snoqualmie valley record, august 22, 2012

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INDEX OPINION 4 CALENDAR 7 OBITUARIES 16 MOVIE TIMES 19 CLASSIFIEDS 20-21 BACK TO SCHOOL 23 Vol. 99, No. 13 SPORTS Ex-Cat Tim Proudfoot heating up the Tech diamond Page 12 YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER, SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF SNOQUALMIE • NORTH BEND • FALL CITY • PRESTON • CARNATION Follow us on Facebook and Twitter SCENE RailCamp NW shows young people that rail is still cool Page 9 V ALLEY R ECORD SNOQUALMIE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 2012 • Daily upDates at www.valleyrecorD.com • 75 cents • Kevin Hauglie Insurance Agency Kevin Hauglie - Agent | 425.222.5881 | www.farmers.com/khauglie 642459 Auto Home Life Serving the Snoqualmie Valley since 1985 with locations in Snoqualmie • Fall City • Duvall Locals stepped up to help victims in massive Central Wash. wildfire BY SETH TRUSCOTT AND WILLIAM SHAW Valley Record Staff The trees were twisted and black and the ground was a study of ash and parched scrub and grass. Smoke hung like fog. But as the sun rose Thursday, Aug. 16, on day four of the massive Taylor Bridge wildlife, the heroes of Horse Canyon and their homes were safe. Snoqualmie Valley Record Publisher William Shaw was an eyewitness to the after- math of nature’s devastating power. He expe- rienced the Taylor Bridge fire as an anxious parent, helping on his son Liam’s ranch after the fire’s wave of devastation passed. Seth Truscott/Staff Photo Jim, a North Bend resident, drops off cases of bottled water with Ryan Hooper, a North Bend deli owner who donated 150 sandwiches and gathered food and supplies Wednesday, Aug. 15, for victims and firefighters caught up in the Taylor Bridge wildfire. “It’s something that needs to be done,” Hooper said of the local response to the fire. “The people of Cle Elum might step up when we need it.” Bye bye, Boalch bounce Seth Truscott/Staff Photo An eastbound driv- er swerves left to clear a rutted sec- tion of roadway on North Bend’s Boalch Avenue. The worn- out street, which serves a number of businesses including a preschool, church, golf course, sheriff ’s station and sev- eral fitness groups, is finally slated for sweeping repairs. BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter Few city projects could get this kind of reac- tion: “That will be awesome! I’m so excited!” In North Bend, though, at least one did, from Angela Premoe, administrator at the North Bend Calvary Chapel on Boalch Avenue. What made her react this way was learning that the city of North Bend had on Aug. 7 award- ed Lakeridge Paving in Covington the contract to reconstruct Boalch Avenue, for the low bid of $413,579. SEE BOALCH, 8 Adding color to her Railroad Park scene in downtown Snoqualmie, Redmond artist Magali Lenarczak creates on canvass for the annual Plein Air Paint Out. She was one of 15 artists participating in the all-day event. For more Railroad Days photos, see page 3 or visit www.valleyrecord.com. Downtown’s true colors Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo The heroes of Horse Canyon SEE WILDFIRE EFFORT, 7

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August 22, 2012 edition of the Snoqualmie Valley Record

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Page 1: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

IndexOpiniOn 4 Calendar 7 Obituaries 16 MOvie tiMes 19Classifieds 20-21 baCk tO sChOOl 23

Vol. 99, No. 13

SPOR

TS Ex-Cat Tim Proudfoot heating up the Tech diamond Page 12

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

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter

SCen

e RailCamp NW shows young people that rail is still cool Page 9

Valley RecoRdSNOQUALMIE

Wednesday, august 22, 2012 • Daily upDates at www.valleyrecorD.com • 75 cents •

Kevin Hauglie Insurance AgencyKevin Hauglie - Agent | 425.222.5881 | www.farmers.com/khauglie

6424

59

Auto • Home • Life

Serving the Snoqualmie Valley since 1985 with locations in Snoqualmie • Fall City • Duvall

Locals stepped up to help victims in massive Central Wash. wildfire

By Seth truScott and William ShaWValley Record Staff

The trees were twisted and black and the ground was a study of ash and parched scrub and grass. Smoke hung like fog. But as the sun rose Thursday, Aug. 16, on day four of the massive Taylor Bridge wildlife, the heroes of Horse Canyon and their homes were safe.

Snoqualmie Valley Record Publisher William Shaw was an eyewitness to the after-math of nature’s devastating power. He expe-rienced the Taylor Bridge fire as an anxious parent, helping on his son Liam’s ranch after the fire’s wave of devastation passed.

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

Jim, a North Bend resident, drops off cases of bottled water with Ryan Hooper, a North Bend deli owner who donated 150 sandwiches and gathered food and supplies Wednesday, Aug. 15, for victims and firefighters caught up in the Taylor Bridge wildfire. “It’s something that needs to be done,” Hooper said of the local response to the fire. “The people of Cle Elum might step up when we need it.”

Bye bye, Boalch bounce

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

An eastbound driv-er swerves left to clear a rutted sec-tion of roadway on North Bend’s Boalch Avenue. The worn-out street, which serves a number of businesses including a preschool, church, golf course, sheriff ’s station and sev-eral fitness groups, is finally slated for sweeping repairs.

By carol ladWigStaff Reporter

Few city projects could get this kind of reac-tion: “That will be awesome! I’m so excited!”

In North Bend, though, at least one did, from Angela Premoe, administrator at the North Bend Calvary Chapel on Boalch Avenue.

What made her react this way was learning that the city of North Bend had on Aug. 7 award-ed Lakeridge Paving in Covington the contract to reconstruct Boalch Avenue, for the low bid of $413,579.

See BOALCH, 8

Adding color to her Railroad Park scene in downtown Snoqualmie, Redmond artist Magali Lenarczak creates on canvass for the annual Plein Air Paint Out. She was one of 15 artists participating in the all-day event. For more Railroad Days photos, see page 3 or visit www.valleyrecord.com.

Downtown’s true colorsCarol Ladwig/Staff Photo

The heroes of Horse Canyon

See WILdfIRe effORT, 7

Page 2: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com2 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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Page 3: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 3

A grand dayHours before the Railroad Days parade, dads were dutifully setting up the family folding chairs along Railroad Avenue, runners were taking their last warm-ups before the fun runs, and 2 year-old Connor Danielson was immersing himself, and his grandma, in the world of model trains. “This is the love of his life,” said Christine Danielson, watching her grandson literally run circles around a model railroad set up in the American Legion Hall last Saturday. “We’ve been here quite a while.” Every inch of the N-scale T-Trak model fascinated Connor, with the added benefit that it was built on a table, low enough for him to see it all without a boost from Grandma. Over on the Northwest Railway Museum Grounds, three men were trying to manhandle the large Carmichael’s Nuts nut across some tracks and over to a grassy area next to the children’s games. Taking a much-needed break, Bryan Woolsey, who co-owns Carmichael’s Hardware with his wife, Wendy Thomas, explained. “It was over there,” he said, pointing in the general direction of Carmichael’s, “but we decided we wanted it over here.”With that, it was back to work for Woolsey, and his helpers Duane and Sam. Painters Ron Raasch and Susan K. Miller were also hard at work, having picked out their subject matter for the Plein Air paint-out and sketched rough images on their canvasses. Miller, working on an image of the Depot, was undaunted by the 3 p.m. paint-out deadline. “I’m pacing myself!” she joked. Although both she and Raasch made poor choices on where to set up their easels — they were too close to the train tracks and were asked to move back for their own safety — both also produced excellent paintings, receiving honorable mentions in the 3 p.m. judging. “This is what God meant when He said watercolor,” Snoqualmie Arts Commission member Jeff Waters said of Miller’s piece. By the time the first racers were charging toward the finish line, the temperature had risen enough to take several runners by surprise. The start was cool enough, said new Snoqualmie resident Billy Johnson, who was happy to have made his personal goal for the 5K, but said, “but the rabbits took off faster than I expected!” Some 800 runners took part in the Railroad Days fun runs, a count that’s down a little from last year, said organizer Sean Sundwall. He attributed the small decline more to the number of races available to runners now than to concerns about hot weather or a minimal fee increase he had to charge this year to cover a new state sales tax. Over at the post-race table, volunteer Kathy Turpin, with her daugh-ters Makayla and Abby were busy breaking open cases of water bot-tles and slicing bananas and oranges for the grateful finishers. Turpin had been busy since the 5K runners started trickling in minutes ago. Sundwall finished first in the men’s 5K, with a time of 16:05. Amber Farthing took first in the women’s 5K, at 18:16. In the 10K, Gregory Leak had the fastest men’s time at 31:19, and Gwen Lapham had the fastest women’s time with 36:12. After the awards, it was time, at last for the parade. Aiden, Wesley and Sophia Adams, and cousins Jared Yunker and Ava Chable-Xool had waited so long, they’d invented their own parade costumes; plastic bags that were originally meant to hold their parade candy became eye-catching hats for each of the kids As grand marshals Jim and Lisa Schaffer passed the judging stand, they were subjected to a police traffic stop. Members of the depart-ment, along with new Police Chief Steve McCulley, gave their retired leader a final salute, which he soberly returned, and Lynn McCulley presented Lisa Schaffer with a bouquet of flowers. The current and former chief’s wives hugged as Schaffer shook McCulley’s hand.

Story and photos by Carol LadwigTop: Officer Bob Keeton, right, gives parade grand marshal Lisa Schaffer a hug during the Railroad Days parade. Above: Tumblers from Mount Si Gymnastics Academy wowed the audience with backflips, cartwheels and aerials in front of the judges’ stand. Left: A SeaFair pirate puts on a show for his young audience. Below, left: Children Adriana and Antonio examine a holed gas tank next to Jerry Estes’ 1946 Chevy truck, mounted on a 1996 Honda Passport chassis. Below, right: Connor Danielson, 2, was engrossed in the model train display by the United Northwest Model Railroad Club. Bottom, left: Panther Pride unicyclists perform for the judges on extra-tall cycles called “giraffes.” Bottom right: With a big smile on her face, 5K runner Leslie Hunter crosses the finish line, followed by Adam Ruben. Hunter took first place in her division.

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

Page 4: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com4 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Scan this code and start receiving local news

on your mobile device today.

“No, I’m content. I don’t have any problems. I think I know everything I need to know.”

Ron PaulSnoqualmie

“I’m really concerned about this mill site annexation, and the environmental impact. I live here to see the wildlife, and I don’t think they’ve considered all the environmental implications.”

Anna BoranianSnoqualmie

“When I first moved here, I wanted to learn everything I could about the history.... Learning about city govern-ment, that’s good information. I remain teachable, and curious to know more.”

Jeff WarrenSnoqualmie

Is there something you would like to know about your city?

Thursday, Aug. 20, 1987

Weyerhauser Real Estate’s proposal for the Lake Alice Plateau contains too many houses and too large a business park for a rural area, former King County Executive Randy Revelle said at a meet-ing of the Friends of the Snoqualmie Valley.

• Just north of Carnation on the Lake Joy Road, you may spend a day in the late 1300s. The Camlann Medieval Faire is an experience you won’t soon forget. The Camlann tourna-ment is a contest “with-out bloodshed.” Valiant men dressed in armor and fought with heavy, wooden clubs for prize goblets and the honor of their chosen lady.

Thursday, Aug. 23, 1962

Reports of vandalism were heard at a recent school board meeting for District #407. There have been several inci-dents of theft, broken windows, and damage to freshly varnished floors. Cherry Valley School was entered three times. Foods were taken, and about $50 was stolen from the principal’s office, along with a new adding machine.

This week in Valley history

PAStof theOut

“No, it is what it is. It’s kind of a nice place to be a stranger in town. I set one of my books (A Visit to Issaquah) here. What I like most is a bunch of people haven’t turned it into a Tinkertoy town.”

Nathan KositskySnoqualmie

ValleyRecoRd

SNOQUALMIE

Publisher William Shaw [email protected]

Editor Seth Truscott [email protected] Reporter Carol Ladwig [email protected]

Creative Design Wendy Fried [email protected]

Advertising David Hamilton Account [email protected] Executive

Circulation/ Patricia Hase Distribution [email protected]

Mail PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98065

Phone 425.888.2311 Fax 425.888.2427

www.valleyrecord.comClassified Advertising: 800.388.2527 Subscriptions: $29.95 per year in King

County, $35 per year elsewhereCirculation: 425.453.4250

or 1.888.838.3000Deadlines: Advertising and news, 11

a.m. Fridays; Photo op/coverage requests in advance, please.

The Snoqualmie Valley Record is the legal newspaper for the cities of Snoqualmie,

North Bend and Carnation.

Written permission from the publisher is required for reproduction of any part of this

publication. Letters, columns and guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views

of the Snoqualmie Record.

Vall

ey Vi

ews

SNOQ

UALM

IE

This summer, I had the privilege of serv-ing our beautiful Valley as an intern at the Snoqualmie Valley Record. I learned a lot

about reporting, and how to write a great story, but most importantly, I was able to work with and learn more about our community. I cannot thank Reporter Carol Ladwig and Editor Seth Truscott enough for this experience. They were extremely flexible with my busy and unpredictable schedule.

As a new waitress at the North Bend truck stop, my schedule was very random and I would only find out my hours at the beginning of each week. The hours were tough, but training was even more work, since I have never waitressed before. I remember coming home at night that first week and crash landing on the couch. My dad would look at me, wrinkle his nose, and say, “You smell like restaurant.” I would glare at him, go take a shower, and then fall asleep the moment my head hit the pillow.

Finally, I was told I’d be working my first shift by myself. I arrived that Sunday evening, which happened to be Father’s Day. I felt like a chick-en running around with its head cut off. I did so many things wrong that first day. I forgot or messed up at least a third of the orders I took, I dropped drinks and plates (luckily most of them were empty), and I made a few customers angry.

But I honestly had some of the best customers I had all summer in that one evening. One particular family I will never forget. Everything that could go wrong did. The family was understanding and happy the entire time I served them, assuring me that I had not ruined their Father’s Day dinner.

If not for families like this one, and the people I worked with, I might not have continued working. The assistant manager, Patty Behney, told me I needed to be like a duck. I laughed a bit, but then she told me why, and I have kept it in my mind ever since. The duck, she said is “composed and unruffled on the surface, but paddling like crazy under water.” This, Behney con-tinued, “shows us that regardless of the circumstance, we never let the guest know we are anything but cool, calm, and collected.”

This phrase served me well throughout my three months as a waitress, and will stay relevant through any other jobs I take on in my life.

Behney, and many of the other people I worked with, not only helped me improve as a waitress but also made the job fun. Flo Sherman and I became good friends and stay in touch even as I am headed to Fargo, North Dakota, where I will spend the next five months finishing up a degree in English. Many of the cooks always kept up a friendly banter.

Customers were definitely some of the most inter-esting people I talked to this summer. I had more propositions of dating and requests for my number in those three months than I’ve had in my entire life. On my last Saturday, a guy sitting at the bar looked at me and said, completely out of the blue, “Will you be my girlfriend?” I tried not to laugh as I replied, “Sorry, but I can’t,” and walked away to help a customer. When I came back, the guy next to him asked why I would say something like that, and I finally had a completely hon-est response. “Well, sir, I’m leaving the state tomorrow and won’t be back for five months!”

These past three months have come as a huge chal-lenge. There were many times this summer when I thought, “I’m not a waitress, I can’t do this.” But as I left the truck stop for the final time this summer, I left with the knowledge that I can do anything I put my mind to.

I hope that anyone I’ve served at the truck stop and the Valley Record’s readers who read any of my articles have enjoyed my experiences as much as I did.

My summer as a truck

stop waitress

EmiLEE RuHLAND Valley Record Summer Intern

Page 5: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 5

Police officers’ quick response caught the criminals

I wanted to express our thanks here at DirtFish Rally School to both the King County Sheriff and Snoqualmie Police Departments for their rapid response to a break-in and property theft at the historic Old Mill.

Thieves had broken in and were attempting to steal copper and valuable metals from within the old power building. Our on-site security and camera sys-

tems alerted us. The quick response and outstand-ing professionalism of the King County Sheriff and Snoqualmie Police caught the criminals immediately. We are extremely grateful to both King County Sheriff and Snoqualmie Police.

Lee ClarkIssaquah

Better watch those Twin Peaks episodes

As a huge fan of “Twin Peaks” I enjoyed read-ing your “Back To Twin Peaks” report in July 25th, 2012, edition. However, I am baffled at the caption to the photo on page 2: “David Lynch sits next to an unidentified actress”.

