Rec Sports
Nov. 4 Election: Southern Valley County Recreation District
Two candidates are competing for one seat on the Southern Valley County Recreation District Board of Directors in the upcoming Nov. 4 election.
Incumbent Monica Gokey will face challenger Ben Oyarzo for a four-year term on the board, which is the governing body of the Cascade Aquatic & Recreation Center.
The five-member board is responsible for setting the strategic direction of the district and authorizing the use of property taxes it collects.
Early voting is open at the Valley County Courthouse from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Oct. 31. On Election Day, residents of the school district can cast ballots at American Legion Post 60 in Cascade from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Voter registration will be available at the polls with current proof of residence and photo ID.
Valley Lookout sent a list of questions to each candidate regarding their candidacy. Their exact responses are published below. Oyarzo did not return a completed Q&A, but provided a statement that is published at the end of Gokey’s responses.
Zone 5 Seat race – Monica Gokey vs. Ben Oyarzo

Why are you seeking election to the Southern Valley County Recreation District Board of Directors?
Gokey: I’ve served on the rec board for nearly three years and one of the things I’m most proud of is how our board has restructured the district’s annual budget to allot resources for capital maintenance costs – which, in the past, have largely been unforeseen and (quite frankly) terrifying. When I say ‘capital maintenance,’ I’m talking about the upkeep costs of running a gym and aquatics facility – things like replacing the dome, redoing the pool’s plaster, fixes to air pumps, the dolphin skimmer, and any of the items that keep our facility working. Strong financial stewardship is a major part of keeping this facility operational into the future. Our board has worked hard to ensure that reserves for capital maintenance are built into the annual budget – and that ethic of responsible fiscal management is imperative.
Do you have any specific goals you would like to help the district achieve? If so, please be specific and briefly describe how you might achieve them.
Gokey: In the three years I’ve served on the rec board, we’ve had major facility-related expenditures crop up every fiscal year. Two years ago (2024) we spent $55,000 to repair leaks in the pool deck. This year we spent more than $80,000 on a renovation of the facility’s loft and $30,000 on fitness equipment, with the help from a generous private donor for the latter. Big repairs/upgrades on the horizon include redoing the pool’s plaster and maintenance on the facility’s bathrooms and showers. Completing those kinds of capital maintenance projects without depleting the district’s financial reserves is the end goal. And with conservative fiscal management, I think it’s doable.
I’ve been a volunteer with the community ice rink for about four years. I adore our local ice rink, and I’d love to see our community get a permanent surface built that could serve as a pickleball/ballsport surface in the summer and an ice rink in the winter. That’s a long-term goal of mine.
What should voters know about you before casting their vote?
Gokey: Having the rec center here in Cascade makes our lives better, and I’m grateful for everyone – staff, patrons, summer guests – who help make this place so amazing. This fall all three of our kids played soccer through the rec district’s youth sports programming… and it was just phenomenal. Youth soccer enrollment has ballooned – so much so that we ended up having to split our age groups into two different teams to every kid could get a playing time during games against McCall and Garden Valley. All our youth soccer coaches are volunteers – incredible humans! – and I just feel so grateful to have this in Cascade.
There’s a perception that the rec district is just the aquatics facility and gym – and although that’s where the bulk of the rec district’s revenue goes, we also administer the Hasbrouck’s ski area, the community ice rink, youth sports (football, soccer, baseball), youth archery, the Killer Whales swim team, and a number of other programs. Our community of people makes it all work. Our human capital is top-notch, and that’s hard to put a price tag on.
Please provide your age, occupation, number of years living in the district, and experiences that you believe make you a qualified board member.
Gokey: I’m 40 years old and self-employed. My husband and I are cow-calf producers – our business is split between Cascade and Horseshoe Bend. I also work off-farm as a writer and radio producer. We moved to Cascade from Alaska nearly ten years ago .
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What does it take to be a board member? It mostly takes a commitment to showing up, learning, listening, and being willing to put in the time. It’s a reality that small rec districts like ours are always going to struggle to continue operating on limited resources. For the past two years, our board – with the help of rec patrons – has staged a fundraising gala to try to bolster our financial reserves.
