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THE ISSAQUAHPRESS
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Locally owned since 1900 • 75 Cents
City OKs buildings up to 125 feet tall Redevelopment plan calls for more than 7,000 residences By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com City leaders raised the building height limit to 125 feet in the business district and raised the stakes for redevelopment in the decades ahead. The roadmap to redevelopment — a document called the Central Issaquah Plan — also creates a framework to add more than 7,000 residences on about 1,000 acres stretched along Interstate 90. In a series of decisions reached Dec. 17 after years spent reenvisioning the business district, a relieved City Council adopted the Central Issaquah Plan, but delayed action on a key piece until at least April. “It’s the right plan at the right time,” Councilman Fred Butler said. “It will not happen overnight, but when the time is right,
we will be ready.” Officials said the document offers a guide to transform the area from strip mall suburbia into a dense urban core in the next 30 years. Critics derided the plan as a step to remake the city as a “baby Bellevue” and undermine Issaquah’s character. The existing business district includes regional retail destinations — Pickering Place, and the Meadows and Issaquah Commons shopping centers — but 75 percent of land in the area is paved parking lots. If implemented, guidelines in the Central Issaquah Plan could reshape the community on a scale larger even than development in the Issaquah Highlands and Talus urban villages throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Cost to public is uncertain The document sets Issaquah on a path to add a regional growth center designation to the business district. Issaquah needs to add dense development and meet other benchmarks to qualify for See PLAN, Page A6
Milestones from 2012 reflect challenges By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com Challenges — whether economic, political or social — defined the year. Construction started on a long-awaited retail center in the Issaquah Highlands as city leaders eyed redevelopment elsewhere. Residents rallied to help one another after crippling snow and ice storms hit the region. The community came together to confront a threat against Skyline High School students. Milestones from the past 12 months show how the community rose to face challenges.
Issaquah bans plastic bags at most retailers Issaquah joined a string of cities along Puget Sound to outlaw plastic bags at local retailers June 4, after months of acrimonious debate about adverse impacts to the marine environment and the regional economy. In the end, concerns about the environment led the City Council to decide 5-2 to eliminate most retail uses for plastic bags. The legislation — and a 5-cent fee on paper bags — go into effect next year. The council listened to advocates from environmental groups and the plastics industry in public meetings throughout April and May, and then again before the decision. The plastic bag ban sponsor, Councilman Mark Mullet, presented the legislation as a way to reduce the estimated 10 million plastic bags the city sends to the King County landfill each year. Proponents said plastic bags pose problems at recycling facilities and use up space at the local landfill needed for nonrecyclable items. Opponents said outlawing the bags could hurt businesses in the region, including plastics manufacturers and mom-and-pop stores.
1 FOR
2012
TOP NEWS STORIES OF THE YEAR INSIDE Police blotter highlights, Page A3 Best (unseen) photos, Page B1 Top sports moments, Page B4 Entertainment highlights, Page B8
Next: Retailers plan to roll out the plastic bag ban and a 5-cent fee on paper bags in March, under the legislation adopted by the council.
Threat prompts Skyline High School closure Skyline High School closed Sept. 20, after a former student threatened to unleash a Columbine-style attack and shoot students on campus. Issaquah School District administrators characterized the decision to close the Sammamish school as a precaution, and the school reopened the next day, albeit at a later time and as extra police officers, parent volunteers and counselors greeted students. The decision to close Skyline for a day rattled the tight school community and spurred a farreaching investigation encomSee TOP
10, Page A2
INSIDE THE PRESS A&E ............... Classifieds ...... Community .... Let’s Go!.........
B8 B7 B1 B2
Obituaries ...... B3 Opinion .......... A4 Police & Fire .. B7 Sports ..........B4-5
BY JaCQUeLINe KerNeSS/ISSaQUaH poLICe DeparTmeNT
Officer Karin Weihe holds 3-year-old Storie Seawright as the Issaquah Police Department delivers Christmas gifts to local families Dec. 19.
BLUE CHRISTMAS
Officer trades blue uniform for red suit to play Santa for families By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com Santa Claus traded the sleigh for a police SUV not long before Christmas. Issaquah Police Department officers joined the jolly old elf to deliver some holiday cheer and — most importantly, for some fortunate children — Christmas gifts. The department adopts at least one local family each Christmas, and the officers in blue collect gifts and then join Santa to make the family’s holiday merry and bright. Just after Thanksgiving, police officers and employees started preparing to brighten the holidays for a pair of families. Throughout the holiday season, police officers and employ-
BY JaCQUeLINe KerNeSS/ISSaQUaH poLICe DeparTmeNT
Santa Claus delivers gifts to 7-year-old Blanca Gomez and 6-year-old Sergio Gomez Jr. as the Issaquah Police Department delivers Christmas gifts to local families Dec. 19. ees spent their own money to buy gifts. The children in both families ranged from 1 to 17, so officers headed out shopping, wish lists in hand. Then, officers and Santa piled
into police vehicles Dec. 19 for the deliveries. “The kids just had these huge See SANTA, Page A5
Christmas fund is 45 percent under goal By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com The all-volunteer organization Issaquah Community Services provided more than $88,000 in assistance to local families last year, in the form of rent and utility assistance, or emergency aid. But the nonprofit organization could provide less help in the future, because the Merry Christmas Issaquah fundraising drive is 45 percent under the $75,000 goal for the year.
Now, as the fundraising drive nears completion, Issaquah Community Services still needs to raise $33,093 to meet the goal. Only once before, in 2003, did Merry Christmas Issaquah fail to meet organizers’ annual goal. The city provides office space and overhead, so 100 percent of donations go to people in need. Holiday donations through Merry Christmas Issaquah enable the organization to help people in the coming year. Payments do not go directly to clients.
QUOTABLE ““He’s a tremendous person, first of all. He has a great attitude, great personality, and he’s worked so hard.”
— Russell Wilson Seahawks quarterback, about Skyline High School senior Max Browne, who was named Gatorade Player of the Year (See story on Page B4.)
The organization offers a place to turn for local families in need of some extra help. Most clients need assistance to pay rent or a utility bill. The holiday fundraising drive accounts for about 65 percent of Issaquah Community Services’ annual budget. The organization faces increased demand for aid — so great the organization shut down for more than a week
SOCIAL MEDIA Connect with The Issaquah Press on social media at www.twitter.com/issaquahpress and www.facebook.com/issaquahpress. Scan the QR code to go to www.issaquahpress.com.
See FUND, Page A5
A2 • Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Top 10 from page A1
passing local and federal authorities. Investigators spent the days after the discovery attempting to pinpoint the user behind the threat posted Sept. 19 on the online bulletin board 4chan. Police traced the post to a proxy server in Sweden — a common technique to mask computer users’ identities — and hit a dead end. Police said a trail of Facebook comments led investigators to a suspect in the threat. Facebook taunts directed at Skyline students and information from friends linked the incident to a 16-year-old Edmonds boy, a former Skyline student. Next: The boy pleaded not guilty to felony harassment, and is scheduled to go to trial next year. In the meantime, a King County Juvenile Court judge ordered electronic home detention and restricted computer access as punishment. Construction starts on highlands retail center Finally, after years of plans and promises, developers and officials gathered in the Issaquah Highlands early June 26 to launch construction on a $70 million retail center in the neighborhood — a long-awaited amenity for residents and, in recent years, a symbol for the anemic economy and rebound. Fields ceded to grasses and wildflowers as a difficult economy slowed plans to build a retail center in the neighborhood should transform in the months ahead to accommodate stores, restaurants and a 12-screen multiplex. The effort to add more retail options to the neighborhood stretches back to the mid-1990s — and lead-
ers from the city, highlands developer Port Blakely Communities and Florida-based retail center developer Regency Centers treated the groundbreaking ceremony as a watershed moment. The planned retail center, Grand Ridge Plaza, encompasses 10 blocks and 15 buildings spread across 280,113 square feet. The announced tenants include a Regal Cinemas multiplex, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Marshalls, RAM Restaurant & Brewery, Safeway and more. Next: Expect the initial offerings — Regal Cinemas and some restaurants — to open at about the same time in the spring. Construction is poised to start on Safeway early next year. Storms, and then blackout, cripple Issaquah In the days after a snowstorm pummeled the region, blackout chased whiteout, as residents uneasy about thorny commutes and missed meetings instead confronted sinking temperatures and toppling trees — all sans electricity. The major snowstorm dropped 3 to 6 inches across the Issaquah area Jan. 18, but the struggle started the next day, as a rare ice storm led to widespread power outages and caused trees to send iceand snow-laden branches earthward. The harsh conditions tested road crews, prompted spinouts and fender benders around the region, and led Issaquah School District administrators to cancel school for almost a week. Ironically, snowfall on the ground early Jan. 18 came from a less-severethan-predicted snowstorm. Still, the snowstorm left deep snow in local neighborhoods, especially areas at higher elevations. The toughest challenges came in the days afterward, as ice encased power lines and tree branches fell to the ground. The recovery effort
The Issaquah Press lurched into gear before snow and ice melted, but city residents and officials continued the daunting cleanup for several weeks. Next: Issaquah, King County and state emergency planners gird for extreme weather and natural disasters. Issaquah Salmon Hatchery marks 75 years The iconic Issaquah Salmon Hatchery opened along Issaquah Creek 75 years ago and, in the decades since, developed into a symbol for the community and a lifeline for fish species. Community and Friends of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery leaders celebrated the milestone throughout 2012. Conservationists and longtime Issaquah residents credit the hatchery for restoring the historic Issaquah Creek salmon runs after decades of logging and mining damaged the creek and surrounding watershed. Works Progress Administration crews started to build the hatchery complex on a former city park and bandstand in 1936, and the hatchery opened the following year. In the 1970s, as the Issaquah Labor Day celebration morphed into the Salmon Days Festival, the hatchery served as a focal point during the festivities. Despite the success, officials confronted a grim future for the hatchery in the early 1990s. State leaders eyed the hatchery for closure amid a budget crisis. FISH formed in 1994 to preserve the hatchery, and spearheads educational programs in school classrooms and at the facility — the most-visited state-run hatchery. Next: Crews plan to replace a problem-plagued dam upstream from the hatchery after securing more than $250,000 in city funds and $4 million in state funds for the longenvisioned project.
