Snoqualmie Valley Record, October 05, 2011

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VALLEY RECORD SNOQUALMIE

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2011 n DAILY UPDATES AT WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM n 75 CENTS

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Reel change

Speaking freely Snoqualmie man wins speech lawsuit against Salmon Days festival

As North Bend Theatre turns 70, owners ponder new era, services and tech

BY CAROL LADWIG

Wildcat will, stout defense halt Interlake’s rushing train Page 9

BY SETH TRUSCOTT

As Issaquah’s annual Salmon Days got under way last weekend and the city celebrated the return of salmon to the area, Paul Ascherl celebrated a court victory by returning to the festival to distribute religious literature. Ascherl, of Snoqualmie, was the named plaintiff in a lawsuit claiming infringement of his First Amendment rights by the city of Issaquah.

Editor

It’s alive because it’s the right fit for the community

SCENE

SEE SPEECH, 11

‘Locavores’ learn lost arts at Carnation’s Dog Mountain Farm Page 12

INDEX PARENTING 2 4 OPINION 5 LETTERS 6 SCHOOLS 12 PUZZLES 12 MOVIE TIMES CLASSIFIEDS 14, 15

Vol. 98, No. 19

School budget short by 75 students Valley’s Sept. enrollment lower than projected BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter

While still growing, initial enrollment figures in the Snoqualmie Valley School District are lower than expected this fall. The difference is only 75 full-time-equivalency (FTE) students less than budgeted, but it could affect the district’s anticipated revenues. SEE SHORT, 11

Sweat drips off Landon Wilson’s brow as he winds the shiny black roll of film from one spool to the next. It’s plenty warm inside the projection room at North Bend Theatre, and Wilson’s exertion, using a handcrank that looks as old as the 1941built theater, makes it more so. In an era when moviehouses like North Bend’s historic theater are going through a lot of changes, Wilson remains a fan of the old school. “I love Cindy Walker, having some- North Bend Theatre owner thing you can hold in your hand,� the 21-year-old projectionist said. As coming attractions for “The Help� streamed out a glass window in his booth and onto the screen, Wilson spent an hour or so of that muggy night putting a half-dozen reels of 35-millimeter film together by hand to create the next show in the lineup, “Dolphin Tale.� “This is the interesting part, the part no one gets to see,� Wilson said. “There’s not a lot of secrets. Just a complicated process to learn.� Wilson must splice all these reels together with no mistakes. A fraction of an error here or there, and the movie onscreen will be only partly visible. It takes delicate handling.

Seth Truscott/Staff Photos

Above, taking pains to present the clearest picture, Landon Wilson eyeballs the join between the trailer reel and “Dolphin Tail� to make sure the movie runs flawlessly. Sooner or later, the North Bend Theatre will go digital, but until that time, Wilson, the projectionist, builds each offering by hand using multiple 35-millimeter reels. Below, owner Cindy Walker sits in the 1941-built theater’s auditorium, cleaned up thanks to a 4Culture grant.

SEE CHANGE, 6

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PARENTING

If you have Parenting news, tell the Valley. Submit ideas to editor@valleyrecord.com. Parenting runs the first week of every month

Serious lessons mingle with fun in evacuation drill

Swap old Halloween costumes at Totz, Macaroni Kid event Every kid’s favorite holiday just got more parent- and planet-friendly, thanks to Costume Swap Day. Between now and October 7, parents can drop off swap-worthy costumes at Totz Drop-N-Play, 249 Main Ave. S., Suite E, in North Bend. In exchange, they’ll be given a ticket for the swap day, 9 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 8, at Totz. Totz is offering a free stay-and-play the day of the event with a Halloween craft and $10 off a future visit. To learn more, visit snoqualmievalley.macaronikid.com.

Students, teachers train on Carnation dam route BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter

Snoqualmie’s ‘Dark Trail’ offers scares Night on a Dark Trail, a volunteer-run haunted trail opening Oct. 27 on Snoqualmie Ridge, is 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28, and starts at the east parking lot of the Trailside building, 35131 S.E. Douglas St., three buildings down from the Snoqualmie Police Station. The haunted trail is appropriate for children age 10 and older, as it is dark and contains scary scenes. The event includes a Jack O’ Lantern display and hay maze suitable for all ages. Visit http://nightonadarktrail.weebly.com for information.

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Kindergarten teacher Vanessa Hair walks backward to watch her students on the mile-long evacuation drill hike from Carnation Elementary School to Tolt Highlands Road.

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A thick fog muffled the warning siren, but it was loud enough. By the time Carnation Elementary Principal Doug Poage was done announcing that the Tolt Dam breach evacuation drill was in progress Wednesday Sept. 27, students and teachers were filing down the sidewalk toward the class checkpoint. “New students, over here!� one teacher announced. A few children, mostly Kindergartners, clustered around her looking excited, while most, veterans of the drill, were cleared after a quick headcount by their teachers to do their part of the evacuation. “This is actually a partial drill this year,� explained Poage. Every other year, both Carnation Elementary School and Tolt Middle School complete a full evacuation of the school buildings, in preparation for a possible breach of the South Fork Tolt Dam above and east of Carnation. Teachers and staff march with students more than a mile, along the Snoqualmie Valley Trail then up Entwistle to the Tolt Highlands Road and the emergency evacuation site for the city of Carnation. In alternate years, only students new to the school such as Kindergartners at Carnation Elementary, and sixth graders at Tolt, complete the full evacuation. The rest, like Christie Isler’s class, make a circuit of a couple of city blocks then, celebrating their survival for another year, head back to class within about 20 minutes. SEE DRILL, 15

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If you’ve ever considered writing your memoir, try the Sno-Valley Senior Center’s course on Memoir Writing, led by Activities Director Kate Miller. Kate will help participants unlock their memories as they write their personal histories. The class meets every Tuesday in October at 1

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Avoid falling at Senior Center’s free ‘fall festival’ Come to the Sno Valley Senior Center’s temporary home at Camp Don Bosco, 1401 327th Ave. NE, on Tuesday, Oct. 18, from 10 a.m. to noon, and learn four simple things you can do to significantly reduce your chance of falling. Lots of freebies and door prizes are offered, plus tips to make your home safer. The event is free. Participants who also get their flu shots at the event will receive a fresh-baked cookie. The event is sponsored by Eastside Fire and Rescue’s Shape-up program.


