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Camas High School students Tyler Hows and Maiah Sharma help sort boxes of food during the annual Stuff the Bus event, sponsored by the Camas-Washougal Business Alliance.
Camas High School students Tyler Hows and Maiah Sharma help sort boxes of food during the annual Stuff the Bus event, sponsored by the Camas-Washougal Business Alliance.

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October 11, 2018

Obituaries for Oct. 11, 2018

Read the following complete obituaries in the Oct. 11 print edition of the Post-Record. Beverly P. ‘Buff’ Toolson Beverly Patricia “Buff” Toolson, of Camas, died on Oct. 5, 2018. She…

October 4, 2018
The Panthers Brevan Bea takes a handoff from quarterback Dalton Payne against Prairie High, Sept. 29.  Bea and Peter Boylan share the running back position and push each other hard in practice when Bea plays defense.

Homeschooler helps Panthers succeed on field

The Washougal Panthers football team is on a two-game winning streak after beating their league rivals, the Ridgefield Spudders, 35-19 Sept. 29, in Ridgefield, and a homeschooled running back is a big part of the team’s success.

October 4, 2018

Camas budget heats up

For Camas City Council members, it may seem like it’s always budget season. For interested citizens, however, it’s just beginning.

October 4, 2018
Camas City Council members, Shannon Turk (left), Melissa Smith (center) and Don Chaney (right) gather at the council's regular meeting, Oct. 1, at Camas City Hall.

Hunt on for new Camas mayor

Along with drumsticks and mashed potatoes, Camas residents will be getting a new mayor the week of Thanksgiving.

October 4, 2018
Jerry Nichols, a retired Camas paper mill worker, took this photo of the inside of the Georgia-Pacific Camas paper mill in the 1980s, when the infamous "Roaring 20" office paper line first started up. The company shut down that paper line, as well as the pulp mill, on May 1. (Contributed photo courtesy of Jerry Nichols)

Federal aid for mill workers up in the air

Five months after the May 1 beginning of a staggered layoff affecting nearly 300 employees at the Georgia-Pacific paper mill in Camas, displaced workers are still waiting to hear if they might receive Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) benefits from the federal government.