a growing hunger

2
V ALLEY R ECORD SNOQUALMIE INDEX HOLIDAY PAGES 6, 12 ON THE SCANNER 13 OBITUARIES 13 CLASSIFIED ADS 15 MOVIE TIMES 14 SUDOKU 14 Vol. 97, No. 28 BUSINESS DIY dollars: Valley group explores barter with exchange founder Page 5 SPORTS Get ready for winter season with Wildcats, Red Wolves team preview Pages 7-11 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2010 DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM 75 CENTS YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE NORTH BEND FALL CITY PRESTON CARNATION Follow us on Facebook and Twitter City, crews say dilapidated fire station must be replaced Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo Snoqualmie Tribe Food Bank Manager Fred Vosk readies a box of basic food that all clients receive. Anyone may “shop” the rest of the facility for fresh produce and other needed items. The Carnation food bank is among Valley non-profits that have seen increased need this season. North Bend family hopes TV segment brings answers BY SETH TRUSCOTT Editor Twenty-four years after he was murdered on a rural road near Lake Alice, Tod Berkebile’s killer is still at large. With the 1986 Snoqualmie slaying still on the King County Sheriff ’s Office cold case list, Berkebile family members hope that an upcoming televised seg- ment on “Washington’s Most Wanted” will uncover clues and spark progress. “We need to get a lot of Valley viewers,” said Berkebile’s sister, Deborah Reed. “Someone knows something and it has gone on far too long.” Tod’s story will air at 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Dec. 10 and 11, on Q13 FOX, and at 9:30 p.m. on Joe TV. The 17-year-old North Bend student dreamed of becoming an engineer or a bot- anist. He was a hard-working student and State’s ‘Most Wanted’ looks at ‘86 Valley killing Valley’s food banks see biggest demand ever in 2010 BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Terri Langley took a deep breath and then hoisted a huge box loaded with groceries over the threshold of the Mount Si Helping Hands Food Bank. With another effort, she pushed the box onto the sidewalk, then went back inside for more. It was the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, and Langley was looking forward to making a holiday meal for her family of four. Langley has been coming here for six months, since she moved to the area. She has been unable to find work, but is grateful to have found the food bank. “This is a beautiful place that helps keep us all fed,” she said. A few minutes later, a young couple came out, arms loaded with provisions. Both the young woman and the man, a North Bend native, believe the food bank has great- ly helped them out. Next was an older couple, a mother with her pre- school-aged daughter, and two men shopping for a large family. They are of all ages, and from a variety of ethnicities and circumstances. A growing hunger SEE HUNGER, 3 SEE STATION, 4 www.lesschwab.com from all of us at Les Schwab North Bend HAPPY H0LIDAYS 610 E. North Bend Way North Bend 425.831.6300 437063 TOD BERKEBILE $5.2 million bond would end drips, rats and safety fears at 1939 building BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter North Bend’s fire station is no place to be in an emergency, maybe not even on a good day. Located next to City Hall, the building has leaks, rats, a floor drain directly to the sewer system, loose windows, an overtaxed elec- trical system and almost no insula- tion or storage. It sits in a flood- plain, and is so unstable that engi- neers estimate a third of it would collapse in another earthquake the size of the 2001 Nisqually quake. “When this was built ... it was never intended to be staffed full- time. This was a volunteer sta- tion,” explained firefighter Bob Butterfield on a tour of the sta- tion’s hazards and assorted repairs that firefighters have had to make do with. The station badly needs fixing up, but the building is past its prime. The two sections were built in 1939 and 1970, so small fixes may outlast the building itself. “You’re talking about an awful lot of repairs and an awful lot of money,” said Mayor Ken Hearing. Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo Firefighter Bob Butterfield shakes a loose window in living quarters at the North Bend Fire Station. A new station is the subject of a $5.2 million bond. SEE KILLING, 4

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A look at increased demand for Snoqualmie Valley food banks

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VALLEY RECORDSNOQUALMIE

INDEXHOLIDAY PAGES 6, 12 ON THE SCANNER 13 OBITUARIES 13CLASSIFIED ADS 15 MOVIE TIMES 14SUDOKU 14

Vol. 97, No. 28

BUSI

NESS DIY dollars:

Valley group explores barter with exchange founder Page 5

SPOR

TS Get ready for winter season with Wildcats, Red Wolves team preview Pages 7-11

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2010 DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM 75 CENTS

YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE NORTH BEND FALL CITY PRESTON CARNATION

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter

City, crews say dilapidated fire station must be replaced

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo

Snoqualmie Tribe Food Bank Manager Fred Vosk readies a box of basic food that all clients receive. Anyone may “shop” the rest of the facility for fresh produce and other needed items. The Carnation food bank is among Valley non-profits that have seen increased need this season.

North Bend family hopes TV segment brings answers

BY SETH TRUSCOTTEditor

Twenty-four years after he was murdered on a rural road near Lake Alice, Tod Berkebile’s killer is still at large.

With the 1986 Snoqualmie slaying still on the King County Sheriff ’s Office cold case list, Berkebile family members hope that an upcoming televised seg-ment on “Washington’s Most Wanted” will uncover clues and spark progress.

“We need to get a lot of Valley viewers,” said Berkebile’s sister, Deborah Reed. “Someone knows something and it has gone on far too long.”

Tod’s story will air at 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Dec. 10 and 11, on Q13 FOX, and at 9:30 p.m. on Joe TV.

