A Whatcom County Spring is Nothing to Sneeze At

Enjoy spring and summer without the allergies. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

Spring is a wonderful time – the sun finally peeks out from behind those persistently rainy clouds, a fresh floral smell fills the air and everything seems happy and bright. Enjoyment of this glorious weather can be hampered, however, for allergy sufferers. All the sneezing, itching and runny eyes can take its toll. The good news? With the right plan, there is hope.

Step 1: Identify

Dr. William Anderson knows how to keep allergies at bay. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

Exactly what is triggering your allergies? Determining the answer isn’t always simple. “Right now, we are entering the grass pollen season, which typically coincides with the flow of white fluffs in the air from cottonwood trees,” says PeaceHealth’s Dr. William Anderson. “These are the seeds from the trees which actually pollenate in the springtime around March. People see the fluffs, experience allergy symptoms and assume they are due to the fluffs. Allergy symptoms now are due to the grass pollen that people can’t see.”

According to Dr. Anderson, grass pollen is released from buds on top of tall grass blades. “I advise my patients – particularly children – to avoid playing in the tall grass as their face is at the same level of the grass pollens being released,” says Dr. Anderson. “The exposure can lead to severe allergic symptoms including nasal obstruction, eyelid swelling and eye itching, and asthma symptoms – even in those who don’t have asthma.”

Dr. Anderson recommends oral steroids such as prednisone for severe symptoms, for a few days to relieve symptoms, along with antihistamine therapy. Improvement then can usually be maintained by anti-inflammatory nasal sprays. “Grass pollen season typically starts in mid to late May and progresses through late June,” he says. “Weed pollen starts up in mid-summer and may persist through late summer.  Those who have mold allergy may notice symptoms from mid-summer through the fall time, especially when working outdoors raking leaves.” The first season of the year is the tree pollen season which starts in January for cedar pollen but for most trees later, in February and March.

Step 2: Prevent

When allergies are properly controlled, spring and summer can be a wonderful time. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

Grass, weed and residual tree pollens are kicked up when mowing the lawn or weed whacking, which can also lead to severe allergy symptoms. Prevent this by wearing a mask and frequently washing your face, hair and body. Using a NeilMed sinus rinse can also keep your nasal passages free of pollen and irritants.

Dr. Anderson recommends that those with known grass pollen allergy begin treatment on May 1 of each year, even if they aren’t yet experiencing symptoms. This may seem counterintuitive but when it comes to allergies, prevention is best. For those with allergy symptoms due to tree pollens which peak in March, he advises starting allergy medications in February, sooner if cedar pollen is a trigger for symptoms.

“There is an immunologic process called priming where a few pollens that land on the mucous membrane early in the season may not cause symptoms, but initiate the allergic inflammatory response that then ramps up over days to the first few weeks of the pollen season leading to severe allergy symptoms,” says Dr. Anderson. “If one can stop this priming process with an anti-inflammatory nasal spray such as Flonase/fluticasone, Nasacort/triamcinolone or Rhinocort/budesonide with one to two puffs in each nostril daily, patients can often proceed through the pollen season with minimal symptoms.”

Dr. Anderson also advises daily antihistamine such as Claritin/loratadine or fexofenadine/Allegra. “Zyrtec/cetirizine is a very good option and has good antihistamine properties but may be sedating,” he says. “This is often taken at night time.”

Being proactive about treatment helps ensure allergy sufferers get the best results. Waiting until allergy symptoms are at their peak often means that nasal passages are irritated and swollen to the point of obstruction, rendering intranasal anti-inflammatory treatment ineffective. “At the peak of severity, the over-the-counter anti-inflammatory nasal sprays may not work unless one is vigilant and utilizes a therapy on a regular basis,” says Dr. Anderson.

Step 3: Treatment

Enjoy spring and summer without the allergies. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

Nasal allergy sufferers can find relief in prescription nasal sprays. “Anti-inflammatory nasal sprays must be used daily,” says Dr. Anderson. “Prescription add-on nasal sprays are advised for those not optimally controlled [on regular antihistamine medications].”

