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Member Profile – Happy Tiers Bakery

November 15, 2022 | Kayla Anderson

Incline Village’s newest café, Happy Tiers, is finally up and running after overcoming various forms of adversity. Its brick-and-mortar location in the Christmas Tree Village serves up delectable cinnamon rolls, quiches, coffee, slices of cake, Doughboys doughnuts, and more every day of the week. 

Its owners Jason and Andrea Jurss are passionate when talking about their journey from whipping up cake batter in their kitchen to finally opening a physical café, that just continues to get better and better. 

“During covid we had 86 weddings cancel on us; it nearly killed the business because we gave all those deposits back since we knew that was the right thing to do,” Jason says. 

In March of 2020, Happy Tiers realized that they had to pivot quickly to stay afloat, and Andrea started making breakfast items and creative desserts like hot chocolate bombs to sell online and to her regular customers. 

“The idea to open a café came about at the start of the pandemic. I laid in bed and thought, no one’s working, there’s no cakes to make, there’s nothing to do. So, Jason said, ‘go make those breakfast items you like’. I did these breakfast packs for local clients for Christmas and Thanksgiving and Jason delivered them,” Andrea says.

However, Andrea knew her clients so well that telling Jason where to go was a little bit of a humorous challenge. “Jason would be delivering, and he’d say, ‘Where do I go?’ and I’d reply, ‘Go down Donna and find that brown door second from the left with the wreath on it’ because I didn’t know anyone’s addresses,” she smiles. 

Jason explains that Andrea would do these big pan quiches that feed a dozen people, then smaller groups who were here for a brief time requested personal ones that could go in a microwave or oven, ideal for vacation rentals. At the mention of it, Jason grabs a personal-sized crustless quiche for breakfast, the eggs fluffy and perfect, filled with slices of bell pepper and perhaps other veggies. Happy Tiers café also recently started serving crustless, gluten free and dairy free desserts and snacks.  

The process of getting a café open in Incline Village took the Jurss’s to their limits, though, despite the experience they had in running successful businesses in Florida where Jason is from. 

Both being from the East Coast, the couple met in 2010, the same year that Andrea’s parents Patrick and Patricia moved to Incline Village. Patrick (Andrea’s dad) had been coming to Lake Tahoe every winter since he was 16 to take a ski vacation. They spent their winters in Florida, which is where Andrea met Jason. Then when Andrea’s grandparents passed away, Pat and Pat decided to pick up and move Incline. Andrea followed her parents and moved to Incline with her kids in 2011, while keeping a long-distance relationship with Jason. 

In 2015, Andrea started making cakes for friends out of her home kitchen and word quickly spread about the quality, creativeness, and delicious concoctions that she made for the North Lake Tahoe community. She formed a solid relationship with the Chateau, who often refers their customers to Happy Tiers in their event planning process. Then in 2017, Andrea moved to Florida to be with Jason and design a high-end dessert menu for Jason’s restaurant called Artisan. However, she kept getting calls from clients in the Lake Tahoe area wanting her to do their cakes. It was a different clientele out there in the Sunshine State, and Jason saw more of an opportunity for growth in Incline Village. 

“When people flew Andrea out here to do their weddings (she did two at the Chateau while she was living in Florida), that opened my eyes to the possibility here,” Jason says. 

The couple moved back here in late 2018, Jason’s own dad and brother eventually following. 

“They all gravitate to us; we’re the nucleus of the family,” Andrea smiles. And grandparents on both sides love being closer to their grandkids who are in middle school and high school here. 

They planned to do winters in Florida and summers here for both businesses (Happy Tiers and Artisan) but then the pandemic hit. 

“I built nine multimillion-dollar concepts from the ground up. Andrea was going to do cakes and our goal was to wholesale. We were doing all the desserts for Granlibakken and local restaurants. Then covid stopped us in our tracks and we realized that we needed a direct-to-consumer concept,” Jason says. 

They found a spot to open a physical café in Christmas Tree Village, signed the lease in spring of 2022, built out the space, hired staff, and did a soft opening in April, and then it all came to a grinding halt. They were forced to shut their doors on June 10th. They were closed for the next 70 days, believing that they probably lost $3,000 in revenue per day that they could’ve made over the summer. 

