Fair Outlines Health Safety Precautions for 2021 Event

Contributed by Melissa Keefe 

As Alaska continues to respond to the global pandemic, the Alaska State Fair will implement a series of safety precautions intended to protect the health of fairgoers, staff, volunteers, vendors, entertainers and others at the 2021 Fair.

Earlier this year, the Fair announced an extended 14-day schedule to help spread out the crowds and keep everyone as safe as possible. Fairgoers are encouraged to purchase parking and admission tickets in advance online at alaskastatefair.org to better estimate attendance and to help keep the public safe.

“This will help us predict crowd sizes and manage our resources to keep patrons safe,” said Jerome Hertel, Fair CEO. “Purchasing tickets online is a contactless transaction that reduces the spread of germs.”

The Fair does not anticipate daily attendance limits at this time, Hertel added. Fair organizers will continue to monitor current CDC guidelines and are working closely with local, state and federal health agencies.

Other safety measures planned for the 2021 Fair include:

Additional handwashing and sanitizing stations will be available throughout the fairgrounds.

High-use areas will be cleaned and disinfected regularly.

Contactless transactions are encouraged.  Skip the line, buy online-don’t wait at the Gate.

Face coverings will not be required for fair guests but are strongly encouraged for those not fully vaccinated and in highly congested areas. Face coverings will be available at all indoor exhibit buildings.

Fairgoers are encouraged to practice social distancing where possible.

Patrons are asked to stay home if sick or experiencing symptoms of illness.

The 2021 Fair, themed Seeing is Believing, will be held Friday, August 20, through Monday, September 6, at the fairgrounds in Palmer. Hours will be 11 a.m. – 10 p.m. daily. The Fair will be closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays (August 24 – 25 and August 31 – September 1) for additional cleaning and disinfecting. 

For more information, visit alaskastatefair.org

Time to Prepare

Contributed by Debra McGhan

In mid-September 2012, Pat Wake bolted upright in bed at the sound of gurgling water. Thinking it part of his dream, it didn’t take but an instant to realize… this was no dream.

His wife Judy, still in bed, suddenly heard him shouting, “Get up! We have to go. Now!”

The Matanuska River had broken through a mud dike and rushed down the road in a flash flood.

“I was still half asleep when I got downstairs and opened the front door to find our porch floating,” said Judy. “There was no time to think, plan or prepare. We just had to grab what we could and go.”

Judy said they had been warned the river could flood. “It was far enough away at the time we never thought it would actually affect us,” she said, “And certainly not so suddenly. Thankfully we had a bag packed which really helped, but still, as you’re closing the front door you think of all you are leaving behind.”

Judy and Pat had several things going for them; An emergency go bag, a positive attitude and good friends who quickly responded to help.

“My friend Vicki Geronimi was amazing. I called her and said we have to get out of our house immediately and need help, can you come? Not only did she show up, but she brought her husband, waders and a truck to help. It was wonderful and something I’ll never forget.”

Geronimi, who admits she is really not prepared herself should an emergency strike, said the water was up to their knees when she and her husband waded up to the neighbor’s house to give a hand.

“The funniest part was their chickens,” she recalled. “I’d never held one in my life and I was terrified. But my friend needed me so here I was helping to put more than a dozen birds in a canoe and then paddling over and putting them in the back of a car. I realized that in an emergency, you become stronger than you might have thought and just do what you have to do.”

It’s the little things in an emergency that can make a big difference. “I was grateful to have a pair of underwear, change of clothes and my toothbrush,” said July. “It’s amazing how just that helped make it all easier.

This fall, as part of National Emergency Preparedness Month, I’m once again reflecting on all that has changed in the past two years with the pandemic. I’ve been around for more than 65 years, and while I’ve lived through catastrophic emergencies like the 1964 Alaska earthquake, I’ve never lived through a full blown global pandemic before. It’s something we often talked about while I was volunteering for the Mat-Su Emergency Preparedness Expo Planning Committee. We always knew that it was likely this could happen. We tried to train and prepare for it. But the reality has proven to be much harder than any table top lesson we practiced.

For some this past two years has been horrific and left them relying on services they never expected to need. Or sick and dying.

For others, they didn’t lose their jobs, had plenty of supplies on hand to sustain them for a long period, and have employed all the tactics advised to avoid getting exposed or sick. This group has stayed healthy, productive and most have thrived.

Thoughtful planning and preparedness practices, whether by intention or happenstance, have made this pandemic a learning opportunity, not a disaster.

