For the past 33 years, Fall City Welding, Inc., has served its community.
Now, after years of coaxing by Fall City Days officials, owners Mike and Renae Tawney are being recognized for the service and outreach they offer to their hometown.
Some parents of young children might fuss over outdoor dirt and grime that might affect their youngsters’ health. But it’s the goods they have in their own homes that may affect little ones more.
Most teenage girls probably prefer to hang out with their friends during spring break.
Clouds parted and the sun finally shone as the Mount Si High School Class of 2010 marched onto the stadium field for commencement exercises.
Friday, June 11, marked the moment the seniors had been waiting on for the past four years.
After learning this month about the assault on a 14-year-old Mount Si freshman that happened in the school locker room in November, which came after weeks of confrontations and allegations of bullying, sophomore Addison Brothers decided that enough was enough.
He and a dozen other Mount Si students frustrated by bullying experiences at school are now taking a stand, demanding that the high school culture change.
In tough economic times, people’s priorities change. Pet health care is often the first thing to go.
“If you have to decide whether your kids go to the dentist or your dog needs his teeth cleaned, you’re going to pay for your child,” said pet advocate Cathi Linden, owner of U Dirty Dog in North Bend.
A musician and educator all his life, Snoqualmie resident Harley Brumbaugh has always wanted to draw Valley residents together through music. When the Bellevue College music program founder moved to Snoqualmie years ago, it was his dream to start a community choir.
So when Snoqualmie Valley Arts founder Richard Burhans tapped Brumbaugh for the first annual Snoqualmie Festival of Music — planned at North Bend’s Mountain Meadows Farm this summer — he grabbed the opportunity to make his longtime idea a reality.
Mount Si High School parent Valerie Loveridge knew senior year for her daughter Chloe would be expensive. She was prepared…
The Lower Valley’s Riverview School District is going to voters this summer with a four-year supplemental Maintenance and Operations levy….
Snoqualmie Valley’s latest shake on May 25 raises the possibility of an even bigger earthquake on the horizon.
North Bend resident Jamie Rosen climbed Mount Rainier and Mount Shasta as a tribute to friends battling cancer. Now, Rosen is climbing Shasta in a benefit trek, Climb Against the Odds, this summer. This time, she has her own family in mind.
Riverview School District is going through the bid review process for a new baseball field at Cedarcrest High School.
The mosaic of Snoqualmie Falls photographs started out six years ago as Dan Nutt’s Valentine’s Day gift for his wife.
But the collection has grown into a kiosk-sized display that will soon be seen by more than two million yearly visitors at the renovated Snoqualmie Falls Park.