Valley leaders will learn how to strengthen the local community during the Snoqualmie Valley’s first-ever Economic Development Conference.
How much is the Salish Lodge & Spa worth? The Muckleshoot Indian Tribe paid $62.5 million to buy the lodge, gift shop and more than 50 acres of vacant land and parking across the street, according to county documents.
Cutting a downed tree blown over by the windstorm Thursday, Oct. 18, Snoqualmie city employee Gary Stevens clears debris on Meadowbrook Road. The season’s first windstorm felled trees and branches throughout Western Washington, causing intermittant power outages, but wasn’t quite as powerful as initially predicted.
The first Snoqualmie Valley Economic Development Conference will be held Oct. 26. Planners hope to make the conference an annual event.
Isabella May Milstein, 7 months, of North Bend checks out some large pumpkins Saturday, Oct. 27, at The Nursery at Mount Si in North Bend.
The white, smooth skulls made of sugar may have looked creepy when presenter Amaranta Ibarra-Sands handed them out to youngsters at Snoqualmie Library, but by the time the youthful crowd got through with them, the sugar skulls looked downright festive.
If contractor bids for North Bend’s proposed roundabout at Cedar Falls and North Bend ways come in high again, some City Council members suggested replacing it with a stoplight.
There are several options on the table to make a proposed sewer extension to the Tanner and Truck Town areas more affordable to property owners, who would bear the cost of the $11.7 million project.
There are several options on the table to make a proposed sewer extension to the Tanner and Truck Town areas more affordable to property owners, who would bear the cost of the $11.7 million project.
As the one-year anniversary of the November 2006 flood approaches, efforts to make improvements are underway.
The pano-ramic view of the Cascades, Mount Si and the Valley from Snoqualmie Point Park is stunning.
King County Fire District 27 in Fall City urges community members to adopt a simple, potentially live-saving habit: change smoke alarm batteries when setting clocks back one hour to standard time at 3 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 4.
A Snoqualmie man has a shot at making the United States Olympic Team.