The 17-year-old North Bend student dreamed of becoming an engineer or a bot-anist. He was a hard-working student and

State’s ‘Most Wanted’

looks at ‘86 Valley killing

Valley’s food banks see biggest demand ever in 2010

BY CAROL LADWIGStaff Reporter

Terri Langley took a deep breath and then hoisted a huge box loaded with groceries over the threshold of the Mount Si Helping Hands Food Bank. With another effort, she pushed the box onto the sidewalk, then went back inside for more. It was the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, and Langley was looking forward to making a holiday meal for her family of four.

Langley has been coming here for six months, since she moved to the area. She has been unable to find work, but is grateful to have found the food bank.

“This is a beautiful place that helps keep us all fed,” she said.

A few minutes later, a young couple came out, arms loaded with provisions. Both the young woman and the man, a North Bend native, believe the food bank has great-ly helped them out. Next was an older couple, a mother with her pre-school-aged daughter, and two men shopping for a large family. They are of all ages, and from a variety of ethnicities and circumstances.

A growing hunger

SEE HUNGER, 3

SEE STATION, 4

www.lesschwab.com from all of us at Les Schwab North Bendfrom all of us at Les Schwab North BendHAPPY H0LIDAYS

610 E. North Bend Way North Bend 425.831.6300

4370

63

TOD BERKEBILE

$5.2 million bond would end drips, rats and safety

fears at 1939 buildingBY CAROL LADWIG

Staff Reporter

North Bend’s fire station is no place to be in an emergency, maybe not even on a good day.

Located next to City Hall, the building has leaks, rats, a floor

drain directly to the sewer system, loose windows, an overtaxed elec-trical system and almost no insula-tion or storage. It sits in a flood-plain, and is so unstable that engi-neers estimate a third of it would collapse in another earthquake the size of the 2001 Nisqually quake.

“When this was built ... it was never intended to be staffed full-time. This was a volunteer sta-tion,” explained firefighter Bob Butterfield on a tour of the sta-

tion’s hazards and assorted repairs that firefighters have had to make do with.

The station badly needs fixing up, but the building is past its prime. The two sections were built in 1939 and 1970, so small fixes may outlast the building itself.

“You’re talking about an awful lot of repairs and an awful lot of money,” said Mayor Ken Hearing.

Carol Ladwig/Staff PhotoFirefighter Bob Butterfield shakes a loose window in living quarters at the North Bend Fire Station. A new station is the subject of a $5.2 million bond.

SEE KILLING, 4

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In an average week, the North Bend-based food bank serves about 310 families, said manager Krista Holmberg. In the weeks leading up to the holidays, the number has been closer to 400.

Increased demand has been a common trend at Valley food banks. At its last distribu-tion in November, Fall City’s Community Food Pantry served 89 families, the most the pantry has seen since it opened in 2007. Board co-chairperson Richard Terbrueggen said the pantry has helped at least 200 different families this year.

At the Adra P. Berry Memorial Food Bank in Preston, “We’ve gone from an average of about 35 families to nearly 50 families a week in the last six months,” said the Rev. Roy Peacock. The need is not just prevalent around the holidays, though.

“It’s been steadily increasing over the last two years,” said Mount Si food bank director Heidi Dukich.

“We always have new families coming in,” agreed Terbrueggen.

Meanwhile, donations haven’t kept the same pace. Carnation’s Snoqualmie Tribe Food Bank serves about 200 families a week, and according

to volunteer Fred Vosk, the bank used to be able to meet its own needs in abundance, but “not so much in the last five years.”

“We’d send our overload to other food banks, Mount Si in North Bend, Holy Innocents in Duvall, and a couple of bat-tered women’s shelters,” he said. They still do, but it’s not as much as it used to be.

Community supportEach food bank is support-

ed differently, but all of them need private donations to con-tinue their service. Mount Si, Fall City, and the Hopelink food bank in Carnation are all 501(c)(3) non-profits,

making any donations to them tax-deductible. Mount Si, Hopelink and Preston also receive some food from Northwest Harvest and Food Lifeline. The Fall City pantry applied for assistance from Northwest Harvest and Food Lifeline, Terbrueggen said, but was not accepted into the program because there are so many food pantries in need right now.

The Snoqualmie Tribe pro-vides its food bank with the facility and transportation. For all its other needs, the food bank relies entirely on private donations.

Although the economic pinch is affecting all of the

food banks, none of them have fundamentally changed the way they operate. There are no income-based eligibil-ity requirements at Mount Si, Fall City, Preston, or the Snoqualmie Tribe food banks; Hopelink accepts Valley resi-dents whose income is 185 percent of federal poverty level or less.

The only requirement at most food banks is that the clients must live in the Valley. However, no one is turned away without food, and Mount Si works hard to connect clients with the resources they need. Hopelink also offers a range of assistance in Carnation.

The Snoqualmie Tribe Food

Bank is unusual in that it has no residency requirement.

“We feed anyone who comes in the door,” says Vosk.

Get involved• Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank, North Bend; (425) 888-0096, www.mtsifoodbank.org.• Fall City Community Food Pantry; (425) 222-6655, or (425) 222-4895, www.fallcityumc.org/foodpantry.html • Adra P. Berry Memorial Food Bank, Preston; (425) 222-5573, • The Snoqualmie Tribe Food Bank, Carnation; (206) 949-2310.• Hopelink Food Bank, Carnation, (425) 333-4163, www.hope-link.org/take_action/volunteer.

HUNGER FROM 1