A task force assigned to study the teaching of controversial issues within Snoqualmie Valley schools will present its findings to the community on Monday, June 9.
Members of the Snoqualmie Valley’s two largest veterans’ organizations have joined forces to build a monument to all those from the Valley who died to serve their country — a local monument they call long overdue.
When North Bend resident Dave Kreitler is done with another shift in the workaday world, he retreats to his shop for a little RR R&R.
With anticipated expenditures exceeding projected revenues by about $1.5 million, the Snoqualmie Valley School District is looking at how to trim its budget for next school year.
With anticipated expenditures exceeding projected revenues by about $1.5 million, the Snoqualmie Valley School District is looking at how to trim its budget for next school year.
“We’re still working on it, but right now it’s hard to tell how much better we can make it,” Ron Ellis, business manager for the district, told the school board at its May 22 meeting.
Most of the difficulties come from costs associated with opening the new Twin Falls Middle School, he said.
A new orientation table on display at Snoqualmie Point Park provides a beautiful short course on local geography.
The colorful table identifies the peaks and valleys of the Cascades as seen from the park, located at 37580 Winery Road on the site of an old winery near the intersection of Interstate 90 and North Bend Way.
High school student Rachel Scott believed in starting chain reactions of kindness. She reached out to the new students sitting alone in the cafeteria, the outsiders, the ones her peers made fun of. She pulled over to hold an umbrella for a stranger as he changed a flat tire in the rain. She changed lives through simple acts of compassion. She was killed by two classmates in the tragic 1999 shooting at Columbine High School.
For a second year, Rachel’s Challenge encouraged Mount Si students to create legacies of compassion at the school’s “Day of Respect” morning assembly on Thursday, May 29.
‘High School Musical’
Community members are invited to celebrate Carnation’s newly completed state-of-the-art wastewater treatment system.
Volunteers needed
MUSIC AND COMEDY
High river waters mean extreme
25 Years Ago
Snoqualmie Police Department