“We were within eight days of closing for good and moving back to Florida, because everything we owned was invested in this business,” the couple says. 

Jason explains that here they were paying rent, but various county and local government entities were telling them different things about what they needed to be properly permitted, causing them to throw money against the wall while trying to appease them. During the process of trying to get reopened, Happy Tiers lost seven baristas, four bakers, and two dishwashers that the Jurss’s had hired and trained. 

“It’s like what Winston Churchill said, ‘If you don’t take change by the hand then it will take you by the throat.’ And Incline was taking us by the throat,” Jason says.

However, the couple is not the type to give up, and fortunately with weddings and events coming back on the scene, their clients and community saved them. 

“There was no telling me I was closing the business; I worked too hard to build it,” Jason says, crediting Andrea for being the driving force and talent while he is more of the behind-the-scenes operations manager. The couple saved money for payroll, bought a new oven, rehired staff, and is now fully open once again providing products at every price point from $1.50 biscotti to $4,000 wedding cakes. 

Jason says they are now focused on what is in the café’s four walls, building out their wedding design studio, putting art up on the walls, and working on their menus. They would also like to convert a corner of the café into an ice cream parlor and call it Happy Cones. 

“My parents [Pat and Pat], the community, and our VIPs helped this business tremendously,” Andrea says. 

“Incline’s our home, this is where we’ll live and retire. Andrea’s parents live here, my family moved here from Florida. It’s a relief that we’re open, and optimistic for the future,” Jason says. 

Happy Tiers Café is hosting its official grand opening party and first annual “Black Pie day” (a play off Black Friday a week before Thanksgiving) on November 17th. From 7:30am – noon get $6 off every pie! Happy Tiers is also offering open enrollment for its VIP program from Black Pie day up until the holidays.

Visit https://www.happytiersbakery.com/ for more information or visit Happy Tiers in person at the Christmas Tree Village. 

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New Issue of LIVE.WORK.PLAY Magazine is Out!

November 14, 2022 | Grace Hubrig

The LIVE.WORK.PLAY holiday issue is now available! Be on the lookout for it to hit mailboxes around 11/19, and you can view it online here.

The Holiday Issue includes details about Northern Lights Festival, Tahoe Film Fest, and Diamond Peak. In addition, it features interviews with Bowl Incline and Happy Tiers Bakery. Check out what’s happening in your community!

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IVCB Community Forum Recap 11-4-22

November 13, 2022 | Member Submitted

Did you miss out on the 11/4 IVCB Community Forum? Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered! You can watch the recap here.

To be alerted about future forums, subscribe to the mailing list by sending an email to ivcbcommunityforum@gmail.com.

The Incline Village/Crystal Bay Community Forum will be held the 1st and 3rd Fridays of the month at 9am in person and online using the meeting app Zoom. The Zoom meeting ID number is 815 3612 1755 and the password is 1864.

On Friday morning at 8:55am John Crockett or Amanda McPhaill from the library will start the meeting. Please join before 9am so we start on time.

If you are unable to join the Zoom meeting by computer or cell phone, you may still submit issues to be discussed to Denise Davis (ivcbcommunityforum@gmail.com).

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Pine Nuts – Secrets to Longevity

November 13, 2022 | McAvoy Lane

On the 30th of November I will be celebrating Mark Twain’s 187 birthday by observing some of the secrets to his longevity, a few of which we can share here… 

“You can’t reach old age by another man’s road. My habits protect my life, while they would assassinate you… 

As for drinking, I have no rules about drinking, when others are drinking, I like to help.  I have found that a tumbler full of whiskey in the early evening is a preventative against toothache.  I’ve never had the toothache, and I don’t intend to have one.

As for smoking, well, I came into the world asking for a light, and will probably go out blowing smoke rings.  But I’m smoking in moderation now.  I never smoke more than one cigar at a time, never smoke while asleep anymore…never refrain while awake.  This is a good rule.  It wouldn’t answer for everybody trying to get to be 187 years old, but it answers for me.