I also want to emphasize that we are thrifty with what we have. Right now, for example, we have two pool lights with about 9000 hours on their working lives – the manufacturer’s recommended lifespan is 6000 hours. We’re looking at a $3,000 replacement cost for those two lights alone. We don’t replace anything until it’s failed or is on the cusp of failing – I mean it when I say that we are careful with how we spend public dollars.
The current board has a strong culture of fiscal stewardship, and that’s afforded us the opportunity to tackle some of our more expensive projects, like renovating the loft and completing other big repairs without dipping into reserves.
Anything else not covered in the questions above?
Gokey: When you look at why pools close, especially in rural communities, it’s almost always because maintenance costs outstrip available funds at some point. Everything is expensive when it comes to pools. (See my earlier note about $3,000 for two pool lights.) Conservative fiscal management is important in keeping this place operational for a long time to come, and that’s a principle I’m committed to as a board member.
Oyarzo: I’ve lived in Valley County for 5 years now. I want to be involved in my community and help in any way possible. With an opening on the SVCRD board this gives me an opportunity to be more involved. I am an active daily member at the facility and would like to be able to help the district grow and advance to offer as much as possible to our community.
Rec Sports
My Christmas wish this year? Less diapers, more sleep
Guy Dossi, Sports Editor
Dear Santa,
Well, it’s that time of year again – the time when hundreds of thousands of young children, and one 37-year-old sports editor, sit down to write you their annual letter. I know you’re busy fielding Christmas present requests, but I was hoping that maybe this year you could find it in your heart to make one or two of my wishes come true.
First, as the father of a 2-and-a-half-year-old and a 6-month-old, I want the same thing every parent in my situation wants: sleep. To say I haven’t had a good night’s sleep in a while would be an understatement.
I remember when we were a one-child family. Back then, I got plenty of sleep. When the baby cried, he needed to eat – a request only the lovely Mrs. Dossi could fulfill – so I simply rolled over and went back to sleep.
With just one child, if one parent needed a little extra R&R, the other could be on baby duty while the tired one caught some Zs. With two, that’s no longer the case. Sleep schedules are completely different, with one awake while the other is sleeping. There aren’t many time slots that allow Mama and Dada to get caught up on our slumber.
And there’s nothing quite like getting only a handful of hours of sleep before being woken up with a foot in my face or seeing a little boy’s smile just inches from my nose saying, “Hi, Dada.”
Speaking of my little boy, Santa, is there any chance you – or maybe even Mrs. Claus – could potty train him? I know that eventually he’ll be out of diapers. He can’t be going to the prom with his Huggies sticking out from his tuxedo trousers. But getting him to simply sit on the potty has been a battle we are just not winning.
Our little boy has become quite the talker and has an impressive vocabulary. But there’s nothing more demoralizing than changing his smelly, rancid diaper while he lies on his back saying, “That’s disgusting. That’s gross, Dada,” as I’m knuckles-deep in baby poo. I’m well aware it’s disgusting and gross. I don’t need the reminder.
We’ve tried potty training a couple of times, and each attempt has ended with the diaper going back on. At this point, I’d settle for him feeling comfortable using the cat’s litter box. At least it would be a step in the right direction.
Another thing I’d like for Christmas is for my little girl to stay this little. I won’t lie – the first few months of her life, she was not an easy baby. Her brother was the reason we wanted a second child, and she may be the reason there won’t be a third.
Then, one day, she went from being the worst baby imaginable to the sweetest, cuddliest, cutest baby I’ve ever seen. She just sits there, smiling and cooing, melting every heart in the room. Because she was so difficult early on, I’m really enjoying this stage and savoring just how adorable she is.
I know she’s going to grow, and those little coos will turn into words. While I’m excited for the day she says, “I love you, Dada,” I’m not looking forward to her discovering the dreaded word every parent fears: no.
So if there’s any way she could stay like this – at least until next Christmas – that would be great.