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In Brief

County Council establishes Veteran Treatment Court The Metropolitan King County Council unanimously adopted an ordinance this month giving the green light to establish a new Veterans Treatment Court as a special unit of the County’s nationallyrecognized Regional Mental Health Court. Based on other therapeutic court models, Veterans Treatment Court will help link veterans involved in the crimi-

nal justice system who are suffering from war-related trauma, such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), to treatment and support services. The legislation also asks the Executive to review options for continuing veterans treatment court beyond the initial pilot year and to recommend a way to provide ongoing support for the Veterans Treatment Court from the recently renewed Veterans and Human Services Levy. “Some veterans have special needs after returning home from some very traumatic sit-

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uations,” said Councilmember Kathy Lambert, who co-sponsored the legislation. “They need and deserve appropriate and respectful services. This therapeutic court is one more step in the evolution of our criminal justice system toward a compassionate approach that is based on restorative justice. This concept has been proven effective at keeping veterans out of jail and instead connecting them with recovery services. While reducing jail costs, this court also will help veterans, both men and women, rebuild their civilian lives and find a healthy and productive future. It is the least we can do for the military personnel who have sacrificed for us.”

Lunch and Learn discusses support for caregivers The Snoqualmie Valley Hospital Foundation will host a free lunch-and-learn training session, on support for people who are caregivers for family or friends. The lunch-and-learn is Thursday, Oct. 6 from noon to 1 p.m. at the Snoqualmie Fire Department on Snoqualmie Parkway. The lunch-and-learn will cover support, individual counseling, training and respite care. Lunch is provided.

Lower Valley’s Walk 4 Women to benefit shelter families

On October 15, walkers and runners from around the region will participate in the Snoqualmie Valley Walk/Run 4 Women. The half-marathon walk, which starts and ends at

Duvall’s McCormick Park Depot, benefits women and their families at local shelters. Registration is $30. To preregister, see the Duvall Civic Club’s Facebook page or www. gardentango.com.

King County Budget Public Hearings King County Councilmember

Kathy Lambert I would like to invite you to attend the upcoming public meetings about the County budget that are most convenient to your home or work. All meetings begin at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, October 13, in Issaquah Pacific Cascade Middle School 24635 SE Issaquah–Fall City Road Wednesday, October 19, in Kent Maleng Regional Justice Center, Courtroom 3F 401 Fourth Avenue N Tuesday, October 25, in Seattle King County Courthouse, 10th Floor 516 Third Avenue More information: www.kingcounty.gov/lambert

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VALLEY VIEWS

SNOQUALMIE

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One-on-one talks are minefield for elected officials

Board members can stay informed, but keep the discussion where we can see it

S

VALLEY RECORD SNOQUALMIE

noqualmie’s seven council members can’t carbon-copy each other on e-mails anymore, thanks to Jodi Warren. The Snoqualmie City Clerk takes the spirit of transparency rules very seriously, so around the time she started at City Hall, she banned the practice of multiple c.c.s. She did it because such e-mails between elected officials who vote on public matters are a form of discussion. That discussion is supposed to take place in chambers, not on computer keyboards. Warren’s ban is worth considering in light of some recent discussion over ways that elected school offi- SETH TRUSCOTT cials are staying in Valley Record Editor touch. Last week, school board member Craig Husa got called on the carpet by letter writer Michelle Kaufmann after he remarked about one-on-one communication between board members and administration at the recent Snoqualmie Valley Rotary Club candidates forum. At issue was whether Husa and his fellow board members are skirting the state’s open public meeting laws

by talking in private. Asked to clarify his remarks, Husa told me that board members do occasionally talk outside of chambers, either in person or on the phone. Husa figures he does 90 percent of his business as a school board member in the meeting room—business that can also include discussions with staff and administrators and visits to schools. All board decisions are made in public. Board members receive open-meetings training and are careful never to discuss business when there are enough of them together to form a quorum. “It’s proper due diligence to come to the meeting with as much of the information understood individually,� says Husa, who describes the substance of the one-on-one discussions as mainly informational. School board president Dan Popp told me that board members do phone each other, averaging once every other month. Calls are generally informational

or logistical, such as start times or availability. According to the Washington State School Director’s Association’s own Open Public Meetings guide, school board members may gather as long as no action—broadly defined as deliberation, discussion, consideration, review or evaluation—takes place. Informational discussions outside of board or council chambers are all well and good. But officials need to be careful is that their talks do not venture into dangerous territory. Toby Nixon, president of the Washington Coalition for Open Government, told me that while there is nothing technically wrong with oneon-one conversations, elected officials can run into problems if information is conveyed from one meeting to another. Such conversations, Nixon says, constitute a “serial meeting,� which courts have determined as a possible violation of the Open Public Meetings Act. Parties to a

serial meeting don’t have to be members of the board. If a superintendent meets with board members individually, but in doing so conveys information from one to another, that can also be a serial meeting. According to Bill Will, executive director of the Washington Newspaper Publisher’s Association, one-on-one meetings between public officials are not illegal, but that doesn’t mean they are appropriate. A passive passing-on of information is fine, but if the conversation becomes a discussion of government business, it’s improper, Will says. The right place for those kinds of discussions is always at an open public forum. It is fine for boards and councils to use things like e-mail or phone calls to stay informed. But they need to be vigilant that those communications don’t venture into discussions that rightfully belong at the meeting table. Their employers, the public, have a right to see that deliberation done in the open.

1VCMJTIFS William Shaw

wshaw@valleyrecord.com

&EJUPS Seth Truscott struscott@valleyrecord.com

Which living person would you put on a stamp?

