KCTC LOGONewsKetchikan Career Transition Center
Friends Helping Friends

December 1998

Headlines Happy Holidays!




Features




We Care For You!

STAFF HOURS:MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 7:00 AM -- 4:30 PM
FOR YOUR RE-EMPLOYMENT, RETRAINING, RELOCATION,
SUPPORT AND OVERALL SOCIAL WELL BEING.

Jerry Collins, Peer Counselor 7A - 3:30P
jcollins@comregaf.state.ak.us

Paul Lamm, Peer Counselor, 8:30A - 5P
plamm@comregaf.state.ak.us

Lani Robb, Vocational Counselor, 8A - 4:30P
lrobb@comregaf.state.ak.us

Peri Shapansky, CDS II, 7A - 3:30P
pshapansky@comregaf.state.ak.us

Dave Sharman, Business Counselor, 8A - 2P
dsharman@comregaf.state.ak.us

Contact our rotating employment consultant through
any of the staff members listed here.

Toll Free: 1-888-795-7526
Note: Our new office hours are 7:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

Our individual staff lunch times are staggered between the hours of 11a.m. -- 1:30p.m. If you desire to meet with one of our staff between these hours or during off hours please let us know. Locally you can reach us at 247-7526. Our toll free telephone number is 1-888-795-7526. Let the Internet access speed your communication to us by using the web and e-mail addresses as listed above.




December Business Workshops

The Ketchikan Business Assistance Center, located in the Ketchikan Career Transition Center, is pleased to offer the following Small Business workshops in December:

  • Thursday, December 3rd - 1:00 p.m. - "Records & Bookkeeping for Small Business"
  • Thursday, December 10th - 1:00 p.m. - "Business Plan Preparation"

I will be traveling to POW sometime between Dec. 14 and Dec. 18 to do business counseling and/or some business workshops. Call 1-888-795-7526 for more information.

Dave Sharman, Business Consultant

Wal-Mart Coming to Town

It's official: Wal-Mart will be building a store right here in Ketchikan. What does Ketchikan think about this? So far, there has been an overwhelmingly positive response among the people. Providing jobs in our community and bringing in shoppers from outlying cities could give our local economy a healthy boost.

The proposed 64,000-sq. ft. Wal-Mart store building site will be located on N. Tongass Hwy next to Lewis Chevrolet, NBA, and Karlson Motors.

For all you prospective construction workers out there, Wal-Mart will potentially generate several construction-related jobs in late spring 1999. As a result of this construction, Signal Road will need to be rerouted. The road is currently running through the proposed construction site and will need to be rerouted around it. Traffic is expected to increase in this area from 730 to 5,270 vehicle trips per day.

We will keep you posted on this exciting project and its employment opportunities in upcoming newsletters.

-Carrie Entwit

Jingle Bugs

Seems to me that people set out some far-fetched gifts for questionable recipients at Christmas. Like all those expensive items for unappreciative pets, or crumbs for freeloading house mice not to mention beer for the garbage men (well, that's what my mom & dad used to do). Just how far is our benevolence expected to go? One year, our family crossed the line in generosity but we didn't do it intentionally.

Having grown up in Hawaii, my Christmas memories are full of what most people would consider surreal distortions of holiday tradition: everyone donning tinsel leis, ornaments hanging from palm trees, women in holiday muumuus instead of wool coats, and Santa arriving on a surfboard (how many of you have seen Santa's toes?). As the old island melody puts it, "Here we know that Christmas will be warm and bright…." We were seldom let down by the weather and it certainly didn't cool off that particular Christmas Eve.

Traditionally, all we saw of my Dad and my youngest brother was the bottom of their flip-flops until Christmas morning, when they finally surfaced from fastidious surveying of the packages beneath the tree. Who knows what fantasies they lived while buried below bow & bough! In gleeful anticipation of getting to touch, weigh and shake our glimmering gifts, we'd clear out the furniture to sit as close to the tree as we could. We pleaded with my step-mom to hurry up as she carefully selected something for each one of us to open. Then we feverishly dove in…but this year something dove OUT!