City adopts roadmap for redevelopment Issaquah leaders adopted a long-term plan Dec. 17 to transform the business district from strip mall suburbia into a dense urban core punctuated by buildings up to 125 feet tall. The roadmap to the more urban future is the Central Issaquah Plan, a far-reaching guide to development for the area stretched along the interstate from the Bellevue city line to Northeast Gilman Boulevard. In a decision reached after years spent re-envisioning the business district — about 1,000 acres stretched along Interstate 90 — a relieved City Council adopted the Central Issaquah Plan, but delayed action on a key piece. Supporters said the change outlined in the Central Issaquah Plan is not going to occur overnight, and noticeable changes could require years to come to fruition. The document could act as a guide to a future Issaquah or, as some critics suggest, invite more sprawl to the community, further clog already-congested roads and mar the mountain panorama. Next: The council is likely to reconsider Central Issaquah Plan design and development standards — rules for buildings, community spaces, landscaping, signage and more — in April. City creates groundbreaking marijuana rules Months before Washington voters approved marijuana for recreational use in November — and imparted a different meaning on the nickname Evergreen State — Issaquah pioneered rules for medical marijuana operations. GreenLink Collective opened in late 2010 at a former daycare center near Issaquah Valley Elementary School in a
neighborhood not zoned for commercial operations. Officials ruled against GreenLink’s initial application for a city business license. The ruling started a monthslong process to establish rules for medical marijuana operations. In December 2011, after listening to emotional testimony from medical marijuana users — and only a handful of complaints from opponents — the City Council adopted rules to limit such medical marijuana operations near schools, parks and other collective gardens. GreenLink opened at a storefront along Northwest Gilman Boulevard in early 2012. Other cities studied the successful process Issaquah used to craft the ordinance, but the voter-approved measure to legalize marijuana for recreational use, Initiative 502, led officials statewide to prepare for additional changes next year. Next: State officials plan to spend up to a year to establish rules for growing, processing, selling and possessing marijuana. Voters decide bitter, surprising Senate bout The candidate no longer in the race loomed over the contest for the 5th Legislative District’s state Senate seat. Cheryl Pflug, a Republican former senator and erstwhile candidate, lingered as a constant presence in the acrimonious race contest between Issaquah City Councilman Mark Mullet, a Democrat, and Snoqualmie Republican Brad Toft. In May, Gov. Chris Gregoire appointed Pflug to a $92,500-per-year spot on the Washington Growth Management Hearings Board. Pflug unexpectedly withdrew from the race and later resigned from the Senate, setting up a head-to-head contest between Mullet and Toft. The actions opened a rift between Pflug and other Republicans. The race turned increasingly bitter in the closing weeks, as Democrats seized on Toft’s past legal troubles and Republicans attempted — and failed — to link Mullet to a deal between Gregoire and Pflug to claim the seat for the Democrats. Mullet came out on top in the unexpectedly ugly contest to succeed Pflug in the Senate, 54 percent to 46 percent. Next: Mullet assumed office in the Senate last month. Once he resigns from the Issaquah City Council in January, members intend to move quickly to appoint a successor. Sting nets former bus driver for child porn Issaquah School District and Eastside Catholic High School officials sought to reassure parents and students May 11 after federal agents arrested a substitute bus driver for the Issaquah district and
MOST-READ ARTICLES Throughout the year, readers turned to www. issaquahpress.com for updates about local events and issues. The most-read articles from 2012 reflect a thirst for details and news breaks, as well as a strong appetite for entertainment tidbits. 1. Mouseketeer Ginny Tyler, voice artist and Issaquah resident, dies — July 23 2. Skyline High School to close over mass shooting threat — Sept. 20 3. Student dies on Skyline High School campus — Dec. 14 4. Quarterback Jake Heaps glad to be at Kansas, out of spotlight — Aug. 28 5. Lindzi Cox, Liberty High School graduate, is still in the hunt for ‘The Bachelor’ — Feb. 28 6. Issaquah residents confront power outages amid icy conditions — Jan. 19 7. Facebook clues led police to suspect in Skyline shooting threat — Oct. 3 8. Maker of Excedrin, Bufferin announces recall — Jan. 23 9. TV’s ‘The Bachelor’ meets local contestant’s parents — Feb. 20 10. Costco looms large in race between Barack Obama, Mitt Romney — Oct. 30 former Eastside Catholic teacher for possession of child pornography. Andrew Bernard Rekdahl, 29, faced child pornography charges after federal prosecutors said the Carnation resident shared explicit images and videos of boys online from his home computer. Department of Homeland Security agents arrested Rekdahl at a school district facility May 10 after a monthslong sting operation. Federal agents arrested Rekdahl and 189 other suspects in a nationwide sting dubbed Operation Orion. The sting targeted the possession, receipt, transportation, distribution, advertisement or production of explicit images or videos. Before the case went to trial, Rekdahl — a popular teacher at Eastside Catholic — succumbed to cancer Aug. 29. In 2010, Eastside Catholic students and parents had raised more than $17,000 to support Rekdahl as he underwent treatment for aggressive duodenal carcinoma, or intestinal cancer. Next: Officials at the school district and Eastside Catholic said no complaints occurred against Rekdahl at either organization. Salmon Days Festival sets attendance record The ode to salmon migration, Issaquah’s iconic Salmon Days Festival, lured a record crowd in early October — more than 180,000 attendees. Salmon Days Festival attendees packed like sardines on downtown Issaquah streets in early October, as sunshine and balmy temperatures lured a record crowd to the event. Salmon Days reeled in attendees for a parade, carnival games, street snacks, arts and crafts, and, of course, a chance to see migrating chinook and coho. Crowds jammed the bridge across the creek on the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery grounds and pressed close to portals to see the fish up close. Salmon Days is a community celebration rooted in a long-ago Labor Day parade. In the 1970s, as the former celebration morphed into Salmon Days, the hatchery served as a focal point during the festivities. Since locals established the festival, Salmon Days transformed from a smalltown celebration into regional festival — and a major draw for out-of-towners and tourism dollars. Next: Organizers started planning the 44th annual festival, a salmon-centric celebration set for Oct. 5-6, not long after the last Salmon Days concluded.
The Issaquah Press
BEST OF BLOTTER Throughout the year, the police blotter chronicles criminal masterminds, traffic snags and occasional oddities beneath tongue-in-cheek headlines. The items included below — culled from 12 months of police reports — highlight humorous and strange happenings from the year: Private eye Police contacted a Sammamish woman after she drove over a planter strip in the 3300 block of Issaquah-Pine Lake Road Southeast on Jan. 26. The collision damaged the underside of her vehicle, causing it to leak transmission fluid. She told the officer she believed she had been followed and her vehicle had been bugged with surveillance devices. Donation frustration Police responded to suspicious activity at a donation bin in the 600 block of Northwest Gilman Boulevard at 3:25 p.m. June 7 as a man and his girlfriend attempted to retrieve clothing accidentally placed in the bin earlier. The girlfriend
verified the story, and the man retrieved the items and departed. American idle Police responded to a noise complaint in the 100 block of Northwest Dogwood Street at 11:39 p.m. June 20 after a caller reported a man singing loudly in the area. Police located the man on the roof of his home and asked him to keep the noise down. Late Flintoft’s Funeral Home & Crematory, 540 E. Sunset Way, requested a police escort for a funeral before 11:24 a.m. July 13. When officers arrived for the detail, they discovered the procession had already left the funeral home. H is for hoodlum Police responded to malicious mischief in the 200 block of Southeast Clark Street at 10:44 p.m. July 15 after a caller reported a child vandalizing a sign. The officer contacted an 8-year-old girl who admitted to pulling down half of the letter H from a sign. The officer took the girl to her mother, and the mother said she intended to make arrangements to pay for the damage.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012 •
Council approves pact to transform gravel quarry to urban village By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com The gravel quarry carved into the hillside below the Issaquah Highlands is poised to transform into businesses and homes in the next 30 years, after the City Council approved a landmark development agreement to reshape the area. The landowner and quarry operator, Issaquahbased Lakeside Industries Inc., proposed the pact last year for about 120 acres on both sides of Highlands Drive Northeast. The council approved the development agreement Dec. 17, despite concerns about building height, traffic congestion and contamination in the Lower Issaquah Valley Aquifer, a key drinking water source for the city. “There was a lot of push and pull, a lot of compromise, and I think it’s an agreement that both is good for my family and is also good for the city of Issaquah, and that we will live to see a development on this site that enhances
the city,” Lakeside Industries CEO Tim Lee said before the unanimous council decision. The city blueprint for long-term growth, or Comprehensive Plan, calls for mineral resource land to undergo “adequate reclamation and enhancement of the site” once quarrying or mining activities conclude. The deal between the city and Lakeside Industries is similar to the agreements underpinning development in the highlands and Talus urban villages, and Rowley Properties land along state Route 900. Developers can build hundreds of homes, plus businesses, roads and other infrastructure, and parks and trails on the existing gravel quarry and other land nearby. The area farthest from the highlands and closest to Interstate 90 is expected to continue as industrial land for the foreseeable future, but construction could start on land near the highlands as early as
next year. Councilman Mark Mullet said the timeline offers the city a chance to study — and correct — possible impacts related to development. “This is the beauty of this whole arrangement,” he said. “We get a great length of time to really study to make sure it works.” Former Councilman David Kappler, Issaquah Alps Trails Club president, said the long-term agreement could carry benefits for the site. “The more they know what they can do with the site over the long term, the more efficient they’ll operate the site,” he told the council. Still, concerns about building height and the potential for aquifer contamination dominated the discussion before the council decision. “I consider myself an environmentalist — I love the lake, the animals that eat all of my flowers, the fish, the native plants. I know they’re all connected, but
Snow causes few disruptions for residents By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com Snow crept into forecasts in recent days, but aside from a dusting in higherelevation neighborhoods and a delay for Issaquah School District students, winter weather did not cause significant disruptions in the area. In response to slushy conditions on roads and some snowfall overnight, school district administrators delayed the start of school two hours Dec. 18. The day before, as forecasters issued a winter
weather advisory for Western Washington, Issaquah and King County road crews prepared for snow. National Weather Service meteorologists predicted snow for Issaquah overnight from Dec. 17-19, but said residents should expect to see accumulation of 1 inch or less as temperatures dipped into the 30s and the snow level dropped low enough to encompass local neighborhoods. Temperatures started to rise into the 40s by Dec. 19, and the snow turned to rain. The city, county and
A3
state Department of Transportation stockpiled salt, sand and anti-icing agents at locations throughout Issaquah and the surrounding area. Crews readied plows and sanders, and crews started to receive road-clearing assignments before Thanksgiving. Issaquah and King County divide streets into priority levels for snow removal. City snowplows initially focus on Priority 1 routes — important arteries and access to hillside communities, such as Squak Mountain and the high-
lands. Crews then address side streets as conditions allow. City crews toil around the clock in 12-hour shifts to remove snow from the roadway and, if necessary, drop sand and de-icing fluid onto the roadway. The county also puts crews on 12-hour shifts during significant snowstorms to provide aroundthe-clock response in unincorporated areas. The prospect of snow led King County Metro Transit to remind bus riders to plan ahead for getting around during winter
weather — especially since many bus route changes recently occurred. Even minor snow and icy conditions can delay or reroute buses on some of Metro Transit’s 240 routes. The agency offers tools to help riders stay informed during inclement conditions. Metro Transit buses go to snow routing as necessary, depending on road conditions in a broad geographic area. Planners assign every bus route to at least one of seven geographic areas in King County and riders can check each area’s status.
let me be clear — clean, safe drinking water is the top of my environmental pyramid,” Issaquah resident Denise Smith told the council. Kappler also cautioned the council about the aquifer contamination, and noted the expense of purchasing water from the regional Cascade Water Alliance. “If we have to go into any kind of treatment of that water, or have to switch and buy more from CWA through there, it’s going to be extremely expensive for residents in the city and residents on the plateau,” Kappler said. City Economic Development Manager Keith Niven said the agreement contains safeguards to prevent contamination. “The idea here is that we’re not just going to put a bunch of storm water in the ground and walk away,” he said. “There will be monitoring. There will be pretreatment. There will be a lot of source controls in Lakeside, similar to Issaquah Highlands.”
WHAT TO KNOW Learn more about Issaquah winter weather plans, and find snowplow routes at http://bit.ly/ Ta4QIm. Call 206-296-8100 to report problems on roads in unincorporated King County. King County Metro Transit riders can receive up-to-date information about route changes at the Transit Alerts website, http://1.usa.gov/5c064v. Find local forecasts and alerts at the National Weather Service, www.nws.noaa.gov.
