Long road of tumor treatment ahead; supporters will try to pave way

PORT TOWNSEND — Two years ago, Renee Depew and her high school friends decided to apply for student exchange programs. All were accepted and offered choices of destinations. Depew’s choice was India.

She didn’t get to go.

Her friends went to Portugal, Africa and Indonesia, but Depew, a Jefferson Community School student, was unable to spend a year abroad due to recurring health problems.

After that, plans to spend part of the past summer working on an organic farm in Italy also fell through because of her health.

Instead, Depew flew to Rochester, Minn., to see doctors at the Mayo Clinic and under go surgery for a brain tumor, followed by weeks of radiation and chemotherapy.

She and her family won’t know if the surgery and post-operative treatments were successful until she returns to the clinic in a few months.

But they do know that the struggle against the tumor’s regrowth will be one that Renee will have to fight for the rest of her life.

To help her family with continuing expenses, Depew’s teachers and family friends have organized a benefit dinner, auction and raffle at the Northwest Maritime Center in Port Townsend next Sunday.

During the event, Depew — who turned 18 in June and who graduated from Port Townsend High School — will draw the winning ticket for the raffle prize, a hand-carved sandstone Buddha donated by an internationally known Japanese architect and his business partners, who heard about her situation and wanted to help.

“They’ve been very supportive,” said her grandfather, Jim Buckley, of architects Hiro Konosu and Mavis Mallon and Mallon’s husband, Steve Berg.

Architects

Konosu and Mallon’s firm, Lost Art Architecture, is based on Bainbridge Island.

Berg collects antiques and sculpture, and has an export business.

They came to know about Depew through Buckley, who lives in Port Townsend and designs and builds Rumford fireplaces through his business, the Buckley Rumford Co.

Buckley met Konosu after a client saw a Rumford fireplace in an Agate Passage home and ordered one for the house that the architect was designing for him in Takayama, Japan.

Learning that Lost Art had no one who was able to install the fireplace, Buckley volunteered to do it himself in exchange for travel expenses.

Konosu, known for Japanese fusion architecture, traveled with Buckley to Takayama, where he helped install the fireplace, then hosted a ceremonial dinner celebrating the first fire.

“There were no walls, but the fireplace was done,” Buckley said.

That trip three years ago was the foundation of a friendship among Buckley and his spouse, Bonnie Buckley; Konosu and his spouse; and Mallon and Berg.

So when a biopsy last June revealed that the Buckleys’ granddaughter had a grade III brain tumor and was headed to the Mayo Clinic, Berg said, “You’re going to need some money right away.”

No answers, until late

Depew had been in and out of Seattle hospitals for the past year seeking an answer to the question of what was causing her seizures. At one point, doctors told her there was no tumor; at another, that her seizures were psychosomatic.

Deciding to have a biopsy in June, she learned that she had a grade III astrocytoma that was operable — just barely.

“It was very frightening,” Bonnie Buckley said.

Wanting the best medical advice, the family made the decision to take Depew to the Mayo Clinic.

Three days after she was seen at the clinic, surgeons removed a 2.5-centimeter tumor, part of which was growing toward her frontal lobe.

Medical costs were covered by insurance — Depew’s mother, Charlene Buckley, works for Jefferson County Transit as a bus driver. But there will be long-term expenses for monitoring her condition.

“She’ll need MRIs every three months for years,” Jim Buckley said.

To help with expenses and show their support, the architects donated the Buddha, which has been exhibited at Maestrale, an import store on Water Street, and is now in the Buckleys’ yard.

Raffle tickets are $5, and will be available at the benefit, which was the idea of Bob Alei and David Miller, two of Renee’s teachers at Jefferson Community School.

The Buckleys credit Dianne Roberts and Len Goldstein of the Northwest Maritime Center for making the center available for the event, one of the first since it opened in September.

Tim Halpin and the Better Half are providing music.

Steve Berg volunteered to do the catering.

“The food is going to be wonderful,” Bonnie Buckley said.

________

Port Townsend/Jefferson County reporter-columnist Jennifer Jackson can be reached at jjackson@olypen.com.

More in News

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and docent Hillary Sanders talks about the urchins, crabs and sea stars living in the touch tank in front of her at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center. Pochert, who lives in Sequim, drove to Port Townsend on Sunday to visit the aquarium because the aquarium is closing its location this month after 42 years of operation. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Aquarium closing

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and… Continue reading

Tree sale is approved for auction

Appeals filed for two Elwha watershed parcels

Port Townsend City Council to draw down funds in 2025 budget

City has ‘healthy fund reserve balance,’ finance director says

Man flown to hospital after crash investigated for DUI

A 41-year-old man was flown to Olympic Medical Center in… Continue reading

Signal controller project to impact traffic

Work crews will continue with the city of Port… Continue reading

Cities, counties approve tax hikes

State law allows annual 1 percent increase

Health officer: Respiratory illnesses low on Peninsula

Berry says cases are beginning to rise regionally

A puppy named Captain Kirk is getting ready for adoption by Welfare for Animals Guild after it was rescued near Kirk Road. An unsecured makeshift kennel fell out of a truck on U.S. Highway 101 last month and was struck by another vehicle. (Welfare for Animals Guild)
Puppy rescued from wreck to be adopted

A puppy named Captain Kirk is about to boldly go… Continue reading

Festival of Trees raises record $231,000

The 34th annual Festival of Trees, produced by the… Continue reading

Man flown to hospital after single-car collision

A 67-year-old man was flown to an Everett hospital after… Continue reading

Lost Mountain Station 36 at 40 Texas Valley Road recently sold to a neighbor after Clallam County Fire District 3 was unable to recruit volunteers to staff the station. Its proceeds will go toward future construction of a new Carlsborg Station 33. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
District sells one fire station

Commissioners approve 2025 budget