The Neighbors project was published weekly in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1996 to 2000. This page remains available for archival purposes only and the information it contains may be outdated. For more updated information, please visit our Webtowns section.
 
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Port Orchard
Despite economic worries, support for schools is high

By JOHN IWASAKI Mail Author
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

Photo of young people playing hackey sack  
Like the rest of Kitsap County, Port Orchard has been affected by the shrinkage of shipyard jobs in Bremerton, and efforts to develop a small industrial park have had with little success.

Economics played a role in the rejection of three straight levies in recent years in the South Kitsap School District before a measure finally passed.

School officials say residents are otherwise highly supportive of education, pointing to thousands of volunteer hours, parent participation in advisory committees and turnout at school events.

"I think kids here can get a quality education," says Tish Iwaszuk, whose youngest child will be her fourth to go through the system. "I think parents will get involved to make kids stay on track."

Iwaszuk is volunteer coordinator at South Kitsap High, a massive brick structure that holds so many students the halls can come to a literal standstill.

While sophomore Joel Emans, 15, knows his school is enormous, Port Orchard itself is "a small town trying to be big."

"It's laid back," adds junior Kelsey Sage, 17. "Not as hickville as people think."

Sophomore Drew Tetrick, 16, says that in other states in which he has lived a journey to the wrong part of town could spell danger. That's not a problem in Port Orchard because "there's only one part of town -- and it's pretty safe," he says.

Those comforting thoughts are shared by waitress Shirley Dobbs at Myhre's Restaurant, a smoky Bay Street institution displaying historic photos of Port Orchard in the era of dirt roads.

"What I like about the community are old and young people moving toward the future," she says after refilling a coffee cup. "There's a lot of history here. We've gone through some wars. But the community is still trying to be the same community."

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HEADLINES
Saturday, June 19, 1999

Community still in search of an identity

Decaying downtown awaits renewal

Despite economic worries, support for schools is high

Town is legacy of an inventor's vision

Jon Hahn: Port Orchard marina anchors community

Things to do while you're here

Scenes of Port Orchard

Port Orchard historical album

Port Orchard by the numbers


Nearby communities:

Bainbridge Island

Bremerton

Kingston

Port Townsend

Poulsbo

Silverdale

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