The Cedar River Watershed is normally closed to hunters, but for three weekends in October, the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe was allowed to hunt up to nine black bears.While hunting is allowed in areas across the state, the Cedar River Watershed has been closed to trespassers, including hunters, since 1911. That changed in October, when the…
Year: 2009
Snoqualmie may oppose tax cap ballot initiative
Snoqualmie’s City Council will consider approving a resolution opposing Initiative 1033 on Oct. 12.Initiative 1033 seeks to limit the growth of city, county and state governments by prohibiting general fund revenues from increasing faster than the rate of inflation and population growth. The initiative requires any revenue collected by the state, county or city in…
Snoqualmie Tribe paralyzed by split, goes to mediation
The Snoqualmie Tribe went to mediation in Seattle last week to resolve a dispute that caused a group of tribal elders to dissolve the council in August. The mediation has been between two factions of tribal council members, some of whom are also among the elders who dissolved the council. A Seattle law firm, Alhadeff and Forbes,…
Cedar Falls Watershed offers free Twilight Tour
Grab your flashlight and bug spray before heading out to the free Twilight Tour offered by the Cedar River Watershed Institute. The third annual tour will showcase the historic Cedar Falls town site, the birthplace of Seattle City Light. The tour will be held from 6-8:30 p.m. Sept. 12 and from 4-6:30 p.m. Sept. 13….
North Bend gets official number on annexation
North Bend’s estimate of how many people live in the Woods River neighborhood and other areas that joined the city when the land was officially annexed on July 6 was very close. “We couldn’t have gotten much closer,” North Bend City Administrator Duncan Wilson said. A special census of the area recently annexed into North…
Economy has local libraries packed
One of Michele Drovdahl’s favorite parts of being a librarian is, as she puts it, “forcing a good book on people.” With the state of today’s economy, Drovdahl’s had plenty of opportunity to do that. As unemployment numbers across King County and the rest of the country continue to rise, so is the number of…
Mount Si High School to get geothermal system
Captain Planet would likely approve of the Snoqualmie Valley School District’s updated light bulbs, not to mention its new geothermal system at Mount Si High School. Using funds from a $27.5 million school bond, construction crews are changing all of the district’s inefficient light bulbs, as well as installing improved heating, ventilation and air conditioning…
Association to challenge Initiative 1033
Suburban Cities Association Executive Director Karen Goroski told the Snoqualmie City Council July 13 that her organization is preparing to oppose Initiative 1033. Goroski updated the council on what the organization was doing to advocate for the interest of King County’s suburban cities. Initiative 1033 seeks to limit the growth of city, county and state…
Local book donations down this year
When three blue book collection bins appeared in North Bend, Penny Humphrey did not think to give them a second thought. As President of the Friends of the North Bend Library, Humphrey was more concerned with organizing library programs with money earned from the library’s annual two-week book sale. Normally, the friends fill more than…
Churches, businesses hit with white supremacist graffiti
A swastika and other white supremacist graffiti were drawn in spray paint on the side of the Church of the Nazarene in Snoqualmie June 9. As shocking as that may have seemed to some, however, the act is actually anything but unusual. According to officials in the Valley, church vandalism is running rampant this summer….