3FQPSUFS Carol Ladwig cladwig@valleyrecord.com

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"EWFSUJTJOH David Hamilton "DDPVOU dhamilton@valleyrecord.com &YFDVUJWF $JSDVMBUJPO Patricia Hase %JTUSJCVUJPO circulation@valleyrecord.com .BJM 10 #PY 4OPRVBMNJF 8" 1IPOF 'BY XXX WBMMFZSFDPSE DPN $MBTTJGJFE "EWFSUJTJOH 800.388.2527 4VCTDSJQUJPOT $29.95 per year in King County, $35 per year elsewhere $JSDVMBUJPO 425.241.8538 or 1.888.838.3000 The Snoqualmie Valley Record is the legal newspaper for the cities of Snoqualmie, North Bend and Carnation. Written permission from the publisher is required for reproduction of any part of this publication. Letters, columns and guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views of the Snoqualmie Record. PROUD SUPPORTER OF SNOQUALMIE VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION, SNOQUALMIE VALLEY SCHOOLS FOUNDATION, ENCOMPASS, MOUNT SI HELPING HAND FOOD BANK

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Do you want to fill a Town Hall sometime? Just announce a meeting to discuss a proposed hydroelectric project anywhere on Washington State rivers. The knee jerk reaction is almost always not just “No!� It’s “Hell, No!� And so it is with the small hydro being proposed on the North Fork of the Snoqualmie River. The late Joyce Littlejohn and her neighbors in Ernie’s Grove said “Hell, No!� to the City of Bellevue when they filed a preliminary permit upon the North Fork in 1982 (FERC P-5926) to include a hydroelectric component with their dam to provide drinking water to the Greater Eastside. She was joined by the folks in the Snoqualmie Valley from North Bend to Duvall. Her point: You just can’t plunk down a 250-foot-high dam, creating a reservoir impounding over 2,300 surface-acres of water upstream from an historically flood-prone valley. Just 10 years before, in the 1970s, the US Corps of Engineers proved that a similar project on the Middle Fork would not be safe from breaching. Joyce was right. I knew the Littlejohns, and on behalf of Weyerhaeuser, I joined her and many others in the environmental community in objecting to the Bellevue project, which was eventually rejected by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and rejected again on appeal. FERC’s rejection of the Bellevue proposal was not a statement against hydroelectric power. It was a rejection of that particular proposal. When I was serving on the King County Snoqualmie Valley Citizen’s Advisory Committee in the mid-1980’s discussing appropriate land uses in the forest zone, we considered the future needs of green energy sources, including small hydro (or Micro Hydro as they are called today). We considered the small environmental footprint that they offered and almost “turn-key� aspects of their day-to-day operations. Since the passage of the King County Comprehensive in 1989, hydroelectric generation facilities have been a permitted use in the forest zone. King County Title 21A.08.100, Para. C14 (dated Dec. 2010) limits the height of the diversion weir to eight feet above the stream bed, and 30 feet across with no more than three acres of surface water impounded. King County Code limits the penstock length, the size of the turbine house, and road access. I support the concept of green energy, particularly when it is done in a smart way. But it doesn’t matter what I support. None of this works without the full support of the property owner: Hancock Forest Resources Group. We all may remember the widely publicized event when Hancock conveyed their development rights (TDR) to King County. It was a magnificent gesture indicating that Hancock did not acquire the Snoqualmie Tree Farm for residential conversion. Unless otherwise stated in the deed, TDRs usually pertain to the total number of residential lots per acre permitted under KCC Title 21A within the array of zones inside the transaction. For example, Hancock most likely would have retained development rights to non-forest uses such as mineral extraction and other permitted mixed uses compatible with forest management. They clearly will have a front seat in these proceedings. The North Fork project, like many, many others, is usually maligned at the outset by well-meaning people. Once the picture is more clearly understood, these same people wonder why we don’t have more of these small hydroelectric projects. And I fully understand my environmental friends who would get rolled over time and again by proponents of small hydroelectric projects if they didn’t take an initial hard stand. But I see in some news reports there might be room for negotiation by the North Fork proponents when talking about “flexible flow rates during certain times of the year.� I think Joyce Littlejohn and the community would support the idea of a small hydroelectric facility on the North Fork of the Snoqualmie, so long as the environmental, engineering and financial assessments show the project to be safe and viable. I’d like to see the Black Canyon folks be given the chance to prove whether or not their proposal is feasible. t %JDL 3ZPO JT B GPSNFS MBOE QMBOOFS XJUI 8FZFSIBFVTFS BOE B /PSUI #FOE SFTJEFOU

LETTERS

Loss of habitat, not hunters, threaten wildlife

The editorial cartoon in the September 14 edition of the Valley Record missed the mark in two important ways. It asked the question, “Which natural predator poses the greatest danger to wildlife?� On the left the cartoon offered a wolf. On the right side there’s a dude in camo carrying a lot of guns. The answer to the question is loss of habitat. That is better symbolized by a dude moving into a house where the wildlife used to be. Perhaps he’d be out in the drive washing his car, suds rolling down the drain. If the inspiration for the question was supposed to be about wolves vs. hunters, the real danger to wildlife (including wolves) would be loss of hunters for lack of game. For it is hunters who typically pay into all four primary revenue steams that fund wildlife management: hunting licenses, excise tax on hunting equipment, contributions to habitat restoration organizations, and regular taxes. We cannot rely on the state or federal government to make wildlife management a funding priority. It would never be ranked a higher priority than even schools or roads. Ideally, the people of our state can form a wolf management plan that is sustainable both scientifically and financially.