If you want to learn new ways to prepare for all types of emergencies and disasters, you’ll have an opportunity on September 25th from 10am to 3pm when the Mat-Su Emergency Preparedness Expo returns live to the Menard Sports Center.

There will be more than 50 exhibitors on hand providing demonstrations, access to resources, the children’s poster contest and much more. You can get all the information about this free community safety event at https//:www.matsugov.org

Let’s face it, disasters and emergencies are becoming more a way of life every year with wildfires, floods, hurricanes, tornadoes and now this global health pandemic. September is the perfect time of year to reflect on our preparedness plan with our family and friends. No matter what happens, it’s good to know we have a chance to affect the outcome through our choices and actions. What we do today will have a direct impact on how we face emergencies and disaster challenges in the future. National Emergency Preparedness Month is our opportunity to plan for success. 

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Make Sense, Not Waste

Contributed by Tim Z

I hate waste, so I started a used building materials store in the Valley.

It’s called Matsu Valley Rebuild, it’s in Wasilla and has over 5000 square feet of space. It’s a donation-based store; not affiliated with any other group and not owned by anyone. The operation is overseen by a board of directors and MVR is driven to be a powerful community resource. Our mission is to keep useful building materials out of the landfill by creating a resource to which people and businesses can donate useful materials that they want to get rid of, but do not wish to waste. We sell these items at 30%-60% of retail prices, proceeds are reinvested into the store.

MVR aims to make the Valley a better place; for you, for our neighbors, for the businesses here and for the economy. We want to redesign our waste stream, bolster our building materials market, inspire creativity and motivation in our neighbors and save people money!

MVR opened in March of 2019 and after we filled our original space in Palmer we moved to Wasilla in September of 2020. Since then we have continued to grow and now it means we have had to turn items away, solely do to a lack of space.

Over the last year the “disruption” in the building materials supply chain has shown us how subservient we are to the retail price of building supplies. The Valley is growing fast. New construction, remodels, cabin projects and tiny houses are going up everywhere. All that building has leftover materials as well as materials taken out after being replaced, what is happening to that stuff?

Sure, some of it gets saved, some gets sold or given away to friends, some gets passed along online or in the neighborhood…but way too much of it is getting burned, buried, left to rot on the property or tossed in the landfill. So, while many people were trying to build and prices were rising others were discarding building materials as worthless. The big box building supply stores set multiple sales records during the highest points of material costs in the last year. People burned, buried and tossed items their Valley neighbors needed while corporations did so well. Why? How do we change that?

We work together and utilize the resources available.

Matsu Valley Rebuild is one of these resources but we need your help. We need people that are in the market for building materials to come check out the store, take advantage of our great deals and help make some room for more donations. We also want you to help us keep useful building materials available to our Valley neighbors. This could mean donating them to MVR, but we are not the only option. Selling or giving things away online through CL or FB works, donating appropriate items to traditional thrift stores is an option, as is the “free” sign out in front of your house. MVR is not in competition with anyone, we just want to keep useful stuff out of the landfill.

This not only helps our neighbors, our friends and our economy, it also helps insulate us from the ebb and flow of the retail economy and helps people that might not be able to afford the retail route. It also creates an opportunity for so many unique and awesome items to be reused and repurposed.

MVR wants to be a part of this and do what we can to inspire and motivate people to get involved. Right now we only offer the donation and sales of items but we have big plans for the future. We will offer a pick up service, a deconstruction service, we want to hold small workshops and classes on basic building projects, develop a tool library and even fix-it events. These events team local experts with people that have items and tools that need to be repaired, things get fixed, people learn how and stuff stays out of the landfill!

Right now the store is busy and a bit overwhelmed. We are looking for volunteers, someone who cares about our mission and wants to help make a difference, someone to help with donation intake, cleaning, organizing, putting items away and more. We are looking for someone who could come in regularly to gain a little familiarity with the operation.  There is some heavy lifting required, some creativity is helpful and a tolerance for cleaning and patience are also necessary.

Matsu Valley Rebuild wants to be part of the solution but we can’t do it alone. We need your help. We can’t do pickups yet, so we need you to bring your clean useful donations to us. We can’t deconstruct so we need you to take care in removal of items and materials. We can’t fit everything so we need you to utilize other options to pass things on. We also need you to tell your friends and family about MVR so we can move some inventory and make room for more…more useful building materials!

Contractors and suppliers; we need you to get on board too! Yes, time is money but so are useful building materials. Surely you care about our Valley neighbors and those who can utilize the things you remove during remodels and have leftover following a build...? As a community we all have some responsibility in this and we all can benefit when we help our Valley neighbors. Will you do your part?

