Rural woodland has given way to bare earth, lines of trenches and rumbling excavators at Tannerwood, a new neighborhood going up in North Bend’s Tanner annex.
Snoqualmie Valley Realtor Debbie Buffelen is using the latest cell phone technology to make the task of shopping for a home an easier project.
Make your way through Duthie Hill Park and you’d better keep an ear out for rattling chains, spinning spokes or a yell of “On your right.”
Mount Si High School has competitive students pushing the envelope in more than just sports. Musicians in the Mount Si Jazz Band were first-time winners in the ‘best overall’ category at the Viking Jazz Festival, held Feb. 4 and 5 at North Kitsap High School.
On a fall backpacking trip, father-son team Brad and Zach Allen discovered historical relics at the Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River.
Angry remarks mingled with applause after the Snoqualmie Valley School District Board of Directors selected new elementary boundaries that change schools for hundreds of families this fall.
Meeting Wednesday, April 21, the board unanimously approved a staff committee’s recommendation of recently-modified option C. No public comment was accepted prior to the vote.
The Snoqualmie Valley Schools Foundation has seen a 20 percent increase in fundraising results in the past year.
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.
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.
A man trapped by an avalanche on Snoqualmie Pass last weekend used his cell phone to summon rescuers.
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.
Writer and photographer Amy Gulick has explored the wildest places in the Northwest, capturing images that show striking beauty as well as nature’s greater purpose.