The new year marks a time of transition for the Snoqualmie Valley Record.
On Wednesday, Jan. 6, the 97-year-old newspaper will change formats. Instead of an 11-by-20-inch broadsheet, the newspaper will follow a tabloid format, measuring about 10 by 13 inches. The format change coincides with a broader distribution model, allowing papers to be sent to more than 12,000 Valley residents.
It’s official: Gangjin, South Korea, is sister city to Snoqualmie.
The Snoqualmie City Council approved sister city status for the South Korean city on Monday, Dec. 14. Gangjin was granted Friendship City status last January, and the move cements the two cities’ relationships in time for a visit by a group of South Korean high school students Jan. 6.
A magnitude 2.9 earthquake centered on Snoqualmie Valley shook communities as far as Federal Way and Redmond on Christmas Eve…
Northwest Railway Museum’s chapel car “Messenger of Peace” has been awarded a prestigious Save America’s Treasures grant. The Institute of…
The Snoqualmie Parks and Recreation Department manages the city’s Street Tree Program, which encompasses trees throughout Snoqualmie — more than…
The Fall City fire department is looking for energetic, community-minded citizens willing to assist with emergency services. Benefits of volunteering…
After much discussion in 2008, Snoqualmie Valley’s teen health center never got off the ground. But efforts to care for…
Wrapping-up their Foodball charity campaign for the holiday season, students at Mount Si High School singlehandedly brought in about 20,000…
Plans for a new North Bend veteran’s memorial are taking form, with the city’s William H. Taylor Park near the…
Lifelong Valley resident and former mayor to begin work in January
Snoqualmie Casino, along with 99.9 KISW-FM, raised over $70,000 at the KISW Salutes the Shield benefit concert and auction held in support of the Lakewood Police Independent Guild.
Sipping coffee at the Carnation Starbucks one chilly fall morning, it took a single overheard word for Geary Eppley to get the kind of local celebrity treatment that few software programmers find.
The word: “Floodzilla.”
New commons will double lunch space at Mount Si High