Police and fire agencies in the Snoqualmie Valley responded to the following:
The Snoqualmie Valley and Riverview school districts are teaming up to help parents of special needs children find community, employment and educational resources for their families.
The cities of Snoqualmie and North Bend are expected to join in King County’s new regional animal control system.
Under the plan, cities pay for service by Regional Animal Services of King County, which replaces the former King County Department of Animal Care and Control. Abandoned animals would be housed at a non-profit shelter in Lynnwood or at the county shelter in Kent.
Fifth District State Representatives Jay Rodne and Glenn Anderson called for serious reforms to the state budget during a visit to the Snoqualmie Valley Chamber of Commerce.
The Snoqualmie Valley School Board is set to select new boundaries this week defining where Valley elementary students attend school.
On Thursday, April 15, the district’s Elementary Boundary Study Committee made its pick on the least-disruptive option for new school boundaries.
It was pure luck that left a tiny tunnel of oxygen and light inside the huge mass of snow that buried hiker Ian Rogers atop Snoqualmie Pass.
The Messenger of Peace doesn’t get the celebrity status of Thomas the Tank Engine or as many looks as the curious old locomotives and rusty haulers parked along Snoqualmie’s Highway 202.
But the 112-year old chapel car, a church on wheels built by the American Baptist Publication Society to bring religion to Western communities without a house of worship, may get national attention through an online vote.
A man trapped by an avalanche on Snoqualmie Pass last weekend used his cell phone to summon rescuers.
Allied Waste’s Yard & Food Waste Drop-Off Program visits the King Street Parking Lot, 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, April 24.
Snoqualmie’s Sustainability Speakers Forums in Snoqualmie are drawing full houses. Exploring topics on planning a green community future, the forums happen each month through June.
Planning for the 2010 Festival at Mount Si is underway. This year’s Festival dates are August 13, 14 and 15.
When students came back from spring break this week, the hallways and classrooms of Mount Si High School seemed a little colder.
The chilled school was due to a dismantled heating system, removed by construction workers to make way for a new hydrovac geothermal heating and cooling system. The new technology is more environmentally friendly and is projected to save nearly half the school’s current heating costs.
Visit the Reinig Road Sycamore Corridor, a registered King County landmark, today, and you will see rows of huge, stately trees, forming a natural cathedral of arching branches and thick trunks.
But a visit with North Bend resident Harley Brumbaugh, armed with an old black and white photo, reveals a very different place.