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Tuesday, May 16, 2023

'Recognizing the good': Awards honor community contributions




'Recognizing the good': Awards honor community contributions

By Starla Pointer, McMinnville N-R/News-Register, May 16, 2023

Stan Primozich, last year’s McMinnville Man of the Year, prepared to honor this year’s winner, Gene Zinda, at the Distinguished Service Awards banquet Wednesday night.

He lifted a thick sheaf of paper, indicating how many pages would be needed to list all of Zinda’s contributions over the last 60-plus years.

“Gene has given so much to this community and to all of us,” Primozich said.

The same could be said of all the winners honored at the DSA event: Junior Citizen Deven Paolo; Outstanding Farmers Marv and Georgia Bernards; and Outstanding Educator Kindra Butler; and Marianne Mills, Woman of the Year.

Woman of the Year was the final award presented at the banquet, hosted by the McMinnville City Club. Chelsey Nichol of the City Club summed up the evening by saying, “I’m thankful to live in a world with Marianne Mills in it … in a town with all our winners in it.”

The 2022 McMinnville Distinguished Service Awards event followed a tradition started by the McMinnville Jaycees in the mid-1950s.

After the Jaycees chapter closed, the DSA program was continued by a committee of previous winners, then by the Odd Fellows. This was the McMinnville City Club’s first year as host.

The evening’s keynote speaker, Dr. Scott Gibson, discussed the role volunteerism plays in building relationships and community.

Working together sparks understanding among people, he said. They may have different political or religious views, for instance, but they are working on a common goal.

We need to be open to diverse viewpoints, Gibson said. That will help counteract the polarization and separation that currently exists in this country.

Anger, lies, greed and the media try to divide us, he said; we need to combat that with community, service and friendship.

“We need to get together and listen to each other again,” he said. “Start by recognizing the good in people, even if they’re different from us.”

A longtime member of the McMinnville Lions Club, Gibson called for “re-energizing” clubs and organizations that perform community service. “Make service cool again,” he said. “Do something worthwhile while enjoying the company of others.”

The DSA winners did that, he said, and others should follow their lead.

Gibson prepared written remarks prior to the banquet, but almost lost them when a spill at his banquet table threatened to tear the printed pages to smithereens.

His notes saved, he opened with a joke about the growing presence of artificial intelligence. “I’m the last human speaker before ChatGPT takes over,” he quipped, adding — presumably joking — that computers may even someday take over his job as a physician who performs cancer screenings.

During the awards presentation, Primozich listed many of Zinda’s history of accomplishments: managing Skyline Manufacturing; founding the Rotary art and wine auction that supported scholarships and Rotary Nature Park; serving on the McMinnville Water & Light Commission for 15 years and on other boards such as the McMinnville Downtown Association.

He also led the Linfield Partners in Progress campaign; expanded the St. Vincent de Paul food pantry while president of that organization; and started a program to provide shoes for children at his Windemere real estate office.

The Man of the Year award came as a “total surprise,” Zinda said.

He said local residents had inspired him when he came to McMinnville in 1959. “I learned to give back to the community,” he said.

Woman of the Year Mills also has a long list of accomplishments in McMinnville, said Ronni Lacroute, the 2022 winner who presented this year’s award.

A 1972 Linfield graduate, Mills is a longtime educator who started her career at Amity High School and retired from Mac High after serving as one of the first female Oregon high school athletic directors. She went on to work for McMinnville Habitat for Humanity for six years, three as director.

After retiring from public schools, Mills also supervised student teachers at Linfield for 10 years and taught pickleball classes. She served on the McMinnville Public Library Foundation Board and First Baptist Church board, volunteered at Memorial Elementary School, where her granddaughters go to school, helped with elections, and other community committees.

As a P.E. teacher and coach in the 1970s, Mills worked with some of the first competitive high school sports for girls. “Girls didn’t have access to high-level coaching then,” Lacroute said. “Marianne committed to providing that for them.”

She was inducted into the Amity Athletic Hall of Fame in 2016 for those efforts.

As a counselor, tennis coach and AD at Mac High, Mills was “a leader in a field where women haven’t always had a role,” Lacroute said.

Mills said helping girls achieve on the athletic field was very important to her. “It was so rewarding seeing them have opportunities.”

She noted how she has kept in touch with many of her former students and players. “I like people. I valued relationships,” she said. “I think that shines through in everything I’ve done.”

Friends were among people who congratulated her after she was surprised to learn she’d been named Woman of the Year.

A member of a family with deep ties to McMinnville, Mills grew up in Waldport and came to Yamhill County for college. She said she’s glad she stayed in the area.

“This has been a great place to call home. So many opportunities,” she said in her acceptance speech.

“To live a rich life, you need to be involved with others,” she said. “I have been richly blessed to be a member of this community.”

Paolo, honored as Junior Citizen, has been active in McMinnville, especially in supporting young people learning about careers in the trades, since he and his brother, Keath, started Solid Form Fabrication. They host interns and contribute to Mac High’s career tech programs.

Deven Paolo also spearheaded the creation of a foundation that provides scholarships to students who plan to study trades. The goal is for it to give out $20,000 annually.

“College is not for all, and high schools didn’t have shop classes anymore,” he said of how he became interested in helping students.

He’s pleased by the results, he said. “The impact you see … it’s always cool to see success stories.”

He recalled his own inspirations for career and community service, including Larry Judd, who taught drafting and woodshop at Yamhill Carlton High School, and Coach Dean Heuberger.

In accepting the DSA honor, Paolo also thanked his family for its support: father Murray Paolo, who also set an example; his brother and business partner, Keath; and especially his wife, Randi, and children Kasen, a high school junior, and Ellia, a freshman.

Young Educator of the Year Butler is in her fourth year of teaching kindergarten at Wascher Elementary School in Lafayette.

She always knew she wanted to be a teacher, she said. Working at the Bear Hugs preschool as a McMinnville High School student only strengthened her resolve.

“I’m big on relationships and connections,” she said. “I love to build relationships with students, and every day I see I’m making a difference in their lives.”

The Bernards, Farmers of the Year, own and run Bernards Farm west of McMinnville. They took over the family farm and Wallace Berry Farm in January 2022.

They grow crops that they sell at farmers markets, supply to restaurants and offer at a farmstand in the vintage barn on their property on Highway 18.

Bernards Farm has been selling at the McMinnville Farmers Market for 22 years. Marv serves on the MDA’s market committee.

He joked that his role on the farm is “playing in the dirt.” His wife does all the rest, he said.

The role women play in farming is too often forgotten, Marv Bernards said. His mother, Chris, “built Bernards Farm,” which started by selling corn, then added bedding plants and hanging baskets. Now Georgia “keeps the engines of the farm running,” he said.

Both he and his wife said they are honored to be recognized — and honored to be part of the McMinnville community.

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FRONT PAGE PHOTO - N-R May 16, 2023, print edition: Marianne Mills walks through the crowd of supporters at the Distinguished Service Awards event May 10 to receive her Woman of the Year award. Mills has been a teacher, coach, athletic director, supervisor of student teachers and director of McMinnville Habitat for Humanity, to name just a few of her accomplishments. (Photo by Rachel Thompson/McMinnville N-R/News-Register

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Linfielder Marianne Mills saluted in June 2023 issue of FBC Tidings. Congratulations!