Seriously? Not one per-son around who’s seen the show? Anybody who has would easily be able to iden-tify the actress as Madchen Amick, who played Shelly Johnson—certainly one of the major supporting char-acters.

Robert Eckhardt

North Bend

Tell us why we need a hospital

I’m curious as to the rea-sons why another hospi-tal is proposed for the city of Snoqualmie, when the citizens voted against it (A property tax levy that would, in part, have funded a new hospital, failed with 31 per-cent approval in 2007).

Why are we getting anoth-

er hospital when Swedish is 15 minutes away? This new Swedish campus is located in a more densely populat-ed area and it is struggling financially, according to a regional newspaper.

Managers there are ques-tioning why more thought wasn’t given to the decision to build there in this reces-sion. The only time a hos-pital in Snoqualmie did a booming business was in the 1950s and ‘60s, when we had an active timber indus-try and Interstate 90 was only two lanes. Can some-one explain this to me?

Lois NicholasSnoqualmie

Saving the bears just to hunt them?

I went to the meeting regarding bears (July 17 in Snoqualmie). I don’t feed them, I find them inter-esting and want to ensure they are protected as much as we need to protect peo-ple. Most of the people at the meeting have had bear encounters and some take issue with the resident wild-life in the recently developed Snoqualmie Ridge (isn’t that why we moved here?).

I was neutral on the meet-ing until it became very evi-dent that the state Fish and Wildlife employees present-ing the meeting were being dishonestly manipulative. We were told about bears becoming habituated to the presence of people and how unmanaged garbage per-manently changes a bear’s

behavior. I don’t dispute that—I have done behav-ioral modification research as a profession. We were told about large numbers of bears being “scraped off of I-90” between Snoqualmie and North Bend, how it pains state game wardens to have to euthanize bears that become a “problem,” and how it is up to us to save the bears from this fate by keeping our gar-bage in our garage, or better yet, in our freezers.

Oh, really? This is where the presentation left me angry. The public was being manipulated into being cooperative by being told stories that would incite their desire to protect wildlife. This was being promoted by employees from the same state agency who were just tickled pink by their recent plan to massacre elk whose only crime was to mess up the grass on the golf course.

This was being promoted by game wardens who sell per-mits to kill the very bears they want us to protect. They were baiting residents with sob stories so that bears will be driven to areas where they or their buddies can have an ample supply to kill. How’s that for a lesson in ethics?

Last year, one person was killed by a wild black bear in the United States. Between 2000 and 2010, seven people were killed by wild black bears in the U.S. In the 1990s, two people were killed by bears. However, every year there is an average of 160 hunting-related shootings, an average of 50 of which result in death of humans in the U.S—that’s every year. I’ll take my chances with the bears.

I find the actions of the state Fish and Wildlife employees abusive of the pub-lic trust, at best disingenuous and at worst dishonest and unethically manipulative of the public goodwill. If we are expected (actually coerced) by this state agency to take actions that drive bears into the nearby forests, then we should expect this same state agency to protect that wild-life from being abused and massacred by their hunter buddies for entertainment.

Susan RanfSnoqualmie

In Brief

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Letters to the EditorThe Snoqualmie Valley Record welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be 250 words or fewer, signed and include a city of residence and a daytime phone number for verification. The Record reserves the right to edit letters for length, content and potentially libelous material. Letters should be addressed to:

Letters to the EditorThe Snoqualmie Valley Record

PO Box 300, Snoqualmie, WA 98065or email to [email protected]

Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

Lett

ers

SNOQ

UALM

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ALLE

yValley cities renew contract with Animal Services

North Bend, Sno-qualmie and Carnation were among the 25 cities in King County to renew their animal control contracts with Regional Animal Services of King County.

Under the new agree-ments with Regional Animal Services of King County (RASKC), cities will be assessed charges based 80 percent on their use of services and 20 per-cent on their population, instead of the previous formula that weighted the charges 50/50. In addi-tion, King County has redrawn the four animal control districts, and will staff each with at least one animal control officer seven days a week. The new contracts take effect January 1, 2013, and will run for three years.

Regional Animal Services of King County will provide animal con-trol, animal sheltering, and pet licensing services to all of unincorporated King County and its con-tract cities.

Page 6: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com6 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Hooper’s Deli opens in North Bend

Food is serious business at Hooper’s Deli, which just opened its doors Friday, July 13, at 202 W. North Bend Way, Suite B, at the location of the former L Taco.

“We take what we do very seriously. We don’t do ‘subs,’ we do sandwiches,” said Ryan Hooper, co-own-er with his wife Bambi. “I love the look on people’s face when they see the size of our sandwiches, and the Dutch Crunch bread we are using is an absolute hit.”

“We believe we are able to fill a need in the Snoqualmie Valley, and by the reaction of our guests every day, we think we are delivering and are happy that the Valley has received us so warmly.”

Hooper’s is open from 11 to 7 every day, but will be expanding hours to 9 p.m. Delivery is offered, and Hooper pledges to be at the delivery location within 10 to 15 minutes after the order is placed.

Hooper’s Deli is located at 202 W. North Bend Way, Suite B, in North Bend. To call in a pick-up order, or for delivery, call Hooper’s at (425) 888-6009. Hooper’s also does party platters and can deliver to special events, offices and functions.

Bayan Mongolian Barbecue opens

Vicki Deshaies and Mark Fanning have opened Bayan Mongolian Barbecue at 8020 Douglas Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie.

Bayan opened June 14 in the former location of iSu-shi and Mogolian Grill, but is a new business with new owners. Bayan can be con-tacted at (425) 888-2110.

Business Briefs

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EZ Mart opens in North Bend

Simon Kim is the operator of EZ Mart, the newly opened con-

venience store at 302 W. North Bend Way, North Bend.

The store features lots of park-ing and a big selection of goods

including cold sandwiches, candy, beer and wine, and lot-

tery tickets. You can contact EZ Mart at (425) 292-3055.

William Shaw/Staff Photo

A grand opening for Mo Barbecue Snoqualmie Valley Chamber of Commerce members celebrated the grand opening of Mo

Barbecue restaurant this summer. Mo serves a variety of barbecue sandwiches, side dishes and beverages, and is located at 8030 Railroad Ave. S.E., downtown Snoqualmie, next to Snoqualmie Market. The restaurant can be contacted at (425) 292-8040 or www.mobarbecue.com.

DMW Martial Arts gets Mark of Excellence nod

Snoqualmie’s DMW has always sought to deliver qual-ity martial art instruction while making a difference in their community. That’s why receiving the Mark of Excellence Award from one of the most respected organi-zations in the industry, Century Martial Arts, is an honor martial art schools across the world hope for each year.

DMW was recognized for its positive impact. The award is the highest honor bestowed by Century Martial Arts.

“At Century our core belief is that martial arts has the ability to profoundly change lives,” said Century Martial Arts founder and CEO, L. Michael Dillard, “and that is exactly what DMW is doing— changing lives for better-ment of their community.”

DMW is located at 7712 Center Boulevard, Snoqualmie, and teaches martial arts to students of all ages. To learn more about DMW, call (425) 396-1400.

Courtesy photo

Marcia Paul, left, program director for DMW Martial Arts, and Dan Cartan, right, chief instructor and owner at DMW, receive an award from Michael Dillard, CEO of Century Martial Arts, center.

The Summit honored with ‘Best recycling’ award by county

The Summit at Snoqualmie ski resort was among 92 companies that King County’s Solid Waste Division named to the 2012 “Best Workplaces for Recycling and Waste Reduction” list.

The list recognizes businesses with exceptional recycling programs and for their commitment to reducing the amount of waste their company produces. Last year, businesses in King County sent more than 180,000 tons of recyclable materials to the landfill. The sixth-annual list spans a wide array of busi-nesses in King County, including hospitality, medical services, professional services, retail, finance, arts and entertainment.

Page 7: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 7

Liam—a former Fall City and Issaquah resident— and his fiance, Natalie McGowan, and cousin Patrick Haggerty of North Bend, defended Liam’s cattle ranch, located on Bettas Road in Horse Canyon, east of Cle Elum. Ranches there were in the direct path of the fast-moving wildfire, which consumed more than 23,000 acres of rural land in the vicinity of Cle Elum and Ellensburg and more than 80 homes since it kindled Aug. 13.

Shaw relates that he was amazed at the devastation. The fire swept up from the south. Neighbors had been ordered to evacu-ate, but several, including Liam and his friends, family and neigh-bors, stayed behind, guarding their homes. Neighbors stayed because they loved their farms and ranches, and didn’t want to see them destroyed.

The younger Shaw had closely grazed his land in preparing for his and Natalie’s upcoming wedding, and as part of his job demonstrating livestock fencing. That close crop, combined with frantic efforts with shovel, dozer, firewall and water truck, kept his home safe as the blaze approached. By Thursday morning, the fire had passed, leaving Liam’s ranch an oasis of green in a desert of ash.

Local resourcesThe fire underscored connections between the Snoqualmie

Valley, the greater Eastside, and neighbors across the Cascades.Many Valley residents and business gave of their time and

resources to help Kittitas County residents made homeless by the blaze, and the firefighters battling it. Snoqualmie Valley Chamber of Commerce, Encompass, Hooper’s Deli, Frankie’s Pizza, Pet Place Market, Mount Si Montessori and the Snoqualmie Valley Hospital Foundation were among the Valley organizations trum-peting the need to react to the fire.

The North Bend McDonald’s restaurant donated a pile of cheese-burgers and Big Macs; Shaw hauled a load of the burgers to the volunteers.

“That was the first food those guys had,” he said.Now, the Kittitas County Chamber asks for monetary dona-

tions. Goods that were donated to help fire victims have filled several warehouses. Cash helps a number of responding groups meet the specific needs of fire victims, while helping businesses recover, according to the chamber.

To learn how to help, visit www.kittitascountychamber.com.

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Pasture and trees burn on upper Bettas Road Tuesday, Aug. 14, during the Taylor Bridge fire. Thousands of acres southeast of Cle Elum burned in the fire, which began last Monday.

North Bend considers police contract change

that Carnation made years ago

By Carol ladwigStaff Reporter

North Bend is not the first Valley city to weigh the pros and cons of ending its contract with the King County Sheriff’s Office, but it is the largest.

Carnation, with about one fourth the population and no easy freeway access, seems to have little in common with North Bend, but the city faced the same debates as North Bend when it came to public safety. Like North Bend, the city had its own police department years ago, which it disbanded when it opted for a police ser-vices contract with the Sheriff’s Department. And like North Bend, when Carnation consid-ered contracting with a neigh-boring city for police services, the surrounding unincorpo-rated residents expressed real concerns about the effect to their own police coverage.

As of press time, North Bend’s City Council was scheduled to vote Aug. 21 on canceling its longstanding contract with the Sheriff’s Department and entering a five-year contract with the city of Snoqualmie’s police department. The deci-sion follows months of dis-cussions in regular and work-study council meetings, a pub-lic meeting for testimony from residents in April, and a July phone survey of 120 residents.

“This is not going to be an easy decision for any of us,” Councilman Alan Gothelf stat-ed during a discussion on the phone survey results Aug. 7.

Carnation’s council voted in 2004 to end the sheriff’s con-tract and throw in with the city of Duvall’s police depart-

ment, which was renamed the Duvall-Carnation Police Department. The partnership between the two cities contin-ues today, but Carnation had to reduce its level of service when the contract was renewed this year, because of stagnant rev-enues.

The new contract reduces police coverage from about three fourths of the time to about half time, with addi-tional “flex” hours budgeted for emergencies. Despite the cut, the contract is still the best solution for public safety that the city can afford, according to City Manager Ken Carter.

“We’re too small to have our own (police department),” he explained. This contract enables the city to provide the needed coverage, without breaking its budget, or any state laws—the state constitution prohibits cit-ies from making gifts of public funds to any entity. The flex hours, which the city pays for but doesn’t necessarily use every week, are what make it possible, Carter explained.

“As long as the service is provided and the needs of the community are met, then we have not gifted anything,” he said. “They haven’t gifted any-thing to us. On average we’re paying for the service.”

North Bend is now balanc-ing the needs of its community against the cost of services, too. The expense of contracting with the sheriff, estimated at about $1.44 million this year, prompted the city to take a closer look at its police contract, but the level of service is the top concern of many councilmen.

“What’s going to be better from a public safety perspec-tive?” Gothelf says this question is his first consideration.

North Bend currently con-tracts for a “flex model” depart-ment, but is considering a “ded-icated model.” The flex model puts a deputy on patrol within

city limits around the clock, and is cheaper, since the city does not pay overtime or sick leave, but it can result in depu-ties on patrol who are unfamil-iar with the city and its people. The dedicated model commits a specific deputy to the city, week in and week out, but is consequently more expensive.

Under North Bend’s cur-rent contract, “they pay for 5.1 deputies to provide for patrols of the city of North Bend, and they also pay for three quar-ters of their Chief of Police,” said Dave Jutilla, Chief Deputy with the sheriff’s office. The remainder of the police chief’s cost is covered by the county, Jutilla added, for “supervisory management” of deputies in the unincorporated areas sur-rounding North Bend.

Police Chief Mark Toner notes that his nine deputies (six for city limits) all want to be assigned to North Bend.

“The only time we get changes up here right now is 1) if somebody gets transferred or promoted… or 2) if somebody is on vacation,” Toner said. “We get consistent people, so they know the community, and they know the area.”

North Bend essentially gets the benefit of a dedicated group of officers, with the flex model price tag now, but Toner agrees that a dedicated model could benefit the city even more.

“We could be more effective in our crime-fighting with a dedicated group,” Toner said.

Snoqualmie’s five-year pro-posal offers the city the equiva-lent of a dedicated model, with one officer of the 20-mem-ber department (currently, Snoqualmie has 14 officers, but would hire six more to meet the demands of the North Bend contract) on patrol at all times. Chief Steve McCulley would serve as police chief for both cities, and the city would pre-serve ownership of the cars and

equipment it would purchase as its share of startup costs for the contract, estimated at $387,000.

When North Bend’s Council met Tuesday, City Administrator Londi Lindell was set to present them with the final five-year cost projec-tions for four different propos-als: their current flex model; Snoqualmie’s proposed dedi-cated model; a dedicated model from the sheriff’s department; and a “modified-dedicated” model that gives North Bend an additional deputy for use as needed.

“What they really want is named, identified, dedicated officers who are assigned to work in North Bend as much as possible,” Jutilla said, of his discussions with the North Bend City Council. “They have that very much right now,” he added, but with the modified-dedicated model, he said his department would give the city a .9 credit for another deputy within city limits.

Toner will have the latitude to select six deputies as North Bend police, Jutilla said, and the city will have the option to identify them with uniforms and cars. The cost of this model would be similar to the flex costs, although “discretionary overtime,” such as staffing up for city events like the Block Party and Festival at Mount Si, would be a city responsibility.

Of the four models, Lindell noted that Snoqualmie’s pro-posal, averaging $1.4 million over five years, is still the least expensive. However, she added “I think one of the concerns with the Snoqualmie model is we’ll be sharing a police chief …” which may make citizens feel isolated. “I think it’s impor-tant to have a person in com-mand who they can go to…they’re going to want a place to go and have their questions answered.”

McCulley has said his department, if awarded the contract, will do “a lot of com-munity outreach, meeting with the businesses, seeing what their needs are, and just mak-ing sure that we’re stepping off on the right foot.”

Contract cops: Carnation’s model

Page 8: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com8 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Riverview office moves to Duvall

The district offices of the Riverview School

District were relocated in July to the school’s new Educational Service Center, 15510 First Ave. N.E., Duvall.

Previously located in a collection of por-table classrooms behind Carnation Elementary School, the district offic-es will have a new mail-ing address, P.O. Box 519, Duvall, WA 98019, but the phone number, (425) 844-4500 will remain unchanged.

Riverview School District bought the build-ing, the former home of the Duvall Church and school, in January, with bond funds left over from a 2007 bond of $56.6 million to renovate all of the district’s school buildings.

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"Wow!" said Premoe, "$400,000 for our little road?" The half-mile of Boalch Avenue from Northwest 14th

Street to the city limits is the scope of this project. It seems small, but "It will make a huge improvement," said Jerry Moen, owner of the nearby Alpine Coachworks. A North Bend resident for 28 years, Moen was wait-ing for the city to make the same improvements that Snoqualmie did to their half of the road several years ago.

"The other half is garbage," he said. "If you watch vehicles driving down the road, they're driving on the wrong side...trying to avoid the bumps."

That wrong-way tactic has been used by many driv-ers, and is a safety concern, especially at the chapel, where there are many evening activities, especially in the summer.

"When school starts, we have activities almost every day," said Premoe.