The IssaquahPress
A4 • Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Opinion
E ditorial
Thanks to our many letter writers
W
e’d like to take a moment to salute those people who took the time to write a letter to the editor in 2012. Their written voice provokes, challenges, encourages and thereby builds a stronger community for us all. We aren’t able to publish every letter we receive, but here’s a list of the 122 authors, in alphabetical order, who did get ink this year. Kendrick Allen Glenn Anderson Lesley Austin Michael T. Barr Matthew Barry WSP Chief John R. Batiste David Baty Suzannah Beeman Julia Benson Family of Bill Bentz Heather Berry Karen Bloomquist Don Borin Kim Borom Matthew Bott Mark Bowers Larry Brickman Bob Brock Kimberly Borom Fred Butler Billie Cairns Robin Callahan Margo Campbell C.A. Christensen Laurie Clark Julie Colehour-Mitchell Tony Cowan Ben Crowther Barbara de Michele Claudia Donnelly Bill Elder Tiffany Endres Barbara Extract Ray Extract Rosemary Fahey Bette Filley Leo Finnegan Tina Fisher Forde Connie Fletcher Laura and Bob Foreman Derek Franklin Joan Friel Rick Gaines Wendy Ghiora Pat Martin and Francie Greth-Peto Tom Harman Mike Harrington Helen Hedman Don Hindman Shupe and Mary Holmberg Sylvia Hooker Ingrid Jarvis Nancy and Jeff Julius Mary Jo Kahler Kate Kaluzny Cori Kauk Janda Keenan Maggie Koeppler Ken Konigsmark Joyce Kormanyos Tom Knollmann
Terry J. LaBrue Jim Leming Barbara Lyall-Gamba Chad Magendanz Scott Mallard Erica S. Maniez Chris Marney Pat Martin Tola Marts Eyrlis McClish Bob McCoy Hamilton McCulloh Dawn McCutcheon Kevin Millar Jessica Mitchell Anne Moore Heather Moore Jody Mull Mark Mullet Wright A. Noel Fred and Mardi Nystrom Chuck Olson Karthik Palaniappan Elizabeth Panni Michael Payant James C. Papp Cheryl Pflug Jack and Beverly Porter Dr. Steve Rasmussen Mollie Roberts William Roberts Jay Rodne Jeffrey Rowe Phyllis Runyon Dorothy Russell Nathan Ryan Joshua Schaier Roland Segers Ken Sessler Don Shafer Barbara Shelton Eileen Sherbon Jacque Sorrell Robin Spicer Leigh Stokes Hank Thomas Shannon Tice Steven Tochko John Traeger Jane Ulrich Camille Vaska Millie Vierra Bryan Weinstein Becky Wilder Janet Wall Nancy Whitaker Paul Williams Wendy Eng Yee Mary C. Ziegler Melanie Zimmerman Renee Zimmerman
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The community conversation that has started around what makes a successful well-rounded student that is ready for the chalnancially, it’s a steal compared to lenges of today’s world is a good ‘The Sound of Music’ other theater options. And, perone and should continue. haps best of all, you get to support What responsibility does the district have to teach our kids beyond all the students who appear on, behind and below the stage. the core subjects? How do we place value on these expanded educaMatthew Barry tional opportunities? How should I recently attended the first high Issaquah we measure the value delivered in school musical I’ve ever seen: “The our schools beyond subjects that Sound of Music,” by Issaquah High Liberty schedule School’s performing arts departhave standardized tests? ment. In summary: Wow! It was a I applaud the board for thinking superb performance. broadly about this subject. There Annika Dybevik, the senior is more national conversation I want to thank the Issaquah about what elements are needed who played Maria, was flawless and has a voice equal to any I’ve School Board for the courage and for a balanced educational offering beyond core subjects. We heard at the Village Theatre, 5th leadership the members showed at the board meeting in regard Avenue or the Paramount. are a progressive school district After Maddy Bennett’s movto the Liberty schedule change. I where the administration, board ing “Climb Every Mountain,” I know it was not easy for the and community clearly are board to vote against the supernoticed quite a few teary eyes in aligned around the goal of doing the audience. There were other intendent’s recommendation. what is best for our kids. It was clear that they had looked wonderful performances (sorry, Let’s help lead the way by can’t name you all), fabulous at the data and listened to the keeping the conversation going community input on the issue. As scenery and a great orchestra. around how we can deliver and If you’ve never thought about was mentioned by members of place value on a broader range of attending a high school show, you the board, Liberty clearly has educational opportunities for all should give it a try. You’re in for a something special going on that of our students. treat if you attend performances the community values, but that the Julie Colehour-Mitchell at IHS (and probably the other school district doesn’t fully underLiberty parent and schedule committee member district high schools, as well). Fistand or know how to measure.
T o the E ditor
High school musical was as good as professional production
Thanks for the right decision
F rom the W eb Connecticut school massacre I am very disturbed that on the day of the Connecticut shootings at an elementary school the folks at the Issaquah Sportsmen’s Club continued to shoot. My kids attend Clark Elementary School and after hearing of the horrific shooting, resulting in 27 lost lives, mostly children, it seemed extremely insensitive to have to listen to the firing of shotguns ricocheting across our playground. Can we not build an underground range? In such an idyllic environment, hearing gunshots does not add to the peaceful surroundings. Amy Eberhardt
Electoral College Why are all these votes going to President Obama when 40 percent of the state voted against President Barack Obama? I feel that I am not represented by the government, as I voted for Mitt Romney and will not have equal representation based on all 12 electoral votes going to Obama. It should be divided based on the percentage of the vote, or 7-5 Obama and Romney. Benton Ramsey Ours is a multiparty system, not just two. Why are all of the electors of a state only from one party? Definitely time to rid ourselves of the Electoral — outdated — College. Sherry Scott Seriously! Having the electoral votes divided proportionally
Have you tried to go to Costco without your car? Enough said! Also, most of our grocery stores aren’t located in residential across the nation would’ve been great for the 2000 election. areas! Safeway, QFC and Fred Mark Roberts Meyer are farther than a block from any housing. This is a fantasy and should never happen. Central Issaquah Plan Ralph Montez People say this is all about the character of the city and how it Troopers’ tractor-trailer can continue to “evolve.” enforcement Look at how Bellevue has evolved, or Redmond, Kirkland or I’d like to see the lower speed even Renton. Why do they all look limit enforced for trucks. the same? That is not evolution — I recently came back from it’s cloning. A town that is unique, Spokane along Interstate 90, and right now, is Issaquah. Why do we there were trucks passing trucks need to change so we can meet passing trucks, some of them some absurd 80-year growth goal? doing substantially more than 60 Building more density lowers mph, others seriously impeding property values, increases traffic traffic — this under somewhat and, still, nobody on the council adverse road conditions. has figured out how this will all Yet, although I drive this route be paid for. Tragic. pretty often, I have never seen a Bryan Weinstein truck pulled over and cited. Yes, the tailgating speed demons in There isn’t enough space in a cars are a problem, but so are parking lot to transform it into a the truckers. “pedestrian-minded” anything. Rick Francis Buildings would have to be destroyed and moved, and then you still wouldn’t have a place to park. Yes, this metamorphosis could Letters of 300 words or less lead to affordable housing, and should be emailed or mailed by developers could build affordable noon Friday. We will edit for space, housing now if they wanted to. I potential libel and/or political get a sense that they don’t want relevance. Letters addressing local to. If we let new development be news receive priority. Letters must built without parking, whether be signed and have a daytime it be a parking lot or parking phone number to verify authorship. garage, we’re in for trouble! “If they could afford to live in Issaquah, get on public transporEmail: news@isspress.com tation, go to work, come home, Mail: P.O. Box 1328, walk a block to a grocery store so Issaquah, WA 98027 they didn’t have to rely on their cars, it’d be ideal,” he said.
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The Issaquah Press
Fund from page A1
in June after exhausting funds for the month. Merry Christmas Issaquah is Issaquah Community Services’ most important fundraiser all year. Other organizations pitch in during the annual Merry Christmas Issaquah fundraising drive, but the vast majority of donations come from the community. St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church hosted a Sing & Play Along Messiah! on Dec. 16 to raise more than $1,050 for Merry Christmas Issaquah. The annual Merry Christmas Issaquah fundraising drive serves as a reminder to community members about the need for social services in the area. Recipients said donations from the organization come at a critical time,
Santa: Police deliver good cheer from page A1
smiles on their faces, and with their parents, it was the same thing,” Police Chief Paul Ayers said after the deliveries. “It was quite a thing to see.” The process started weeks earlier, after Police Communications Specialist Jacqueline Kerness reached out to the Issaquah School District for some help with finding families in need. Kerness bought Christmas trees for the families
Holidays alter garbage collection schedules
Customers should not expect regular garbage service on Christmas and New Year’s Day. The haulers serving Issaquah do not collect garbage and recycling on the holiday. Instead, if a customer’s collection day falls on Christmas, service is delayed one day. Customers with garbage and recycling collection on Tuesday receive Wednesday service the day after the holiday, and Wednesday customers receive Thursday service.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012 •
A5
ON THE WEB Miller Family Dermatology, 450 N.W. Gilman Blvd., Suite 301A, is donating $1 for each Facebook like it receives to Merry Christmas Issaquah through December. Like Miller Family Dermatology at www.facebook.com/ MillerFamilyDerm.
2012 GOAL: $75,000 TO DATE: $41,907 HOW TO HELP Help by making a taxdeductible donation to Issaquah Community Services. The organization is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Send donations to Merry Christmas Issaquah, c/o The Issaquah Press, P.O. Box 1328, Issaquah, WA 98027. The names of donors — but not amounts — are published in The Press unless anonymity is requested.
after other options dry up and disappear. The all-volunteer nonprofit organization is responsible for dispersing the donations to families living inside Issaquah School District boundaries. Merry Christmas Issaquah — spearheaded by The Issaquah Press since 1981 — set a donation record last year, but the $77,362 raised could barely meet demand. The number of donors
last year, 231, also set a record.
at a Black Friday sale and dropped off the trees not long after Thanksgiving. “I couldn’t sleep after Thanksgiving,” she said. “I went to bed and woke up at 1 o’clock in the morning and couldn’t fall back to sleep. I remembered that Target was open, so I went over to Target and got two trees.” Once delivery day arrives, officers and Santa — spoiler alert — motorcycle officer John Lindner, in a red suit, headed to the families’ homes. “Usually, the parents know to have the kids answer the door, and once they see Santa, their faces light up,” Kerness said. Then, Kerness and other department staffers serve as elves, handing gifts to Santa and answering children’s questions. “They asked why Santa didn’t have a sleigh, and we said, ‘Well, the sleigh is in the shop and one of
the reindeer had a flat,’” Kerness joked. “That was the best thing I could come up with.” Police asked children to open only one gift during the event and save the others for Dec. 25. “They want to open those gifts now, and we make sure to say, ‘You can only open one. You have to wait until Christmas,’” Kerness said. The deliveries marked the latest holiday project for the police department. The agency served as a collection site for Operation Bald Eagle’s Toys for Troops drive and sent officers to participate in a recent Shop with a Cop event in Factoria. The project to adopt a family each Christmas is a department tradition among officers and employees. “I get a lot of feedback that they look forward to it every year,” Kerness said.
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Plan from page A1
transit funds in the future. Planners envision 7,750 residential units in the business district by 2031 — up from about 750 now — and growth from 13,000 jobs in the area to 19,225 jobs. Under growth targets set by the state, Issaquah is expected to add at least 5,750 residential units and 20,000 jobs citywide by 2031. “If we want to see mixed-use, modern development, we need density and maybe even a little more height,” Councilman
Joshua Schaer said. The regional growth centers receive higher priority for state and federal funding in order to connect the regional hubs, but transportation funding is increasingly scarce due to the fragile economy and the belt-tightening political climates in Olympia and Washington, D.C. The total public investment for eventual improvements to roads and other infrastructure in the business district is undefined, although the city is expected to shoulder some costs and pass others on to developers. “I think there were some legitimate issues raised from residents of the com-
Dining Guide
The Issaquah Press munity about how you’re going to fund the infrastructure improvements,” Councilman Mark Mullet said. “I think if you don’t have the center designation, I think getting those grants to actually fund the infrastructure investments is going to be next to impossible.” (In addition to serving on the council, Mullet, a Democrat, is also the state senator for the 5th Legislative District, and plans to resign from the council next month.) Criteria set by the regional planning authority require such a center to accommodate businesses and residences, incorporate features for mass
transit, pedestrians and bicyclists. The standards also call for a compact footprint and smaller blocks meant to entice pedestrians.
and King County Metro Transit, not the city. “What agencies have more to do and to say with whether or not we achieve those — and therefore ‘Send a strong message potentially achieve the to the market’ true vision and goals of the The council called city whole plan — than PSRC leaders to reach out to and the transportation King County Metro Tranagencies?” Councilman Paul Winterstein said. sit, Sound Transit and the Puget Sound Regional Leaders at the Issaquah Council — the planning Chamber of Commerce and authority for King, Kitsap, Forterra, a Seattle-based Pierce and Snohomish conservation group, supcounties — as Issaquah ap- port the regional growth plies for a regional growth center designation. center designation. But the city Planning PolDecisions, such as exicy Commission, a growth tending a light rail line to advisory group comprised of residents, balked at Issaquah or bus routes in the business district, fall to the proposal. Though the planners at Sound Transit commission recommended for the council to adopt the Central Issaquah Plan, members questioned the need to include a regional center designation. Connie Marsh, Issaquah Environmental Council president, a business owner along Northwest Gilman Boulevard and a former council candidate, said the designation creates unrealistic targets for growth. “I would prefer to actually have a Central Issaquah Plan that we could do in 30 years as our plan,” she told the council. Serving “I think this is an 80-year Issaquah plan, and I would like to since , $155 le p cut it shorter to something o e p 0 1982 -1 for 8 that we actually could grasp and achieve. Halfway through it, we could revisit and say, ‘OK, well now we’re getting a little and further, let’s increase our 40 E. SUNSET WAY, ISSAQUAH • 425-392-5678 vision.’” Issaquah Chamber of Commerce CEO Matthew Bott said adopting the Central Issaquah Plan as-is bolstered the city’s reputation to potential businesses. “In the short term, it will send a strong message to the market, to regional property brokers and potential new businesses that Issaquah is in a position for them to invest in,” he told the council.