Bud Raisio, North Bend President, Snoqualmie Valley Youth Soccer Association

OUT

David Willson North Bend

PAST

Critical time for Si View Parks Si View Metropolitan Park District is facing a critical time. Two measures on your November ballot will determine the direction and fate of our park district. Residing in the Snoqualmie Valley for approximately 30 years, I can reflect on the importance of this community park in the lives of so many. Having had the opportunity to serve our community as president of the Snoqualmie Valley Youth Soccer Association, it is easy to review the numbers of young

A MODERN DAY MERCANTILE!

of the Thursday, Oct. 2, 1986: The city of

This week in Valley history

Snoqualmie is again subject to a floodway building ban from the State Department of Ecology. The ban prohibits the city from awarding building permits to any project in the floodway of the Snoqualmie River.

Thursday, Oct. 5, 1961: The

Advisory Council for Better Schools met recently to announce the construction schedule for District 410. Six classroom “starter units� are planned for each of the three elementary centers in Fall City, North Bend and Snoqualmie, and five new rooms are planned for the high school.

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players who use the park to participate in soccer programs. More than 2,000 youths register to play soccer each year. That means that over the 23 years I have served as president, 46,000 youth have used the fields at Si View Park! The association struggles each year to find fields to accommodate the number of youth participating in soccer, and Si View Park has indeed met the majority of our needs for soccer fields. Aside from soccer needs met by Si View Park, I also consider the tremendous programs Si View provides to include all ages. Along with you, my family has had the privilege of using Si View for recreational basketball, swimming lessons and extensive pool programs, dance and exercise classes, family fun night, teen night, farmer’s markets and much more. It would be easy to take this facility and the vital service it provides our community and youth for granted. I am afraid I would be guilty of this right along with you. However, understanding what the loss of Si View Park would mean to our community, I encourage you to most definitely mark your ballot in November with a heartfelt “yes� of support on both measures. You can be sure the importance of the Si View facility trickles down to real estate values, when families are viewing our Valley as a potential area to reside in. It is simply critical to maintain a community park in our Valley.

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CHANGE FROM 1 Change is coming to this booth, and Wilson knows it. North Bend Theatre, which opened 70 years ago this year, will soon enter an era of digital films and premium serves. He’ll miss the nostalgia, but is also excited about the new qualities. “It’s an exhilarating prospect,� Wilson says. “We’re going to be a whole different theater.�

Recent makeover In a taste of things to come, North Bend Theatre reopened on September 15 after a makeover and cleaning. Owners Cindy and Jim Walker received a $7,000 grant from the county heritage funder, 4Culture, to give the theater a good cleaning, fix the roof and plan ahead. Inside, the theater lobby got new crown moulding, clerestory lighting and a fresh coat of soft gray paint. In the auditorium, the floor and seats got a scrubdown, and the floor was freshly painted. Outside, the grant paid for a fix in a nagging roof leak, and for a preservation architect to assess the building. The architect confirmed that a roof-to-foundation crack in the long concrete wall of the theater was simply cosmetic, rather than worrisome. The architect also confirmed that the auditorium can handle an extension of a balcony, allowing the Walkers to one day realize some big plans: To not only go digital, but to build a new balcony where adult moviegoers can enjoy food and beer.

Local fit North Bend Theatre is one of perhaps fewer than a dozen pre-1950s screens still operating in this state. The reason it’s still alive is because it’s the right fit for the community, Cindy Walker says. When the Walkers bought the theater in 2006, the industry was already going digital. Today, they know they need to transition away from film soon. “We viewed ourselves as stewards,� Cindy said. Taking over, they wanted to expand movie times, bring in a greater variety of movies and special family offerings. The Walkers have continued their Wednesday morning “Mommy Matinees,� lightly attended but still appreciated by families, as well as their special-needs family matinees. A free summer program offered children’s matinees, free of charge, all summer long. Hundreds of children attended. “It was packed every time,� Walker said. North Bend Theatre “doesn’t make a ton of money,� she said. She said it’s hard to compete as a small independent. Service and technology is part of the reason. The 290-seat theater still sells out during big events like the Mountain Film Festival, which starts Sunday, Oct. 9, or the Rocky Horror

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Picture Show on Halloween, but typical good nights are about 70 people. Walker keeps the place going as a labor of love. She enjoys planning the theater’s alternative offerings, such as the mountain films, and is proud of her role in what’s always been a gathering place for youth and families. “There’s a lot I get back out of it for keeping it alive,� she said. “We can tell if there’s a middle school dance based on the number of kids in here on a Friday night.� “Families are the bread and butter here,� Walker added.

Long memory That fateful day in the theater is seared into Harley Brumbaugh’s mind. One day in 1948, Brumbaugh, as an eighth grader, joined a group of friends from the Riverside neighborhood for a show at the North Bend Theater. The boys sat in the back. A group of girls from their class were in the middle. One girl invited young Harley to sit with her. “She’s a nice girl,â€? he thought. “I will.â€? He took his seat, and was tormented over the thought that kept occurring to him during the coming attractions: Should I put my arm around her. Eventually, he worked up the nerve. That was as far as the cuddling went. “There was nothing impassioned or anything like that,â€? he said. But the next day, Harley and the girl were both called on the carpet by their teacher. They both had to apologize to their class for their forward behavior. As a student athlete and musician, Harley was a role model and example for the rest of the school. “Harley, we wouldn’t expect that kind of conduct from you,â€? he was told. His classmates helped him live it down, but Harley was shamefaced, and his would-be date was in tears. Needless to say, Harley never tried that move on her in the theater again. The morĂŠs of the time were very different 60 years ago. But the local theater claimed a big presence in young people’s lives. The original North Bend theater was located inside the McClellan Hotel, today’s McGuire Hill building. In 1941, today’s purpose-built theater opened in a pouredconcrete, Art-Deco style building. For a time, it did business as the North Bend Cinema. Most children went to movies at least once a week. Tickets started at a dime. “You let the word out you were going to the movies,â€? Brumbaugh remembered. “Some of the girls would let the word out. You just happened to meet at the movies.â€? Compared to the old Meadowbrook theater, which was showing its age, North Bend Theatre was considered the swanky place to see a show in those days before television. To Brumbaugh, it brought the glamour of Hollywood to the Valley, and drew moviegoers from as far as Duvall. Things are different today, when an inde-