Dr. Anderson says Patanase and Astelin can be added to, but not replace, intranasal anti-inflammatory therapies. These are antihistamine nasal sprays and also act on inhibiting release of histamine. “Over-the-counter Nasalcrom is available and may be used up to four times daily, added on if needed, although usually not as effective as Patanase and Astelin.”

For those with itchy, runny eyes, Dr. Anderson recommends over-the-counter eye drops containing ketotifen, like Zaditor, Alaway and other generic options. These can be used up to three times daily as needed. Those planning to spend time outdoors should use this treatment in the morning.

If these methods don’t optimally control your allergy symptoms, Dr. Anderson recommends allergy shots or subcutaneous immunotherapy. This entails three to five years of regular immunotherapy injections once per month, after a weekly six-month buildup phase. “These are very effective but require significant time commitment especially during the buildup phase,” he says. “Some people choose to pursue allergy shots to reduce all the medications they need to control symptoms.”

Now there is also a sublingual immunotherapy tablet for those with grass pollen allergy that can mostly be taken at home. “Most don’t realize that this therapy is available,” says Dr. Anderson. This therapy is also available for dust mite allergy.

Don’t let allergy symptoms get you down – take the steps you need to enjoy spring and summer in the great outdoors today!

Sponsored

Lighthouse Mission Ministries Launches Street Connect to Bring Help to Homeless

With 742 homeless in Whatcom County, and no shelters available in Skagit or Island Counties, Lighthouse Mission is an essential resource. Photo credit: Cassandra Darwin

Submitted by: Lighthouse Mission Ministries

Lighthouse Mission Ministries (LMM) is expanding its outreach to the Bellingham community’s homeless population by launching Street Connect, where volunteers go out in vans to meet basic needs, build relationships and offer an invitation for shelter.

Teams of volunteers are visiting areas around the greater Bellingham area, according to Executive Director Hans Erchinger-Davis. Volunteers now go out five nights a week and talk with people who are homeless and learn what they need.

Vans are stocked with items such as socks, sandwiches, water bottles and hygiene kits, Erchinger-Davis said. Rides are offered to the LMM Drop-In Center, where services, support, shelter and three daily meals are available.

“Trust relationships are often necessary for someone experiencing chronic homelessness to become motivated to take next steps,” Erchinger-Davis said. “Feelings of shame and worthlessness can keep people isolated, taking weeks or years for someone to get out of ‘survival mode.’ It can also be intimidating to enter the Drop-In Center if you don’t know anyone there or what the culture is like.

“By connecting people with volunteers, staff and current residents at the street level, meeting their basic needs and offering a direct invitation from the Mission, we remove those barriers and increase the likelihood of them accepting our offer of care.”

Street Connect will add a two-stall shower trailer to the program in July, giving people who are homeless access to warm showers and sanitation. The trailer will include two separate units, each with a shower, toilet and sink.

“Access to warm showers and restrooms is essential to a person’s dignity and when associated with wrap-around support services can inspire life transformation,” Erchinger-Davis said.

This trailer will be taken out with one of the Street Connect vans. It will also be parked at the Mission’s Drop-In Center. Eventually the Mission hopes to partner with local churches, giving them the opportunity to host the trailer. A variety of hygiene items, feminine hygiene products, towels and clean clothing will be distributed as needed.

Street Connect will give community members (faith communities, civic groups, sports teams, universities, businesses, individuals, etc.) the opportunity to address homelessness by volunteering in exciting, safe and meaningful ways, Erchinger-Davis said. To get started with volunteering, please visit www.thelighthousemission.org.

According to the Whatcom County Point in Time Count on Jan. 26, 2017, 742 homeless people were counted, up from 719 in 2016 and 493 in 2012.

Lighthouse Mission Ministries, a privately funded, local 501(c)(3) organization, is operating Street Connect without any government support. Bellingham’s Northwest Chevrolet donated the van. The public may support this program by giving money, toiletries, socks, granola bars, hand warmers, peanut butter and water bottles.