As a staff member driving the road every day, Premoe also worries about the damage to her car. Driving on Boalch, she says, is like driving on a dirt road.

"It seems like no matter how slow you crawl, you feel like you're going too fast."

Starting next month, anyone trying to reach the chapel, the sheriff 's substation, Encompass, Mount Si Sports + Fitness or any of the other organizations located on Boalch, the drive will be even slower as work begins on the road reconstruction.

Lakeridge's contract includes reconstructing the entire roadway, along with erosion control, and installation of storm sewer and culverts. Project Manager Donny Miller estimated they would begin work after Labor Day, and expected to be complete in mid-October. He did not anticipate any difficulties or delays from weather.

The project, listed as the city's top priority in its six-year transportation improvement plan, will be the first funded by Transportation Benefit District funds. It will also be the biggest road project the city has done in years, said Public Works Director Ron Garrow.

"We've come a long way," he told the council.North Bend authorized a $1.4 million bond in June for

the Boalch reconstruction and Pickett Avenue between Northeast Sixth Street to Northeast Twelfth Street. The city-authorized bond will be paid with revenue from the Transportation Benefit District's sales tax of 0.2 percent, which more than 60 percent of North Bend voters approved in November 2011. The city and the TBD are governed by the same people, North Bend City Councilmen, but as two different agencies.

The new sales tax, which brought North Bend's rate to 8.8 percent, was implemented in April, and the TBD began receiving its monthly revenues from it in June. In future years, the TBD expects to earn about $400,000 from the sales tax, but earnings will be less for 2012 since the tax was not in place for the full year. Through July, the TBD has collected just over $60,000 from the tax.

BOALCH FROM 1

WeDnesDAy, Aug. 22

One-On-One COmputer AssistAnCe: Get extra help on the computer from a KCLS volunteer, 1 p.m. at North Bend Library.

the BAsiCs: Memory Loss, Dementia & Alzheimer’s Disease presentation is 11 a.m. at Mt Si Senior Center, 411 Main Ave. S., North Bend, presented by the Alzheimer’s Associ-ation. This free workshop will cover risk factors, diagnosis, treatments, resources and the benefits of early detection.

THuRsDAy, Aug. 23

Chess CluB: Snoqualmie Valley Chess Club meets at 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. Learn to play chess or get a game going. All ages and skill levels welcome.

eBOOk help: Drop-in e-reader assistance is 11 a.m. at Sno-qualmie Library. Learn how to download KCLS e-books to your eReader or computer during this demonstration.

live musiC: Open mic night is 7 p.m. at Sliders Cafe, Carna-tion. Sign-up starts at 6:30 p.m.

FRiDAy, Aug. 24

e-reAder AssistAnCe: Learn how to download KCLS e-books to your e-reader or computer during this digital downloads demonstration, 4 p.m. at Fall City Library.

live musiC: Bryant Urban’s Blue Oasis plays at 7 p.m. at Box-ley’s Place, North Bend, www.boxleysplace.com.

live musiC: Junkyard Jane plays at Raging River Cafe and Club, Fall City.

sATuRDAy, Aug. 25

nursery COnCert: Three artists, Bill Davie, Kat Eggleston and Rob Kneisler play at 7:30 p.m. at the Nursery at Mount Si, 42328 S.E. 108th St., North Bend. Original songs by a trio of talented musicians, cost is a $10 sug-gested donation. Bring your own chair, blanket and bev-erage. Doors open at 7 p.m. To learn more, e-mail to Nels Melgaard at [email protected].

live musiC: Ravinwolf plays at 8 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Falls Brewery and Taproom, downtown Snoqualmie.

live musiC: Bluegrass jam session is 2 p.m. at Sliders Cafe.live musiC: Graye and Green Group plays at 7 p.m. at Boxley’s.

sunDAy, Aug. 26

live musiC: The Defeyes headline a free concert at 1 to 3 p.m. at Snoqualmie Point Park, 37580 SE Winery Road (Exit 27), Snoqualmie. They play rock, reggae and blues.

MOnDAy, Aug. 27

e-reAder AssistAnCe: Learn how to download KCLS e-

SNOQUALMIE VALLEyCalendar

Seth Truscott/Staff Photo

Winding up to launch a Styker, a two-pound foam airplane, Scotty Warner of North Bend relaxes by flying kit craft at Meadowbrook Farm on Thursday, Aug. 18. “I love this place,” Warner says of the farm, where wide, open spaces allow his craft to soar, glide and dive.

skybound at the farm

books to your e-reader or computer during this digital downloads demonstration, 6 p.m. at North Bend Library.

TuesDAy, Aug. 28

dOg CAre: You Have a Puppy/Dog Now What? presentation is 7 p.m. at the North Bend Library. Dogs don’t speak English, but communication is possible using a combina-tion of verbal and body language. Once you know how to communicate, you can stop behavior problems, which are the number-one reason dogs are given up and end in shelters. Communicating well is a lifesaver for your pet! Presenter Maggie Whetsel has been trained in canine studies and volunteers at the Bellevue Humane Society. Her mission is to keep dogs out of shelters.

live musiC: Twede’s Open Mic is 6 p.m. at Twede’s Cafe, 137 E. North Bend Way, North Bend.

WeDnesDAy, Aug. 29

One-On-One COmputer AssistAnCe: Get extra help on the computer from a KCLS volunteer, 1 p.m. at North Bend Library.

Bothell man, 20, drowns in snoqualmie River near CarnationKayakers unsuccessful in rescue attempt

A 20-year-old man drowned Wednesday, Aug. 15, while swimming in the Snoqualmie River at Carnation.

According to a report from the King County Sheriff, the accident was reported shortly after 3 p.m. Wednesday, near the 1500 block of West Snoqualmie River Road Northeast.

Sheriff ’s reports say the man went swimming with a group of co-workers. At some point, the victim was

unable to stay afloat and slipped under the water.According to the report, two boaters kayaking down the

river attempted to pull the man up and out of the river, but the water was too deep.

An Eastside surface rescue team pulled him from the water, and CPR was attempted. The man was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Sheriff ’s Deputies and Eastside Fire and Rescue person-nel responded. The drowning is being investigated by the King County Sheriff ’s Office Marine Unit.

Page 9: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 9

In Brief

RailCamp’s Valley visit introduces young people to trains' past, future

By Seth truScottEditor

First one teen, then another steps onto the ladder, takes the scraper and starts cleaning 50-year-old gunk from the wooden interior of Messenger of Peace.

While some teens might drag their heels on household chores, these hands-on activi-ties at the Northwest Railway Museum seem to draw in the dozen teenage participants in RailCamp Northwest, which recently visited the Snoqualmie heritage site.

Open to high-school-age boys and girls, the camp, organized by the National Railway Historical Society, has run for 15 years on the east coast, but made its first visit to the left coast earlier this month. Most participants were from back east, but several learned about it in the Northwest. So far, the camp has been a big success, counselors said.

Campers spent their first day with Sound Transit, the next with Tacoma Rail, the third at the Northwest Railway Museum, and the fourth at the Mount Rainier Scenic Railroad, before returning to Snoqualmie.

The teens got a chance to inspect locomo-tives in Tacoma, and assemble power units for trains. Here in the Valley, they got to help volunteers working to preserve Messenger of Peace, a 114-year-old chapel car that served the region generations ago. They also used the museum's tools at the Conservation and Restoration Center to make souvenir bookshelves made in part from train tracks salvaged in Seattle.

"It's testing us," said teen Jessica Fleming of St. Maries, Penn, as she worked in the museum's workshop. "But it's lots of fun."

Trains are already a part of her life. Fleming's family owns a small-gauge rail-road at their home.

RailCamp "helps you experience a lot more than you'd usually get to experience," she said. "I don't know how many other 15-year-olds can say they got to do this."

The camp gives teens who are interested in railroading a sense of the jobs that are out there in the industry. It helps maintain the history and heritage of trains, through the past to the future.

Rail is still important, counselors say."Sometimes, the kids' peers say, 'You must

be some kind of nut! You're into railroads?'" said camp counselor Bill Chapman, who hails from Boise.

But Chapman counters with the example of the humble, high-tech cellphone.

"All of its parts were taken by rail to a port, put on a ship to Asia, made into a cell phone. It came back, was put into a container and shipped to the store where they bought it by rail," Chapman said. "So if you don't think you have an interest in railroads, you do, if you have an interest in iPhones."

"This is their commitment to engaging the youth of today," said Richard Anderson, Northwest Railway Museum's executive director. "Railway heritage is something that had a profound effect on the country."

"There was a time, not so long ago, when trains affected every aspect of life. Your mail came by train, your groceries came by train, you visited relatives by train.

"The people who actually experienced it are, frankly, in the process of passing on," Anderson said. "It's important that the coming generations carry this forward."

So it's good for folks like Anderson, then, that young campers like Fleming under-stand that trains aren't just relics, but have meaning today.

"They were good in the past, and they keep getting better," Fleming said.

Learn more about RailCamp at nrhs.com/program/railcamp.

The legacy rolls on

Seth Truscott/Staff Photos

Above, Kevin Phalon, 17, of New Pequannock, N.J., scrapes old, parched laquer from the interior of the Railway Museum’s century-old Messenger of Peace. Below, RailCampers explore the interior of the chapel car. Right, RailCampers Jessica Fleming, center, and James Haley, left, hone their woodworking skills in the Northwest Railway Museum’s Conservation and Restoration Center.Bottom, Northwest Railway Museum Executive Director Richard Anderson helps teen John Grocki of Garden City, Long Island, with his souvenir project.

Blood drive rolls into Fall City

Give blood to the Puget Sound Blood Center from 11 a.m. to 5

p.m. Friday, August 24, at the Hauglie Insurance building in Fall

City. The donation bus will be closed from 11 a.m. to noon for

lunch. E-mail adonaldson@hauglieinsur-

ance.com to sign up.For questions about your eligibility

to donate, call the blood center’s donor echeduling at 425-453-4510

or email [email protected].

Outdoor movie fundraiser to

help Valley man Jim Townsend

with injuriesJim Townsend, a 1983 Mount Si

High School graduate, was severe-ly hurt in an all-terrain vehicle

accident. His family, classmates and friends are planning a gather-

ing to help speed him down the long road to recovery.

An outdoor movie fundraiser, planned for 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 25 at 48026 S.E. Mount Si

Rd., North Bend, will help pay for medical expenses.

Admission is $10. Learn more at www.singlewideproductions.com

or send an e-mail to [email protected].

Ice cream social planned by

Youth CouncilThe Riverview Youth Council hosts its annual ice cream social, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5, in the

park at Taylor’s Landing, just off Highway 203 in north Duvall.Learn more about the Lower

Valley youth council at sno-qualmievalleycommunitynetwork.

org/youth-leadership.

Barbecue, auction helps

Carnation bird sanctuary

An all-ages barbecue and auction benefit for a local parrot sanctu-

ary, “It’s for the Birds” is 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 25, at the Macaw Rescue and Sanctuary,

34032 N.E. Lake Joy Rd., Carnation.Macaw Rescue and Sanctuary is a nonprofit organization caring for over 500 macaws and other

parrots.Tickets to the barbecue are $20 in advance, $25 at the door, $10 for

children under 10. To learn more, visit www.

macawrescueandsanctuary.org, call (425) 941-7543 or e-mail to

[email protected].

Page 10: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com10 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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North Bend’s Emily Hamilton qualifies for National American Miss Competition

Emily Hamilton, 6, of North Bend, competed in the Washington National American Miss State Pageant and came home a winner.

Emily won the talent competition by performing a singing ventriloquist act with a Kermit the Frog puppet to “Life’s a Happy Song.”

Emily also won the photogenic competition for the second year in a row.

Winning these two optional contests qualified Emily to com-pete in the national optional competitions which take place in Disneyland in November. The wins each provided a trophy and a $250 cash prize. The $500 in winnings will be deposited into Emily’s college fund by her parents.

In addition to winning two optional competitions, Emily fin-ished third runner-up overall out of 40 Princess Division contes-tants. By placing in the top five (called the Queen’s Court), Emily now qualifies to compete in the national All-American Miss Pageant which is exclusively offered to contestants across the U.S. who finish in the top five in their division. This competition will also be held in Disneyland over Thanksgiving week.

The National American Miss pageants are dedicated to cel-ebrating America’s greatness and encouraging its future leaders. Each year, the pageant awards $1 million dollars in cash, scholar-ships and prizes to assist the development of young women.

Courtesy photo

Emily Hamilton, 6, won the talent competition with her Kermit ventriloquist act, “Life’s a Happy Song,” during the Washington National American Miss State Pageant.

North Bend Jazz Walk plannedMore than 40 Northwest jazz musicians will celebrate America’s clas-sic musical art form at six downtown venues in the first North Bend Jazz Walk, 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8.Spanning three blocks, the Jazz Walk includes Pioneer Coffee, North Bend Theatre, Twede’s Cafe, Valley Center Stage, Boxley’s and the North Bend Bar and Grill. The event is sponsored by the nonprofit Boxley’s Music Fund. Tickets are $12 for adults, $5 for children ($14/$8 in advance). Tickets, directions and a schedule are available online at www.northbendjazzwalk.com.

Page 11: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 11

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Dear Snoqualmie Railroad Days

Sponsors and Supporters,

Thank you for supporting Snoqualmie Railroad Days! We salute you and thank you. We couldn’t do it without you!

Snoqualmie Casino • Snoqualmie Indian Tribe Boeing Classic • 4 Culture • SECAST

Northwest Railway Museum • City of Snoqualmie Carmichael’s True Value • Finaghty’s Irish Pub & Restaurant Chapman Electric • Thin Pig Media • Waste Management

Swedish Medical Group • Sequoyah Electric • R & R Rentals Valley Center Stage • Admiral Enterprises • TODDGAMBLEART

Snoqualmie Market • Sno Falls Credit Union • Sahara Pizza Legends Car Club • Party Hoppers • Puget Sound Energy

Sno Valley Arts • Snoqualmie Arts Commission The Bindlestick

With Sincere Thanks, Northwest Railway Museum and Snoqualmie Railroad Days Festival Team 66

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Electrifying fundraiser for food bank at city lunch

courtesy photo

Snoqualmie Police Chief Steve McCulley, center, and new Captain Nick Almquist, left, were zapped by a Taser gun during the City of Snoqualmie’s Team Building Lunch, held Thursday, July 19. The city had held a fundraiser raffle with the prize being a chance to Taser the Public Works Director, Dan Marcinko. McCulley and Almquist stepped in as consolation-prize Taser victims. Sixteen-year-old Peyton McCulley zapped her dad, and city information tech director PJ Rodriguez drew the ticket to zap Almquist. The electrifying raffle raised $450 and 50 pounds of food for the Mount Si Food Bank.

Second annual memorial ride set for LovettOn Saturday, Aug. 25, Pete’s Club Grill in Carnation will host a colon cancer benefit ride,

in memory of former owner Don Lovett. The motorcycle ride will leave Pete’s Club in Carnation at 10 a.m. (breakfast will be served starting at 9 a.m.), and travel to Ocean Shores, where Lovett’s parents live. Proceeds go to Colon Cancer Alliance (www.ccalliance.org).

StoneFest coming in Sept.From September 10 to 14 at the

Marenakos Rock Center in Preston, stone lovers will come together for the eighth annual StoneFest in the Pacific Northwest.

The four-day event will feature hands-on

learning projects, presentations, demon-strations, and talks about stone masonry.

This year’s StoneFest focuses on building with stone, using mortar and dry stack meth-ods, sculptural and architectural carving, tra-ditional lettering, mortar myths and tools of the trade. Register at www.stonefest.org.

Page 12: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com12 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Youth soccer tournament champions

Contact staff writer Carol Ladwig at cladwig@ valleyrecord.com or

425.888.2311

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Boeing Classic tournament is underway, jet

visits FridayThe Boeing Classic PGA

Champions Tour takes place this week at the Snoqualmie

Ridge TPC, in its eighth outing in the Valley.

More than 80 players will participate this year including

last year’s champion, Mark Calcavecchia.

The Korean Air Pro-Am begins today, and the Boeing Classic

tournament proper begins on Friday, Aug. 24. The Boeing Jet Flyover will kick off Round 1 at

11:20 a.m.More information about the

Boeing Classic, including afull schedule, special events, play-ers, sponsorship opportunities

and beneficiaries, visit www.boeingclassic.com.

Practices begin this

week for high school sports

Mount Si High School athletic practices and tryouts began

this week for fall sports, including football, girls soccer, volleyball, boys golf, boys ten-

nis and cross country.For details, visit mountsihigh-

school.weebly.com/sports.html.In the Riverview School District,

turnout began Monday, Aug. 15, for high school football, and this

past Monday, Aug. 20, for volley-ball, cross country and girls soccer.