Thank you for your support,

Tim

Founder/President/Manager

Matsu Valley Rebuild

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567 South Denali Street

Wasilla

Wed-Sat 10-6

matsuvalleyrebuild.com

Facebook/Instagram

Learning to Speak through Emotion

Contributed by Vicky Randolph

No matter if the event is a wedding or a wake, a graduation or a goodbye, a birthday or a baptism, our emotions often get the best of us at a time when we truly want to say something heartfelt and meaningful.

If you’re like me, meaningful events provoke your emotions to well up and your throat tightens to the point where it’s difficult to speak, let alone to say what you truly want to say.

My mother was diagnosed a few years ago with a progressive disease that would eventually cause her death.          Mom was well known and very well respected for her lifetime of community service and volunteerism. Everyone loved her big bear hugs.           As I contemplated the time I had remaining with her, I wanted to celebrate her life and to pay tribute to her while she was alive. Her 80th birthday was 2 years away.

I began to plan a big party to celebrate her life.  The guest list had over 100 people on it, and the list was growing. As the party plans solidified my confidence waned…  I seriously doubted my ability to Emcee the party because I knew from past experience that I would not be able to speak through my emotions.

Instead of cancelling the party or asking someone else to emcee, I joined Toastmasters. A friend who belonged to Toastmasters told me the Toastmasters program would help me.   I’m pleased to say that because of the Toastmasters program and a wonderful group of fellow Toastmasters, I have learned how to speak through emotion. The reality test was somewhat as planned, but then again--not.         About 120 people were gathered together in an event hall, with a slide show of hundreds of photos covering my mother’s life playing on one wall delicious catered food, a guest book, good background music and lots of hugs and tears. The only person missing was my mother. Our tears were of sadness, because the gathering wasn’t her 80th birthday party as intended, but her memorial service. My mother died a few months prior to her 80th birthday.

All those people that were on the party guest list were sitting there in front of me, hoping to be lead into a time of sharing, laughter, memories.              We were all feeling the sadness, grief and deep loss of our dear friend, mentor, relative, sister, aunt, mother, grandmother.

Thanks to Toastmasters, I did not freeze when the microphone was handed to me, nor was I overcome by the intense emotions I was feeling. Instead, I was able to speak with a strong voice, even though there were tears in my eyes.

We were able to laugh with each other about my mother’s great sense of humor, to enjoy each other’s memories and stories while remembering my mother’s positive impact on our lives.

Do you fear an upcoming event where your emotion might lead you into the room?          Toastmasters can help.

The Toastmasters program is 95 years strong with a proven track record of well over 300,000 active members in 145 countries throughout the world.

The Toastmasters program is focused on helping each other learn to become better communicators in a self paced and supportive environment.              Every person who joined a Toastmasters club joined for a specific reason. For me, it was learning to speak through emotion.

The outcome is so much more than what we hoped to accomplish, because Toastmasters helps us develop and polish all the components of good communication….listening, thinking, and speaking.

Want to know more?

Palmer Toastmasters meets every week on Tuesday evenings, either via ZOOM or in person. Our in-person meetings take place in the Turkey Red restaurant banquet room in downtown Palmer on the first 2 Tuesdays of each month; all other meetings are held via Zoom.

Our meetings begin at 6 PM and end by 7:15 PM.

Call 907-539-7111 or check out the club website at www.palmer.toastmastersclubs.org or the Toastmasters International website www.toastmasters.org.

Better yet, attend as a guest. Our meetings are free and open to the public.

About the Author

Vicki Randolph is a life-long Alaskan, born and raised on Kodiak Island just as 6 generations of mothers before her. She has lived in Palmer for the past 30 years. She is a charter member of the Palmer Toastmasters Club, and recently completed the Toastmaster education program to achieve the highest honor bestowed on its members--that of Distinguished Toastmaster.

Houston Founders Day August 21st 6-10:30pm

Contributed by Adam Rein

Houston, Alaska is celebrating its 55th birthday on August 21st at 6:30 p.m-10:30 pm. Entertainment for this special 2021 Founders Day celebration couldn’t happen without so many wonderful sponsors.

Come and enjoy Rockabilly Blues and good ole’ fashioned Rock-n-Roll – live music will be provided by the Wild Cat Trio!

While jammin’ to the beat of the music, jump in line for our free BBQ hot dogs, chips, and drinks. 

Three all-time favorite events will be back and better than ever this year:  
The Blueberry Pie Eating Contest ($100 prize); the Egg Toss ($100 prize), and the Cake Walk! 