As for exercise, I’ve never taken any exercise and I don’t intend to take any.  Exercise is loathsome. I’ve never seen any advantage in being tired.  Whenever I get the urge to exercise, I go lie down somewhere until it passes away. Oh, and never put off until tomorrow what you can put off until day after tomorrow. Whatever a man’s age, he can reduce it several years by putting a bright-colored flower in his buttonhole.”

Yet even more than celebrating Mark Twain’s birthday, I will get to celebrate the 80th birthday of lifelong friend, Bonnie McLaverty, and she’s still very much alive, much like an uncorked bottle of champagne. I just wrote Bonnie a note, a note of acknowledgment for a life lesson learned so many years ago on a school bus ride with her, well, here’s the note…

Dearest Bonnie,

I learned a life lesson on a school bus ride with you to Del Rey Elementary on the morning after your father had died. I wanted so to say something comforting to you but could not figure out what it was I wanted to say, so I didn’t say anything. All that day, and beyond, I admonished myself for not having said something, anything, to acknowledge your sorrow. I made a promise to myself to never again deliberate what to say, but to step right in and say something, anything, from the heart.

Over the many years to follow, I have, in fact, found myself in that very position, and have stepped forward to offer condolence without hesitation or a moment’s thought as to what I might be intending to say. Expanding upon that notion, it might be safe to say that we can never go wrong, no matter what the circumstance, when we speak from the heart. Sometimes a simple hug will answer.

So, Bonnie, if I failed to say so on our school bus ride down Valley View Drive toward Del Rey Elementary on that morning 68 years ago, please do accept my belated condolences, for I did indeed feel great sympathy for you in the loss of your father…

Your lifelong friend,

McAvoy

Listen to the Audio

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History & Culture of the Washoe Peoples

November 13, 2022 | Member Submitted

Celebrate Native American Heritage Month by learning more about the history and culture of the Washoe Peoples at the library on November 16 at 4pm. Registration is recommended in advance: register here.

The Washoe Peoples presence at Lake Tahoe and surrounding areas dates back to time immemorial as they are one of the oldest tribes and languages in the Great Basin and Sierra Mountains. Gain a greater understanding of what the landscape, wildlife, and people who lived here were like in the past and how they have persevered to keep their way of life alive today.

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Member Profile – Bowl Incline

November 10, 2022 | Kayla Anderson

Originally published in the Holiday Issue of the LIVE.WORK.PLAY magazine, view it here.

On a midday Friday afternoon, the two giant bowling pins in a 4-10 split line the entrance of Bowl Incline. Inside, the Ohana Diner (featuring a menu designed by renowned chef Sam Choy) serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner in front of bowling lanes that are bright and welcoming, everything outfitted in a modern retro motif. Flat screen LED TVs throughout the alley show the latest sports games and are perfect screens, meaning it’s the best resolution you will find. One room has three pool tables, another has an arcade with crane machines, basketball hoops, and floor-to-ceiling PAC-MAN. Outside on the main floor is another open-air bar, an enclosed patio with community-engraved pavers, with bocce ball and cornhole. The newly retrofitted Bowl Incline also has a second floor now holding another bar, original quality Henry Miller tables imported from England, and two axe-throwing lanes.

Saddling up to the bar, the amicable bartender says that the most popular cocktails are the Sour Strike, “it’s like a flavored vapor”, and any of the Ballers are good as well as the Double Wood margarita because of the Li Hing Mui salted rim.

While talking about the drinks, owner Steve Tomkovicz warmly greets me and gives me a tour.

The Tomkoviczes have had a house in Incline Village for 12 years, moving here full time during the pandemic from the Bay Area. “The restrictions weren’t as bad here; we could take walks on the golf course,” he says. He and his wife Tracy rebuilt Bowl Incline, gutting the interior, tearing off the roof, getting new bowling equipment, furniture, and basically modernizing the space. The only thing they kept was the name.

Steve launched his first business when he was 10 years old, selling flowers on freeway offramps in East LA to support his mom. He went to colleges on football and rugby scholarships, always working three jobs. In 1983 he started an industrial supply company, and it took off; he had 350 employees and 10 locations across the country, doing $240 million in sales.