Learn more about Cedarcrest High School sports at www.

chs.riverview.wednet.edu/

Seattle Cup Tourney: Cascade FC B96 boysThe Cascade FC U-16 Boys Soccer Team recently won the championship for their age group at the 2012 Seattle Cup, which was held at the Starfire Complex in Tukwila. The tournament, hosted by Seattle United, one of Washington State’s largest soccer clubs, featured well over 200 highly competitive teams.In the U-16 championship game, with the temperature approaching the mid to upper 90s on the pitch, Cascade faced off against a very strong Wenatchee Fire team. They played to a 0-0 draw, with the game being decided in a shootout, ultimately won by Cascade FC.Pictured are, from left, front row, Matthew Cowan, Alec Hintzke, Ezekiel Kingery, Dan Kero, Bryan Bodnar, Cameron Heimbigner, Jesus Espinoza and Evan Betz; back row, head coach Dan Paczosa, assistant coach George Oord, Max Adamson, Alexander Vicars-Harris, Brandon Mowry, Bruce Corrie, Kyle Walsh, Mason McRae, Colton Oord, Jacob Turpin and assistant coach Ron Kero. Not pictured: Justin Klock.

CrossFire Select Cup: CFC G00 Green girlsCascade FC G00 Green Team (U-12 girls) played in the CrossFire Select Cup Soccer Tournament over the July 29 weekend at 60 Acres Park in Redmond. The girls played five games over the weekend, winning all five games and becoming the bracket champions. Pictured are, back from, coaches Eric Berberich and Steve Lilleberg; middle row, Grace Stetson, Abigail McKenzie, Danielle Butoryak, Jessica Warrilow, Sarah Hommas; front row, Jolie Breitbach, Taylor Berberich, Nicole Sauer, Jessica Morris, Maddie Lilleberg, Lauren Forrest, Ella Furness, Bella Gerlitz and Harper Click; Not pictured: Aria Shakib, Paris DelDegan, Sydney DeRouen, Addison Kaess, Britta ThompsonThe team will play at the Sky River Soccer Club Tournament in Monroe on Thursday, Aug. 23.

Big balancerMount Si alumnus Tim Proudfoot

reflects on first year as a Red RaiderBy EmilEE Ruhland

SVR Staff Intern

In many ways, college is a great way to learn balance. First-year college students must work to keep up with the demands of study, learn from their mistakes, and still be able to have fun and relax.

For 2011 Mount Si graduate Tim Proudfoot, sports are added to the mix. Student athletes like Proudfoot must create a very delicate balance between all aspects of college life.

As a baseball player at Texas Tech University at Lubbock, Proudfoot has to stay on top of everything and be much more organized than in high school.

“It can be really tough sometimes,” the ex-Cat says. Required study hall gives time for Proudfoot to catch up on his school work, and teach-ers are willing to give help if the athlete is willing to put the time and effort in. And Proudfoot was willing; he achieved above a 3.0 GPA in order to be on the 2012 Academic Honor Roll at Texas Tech.

Proudfoot has been playing baseball for 13 years and is now a short-stop at Texas Tech. Out of Proudfoot’s large family—he has six brothers and sisters—he was the only child to play baseball. Playing baseball, he said, was his “own thing.” Proudfoot also said “I was able to connect with my dad through baseball.”

Always a competitor, he chose shortstop because that position is “known to be the most athletic player on the team,” and because he liked the view from the spot.

Growing up, “there was a certain age where everything connected.” From that moment on, Proudfoot strove for success, and was generally able to achieve it through hard work.

“I always wanted to get better,” he said.The 2012 Red Raider season demonstrated that he still works toward

improving. In May 2012, Proudfoot was one of only four freshmen in the nation to be named to the Brooks Wallace Award Watch List. The list includes the top 50 Division I shortstops, and is named after a former Red Raider shortstop.

Proudfoot knows it’s “a big honor” and he hopes to continue to improve throughout his years at Lubbock. Proudfoot would love to play in the major leagues for the Red Sox—“Obviously I would play anywhere I could.”

Proudfoot is still undecided on what to pursue for a major, but he is considering business and is interested in biology.

You can follow the Red Raiders at www.texastech.com/sports/m-basebl/text-m-basebl-body.html. The team has posted a Q&A with Tim Proudfoot on the site.

Courtesy photo

Tim Proudfoot, a Mount Si 2011 graduate now playing shortstop for the Texas Tech Red Raiders, fires a ball during play this year against Missouri State. Proudfoot’s freshman season shows he’s continuing to push for high achievement while seeking balance in his college endeavors.

Page 13: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 13

In Brief

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50th anniversary party is Saturday for Don, JoAnne Clark

Don and JoAnn Clarke of Snoqualmie have been married for 50 years.

On July 28, the two celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.

Don and JoAnn have lived in Snoqualmie for 42 years. Don worked as a mechanic and ran his own service station in North Bend, while JoAnn worked in retail and helped Don at the station. They both enjoy camping, fishing and spending time with their family. They have a daughter, Susan, and two sons, Allen and Brian, and six grandchildren who all love them greatly.

A party and open house is 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 25, at the Clarke home, 7503 434th Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie. All are welcome.

courtesy photo

Barn dance commemorates Carnation centennialNext in the series of events marking Carnation’s 100th anniversary is the Tolt Centennial

Barn Dance, set for 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 30, at Camp Korey, formerly Carnation Farms.

Host for the evening will be Elbridge Stuart, a descendant of the family that founded Carnation Farms. He will share stories from Carnation Farms’ past during the evening. A Bellingham roots music band, High Wide & Handsome will perform for the dance.

Advance tickets are $20 each, available through September 14 at Millers Arts in Carnation and online at www.brownpapertickets.com. Tickets bought after that date are $25 each.

Meet your farmer at Carnation Market benefit

Carnation Farmers Market is working to forge local food connections every week, and at a special farm dinner benefiting the mar-ket, “Please Pass the Peas,” 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 23, at Oxbow Farm in Carnation.

The evening features a four-course meal of sea-sonal foods, prepared by Chef David Sanford, of Belle Clementine restaurant. All proceeds will support the farmers market’s efforts to connect local farms and local eaters, such as the new market shelter completed this spring. Construction of the shelter enables the market to extend its sea-son through November, but nearly exhausted the market’s funds before the project was complete. The next phase of the project, for which the market is cur-rently fundraising, will bring electric power for lights and heaters to the shelter.

Guests at “Please Pass the Peas,” will begin their eve-ning with a cocktail of local vodka and a seasonal fruit infusion. They can tour the farm before sitting down to a four-course meal made with local, seasonal foods and paired with local wine. Among the guests at the table will be some producers of the meal, farmers, wine-makers, cheese-makers or ranchers.

Event sponsors include PCC Natural Markets, Oxbow Farm, Belle Clementine, Full Circle Farm, Growing Things Farm, Novelty Hill-Januik Winery, Southard Winery, Piccola Wine Company, Glass Distillery, Loki Fish, Golden Glen Creamery and Tonnemaker Hill Farm.

For more information and tickets, visit www.car-nationfarmersmarket.org, or contact Market Manager Melissa Borsting, at [email protected] or by calling (425) 765-8764.

The Carnation Farmers Market opens every Tuesday from 3 to 7 p.m., May through November in the heart of downtown Carnation. Shoppers can choose from a variety of fresh produce, flowers, raw honey, local cheese and but-ter, fish, eggs, chicken, rus-tic breads, and fine pastries. Music on the Grass, chalk art, and a children’s booth are regular features.

Page 14: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com14 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

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2012 Chevrolet Cruze 2LS (4184) .................$17,9882012 Chevrolet Cruze Eco (4158) .................$19,2272012 Chevrolet Cruze Eco (4190) ................$20,9802012 Chevrolet Impala LT (4052) .................$24,7272011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4036) ........$24,9002012 Chevrolet Malibu 1LZ (4078) ...............$24,9502013 Chevrolet Malibu sedan (4180) ...........$26,4102012 Chevrolet Express 1500 LS (4192) ......$29,2252012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4198) ........$29,3632012 ChevroletEquinox LTZ (4164) ..............$30,1462012 Chevrolet Colorado LT (4144)..............$32,2152012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4100) ........$32,8822012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4124) ........$33,9502012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4123) ........$34,0552012 Chevrolet Traverse LT AWD (4122) ......$34,2612011 Chevrolet Camaro 2SS (4037) .............$36,9002012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4167) ........$37,5802013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4186) ........$37,8422012 Chevrolet Volt Std hatch (4166) ..........$38,554 2012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4071) ........$39,7162013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4176) ........$42,3512012 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 (4195) ........$48,1262012 Chevrolet Tahoe Z71 SUV (4161) ........$49,3782012 Chevrolet Tahoe LT 4WD (4188) ..........$48,3912012 Chevrolet Corvette cpe (41730 ...........$48,9912012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4074) ........$49,5502012 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4065) ........$49,5502012 Chevrolet Suburban LTZ (4193) ...........$56,4592013 Chevrolet Tahoe Hybrid (4185) ...........$56,6952013 Chevrolet Silverado 3500HD (4191) ...$58,2532013 Chevrolet Suburban LTZ (4189) ...........$59,4002012 Chevrolet Corvette GS (4086) .............$67,190

2000 Chevrolet Lumina sedan (27015A) .........$3,971...$3,9711993 Chevrolet Suburban K2500 (R11601C) ....$4,9712000 Buick LeSabre Ltd sedan (26950A) ..............$5,9711999 Chevrolet Suburban K1500 4WD (26692A).... $6,9712001 Mazda Tribute SUV (R12744A) ................$7,8712005 Honda Accord sedan (4056A) ................ ...$8,5712003 Volkswagen Jetta GL 2.0 (R12368C) ..... ...$8,8711998 Ford Mustang GT conv (27165N) .......... ...$8,8712002 Ford Focus ZX5 sedan (27232A) ............ ...$8,8712001 Ford Mustang 2 dr cpe (V9441A) .......... ...$8,9712002 Chevrolet TrailBlazer LTZ (26984A) ......... .$10,171

2008 Kia Spectra EX sedan (R12598B) ........... .$10,571.$10,5712008 Toyota Yaris hatch (V9199B) ...................$11,9712011 Kia Rio LX sedan (27113) ....................... $12,5712007 Nissan Altima S sedan (26995A) ............$12,8712005 Nissan Quest SE minivan (R12644A) ..... $12,9711999 Chevrolet Camaro Z28 conv (27248) .... .$13,8712004 Toyota Camry sedan (V9837B) ........... $13,8712007 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (4136C)....$13,9712011 Toyota Yaris sedan 4-spd (27023) .....$13,9712008 Chevrolet Colorado Work (4119A) ....$13,9712006 Chevrolet Impala LTZ (27283) ...........$13,971

2006 Chrysler 300 sedan (V9840P) ...........$14,571$14,5712002 Ford F-150 Harley Davidson (26842A) $14,5712004 GMC Envoy SUV (27230B) ................$14,9712008 Saturn Vue XR AWD SUV (27219A) ...$14,9711994 Chevrolet Corvette (3926B)................$14,9711993 GMC Typhoon 2dr utility (26998P) .....$15,8712009 Honda Civic 2dr cpe (R12896A)..........$15,8712011 Ford Focus SES sedan (27112) ............$15,9712006 Jeep Wrangler X Sport (27011) ..........$15,9712010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i (27115) ..............$16,5712006 MINI Coopers S conv (V1132B) ..........$16,571

2008 Volkswagen Jetta sedan (V9719A) .....$16,871$16,8712008 Honda Civic sedan (R12564A) ............$16,8712007 Honda CR-V EX-L AWD (V9389A) ........$16,8712009 Honda Accord LX-P sedan (V8916E) ...$17,8712011 Nissan Altima S sedan (27114) ...........$17,9712008 Ford Taurus Ltd AWD (26998A).............$17,9712009 Jeep Liberty Sport AWD (R12259B) ..... $18,3712008 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 (27264) ...... $18,4712009 Subaru Impreza Outback (V1159R) ..... $18,9712009 Nissan Rogue SUV (V9570A)................ $19,3712006 Cadillac Escalade AWD (R12269B) ...... $19,971

New Cars

Page 15: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 15

NB’s Hannah Piper gets WWU design scholarship

Western Washington University student Hannah Michelle Piper, daughter of David and Sharon Piper of North Bend, has accepted a $1,500 Mount Baker Products Scholarship for the 2012-2013 academic year.

The Mount Baker Products Scholarship is awarded to winners in the annual Mount Baker Products Furniture Design Competition.

Piper graduated from Mount Si High School in 2008 and has a 3.5 GPA. She is also a Western’s College of Business and Economics Alumni Scholarship recipient, on Western’s Dean’s List and a CBE Distinguished Scholar. Piper’s profes-sional goal is to be a supply chain professional.

Valley students graduate at Seattle Pacific

Five Valley students have graduated from Seattle Pacific University.

From Snoqualmie, Judith Ann Bergman graduated with a bachelor of science in nursing, while Sarah June Whims gradu-ated cum laude with a bachelor of arts in accounting.

From North Bend, Janet Lynn Bradley graduated with a master of education in curriculum and instruction. David Curtis Ferguson of North Bend graduated cum laude with a bachelor of arts in music, while Chatty Dora O’Keeffe graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor of science in nursing.

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Volunteers:Evan DixFritz RibaryGina EstepGregory MalcomJennifer OsbornJill MassengillKevin HauglieKevin DwyerKim LiskKim StarrLee RedmondLindsey Oliver

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The 24th Annual Tour de Peaks was produced and staged by the Snoqualmie Valley Chamber of Commerce.

Page 16: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com16 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Jeffrey ‘Pete’ Stevens

Jeffrey P. “Pete” Stevens, age 62 of Fall City, formerly of Issaquah, died at home on Saturday, Aug. 11.

Pete is survived by his lov-ing wife Arlene; two broth-ers Gary and Phillip Stevens. A committal service was held Friday, August 17, at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent. Arrangements are by Flintofts Funeral Home.

...obituariesJohn E. “Jack” Chalfa, of North Bend

(formerly of Issaquah), passed away at his home on August 16, 2012. He was 87 years of age.

Jack was born on January 2, 1925 in Renton, the son of John Joseph and Mary V. (Pedro) Chalfa. He was raised in Issaquah and voluntarily enlisted into the US Navy in 1943 before completing High School. After technical training at the University of Wisconsin, he saw battle as a Radioman 3rd class on the LCS(L)(3) #8, one of the Mighty Midgets used in the South Pacific for close support before landing forces on beaches. He fulfilled several campaigns in the Pacific theater including the Philippine Liberation.

Those who knew Jack gained a profound respect for his deep dedication to country and wisdom through his naval service. He wrote, “fighting a war on any Navy ship is no cake-walk…in our dotage we understand how quickly we grew from teenage boys to manhood, how much we appreciate God’s gift of life and deliverance from danger and the perspective we gained from our wartime experiences”. In one harrowing battle, his ship was only one of seven in his Flotilla to survive. Yet despite these odds, Jack always managed to find humor in the most desperate of times; his stories of Elmer the deaf monkey who climbed the halyards to rally the crew during the roughest of seas, the live chickens in the 40 millimeter gun tub, and the pop-up toaster caper whereby he repurposed the Commodore’s toaster to his radio shack, were all-time favorites. For those who may wonder, the toaster still works today and maintains a stately position on Jack’s kitchen counter.

On honorable discharge with commendations in 1946, he returned to civilian life graduating from Issaquah High School as a star football player. He went on to receive his Bachelor of Science from Seattle University in 1951. Attracted to a life of

adventure, he became a trucker and enjoyed the challenges

of transporting fuel and oversized loads. He worked for Renton-Issaquah Auto Freight, Harms Pacific Transport, Pacific International Express, and later hauled beer to stores and taverns in the Northwest for Greens Distributors and K & L Distributors. He retired from trucking after 40 years of service in 1987.

Jack married the love of his life, Alice Lorraine Hahne, on April 28, 1962 in

Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. They resided in Issaquah from 1963 to 1987 then retired to North Bend. In their later years, Jack and Alice enjoyed travelling around the world and close to home. Ocean salmon fishing was Jack’s passion and he enjoyed reminiscing about his many fishing trips almost as much as fishing itself. He loved cutting firewood, was an avid vegetable gardener and baker, and was generous in sharing the fruits of hard labor. He and Alice were inseparable companions, celebrating their Golden Wedding Anniversary in April 2012.