As for the lovely Mrs. Dossi, what do you get the woman who already has everything? She has two beautiful children and a husband who is constantly funny, never insensitive and just happens to be right about everything. You don’t need to bring her anything this year. Being married to me must feel like Christmas morning 365 days a year.
As you can see, Santa, my list isn’t very long this year. I would ask for the Dodgers to have a losing season, but I’m pretty sure you’re also on their payroll, so I’ll stick with realistic requests.
I look forward to a full night’s sleep, no longer changing poopy diapers, and being greeted every morning by the smile of my beautiful wife – not the cry of a little boy who doesn’t want to eat his pancake because the fork he was given was green instead of blue.
And even if none of my Christmas wishes come true, I’m still a pretty lucky Guy.
Merry Christmas, Santa.
Rec Sports
PROFILE | Red Star’s Damien Durand – from youth activity leader at 25 to Ligue 2 top-scorer at 30
“When your passion finally becomes your job, it’s an incredible feeling,” Damien Durand says in a recent interview. “At the age of 25, working as a youth activity leader, you tell yourself your chances are very limited.”
At 30 years-old, Durand is not meant to be here. At least, not according to the usual pathways. There was no academy conveyor belt, no early professional contract, no carefully managed ascent. Instead, there were years spent in the amateur divisions, balancing football with work as a youth activity leader in Morangis, playing for pleasure as much as ambition.
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And yet, midway through this season, Durand finds himself co-leading the Ligue 2 scoring charts and spearheading Red Star FC’s push at the top end of the table.
The Frenchman signed his first professional contract at 26, an age when many forwards are already peaking. Rather than trying to compress a career into fast-forward, he had to embrace each step. Discovered late by former Red Star manager Vincent Bordot while playing for Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois in the fourth tier, Durand stood out not through polish, but through honesty. “In terrible conditions, on a muddy pitch, I saw someone who didn’t hide,” Bordot recalled to Le Parisien. “He showed the simple pleasure of making runs, dribbling, playing football.” That simplicity has never left him.
Durand – an ever-present in Red Star’s rise
At Red Star, he became Mr Reliable. A number 7 whose qualities are deceptively effective. Compact, explosive over distance and difficult to read in one-on-ones, Durand thrives on timing rather than brute force.
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When current Rennes manager Habib Beye arrived in 2021 to steer a Red Star side to safety in the third tier, Durand was the main creative source. When Beye earned promotion to Ligue 2 with Red Star, the Frenchman was named in the Championnat National team of the season. When Grégory Poirier took the helm at the club and steered Les Audoniens to safety, it was Durand who had scored several key goals to keep the club in the second tier. At every step of evolution for Red Star comes the stepping up of their winger, nicknamed ‘DD7’ by his teammates and the club’s supporters.
Yet this season, the Frenchman, along with the rest of Poirier’s dressing room, have found yet another level. Eight goals in 16 Ligue 2 appearances have put him level with Saint-Étienne’s Zuriko Davitashvili and Troyes’ Tawfik Bentayeb. Sometimes confidence comes from experience, reliability, and the simple fact of taking pleasure in doing what you love.
GFFN | George Boxall
Rec Sports
Public Defender Melanie Sellers announces 2026 candidacy for Public Defender
Public Defender Melanie Sellers announces 2026 candidacy for Public Defender
Published 10:00 am Wednesday, December 24, 2025
District Public Defender Melanie Sellers has officially announced her candidacy for the 2026 Republican Primary and General Election. With the strong recommendation and support of retiring District Public Defender Jeff Kelly, Gov. Bill Lee appointed Sellers to the office of First Judicial District Public Defender effective March 1, 2025. Sellers will appear on the 2026 Republican primary ballot in Carter, Johnson, Unicoi and Washington counties to fill the remainder of Mr. Kelly’s unexpired term. Sellers is a seasoned attorney and a respected leader with more than 28 years of experience in law and public service.