Then four years ago, his doctor told him that he had an enlarged aorta that could rupture at any time. Knowing that his life could be cut short at any moment, Steve reevaluated his priorities and thus sold his company to move to Lake Tahoe.

However, Tomkovicz isn’t the kind of man to sit around and wait for his heart to burst. He has been a hard worker his entire life and loves to be involved in his community and build teams. When his family moved to Incline, he saw a “For Sale” sign in front of Bowl Incline and decided that this would be his new passion project (although he admits that he’s still sad that he sold the industrial supply company that he built out of a pickup truck).

He emphasizes that money is not the driver in this venture, that he wants to provide a place for families and friends to go to disconnect from technology and connect with each other.

“We need to change how we de-stress, how we connect,” he says.

A spiritual man, Steve embodies Bowl Incline’s motto, “Peace. Love. Bowl.”, which is found on staff shirts and signs throughout the alley.

“Everyone has to treat everyone well in here. I’m a pretty simple person but complex in how I do business because everyone has to treat each other with love and respect,” he says.

The property included an apartment complex across the street, too, and they could’ve knocked down the bowling alley and built more housing but felt like if they did that then they’d be losing a huge community asset. Local businesses rent out the upstairs area for private parties, they regularly have live music, and their bowling leagues filled up fast. 

Steve loves dancing and says that he envisions hosting community events up in the lounge. He’d like to do a Frank Sinatra birthday celebration, invite people up to do some swing or dancing.

“This is a community space. Up here (in Incline Village) when the lights go out, there’s nowhere to go. Most places close at 8 or 9pm,” he says. 

Bowl Incline supports charity nights, hospital events, and provides another place to celebrate besides the Chateau and the Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe. Kids from the Incline schools even come clean the parking lot in exchange for bowling sessions. 

“We’re always thinking about how to give this community a center to celebrate life.”

And it truly is a family affair; Steve’s daughter Allison runs events, his son-in-law Josh runs the bars, and his wife Tracy is the financial wizard/operations manager. Throughout our tour, his son Steven is down on the first-floor bowling.

“Everything is new and it’s exciting for us. This is a place where you feel loved; and we have love for the Tahoe area. If we can create all that love between families and team members, this will be successful.

“I’m proud of what we’re doing. I’m 68 with a bum ticker and if I get to live around this and help people connect and practice kindness, then I’m good. Hopefully, we’re building a vision of love, excitement, and an escape from life but not each other,” Steve adds. 

For more information about Bowl Incline, go to www.bowlincline.com or visit the alley in person at 920 Southwood Boulevard in Incline Village.

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Incline Education Fund Updates

November 9, 2022 | Mary Danahey

Hi I’m Mary with the Incline Education Fund, a local nonprofit that support students, educators and parents here in Incline. Through our programming, advocacy and fundraising, IEF helps to ensure academic achievement and skill development across generations of Incline students. We have some exciting updates to share about each of the schools:

Incline Elementary School

Watch for info on a Thanksgiving Parade involving the amazing IES Makerspace.  It will be a not-to-be-missed event!

Love See’s Candy?  IES is hosting a fundraiser for the holidays! Order online here before 12/2.

Incline Middle School

The new Exploratory period at IMS had a very successful first term.  Students took classes in: swimming, world percussion, cooking, robotics, financial literacy, roots & shoots, or an internship at the bowling alley. The second session starts this week!

Incline High School

Save the date for the IHS Crab Feed – March 18, 2023 at the Hyatt.

In athletic news – the IHS soccer boys’ team are State Champs! And the girls team took 2nd. Noah McMahon took 1st at the XC state championships. Great performances for our small school!

Basketball tryouts are around the corner. Check IHS website for dates and times.

Do you have a career or job skill to share?  Become a part of Incline High School’s new Learning Through Interest/Internship program! Contact Deirdre Carney for more information. 

