Members of the Snoqualmie City Council clinked glasses of sparkling cider at a recent meeting to celebrate a big upgrade to the city’s bond rating, which could save the city tens of thousands of dollars per year.
It’s class time, and students won’t focus. Most instructors would lecture the kids and probably get frustrated. Not Gary Schwartz. The North Bend actor and theater teacher comes up with a game to capture and hold their attention.
The trial of a Fall City man accused of burning the Snoqualmie Inn takes place Monday, March 3, in King County Superior Court.
The North Bend City Council unanimously authorized the spending of more than $100,000 of taxpayers’ money to fight an appeal against the end of the city’s water moratorium.
King County Metro will hold an open house to discuss Interstate 90 transit service from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27 at Fall City Elementary School, 33314 S.E. 42nd St., Fall City.
Finaghty’s Irish Pub and Restaurant opened recently on Snoqualmie Ridge. From left to right are general manger Patrick Rooney, owner Lisa McCord, owner Phil Stafford and owner Adam Krett. They have 12 beers on tap leaning towards the Irish beers such as Guinness. To learn more about Finaghty’s, and the eclectic mix of new businesses that surround it in Snoqualmie Ridge Marketplace’s newest retail center, pick up a copy of the Record.
Community members are invited to attend an informational meeting about the proposed PTSA at the new Twin Falls Middle School at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 28, at the school district’s administration office boardroom, 8001 Silva Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie.
Even before the discovery of asbestos forced the evacuation of emergency workers from Fire Station 87 in downtown North Bend this month, city officials were pushing to have the undersized and structurally unsound building replaced.
King County Hospital District No. 4 is cutting 18 jobs, eliminating its surgery department and marketing office.
Before logging and development forever changed the face of the Valley, old-growth trees nearly 400 feet tall dominated the landscape.
Snoqualmie Middle School students and staff were evacuated after the discovery of the message “A bomb will explode at 2pm” in a school bathroom on March 4. The school called 911, and several law enforcement agencies responded with bomb-sniffing dogs.
Pick up next wee’s Valley Record for more details
Snoqualmie Middle School students and staff were evacuated after the discovery of the message “A bomb will explode at 2pm” in a school bathroom on March 4. The school called 911, and several law enforcement agencies responded with bomb-sniffing dogs.
Pick up next wee’s Valley Record for more details
Mount Si sophomore Becky Banning knows she won’t get a scholarship or a lucrative contract out of her passion for unicycling, but that doesn’t stop her from practicing up to three hours a day, six days a week.