
The Board of Directors has nominated eight members of the Fellowship to serve as our Settled Minister Search Committee. The signed members of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Corvallis will vote on whether to approve the formation of this Committee at the UUFC Annual Meeting on May 17, 2026. The eight nominees are listed below, along with biographical introductions they each provided.
Gary Barnes
I joined the UUFC in 1991, and I have been involved in many aspects of the fellowship over that time, including singing in the choir and providing many other musical contributions, volunteering in RE, serving on the UUFC Men’s Retreat team, serving as a member of the Committee on Ministry for over a decade, and on the team that created the current UUFC Covenant.
I recently retired from a career as a social worker, which has given me more time to do the things I love and value: spend with my family and friends, play music, read and write, cook, be outside, watch Baltimore Orioles baseball, and volunteer where I think I can make a contribution.
I am very honored and grateful to be invited to be on the search team, which is so important to the health and future of our religious community. I agreed to take on this because I now have the time and flexibility to follow through on the commitment. My skills and experience seem to line up well with the task, even though I obviously also have so much to learn. I had a career of trying to make the world a little better by advocating for people with less power and privilege, and tried my best to listen, observe, and set aside judgment so that I could see the unique value that each person brings to this life. Through that lens, the amazing diversity, talent, and resilience of people is special. I often think this when watching the congregation from the back row of the choir on Sundays. In addition to working with individuals, I have experience advising work teams and have taught leadership skills, which could be an asset to the ministerial search team.
Russ Born
Russ is a transplant from southern California who has lived in Corvallis since 1994. He has been a UU member for 10 years. He will soon be retiring from a 30-year career in IT at Oregon State University, and finishing his term as president of the SEIU sublocal there. He is an active member of the Rotary Club of Corvallis After 5 and the Mankind Project, and has coached Special Olympics for 30 years. His interests include hiking, camping, motorcycling, golf, and theater–as a spectator, not a performer.
Molly Curry
Hello, I’m Molly Curry. I am excited for the work the Search Team will be doing this year! I have been coming to the UUFC since 2016.My roles at the Fellowship include Religious Exploration teacher, Connections Council co-lead, as well as a facilitator for Queerly Beloved, and membership in the neurodivergent group and a chalice circle. It is a true privilege to be asked to work with, and guide, the congregation to find a settled minister for the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Corvallis.
Tim Emery
The UUFC has been a home for me for forty years. After living in the San Francisco area for most of my life through university I was happy to come to Corvallis for graduate school in 1976 and then a career at HP. The UUFC was not a part of the picture until 1986 when my two kids were three years and three months old. Living across the street from Craig and Nancy Leman I was aware of the UUFC and it was Nancy’s encouragement that got me here in September 1986 on the day that the new building was dedicated. Early in those years I spent time in RE and as my kids grew volunteered in the toddler room to continue learning from the young ones.
Anna and I met when her daughter was nine and it was rewarding and challenging to support Star through her growing up. The UUFC was very important to her and to us in those years.
The UUFC has supported us through several crises for which we are thankful.
Over the years I’ve been a member of the mowing crew (May the Makita Be With You), served on the Nominating committee twice, served on the board as treasurer and for the last several years been part of the sound and video crew.
A ministerial search is an infrequent event and I’m happy to participate this time around. My personal perspective of the fellowship over forty years will be a contribution to the team.
Priscilla Galasso
Priscilla is currently serving her second term as Secretary of the UUFC Board. She sings in the choir, is a Spirit Play guide in RE, volunteers in the office twice a week, leads a Chalice Circle, attends a second Chalice Circle, and is on the Women’s Retreat Team, the Justice Theater Team, and the Adopt-a-Highway Team. She became a member on December 21, 2021 and earned the nickname “The Priscillatator” from the Women’s Retreat team when she began her leadership journey here. She was on the Nominating Committee before being elected Secretary. Being on the Search Committee is an opportunity that will allow her to offer her knowledge of the Fellowship’s unique characteristics and needs over the past five years. Her administrative skills come from work experience as an Office Manager for a land trust and the Operations Supervisor of the largest children’s theater organization in the nation. She was on a Search Committee for a minister once before, in the Episcopal Church she attended with her family 35 years ago. She is dedicated to offering her skills to the Committee’s tasks and abiding by the covenant they will create. She hopes to create strong connections with her Committee colleagues that will enable the group to encourage one another to do their best work with commitment and joy. She is honored to be given the Fellowship’s trust and looks forward to taking on this position, serving the community she has come to love so deeply.
