Columbia River Arts and Culture Foundation (CRACF) board vice president Clare Hovland doesn’t think he should take a vacation until the nonprofit’s organization’s proposed performing arts and cultural center is built on the Washougal waterfront, no matter how long it takes.
That mindset is a microcosm of how the group has been approaching its work during the past three years.
“One of the things that we learned in our research is that the places that have been successful, like the performing arts building in Yakima … all of them had this dogged group of people that just kept going,” CRACF board president Martha Martin said. “And that’s what it is. It’s like a marathon — you just have to keep going. And we’re learning all the time. We’re still following our timeline. It got shifted in 2020, that’s for sure. But we’re still moving along.”
CRACF will hold its first fundraising event, “Taste ‘n Tunes 2022,” from 1 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20, at Marina Park in Washougal.
“We felt that this was the best summer to do it because things are starting to come back,” Martin said. “We were looking at the weather, of course, to make sure that we don’t get rained on. And we wanted to have it in the area that (the performing arts and culture center would be) predominantly located, or at least close by to where we want to have it, so people could see this awesome view and experience that beautiful river and just really experience a whole lot of real fun things.”