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Limit on building height elicits comparisons to Bellevue Officials held off on another complicated component in the Central Issaquah Plan — a decision about design and development standards, or the rules for buildings, community spaces, landscaping, signage and more. The council is likely to reconsider the design and development standards April 1. “It is my hope that this vision will indeed be fulfilled in the decades ahead, that the plan provides for the proper mix of regulations, incentives and flexibility to achieve this vision,” Janet Wall, a longtime local environmentalist, told the council. “But I also agree with the proposed delay to go over some of the details of the design and development standards. It’s worth the extra time and effort to ensure that we get it right.” The provision to increase building height to 125 feet in the commercial core — up from 65 feet — attracted the most scrutiny from opponents and elicited comparisons to Bellevue. The height limit for buildings in
TIMELINE The process to adopt the Central Issaquah Plan started in the late 2000s, even as construction boomed in the Issaquah Highlands and Talus urban villages. The document is meant to re-envision development in the business district for the next 30 years. 42007 — City issues report outlining conditions in business district. 42007-08 — City hosts public workshops and open houses to gather residents’ input. 42009 — Mayor appoints citizen task force to develop draft Central Issaquah Plan. 42010 — Central Issaquah Plan Task Force delivers draft after more than 1,000 hours of work. 2012 4March — The revised plan is sent to the municipal Planning Policy Commission, and a draft environmental review is issued. 4June — The final environmental review for the Central Issaquah Plan is issued. 4July — Planning Policy Commission holds final public hearings on the plan. 4August to November: City Council delves into the document at a retreat and through council committees. 4December: City Council adopts Central Issaquah Plan, but delays design and development standards until April. Sources: City of Issaquah, The Issaquah Press archives
downtown Bellevue is 450 feet. The initial step to transform the business district started late last year, as the council approved a 30year agreement between the city and longtime Issaquah developer Rowley Properties to overhaul almost 80 acres and allow buildings up to 150 feet tall on Rowley Propertiesowned land. Skeptics suggested 10-story buildings in the business district could mar the Issaquah Alps panorama. Winterstein cited the intersection of Northwest Maple Street and 12th Avenue Northwest to illustrate changes outlined in the Central Issaquah Plan. “People express angst about taller buildings that block the view and about becoming too much like Bellevue,” he said. “Well, the buildings that could be built in the vicinity of 12th and Maple would be about a third of the height of the towers in Bellevue. Plus, our code ensures that there will be adequate spacing between them, specifically so the views of the hills and mountains are preserved.”
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©2012
A6 • Wednesday, December 26, 2012
the issaQuahPress
Section
B
COMMuNity
Wednesday December 26, 2012
BEHIND LENS the
1 FOR
Photos by Greg Farrar
2012
BEST (UNSEEN) PHOTOS OF THE YEAR
At top, a duck pauses on the lip of the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery weir Sept. 28 to watch Chinook returning to spawn as the annual Salmon Days Festival approaches. Above, Joe Tonnemaker, Issaquah High School senior, throws Connor McCaw, of Woodinville, to the mat during their 145-pound match on 50th Anniversary Alumni Night Jan. 11. Tonnemaker won by a technical fall, giving the Eagles the final 54-24 margin of victory over the Falcons. Above, Kaitlyn Ochu, 4, of Maple Valley, slides down playground equipment at Squak Valley Park May 12. At left, Raymond Ha, Liberty High School junior, carves the water to a 3A state championship medal Feb. 18 in a 100-yard breaststroke time of 57.46 seconds.
SLIDESHOW Find more photos from the best photos of 2012 you never saw at www.issaquahpress.com.
At left, Jennie Reed, an Issaquah High School graduate of the 1990s, shows the design of her London 2012 Olympic silver medal in women’s team pursuit cycling. Above, Tania Saxena, 11, of Sammamish, shows off her abstract art July 17 during the annual Chalk Art Festival at the Community Center. At right, postal carrier Laura Gilliam delivers mail Jan. 20 on Idylwood Drive Southwest after a major snowstorm hit the region. Liberty High School cheerleaders (from left) Sara Belali, Sophia Davis, Jenny Haselden, Sara Bluhm, Leah Jackman, Lauren Lee, Jamie Spurgeon, Lily Dunlap, Emily Culbertson and Alaina Irving, donate their day July 14 to cheer Rotary Challenge Day gravity car racers.
Above, Brady Williams, 5, of Talus, ‘flies’ with the assist of his mom Lesli during the Aug. 14 Concert on the Green. At right, Sabina Honig (left) and Amir Feinsilber cross the Issaquah Creek bridge on Newport Way Southwest during the fourth mile of their marathon run Nov. 4, which they ran at the same hour the cancelled New York City Marathon was to have been held.
B2 • Wednesday, December 26, 2012
The Issaquah Press
LET’S
PLAN FOR THE WEEK OF
DEC. 27 - JAN. 2
GO! Small Works Holiday Exhibition, through Dec. 29, artEAST Art Center, 95 Front St. N., 392-3191, www.arteast.org Volunteer: YWCA Family Village youth mentors, activity helpers, computer lab, after-
school program, 270-6804, dcooper@ymcaworks.org Volunteer: Seattle Tilth’s veggie crew plant, tend and harvest the community learning garden at Pickering Barn, for ages 18 and younger, RSVP to falaahjones@ seattletilth.org or 206-6330451, ext. 110 Volunteer: Issaquah Food & Clothing Bank customer service or sorting inventory, Friday and Monday needed most, cori@issaquahfoodbank.org or 392-4123
7:30 p.m. Dec. 31 Third Annual New Year’s Eve Celebration featuring Darren Motamedy. Seating starts at 7:30 p.m., dinner will be served from 7:3010 p.m., music starts at 9 p.m. Tickets are $25 and include champagne toast at midnight and dessert. Reservations are required. Call 392-5550.
Thursday Ladies Night at Zeeks Pizza, half-price cocktails, 2525 N.E. Park Drive, 893-8646 Open house of Pickering Barn for those planning upcoming events, noon to 4 p.m., 1730 10th Ave. N.W., 837-3321 Fish & Chips for Thursday night dinner at the Lake Sammamish Elks Lodge, $10/person, 6 p.m., 765 Rainier Blvd. N., 3921400
Hunting and Fishing Tales of Old Issaquah, for ages 10 and older, 11 a.m. Jan. 12, Train Depot, 150 First Ave. N.E., free Issaquah Ski & Snowboard School, for grades 4-12, 7:45 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Jan. 5 to Feb. 23, Saturdays, Snoqualmie Pass, costs vary by class, 572-6786
MONDAY
Issaquah/Sammamish Health & Safety Fair, free health screenings, children’s fingerprinting, home safety and emergency preparedness, 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Feb. 9, Pickering Barn,
DEC. 31
New Year’s Eve Party, featuring the Roof Shakers, 8 p.m., Amante, 131 Front St. N., $45, reservations only,
Issaquah Valley Rock Club: September through June, Issaquah Valley Senior Center, 75 N.E. Creek Way,
Rhythm and Reins Women’s Equestrian Drill Team: Sunday, Rock Meadow Equestrian Center, 20722 S.E. 34th St., Sammamish, 222-7100 or Leemod@pobox.com
TUESDAY Elks Lodge No. 1843: 6:30 p.m., 765 Rainier Blvd. N., 392-1400
Read & Discuss: ‘Remarkable Creatures,’ by Tracy Chevalier, 6:30-8 p.m. Jan. 14, Issaquah Library, 10 W. Sunset Way, free
Issaquah Quilters: 10 a.m. to noon, Issaquah Depot, 50 Rainier Blvd. N., info@ issaquahquilters.com
Upcoming
Creme Tangerine, 7:3010:30 p.m., Amante, 131 Front St. N., 313-9600
Our Stories, Ourselves: ‘Places of Interest Across the Globe,’ in the card room after lunch, senior center, 75 N.E. Creek Way, 392-2381
A Toast to the Lord — a faith-based Toastmasters
WHAT THE ICONS MEAN
OUTDOORS
FREE
MUSIC
FAMILYFRIENDLY
PERFORMANCE
ARTS
Sunday
The Julius Boehm Pool will close early at 3:30 p.m. and the community center at 5 p.m. for the New Year holiday.
Upcoming
Providence Point Kiwanis: noon, 4135 Providence Point Drive S.E., 427-9060 or ferrinlauve@msn.com for $5 lunch reservations
Friday
Father/Daughter Valentine Dance, for girls in grades one through five and their dads, 7-9:30 p.m. Feb. 9, community center, $20/couple, www.issaquahparks.net
Live music nights, Zeeks Pizza, 2525 N.E. Park Drive, 893-8646
Issaquah Valley Grange: 7:30 p.m., Issaquah Myrtle Mason Lodge Hall, 57 W. Sunset Way, 392-3013
club: 7-8:30 p.m., Eastside Fire & Rescue Station No. 83, 3425 Issaquah-Pine Lake Road S.E., 427-9682, orator@ live.com
Information@issaquahrockclub.org
1730 10th Ave. N.W. free admission, classifieds@isspress.com or 392-6434, ext. 222
Family Night at Zeeks Pizza, kids eat for free, 2525 N.E. Park Drive, 893-8646
313-9600
Greater Issaquah Toastmasters Club No. 5433: 6:45 p.m., Bellewood Retirement Home, 3710 Providence Point Drive S.E., issaquahtm@gmail.com
DEC. 29-30
Upcoming
Black Velvet 4, 7:30-10:30 p.m., Amante, 131 Front St. N., 313-9600
DEC. 27-28
THURSDAY/FRIDAY
SATURDAY/SUNDAY Saturday
DON’T MISS
New Year’s Eve Party
ONGOING EVENTS
Issaquah Parks & Recreation presents a new adult, 7-on-7 flag football league, starting Jan. 12 at Central Park Fields. Call 837-3388.
Send items for Let’s Go! to newsclerk@isspress.com by noon Friday.
La Leche League of Issaquah: 10 a.m., Overlake Medical Center Issaquah, 5708 E. Lake Sammamish Parkway S.E., www.lllusa.org/web/ sammamishwa.html Rotary Club of Issaquah:
The Triple XXX Rootbeer Drive-in 2013 Sunday car show schedule is now out. Go to www.triplexrootbeer. com to see when to schedule an appearance by your classic ride.