Lighthouse Mission Ministries has been helping people who are homeless since 1923. Approximately 250 men, women and children receive shelter and care from Lighthouse Mission Ministries each night and 350 meals are served daily. To make donations or learn more about its services, call 360-733-5120 or visit www.thelighthousemission.org.

 

Announcing the Great Ferndale Midsummer Mystery July 1 – 24

Submitted by: City of Ferndale

Thanks to a Project Neighborly grant from the Whatcom Community Foundation, the City of Ferndale is able to host the Great Ferndale Midsummer Mystery, a city-wide scavenger hunt from July 1 -24. Similar to the Great Ferndale Treasure Hunt last year, this adventure encourages residents to meet their neighbors, explore their city and solve the mystery of who stole the spirit of Ferndale!

To participate, grab a scorecard from the city website, or found in person at City Hall or at Food Truck Fridays (June 1 and July 6) at Star Park. The scorecard keeps track of the clues found and the points earned.

Clues will be distributed through the city’s Facebook page, twitter account and posted at City Hall, the Ferndale Library and the Ferndale Visitor Center. The first clue will be released Sat. July 1, and then after that it is every Tuesday and Friday until July 20.

All participants will receive a medal, but the first, second and third place winners will also receive a cash prize, fourth through sixth place winners will receive gift certificates and everyone who participates will feel a sense of accomplishment and fun.

More details are available at www.cityofferndale.org/FerndaleMystery. This event is part of the City of Ferndale’s 2018 Summer of Fun.

If you have any questions, please contact Recreation Coordinator and part-time Detective impersonator Riley Sweeney at rileysweeney@cityofferndale.org or 360-685-2353.

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center Receives “Get With The Guidelines – Stroke Gold Plus Quality Achievement Award”

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center honored
PeaceHealth’s St. Joseph Cardiovascular Center has an award-winning, nationally recognized program with a comprehensive range of heart care services. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

Submitted by: PeaceHealth

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center has received the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines®-Stroke Gold Plus Quality Achievement Award. The award recognizes the hospital’s commitment to ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized, research-based guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence.

PeaceHealth St. Joseph was honored with this achievement. Photo courtesy: PeaceHealth.

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center earned the award by meeting specific quality achievement measures for the diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients at a set level for a designated period. These measures include evaluation of the proper use of medications and other stroke treatments aligned with the most up-to-date, evidence-based guidelines with the goal of speeding recovery and reducing death and disability for stroke patients. Before discharge, patients should also receive education on managing their health, get a follow-up visit scheduled, as well as other care transition interventions.

“PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center is dedicated to improving the quality of care for our stroke patients by implementing the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines- Stroke initiative,” said Terry Carter, nurse manager and stroke program coordinator at PeaceHealth St. Joseph. “The tools and resources provided help us track and measure our success in meeting evidenced-based clinical guidelines developed to improve patient outcomes.”

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center additionally received the association’s Target: Stroke Elite Plus Honor Roll award. To qualify for this recognition, hospitals must meet quality measures developed to reduce the time between the patient’s arrival at the hospital and treatment with the clot-buster tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA, the only drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat ischemic stroke.

“We are pleased to recognize PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center caregivers and providers for their commitment to stroke care,” said Eric E. Smith, M.D., national chairman of the Get With The Guidelines Steering Committee and an associate professor of neurology at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada. “Research has shown that hospitals adhering to clinical measures through the Get With The Guidelines quality improvement initiative can often see fewer readmissions and lower mortality rates.”

According to the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, stroke is the number five cause of death and a leading cause of adult disability in the United States. On average, someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke every 40 seconds and nearly 795,000 people suffer a new or recurrent stroke each year.