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The Local Lens – Winter Wellness & Conditioning

November 9, 2022 | Kayla Anderson

I’m so honored to be asked to be a guest contributor for the Local Lens! As I write this, it is Election Day and snowing like crazy. Hopefully you all had a chance to vote and are now patiently waiting for the ski resorts to open. Mt. Rose-Ski Tahoe opens this Friday, and Diamond Peak is still on track to open on Thursday, December 8th

However, while it may be tempting to go out and shred powder as soon as you can, you may not have your ski legs quite under you yet. Therefore, whether you are into winter sports or not, here are some pre-conditioning fitness classes and wellness options to get you looking and feeling your best during this early snowy season:

Warm Up with Indoor Pickleball at the Incline Recreation Center

If you’re looking to get out of the cold weather and work up a sweat, then play some indoor pickleball with your friends at the IVGID Recreation Center on 980 Incline Way. The three courts are open on Sundays from noon-3pm, Wednesdays and Fridays from 11am-1:30pm. 

The Rec Center also offers seasonal sports conditioning group fitness classes this time of the year that focuses on improving your strength, balance, agility, flexibility, endurance, and coordination. These classes include warm-up stretches, group drills, a 10-station circuit, and sports strengthening tips. Check out the group fitness schedule for these types of classes and others here

Or Get Into the Flow with a High Altitude Fitness Yoga Class

Rock climbing at High Altitude Fitness on 880 Northwood Boulevard is also a good way to get in shape, or you can work on improving your strength with a low impact yoga workout. HAF is open from 6am-10pm Monday-Friday and 7am-8pm on the weekends in the winter, and there are usually different kinds of yoga classes held there six days a week (reservations required). 

Tahoe Fitness Loft Offers Barre Classes, Too

To get a lean, mean skier’s or snowboarder’s physique, check out a barre sculpt class at the Tahoe Fitness Loft located on 760 Mays Boulevard next to the Glasses Wine Bar. Barre workouts incorporate ballet, yoga, and Pilates to improve posture and core strength. Spin and special Pilates winter sports conditioning classes are taking place right now, too. 

Already tired from shoveling snow? Get a massage. 

If you’re not that concerned about skiing or snowboarding this winter, but your muscles are tight from shoveling snow, then consider spending a day at the spa to stay relaxed and rejuvenated. Here are some local places that will leave you feeling brand new and ready for whatever elements Mother Nature throws our way:

Aloha Skin Spa

Pamper yourself with a one-of-a-kind body treatment or relieve muscle tension and improve your circulation with a relaxing massage at Aloha Skin Spa on 770 Northwood Boulevard, behind the 76 gas station. Hydropeptide facials, purifying body wraps, and a detox steam tent is also available at Aloha. 

Stillwater Spa at Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe

If you want to embark on a staycation where you can truly unplug and reset, then visit the Stillwater Spa at the Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe on 111 Country Club Way. Indulgent facials, flotation therapy, and deep muscle renewal massage packages are sure to make you feel glad you stayed in town. 

The Sanctuary Kings Beach

Over in Crystal Bay on the California/Nevada border (205 Stateline Rd.), The Sanctuary is all about protecting the mind, body, and soul with yoga, massage, acupuncture, facials, and reiki options in its bright, relaxing studio. But that’s not all…health professionals on staff also provide ayurveda, health coaching, nutrition counseling services, and naturopathic cancer care. They also have one of the best deals for locals who are into yoga- first time students can enjoy unlimited yoga for 30 days for $75.

See you at the gym, at the spa, or on the slopes soon!

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Pine Nuts – Putin & Sakharov

November 8, 2022 | McAvoy Lane

Back in July Vladimir Putin quoted and credited Mark Twain. At the time, I suspected he was reaching out, maybe not with an olive branch, but maybe with a twig. He said, “To quote Mark Twain, ‘The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.’” I was wrong.

Putin went on to conscript thousands of young men to fight in Ukraine, creating a brain drain the likes of which has not been seen since China took back Hong Kong.

With sophistication of weaponry, warfare has become less romantic. I can just hear this refrain from young twenty-somethings on both sides of any war, “I want to stand up for my country, but I definitely don’t want to be blown-up by a satellite-guided drone made in Iran.”