JAN. 1 12:15 p.m., Tibbetts Creek Manor, 750 Renton-Issaquah Road, www.issaquahrotary.org
Upcoming Learn to Ice Skate, for ages 5 and older, 6-6:30 p.m. or 6:30-7 p.m. Tuesdays Jan. 8 to Feb. 19, Castle Ice Arena, 12620 164th Ave. S.E., Renton, $120, 254-8750 or lts@castleice.com
LIBRARY
VOLUNTEER
WEDNESDAY
JAN. 2
Wednesday Nigh Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Zeeks Pizza, 2525 N.E. Park Drive, 893-8646
for new mothers with infants up to 12 weeks, 10 a.m. to noon Wednesdays, Jan. 2-31, Overlake Medical Clinic, Highmark, 1740 N.W. Maple St., $55, 688-5259
Amateur Radio Club: 7:30 p.m. senior center, 75 N.E. Creek Way Eastside Welcome Club: 10 a.m., call Pat 572-0474 Issaquah Emblem Club: 7 p.m., Elks Lodge, 765 Rainier Blvd. N., 392-1400
Upcoming ‘You and Your New Baby,’
Women’s Self Defense Class, for adults and teens, 7 p.m. Jan. 16, Issaquah Library, 10 W. Sunset Way, free, 392-5430 Steampunk, for adults and teens, 7 p.m. Jan. 30, Sammamish Library, 825 228th Ave. S.E., 392-3130
“To My Kitten (Susan O’Connor) MERRY CHRISTMAS --- I L O V E Y O U
CITY COUNCIL VACANCY - NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS -
Love Forever, Your Miko (Michael O’Connor)”
The City of Issaquah is looking to fill an upcoming vacancy on the City Council, Position No. 1.
Qualified candidates must be at least 18 years of age, be a registered voter and a resident of the City for at least one year. The appointed person will serve until a qualified person is elected at the November 2013 General Election, who then resumes the remainder of the term (expiring December 31, 2013). Applications are available at City Hall, City Clerkʼs Office 130 E. Sunset Way, Issaquah WA
or on the Cityʼs website: issaquahwa.gov.
Submit Application and Letter of Interest by: 5 PM, Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Questions? Contact the City Clerkʼs Office at 425-837-3000 ** Interviews will be held January 22, 2013.
Appointment anticipated to be made January 29, 2013. **
Don’t let sun damage spoil your game... Enjoy the game and the sunshine, but keep an eye out for skin changes.
Get routine checks so it’s never a problem. Schedule your appointment online at www.MillerFamilyDerm.com 450 NW Gilman Blvd., Suite 301A Issaquah, WA 98027 425-654-3961 www.MillerFamilyDerm.com
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The Issaquah Press
O bituary Barbara Espeseth Barbara Espeseth, 85, a longtime resident of Bellevue and Providence Point, passed away Dec. 1, 2012. She is survived by her daughter Karen (Will) Snow, of Palo Alto, Calif.; daughter-in-law Cynthia, of Woodinville; and grandchildren Madeline and Jesse. A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Dec. 30, at Sammamish Presbyterian Church, 22522 N.E. Inglewood Hill Road, Sammamish. Make contributions to the Issaquah Food & Clothing Bank, 179 First Ave. S.E., Issaquah, WA 98027.
College News Local students make UW dean’s list The following Issaquah students were named to the dean’s list at the University of Washington for the 2012 summer quarter: Emoniel Isakharov, Simerjot Singh, Fablina Sharara, Dexter Hu, Andres Orams, Akumbom Tunyi, Brendan Smith, Cortney Schirman, Brittany Guilbert, Joseph Sturtevant, Lindsay Gardner, Jordan Nugent, Blake Johnston, Steven Lau, Kevin Nguyen, Dawn Cheung, Lynda Ochs, Stephanie Wang, Eric Parker, Christine Quach, Vincent Quach and Keiji Hiramoto Jr. To qualify, students must have completed at least 12 graded credits and have a grade point average of at least 3.5 (out of 4).
Local student chosen for world debate Conor Summers, of Issaquah, was one of four members of the Carroll College Talking Saints debate team selected for debating four university students from Afghanistan via the Internet in a special international exhibition debate. Summers was selected for his strong performance Nov. 9-11 at the Linfield College forensics tournament in McMinnville, Ore., involving 29 colleges and universities. The Carroll team won more than 20 awards.
Local Linfield College student to study abroad Katherine Allison, a 2010 graduate of Issaquah High School, is among 56 students at Linfield College, in McMinnville, Ore., participating this fall in its study abroad program. Allison, a sophomore majoring in international business, is studying at the American University Center in Aix-en-Provence, France. She will participate in community service activities while living with a host family. She is the daughter of Karen Allison, of Bellevue, and a member of Linfield’s tennis team and Alpha Phi Sorority.
Local students graduate from EOU Issaquah residents Molly Fransen graduated along with Melissa Neil (Cum Laude) with Bachelor of Science degrees in business administration from Eastern Oregon University, in La Grande, Ore.
BEST OF ISSAQUAH 15 CONSECUTIVE YEARS! 1996-2011
Town & Country Square 1175 NW Gilman Blvd. Suite B-4, Issaquah (425) 391-9270
Student nets perfect AP social studies score Karthik Palaniappan has a lot to celebrate this holiday season. The senior at Issaquah High School is one of only four students worldwide who earned a perfect score on last spring’s Advanced Placement U.S. Government and Politics Exam, taken by 239,513 students. “I definitely have a passion for politics, which is why I did not mind putting in the work,” Palaniap-
W ho ’ s N ews Issaquah resident wins video competition Tony Elevathingal, of Issaquah, was one of three youth award filmmaker winners in Seattle Center’s Next 50 Civic Action Month A Story Runs Through it: Neighborhood Film Project. Watch his video “Issaquah” at http:// bit.ly/XrrUWe.
Providence Marianwood hires new administrator, director of therapies Providence Marianwood recently hired Chris Bosworth as its new adminisChris Bosworth trator and Maricor Lim as its director of therapies. Bosworth has more than seven years in a number of Maricor Lim leadership and management roles. Most recently, he was the administrator and marketing manager for Willow Springs Care in Yakima. Lim most recently worked as a facility rehab coordinator for several nursing homes in Indiana before relocating with her family to the Issaquah Highlands. She excels at working with physicians and care teams to develop individualized therapy goals for each resident and patient.
pan said in a statement released by the Issaquah School District Dec. 18. “I really enjoyed the class, especially our daily discussions of current news.” AP exams are written and scored by college professors from around the world and are designed to cover a full year of intensive, collegelevel knowledge and skills. In 2012, 3.7 million AP exams were taken and only 88 perfect scores.
The ER received the award by achieving and maintaining patient satisfaction scores in the 95th percentile or above for at least three consecutive years. The Swedish/ Issaquah team also won in 2009, 2010 and 2011. The Press Ganey Summit Award is the health care satisfaction industry’s most coveted symbol of achievement bestowed annually. The Swedish/ Issaquah ER is one of 114 health care facilities in the country to receive the prestigious honor in 2012, and one of only 101 to receive it for achieving and sustaining excellence in patient satisfaction.
Issaquah resident wins Ballard Pokémon title After a full day of headto-head Pokémon Trading Card Game battles Nov. 19, Connor Lee, of Issaquah, clinched first place in the Junior Division at the Ballard Pokémon City Championships. Along with the title and city championship trophy, Lee earned championship points, which count toward earning an invitation to the 2013 Pokémon World Championships, in Vancouver, B.C.
“We are so proud of Karthik,” Issaquah High Principal Paula Phelps said. “This is a testament not only to his personal passion and work ethic but also to the rigor of our Social Studies Department.” Palaniappan is also an officer of his school’s Junior State of America chapter, a political awareness and civic engagement club.
Kelly Rowley Richardson earns CCIM designation Kelly Rowley Richardson, of Rowley Properties, was one of only eight Washington real Kelly Rowley estate Richardson professionals to earn a Certified Commercial Investment Member designation in 2013. The CCIM designation is the highest professional certification one can earn in commercial real estate. Kelly Rowley Richardson grew up around the family business, obtained her business degree from Drake University and, after selling in residential real estate for a few years, joined the family business in 1989. She has been leasing commercial real estate since 2005.
Issaquah resident wins blog of the year Career Woman Inc., (www.careerwomaninc. com) a Seattle-based career coaching and consulting firm founded by Issaquah’s Lisa Quast,
Wednesday, December 26, 2012 •
B3
P ets of the W eek Kringle is a 6-year-old Pomeranian mix with an infectious smile and a playful spirit! Kringle Kringle is a jolly fellow who has yet to meet a face he couldn’t kiss. If you’re ready for love at first sight, visit Kringle today.
Meet Celery, a 6-month-old teddy bear hamster who’s as cuddly as Celery can be. Celery is very energetic and will show off his endurance on the hamster wheel. Give Celery a home for the holidays for FREE.
Interested in adopting these or other animals? Call the Humane Society for Seattle/King County at 641-0080, go to www.seattlehumane.org or email humane@seattlehumane.org. All animals are spayed/neutered, microchipped and vaccinated, with 30 days of pet health insurance and a certificate for a vet examination.
recently received the Gold Blog of the Year award from the Stevie Awards for Women in Business. CareerWomanInc.com also received a Bronze award in the Website of the Year category.
Fundraiser tops 10 tons, $3,000 for food banks Eastside Fire & Rescue’s food, toy and clothing drive Nov. 23-25 netted 10 tons of donations and $3,800 in cash, all to go toward the Issaquah Food & Clothing Bank and the Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank, in North Bend.
Local youth playwrights honored Honored at the Young Playwrights Program Celebration at ACT Theater in Seattle on Dec. 10 were seven local Eastside Catholic seventh-grade playwrights. Honored were: Sammamish: Zach Tlachac’s “George and Wilson – Secret Agents”; Emmie Head’s “What Happened to Alex?”; Grace Jendrezak’s “Joseph the
Janitor”; Nicole Cowan’s “Is He Worth It?; Blake Rogalski’s “Rapper Trouble” Issaquah: Alex Kennedy’s “Sweeping Beauty” Newcastle: Nick Reeve’s “Diablo Woods” ACT Theater selects eight outstanding plays by young playwrights each year and showcases them in staged readings at ACT in the Young Playwrights Festival, which takes place in early March 2013. Tlachac’s play was chosen as one of the outstanding eight plays from the 400 submissions from area middle and high schools. For the Young Playwrights festival, he will be partnered with a professional director, dramaturg, stage manager and actors. His play will receive two performances by ACT and will also be included in the annual ACT anthology, PLAY. Head and Jendrezak were also honored and will be produced by Seattle’s Twelfth Night Productions. Kennedy will be produced by Macha Monkey Productions. All of these plays will be performed in Seattle in spring 2013.
Swedish/Issaquah receives patient satisfaction honor The Swedish/Issaquah emergency room was recently named a 2012 Summit Award Winner by Press Ganey Associates.
Total: $41,907 from 160 donors
2012 Goal: $75,000 Thank You! to this week’s donors: Rana Kassel Margaret & Rodger Shute James & Theresa Randolph Penny & Dave Short Virginia Miller Becky & Dick Powell Alan Dunkin Wanda & Richard Dickson Marsha & Keith Kringlen Charles & Carol Baumann Ruben Nieto & Bobbie Olin Dale & Jeanett DePriest Paul & Mari Haugland Steve & Joanne Adkisson Martha DeCastro Kris & Chip Colliander Douglas & Victoria Trigg Gerald & Lucille Hersey James & Leslie Austin Karen Luecking Matt & Barb LePage Oscar & Suzanne Wallern Pauline & David Harris Tom Norton & Debbie Berto David & Joanna Wood Julia Benson In Memory of: Sally, by Karen Luecking 4 anonymous
Send contributions to:
Merry Christmas Issaquah c/o The Issaquah Press PO Box 1328, Issaquah, WA 98027 Name will be published unless anonymity is requested.