Shikha Gottfried
UUFC has been my first UU home for over two decades. We came seeking common ground to raise our daughters (then 1 and 3) in a community that would help them become the kind of human beings I wanted more of in this world. In that process I was surprised to discover that UUFC was what I needed too.. without even knowing it!
I’ve found much food for thought in many of the Sunday services, especially when hosting Post Sermon Discussions to contemplate perspectives with others. Similarly, growing new Chalice Groups has been a powerful way to build deeper connections to people. Over the years I’ve participated in many different groups and events, helping out and learning about myself and others along the way. But the biggest part of why I stick around are the relationships… there are many good people here.
Outside of UUFC, I enjoy being a Master Gardener through the OSU Extension Service, teaching others how to grow their own food. I’m partial to the magic of starting plants from seeds and anything else that helps me reuse nature’s bounty. I also teach at times at Crossroads Conversation School, where it’s been a particular pleasure for me to connect with women from many different countries, all here searching for ways to belong and seeking skills to make the process easier. I use my time in the classroom to surreptitiously introduce feminist ways of being and encourage independent thought.
I’m “retired” from a very left brain centered career as a software engineer and find my time spent on more physical pursuits, despite my body aging which brings its own new challenges. Sometimes weeding can feel like a contact sport! Two beautiful daughters have grown and flown, so the mothering portion of my life has turned a corner. I’m *sure* they appreciate all my advice via text.
I don’t feel like I have free time to add more activities to my plate but this particular role to be a part of the Search Committee for our next minister is one that I couldn’t turn from. I plan to enter into this journey with curiosity-to uncover where we’ve been as a congregation and how we think we need to be and grow in this ever changing world. There are many perspectives to consider, and I look forward to conversations with each other as we all look to our future together.
Rachel Houtman
Rachel Houtman has been a member of the UUFC for 13 years. She has lived in Corvallis since 2005 and currently shares a home with her parents and three children. Rachel was raised in UU congregations from the age of 5, first in Madison, Wisconsin, followed by 14 years in the congregation in Bangor, Maine. She moved to Corvallis with her family in 2005 and attended services at the UUFC sporadically while working and completing a master’s degree in Forestry in 2011. In 2013 she became a member of the congregation, a year before her first child was born. Over the years she has served on the Program Council, as a youth advisor, run cash registers at various events, and facilitated a youth OWL program. The responsibility task to a group of congregants in the search for a new minister is weighty. This liminal space can create excitement and trepidation about what is to come. Rachel holds this as a time to open to what comes next for our congregation and is excited to be a part of this work.
Joyce Standing
Joyce Standing spent her first eight years on a farm on Stahlbush Island just east of Corvallis. Her family moved to Portland where she went to school in David Douglas School District. She returned to OSU for her BS in Elementary Education. After completing her MAT at Lewis & Clark and four years teaching in Beaverton, she and her husband moved to Kirkland, WA where Joyce lived until 2023 when she returned home to Corvallis once again. She taught fourth-sixth grade in public and private schools for twenty-five years before starting her own private tutoring business which she continues part-time today.
The UUFC felt welcoming and positive to Joyce from the moment she walked into the foyer two years ago. She enjoys learning more about being an active UU member and has held the Membership Lead for a year and a half. The idea of exploring values and beliefs along with her strong sense of connecting with others is what drew her to accept a role on the Search Committee. She looks forward to meeting others, listening to ideas, sharing opinions, and learning more about what it means to be a member of our thriving fellowship.