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Centralia-Chehalis Chamber of Commerce Announces New Director at Annual Banquet

Mar. 21—The Centralia-Chehalis Chamber of Commerce unveiled Cynthia Mudge as its new executive director during Friday's annual chamber banquet following the departure of longtime director Alicia Fox, who led the organization for 10 years.

The event also saw Providence Health System announced as the Business of the Year.

"We closed a chapter with Alicia Bull as our executive director for 10 years, which is longer than the average director, and we were lucky to have her for a full 10 years," Amanda Singleton, chamber board member and past president, told The Chronicle. "And it was a really great opportunity to introduce our new director Cynthia Mudge, and we are really excited to see what she has to offer our community."

Mudge said she grew up in Seattle, but after her time as an adolescent, her parents bought a farm in the Lewis County area and spent the rest of their lives in the community.

She said they fell in love with the area.

Now, Mudge will live at the farm she owns with her sister.

"I get to live on the farm and have goats and sheep, and my sister and I — she's 10 years younger — we never had the chance to live near each other as adults," Mudge said at the banquet. "So I'm really excited about being here and learning more about the community that my parents loved so much. ... I want to get your thoughts about where you want to be and where you want to go. So thank you so much."

Hotel Washington's upstairs event room was packed Friday night as more than 250 Centralia-Chehalis Chamber of Commerce members and guests crammed into the space.

The room was lively and active, with attendees networking and celebrating their hard work over the year in the kind of event that has become rare in recent times due to the pandemic.

"We were still booking people who were trying to come in hours before," Chamber Board President Lindy Waring told The Chronicle. "We were still selling tickets an hour or two before the event, and we could not squeeze any more in there."

In fact, there were so many people who wanted to participate that chamber representatives were adding chairs to already full tables to fit as many people into the event as possible.

With tickets set at $50 a seat, or $300 a table, proceeds from the ticket sales were set to pay for the event's overhead, but then any extra money made went into the fund that pays for the organization's operational costs.

But the event wasn't just a vehicle to help pay for the chamber's day-to-day work. It was also a scholarship fundraiser for the Rob Fuller Scholarship Fund.