THe ISSaQUaHPreSS
SPorTS
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Wednesday December 26, 2012
Max Browne named national player of the year
By Larry Stone Seattle Times staff reporter At midmorning Dec. 18, Skyline High School quarterback Max Browne was called out of class by his football coach, Mat Taylor, on the pretense that he was needed at an emergency captain’s meeting. Browne fell for it hook, line and sinker. What awaited him in the upstairs classroom stunned him — his parents, a gaggle of cameras, a crowd of friends and, emerging from a hidden spot, Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson. Wilson had been sum-
moned to present Browne with the Gatorade National Football Player of the Year Award, one of the most prestigious honors in high school athletics. They had managed to keep it secret from Browne, who later was formally presented the Gatorade trophy during a ceremony in the school’s theater packed with classmates. “I had no idea,” Browne said afterward of the ruse. “Totally surprised. It was awesome.” Wilson first met Browne last summer at a Nike camp in Beaverton, Ore., and the two bonded. Wilson eagerly accepted the
opportunity to come to the Sammamish school’s campus on the Seahawks’ day off before their showdown with the 49ers. “He’s a tremendous person, first of all,” Wilson said. “He has a great attitude, great personality, and he’s worked so hard. Gatorade found the best person in the country.” The statistics certainly bear that out. Browne finished his career as the state leader in passing yards (12,951) and was third all-time in touchdowns (146) while leading Skyline to two straight Class 4A state titles. As a
senior, he threw for 4,526 yards and 49 touchdowns with just five interceptions in 377 attempts (277 completions). But the Gatorade honor also recognizes academics and community service. Browne maintains a 3.5 grade point average at Skyline, and volunteers locally on behalf of the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life and Generation Joy. “His stats are unbelievable. But if you had a statistic for leadership, he would win this
See BROWNE, Page B5
By KeN LamBert/the seattLe tImes
Skyline High School football quarterback Max Browne, surrounded by his teammates, was named Gatorade National Football Player of the Year on Dec. 18.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
1 FOR
After ending the first half 12 points behind Dec. 19, the Skyline High School girls basketball team returned for a comeback and beat Woodinville, 56-53. “The first half, we just weren’t playing with the same intensity that we have defensively,” head coach Greg Bruns said. “Every time we answered, they would knock down a three.” When the Spartans entered the locker room down 29-17, the coach told them to step it up and take more pride in who they are. They did. Haley Smith came out in the third quarter to score 10 of her 14 game points; Alex Daugherty put five on the board, including a 3-pointer. Skyline swept the third quarter, 23-11. “Those are big shots when the game is on the line,” Bruns said. The win against Woodinville gave the Spartans a 5-0 league record.
2012
TOP SPORTS STORIES OF THE YEAR
The Issaquah School District high school sports teams have a strong tradition of excellence, and 2012 was no different. Athletes took home conference titles, state championships and even national awards. Skyline quarterback Max Browne ended his storied career with a state title, earning Gatorade’s National Football Player of the Year along the way. Issaquah boys swimmers earned their best state finish ever, taking home second place. In November, the Liberty girls soccer team made it to state again, under the tutelage of yet another new coach, coasting to a fourth-place finish. Here’s a recap of the top local sports stories in 2012: Skyline football legacy continues with fifth state title in six years The Skyline High School Spartans dominated high school football this year. The team culminated its perfect 14-0 season Dec. 1 with its fifth state title in eight years by beating Bellarmine Prep, 49-24. “I feel awesome. This is the very best,” Coach Mat Taylor said. “It continues to get better every year.” Within Skyline’s first drive of
By greg farrar
Jubilant members of the Issaquah High School boys swim team and their coaches hoist their state 4A second place team trophy and give themselves a cheer Feb. 18 at the King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way. the night, Max Browne became the state record holder in career passing. By the time Browne had thrown his last pass as a high school quarterback, he had broken Brian Lindgren’s (DeSales) 14-year-old record of 12,575 passing yards. Browne now holds the record at 12,951. That same week, Browne was named one of six finalists for the 2013 U.S. Army Player of the Year Award, given to the nation’s most outstanding senior in high school football participating in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Liberty loses a legend The Liberty family was dealt a devastating blow in October, when the community learned that
longtime announcer Dan Braillard had passed away. Braillard spent 25 years announcing Liberty football games and 15 years calling Patriot basketball games. After Sept. 11, before every game, Braillard would ask fans to stand and honor the servicemen and servicewomen stationed around the world with a moment of silence. It became his signature call. “Friday night at Liberty was kind of a production,” Liberty football coach Steve Valach said. “Dan used that microphone as a way to just enhance the whole experience. It was kind of like a Shakespearean performance.” Braillard’s passion for the blueand-green ran deep. For him, there was nothing better than sitting down in the bowl that is Liberty’s field, watching the sun set and rooting for the Patriots. Liberty football games will never quite be the same without the “Voice of the Patriots.” Issaquah grad Jennie Reed wins Olympic silver in London After going on to become a world champion sprint cyclist and participating in two Olympiads, Jennie Reed was ready to hang up the bike in the metaphorical garage and retire. When she was invited to be part of the team pursuit for the 2012 games, she knew it wasn’t going to be easy.
By LILLIaN tUCKer
Above, Daniel Richardson, Skyline High School midfielder (left) tussles with a Woodinville player during the first period of their May 1 soccer match. At right, Jennie Reed takes a turn in front drafting teammates Dotsie Bausch (middle) and Sarah Hammer (left) during the semifinal heat to beat Australia and go to the gold medal round in women’s team pursuit cycling in August at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
Skyline girls stay perfect
Dan Braillard When Reed found herself competing in the summer Olympic games bicycle racing, it was the attention that the sport gets in London that probably sent her over the moon emotionally and consequently provided her with the impetus to claim silver. The biggest difference for Reed about London compared to her previous two Olympiads in Beijing, China, and Athens, Greece, was the interest that Great Britain has in track cycling. “It was cool going in because I’d never experienced that before. The athletes engaging in this sport are like national heroes. There was a lot more media, a lot more attention on it. You run into people, fans, and all of a sudden people know exactly what you’re See TOP
10, Page B5
Matthew Campbell nets 18 in Liberty loss The Liberty High School boys basketball team went up against one of the top teams in the state when the Patriots hosted sixthranked Mercer Island on Dec. 18. But despite a big game from Matthew Campbell, who scored 18 points, the Patriots fell to the Islanders, 75-59. Liberty players Tynan Gilmore and Dayton Mackay also netted doubledigit points, scoring 14 and 11 points, respectively. The Islanders led, 33-24, at halftime, but pulled away after a big third quarter when the team scored 25 points. Not to be outdone, the Patriots put together an impressive quarter themselves, outscoring Mercer Island, 24-17, in the fourth quarter. By then, the deficit was too much to overcome. It was a reunion of sorts for Liberty coach Omar Parker who played for legendary coach Ed Pepple at Mercer Island and later became an assistant at his alma mater.
The Issaquah Press
S coreboard
Boys basketball
Garfield Newport Ballard Issaquah Roosevelt Skyline
Conf. 4 0 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 1 3
KingCo 3A/2A standings Overall 4 1 5 2 3 3 4 2 2 4 1 4
Dec. 18 game Bothell 67, Issaquah 64 Bothell 20 14 18 15—67 Issaquah 15 12 15 22—64 Bothell—Zach LaVine 35, Perrion Callandret 12, Josh Martin 10, Aaron Wilks 5, Kellen Webster 3, Peer Fisherkeller 2 Issaquah—Ty Gibson 18, Brian Watson 16, Ryan Sexton 11, Jake Henke 10, Grant Blair 5, Gage Lenheim 4, Cory Nevin
Girls basketball KingCo 4A Standings Crown Division Skyline Newport Issaquah Ballard Garfield Roosevelt
Conf. W L 5 0 4 1 3 1 2 3 0 4 0 5
Overall W L 7 1 5 1 5 1 3 4 2 5 1 6
Dec. 19 game Issaquah 65, Bothell 33 Bothell 11 7 4 11—33 Issaquah 18 16 13 18—65 Bothell—Randi Dixon 10, Erin Burns 8, Sharon Akoto 3, Sami Scuden 3, Brenda Akoto 2, Sierra Cole 2, Jessi Howe 2, Chloe Lium 2, Melinda Akoto 1 Issaquah—Mandie Hill 16, Quincey Gibson 15, Aimee Brakken 12, Katrina Clements 8, Paige Montague 5, Sara Beatty 4, Jozie Crissafulli 2, Miranda Hansen 2 Dec. 19 game Skyline 56, Woodinville 53 Woodinville 15 14 11 13—53 Skyline 8 9 23 16—56 Woodinville—Kim Frost 15, Sabin Keo 13, Erin Hamilton 7, Midon McElwee 6, Emily Spencer 5, Keenae Tiersma 4, Tynan Gable 3, Madison Ramire
Browne from page B4
award, too,” Taylor said. “I’ve never been around a greater leader on our football team, but more importantly, in the classroom, too.” Dec. 18 was also Browne’s final day in a Skyline classroom. He is graduating early so he can enroll at USC for the winter semester. He begins classes Jan. 14 and will participate in spring football for the Trojans in March as he competes to succeed Matt Barkley at quarterback. “It’s crazy,” Browne said. “It hasn’t really hit me. I always thought I’d stay in high school. I’ve loved it. It’s been a fun 3 1/2 years, on and off the field. It will probably hit me when I’m down at USC and see all my friends posting stuff about high school.” Browne, regarded as the nation’s top quarterback recruit, said the opportunity to get a jump-start on his college career swayed him to accelerate his enrollment at USC. “You notice a lot of quarterbacks doing that now,” he said. “It just helps getting to know the offense, getting to know the college atmosphere. That extra six months is just critical.” Browne became just the second player from Wash-
Bellevue Juanita Mercer Island Lake Washington Liberty Mount Si Interlake Sammamish
Conf. W L 4 0 4 0 3 1 3 2 2 2 1 3 0 4 0 5
Wednesday, December 26, 2012 •
B5
Top 10
Skyline— Haley Smith 14, Rachel Shim 10, Lacey Nicholson 9, Shelby Kassuba 8, Bryn deVita 6, A. Daugherty 5, C. Daugherty 4
KingCo 4A standings Crown Division
Overall W L 7 0 5 2 2 2 4 3 4 4 2 5 3 5 3 5
Dec. 19 game Mercer Island 53, Liberty 46 Mercer Island 9 18 13 13—53 Liberty 4 15 13 14—46 Mercer Island—Jessica Blakeslee 14, Renae Tessem 12, Kris Brackmann 9, Rachael Tessem 8, Julia Blumenstein 4, Yasmeen El-Rafey 2, Jamie Mounger 2, Christina Williamson 2 Liberty—Sierra Carlson 12, Cherelle Demps 9, Avery Granberg 7, Danielle Demps 5, Alicia Abraham 4, Ashlan Applegate 4, Sarah Bliesner 3, Tara Johnson 2, Devin Anderson, Rebekah Campbell, Tara Johnson, Adele Payant
Wrestling KingCo 4A Crown Division Matches Dec. 20 league match Skyline 35, Issaquah 24 106—Nathan Swanson, S, pinned Dakota Kutz, 0:30 113—Torre Eaton, I, pinned Kody Nguyen, 3:16 120—Justin Manipis, S, dec. Jordan Hamilton, 3-0 126—Joseph DeMatteo, S, maj. dec. Louden Ivey, 8-0 132—Garin Swanson, S, pinned Spencer Tickman, 5:59 138—Alex Smith, S, maj. dec. Seth Hartman, 10-0 145—Joseph Gurke, S, dec. Colby Starren, 15-10 152—Jerdon Helgeson, I, pinned Tyler Aguirre, 3:50 160—Boden Longmore, S, dec. Parker Hamilton, 7-6 170—Michael Mecham, S, pinned Chance Gunte, 3:12 182—results not reported 195—Double forfeit 220—Ahmed Ahmed, I, dec. Sean McAlhaney, 6-4 285—Jonathan Norris, I, won by forfeit
ington to win the Gatorade national award for football, following Brock Huard, of Puyallup High School, in 1994-95. The honor includes a trip to Hollywood for Browne and his parents Cheryl and Mike, in July, with Gatorade winners in other sports for a banquet to announce one overall athlete of the year. He’ll also get to walk the red carpet at the ESPY awards, Gatorade marketing executive Nancy Laroche said. The 6-foot-5, 215-pound Browne towered above Wilson as they stood on the stage. The Seahawks quarterback promised to follow Browne’s career, and Browne said he hoped to be able to pick Wilson’s brain for advice. “He has so many great qualities,” Wilson said. “He just draws a room. He just knows how to light up a room.”