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At the debut of his movie, “Murder on 5th Street,� teenage director, producer and scriptwriter Garret Meyers posed in front of the North Bend Theatre with his name in lights. Last summer, 15-year-old Garrett created his 12-minute thriller with the help and talents of his family and his neighbors working as cast and crew. Cindy Walker at the North Bend Theatre agreed to arrange a special big-screen showing of the movie, complete with popcorn and candy, for Garrett and his family, including visiting grandparents. “I thought it was pretty fun,� said Garrett, whose other movies can be found on YouTube. The Snoqualmie boy started making movies just over a year ago, when he got his first camera for Christmas. His still camera also took video, and from there, it was a reasonable jump to filmography, video-editing, and special effects. Garrett has taken filmmaking very seriously, and he loves being able to do all of the work himself, from script-writing to composing the score, filming, directing, and producing. For “Murder,� he says, “It took me two weeks to film it and a couple of days to edit it,� and he is looking forward to ever bigger projects, including helping some local film school students with their projects. His mom, Deborah, sees him as an in-demand Hollywood film-maker some day, but says, “Even if he only makes his family Christmas card, I’m sure he’ll do a wonderful one.� pendent theater competes not only with the big chains, but also television, DVDs by mail and streaming shows. But it’s not all that different. “We’ve come a long way,� Walker said, laughing. “But when I’m in there on a Friday night, there’s still some 13-year-old kid doing that,� stretching out her arm, “for the first time. That piece of Americana is still there.� Walker said parents feel comfortable dropping their children off at a hometown theater. The children feel independent. That same feel isn’t always there at the big megaplexes, she added.

Premium attractions Donations of time and resources played a big role in the theater’s just-completed face lift. Lowe’s Hardware and Valspar Paint donated moulding and paint, and volunteers with LifePointe Church’s youth program provided the muscle. A crew of 10 youth group members and parents got down on their hands and knees to paint around the auditorium chair legs, then broke out the rollers to coat the whole floor. When the painting was done, the local EcoClean service donated a full carpet cleaning to North Bend Theatre. All the help touches Cindy Walker’s heart. “We recognize as owners what a benefit the theater is to the community,� she said. “The community answers back that they cherish it, too, and want to see it continue.� The ability to keep the theater alive in the 21st century may depend on a grown-up crowd. Walker wants the ability to serve beer and wine to an adult crowd in her planned balcony, meant to be built in similar fixtures and style

and extend from the back wall to the nearest wall pillar. Right now, alcohol can’t be served due to the theater’s one-auditorium-for-everybody layout. Walker estimates the balcony fix and the digital fix each would cost about $100,000. “By the end of 2013, I have to make the change to digital,� Walker said. Thirty-five millimeter film tech hasn’t changed much from the 1950s. Projectionists like Wilson still splice and wind films onto huge platters for projectors that are decades-old. “If you watch a film, you’ll see the splices, the scratches,� she said. Real films, she said, are like “a good pair of denim jeans.� Walker likes the authentic feel. But replacing the film system with a new digital project will save time and money. Under a new system, films will come on DVDs or as direct downloads to a hard drive. Walker can say goodbye to the expense of shipping and transporting the boxes of reels, and the time to put them together. The changes to the building, too, will mean a better experience for adult customers, who, up in the balcony, won’t have to listen to teenage chatter. Walker said she’ll get a better financial return from concessions at her specialty events, such as the mountain festivals. “Places like mine that are able to stay in business are providing premium service,� she said. Walker sees the changes as vital to keeping the hometown theater alive. “It can be managed so that it’s here for this generation of kids to be telling the same stories that Harley was telling when they’re 75,� she said. “I think it’s positioned to do that.�

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SPORTS

Scratching the itch

The Chief Kanim Middle School seventh grade football team met its counterpart at Twin Falls Middle School on Friday, Sept. 23. Chief Kanim earned their first win of the season, 34-6. The Hawks offensive line helped pave the way for an effective ground game. Jacob Belcito got the fireworks started early with a 70-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, then ran the ensuing punt back for a 55-yard return and another TD. Belcito added three more touchdown runs in the game. The Hawks’ defense finished the job, led by Jack Strobbe, Baily Mullen and AJ Archambeau. Stars in the game included Belcito with five touchdowns for 140 yards and eight tackles; Mullen with six tackles and two sacks; Andrew Lewis with 60 yards and six tackles; and Jake Brady, who went three for six attempts with 30 passing yards.

BY SETH TRUSCOTT Editor

Stop that train!

Seth Truscott/Staff Photos

Mount Si defenders close in on Interlake carrier Jordan Todd during play Friday, Sept. 30. Below, Jimbo Davis hangs on as lineman Josh Mitchell brings Todd down.

Mount Si’s mixed attack, defense holds off Interlake star to claim road win BY SETH TRUSCOTT Editor

Connor Deutsch was clear about who needed praise following a Friday, Sept. 30, road win over the Interlake Saints: Josh Mitchell and his compatriots on the Mount Si defensive line.

The picture on the back of the book shows a wooden backboard and a hoop without a net, mounted on a gnarled tree. It’s one of the hoops that Snoqualmie resident Rick Turner found in Jamaica during his globetrotting travels as a volunteer and professional basketball coach. The threadbare court shows the challenges and the promise that Turner encounters every summer in his youth basketball program, which teaches the sport to hundreds of children in Kingston and rural Jamaica. “The people there are super-passionate,â€? he said. Young players often lack the fundamentals of the sport, but are so athletic “that the sky’s the limit as far as what they can do.â€? When Turner first flew Seth Truscott/Staff Photo to Jamaica as a volunteer Snoqualmie resident and coach 15 years ago, the globecrossing basketball coach effort wore him out. He Rick Turner has penned an kept telling himself each account of his experiences on year would be his last. But the court. He will sign copthe experience kept growing on him. Now, he goes ies of “If my name was Phil Jackson‌ would you read this? back every July. “It’s the thing I look for- The Anonymous Adventures ward to most every year. of an Anonymous Coachâ€? this I can’t imagine not going,â€? month at Costco stores. he said. SEE COACH, 10

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COACH FROM 9 The book in question is Turner’s own, “If my name was Phil Jackson‌ would you read this?â€? Published in May, and chronicling the “anonymous adventures of an anonymous coach,â€? Turner’s book follows his professional coaching career, tracing his experiences with college, pro and semipro teams across the Northwest, in China, and in Jamaica.

