The winter can be a time when needy families can feel left out in the cold.
Eastern Washington University has released its dean’s list for the fall quarter of 2008, and several Valley graduates earned honors. Undergraduate students who earn 12 hours and receive a grade point average of 3.5 or better is placed on the dean’s list for the quarter. Valley students who made the list include Taryn Ellison, Margot Schuller, Charles Moetului, Krystal Shields-Gianni, Alexander Smart, Beau Stanford and Brena Burnard.
Valley Animal Partners has teamed up with Pawsitive Alliance to help assist families with spaying and neutering their dogs and cats.
The flood debris collection site at the King Street parking lot in downtown Snoqualmie will be open through Sunday, Feb. 1, for those affected by the flood.Collection hours are noon to 4 p.m. Sunday will be the final day for collection.
A group of Valley residents who have survived cancer, or are continuing to battle the disease, are finding solidarity in a monthly coffee get together.
Phil Harrington, new pastor at Snoqualmie United Methodist Church, found his new place in life following an unpredictable path.
At the height of the Jan. 7 flood, the former Bank of America building in Snoqualmie was surrounded by dozens of parked cars, the owners seeking a dry spot for the vehicles in times of high water.
The Mount Si High School Parent Teacher Student Association recently awarded more than $5,600 in grant funds from Mount Si teachers, staff, and students from various departments and clubs.
A 23-year-old North Bend man was found dead Tuesday, Jan. 20, in his vehicle on a remote road near Southeast 53rd and 396th Avenue Southeast.
Parents of Mount Si High School students will have a chance to experience life as a Wildcat, following their students to class, navigating crowded hallways and sampling cafeteria fare.
Aiming to avoid added school days in summer, the Snoqualmie Valley School District Board of Directors approved calendar changes last week that make use of early-release Fridays.
“We won!” The bulletin board outside the incubation room at the Tokul Creek Fish Hatchery still has words of triumph from last summer, when hatchery supporters succeeded in keeping the hatchery open in the face of a proposal to close it.
Residents of the Broadhurst neighborhood near Ames Lake were back before the Snoqualmie Valley School District board of directors, making their latest case to join Lake Washington schools.