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                                 Woman of Achievement Jean Lacey inherited her love of service from 
                                 her parents.  “My mother had a saying, ‘You must 
                                 pay rent for the space you take on this earth and the only way you 
                                 can really do that is by doing good deeds in your community.’  
                                 That was a creed in our family.”
                                 
                                 A native of Canada’s Vancouver, Jean moved to America’s 
                                    Vancouver in 1950 where, for 19 years, she served as the first 
                                    Executive Director of YWCA Clark County, one of the co-sponsors 
                                    of the Woman of Achievement celebration.   
                                     
                                    Her husband understood.  John William Lacey was an executive at Portco Packaging in
                                    Vancouver.  “He was a wonderful man,” Jean said.  “He understood me and supported
                                    me in all my endeavors.”    They had two children:  a daughter, Meridee Jean, who
                                    died in infancy, and a son, Clark.                 | 
                              
                           
                            
                              
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                        Jean was working for an insurance company she applied to become Executive 
                           Director at the YWCA.  Under Jean’s leadership, the YWCA 
                           reached out to the community in unprecedented ways.  Recognizing 
                           an increase in abuse toward women, she established the Safe Choice Domestic 
                           Violence Shelter.   She recalled, “The YWCA didn’t 
                           have the money [to rent the house], so I turned to my husband and son.  
                           Half an hour later, they came to me and said ‘We know you’d 
                           like to do this, and we know it’s needed.  So that’s 
                           your Christmas present -- three months rent.’”  
                        
                        Jean pioneered other programs, reaching out to women in jail and to teenagers.  Developing
                           the YWCA’s teen program “was a wonderful thing,” Jean said, adding that she got “surrogate
                           daughters….I still hear from some of them.”  
                        
                        Jean went on to serve as a consultant for the YWCA on the national level and in Canada
                           and 19 other countries.  
                        
                        After her son served in the U.S. Air Force, she went into business with him and they
                           founded Cascade Equipment Service.  They worked together until his death in 2004. 
                            John, her husband of 63 years, had died one year earlier.  
                        
                        Jean was instrumental in establishing Vancouver’s Sister City relationship with Joyo,
                           Japan.  She served on Washington Governor Albert Rossellini's Status of Women  Commission,
                           Oregon Governor Tom McCall’s Drug Commission, Vancouver Mayor Al Angelo’s Teen Commission,
                           Clark County’s Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) Commission, and the
                           City of Vancouver International Affairs Commission, as well as being a charter member
                           of Vancouver’s Fourth of July Committee.  In addition, she has served on the boards
                           of Soroptimist International, Meals on Wheels, N.A.A.C.P. of Vancouver, the Fort Vancouver
                           Seaman’s Center, and the Salvation Army.
                        
                        Jean has sparked a spirit of volunteerism at Cascade Retirement Inn, where she now
                           lives.   Jean formed a crocheting and knitting club whose members sew baby caps for
                           infants at Southwest Washington Medical Center.   Jean said proudly, “The ladies are
                           so excited about it because they are thinking about new life.”
                        
                        Over the years, Jean has been recognized as Clark County’s First Citizen and received
                           the Woman of Achievement award from the Vancouver chapter of Business and Professional
                           Women.  She was also named Soroptimist of the Year for the Soroptimist Northwest Region.
                        
                        Jean observed, “John Dunne said that no man is an island until himself.  I never felt
                           that I owned those awards, because it’s the people you work with and help in the community
                           that get you there.”
                        
                        At the vibrant age of 94, she also offered some advice to young people:  “Take the
                           word no – and the word never -- out of your vocabulary.  Look to the future.  I know
                           that night will come, but there’s always another day.”