Jack was preceded in death by his wife Alice (July 8, 2012) and his twin sisters Donna and recently, Dulcie Chalfa. He is survived by his cousin, Jim Barnes, and several 2nd cousins. He was a life-long member of Albert Larson Post #3436 Veterans of Foreign Wars, Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie #3054 and Lake Sammamish Elks Lodge #1843.

Funeral services will be held 9:30 am Thursday, August 23, 2012 at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Issaquah. Committal will follow at Lower Hillside Cemetery, Issaquah, with military honors.

Remembrances may be made to the LCS Museum and the National Association of USS LCS (L) 1-130, c/o Dennis A. Steenbergen (http://www.mightymidgets.org), or the American Cancer Society.

Arrangements are by Flintoft’s Funeral Home. Friends are invited to share memories and sign the family’s on-line guest book at www.flintofts.com.

665996

John E. “Jack” Chalfa

...obituariesPlace a paid obituary to honor those

who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506

[email protected] obituaries include publication

in the newspaper and online atwww.valleyrecord.com

All notices are subject to veri� cation.

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Snoqualmie Police DepartmentTueSDay, aug. 14

Car prowl: At 2:16 p.m., an officer was dispatched to the 6300 block of Silent Creek Avenue Southeast for a theft re-port. The victim had parked his van in the driveway of his home around 11:30 p.m. Aug. 12, and around 8:30 the next morning, he noticed the lock of his door was damaged, and several items inside were missing. The thieves took a pair of $200 sunglasses, and miscellaneous tools valued at $1,000.

SunDay, aug. 12

MarshMallow CoMplaint: At 10:46 p.m., a caller in the 34600 block of Southeast Carmichael Loop asked police to investigate what she thought was a loud party. Police found four teenage girls roasting marshmallows and asked them to keep the noise level down.

FriDay, aug. 10

Car prowls: At 5:21 a.m., an officer on patrol saw two cars in the 7800 block of Silva Avenue Southeast that were possi-ble victims of car prowls. Both cars were parked on the street with their doors open, dome lights on, and their glove boxes and gas-tank lids open. lost and intoxiCated: At 1:55 a.m., an officer on patrol stopped a car at Southeast Snoqualmie Parkway and Fisher Avenue for speeding. The driver appeared intoxicated and didn’t know how he ended up in Snoqualmie; he’d left Taco-ma to go to Federal Way. He was arrested for DUI, and asked if the local police were hiring, since he’d probably lost his job.

Fall City Fire DistrictWeDneSDay, aug. 15

Missing in the river: At 3:10 p.m., Fall City Fire Department, Eastside Fire and Rescue, Bellevue Paramedics, and Duvall Fire Department responded to the 1500 block of West Sno-

qualmie River Road for reports of a 20-year-old man missing in the river. Crew members dived down and removed the pa-tient from the river, and provided resuscitation efforts while en-route to the hospital. The man was transported to a local hospital by Bellevue Paramedics. illegal burn: At 7:38 p.m., Fall City Fire Department re-sponded to the 3900 block of 310th Avenue for a haze in the area. Upon arrival crew members found a large 30 by 30 foot illegal burn during a county-wide burn ban. They extin-guished the fire, and gave the resident a notice of violation.

MonDay, aug. 13

off the road: At 5:37 p.m., Fall City Fire Department, and Eastside Fire and Rescue responded to the 3900 block of Fall City-Carnation Road Southeast for reports of a single vehicle off the roadway down an embankment. One patient was evaluated at scene, and refused a transport. head injury: At 6:16 p.m., Fall City Fire Department, and Bellevue Paramedics responded to the 29800 block of Tolt Hill Road for a 50-year-old man who experienced a head injury after a fall. He was evaluated at the scene, and then transported to a local hospital by a private ambulance.

SunDay, aug. 12

fall: At 4:58 p.m., Fall City Fire Department and Snoqualmie Fire Department responded to the 34800 block of Southeast 33 Place for a 25-year-old woman who was injured after fall-ing from a log over the river. She was evaluated at the scene, and transported to a local hospital by a private ambulance.fighting: At 6:34 p.m., Fall City Fire Department, and East-side Fire and Rescue responded to the 35200 block of David Powell Road for a 28-year-old man being combative on the river. The man refused treatment, and was left in custody of a King County Sheriff’s Deputy.Confused: At 8:57 p.m., Fall City Fire Department responded to the intersection of Southeast 47th Place and 354th Av-enue Southeast for a 28-year-old man who was acting con-fused. He was evaluated at the scene, and transported to a local hospital by a private ambulance.

SaTurDay, aug. 11

reaCtion: At 12:21 p.m., Fall City Fire Department responded

to the 34000 block of Southeast 43rd Street for a 52-year-old man experiencing an adverse reaction to prescription medi-cations. The man was evaluated at the scene, and transport-ed to a local hospital by a private ambulance.heart attaCk: At 4:30 p.m., Fall City Fire Department, Bellevue Paramedics, Snoqualmie Fire Department, and Eastside Fire & Rescue responded to the 5100 block of 335th Lane Southeast for a 62-year-old man in cardiac arrest. Crew members worked together, but their best efforts were unsuccessful.

FriDay, aug. 10

knee pain: At 7:41 p.m., Fall City Fire Department responded to the 7700 block of Fairway Avenue Southeast for a 57-year-old woman experiencing knee pain. She was evaluated at the scene, and transported to a hospital by a private ambulance.

ThurSDay, aug. 9

feeling low: At 12:17 p.m., Fall City Fire Department respond-ed to the 4800 block of Preston-Fall City Road for a 50-year-old man who was lethargic. The man was evaluated at the scene, and transported to a hospital by private ambulance.

Carnation Police Department ThurSDay, aug. 16

doMestiC violenCe: At 2:26 a.m., police were called to the 4700 block of Stewart Avenue for a report of domestic vio-lence. A 41 year-old man was arrested and booked into jail on assault charges.

WeDneSDay, aug. 15

bike theft: At 7:53 p.m., two campers contacted an officer while they were searching the city for a silver Trek mountain bike stolen from the Tolt MacDonald Park. The pair were ad-vised to contact the sheriff’s department. Officers searched for the bike with no success.

MonDay, aug. 13

vaCation’s over: At 2:15 p.m., police were called to the 4600 block of 325 Avenue Northeast, where an observant neigh-bor reported suspicious activity. It was the home-owner, back early from a vacation trip.

Obituaries

On the scanner

Page 17: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 17

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Musical banquet at

Snoqualmie Point Park

Join Pacific MusicWorks and the Mount Si Chamber Choir

for a “Musical Banquet,” a free, open-air concert 2 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 8, on the lawn at Snoqualmie Point Park. This

concert features some of the greatest hits of the 17th cen-

tury performed in an inspiring natural setting.

The concert will begin with an all-women’s acapella ensemble

from the Mount Si Chamber Choir performing contemporary American and French-Canadian pieces. Following, internation-

ally renowned lutenist and con-ductor Stephen Stubbs will lead a chamber ensemble of singers

and musicians in a program entitled “A Musical Banquet,”

based on a Robert Dowland col-lection from 1610.

Artists include: lutenist Stephen Stubbs, baroque harpist

Maxine Eilander, violinist Tekla Cunningham, and sopranos

Catherine Webster and Erin Calata. Snoqualmie Point Park is

located at 37580 SE Winery Road. Heading east on I-90,

take Exit 27, turn right and head up the hill to the left. From North Bend, drive up North

Bend Way and go under the Exit 27 overpass, continuing up the

hill to the park.This musical event is spon-

sored by the Snoqualmie Arts Commission and 4Culture.For more information, call

60 years, together

courtesy photos

North Bend couple Sam and Kathy Riley attend a Mount Si football game in 2010. The Rileys, pictured below when they married, 60 years ago last July, will celebrate a diamond anniversary party this fall.

North Bend’s Sam and Kathy Riley look back on six decades of

marriage; family plans party in Oct.

In 1952, Sam Riley first met Kathy at a local dance. Sam and Kathy Riley were joined in marriage on July 18, 1952. Lifelong

residents of North Bend, the Rileys, together with their big family, have lived on the same street of Maloney Grove Road since they said, “I do.”

Their diamond wedding anniversary will be celebrated as a symbol of lifelong commitment, courage and love. Sam proudly celebrates his 80th birthday this year as well. The family is making plans for a big celebration of their 60th wedding anniversary and Sam’s birthday. All friends of the family are welcome to attend. The event is scheduled for noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, October 20, at Sallal Grange.

For Sam and Kathy, it is family that matters most, and what they cherish and hold dearest to their hearts. Their 10 children and their spouses are; Sam, who died a short time after birth; Mark and Crystal Riley; Darryl and Donna Riley; Scott and Cindy Riley; Shannon and Chuck Jayne; Traci Riley; Kevin and Lisa Rae Riley; Todd and Shelley Riley; Eric and Shari Riley; and Lisa and Casey Brogden-Riley. Most of the Riley children and their families reside in the greater Snoqualmie Valley. Traci lives in Seattle. Over the years, the Rileys have also welcomed the birth of 25 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.

Kathy proudly served as the Kindergarten room mother for all nine of her children, from 1958 through 1970. In the 1960s, work was hard to come by, and husbands would go where the work was to be found. Sam spent many months of the year in Alaska working construction and leaving Kathy behind to tend to the children.

Sam founded Riley-n-Sons Drywall in 1975 and until his retirement proudly operated the

company, while working alongside his sons. Kathy opened the doors to North Bend’s one and only fabric shop; the Sew-Sew Shop in 1970.

The couple went on memorable vacations together, such as trips to Mexico, Hawaii and a couple of Caribbean Cruises. However, it is their summer trips to Lake Chelan, that Kathy and their children cherish most of all. Seventeen consecutive summers were spent together at Lake Chelan. Kathy would pack up the camper and head out of North Bend, always loaded with more than her nine kids, because doesn’t every-one allow their kids to bring a friend, even when you have nine of your own already? When pos-sible, Sam would join them on the weekends.

For the Rileys, it is being surrounded by the love of family and friends that equates to ‘life well spent’.

Since 1967, when son Mark first went to Mount Si, there has been a child or grand-child in attendance at the High School. Today, as proud members of this Wildcat Nation, Sam and Kathy can often times be seen on the side-lines cheering on their grandchildren.

Sudoku See answers, page 19

Difficulty level: 8

9 3 7 1 4 5 2 6 88 5 4 6 7 2 3 9 11 6 2 8 9 3 4 5 72 8 6 7 1 9 5 3 47 4 3 5 2 8 6 1 95 9 1 4 3 6 7 8 23 7 9 2 5 1 8 4 64 1 8 3 6 7 9 2 56 2 5 9 8 4 1 7 3

Across1. Some N.C.O.’s

7. Be a snitch

13. Smooth

14. Frank acknowledg-ment

15. Food

16. Highest legislative councils

18. Come to mind

19. Dracula, at times

21. “Scream” star Campbell

22. Locale

23. Salk’s conquest

25. Alum

26. Athletic supporter? (golf)

27. Social visitors

29. Absorbed, as a cost

30. Behind in payments

32. Snake in the grass

34. “A jealous mistress”: Emerson

35. “___ bad!”

36. Involving the stomach

40. Separate from a larger group (2 wds)

44. On, as a lamp

45. Either end of square

sail support

47. Biochemistry abbr.

48. Andy’s radio partner

50. Bats

51. Carpentry tool

52. Pivot

53. Lent’s start, e.g.: Abbr.

54. “Taras Bulba” author

55. Colonized

58. Spanish-speaking community

60. “Citizen Kane” actor Everett ___

61. Puts in a straight line

62. Harmonized

63. Peace of mind

Down1. More frightening

2. Judge

3. “Reduce, ___, recycle”

4. Battering wind

5. Australian runner

6. Signs

7. More flavorful

8. “___ Maria”

9. Elephant’s weight, maybe

10. Strongly nasal speech

11. Situated on the side

12. Better

15. Ziti, e.g.

17. Exodus commemo-ration

20. “Is that ___?”

23. Incomplete

24. Public speaking

27. Keep in stock

28. Attack

31. “Dig in!”

33. “Sesame Street” watcher

36. Lens

37. Drifting

38. In a resolute manner

39. Filled to capacity

40. Ridge deposited along a shore by waves

41. Ancestry

42. Release

43. Asian weight units

46. ___-eyed

49. ___ Hall University in NJ

51. Do without

54. Film crew member

56. Anita Brookner’s “Hotel du ___”

57. Charlotte-to-Raleigh dir.

59. A pint, maybe

Crossword puzzle

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Page 18: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com18 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

PUBLIC NOTICE #663169DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

(ECF12-006)WAC 197-11-970 Determina- tion of nonsignificance (DNS).Description of proposal: Amendment to Chapter 15.40 Permissible Uses of the City of Carnation Municipal Code to al- low Fitness and Recreation Uses in the Horticultural Commercial (HC) Zone.Proponent: City of CarnationLocation of proposal, including street address, if any: City of Carnation, city-wide.Lead agency: City of CarnationThe lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a probable significant ad- verse impact on the environment. An environmental impact state- ment (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with the lead agency. This information is available to the public on request. [X] This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this propo- sal for 20 days from the date of First Publication below. Com- ments must be submitted by September 4, 2012.Responsible Official: Linda ScottPosition/Title: City Planner Phone: (425) 333-4192Address: City of Carnation 4621 Tolt Avenue PO Box 1238 Carnation, WA 98014-1238Date August 9, 2012 (OPTIONAL)[X] There is no agency appeal.Date Issued: August 9, 2012Date Mailed: August 9, 2012Date Published: August 15, 2012 and August 22, 2012 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #663133DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

(ECF12-003)WAC 197-11-970 Determina- tion of nonsignificance (DNS).Description of proposal: C i t y of Carnation Update of the Parks and Recreation, Capital Facilities and Utilities Elements of the Comprehensive Plan.Proponent: City of Carnation

Location of proposal, including street address, if any: City of Carnation, city-wide.Lead agency: City of CarnationThe lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a probable significant ad- verse impact on the environment. An environmental impact state- ment (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with the lead agency. This information is available to the public on request. [X] This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this propo- sal for 20 days from the date of First Publication below. Com- ments must be submitted by Sep- tember 4, 2012.Responsible Official: Linda ScottPosition/Title: City Planner Phone: (425) 333-4192Address: City of Carnation 4621 Tolt Avenue PO Box 1238 Carnation, WA 98014-1238Date August 9, 2012 (OPTIONAL)[X] There is no agency appeal.Date Issued: August 9, 2012Date Mailed: August 9, 2012Date Published: August 15, 2012 and August 22, 2012 in the Snoqulamie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOITCE #665525 The Snoqualmie Valley School District Board of Directors has scheduled a Work Session for Thursday, 8/30/12, 6:00-7:15 p.m. in the District Administra- tion Office Boardroom located at 8001 Silva Ave. SE, Snoqualmie, WA 98065. The purpose of the Work Ses- sion will be to receive a report on Teaching and Learning. Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on August 22, 2012.

PUBLIC NOTICE #663152DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

(ECF12-005)WAC 197-11-970 Determina- tion of nonsignificance (DNS).Description of proposal: Amendment to Chapter 15.46 Accessory Dwelling Units of the City of Carnation Municipal Code.Proponent: City of Carnation

Location of proposal, including street address, if any: City of Carnation, city-wide.Lead agency: City of CarnationThe lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a probable significant ad- verse impact on the environment. An environmental impact state- ment (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with the lead agency. This information is available to the public on request. [X] This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this propo- sal for 20 days from the date of First Publication below. Com- ments must be submitted by September 4, 2012.Responsible Official: Linda ScottPosition/Title: City Planner Phone: (425) 333-4192Address: City of Carnation 4621 Tolt Avenue PO Box 1238 Carnation, WA 98014-1238Date: August 9, 2012 (OPTIONAL)[X] There is no agency appeal.Date Issued: August 9, 2012Date Mailed: August 9, 2012Date Published: August 15, 2012 and August 22, 2012 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #663356LEGAL NOTICE

CITY OF CARNATION-NOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Carnation Planning Board will hold a Public Hearing to receive public comment regarding the following proposed ordinances:• An ordinance amending the

Carnation Comprehensive Plan; clarifying the goals and updating and establishing new level of service stan- dards in Chapter 6 Parks and Recreation Element; updating information regarding the City’s water utility and other utility references in Chapter 8 Utilities Element; updating and reorganizing the City’s capital facility inventory in Chapter 9 Capital Facilities Element; and setting forth legislative findings.

• An ordinance amending Chapter 15.08 CMC Basic Definitions and Interpreta- tions to add new definitions for “commercial sports and athletic facilities” and “light trespass”; amending Chapter 15.36 CMC Zoning Districts and Zoning Map to expand the authorized land uses within the Horticultural Com- mercial (HC) zone; and amending Chapter 15.40 CMC Permissible Uses to authorize commercial sports and athletic facilities as a permitted use within the HC and LI/M zones subject to restrictions.

