David B. Bentley pushed to get the "Friendship Bridge" across Valley
Creek Estuary built as a symbol of the intangible "bridge" he strove to build
between Mutsu City, Japan and Port Angeles, Washington. Bentley passed away in
February of 2007 and was the founder of Peninsula International Relations
Association (PIRA), the group formed to establish the exchange programs and
sister city relationship between Mutsu and Port Angeles. Bentley formed PIRA in
1991 after he traveled to Mutsu City and established the foundation for the
relationship. In1994, the first of many groups of Japanese students came for a
visit to

experience American life in Port Angeles. The relationship between the cities
was formalized in 1995. The bridge was built in celebration of the fifth
anniversary of the group. "The bridge was really his idea that he hatched, and
he plowed it through the whole way," Tad Price, longtime friend of Bentley's and
former PIRA president, said. "He's the one that got all the volunteers and got
the materials donated. That was his baby. "This is his legacy." Chuck Leber, the
current president of PIRA, said that, at his death, Bentley was working to
establish a foundation that would pay the exchange program between the two
cities. "His interest was establishing a foundation that would be pretty
active." "He was a big guy with an even bigger heart." The 38-foot, 6-inch
pedestrian bridge was completed in 1999. It spans Valley Creek and was
constructed to complete the $1.5 million Soroptomist International of Port
Angeles project to transform the K-Ply mill's former log yard into a natural
estuary habitat at the mouth of Valley Creek. The project, just west of downtown
Port Angeles business district, was built through volunteer work and donations.
The form of the bridge represents a handshake between the people of Port Angeles
and those of Mutsu City, Japan, which is on the northern part of Honshu Island.
The bridge was the outward sign of what Bentley strove to accomplish on a deeper
level. "What he always told me was that he believed if people would sit a table
and talk, we could solve all of our differences," said Price. He just wanted to
get people together so they could understand each other and talk. "Mainly that
effort was aimed at kids. He's got a lot

of
friends in Japan." Students, ranging in age from 6 to 75, from Mutsu City come
to Port Angeles to get a taste of American culture and North Olympic Peninsula
natives visit to learn about Japanese culture. "We've had five Port Angeles
mayors that have made the trip to Japan, and that is because of Dave's work,"
said Price. Understanding of other culture was the drive behind Bentley's
passion for the organization. "He would take some the Japanese men out fishing
with some of the older retired men here, and they had in an instant friendship,"
Price said. "They accomplished more in 10 minutes than a group of men in suits
sitting at a table with piles of paper could accomplish in hours." Bentley was
born on July 5, 1942, in Glenoma. He graduated from Highland High School in
Yakima in 1961 as an honor student and earned a degree from Yakima Community
College. Bentley married Barbara Johansson of Port Angeles in 1981. He had come
to Port Angeles in 1975 to open First Federal Savings & Loan's east side branch.
He worked from 1983 to 1986 as a private business consultant. In 1986, he worked
as vice president and an area manager of Sterling Savings in Port Angeles.
Beginning in 1991, he served as a financial advisor with Ameriprise Financial
Services. Bentley was also a member of the Port Angeles Rotary Club.
Peninsula Daily News, February 22, 2007