How Lynden’s Downtown Business Association Helps Front Street Blossom

The Lynden Downtown Business Association works with the City of Lynden on a downtown flower program that sees planters and baskets of vibrant flowers decorating storefronts and sidewalks. Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

If you take a stroll through downtown Lynden these days, it’s hard not to be impressed by what you see: immaculate storefronts housing bustling local businesses, all lined up along clean, flower-filled sidewalks.

It’s an aesthetic that Teri Treat, a board member of Lynden’s Downtown Business Association, calls a great blend of hip and historic for Whatcom County’s second-largest population center. “It’s an intact, classic American downtown,” she says. “And, one of the most walkable cities in Whatcom County.”

Drizzle is one of many newer tenants in the renovated Waples Mercantile Building, which re-opened in 2016 after a fire nearly destroyed the historic structure in 2008. Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

The revitalization of Lynden’s Front Street has been, in large part, due to the efforts of the LDBA, an organization founded to promote and enhance the success of downtown Lynden. Made up of local business owners, the LDBA has nearly 100 members just five years after being close to dissolution.

Not long ago, Lynden’s downtown was riddled with vacant retail spaces and the burned-out shell of the old Waples Mercantile Building, which was nearly destroyed in a 2008 fire after standing since 1914. “It was pretty much a ghost town,” says Jerry Blankers, a longtime Lynden real estate broker with an office on Front Street. “It was dead.”

When longtime member Ken Stap stepped up to become LDBA president in 2013, money started being invested into downtown and Stap knew better times were just around the corner.

Clean sidewalks, ample crosswalks and plenty of non-metered parking are all part of Lynden’s downtown charm, which the LDBA’s Teri Treat calls “the most walkable city in Whatcom County.” Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

In 2016, the building that once housed Billy Waples’ Lynden Department Store re-opened, spurring a boom that’s brought a resurgence of downtown visitors. The Waples building is now home to a hotel (the Inn at Lynden), a taphouse (Overflow Taps) and a delightful mix of restaurants and shops including Whatcom County favorites Avenue Bread and Village Books. The nearby Jansen Art Center has also contributed greatly to downtown’s resurgence.

Two years ago, the LDBA helped Lynden win $25,000 from America’s Main Streets, a national contest that annually awards one lucky town a grand prize to be used for downtown revitalization efforts. Those funds, says Stap, have been used for upgrades to downtown benches, trash cans and lighting, among other things. And where LDBA meetings once had just half a dozen people, there are now at least 30 to 40 attendees. “They’re all excited about what’s going on downtown,” Blankers says. “It’s a whole different-looking atmosphere.”

“Our own little Mayberry”

Lynden’s Front Street is a popular destination. Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

According to Treat, what makes Lynden’s downtown so great is that it features unique businesses in a concentrated location that’s clean, safe, bikeable and walkable. It also doesn’t hurt that parking’s free.

The LDBA helps by providing a unified voice to downtown business owners, helping them market themselves and – in being unified – manage both the rewards and challenges of growth. In addition, the LDBA works with the City of Lynden on a downtown flower program that decorates storefronts and sidewalks with pots and baskets of vibrant flowers.

It’s one of many little touches that Jesse Clark, owner of Lynden Bolt, says brings people back to town. “People actually come here from all over the place, just to walk around the downtown when the flower baskets are up,” he says. “It’s our own little Mayberry.”

Clark’s store has been on Front Street for two years now, and he says being part of the LDBA not only makes working with the city easy, but provides a sense of unity; other members have often come to his store to buy supplies for their construction projects. “Everyone’s willing to help each other out,” he says.

Several years ago, a fair amount of vacant retail space sat along downtown Lynden’s Front Street. But things have changed for the better, providing visitors with a vibrant and varied selection of downtown businesses. Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

Stap hopes Lynden’s downtown vibe is as welcoming to locals as it is to outsiders, giving off the feeling that Lynden appreciates its visitors, but isn’t too touristy. “It’s a working downtown,” he says. “We’re not just a tourist destination. We still have the paint store, we still have the hardware store, we have the furniture store – we have all these things that people come to downtown for.”

Logo-motion

One of the LDBA’s latest projects is a new logo, created by local graphic designer and LDBA member Corey Jamison.