This year we are doing a Neon Cake Walk with a chance to win light up apparel. All participants will get a cupcake and a “glow swag” to help light up the party!  You will also see performances by Ariel View – acrobatics group out of Anchorage with daring stunts and amazing choreography; Medieval Knights Combat – sword, armor, combat; Alaska’s Wildest Magic – street magic performance; 2019 National Championship Women Cloggers – upbeat and fast feet, champions of their craft from the Valley.

Kids games and family fun are in abundance at Houston Founders Day! We have a Petting Zoo, amazing balloon artists, kids field games, Turkey Shoot, and a 60-foot-long bouncy house obstacle course.

What is Houston, Alaska best known for? Fireworks!  Around 10:30 p.m. Gorilla Fireworks will dazzle us with a fireworks display.  Those who have seen it in the past know it is not to be missed!

Houston Founders Day 55th birthday celebration starting at 6:00 pm Saturday, August 21st at Mile 57 Parks Highway, Houston, Alaska - “Where the Real Alaska Begins”.

Donations to MatSu Food Bank

Contributed by Lauralynn Robison

It’s heartbreaking and almost impossible to ignore the number of families or individuals who are struggling to put food on their tables.  In our minds, the more money we can raise, the more people we could help feed, thereby accomplishing our mission. 

The donated money we receive from everyone goes directly towards our mission, to maintain a warehouse and pantry so that the Mat-Su Community has a place to get nutritional food.  MatSu Food Bank operates a Food Pantry that is not affiliated with any other local food bank.  We need our donors and the people of our community to know where all their donated money and food is going.  T

he financial donations go to maintain the pantry and warehouses daily operations and help with food purchases such as eggs and butter. The food donations go back into our community. 

Every time a donation is received, we have an accountability to our community to make sure it is utilized appropriately.  We are all here to help each other, we appreciate each and every member of our community, we are proud to serve as your local food bank/pantry. 

Thank you to all of our donors, local businesses who continue to support us and the community for volunteering your time and talents. We will be at The Alaska State Fair this year on 5 separate occasions to collect food and donations on August 20th, 21st and again on the 26th, 27th and 28th.  Be sure to say “Hello” as you come through the gates on the days we are there!  Thank you. 

Remember: No One should go hungry! Please take a minute to visit our web page matsufoodbank.org. See the many ways you can contribute, by volunteering and making donations, help us help our community.

Please contact us at (907) 357-3769 to schedule time to volunteer.

You can also follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/MatsuFoodBank …

Thank You for all your continued support, we deeply appreciate our community!

The End of Summer State Fair Fun

Mat Su Republican Women’s Club Est. 1947

P.O. Box 875662

Wasilla, Ak. 99687

msrwc48@gmail.com

Article for August 2021 People's Paper Edition

Sandy May/V.P. Membership

907-315-3297

The End of Summer State Fair Fun!

For the Mat Su Republican Women’s Club Est. 1947 this is the highlight to the end of summer! Our Club has been an annual presence at the Fair since the ‘40s. It began when the State Fair was located where the Pioneer Home in Palmer is. Back in those days, our Club pretty much handed out information, including the location of the restrooms, and later added water and donuts to the fair-goers. Over the years as things changed with the Fair, we did too. Eventually, a Mr. Snodgrass, husband of one of our members, had run a campaign for a political office. Louise Kellog, who wrote much of the old history for us, did not mention whether he was successfully elected or not, however, his booth was on its way to be Mrs. Snodgrass’s storage shed. It took a detour instead and was loaned to us to use at the Alaska State Fair. Imagine the joy the members had to be inside away from the wild rain and wind!  Elinor Goodrich, a member still, remembers those days and told us, “The wind would howl and the walls would shake in that old building!” But they were content with that!

Our Club has come a long way out there! But our focus is still the same. We are a rockin’ Republican presence where we can register people to vote or assist them with updating their voter information no matter what your political affiliation is. We provide candidate information, sell political merchandise, hold a raffle for guns with tickets being $5 each or 5 tickets for $20 (Screamin’’ deal, right?!) Our Legislators and Governor have been at or in our booth during the time of the Fair, giving constituents the opportunity to meet and talk to them.

The Alaska State Fair is the perfect pick me up to wrap up our summer! This year, after covid lockdowns, we are all ready to get out there for an Alaskan great time! The theme this year is “Seeing is Believing” and there will be plenty to see….including the Mat Su Republican Women’s Club Est. 1947 booth!

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