• An ordinance amending Chapter 15.46 CMC Acces- sory Dwelling Units; clarify- ing and cross-referencing other codified regulations governing such land uses.

• An ordinance amending Chapter 15.64 CMC Flood- ways, Floodplains, Drainage and Erosion; revising and up- dating the City’s stormwater management regulations; clarifying the purpose and intent of said regulations; adding new definitions; revis- ing and clarifying certain reg- ulatory standards; and setting forth legislative findings.

The Planning Board will also discuss and potentially adopt findings and conclusions in sup- port of the proposed ordinances. The hearing will be conducted at the regular meeting of the Carnation Planning Board on August 28, 2012, at 7:00 PM or soon thereafter, in the Council Chambers at Carnation City Hall located at 4621 Tolt Avenue in Carnation. The hearing may be continued to subsequent Planning Board meetings. The hearing is open to the public. All persons wishing to comment on the proposed ordi- nances may submit comment in writing or verbally at the sched- uled public hearing. The full text of the proposed ordinances will be available for public review during normal business hours after Wednesday, August 22nd, 2012, from the city clerk at Carnation City Hall. It is possible that substantial changes in the proposed amendments may be made following the public hear- ing. There will be an additional public hearing on this subject

before the City Council prior to final adoption. This notice is published pursuant to CMC 1.14.010 & 15.100.040 (B).

CITY OF CARNATIONMary Otness, City Clerk

Published in the Snoqulamie Valley Record on August 15, 2012 and August 22, 2012.

PUBLIC NOTICE #663139DETERMINATION OF NONSIGNIFICANCE

(ECF12-004)WAC 197-11-970 Determina- tion of nonsignificance (DNS).Description of proposal: Amendment to Chapter 15.64 Part II Stormwater Management pf the City of Carnation Munici- pal Code.Proponent: City of CarnationLocation of proposal, including street address, if any: City of Carnation, city-wide.Lead agency: City of CarnationThe lead agency for this proposal has determined that it does not have a probable significant ad- verse impact on the environment. An environmental impact state- ment (EIS) is not required under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c). This decision was made after review of a completed environmental checklist and other information on file with the lead agency. This information is available to the public on request. [X] This DNS is issued under WAC 197-11-340(2); the lead agency will not act on this propo- sal for 20 days from the date of First Publication below. Comments must be submitted by September 4, 2012.Responsible Official:Linda ScottPosition/Title: City Planner Phone: (425) 333-4192Address: City of Carnation 4621 Tolt Avenue PO Box 1238 Carnation, WA 98014-1238Date August 9, 2012 (OPTIONAL)[X] There is no agency appeal.Date Issued: August 9, 2012Date Mailed: August 9, 2012Date Published: August 15, 2012 and August 22, 2012 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #665523Legal Notice

City Of SnoqualmieKing County,

Washington 98065

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to RCW 35A.14.460 that the proposed effective date of annexation of the following described property as established in Ordinance No. 1098 is Sep- tember 28, 2012. The property annexed is legally described as follows: THAT PORTION OF SEC- TIONS 29, 30 & 32, TOWN- SHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST, WILLAMETTE MERID- IAN LYING NORTHERLY AND EASTERLY OF THE PLAT OF SNOQUALMIE FALLS AS RECORDED IN VOLUME 6 OF PLATS AT PAGE 51 ON SEPTEMBER 25, 1890, RECORDS OF KING COUNTY, WASHINGTON AND NORTHERLY AND EASTERLY OF THE CITY OF SNOQUALMIE MUNICIPAL BOUNDARIES AS ESTAB- LISHED BY CITY ORDI- NANCE NUMBERS 265, 514, 566/569 AND 650/659 AND WESTERLY OF THE KING COUNTY URBAN GROWTH REA (UGA) BOUNDARY ESTABLISHED BY KING COUNTY ORDINANCE NO. 11575, SAID UGA LINE MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE INTER- SECTION OF THE EASTER- LY MARGIN OF 396TH DRIVE SE, (COUNTY ROAD #494) WITH THE NORTH LINE OF SAID SECTION 29, SAID POINT BEING N89°53’59”W 2082.0 FEET DISTANT FROM THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID SECTION 29; THENCE S00°52’54”E A DISTANCE OF 457.75 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE SOUTH- EASTERLY ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE LEFT, HAVING A RADIUS OF 686.34 FEET, THROUGH A CEN- TRAL ANGLE OF 17°30’00”, AN ARC LENGTH OF 209.63 FEET; THENCE Sl8°22 ‘54”E A DISTANCE OF 839.42 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE RIGHT, HAVING A RADIUS OF 173.24 FEET, THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 76°20’00”, AN ARC LENGTH OF 230.80 FEET;

PUBLIC NOTICES

Continued on next page...

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Hospital Lunch and Learn looks at gluten-free diets

Snoqualmie Valley Hospital District’s September Lunch & Learn, noon to 1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 6, explores the “Gluten-Free Diet: Beyond Myth or Fad,” with speaker Nancy Baker.

Baker is a former director of education for the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness. The event is open to the public and held at Snoqualmie Fire Station, 37600 S.E. Snoqualmie Parkway. Lunch is provided. Register at www.snoqualmiehospital.org/community/lunch-learn.

Learn how Snoqualmie works at the Citizens Academy

The city of Snoqualmie is offering a free seven-week course for citizens to get a first-hand look at how Snoqualmie’s government works. The sessions will be led by Snoqualmie city leaders, officials, and department heads. Sessions will be informal, interactive and fun. Some sessions will include tours of city facilities including public works, the fire department, and police department.

The course begins on September 12 with a look back at Snoqualmie’s history and a look to the future. Over seven

weeks, participants will learn what a mayor-council form of government is; where city revenues come from; where property taxes go; who is responsible for capital planning; how public safety programs are put into action; how citizens can be more involved in the decisions that influence quality of life and more.

Session times are 6 to 8:30 p.m. on Wednesdays, Sept. 12 to Oct. 17, with a Saturday session on Oct. 6 at the Snoqualmie Police Department. A certificate of completion is awarded at the city council meeting at 7 p.m., Monday, Oct. 22.

Apply at www.cityofsnoqualmie.org.

Page 19: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 19

THENCE S57°57’06”W A DIS- TANCE OF 136.85 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE SOUTHERLY ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE LEFT, HAVING A RADIUS OF 113.24 FEET, THROUGH A CEN- TRAL ANGLE OF 54°43’00”, AN ARC LENGTH OF 108.14 FEET; THENCE S03°14’06”W A DISTANCE OF 258.32 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE SOUTHERLY ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE LEFT, HAVING A RADIUS OF 686.20 FEET, THROUGH A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 12°57’00”, AN ARC LENGTH OF 155.10 FEET; THENCE S09°42 ‘54”E A DIS- TANCE OF 726.81 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE SOUTHERLY ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE RIGHT, HAV- ING A RADIUS OF 1462.39 FEET, THROUGH A CEN- TRAL ANGLE OF 02°35’24”, AN ARC LENGTH OF 66.10 FEET TO THE EASTERLY PROLONGATION OF THE NORTH LINE OF TRACT F, KING COUNTY BOUNDARY LINE ADJUSTMENT & LARGE LOT SEGREGATION NO. L10L0024 AS RECORDED UNDER KING COUNTY RE- CORDING N0.20100630900006 AND AS AMENDED BY AMENDED SUBDIVISION SURVEY UNDER KING COUNTY RECORDING NO. 20120702900002; THENCE LEAVING THE EASTERLY MARGIN OF SAID 396TH DRIVE SE AND CONTINUING TO FOLLOW SAID KING COUNTY URBAN GROWTH AREA (UGA) BOUNDARY, S89°44 ‘54”W ALONG THE EASTERLY PROLONGATION OF THE NORTH LINE OF SAID TRACT F, A DISTANCE OF 275.69 FEET TO THE EASTERLY MARGIN OF THE FORMER CHICAGO MILWAUK.EE & ST. PAUL (CM & SP) RAILWAY CO. RIGHT-OF-WAY; THENCE S24°06’04”EALONG SAID EASTERLY MARGIN A DIS- TANCE OF 1062.70 FEET TO A POINT ON THE SOUTH LINE OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTH- EAST QUARTER OF SAID SECTION 29, SAID POINT

ALSO BEING AN ANGLE POINT IN THE BOUNDARY OF SAID TRACT F; THENCE CONTINUING S24°06’04”E ALONG SAID CM & SP RAILWAY RIW AND THE EASTERLY BOUNDARY OF SAID TRACT F AND ITS SOUTHEASTERLY PROLON- GATION A DISTANCE OF 1300 FEET MORE OR LESS TO THE SOUTHERLY BANK OF THE SNOQUALMIE RIVER AND THE TERMINUS OF THIS DESCRIBED LINE; EXCEPT THE RIGHT OF WAY OF 396TH DRIVE SE SITU- ATE IN THE COUNTY OF KING AND STATE OF WASHINGTON.ATTEST: Jodi Warren, MMC City Clerk Publish/Post: August 22, 2012 and August 29, 2012 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #665621CITY OF NORTH BEND

NOTICE OF APPLICATIONSProposed Projects:

2 Adjacent Short Plats The applicant has submitted for two short plat applications for the division of two adjacent parcels on Maloney Grove Ave. SE (1023089077 and 1023089155) into 4 lots each, through the short plat process. Each short plat rep- resents a separate application, but the two applications will be reviewed together as they share right-of-way improvements. Owner/Applicant: John Day Homes. PO Box 2930 North Bend, WA 98045, (425) 831-4901Application Type: Preliminary and Final Short Plat ApprovalDate Applications Received: July 13, 2012Date of Notice of Complete Applications: August 20, 2012Date of Public Notice of Applications: August 22, 2012Deadline for Public Comments: September 5, 2012Other Necessary Approvals Not Included In These Applications: • SEPA Threshold Determination• CertificateofConcurrency• Stormwater Management Approval • Clearing and Grading Permit• Right-of-Way Use Permit • NPDES Construction Stormwater General PermitEnvironmental Review: A State Environmental Policy Act

(SEPA) Determination and 15-day comment period will be completed for the project. Local Government Contact Person/Availability of Documents: Additional informa- tion concerning the application can be obtained from Mike McCarty, Senior Planner, North Bend Community and Economic Development Department, 126 E. Fourth Street, North Bend, WA 98045; (425) 888-7649, fax (425) 888-5636, mmccarty@ northbendwa.gov. Relevant doc- uments, including the application and site plan materials, can be re- viewedatthesameoffice.Applicable Development Regulations and Policies: The application will be evaluated for consistency with, and mitigation will be required pursuant to, the following City of North Bend development regulations and pol- icies: North Bend Comprehen- sive Land Use Plan; North Bend Municipal Code Chapter 14.04 (SEPA), 14.16 (Stormwater Management), Title 17 (Land Segregation), Title 18 (Zoning), and Title 19 (Development Standards). Applicable permits and approvals governing the above referenced municipal code chapters will be required prior to development of approved short plat lots.Submittal of Public Comments: Public comments must be received in the North Bend Department of Community and Economic Development by 4:30 pm on the date shown above. Comments may be mailed, emailed, personally delivered, or sent by facsimile, and should be as specific as possible. Any person may request a copy of the decision once made by contact- ing Senior Planner Mike McCar- ty at the address, email and phone number set forth above.Appeal Rights: Any party of record may initiate an appeal of an administrative or quasi-j udicial decision within 21 days following issuance of the final decision, per NBMC 20.06. Posted at the site and in public places, noticed on the City’s web- site, published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record, and mailed to all property owners within 300 feet of the boundary of the subject property, and to potential agencies with jurisdiction. Published in Snoqualmie Valley Record on August 22, 2012.

PUBLIC NOTICE #665648CITY OF SNOQUALMIE

NOTICE OF APPLICATION AND NOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING FOR CONDITIONAL

USE PERMITProject: Daycare/Montessori School Application: Conditional Use Permit Applicant: Rooster Valley Farm School Submittal Date: August 13, 2012Date Complete: August 13, 2012Project Description: The applicant will use the exist- ing building (previously Sno- qualmie Valley Family Worship Center) to operate a daycare for children ages 2 ½- 5 years old. The daycare will have two class rooms that have the capacity for 20 children in each room. Project Location: The proposed project is located at 8488 Falls Ave SE. Public Testimony: A public hearing has been scheduled before the Hearing Examiner on September 11, 2012 at 4:30pm at Snoqualmie City Council Chambers located at 38624 SE River Street, Snoqualmie. Oral comments may be given at the hearing and any person may submit written testimony on the above application. Written comments should be submitted to the City of Snoqualmie, PO Box 987, Snoqualmie, Washington 98065, Attention: Gwyn Berry, and must be received by 4pm on September 11, 2012. Notifica- tion and request of written deci- sion may be made by submitting your name and address to the Planning Department with that request. Application Documents: The application and all support- ing materials are available for public inspection at the City of Snoqualmie Planning Depart- ment Building, 38624 SE River Street, Snoqualmie.Published: August 22, 2012 in the Snoqualmie Valley Record.

PUBLIC NOTICE #665638NOTICE: ANNOUNCEMENT

OF AVAILABILITY OF DRAFT RECLAIMED

WATER PERMITPERMIT NO: ST0045506APPLICANT: Washington State Fire Training Academy50810 SE Grouse Ridge Road

North Bend, King County has applied for a Reclaimed Water Permit in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 90.48 and Chapter 90.46, Revised Code of Washington (RCW). Follow- ing evaluation of the application and other available information, a draft permit has been devel- oped which would allow for the production and distribution of reclaimed water from the facility to the Washington State Patrol property in North Bend.

PUBLIC COMMENT AND INFORMATION

The draft permit and fact sheet may be viewed at the Department of Ecology (Department) web- site: https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/ wqreports/public/f?p=publicpar- is:permit_docs:14631888133159- 98 The application, fact sheet, proposed permit, and other relat- ed documents are also available at the Department’s Northwest Regional Office for inspection and copying between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:30 pm week- days. To obtain a copy or to arrange to view copies at the Northwest Regional Office, please call Sally Perkins at (425) 649-7190, or email her at [email protected] Interested persons are invited to submit written comments regard- ing the proposed permit. All comments must be submitted within 30 days after publication of this notice to be considered

for the final determination. Comments should be sent to:Water Quality Permit CoordinatorDepartment of EcologyNorthwestRegionalOffice3190 - 160th Avenue SEBellevue, WA 98008-5452Email comments should be sent to [email protected] Any interested party may request a public hearing on the proposed permit within 30 days of the publication date of this notice. The request for a hearing shall state the interest of the party and the reasons why a hear- ing is necessary. If a hearing is to be held, public notice will be published at least 30 days in advance of the hearing date. Any party responding to this notice with comments will be mailed a copy of a hearing public notice. Please bring this public notice to the attention of persons who you know would be interested in this matter. The Department is an equal opportunity agency. If you require special accommodations or need this document in a format for the visually impaired, call Tricia Miller at (425) 649-7201. Persons with hearing loss can call 711 for Washington Relay Service. Persons with a speech disability can call 877-833-6341. Published in Snoqualmie Valley Record on August 22, 2012.

PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506

or e-mail [email protected]

PUBLIC NOTICES...Continued from

previous page

TriniTy EvangElical church

26729 SE 76th Place • Issaquah 98027 • 425.392.2546 • [email protected]

We are a small, country church preaching and teaching God’s word. We gather to worship our Lord Jesus Christ and learn from his word. It is our hope you will find the worship uplifting and inspiring, the messages relevant and practical, and the people warm and genuine.

We would be delighted to have you browse our website at www.trinityi90.com and visit usSunday mornings at 10:00 am.

Please contact church of� ces for additional information

WELCOME TO OUR LADY OF SORROWSCATHOLIC CHURCH

Mass ScheduleSaturday 5pm • Sunday 8, 9:30 & 11am

39025 SE Alpha St. Snoqualmie,WA 98065

425-888-2974 • www.olos.orgRev. Roy Baroma, Pastor

Mass at St. Anthony Church, Carnation.Sundays at 9:30am.