Jamison, creative director of San Diego-based Jamison Advertising Group, has lived in Lynden for 13 years, working out of a Front Street office for the last year-and-a-half.

For the LDBA’s new logo, Jamison says they wanted something simple and easily identifiable that would pay respect to Lynden’s historic tradition while still representing its up-and-coming modernity.

The logo features a hand-drawn script to represent a city built by hand, by hard-working people. It is encapsulated by a clean, modern typeface representing what Lynden is becoming today. There’s also an embedded icon that’s interchangeable depending on the time of year.  Icons include a raspberry, a flower, a bicycle and a pint glass.

The Lynden Downtown Business Association works with the City of Lynden on a downtown flower program that sees planters and baskets of vibrant flowers decorating storefronts and sidewalks. Photo courtesy: Lynden Downtown Business Association.

“It’s a nod to the tradition and the past, but using colors, type and imagery to always point towards the future,” Jamison says. “We want to attract the local residents who are here; we want to attract people from Whatcom County and beyond. Not just to be a ‘Dutch destination,’ but to be a true destination that anybody would want to go to.

They’re also working on a marketing campaign using 18-by-24-inch illustrated posters depicting the downtown life of Lynden, based off iconic 1930s-style travel posters of France and other European countries.

Jamison says the logo’s official launch will be in time for the Farmers Day Parade on June 2.

In addition to the new logo, Treat says the LDBA is working on several upcoming events, including a 4th of July barbeque, outdoor evening movies (Hot Summer Nights) and a Girls’ Night Out planned for the fall.

The Lynden Chamber of Commerce – which works closely with the LDBA – also puts on a number of big events, including the annual Raspberry Festival and Curt Maberry 3-on-3 basketball tournament.

In other words, there’s no shortage of opportunities to see why the pride is back along Front Street. “There’s a whole new energy downtown,” says Blankers. “When people started changing the whole attitude – the picture of downtown – it’s made a huge difference.”

Sponsored

Body Move Bootcamp: Something New for Whatcom County

Photo courtesy: Photo Movement Lab.

Submitted by: Flex Movement Lab

We live life in 360 degrees, not very much of what we do is exclusively in a linear plane. That is why we believe the best fitness is functional, the kind that strengthens our joints and connective tissues, restores mobility, releases tension and pain and ultimately optimizes our bodies, at any stage of life. While losing weight and looking great is a fantastic byproduct of training, it is not the end all be all. There is so much more to it than that.

Get fit with friends! Photo courtesy: Photo Movement Lab.

Thought patterns, exercise patterns, eating patterns … all of them play a role in your overall well-being, health and success. The Body Move Bootcamp is not just about losing weight or achieving a single fitness goal. It’s about changing our thoughts, mostly about ourselves. It’s about learning new functional movement patterns, maybe some we haven’t ever tried before. And it’s about developing new eating patterns.

Change is never easy. It’s often challenging and sometimes uncomfortable. Having a support system of other like-minded individuals who are pushing to better themselves in all areas is one way to give yourself the advantage while pursuing lasting change.

Flex Movement Lab offers classes starting as early as 5:00 a.m. throughout the day and into the early evening in order to make this accessible to everyone. Swing shift? Turn around? Soccer mom schedule? We speak those languages.

Flex Movement Lab makes getting fit easy. Photo courtesy: Photo Movement Lab.

It’s hard enough to find time to sneak in a workout, even harder for parents trying to balance family, work and self-care. That’s why we are partnered up with West Coast Fight Club, in the same building, that offers an incredible kids MMA class from 5:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursdays. They welcome ages 7-17 and specialize in teaching discipline, self-control and confidence in a fun and active class setting. Additionally, we are located right next door to Gymstar which provides even more opportunity for both you and the little one to find the right option to get active and stay healthy.

If you are curious what it is all about, we are offering a special two week all access intro pass for $20. Bootcamp starts on June 4, come try out some new classes and see if it is the right fit for you.