Coaching start Turner joined the coaching world against his better judgement. In 1997, at age 30, he departed a job as the Seattle Supersonics’ Director of Broadcasting for new pastures. His first gigs weren’t paid. “When I got into this, I took a leap of faith,� Turner said. “I was flying without a net. I wasn’t sure what I was doing was right.� Volunteering for University of Washington men’s coach Lorenzo Romar, he observed the Huskies’ approach up close. “For me, it was like a graduate program in coaching,� Turner said. The experience also confirmed to him that he could do it. “I knew there was no level I couldn’t coach at,� he said.

Over the last 15 years, he helmed teams in the minorleague American Basketball Association, the Continental Basketball Association, then in China. A portion of the book, and part of the proceeds of its sales, goes into the Jumpball Basketball camp for youth in Jamaica, where Turner has spent more than a decade as a volunteer coach. In that time, Turner watched Jumpball go from 65 to 650 youth, many coming from poor backgrounds.

Chinese superstar China’s hoops scene, too, is very different from the one here. “In China, they are just fanatical about basketball,� Turner said. “We were like the Beatles over there.� Turner says he’s no superstar, but he watched in awe when his team was given an honor guard of military police to leave their stadium one night. “I walked into the arena one night and looked around,� he said. “People were holding posters of me! It was Rick Turner Night.� Chinese talent is high, and the people are proud of homegrown international stars like Yao Ming. They look at their own Chinese Basketball

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Association as the equivalent of the N.B.A. “It’s no small deal,� Turner said. Turner’s love of basketball dates back to his early teens, when he was a “total basketball gym rat.� Until ninth grade, Turner was cut from every team, but when he started in high school in Kirkland, there was a no-cut rule put in place in the Lake Washington district. Turner was embarrassed to be the oldest boy on the JV squad, but the rule kept him in the game. He got bigger, and better as an athlete, but when he got to college, injuries sidelined him. Until he became a coach, “I never really scratched that basketball itch,� he said. “There comes a time when everyone says, you need to be doing something you love. Find your passion and pursue it.� t 3JDL 5VSOFS XJMM TJHO DPQies of his book on two dates, noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 8, at the Woodinville Costco; and noon to 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at the Kirkland Costco. You can also visit his Facebook page.

TRAIN FROM 9 “All our defensive backs‌ stepped it up,â€? said the senior co-captain. Mount Si handled the Saints 26-14, but it wasn’t quite a domination. Mount Si defenders had their hands full with Interlake no. 22, Jordan Todd, a senior running back with a penchant for breaking through lines and breaking away from tackles and grasping hands. “He could have turned it around, but our DBs were very contained,â€? Deutsch said. “It saved touchdowns and it was great!â€? Mount Si held Interlake scoreless in the first half, with the game following something of a pattern. Interlake’s carriers, led by Todd, moved the ball in big bursts, but were kept out of the endzone by tenacious defense. Deutsch happened to be first on the board, as the offense got him close enough for a one-yard touchdown run at 6:29. Then junior

Cameron Van Winkle fired up his feet on the night for a point, making things 7-0. Record-smasher Van Winkle kept it up, making a memorable 42-yard field goal at 1:14. Next, with 7:25 left in the second quarter, Mount Si quarterback Ryan Atkinson cut into the clear on his right to send a smooth 28-yard pass to receiver Tyler Button for six points. Van Winkle provided the point after. “It’s a combination of preparation and opportunity,� Button, a junior, said of the catch. In the locker room during the half, “We talked about tackling no. 22,� Button said. “He’s a strong running back. We’ve got to do exactly what we did in the first half— come back and win.� Following a scoreless third, the Todd train finally arrived, hauling the ball downfield to make things 17-6. Saints kicker Rigel Kuhn made the point after at 8:15. Mount Si kept things on rails, though. Atkinson

fired another 28-yard air package to Jimbo Davis to make it 23-7 at 4:50. At the two-minute mark, Van Winkle delivered his fourth successful kick of the night, a 39-yard field goal to make it 26-7. Interlake kept on until the end. Ryan Turman caught a touchdown reception from Kamana Adriano, then Kuhn made the kick with 37 seconds left, salvaging some of the home team’s pride. “I’ll take a win any day of the week,� Deutsch said. Still, it took a lot of mind-overmatter on the night, with Mount Si trying out some new faces on the line. “It was willpower,� he said. “Mentally, I think we’ve got to step it up for next week. We’ve got a big, big game. It’s Mercer. We’ve got to tackle and play our game.� t .PVOU 4J QMBZT .FSDFS Island on the road, 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 7. You can follow the team at mtsihsfootball.com/.

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SPEECH FROM 1

Be an emergency team member with training The cities of Snoqualmie and North Bend, along with Eastside Fire & Rescue, are jointly offering the FEMA-certified Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) course, which begins October 15 at the Snoqualmie Fire Station. CERT training helps people be ready for real emergencies, and concludes with a disaster simulation and drill. To register for the CERT program, email the City of Snoqualmie Department of Emergency Management at eoc@ci.snoqualmie.wa.us and include your name, address, and phone number, or call Liz Luizzo or Bob Rowe at 425-888-1551.