Spanish Mass at 11am on the 1st Sunday425-333-4930 • www.stanthony-carnation.org

A church for the entire vAlleyJoin us at our new DT Snoqualmie location

8086 Railroad Ave. SE

[email protected]

EVERY SUNDAY @ 10:00AM

Mount Si Lutheran Church

411 NE 8th St., North BendPastor Mark Griffi th • 425 888-1322

[email protected]

Summer Sunday Worship

9:00 AM with coffee hour following

Dir., Family & Youth Ministry—Lauren Frerichs“Like” us on Facebook –Mt. Si Lutheran Youth

Puzzle Answers FrOM PAGe 17

9 3 7 1 4 5 2 6 88 5 4 6 7 2 3 9 11 6 2 8 9 3 4 5 72 8 6 7 1 9 5 3 47 4 3 5 2 8 6 1 95 9 1 4 3 6 7 8 23 7 9 2 5 1 8 4 64 1 8 3 6 7 9 2 56 2 5 9 8 4 1 7 3

Snoqualmie Valley

Places of worship

North BeNd theatre ShowtimeSWednesday, May 30

• Recess: school’s out, (g), NooN, FRee summeR matiNee• DiaRy oF a wimpy KiD: Dog Days, (pg), 3 aND 7 p.m.

Thursday, May 13• DiaRy oF a wimpy KiD: Dog Days, (pg), 3 aND 7 p.m.

FrIday, june 1• the BouRNe legacy, (pg-13), 5 aND 8 p.m.

saTurday, june 2• the BouRNe legacy, (pg-13), 5 aND 8 p.m.

• sunday, june 3• the BouRNe legacy, (pg-13), 5 p.m.

• Monday, june 4• the BouRNe legacy, (pg-13), 7 p.m.

Tuesday, june 5• the BouRNe legacy, (pg-13), 7 p.m.

Page 20: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

20 • Aug 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record www.nw-ads.comWWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Real Estate for Sale

King County

SNOQUALMIE VALLEY

RECENTLY Renovated mobile home 1 BR, 1 BA. $13,000 obo. New paint, carpet, hardwood f l oo r s , ba th r oom & plumbing in 2007. Stor- age with closets. Rela- tively new roof and win- dows. Covered pat io. Great location in heart of North Bend within blocks of downtown and 100 ft f rom the Snoqualmie Valley Trail. Lot rental is $350. Includes t rash, water. Sale pending mo- bile home park applica- tion approval. Call 303- 562-5332 for details.

Real Estate for SaleOther Areas

5 0 % O F F O C E A N - FRONT Condos! 2BR/2 B A wa s $ 7 0 0 K n ow $399,000. Acquired from bank 1 hr Vancouver 2hrs Seattle 1-888-99- Marin x 5397

Apartments for Rent King County

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Snoqualmie

2 B E D RO O M , $ 9 6 0 . 4-Plex in Snoqualmie. 10 minutes to Issaquah. No smoking, no pets. First, last, damage. 425- 861-4081

Money to Loan/Borrow

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Announcements

_ ADOPT _ Ador ing, athletic, musical profes- s i o n a l s ( s t ay h o m e mom) await precious ba- by. Expenses paid. Da- vid & Robyn. 1-800-410- 7542ADOPTION: Active Doc- tors, playful pup, Love & Laughter, s tay home parent yearns for 1st ba- b y. E x p e n s e s p a i d . Brent & Keri 1-888-411- 0530

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Found

FOUND CAT at the end of June. Shor t haired black cat with white flea col lar. Cal l to ID and claim 425-222-4525.

EmploymentAutomotive

MECHANIC WANTED

Heavy and Light Duty Tr ucks ; Trac to r and Trailers; Compressors; Forklifts; Scissor Lifts; Rental Yard. Call Barry:

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Employment Professional

The YWCA of Seattle-King County-Snohomish County

is seeking aGeneral Maintenance

Person The primary focus of this position is the day-to- day repair and mainte- nance as well as unit turns. Employee spends most of the time at one of two locations. Work requires practical skill and knowledge, but not journey-level skill, in two or more trades such as: painting, plumbing, plas- ter ing, carpentry, ma- sonry, tile setting, and electrical work. The em- ployee may occasionally perform general grounds maintenance and basic custodial work. Option to live on-site is available – but not mandatory. PT 32hrs $16.28/hr Details at:

www.ywcaworks.org Resp. to

[email protected]

EmploymentGeneral

CARRIER ROUTES

AVAILABLE

IN YOUR AREA

Call Today1-253-872-6610

CIRCULATIONASSISTANT

The Snoqualmie Valley Record, a div is ion of Sound Publishing, Inc. is seeking a Part-Time Cir- culation Assistant who can be a team-player as well as be able to work independently. Position i s P T 1 6 h r s / w k (Wednesday & Thurs- day ) . Du t ies i nc lude computer entry, route verification, paper set up & carrier prep. Must be computer-proficient, able to read and follow maps for route delivery, and able to lift up to 40 lbs repeatedly. A current WSDL and reliable, in- sured vehic le are re- quired. EOE

Please e-mail or mailresume with cover let-

ter to:[email protected]

or ATTN: HR/SCA, Sound Publishing, Inc. 19426 68th Avenue S.,

Kent, WA 98032

EmploymentGeneral

Advertising SalesConsultants

Are you ready to stop w o r k i n g w e e k e n d s ? Looking for an exciting career in Sales? Sound Publishing, Inc. has im- mediate openings for Advertising Sales Con- su l tan ts a t our Red- mond, and Issaquah/ Sammamish Repor ter newspapers. The ideal candidates will demon- strate strong interper- sonal skills, both written and oral, and have ex- cellent communications skills; must be motivat- ed and take the initiative to sell mult iple media products including on- line advertising and spe- cial products, work with existing customers and find ways to grow sales and income with new p r o s p e c t i ve c l i e n t s . Print media experience is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient with data processing and spreadsheets as well as ut i l iz ing the Internet . Position requires use of personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of ac- tive vehicle insurance. Compensation includes salary plus commission and we offer a competi- tive benefits package in- cluding health insurance, 4 0 1 K a n d e m p l oye r match, paid vacation (af- ter 6 months), and paid ho l idays. Based in Poulsbo and Bellevue, Wash., Sound Publish- ing, Inc. owns and oper- a t e s 3 8 c o m m u n i t y newspapers and 14 Lit- tle Nickel publications in the greater Puget Sound area. Our broad house- hold distribution blankets the greater Puget Sound region, extending north- ward f rom Seat t le to Canada, south to Salem, Ore., and westward to t h e Pa c i f i c O c e a n . Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- ployer (EOE) and recog- nizes that the key to our s u c c e s s l i e s i n t h e abilities, diversity and vi- sion of our employees. Sound Publishing, Inc. strongly supports diver- sity in the workplace. If you’re interested in join- ing our team and work- ing for the leading inde- p e n d e n t n ew s p a p e r publisher in Washington State, then we want to hear from you! Email your cover letter and re- sume to: hreast@sound- publishing.com or mail to: Sound Publ ishing, Inc., 19426 68th Avenue S . Ken t , WA 98032 , ATTN: HR/SALES

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

EmploymentGeneral

CREATIVE ARTISTThe North Kitsap Herald, a week ly commun i t y newspaper located on the Kitsap Peninsula in Poulsbo, WA, has an im- mediate opening for a full-time Creative Artist. Duties include perform- ing ad and spec design, designing promotional materials, providing ex- cellent customer service to the sales staff and cli- ents. Requires excellent communicat ion ski l ls, and the ability to work in a fast paced deadline- or iented environment. Exper ience in Adobe Creative Suite 2: InDe- sign, Photoshop, Illustra- tor and Acrobat is also required. Newspaper or other media experience is preferred. Must be able to work indepen- dently as well as part of a t e a m . R e q u i r e s f lex ib i l i ty. We of fer a great work environment, health benefits, 401k, paid holidays, vacation and s ick t ime. EOE. Please e-mail your re- sume, cover letter, and a few samples o f your work to:

[email protected] or mail to:

CANKH/HR Sound Publishing, Inc.

19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106,

Poulsbo, WA 98370

HOUSE CLEANERSImmediate openings for local cleaning company full time M-F 7:30-5:00. No nights or weekends,

For info call or email:[email protected]

or call425-292-9643

REPORTER

The Bainbridge Island Review, a weekly com- munity newspaper locat- ed in western Washing- ton state, is accepting applications for a part- time general assignment Reporter. The ideal can- didate will have solid re- porting and writing skills, have up-to-date knowl- edge of the AP Style- book, be able to shoot photos and video, be able to use InDesign, and contribute to staff blogs and Web updates. We offer vacation and sick leave, and paid holi- days. If you have a pas- sion for community news reporting and a desire to work in an ambitious, dy- namic newsroom, we want to hear from you. E.O.E. Email your re- sume, cover letter and up to 5 non-returnable writing, photo and video samples [email protected]

Or mail to BIRREP/HR Dept., Sound Publishing, 19351 8th Ave. NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo,

WA 98370.

EmploymentGeneral

VeterinaryAssistant/Tech

Full time/Part time. Ex- perience preferred. Ap- ply in person at: North B e n d A n i m a l C l i n i c ; 1615 Benigo Blvd N.Fax resume: 425-888-6574

EmploymentTransportation/Drivers

Drivers: CDL-B:Great Pay, Hometime! No-Forced Dispatch! N e w s i n g l e s f r o m Seat t le, WA to sur- rounding states. Apply:www.truckmovers.com

or 888-567-4861

DRIVERS --Choose your hometime from Weekly, 7 / O N - 7 / O F F, 4 / O N -7 /OFF, Fu l l or Par t - time. $0.01 increase per mile after 6 months. Re- quires 3 months recent exper ience. 800-414- 9 5 6 9 w w w . d r i v e k - night.com

DRIVERS

Premier Transportation is seeking Tractor-Trailer Drivers for newly added dedicated runs making store deliveries Monday- Fr iday in WA, OR, ID. MUST have a Class-A CDL and 2 years tractor-trailer driving exp.

• Home on a daily basis• $.40 per mile plus stop

off and unloading pay• $200/day minimum pay• Health & prescription

insurance• Fami l y den ta l , l i f e ,

disability insurance• Company match 401K,

Vacation & holiday pay• $1,000 longevity bonus

after each year• Assigned trucks• Direct deposit

For application informa- tion, Paul Proctor at

Premier Transportation: 866-223-8050. EOE

Short Line/Local Drivers

Needed

3 Home every day3 Sign on Bonus3 Excellent pay/Benefits3 Must have 1yr. veri- fiable exp. w/doubles exp.3 O/O’s also welcome

Call Robert:800-241-2415

or apply online at:www.markettransport.com

TIME FOR a change? Haney Tr uck L ine i s seeking top-quality, pro- fessional truck drivers! Positions available now! CDL-A, hazmat, doubles required. Cal l now 1- 8 8 8 - 4 1 4 - 4 4 6 7 . www.GOHANEY.com

Business Opportunities

ACTORS/MOVIE EX- TRAS Needed immedi- ately for upcoming roles. $150-$300 per day de- pending on job require- ments. No experience, all looks needed. 1-800- 951-3584 A-105 . For casting times/locationsMake Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Mini- mum $4K to $40K+ In- vestment Required. Lo- cations Available. BBB Accred i ted Bus iness. (800) 962-9189

THE SECRET THEY DIDN’T WANT YOU TO HEAR ABOUT.

Once In ALifetime

Opportunity

For FREE CD Call:425-698-1910

GIN

Schools & Training

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for hands on Avia- tion Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Main- tenance (877)818-0783 ATTEND COLLEGE ON- LINE from Home. *Medi- cal, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certi- fied. Call 800-488-0386 w w w . C e n t u r a O n - line.com

ATTEND COLLEGE on- line from home. *Medical *Business *Criminal Jus- t ice. *Hospi ta l i ty. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Fi- nancial Aid if qualified. SCHEV cer t i f ied. Call 866-483-4429. www.CenturaOnline.comNATIONALLY ACCRED- ITED live Online Instruc- tor Led Programs at Mil- dred-El ley.edu/onl ine. Medical and Non-Medi- cal Transcription, Physi- c ian-Based B i l l i ng & Coding, Hospital-Based Coding. L i fe t ime Job Placement Assistance. 888-502-1878

Cemetery Plots

2 CEMETARY PLOTS at the beautiful Greenwood Memorial Park, Renton. G o r g e o u s l o c a t i o n ; Rhodedendron Garden, plots 3 and 4. Situated on a level area. Permant care property; friendly & helpful staff maintains the grounds! Both only $7,000. Currently retails for $16,000. Cal l Bob 425-327-6636.2 CEMETERY LOTS (s ide x s ide). Ensure e ter n i ty next to your l oved one. Beau t i f u l Washington Memor ial Park located in the gor- geous Garden of Light! Serene landscape when you visi t , with qual i ty year-round grounds care included! Sel l $3,500 each or $4,000 for pair. Seller pays transfer cost. Call 425-837-1902 leave message.2 NICHES AVAILABLE in the gorgeous Orchid Room at the beautiful Queen Anne/ Arthur Co- lumbarium. Located at 520 W Raye St, Seattle. Dimensions are 3” wide by 7.5” long. Helpful , f r i end ly p ro fess iona l staff. Easy parking leads to flat entrance and all internal rooms, where y o u r s a fe f r o m t h e weather while visiting. $1,500 obo. 360-658- 8594.

PNW

Mar

ketP

lace

!

OfficeHours:8-5pm

Mondayto Friday

print &online24/7

www.nw-ads.comemail:

classi�ed@soundpublishing.

comCall toll free

1.888.399.3999or

1.800.388.2527

Page 21: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM www.nw-ads.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • Aug 22, 2012 • 21

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Cemetery Plots

2 PREMIUM Side by Side lots. Excellent loca- tion in the Rock of Ages Garden of Washington Memorial Park in Sea- tac. $5,000 each or both fo r $8 ,000. 253-631- 3734

3 ADJACENT PLOTS; in Washington Memor ial Park, Seatac. Easy ac- cess, close in to road. Immaculate, well kept grounds all year round. Attentive, caring staff. Section 17 South; block 11; space D; plots 1, 2 & 3. Valued at $12,000. Ask i ng on l y $4 ,800 . $1,800 each. Call JC or Ellen 253-833-2529.

BARGAIN! side x side cemetery plots in the Garden of Devotion at Bonney-Watson Wash- ington Memorial Park in Seatac. I t is a p lace where calm prevails; a sanctuary where people can go to remember loved ones who have passed . Fo r sa le by owner. $4700 cash. In- cludes transfer fee. Call: (206)242-3257

SUNSET HILLS Memori- al Park in Bellevue. 2 Choice S ide by S ide Plots in The Garden of Rest, Lot 83, Spaces 11 and 12. Can Buy 1 or Both. $7,500 each or Discount If You By Both. Contact me at: 425-890- 7780 [email protected]

Electronics

Dish Network lowest na- tionwide price $19.99 a month. FREE HBO/Cine- max/Starz FREE Block- buster. FREE HD-DVR and install. Next day in- stall 1-800-375-0784

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SAVE on Cable TV-Inter- net-Digital Phone. Pack- ages start at $89.99/mo (for 12 months.) Options from ALL major service providers. Call Acceller today to lear n more ! CALL 1-877-736-7087

Food &Farmer’s Market

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Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

Home Furnishings

BED: Select Comfor t bed, bought in July. Nev- er s lept in . Excel lent condition. Paid $2000. Asking $1300 cash. Is being stored at Public Storage in Kent; 6850 S. 2 3 8 t h S t r e e t , Ke n t 9 8 0 3 2 . Fe e l f r e e t o come by on Saturdays, between 9am & noon, or call: (253)236-4466 for more details

Mail Order

ATTENTION DIABETICS with Medicare. Get a FREE Talking Meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, this meter eliminates painful finger pricking! Call 888-903-6658

Attention Joint & Muscle Pain Sufferers: Clinically proven all-natural sup- plement helps reduce pain and enhance mo- bility. Call 888-474-8936 to try Hydraflexin RISK- FREE for 90 days.

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Buy Gold & Silver Coins - 1 percent over dealer cost For a limited time, Park Avenue Numismat- ics is selling Silver and Gold Amer ican Eagle Coins at 1 percent over dealer cost. 1-877-545- 5402

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Ca l l Today 888 -459 - 9961 for $25.00 off your first prescription and free shipping

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Mail Order

Diabetes/Cholestero l / We i g h t L o s s B e r g a - monte, a Natural Product for Cholesterol, Blood Sugar and weight. Physi- c i a n r e c o m m e n d e d , backed by Human Clini- cal Studies with amazing results. Call today and save 15% off your first bottle! 888-470-5390

Over 30 Million Woman Suffer From Hair Loss! Do you? If So We Have a Solution! CALL KERA- NIQUE TO FIND OUT MORE 888-481-2610

Miscellaneous

MANTIS Deluxe Til ler. NEW! FastStart engine. Ships FREE. One-Year Money-Back Guaranteewhen you buy DIRECT. Cal l for the DVD and FREE Good Soil book! 866-969-1041

Wanted/Trade

OLD COMICS WANT- ED! Will buy comics and original comic art from the 30’s thru the 60’s. (425)442-4841

Cats

B E N G A L K I T T E N S , Gorgeously Rosetted! Consider a bi t of the “Wi ld” for your home. L ike adventure? This may be the pet for you! www.seattlebengals.com then click on “Kittens” to see what’s available with pricing starting at $900. Championship Breeder, TICA Outstanding Cat- tery, TIBCS Breeder of D i s t i n c t i o n . S h o t s , Health Guarantee. Tere- sa, 206-422-4370.