“My leadership as District Public Defender is guided by a deep respect for the people we serve and the fundamental rights that ensure fairness in our justice system. I believe that careful, compassionate legal advocacy can secure those rights while also changing the course of a person’s life, strengthening families and improving communities. I strive to lead an office that values preparation, professionalism and empathy, where attorneys and staff are supported in providing meaningful, effective representation grounded in the Constitution. Justice is best served when every person is heard, their rights are fully protected, and each case is approached with care, integrity and a commitment to fairness.”
Sellers’ platform for District Public Defender centers on:
- Protecting constitutional rights and ensuring fairness in every case
- Treating every client with dignity and respect, regardless of charge
- Promoting professionalism, sound judgment and ethical practice
- Strengthening public trust in the justice system through consistency and integrity
- Mentoring and supporting attorneys and staff to do their best work
- Addressing barriers to client success before disposition
- Allocating resources to provide a meaningful opportunity for client communication
A longtime Carter County resident, Sellers is an honors graduate of East Tennessee State University and the University of Tennessee College of Law with a concentration in trial advocacy. Since bar licensure in 1997, Sellers has dedicated her career to criminal law, with more than 12 years as an assistant district attorney and more than 14 years as an assistant public defender. Sellers is particularly passionate about advocating for individuals facing challenges such as substance use disorder, mental illness or intellectual disability. She is a charter member of both the First Judicial District Felony Recovery Court and Northeast Tennessee Residential Recovery Court teams, which currently serve more than 130 individuals to support long-term recovery from substance use disorder and to reduce criminal recidivism.
Outside of her professional endeavors, Sellers is married to her husband, Rob, and is the proud parent of two sons, Bailey and Clay Gwinn. She has long been involved in youth sports, previously serving on the boards of several local organizations, including the former Carter County National League, the Cyclone Touchdown Club and the Cyclone Wrestling Booster Club. Additionally, Melanie served for five years as a commissioner on the Elizabethton Regional Planning Commission.
The First Judicial District Public Defender’s Office represents individuals who cannot afford an attorney in the General Sessions and Criminal Courts of Carter, Johnson, Unicoi and Washington counties. The office is currently averaging more than 5,700 cases per year.
Rec Sports
Mite 1 and Mite 2 Jamboree at the Ruk | North Shore Journal
SILVER BAY – The local hockey community gathered in force this past weekend as the “Ruk,” or more formally known as Rukavina Arena, transformed into a hub of competitive spirit and youth athleticism. On December 20 and 21, the arena hosted the 2025 Rocky Taconite Mite 1 and 2 Jamboree, marking the largest and most anticipated event on the program’s annual calendar.
The scale of this year’s jamboree was astounding, featuring a massive lineup of over 20 teams divided between the Mite 1 and Mite 2 levels. The event drew hundreds of families to Silver Bay, with young athletes traveling from throughout the Duluth area, as well as from Two Harbors, Hermantown, and Esko.
Silver Bay was well-represented on the ice, fielding a team at each level. For many of these local players, the weekend was the culmination of eight weeks of rigorous preparation. Since the season began two months ago, the Mites have been hitting the ice for early morning and evening practices, focusing on the fundamentals of skating, puck handling, and teamwork.
The hard work clearly paid off. Coaches reported being deeply impressed by the strides the players have made since their first practices in October. Beyond the goals and assists, team leaders emphasized that the athletes represented the Silver Bay program with exceptional sportsmanship and grit. “The kids have been working very hard in practice these last two months in preparation for this weekend,” shared Gus Engstrom, President of the Silver Bay Blue Line Club. “Needless to say, they represented themselves and our program very well. All of the coaches are impressed with the strides they have made so far this season.”
Executing an event of this magnitude required a coordinated effort from the entire community. Organizers were quick to credit the “behindthe-scenes” heroes who kept the tournament on schedule. High praise was directed toward the dedicated arena staff, whose maintenance of the ice and facilities at the Ruk ensured a professional environment for the visiting teams.
The jamboree’s success also hinged on a small army of parent volunteers. These community members filled vital roles, from staffing the bustling concession stands and greeting visitors at the welcome table to meticulously tracking game play in the scorekeepers’ box.
