Snoqualmie budget to shrink in 2009
Museum tome explores local lives
It’s a rainy night at the corner of Bendigo Boulevard and North Bend Way, in the heart of North Bend’s downtown, but business owner Nancy Wray’s new store is a warm, comfortable haven from the storm.
Helping Hand food bank sees 25 percent increase in demand
Detail and heritage run strong in the heavy, yet fragile works of North Bend craftswoman Carol James.
Bringing smiles to young children and their families is the full-time job of performer Courtney Campbell.
Estimating extra visits due to the new Snoqualmie Casino, Snoqualmie Valley Hospital is predicting 2009 will be a year of revenues in the black.
Valley residents can learn how to create the ancient sounds of the flute, in workshops at the North Bend and Fall City libraries.
Too bad for Snoqualmie liquor aficionados: North Bend gets its liquor store back on Friday, Nov. 14.
Over the last century, hundreds of Valley men and women have left their homes and families to serve their country. Fifty paid the ultimate price, dying in service to their country.
Gearing up for anticipated heavy traffic at the new Snoqualmie Casino, a group of Valley, state and county agencies will fire up the Emergency Operations Center at Snoqualmie Fire Station on opening night, Thursday, Nov. 6.
The next few months will see big changes for the nascent Snoqualmie Tribal Police Department.
From origins last summer with a single officer at the helm, the force is expected to add staff, set up a station and replace King County Sheriff’s Department as the primary responder to Snoqualmie Casino, which opens this week.
Lovingly restoring a piece of Fall City history for the benefit of today’s diners and travelers, the owners of the Fall City Inn are inviting locals to see what the newly opened establishment has to offer.