TOM'S COLUMN: WE'RE BUILDING A BRIGHT FUTURE BLOCK BY BLOCK

Bob Levin and Tony Sisto represented different but equally energized segments of a growing community. And though they are gone, their strengths linger. Levin came to Clark County 12 years ago from Port Angeles to become president of the Columbia River Economic Development Council. He recently left t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Columbian (Vancouver, Wash.)
Main Author TOM KOENNINGER, Columbian editor and vice president
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Vancouver, Wash Columbian Publishing Company 06.02.2000
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Summary:Bob Levin and Tony Sisto represented different but equally energized segments of a growing community. And though they are gone, their strengths linger. Levin came to Clark County 12 years ago from Port Angeles to become president of the Columbia River Economic Development Council. He recently left the 225-member CREDC for a similar post with the 2,500-member council in Austin, Texas. "I feel like I'm going to the Super Bowl," he told The Columbian last month. Sisto moved from the National Park Service's Regional Ecosystem Office in Portland in 1995 to become superintendent of the Fort Vancouver National Historic Site. He has now exited the Vancouver job to accept a promotion to San Francisco, where he will be chief of concessions for national parks in six western states and the Pacific islands.
ISSN:1043-4151