Hammers FC Academy Soccer Camps Foster Confidence in Whatcom County Youth

A picture of the Hammers FC Academy summer camp from 2017. There are four different sessions throughout the summer. Photo courtesy: Ivan Colin.

Do you remember when you first stepped onto a sports field? That initial experience can be nerve-racking and downright terrifying for some. After all, at the time, you’re just a child thrust into a fast-paced activity you’re unfamiliar with. But with the proper training, coaching and encouragement, those feelings of uncertainty slip away as you settle into your sport of choice.

Ivan Colin is a forward for Bellingham United and director of the Hammers FC Academy. Photo courtesy: Ivan Colin.

Hammers FC Academy Director Ivan Colin and HFCA summer camps provide just that for burgeoning soccer stars; the necessary training and mentorship to ensure kids are active soccer participants and have fun engaging in meaningful activities.

For Ivan and the HFCA, it’s not just about building kids into soccer players, but establishing them as individuals too. Organized sports give children an outlet to forge connections with mentors and other children, teach them how to communicate with one another and allow them the freedom to play and just be a kid.

Ivan started with the HFCA two years ago when he joined Bellingham United FC as a player. He started as a trainer, then worked his way up to director. Ivan now splits his time between managing the HFCA and playing forward for Bellingham United. “It’s tough, but I make it work because I love to see the high moments that happen when these kids are on the field,” Ivan says. “I train for Bellingham United at night and do HFCA activities during the day and evening.”

November through February is Indoor Season. During his three-month Outdoor season (Bellingham United is year-round), which started in May, Ivan will also host three of HFCA’s four summer camp sessions. Summer is a busy time for Ivan but it’s all worth it because he’s making a difference in children’s lives.

Campers from summer 2017’s advanced camp session participate in a soccer scrimmage. Photo courtesy: Ivan Colin.

Ivan remembers the importance of having strong mentors supporting him when he played youth soccer. He says his coaches, trainers and parents encouraged him to succeed not only as a player, but as a person. Their advice and belief in him, coupled with Ivan’s work ethic, helped shape who he is today and provided him with the chance to play both college and semi-professional soccer. Ivan wants kids who attend the HFCA training programs and summer camps to find that same mentorship from himself and his staff.

“As a player and as a coach I love being able to play soccer in front of these kids, and to play with them too; it’s great to be able to coach and teach,” Ivan says. “These kids look up to you. They look at you like a rock star. It makes you want to be that mentor for them.”

For Ivan, it’s amazing to see enrolled campers who may seem reserved or shy completely change their demeanor on the field. At first, some kids find it hard to interact with other campers and are unsure how they’ll perform. But as soon as they step on the pitch, that all changes. Ivan loves to see kids gain a sense of freedom and channel their energy onto the soccer field.

A picture of the Hammers FC Academy summer camp from 2017. There are four different sessions throughout the summer. Photo courtesy: Ivan Colin.

The HFCA runs a variety of drills and activities during their four-day summer camps, but Ivan says his favorite are the big group soccer games. Here, he and the other coaches can really see how much the campers have learned, as well as join and engage with them. There is nothing more rewarding for campers than to “nutmeg” or get by a coach in one of the camp games. More importantly, they get to watch and join in with them having a genuinely good time.

“Our camps and training go beyond the soccer field,” Ivan says. “We’re all about learning how to play, having fun and helping kids through this developmental stage in their life.”

When he arrived from California two years ago, Ivan didn’t know much about the soccer community in Whatcom County. He found it to be a tight-knit community where everybody knows everybody. He loves that the soccer community in our little part of the Pacific Northwest brings so many different groups together and forms a strong bond among them.

The first HFCA camp session is June 25-28, with the following sessions running July 16-19 and August 6-9. All sessions begin at 9:00 a.m. and last until 12:00 p.m. The regular HFCA summer camp sessions are for ages five to 12. There is an advanced camp for ages eight to 12, which runs July 16-19 from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. All HFCA summer camp sessions take place at Phillips 66 Northwest Soccer Park. The fee is $110 for regular camp and $120 for the advanced camp. Each registration includes a soccer ball and HFCA shirt.