Nobody freaked at the first beetle (people don't survive in Hawaii if they can't fathom a few bugs). We barely flinched at the second… but stirring the gifts below the lighted tree appeared to have stirred a small army of beetles! They came rampaging out of the paper! They were scaling poor tannenbaum! They furiously waved their antennae at us from the protective cover of the tinsel! I hurled my infested present at my brother (boys like bugs, right?) but the paper stuck to my fingers and tore the gift-wrap. Between the "Eww's" and the "EEK's" someone yelled, "Look! Look at the candy canes!"

What only the night before had been beautiful, plump red and white canes were now translucent, toothpick-thin hooks hanging precariously all over the tree. In the night's humidity the candy canes on the tree had slowly melted, dripping from limb to limb, needle to needle and present to present. The aroma of sweet, melting peppermint had attracted our hoard of six-legged visitors as Cinnabon attracts shoppers in the mall. They were licking our presents, our ornaments, and now our fingers. My dad had peppermint on his eyebrows, no doubt a result of his foray among the gifts earlier that morning, but to his relief he appeared to be beetle free.

We coped. My step-mom, who went A.W.O.L. in the midst of beetle-mania, reappeared with hot, steamy face clothes thus we proceeded to bathe our way through Christmas. I'm not sure what became of the all the beetles, no doubt drunk with sugar by then. Perhaps they had time to scuttle away to safety as the allure of presents still entranced us and sticky ribbons kept us preoccupied. I also can't remember a single thing I received that Christmas. Hmm. Maybe it is more fun to give than to receive (even to bugs).

Mele Kalikimaka everyone!

-Lani Robb,
Vocational Counselor

Come to the Christmas Buffet!

Come one come all to the Christmas get-together at the Ketchikan Career Transition Center from 10am to 4pm December 23. Good food, fun and conversation. See old friends and make new ones. We here at KCTC hope to see you then.

New CDS in Ketchikan

Ketchikan Career Transition Center has a new Community Development Specialist to assist you in planning your future! I would like to take this opportunity to introduce myself. I am Brian Tackett. I have lived in the State of Alaska for four years. I have lived in the Alaskan bush and other cities in Alaska. Some of my hobbies are: kayaking, scuba-diving, and running. I really do enjoy living in Ketchikan and I look forward to meeting folks here and in the surrounding communities. I invite you to stop by the Center and find out about the services we offer.

I look forward to meeting you soon!

-Brian Tackett,
Community Development Specialist

New Chance Update

The New Chance Center is glad to announce we will continue classes through May of 1999. The next class will begin on January 11th, 1998. Interested applicants may contact us at 225-5230 (fax 247-5240) or stop by our convenient second floor location in the Plaza Port West Mall, next to the Bon Marché for Kids. You may enroll for any or all of the classes.

The daily schedule is as follows:

  • 8-10:00 Academic Skills
  • 10-12:00 Career Exploration
  • 1-3:00 Computers for Beginners
  • 3-5:00 Open lab (homework time)

You're invited to graduation for the current session to be held at the New Chance Center on December 18th from 1-2p.m.

Job Service Update

For those looking for work, our job list still offers variety. The City/Borough of Juneau sends us their job openings as they become available. These have presented some good opportunities. Tim Gieb is one former co-worker who successfully took advantage of this avenue. He has relocated to Juneau and is currently working as an Instrument Tech. He says Juneau is much like Ketchikan in its beauty but has far less rain and much more opportunity. You might have to go to the ski slopes to check with him for more information as he mentioned he will be hanging out there in his spare time.

Has anyone been following the Kodiak Missile Launch happenings? Thursday, November 5th the launch of the Air Force missile was a first for the Kodiak Launch Complex, a site the State hopes will become the centerpiece of a new industry sending satellites into orbit. Alaska Aerospace Development Corporation (AADC) is the State agency that operates the launch site. The $28-million-dollar complex is still under construction. At first, this complex won't provide dozens of year-round jobs, as the only permanent launch jobs will likely be a few security people and a site manager to watch the site. However, the project will boost the local economy by channeling routine maintenance work and other business to the site. I am currently working on an exciting job development opportunity for one client from KCTC. You never know what other opportunities will arise with AADC.