It might be safe to say that all the romance connected to warfare passed away with the arrival of the drone. I can’t imagine Mark Twain wanting to write about the war in Ukraine. In fact, I’m reminded just now of how Samuel Clemens felt about fighting in our Civil War, when the desire to kill people to whom he had not been introduced had passed away, and he seceded from the secession. Some said he was too irregular, even for the irregulars.

I believe in my heart that Putin should be reading Sakharov: “Peace, progress and human rights are three inextricably linked goals.” Then too, I had forgotten how Sakharov was not allowed to travel to Oslo to receive his Nobel Peace Prize. I only wish he were with us today.

Escalation is the dirty word of the day. It starts with one dirty bomb, a bomb combining radioactive material with conventional explosives, repaid by two dirtier bombs, followed by a flurry of nuclear bombs, launched with the words, “I’ll get you (insert your profanity of choice here), before you get me.”

Suddenly there is nothing left but cockroaches and, “Phantom of the Opera.” But wait! A Russian finger said, “Nyet!” Which in this instance means, “Not yet!” And we live to fight another day.

Isn’t it too bad that romance was ever connected to warfare in the first place? Warfare is nothing more than a street brawl made large, a street fight brought on by older men and fought by younger men. Or as our mutual friend Mark Twain characterized it, “…each nation knowing it has the only sane system of government, each despising all the others, each an ass and not suspecting it.”

I wish I could sit at the other end of that long table of Putin’s, just the two of us, and ask him to explain to me the value of his invasion, and how it is benefiting the world at large. I doubt his explanation would earn him a Nobel Peace Prize, though it just might earn him an Oscar.

I would love to know what Putin has been reading of late. I am quite sure it has not been Sakharov…or Twain.


Listen to the audio here.

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The Local Lens – Winter is Coming!

October 31, 2022 | Kathy Slocum

We’re thrilled to welcome guest author, Kathy Slocum, to pen this week’s Local Lens. She is a current board member and the publisher of our LIVE.WORK.PLAY. magazine. She originally moved to Incline Village in 1991 and has lived in the area since then, but returned to Incline Village in 2017. Please enjoy her article–
 
Greetings! Our weather is quickly changing, and winter will be here soon. We’ve got some great events coming this weekend. 
 
UNR at Lake Tahoe Ski Ball Fundraiser – Saturday, November 5 at 5:00 p.m.
Division 1 skiing returns to Nevada which is very exciting for our area. UNR’s new Athletic Director, Stephanie Rempe, has brought in Mihaela Kosi, who served as Sierra Nevada University’s (SNU) alpine skiing head coach since 2018. Mihaela will assume the same role with the revived University of Nevada Wolf Pack program. The addition of alpine skiing to the Wolf Pack varsity sports lineup is part of the University’s transition of assets and operations from SNU to the rebranded University of Nevada, Reno at Lake Tahoe. The SNU program has called Diamond Peak their training ground for many years. The UNR training program is undecided. Find out more about the Ski Ball, purchase tickets, or participate in the silent online auction here.
 
Over the last few years, I’ve trained with the Masters ski program offered by Diamond Peak Ski Education Foundation (ski team) and experienced the SNU athletes training. Their skill level is amazing. For all the aspiring ski racers, snowboarders, and all mountain skiers please consider joining one of the season long programs ski education programs with DPSEF.
 
Gather in Gratitude, Sunday, November 6
The 32nd Annual Tahoe Chocolate and Wine Festival is another great event I am looking forward to attending. Proceeds go to Sierra Community House whose mission is to connect and empower our community through family strengthening, crisis intervention, hunger relief, and legal services. Find out more and/or purchase tickets here.
 
Northern Lights Festival
IVCBA’s Northern Lights Festival begins Thanksgiving weekend and celebrations continue through December. Watch for the complete schedule of events in our upcoming issue of LIVE.WORK.PLAY. magazine, scheduled to arrive in your mailboxes by November 21. Visit www.northernlightstahoe.com for all the festival information and updates. I hope you enjoy the magic of the season.


As we approach the change of season and the winter months, I reflect on how much I love living in Incline Village, with access to amazing outdoor recreation and am reminded how fortunate we are. 


Kathy Slocum can be reached via email at kathy@ivcba.org.

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