Brain cancer fundraiser earns $840,000 The nonprofit organization for which Jenn Clarke of North Bend is a spokesperson, Seattle Brain Cancer Walk, earned $420,000 in donations in its fourth annual event Saturday, Sept. 24. An anonymous donor has matched the total earnings, bringing the organization a total of $840,000. The event is still accepting donations at its website, www.braincancerwalk.org, through December 31, in an effort to raise another $80,000, which the anonymous donor has also agreed to match.

SHORT FROM 1 District Finance Director Ryan Stokes reported on enrollment figures to the Snoqualmie Valley School Board Sept. 22, and noted that the balanced budget the school board passed in August was balanced on state revenue for more students. Stokes stressed that he was simply informing the board of the enrollment numbers, and was not requesting action, since it may not be necessary. “There’s usually an uptick (in enrollment) in October,” he said. “Due to the timing of the start of school, we start a little bit before Labor Day, our September enrollment counts often fluctuate, they’re often a lot lower than our October enrollment.” For 2011-12, the district projected serving 5,837 FTE students, and receiving the state allocation for them. September

enrollment figures were 5,762 FTE students, which could result in about $300,000 less in state funds. By school level, there are 61 fewer elementary-age students, 47 of them from Opstad Elementary School, and 22 fewer high school students than projected. At the middle school level, the district has eight more students. “Our middle school continues to be very strong,” Stokes said, adding that enrollment is growing at every level, but is highest in the middle schools. Washington school districts report enrollment figures to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction on the fourth day of school in September, and the first day of school in each following month. Using a formula based on enrollment and staff numbers, state officials determine allocations for each district. Historically, these allocations cover only about 65 percent of per-pupil spending.

His attorneys claimed the city’s 12-year-old law, IMC 5.40.040, effectively banned free speech in public areas, and in a September 21 ruling, federal judge Marsha Pechman concurred. Judge Pechman upheld an injunction against the city’s enforcement of the law during this year’s Salmon Days, and denied the city’s request for an extension of the case. The Issaquah code “establishes ‘expression areas’ within the festival area for leafleting, organized protesting, nonscheduled entertainment, and non-profit distribution,” but Ascherl’s claim in his August 5 filing was that both areas were too remote for his purposes, and one was also too noisy. “The problem with those socalled free expression areas is you can’t really reach an audience,” said Alliance Defense Fund attorney Nate Kellum, the senior counsel for Ascherl’s case. “Nobody really came that close to where he was forced to be.” Ascherl, who referred the Record to the Alliance Defense Fund for all comments “until the case is over,” states in his affidavit that he was distributing literature about his faith at the 2010 Salmon Days, and was told by a festival official to stop. He refused, saying he was within his Constitutional rights, and the official left but returned with two police officers. Ascherl assured the police he was not forcing his literature on anyone or harassing passersby, and they left. “He was not trying to cause a spectacle. He just wanted to

The First Amendment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. share his views,” Kellum said. The affidavit further reports that the festival official returned with police and ordered him to stop again. He asked to see any law prohibiting his action, and, when he was presented with IMC 5.40.040, he agreed to go to the expression area. Issaquah’s response to Ascherl’s claims was that the legislation was “narrowly tailored to serve public safety concerns, minimize congestion, and facilitate the orderly flow of pedestrian traffic during the festival.” Issaquah public information officer Autumn Monahan said the city “...created the legislation more than a decade ago to address concerns from vendors, the public and others about public safety and congestion as festival attendance increased.” Attendance at this year’s event was expected to exceed 180,000 people. Kellum said the city had also argued that the law was originally motivated by politicians’ campaigning activities. “Their argument, as I understood it, was they’ve had problems with congestion and safety in the past when there was political speech,” he said. In her decision, Judge

Pechman said the city’s arguments were unconvincing, since they were primarily “speculative” about Ascherl’s activities creating congestion. Further, she noted that the city allows many activities that create more congestion than Ascherl’s proposed plan, and she found that the law was unconstitutional, violating Ascherl’s first-amendment right to free speech. “Since he would be continually prevented from exercising his First Amendment rights, the Court finds Ascherl will suffer irreparable harm without the injunction,” she wrote. Issaquah officials are disappointed by the ruling, but will obey it. “The festival will have free expression areas, but Mr. Ascherl and others will also be allowed to distribute literature outside of those areas during the 2011 Salmon Days,” Monahan wrote. “The restrictions on solicitation, buskers, performers, etc. are not affected by the ruling and will be enforced.” Kellum reported that Ascherl “was thrilled that the federal judge has recognized his constitutional right.” Distributing literature and talking about Jesus Christ with others “is a tenet of his faith,” said Kellum. “He feels really strongly about it.” Since the injunction affects only the 2011 Salmon Days, Kellum plans to seek a permanent order, but says for now, the ball is in the city’s court. Monahan said city officials plan to meet with their legal team to “assess next steps concerning our ordinance.” Salmon Days ran Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 1 and 2.

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Staff Reporter

Everything serves a purpose on Dog Mountain Farm, even the weeds. Trees and gardens produce fruits and vegetables, chickens and ducks produce eggs, various other animals provide meat, and all provide fertilizer components. The weeds are food and work for the farm pig. “Gabriel’s tilling for me,� says Dog Mountain Farm owner Cindy Krepky, looking over at the animal, busy tearing up a small square of land for more garden space. She pens the pig wherever she wants land cleared, and he goes to work, digging and eating plants, roots and all. Even tenacious dandelions don’t grow back. Two beautiful Percherons are the closest things the farm has to window-dressing, and they earn their keep by providing raw materials for fertilizer, and appearing in parades. The draft horses have also hauled the farm’s produce down the hill to Carnation. It’s a small, but working farm that Cindy and her husband Dave started 11 years ago, almost at the top of Tolt River Road. “Most people would call this a micro-farm because we have so few acres,� Krepky said, only five. In the past two years, the farm has grown into more than home and office for the Krepkys. They’ve started programs focused on sustainable WE HAVE A TRUCK TO RENT FOR LOCAL MOVES

agriculture, and want to set the example. “What we’re trying to demonstrate is more of a closed system, where you have few inputs to the farm,� Krepky said. Managing the products of the farm, 250 different fruits and vegetables, fiber from sheep, eggs from chickens and

ducks, and meat from the animals they butcher, is the focus of the two year-old School of Lost Arts (www.lostartsschool. org). Classes at the school cover producing, preserving, and enjoying locally-grown foods, and hands-on work is required. “They (students) get to participate in the process,� said School Director Erin Chamberlain, whether it’s kneading dough for a hearth breads class, or picking the fruit in the orchard to make jam. SEE SCHOOL, 13

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Cindy Krepky, left, and Erin Chamberlain, director of the School of Lost Arts, collect some eggs on Dog Mountain Farm, home to the school and its curriculum of living close to the land. Below, the farm’s goats huddle by the fence for some green handouts from Chamberlain.