from page B4
talking about.” Skyline cheerleaders earn state and national honors Skyline High School cheerleaders finished another successful season in seventh place at the National High School Cheerleading Championship. Skyline’s Silver and Green squads traveled to Orlando, Fla., on Feb. 11-12 and gathered with 22,000 athletes at Walt Disney World for nationals. The more than 600 teams were split into different categories depending on their size and types of routines. The Skyline Silver squad competed in the Medium Varsity Non Tumbling group; they finished seventh. Skyline’s Green team performed in the Medium Varsity Division 1 category — one of the hardest divisions, according to head coach Stephania Lemeshko — but did not place. Before nationals, Skyline took on squads from the state on Feb. 4 and came out on top. With a score of 231 points, the Green team took first place in the medium 4A division, finishing ahead of Ballard, Marysville Pilchuck, Battle Ground and Bellarmine Prep. Issaquah girls’ tennis goes undefeated and wins KingCo As far as KingCo 4A tennis was concerned in 2012, there was a new sheriff in town. The Issaquah High School girls tennis team went 10-0 on their way to the KingCo
Photos by Greg Farrar
Above, Issaquah High School wrestlers, coaches and team managers howl as they pose for photos after winning the KingCo 4A Tournament team championship Feb. 4. Below, Matt Sinatro, Skyline High School senior wide receiver, snags a 55-yard scoring touchdown pass near the end of the third quarter of the state 4A state football championship game Dec. 1 against Bellarmine Prep. conference championship. Along the way, they defeated quality opponents in Skyline and Woodinville, and even beat Newport, who had not lost to another school in more than 10 years. “After we beat Newport, we caught fire in the conference,” head coach Shannon Small said. “It was quite an accomplishment for the girls … they were ecstatic.” After toughing out some terrible weather early in the season, Issaquah was able to put in hard work in the limited practice time they had. “A lot of them gave up other sports to focus on making varsity,” Small said. “It’s just great for them to be able to walk away from their high school career as KingCo champs.” The road to the state
By Greg Farrar
Tara Johnson (11), Liberty High School junior midfielder, jossles for the ball with Holy Names Academy sophomore midfielder Hannah Powers during their state 3A consolation final Nov. 17 in Puyallup.
championships was next, for which Small said she has two hopefuls — Samantha Garrard and Kelsey Wilson. But for now she’ll sit back and take in their accomplishment. Spartans relay swimming prowess into state title When the Skyline High School girls 200-yard medley relay team marched out to the pool at the 2012 4A Girls State Swim and Dive Championships, it was ready for battle. First off the block in lane four was Spartan Kristaley Umezawa; next to her in lane five was Stacy Maier, swimming backstroke for the Issaquah Eagles. The two emerged for their first breath at the same time, throwing their arms back in synchronized windmills. Maier edged ahead and Issaquah’s Kayla Flaten maintained the slight lead over Andi Scarcello in the second leg. Then, Stephanie Munoz, of Skyline, dove in for the third leg and passed Eagle Kellie-Marie Langan. Keeping the momentum going, Maria Volodkevich dove in the pool for the final leg and pulled ahead of everyone to take the title for the Spartans with a time of 1 minute, 49.12 seconds. Skyline, which won the overall state title in 2009, 2010 and 2011, finished fifth overall with 132 team points. Skyline soccer wins another state championship For the fourth time in five years, the Skyline High School girls soccer
team claimed the 4A state title Nov. 17. When the dust cleared that evening at Puyallup’s Sparks Stadium, the Spartans had blanked their KingCo 4A nemesis, Issaquah, 1-0 to claim the state crown. At the 15-minute mark of a hard-fought game, Skyline sophomore striker Isabella Marshall registered the encounter’s solitary goal when she took a picturesque assist from fellow sophomore forward Amanda Johnston and, amid heavy traffic in front of Issaquah’s goal, legged in a left-footed rocket from about 5 yards out. “When you work hard, believe in yourselves and play confidently … you can achieve great things,” Marshall said.
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Wednesday, December 26, 2012 Page B6
Learning experience continues in school clubs Issaquah forms Global ProblemSolving Club
New club celebrates science fiction
Difference makers — Skyline SHOCK
Club opens students to Asian culture
Issaquah High School has a new club: Global Problem-Solving Club, or GAP, led by sophomore President Amy Lee. Last year in Lisa Sibbett’s world studies Sophie class, students Mittelstaedt kept up with current events Issaquah and learned High School how to be global citizens. Toward the end of the eye-opening, motivational year, several students applied for a program called Global Youth Leadership Initiative, run through the World Affairs Council. After an intense summer studying foreign policy and humanitarian aid, the students decided to share their passion with their peers. “We thought creating a club was the best method to raise awareness in our community,” sophomore Natalie Fetsch said. At a typical meeting, the students discuss current events. They analyze how the world could influence those events and how they personally could influence those events. “Last meeting, we had a lengthy discussion about a typhoon in the Philippines and how the U.S. should respond,” Fetsch said. The long-term goal of GAP, according to Fetsch, is to “include all of IHS in changing their lifestyles to be more involved with current events.”
Liberty High School seems to have something for everyone searching for an extracurricular club. One of the quirkier new editions, created this year by club Veronica Austin president and Liberty High senior Hannah Park, is the School Doctor Who Club. “Doctor Who Club was started not only to celebrate the longest-running sci-fi series on television, but also to introduce others to British culture and the fandom surrounding the Doctor” the show’s time-traveling hero, Park said. Club members participate in various Doctor Who-themed games, and occasionally watch episodes of the show. One of the more interesting activities is the writing of “Trock,” or Timelord rock, a genre of music well known among the show’s fans that celebrates the show and its characters. “My favorite part of the club is interacting with the other members and knowing that there are other geeky people out there besides myself,” Park said. “It’s very welcoming.” Those interested in becoming a member of Doctor Who Club — longtime Whovians, sci-fi fanatics or fans new to the genre — can attend a club meeting any Thursday after school in room 518.
Following the spirit of giving back this holiday season, SHOCK Club at Skyline High School continues to engage in service for its Sampurna Basu community. Started in Skyline High April by coSchool presidents Jon Yee and Prabha Dublish, SHOCK stands for Skyline High Outreach Community of Kids. The club’s mission is simply to make the world a better place. During its weekly meetings, the club organizes drives and other functions that raise money for other youths in the community on a local as well as international level. So far, the club ran a successful change drive for Echo Glen Children’s Center that raised more than $300. The club is currently planning a supply drive for March that will contribute to the organization GenJoy, which aids children in South Africa. SHOCK is also planning another change drive in May. “Helping children in a place far from where we live is really cool, because although you cannot actually see the impact of your work, you are still impacting someone else’s life,” Dublish said. Learn more about SHOCK Club and its mission at http:// shsshockclub.wordpress.com.
Eastside has many interesting clubs and activities but Asia Club is definitely one of the most unique. Asia Club Shreya Tewari is a fairly recent club Eastside Catholic (started in High School the past several years) open to anybody interested in learning about and delving into Asian studies — languages, culture or food. The club meets once a week and learns about different Asian cultures and immerses itself in celebrating different foreign practices. The club does a large amount of fundraising to support kids and people in general in many underprivileged areas in Asian countries. For different holidays, there are different kinds of candy grams that go around the school that are sponsored by Asia Club to raise money. Around Halloween there are Halloween candy grams; during December there are candy cane candy grams, and during February there are Valentine’s Day candy grams that people can send to their friends. All of the money earned is sent to the charities they support. Asia Club stands out for working to actively promote cultural awareness and diversity throughout its high school and community.
PHOTO OF THE MONTH
A red bow provides the finishing touches for a Christmas tree. According to www. penitents.org, the scarlet ribbon is a symbol of Christ’s sacrifice of himself, which saved people from eternal damnation.
By Shreya Tewari
Teens, want to win a cool prize and have your photo chosen for photo of the month? Email your cool school photo along with your name and school name to editor@isspress.com.
When did the holidays go up for sale? “Peace on Earth and goodwill toward men. Buy now and your cost will be only $9.95.” Jacob Brunette That Issaquah High is the School American holiday season in a nutshell; the time of year in which we celebrate love, peace and incredible savings. It seems that every year, however, the incredible savings start sooner, and the love and peace get pushed further into the background. As soon as Halloween is over, the holiday season has begun. Stores start selling Christmas lights and decorations. Santa Claus appears on TV, advertising cars and clothing. Holiday music loops endlessly in the mall. Every year, the onslaught of commercials starts a little sooner in an attempt to extend the lucrative period of holiday shopping for as long as possible. To anyone selling something, that is all Christmas, Hanukkah and New Year’s are: opportunities to turn a profit. But that thought process is missing the fundamental reason for the holidays’ existence. The holidays are meant to be periods of togetherness and happiness, when families
O pinion reunite from wherever they have spread out to, and enjoy a couple of days in each other’s company. Winter break is meant to be a period of relaxation and contentment. Giving gifts is meant to be a sign of how much you care for somebody, not an unfortunate duty or an opportunity to make money. The increasing commercialization of the holiday season dilutes this experience, turning it into nothing more than a chance to satisfy one’s greed. People forget the meaning of the holidays, fighting each other for a chance to get the best deals, instead of being happy with what they have. Of course, many will argue that the two do not have to be mutually exclusive. Why can’t I love my family and still take advantage of low prices? And the answer is you can. It is entirely possible to partake in holiday sales while still adhering to the holiday spirit. Unfortunately, many don’t, and lose sight of the true meaning of the holidays over the din of advertisements and discounts. So, next time you see that cool new thing you want for 50 percent off, stop and take a minute to remember what the holidays are really about.
WHAT’S YOUR NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION? Eastside Catholic “My New Year’s resolution is to smile more and to stop overthinking everything and just have fun.” Amanda Scotland, senior “My New Year’s resolution is just to help everyone have a better day when I’m around.” Ethan Miller, senior
Issaquah High School “I want to clean my room every day so when I go to college in the fall it’s not a total disaster!” Courtney Brauff, senior
“I want to work hard to make the varsity soccer team.” Quinn Freet-Johnson, junior
Liberty High School “I don’t really feel like the new year is really that different. It’s just an excuse for people to say they’ll do something better, which I don’t think is true.” Grant Rayfield, sophomore
“To be less shy and talk to more people.”
Rachel Shaw, senior
Skyline High School “My New Year’s resolution is to get involved in more school clubs and activities.” Arjun Kumar, freshman
“My New Year’s resolution is to do at least 15 acts of kindness a day.” Michelle Chauvin, junior
SPONSOR We’d like to thank the parents of Beat staff members and friends of The Beat for generously supporting and sponsoring this page, and continuing to support this project. If you would like to help us continue The Beat teen journalism project, email Press Managing Editor Kathleen R. Merrill at editor@isspress.com
The Issaquah Press
p OliCe & F iRe Rolled
A wallet and iPhone were stolen at the Rollin’ Log Tavern, 50 E. Sunset Way, before 11:48 a.m. Nov. 22.
Arrest Police arrested a woman on a Renton warrant in the 100 block of East Sunset Way at 12:27 a.m. Nov. 23, and released her to the Renton Police Department.
Flattened A Ford flatbed truck was stolen in the 1000 block of Lake Drive before 4:05 p.m. Nov. 23.
Arrest Police arrested a 62-year-old Bellevue man for theft at Costco, 1801 10th Ave. N.W., at 4:45 p.m. Nov. 23.
Assault Police arrested an 18-year-old Issaquah woman for assault in the 23100 block of Southeast Black Nugget Road at 5:25 p.m. Nov. 23.
Assault Police arrested a 33-year-old North Bend man for assault and on Issaquah warrants after he assaulted a store employee at Fred Meyer, 6100 E. Lake Sammamish Parkway S.E., at 8:01 p.m. Nov. 24.
Dinosaur dilemma A mailbox was damaged, a 4-foot-tall, mechanical dinosaur Christmas lawn ornament was stolen and garbage was dumped on a lawn at a residence in the 25800 block of Southeast 28th Place before Dec. 9.
Cheers! Police responded to QFC, 2902 228th Ave. S.E., at about 10 a.m. Dec. 9 after employees reported men stealing liquor. The employees said one man attempted to distract employees as the other loitered near the liquor aisle. The suspects had left by the time police arrived, but were located nearby at Bartell Drugs, 526 228th Ave. N.E., acting in a similar fashion. Police contacted another man in the group as he waited in a car outside the store. The car contained bottles of liquor, including one with a store security cap still attached. Police confiscated the bottles, but did not file charges because officers could not prove the liquor had been stolen from the businesses.