Another exciting opportunity I am involved in is assisting a client in obtaining training as a Baader Technician. You may ask: What is a Baader? Badder is a Company which manufactures machines for the Seafood Industry. These machines produce skinless/boneless fillets of fish. The machines are built in Germany and usually the company recruits operators from Germany or Norway since there are no trained technicians in America This takes available work away from Americans. My client and I aim to change this. The pay is very good. Usually between $6000-$9000 Per month.

Stop by the Center and let me assist you with your search for employment. The holidays are just around the corner and there should be some temporary/seasonal positions available which could put some extra cash in your pocket.

Those who haven't used the computer for job searching yet, stop by and let us show you how. There is a whole new world on the Internet just waiting to be discovered.

Although Thanksgiving has come and gone, let us continue to give thanks for the many blessings in our lives. Sometimes, even the obstacles are blessings in disguise. Wishing you all a joyous Christmas season! When you are thinking of gift-giving please remember how very valuable is a gift from your heart; gifts of memories, love, and friendship will last longer than any store-bought gift.

-Noni Woodruff,
Employment Consultant

The Succcess Corner

CONGRATULATIONS!

The Ketchikan Career Transition Center helps provide conditions favorable for re-training. Know-how can be developed and ability acquired for a new career choice. For example...

TRAINING COMPLETED!

Cecil HARPER finished training November 20, 1998. Training: Refrigeration & Heating Place: Universal Technical Institute

Knowledge is power.

A New Life

Last week I saw my old friend Scott Diverty. He was back in Ketchikan taking care of some business. We had some time together talking about the "Good Old Days" but more importantly, how things are now. He has finished his school in Phoenix, AZ for H.V.A.C. with very high marks. Has moved to Glendale, AZ found a job and bought a home. His wife has a job she likes.

One of the things we talked about was how he originally thought he would not live any place other than Ketchikan. How things change: he now knows what it's like to be dry! He said to tell you all that if you are down his way look him up. "I'm in the book!"

-Paul Lamm,
Peer Counselor

Addresses & E-Mails

These are some names and addresses we received at the KETCHIKAN CAREER TRANSITION CENTER from clients who have given us permission to print their address, phone number, fax number, email address etc.

Note: Rodney DUE is a Civil Service shift supervisor for the wastewater treatment plant serving Pearl Harbor & Hickam AFB, since 2/97.

Rodney Due
P.O. Box 262
Pearl City, HI 96782
Telephone: (808) 672-6811
E-mail: duecrew@gte.net

Mary Bransford
815 Olympic Avenue
Medford, OR 97504

Al & Brenda Jacobson
P.O. Box 6471
Ketchikan, AK 99901-99019
E-mail: voltage@ptialaska.net

John Vandiver
317 South Shoreline Drive #4
Liberty Lake, WA 99019
E-mail: John@Vandiver.net

Will & Sandy Singer
P.O. Box 1171
Ward Cove, AK 99928

KCTC Management Committee Mission Statement

The committee is committed to provide programs, guidance, and oversight to KCTC in a way that supports and identifies:

  • Re-employment
  • Retraining
  • Relocation
  • Support and overall social well being

The Committee will serve as a liaison between workers and local, state, and federal entities in a way that will provide outreach and advocacy on behalf of affected workers and families directed toward achieving self sufficiency. Committee members are: Gary Benton, IUOE; Amy King, KPC Management; Paul Lamm, AWPPW; Vera Plumb, IBEW; Lauri Zadina, KPC non-union workers.

If you have any questions please
contact any of our
Helpful Staff!


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Other Back Issues of the KCTC Newsletter:
April Newsletter  
May Newsletter  
June Newsletter  
August Newsletter  
September Newsletter  
October Newsletter  
November Newsletter  


This Website is sponsored by the JTPO Dislocated Worker Program
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Last modified December 16, 1998.
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A Woman-Owned Business in Ketchikan, Alaska