Sponsored

The return of Whatcalendar.com

Submitted by: Guy Occhiogrosso of the Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce

Whatcalendar.com is back and better than ever. As many of you know (and probably experienced), this online community event calendar operated by the Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce had some technical difficulties during the winter. The dual branded online tool serves our community as the largest online calendar dedicated to promoting both community and tourism-related events in Whatcom County. The calendar can be found at both URLs: www.whatcalendar.com and www.bhamevent.com.

“If we did our job well, you (the user) will not realize it is much different than before,” says Guy Occhiogrosso, President/CEO of the Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce. “We wanted it to look the same to the general public, even though the internal system has completely changed. Our long-time users will need to learn the new system, but the team searched for a few months for a platform that would serve this unique use while being user friendly to both the viewer as well as the event organizer.”

The original purpose of the dedicated tool is still to provide the community with a simple, dedicated online event calendar. The priority of the calendar is for the public to be able to access and find events happening in Whatcom County.

The secondary purpose is for the calendar to be used by the multiple nonprofit organizations and event planners in the county to help schedule major events. The long-term goal of this tool is that we can help shape the “calendar of events” that happen in the community. “The Bellingham region is so large that we will always have multiple events on the same day. For our families and tourists alike, this isn’t necessarily a bad situation. But where we find the issues are when we have large fundraisers and community awareness events happening on the same day. We hope to curb these scheduling overlaps by building a larger program around the calendar,” Occhiogrosso said.

From an insider’s perspective, these were not the only reasons whatcalendar.com was created. The Chamber is and has always been “the front door to the community.” Over the years, many community tasks have fallen to the chamber to the point we are now experts in many different facets of community and business development. As we further engage in a digital world, we need to use tools as efficiently as we can. A decision based upon this new normal was that we could effectively operate two separate online calendars. As a business member association, the chamber operates a member-oriented calendar at www.bellingham.com. This meant the chamber needed to create a separate calendar for community events. To streamline the initiative, a website would be created exclusively dedicated to the calendar itself.

The calendar exists for engaging, organizing, and informing our community. We have partner organizations in the community that also operate calendars, such as Bellingham Whatcom Tourism. Their calendar at bellingham.org is a great tool for visitors as their calendar showcases many events that welcome tourists as well as county residents alike. Even though whatcalendar.com can be used by tourists, it is certainly not the primary use. We encourage our community events to post to both calendars as well as other community calendars. If you are in one of the smaller cities, be sure to post your event to the local chamber calendar. For those community events and fundraisers engaging the Bellingham region specifically, we ask that you add your events to the calendar, so we can all work together to help make this corner of the world an even better place.

As we move into fall, be sure to look for educational opportunities hosted by the chamber and a chance for you to network with other event coordinators. In the meantime, post your events to www.whatcalendar.com. The new and improved version should last us well into the future with a more stable internal structure. We would like to thank Print & Copy Factory for all their help in rebuilding the calendar and walking us through the decision points to find the best solution.

What To Do In and Around Bellingham June 1—3

Skyline Divide's rolling ridgeline is an excellent summer hiking destination for dogs and their humans.

Welcome to June, Whatcom County! For me, the beginning of June is the real start of summer and after a long, rainy winter, I am ready to celebrate the upcoming three months of sun! Let’s start summer off right by having some fun this weekend. Here are a few ideas of what to do in and around Bellingham June 1—3. And don’t forget to check out our full events calendar for all the fun happenings in Whatcom County.

Up Next Weekend

WhatcomTalk aims to be your source for positive information and events happening in Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden and throughout Whatcom County. If you have a suggestion for a post, send us a note at submit@whatcomtalk.com. For more events and to learn what’s happening in Bellingham and the surrounding area, visit our events calendar. To submit an event of your own, visit our events calendar and click on the green “Post Your Event” button.

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