Over and out A resident at Jacobs Creek, in the 4000 block of Issaquah-Pine Lake Road Southeast, reported finding a walkie-talkie near his or her mailbox Dec. 12. Police determined the device belonged to the Issaquah School District, but could not determine how it became lost. Police returned the walkie-talkie to the school district.
Arrest Police arrested a 37-year-old Sammamish man for driving in a lane of oncoming traffic before crashing near the corner of East Lake Sammamish Parkway Southeast and Southeast 22nd Street. The Press publishes names of those charged with felony crimes. Information comes directly from local police reports.
EASTSIDE FIRE & RESCUE REPORTS FOR DEC. 8-15 At 10:43 p.m. Dec. 8, two engines were dispatched to the scene of a motor vehicle accident in the 100 block of 22nd Place. There were no injuries. Three engines were sent at 6:27 p.m. Dec. 9 to the scene of a motor vehicle accident in the 100 block of Northwest Gilman Boulevard. There were no injuries. Three engines were sent at 10:10 p.m. Dec. 9 to investigate an overheated motor in the 18700 block of Southeast 43rd Street. An engine was needed at 2:39 a.m. Dec. 11 to extinguish a building fire in the 18100 block of Northeast 76th Street. An engine was dispatched at 8:04 p.m. Dec. 11 to investigate the smell of smoke in the 1500 block of westbound Interstate 90.
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! S T H G LI RA! CAME UAH! ISSAQ Memorable moments entertain, educate By Warren Kagarise wkagarise@isspress.com Entertainment came to Issaquah in some surprising forms throughout 2012. Besides the usual retinue on the page, stage and screen, a documentary peeled back the layers at Costco and big-name authors signed books for local readers. The city hosted celebrities, spotlighted residents on the national stage and celebrated big debuts in recent months. The boldface names earned cred through stints on reality TV, titles on bestseller lists and hardware aplenty — a Tony Award, a National Book Award. Reality TV plugs in local contestants Lindzi Cox pursued “The Bachelor” and Lizzie Parker competed for the title “Fashion Star” as local women added grace to reality TV contests. Lindzi Cox Cox, a 2003 Liberty High School grad, competed against 24 other bachelorettes to win a rose from the titular bachelor, Ben Flajnik, and reached the final round on Lizzie Parker the ABC dating game. In the end, however, Flajnik proposed to bachelorette Courtney Robertson rather than Cox. (Flajnik and Robertson broke up after filming concluded and as the series aired, and then reunited, but split again in October.) Parker, a Gilman Village shopkeeper and Sammamish resident, earned attention from fashionistas on the NBC reality TV competition. In the debut episode, Parker scored a clothing deal with Macy’s after her asymmetrical, jersey tunics, featuring a single capelike sleeve, earned praise from Macy’s buyer Caprice Willard.
effect, bestselling authors headed to the flagship warehouse throughout the year. Timothy Egan, a correspondent for The New York Times and a National Book Award winner, came to Issaquah to promote “Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher” — a biography of 19th century Seattle photographer Edward Curtis. The list of authors signing books at Costco amid the oversized containers of cashews and rotisserie chickens included, appropriately enough, Food Network star and celebrity chef Giada de Laurentiis and seminal Seattle chef Tom Douglas. Lee Child, the author behind the Jack Reacher series, stopped at Costco to promote the latest entry into the Reacher canon — “The Affair” — months before Tom Cruise starred as the character on screen. “Jack Reacher” the film opened Dec. 21. Library marks page-to-screen changes Other blockbuster novels transitioned from the page to the screen, and the Issaquah Library hosted bashes to celebrate “The Hunger Games” and “The Hobbit” franchises. Imagine “The Hunger Games” as a mishmash of “Survivor” and “The X Factor” set in a “Lord of the Flies”-style arena. Participants joined activities inspired by the book — although nothing as dangerous as the titular games — and nabbed prizes inspired by the book and the film. The library chose a tamer activity to celebrate the release of “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” and invited Middleearth dwellers over for second breakfast.
Doc demystifies Costco’s appeal Issaquah-based Costco sells $4 billion in produce, almost $2 billion in televisions, 55 million rotisserie chickens, 2.6 billion gallons of gasoline and 3 million pairs of eyeglasses each year. The eye-popping numbers led CNBC to peek behind the scenes at the largest warehouse club chain on the planet for the documentary “The Costco Craze: Inside the Warehouse Giant.” Carl Quintanilla examined how Costco expanded to 600 stores and $93 billion in annual sales by attracting affluent customers and shoppers on a budget. The documentary also explores the “Costco Effect” — the tendency of members to succumb to discounts and buy more than expected.
Titanic continues to captivate “Titanic” returned to movie theaters in April, and the Kiwanis Club of Issaquah invited Titanic historian Don Lynch — a consultant on the 1997 film — to discuss the ill-fated ocean liner. Even a century after the Titanic departed the surface, the disaster — 1,514 passengers and crewmembers perished in the sinking — continues to capture imaginations. Only about 700 people survived the catastrophe. April 15 marked 100 years since the Titanic tragedy unfolded about 400 miles from Newfoundland. In the mid-1990s, as Cameron prepared for a film about the Titanic’s last hours, the “Aliens” and “The Terminator” director turned to Lynch’s “Titanic: An Illustrated History” as a reference. Lynch later descended to the Titanic shipwreck in August and September 2001. Lynch’s visit prompted Jill Carrizales and daughter Jennifer Ramsey — relatives of Titanic survivor Ruth Becker — to travel from Gastonia, N.C., to Issaquah for the discussion.
Bestselling authors greet local readers Meanwhile, in another Costco
‘Million Dollar Quartet’ returns to roots “Million Dollar Quartet” — a
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Above, the cast of the national tour of the jukebox musical ‘Million Dollar Quartet’ performs a song in the Tony Award-winning show. Below, Paula Jones, fifth-grade teacher at Sunset Elementary School, holds a sign from Oct. 14, 1962, when then-6-year-old Paula Dahl set a Century 21 Exposition milestone.
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multimillion-dollar phenomenon — experienced a homecoming of sorts as the rock ‘n’ roll musical shaped a half-dozen years ago at Village Theatre toured to Seattle. The show about the “million dollar quartet” — Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis — collaborating for one night at the storefront Sun Records studio, led to successful runs at Village Theatre in Issaquah and Everett, and then in Chicago, New York City and London. In 2010, “Million Dollar Quartet” garnered a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Musical and a statuette for the pianopounding Lewis in the Issaquah and New York productions, actor and musician Levi Kreis. Century 21 goes back to the future The year marked a half-century since the Century 21 Exposition added the Space Needle to the Seattle skyline and put the Pacific Northwest on the map. The future envisioned in 1962 resembled something lifted from “The Jetsons” — space-age cool, conveniences galore and optimism as boundless as the cosmos. Paula Becker and Alan Stein — staff historians for HistoryLink. org, collected memories from the fair in the book “The Future Remembered: The 1962 Seattle World’s Fair and Its Legacy” — appeared at the Issaquah Library to discuss the expo’s impact. The book unearthed stories from local fairgoers, including the 9 millionth visitor to the fairgrounds, a then-6-year-old girl. The girl nowadays is Paula Jones, a fifth-grade teacher at Sunset Elementary School. Factitious families lock horns on stage Village Theatre examined parent-child relationships in the original musicals “It Shoulda
Been You” and, more darkly, in “Lizzie Borden.” The tension at the SteinbergHoward wedding is as tight as a bridesmaid’s dress in the romcom “It Shoulda Been You.” Rebecca Steinberg is about to marry Brian Howard — even if the union between a Jew and a gentile causes heartburn for the Steinberg and Howard clans. But, just before the couple is due to step down the aisle in showy ceremony, Rebecca’s old boyfriend crashes the wedding and asks for another chance. “Lizzie Borden” delves into a more fractured familial relationship. Long before Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, O.J. Simpson and Casey Anthony turned legal proceedings into media circuses, a comely ax murderess morphed into a cause célèbre. The musical lifts facts from the court transcripts and adds a rock ‘n’ roll score to Borden’s tale. Residents sip, shamble downtown Downtown Issaquah hosted film buffs, oenophiles and, of course, zombies to attract residents to shops and restaurants. In February, Downtown Issaquah Association leaders launched the First Friday Wine Walk to encourage folks to sip and shop. Then, in September, organizers rolled out the debut Issaquah Film Festival at Village Theatre’s First Stage Theatre. Just before Halloween, undead dancers shuffled down Front
Street North during the Downtown Zombie Walk. Unlike the mindless mobs in “The Walking Dead” and George A. Romero flicks, zombies in Issaquah caused more grins than grimaces. The horde shambled to the Issaquah Library to dance to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” Community mourns artist, entertainers Richard Beyer, creator of downtown Issaquah’s most recognizable sculpture, died April 9 — almost 11 years after a unveiling a life-size piece depicting late City Clerk Linda Ruehle across from City Hall. The piece depicts Ruehle, ledger in hand, seated atop a bench fashioned from city code books. The late Ruehle served as city clerk for 27 years before she retired in 2001. Before the Salmon Days Festival turned into a Pacific Northwest icon, organizers turned to a bona fide Pacific Northwest icon — J.P. Patches — in 1970 to lead a parade at the celebration. Chris Wedes, a.k.a. Julius Pierpont Patches, died July 22 after a long battle against multiple myeloma, a blood cancer. Disney legend Ginny Tyler — a former head Mouseketeer on “The Mickey Mouse Club” and a noted voice artist — died July 13 in Issaquah. Tyler maintained a lifelong pride in TV and film roles for Disney after succeeding Annette Funicello on “The Mickey Mouse Club.”
Eastside Catholic tuba player to march in Rose Bowl Parade By Lillian O’Rorke ltucker@ sammamishreview.com Clayton Dungey and his family have always loved Disneyland. Whenever they got the chance, the five of them would jump in the car and spend a long weekend there. But for Clayton, the biggest thrill wasn’t Mickey Mouse or Splash Mountain — it was the marching band on Main Street. The Eastside Catholic High School sophomore, an Issaquah tuba player, will join the Bands of America
Honor Band in January, perform at Disneyland and march in the 2013 Tournament of Roses Parade. “That’s one of my favorite things to do on tuba is playing, and seeing little boys looking and seeing how cool it is, because that is how I felt as a little boy looking at the tuba player,” Clayton said. “I really like to perform for others, and this opportunity to play for millions of people is really awesome. I am really excited for this opportunity.” Clayton comes from a family of musicians. His father Phillip Dungey is his school’s
music director and suggested Clayton apply and send in an audition tape for the national honor band. Clayton Dungey “He loves to perform. So anytime he gets a chance — and he is always a ham about it, too — he always holds his tuba up high, so proud he is the one playing the big instrument,” Phillip Dungey said. “It’s an exciting opportunity for
him … This would be much grander scale than anything I have ever marched in.” Hundreds of students from across the country vied for a spot in the Bands of America Honor Band, a program of the Music for All organization. In all, 325 musicians and dancers were chosen to take part in the band’s performance at the 124th annual 5.5-mile Rose Parade. “To be selected for this unique opportunity is a oncein-a-lifetime experience for these students and a testimony to their excellence and achievements,” Music for
All President and CEO Eric Martin said in a statement Dec. 10. “Their participation deserves the admiration and support of everyone in their community. “The Rose Parade is one of our country’s national pageantry treasures, and the 2013 Honor Band members will be ambassadors of America’s bands, and of their states and communities.” Clayton will spend a week in southern California, where he will have rehearsals, performances at the Tournament of Roses Bandfest and Disneyland, special activities and a featured
WHAT TO KNOW Watch the 124th Rose Parade at 8 a.m. Jan. 1 on ABC, Hallmark Channel, HGTV, KTLA (Tribune), NBC, RFD-TV and Univision.
appearance in the parade. The honor also means Clayton will trade in his 25-year-old white fiberglass tuba for the week for a new brass sousaphone. “I’m excited to play a nice new instrument,” he said. “I can’t wait.”