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

Dogs

(3) MINIATURE YORK- SHIRE Terrier Puppies For Sale. They are 9 weeks old and ready for a new home. I have 1 fe- male and 2 males left. They are very loving, playful, and ready for a new adventure. I am asking $1000 for the fe- male and $800 for the males. Email or call if in- terested: [email protected]

AKC German Shepherd female pupp ies f rom Championship German working bloodlines, Ger- man pedigrees. Black, medium sized, athletic, n i c e d r i v e s , g o o d nerves, great tempera- m e n t , s o c i a l , p u p py trained, family raised. Excellent results from a solid breeding! No limita- tions; these dogs can do it all. De-wormed, vacci- nated. $850. Snohom- ish. Email/ Call; [email protected] or [email protected]

AKC Red Dobe r man Puppies. Born 6/15. Ser- vice quality, parents on site, tails and claws. 3 males, 2 females. Cur- rent shots & dewormed. Exce l len t fami ly and guard dogs. Starting at $500 or trade. Ready for a new home. 253-359- 3802

Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

Dogs

GOLDEN DOODLE First Generation F1 Puppies. Loving, kind, playful and social with animals. Lg, med . & sma l l s i zes . Blondes & blacks. Hip, eye & hear t cer t i f ied. First shots, worming & dew claws removed. 3 f e m a l e s . 5 m a l e s . $1,200 each. Ready to go to new homes August 3rd. Call 360-420-2277. Sedro Woolley.

GREAT DANE

A K C G R E AT D A N E Puppies. Now offer ing Full-Euro’s, Half-Euro’s & S t a n d a r d G r e a t D a n e s . M a l e s & fe - males. Every color but Fa w n s , $ 5 0 0 & u p . Heal th guarantee. Li- c e n s e d s i n c e 2 0 0 2 . Dreyersdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes. Also; sell- ing Standard Poodles. www.dreyersdanes.comCall 503-556-4190.

Bottomless garage sale. $37/no word limit. Reach

thousands of readers.Go online: nw-ads.com24 hours a day or Call 800-388-2527 to get

more information.

SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

www.nw-ads.comWe’ll leave the site on for you.

Horses

2 AQHA HORSES, start- ed w i th 90 days p ro t ra in ing . Gen t l e and ready to progress. Both are 2 years o ld. One mare and one gelding. Partner up! Great project horses and terrific West- ern Pleasure, Gaming, Trail Potential. UTD on S h o t s , W o r m i n g , Hooves. C l ip, Bathe, Trailer, Stand for Farrier. S t a n w o o d l o c a t i o n . $2000 each. A Deal ! 206-465-8748.

AutomobilesDodge

2007 DODGE Caliber. Fun To Drive!! Automat- ic, CD player. Dark Blue exterior, Black on Grey interior. Newly serviced. New Tires, Battery and More. Excellent like new condition! $8,500 OBO. 253-397-9986

LOADED 2009 Dodge Challenger R/T. Barely dr iven; 17,700 mi les. Perfect Black exter ior with Dark Gray interior. D e a l e r m a i n t a i n e d . CARFAX available. AC, CD, MP3, Nav System, Bluetooth. 5.7L Hemi V 8 . O n l y a s k i n g $27,800 ($1,500 below KBB). Ready to SELL TODAY. Call Greg: 843- 412-7349. South Whid- bey.

Bottomless garage sale. $37/no word limit. Reach

thousands of readers.Go online: nw-ads.com24 hours a day or Call 800-388-2527 to get

more information.

Miscellaneous Autos

2000 INTERNATIONAL4700 TRUCK

with tuck away lift gate. Eng ine - - D iese l - T 444E -- 195 HP. 5 speed manual t ransmiss ion. Box -- 24’L x 102’H x 96’W. Roll-up door. Mile- age 195,600. Well Main- tained. $14,000.

Call Karen,(425)355-0717 Ext.1560

Located in Everett.

Pickup TrucksDodge

2000 DODGE Dakota. 1 of 100 made. Collectors item! Like new, used for ca r shows on ly. V-8 , 52,000 mi les, custom whee l s , B IG s te reo ! $12,000. 253-333-2136

Vans & Mini VansToyota

2010 TOYOTA Sienna XLE FWD Mini Van, lo- cated on Vashon Island. Burgundy color. Includes all extras (e.g., naviga- tion system, DVD, leath- er seats, Tr i-zone cl i- mate control, sun roof, heated driver and front passenger seats). In- cludes 7 prepaid 5000 mile maintenance certifi- cates. VERY low mile- age: 23,400. $28,700. 415-624-9002.

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Cash JUNK CARS &

TRUCKS

Free Pick up 253-335-1232

1-800-577-2885

Tires & Wheels

17” TIRES & WHEELS - Set of 4 Michelin tires on aluminum alloy Hon- da wheels. P225/50R17, Pilot HX MXM4. Excel- lent condition! Like new. $1200 OBO. Spanaway area. Cash only. 253- 273-0074

Motorcycles

2006 HARLEY Low Rid- er. Fuel Injection Twin Cam 88, 6 speed, 35.7k miles, well maintained. Very low seat height for short or tall riders. Har- ley’s special “Prof i le” chrome laced wheels. Kuryakyn “Switch Blade” folding-heel-support for- ward control foot rests, and Kuryakyn Panacea LED ta i l l igh t . $9 ,650 o b o. d i ve r s i f i e d i n t e - res [email protected] o r 253-473-5326 South Ta- coma.

Vehicles Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

DONATE YOUR VEHI- C L E R e c e i ve $ 1 0 0 0 GROCERY COUPONS. UNITED BREAST CAN- C E R F O U N DAT I O N . F r e e M a m m o g r a m s , B r e a s t C a n c e r I n f o www.ubcf. in fo FREE Towing, Tax Deductible, Non-Runners Accepted. 1- 800-728-08011-888-545-8647

Bottomless garage sale. $37/no word limit. Reach

thousands of readers.Go online: nw-ads.com24 hours a day or Call 800-388-2527 to get

more information.

Professional ServicesLegal Services

DIVORCE $135. $165 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- er ty division and bills. B B B m e m b e r . (503) 772-5295.www.paralegalalterna- tives.com [email protected]

VJ LAW FIRMIs a Full Service Law FirmServing Individuals and

Small Businesses inAreas Such As:

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Please contact:

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Get the ball rolling...Call 800-388-2527 today.

Home ServicesHauling & Cleanup

A+ HAULINGWe remove/recycle: Junk/wood/yard/etc.

Fast Service - 25 yrs Experience, Reasonable rates

Call Reliable Michael 425.455.0154

Home ServicesLandscape Services

TOM’S CONCRETESPECIALIST

Tom 425-443-547425 years experience65

7699

www.tomlandscaping.com

All Types Of Concrete

A-1 SHEERGARDENING & LANDSCAPING

* Cleanup * Trimming* Weeding * Pruning

* Sod * Seed* Bark * Rockery

*Complete Yard Work 425-226-3911 206-722-2043

Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

Home ServicesLandscape Services

Any kind of YARDWORK

*Bark *Weed *Trim*Prune *New Sod

*Thatching*Paving Patios

*Rockery/Retaining Walls*General Cleanup

Call Steve206-244-6043425-214-3391

lic#stevegl953kz

Home ServicesPainting

Manuels PaintingX 15% OFF DISCOUNTX Exterior and Interior.X Priming, Scraping, Sanding, & Caulking.X Roof Cleaning/ TreatmentX Pressure Washing.X Gutter Cleaning.X Small siding repair.X Deck & fence stain.

(206)[email protected]./Bonded/Ins. MANUEP*9920Z

Home ServicesRoofing/Siding

ROOFING &REMODELINGSenior DiscountsFree Estimates

Expert Work253-850-5405

American Gen. Contractor Better Business BureauLic #AMERIGC923B8

Home ServicesTree/Shrub Care

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Tree Removal/TrimmingResidential & CommercialLic. ~ Bonded ~ Insured

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Advertise your service800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com

Page 22: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com22 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Ba ya nm o n g o l i a n

Bayan Mongolian BBQMon-Sun 11am – 9pm

Lunch Special (Mon-Fri)11am – 2pm

Kids Eat Free Tuesdays! 12 years & younger

Come on in! Call or click to order:

(425) 888-2110 bayanmongolian.com

Beer on Tap and Wine Served Daily

Happy Hour 3-6pm Every Day!

8020 Douglas Ave SESnoqualmie, WA 98065

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Ba ya nm o n g o l i a n

Bayan Mongolian BBQMon-Sun 11am – 9pm

Lunch Special (Mon-Fri)11am – 2pm

Kids Eat Free Tuesdays! 12 years & younger

Come on in! Call or click to order:

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Beer on Tap and Wine Served Daily

Happy Hour 3-6pm Every Day!

8020 Douglas Ave SESnoqualmie, WA 98065

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RIBBON CUTTING & GRAND OPENING

CELEBRATIONAugust 29 • 5:30pm

Gluten-Free and Vegetarian Menu Items

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Bayan Mongolian BBQMon-Sun 11am – 9pm

Lunch Special (Mon-Fri)11am – 2pm

Kids Eat Free Tuesdays! 12 years & younger

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Beer on Tap and Wine Served Daily

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8020 Douglas Ave SESnoqualmie, WA 98065

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6647

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Call or click to order: 425.888.2110bayanmongolian.com

8020 Douglas Ave SE • Snoqualmie Ridge

Kids Eat Free Tuesdays!*12 years & younger * restrictions apply.

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*

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Bayan Mongolian BBQMon-Sun 11am – 9pm

Lunch Special (Mon-Fri)11am – 2pm

Kids Eat Free Tuesdays! 12 years & younger

Come on in! Call or click to order:

(425) 888-2110 bayanmongolian.com

Beer on Tap and Wine Served Daily

Happy Hour 3-6pm Every Day!

8020 Douglas Ave SESnoqualmie, WA 98065

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Locally Owned and OperatedHealthy Choices

Lunch Special (Mon-Fri)11am – 2pm

Bayan Mongolian BBQMon-Sun 11am - 9pm

Beer on Tap andWine Served Daily

What is a Critical Access Hospital?Definition – A small, generally rural facility that provides outpatient and inpatient hospital services. In 2011 there were 1327 Critical Access Hospitals in the United States, 38 in Washington, and two (2) in King County (Enumclaw and Snoqualmie Valley). These hospitals are designated by the state and certified by Medicare.

The Critical Access Hospital Program was created in 1997 by the federal government as a safety net device to assure Medicare beneficiaries access to health care services in rural areas. It was designed to allow more flexible staffing options relative to community need, simplify billing methods and create incentives to develop local integrated health delivery systems, including acute, primary, emergency, and long-term care. No more than 25 beds are allowed in use at any one time. Most of the 25 beds can be used to provide acute or sub-acute care dependent on patient need.

What is a Swing Bed Program?“Swing” refers to the fact that a bed in a Critical Access Hospital (CAH) can be used for acute care or sub-acute care, based on patient need. This kind of care is designed for patients who are discharging from a hospital but need temporary nursing and/or rehabilitation care that cannot be provided at home or in a typical skilled nursing facility. This program is a unique medical sub-acute rehabilitation program for patients who have spent at least 3+ consecutive midnights in any acute care hospital as an inpatient (not observation status). Rehabilitation services include physical, occupational, speech, and recreational therapies. Snoqualmie Valley Hospital (SVH) has the only active Swing Bed program in King County. This program specializes in nursing care and recovery of strength and function, so that patients can return to their home or residential living facility. SVH’s Swing Bed Program includes animal assisted therapy and community reintegration, along with complex wound care management, IV infusion, blood administration, parenteral nutrition (TPN), tracheostomy care, patient controlled analgesia (pain control), and geriatric specialized care. The goal of the Swing Bed Program is to return patients to the level of functioning they had prior to hospitalization or to help them adapt to their modified level of physical condition. All of the large hospitals on the Eastside, Harborview, and other regional facilities have referred into this program many times to promote faster and more complete recovery for their patients, to decrease the overall cost of healthcare, and to enhance integrated health delivery systems for all concerned.

(425) 831-2300 www.SVHD4.org

6645

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Page 23: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 22, 2012 • 23

Now preferred provider for Premera.

It is our goal to implement the higheststandard of care at every patient encounter whether it is a child’s � rst visit to the dental

of� ce, a teenager who is headed off to college or a special-needs adult patient

we’ve been seeing for decades.

WE HAVE 2 LOCATIONSTO SERVE YOU

We believe every child should be treated theway we would like our own children to be treated.

6510

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We are accepting patients of

all ages

Dr. Brian Mayer DDS

425.888.2703www.rivertreedental.com38700 SE River StreetSnoqualmie

RiverTree Dental Care

Cosmetic and Preventative Dental Care

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7802 SE Center Blvd. Suite A Snoqualmie 425 - 367 - 4747 www.mathnasium.com/snoqualmie 66

5194

COUNTRY JUNCTION PRESCHOOLEARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION FOR AGES 3-5 YEARS

2, 3 & 4 day A.M. & P.M. classes available.

Serving the families & children of our

incredible Snoqualmie Valley since 1997

We would love to show you our school!

www.countryjunctionpreschool.org7695 RAILROAD PLACE SE • 425 888-0800

We are located in the heart of downtown historic Snoqualmie

6647

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Family Dentistry with the Personal Touch!• Family Dental • Mercury-Free Dentistry • Veneers • Intraoral Cameras

Family Dentistry with the Personal Touch!Family Dentistry with the Personal Touch!

Call Dr. Kerry E. Bailey today at 425-888-2431 for all your dental needs or email us at [email protected] to make an appointment505 NW 8th Street, North Bend, WA • www.alpinedentalnorthbend.com

6628

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Virtual academy meetings set at Mount Si High SchoolSnoqualmie Valley Virtual Academy meetings, for students in grades 9-12 who want to enroll in online classes this fall, will be held August 22 and 30, at 2:30 p.m. in the MSHS library.

Bikes for Books coming soon to Valley schools

Unity Masonic Lodge will deliver new boys’ and girls’ bikes to elementary schools in the Valley next week, in the kickoff to the Bikes for Books program.

The bikes are the prizes in promotions that inspire local school-children to read. Each school has its own rules, but in general, the more books that students read, the more chances they have to win a new bike in a prize drawing held annually. Bikes are purchased with dona-tions from the Lodge members and the general public and all donations are gratefully appreciated.

City honors retired NB unicycle unicoach

After 42 years in the val-ley, Alan Tepper has gotten to know a few people, but not with his full name.

He is actually, “known as Coach Tepper or Mr. T to most of us,” said North Bend Mayor Ken Hearing in a presentation to Tepper at a recent council meeting.

Hearing and the city council honored Tepper, who retired this year after 45 years of teaching, 38 of them in the Valley. He taught physical education, and led student activities like a jump-roping program and the beloved Panther Pride Unicycle Team for years. Earlier this year, Tepper was voted Best Teacher in the 2012 Best of the Valley reader poll.

“We want to thank him for his dedication and com-

mitment to the children of this community, and wish him all the best,” Hearing said.

Tepper spoke briefly about his career, from his first job teaching seventh-grade math to adult prison inmates in Pennsylvania, to starting at Snoqualmie Elementary School and moving in 1980 to North Bend Elementary to replace

then-P.E. teacher Don McConkey (now Assistant Superintendent in the school district).

“The biggest thing that I really appreciate is, it was more than just working with students at North Bend Elementary,” he said. “There were many families where it seemed I became part of the family…. and it really touched my heart.”

Last hooray for Mr. Tepper

Page 24: Snoqualmie Valley Record, August 22, 2012

www.valleyrecord.com24 • August 22, 2012 • Snoqualmie Valley Record

Tickets available at the Snoqualmie Casino box office or .com

SLOT TOURNAMENTSEMI FINALS AND SNOQUALMIE CASINO FINALS!

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immediately by the Snoqualmie Casino Finals where players will compete for a share of $10,000 & 1-of-3 VIP Las Vegas Packages

to play in the TournEvent of Champions, where you could win $20,000 and be crowned as Washington’s Best Slot Player!

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