Fall City resident Rockwell Hammond Jr. could tell he had a winner on his hands when “Birdwing” came together.
A high-speed chase on Interstate 90 ended near the Highway 18 exit Friday with the arrest of a California man who allegedly stabbed a passenger in his vehicle, then hijacked another car.
A pilot program by King County, designed to protect rural land from development, could affect Snoqualmie Valley Hospital’s plans for a new campus.
North Bend resident Willie Wiseman’s new home made it all the way from Millersburg, Ore., to North Bend.
But the modular home had one final hurdle to cross: the Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie River.
An African children’s choir will perform several shows in the Valley on its first US tour. The group Matsiko, Ugandan for “hope,” will sing, dance, act out dramas and perform drum routines to benefit children who need financial help for education.
Valley members of the Republican and Democratic parties will hold their precinct caucuses at 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9.
A caucus is a grassroots process where party members come together to discuss issues and candidates for the 2008 presidential election.
A Fall City woman died Thursday after rolling her Ford Explorer into a water-filled ditch off State Route 202 near 264th Street Southeast, the Washington State Patrol reported.
Valley residents, families and high-school students helped provide 130 families with food baskets and grocery gift cards during family support organization Encompass’ food drive, held this past December.
Valley high school thespians invite audiences on a slightly less-than-epic journey as they perform a condensed version of Homer’s Odyssey Feb. 6-9.
The discovery of asbestos in North Bend Fire Station 87 on Thursday, Feb. 14 forced rescuers to temporarily relocate to sites where quarters were cramped, but their ability to respond to emergencies wasn’t hindered.
A 40-strong group of Valley parents have formed a new coalition, with the aim of ensuring that teachers at Mount Si High School aren’t touting their personal agendas in the classroom.
Members of the Snoqualmie Valley Administrative Secretaries Association (SVASA), a union representing more than 30 secretaries in the Snoqualmie Valley School District, voted to approve a three-year contract with the district.
Within just a few minutes of arriving at Fall City’s Farmhouse Market, Perry Wilkins had already picked up a handful of signatures on the clipboard in his hand.