Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business
www.tricitiesbusinessnews.com/articles/2134
Kennewick chiropractor Bob Tollison, 65, plans to retire later this year and pursue an encore career as a welder. (Courtesy Bob Tollison)

Chiropractor moving to metal manipulation

June 13, 2019

Practitioner to retire, return to first career as welder

When Bob Tollison, a

Tri-City chiropractor, wants a workout, he doesn’t head to the gym. 

Instead, his

preferred fitness routine is a visit to the Plumbers and Steamfitters Local

Union 598 in Pasco, where he dons his gear and perfects his welding skills.

The skills needed to

make an acceptable weld require flexibility, strength, concentration and

hand-eye coordination and beat pumping iron, Tollison said.

Welding is not just

an after-work activity for the 65-year-old Tollison.

When he retires from

his practice after his next birthday later this year, welding will become his

encore career. Or rather, a return to his first career.

Tollison attended

Columbia Basin College’s welding program in 1972 and his skills as a N stamp

(that’s “n” for nuclear) welder were in demand to build key local projects,

including the Plutonium Uranium Extraction Plant, known as PUREX, and the

Columbia Generating Station.

He also plied his

welding torch throughout the Northwest and Alaska, working on pipeline projects

and pulp and paper mills during the construction boom in the 1970s.

However, the big

projects ended with the arrival of the 1980s, he said.

That’s when Tollison

began to consider alternate career paths.

He became interested

in chiropractic care as result of debilitating back spasms he experienced

because of the long hours he logged as a welder.

Standard medical

treatments did not help and he only found relief after visiting a chiropractor,

he said.

In 1982, Tollison,

accompanied by his wife and two young children, packed up and moved to

Davenport, Iowa, to attend the Palmer College of Chiropractic.

After graduating in

1986, he moved to Arizona to begin an internship and start his practice. But

after a couple of years and wanting to be closer to family, the family moved

back to Tri-Cities.

Tollison has

practiced in the Tri-Cities for 30 years and has seen thousands of patients.

He currently

maintains a small office off Clearwater Avenue, with his wife working as office

manager. 

He works a reduced

work week, seeing patients on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

He’s looking forward

to hanging up his white coat in August when he turns 66. He said the business

side of running a practice has changed significantly in the last few years and

thinks this is a good time to close his office.

Tollison’s many

interests include hiking, biking, kayaking, preaching and using his FCC amateur

radio license. So why welding for his retirement?

“I have vacationed

across North America and Europe, so I don’t need to travel as part of my

retirement,” he said. “My family and my children are in the Tri-Cities. My

wife’s mother has dementia issues and needs our care. I don’t plan on welding

full time but instead I could consider it a high-paying vacation from my

retirement,” he said.

Like many who aspire

to an encore career, Tollison’s plan was years in the making. For the past 10

years, Tollison has been spending time in the union hall welding booths to hone

his skills.

The muscle memory of

using his torch to weave a stream of molten steel to fuse two sections of pipe

together has returned. Recently he passed a union test for welding carbon steel

pipes and he is now allowed to test to work for contractors who need welders.

“The great thing about union is that it doesn’t matter how

old you are. All that matters is how good you are and if can you do the job,”

he said.