Sound Community Bank Welcomes Amy Row as Commercial Loan Officer Sound Financial Bancorp, Inc.
SEATTLE, Feb. 19, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Sound Community Bank welcomes Amy Row, Commercial Loan Officer.
Row brings 30+ years of banking experience from retail to commercial banking, specifically specializing in commercial real estate and commercial & industrial (C&I). She holds several professional certifications in commercial lending, accounting, regulation, compliance, and structure. Row is a graduate of Washington Bankers Association’s Commercial Lending Development and Credit Analyst Development Programs, as well as a graduate of the American Institute of Banking. Row appreciates the Pacific Northwest and employment with Sound Community Bank. She said, “Sound Community Bank has integrity, is quality conscience and provides clients with the best possible products and services.”
New London A special committee tasked with a review of policies and practices of the New London Police Department has suggested the formation of a civilian police review board and a charter change to clear the path for creation of a police commission.
Months of work by the Public Safety Policy Review Committee is summarized in a 17-page report with a list of recommendations, with short- and long-term goals, aimed at providing more community oversight and police accountability.
The report, guided by the state’s new police accountability legislation, was submitted to Mayor Michael Passero this week.
The committee does not call for an outright reduction of the police budget but does advocate for a restructuring of police funds and a “holistic approach to budgeting for public safety and support services.”
New London Debbie Phillips and Annita Harris, lifelong friends and members of the Shiloh Baptist Church, are on a mission to bring joy in the form of holiday wreaths and decorations to those who might need a reason to smile after such a difficult year.
The Mystery Elves plan to deliver wreaths to every nonprofit residential site within the city, and a few beyond, as well as to state group homes during the next week. They re also providing wreaths to New London homebound seniors, veterans and cancer survivors who request them.
They ve put their elf ears on during the past week and approached local business for donations of materials with heartwarming results, Phillips said. The church agreed to let them use the Family Life Center as an assembly site, and during the past few afternoons, the elves have been personalizing the plain pine wreaths with ribbons, bows and other embellishments.