Procrastination can be an enemy of progress, which is why we should make resolutions on New Year’s Day and set goals during the rest of the year.
One of my goals for the new year was to give a final rest to our long-standing business feature, called “Clark County at Work,” and replace it with something that would open up more expansive story possibilities. Beginning Monday, we launch a new feature called “Working in Clark County.” The title sounds familiar, and the new feature should feel that way as well. The twist is that “Working in Clark County” focuses not on businesses but rather on the people who work for those businesses.
Our profile subjects will be business executives, minimum-wage workers, or anyone in between. They will be employed by businesses, nonprofits, community organizations, or governments. We will ask them to share professional and personal insights and anecdotes about their jobs, their favorite hangouts, what they’ve done well and what they wish they could do over. Mary Ricks, the Columbian staff member who has tirelessly produced the “Clark County at Work” feature since 2008, will take the lead in producing the new worker profiles.
The quick-hit, heavily formatted “Clark County at Work” has been a staple of this newspaper’s business report since its debut on July 16, 2001. Since our first, painfully short, feature on Staircrafters, a stairway manufacturer still operating in Vancouver, we’ve run hundreds of “At Work” business features about companies ranging from a single employee to the large Pendleton Woolen Mill in Washougal,