HAPPY NEW YEAR! www.issaquahpress.com
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