“There are a great number of people that helped make the jamboree run smoothly,” said Engstrom, expressing deep gratitude for the volunteers who handled the “various odds and ends” that come with hosting dozens of teams.
As the 2025 Rocky Taconite Jamboree concluded, the focus remained on the mentorship of the players. Organizers closed the event with a final thank you to the coaching staff, whose countless hours of volunteer time provide the foundation for the area’s youth hockey success. With the largest jamboree of the year now in the books, the Silver Bay Mite program looks forward to continuing its momentum through the remainder of the hockey season.
To stay updated on local schedules or to support youth sports, visit the Silver Bay youth hockey website at www.silverbayhockey.com.
Photo submitted by Gus Engstrom
Rec Sports
Metro Nashville Public School students’ artwork to be featured on new salt trucks
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Nashville is getting five new salt trucks to help prepare for winter weather, and some of them will be covered with artwork from some of Nashville’s youngest artists.
This is through a partnership between the Nashville Department of Transportation and Multimodal Infrastructure (NDOT) and Metro Nashville Public Schools. Elementary schools from across Davidson County submitted artwork to get their pieces chosen to cover the new salt trucks, but only five made the final cut.

“The kids loved it. We had a ton of pics to go through to get to the final five,” said Phillip Jones, the deputy director for NDOT. “Hopefully, we’re going to kind of deploy these five trucks in the area where these schools are, so hopefully these kids will be able to see their artwork.”
Metro Nashville leaders say they will reveal the full designs and their new names in January.
Copyright 2025 WSMV. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Regional Youth Assessment Center corporal hopes to provide familiarity, positivity during Christmas shift – Grand Forks Herald
EDITOR’S NOTE: This story is part of a holiday series that will run through Dec. 25 in the Grand Forks Herald.
GRAND FORKS — Though some work on Christmas out of obligation or financial strain, others choose to spend their holiday working to create a positive experience for those who can’t be at home with their families.
For a second year, Cpl. Lexi Smart offered to spend her holiday with residents of Grand Forks’ Regional Youth Assessment Center, which houses youth either in need of emergency shelter, detention or something in between.
“I know that this time can be really hard for the kids,” Smart said. “Some of them have been there a lot longer than others, and they are missing out on seeing their family. I wanted to be a smiling face that maybe can help brighten their day.”
Her family works to accommodate her schedule, which is something they’ve gotten used to over the years because another relative of theirs works as a firefighter.
Smart tries to spend the holiday providing normalcy for the kids while they’re at the center. Last year, she and a coworker bought gifts for the kids. Because they spend so much time together, Smart and her coworker had ideas for what the kids would like and what they’re most interested in.
“We wrapped them, too, so they got to have a little bit of familiarity with Christmas, they got to unwrap gifts,” she said.
The Regional Youth Assessment Center houses juveniles, typically between ages 10 and 17, who either need to be in detention throughout court proceedings, are in trouble that doesn’t meet the level of detention or simply need emergency shelter.
Smart has been working at the center for about two years, and as a corporal, she’s out on the floor, talking to residents, playing games with them and ensuring their wellbeing while they live at the center.
She decided to work there because she plans to become a math teacher after graduating college, and wanted more experience working with kids ages 10-17. Since taking on the role, Smart decided to pursue a criminal justice minor in addition to her math and education majors.
“Working here has inspired me to maybe want to be a math teacher at a correctional facility one day,” she said.
She finds value in trying to motivate and inspire youth. She also wants to make sure they feel comfortable and know they’re not alone.
“I can relate to some of their stories,” Smart said. “A lot of our kids, they go through really hard things in their childhoods. A lot of what they’ve been through has led them to where they are now.”
Many of the youth at the shelter haven’t gotten into any trouble, Smart said, but she feels even those who have deserve understanding and empathy.
“They know what they did is wrong, and I know what they did is wrong, but I think that there’s always a backstory to it,” she said. “You have to understand a lot of these kids were just dealt the wrong hand in life.”
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