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CALENDAR SNOQUALMIE VALLEY

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5

COMPUTER CLASS: Internet Level 1 is 6 p.m. at Fall City Library. LIVE MUSIC: Open mic is 7 p.m. at The Black Dog in downtown Snoqualmie; (425) 831-3647; all ages welcome. ANIME: The teen Anime & Manga Club meets at 3 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library. Watch anime, eat popcorn and practice your anime drawing. All skill levels welcome. TALES : Young Toddler Story Time is 9:30 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library, for ages 6 to 24 months with an adult. TALES : Preschool Story Time is 10:30 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library, for ages 3 to 6 with an adult TALES: Pajamarama Story Time is 6:30 p.m. at North Bend Library, all young children welcome with an adult.

COMPUTER ASSISTANCE: Do you need help on the computer? A KCLS volunteer can give you oneon-one assistance, 1 p.m. North Bend Library.

THURSDAY, OCT. 6 GAME ON: Teens can play video games, 3 p.m. at Fall City Library. COMPUTER CLASS: Microsoft Excel Level 2 is 6:30 p.m. at Fall City Library. LIVE MUSIC: Open mic poetry is 6 to 8 p.m. at The Black Dog in downtown Snoqualmie; (425) 8313647; all ages welcome. PURL ONE, LISTEN TOO: Learn stitches, meet new friends, listen to books and talk knitting, 1 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library. TALES: Pajama Story Time is 7 p.m. at Snoqualmie Library, all young children welcome with adult. CHESS GAMES: Snoqualmie

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Valley Chess Club meets at 7 p.m. at North Bend Library. Learn to play or get a game going. All ages and skill levels. STUDY ZONE: Children in grades K-12 can drop in at 4 p.m. at the North Bend Library for free homework help from volunteer tutors.

Versatile guitarist to play at Woodman Lodge Courtesy photo

Snoqualmie-based guitarist Jay Roberts performs 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13, at the Woodman Lodge Steakhouse and Saloon in Snoqualmie. Versatile with rock, blues and jazz, Roberts’ heart is in improvising and teaching. He founded Roberts Music Institute, an accelerated learning facility located in Bellevue. To learn more, visit http://robertsmusicinstitute.com/2010/02/ jay-roberts/

FRIDAY, OCT. 7 GAME ON: Teens can play video games, 3 p.m. at the North Bend Library.

SATURDAY, OCT. 8 LIVE MUSIC: Mike Antone and Camelia Jade play from 10 a.m. to noon at The Black Dog in downtown Snoqualmie; (425) 831-3647; all ages. LIFE AFTER HIGH SCHOOL: The Money Maze-Finding Money for College is 10 a.m. at Snoqualmie Library. This workshop provides a complete review of how to identify and apply for all types of grants, scholarships, work study and student loans.

SCHOOL FROM 12 Chamberlain came here because she wanted to play a role in the expanding local food movement. Last summer, Chamberlain scheduled a full slate of Culinary Traditions classes on making bread, jams and jellies, cheese, butter, and the art of fermentation. She’s also coordinated Young Farmers Day Camps which bring children up to age 12 out to the farm to experience food production, and launched

“Locavore Lunches” modeled after Dog Mountain’s monthly farm dinners, but with what Krepky calls “a true farm-to-table experience.” Locavore Lunchers are invited to tour the farm with the chef, to hand-pick the ingredients for their meal. Then, as with the farm dinners, they can watch the chef work in the outdoor kitchen and enjoy the meal in the farm’s orchard. The school, farm dinners and locavore lunches all shut down for the winter months. However, the farm will host a

harvest open house Saturday, Oct. 22, for people to visit the farm and enjoy some freshlypressed cider. School of the Lost Arts will return next year, along with the farm’s other programs and volunteer opportunities. Krepky, passionate about education, is always trying to help people understand the need for local, sustainable farms, through various programs. “The whole idea there is to give them some education on nutrition and eating locally, seasonally,” she says.

PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE #526942 LEGAL NOTICE JB STORAGE NORTH BEND WA 98045 NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to auction the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under the Washington Self-Service Storage Facilities Act. The undersigned will sell at public Auction by silent bidding on the 11 of OCT. 2011 from 10 am to 12 am on the premises where said property has been stored and which are Located at JB STORAGE, 46925 SE MIDDLE FORK RD, NORTH BEND WA. 98045, County of King, State of Washington. 1) Elizabeth Johnson unit # 15 North Bend WA 98045 2) Josh Johnson unit # 10 4104 B103 Ave SE, Lake Stevens WA 98258 3) K&M Subway Inc. unit # 101 1035 E Harvest Rd, Queen Creek AZ, 85240 4) Jim Lyons unit #8-140 15109 B Ceader Falls RD SE #B North Bend WA 98045 5) April McCarty unit # 44 PO Box 250 North Bend WA 98045 6) John Shilling unit #43 PO Box 962 Fall City WA 98024

7) Holly & John Searle 8831-371 PL SE unit # 23-25 Snoqualmie WA 98065 8) Cliff Solomon unit # 119 PO Box 2492 North Bend WA 98045 9) Victor Stone unit # 2 lot #40 31502 NE 40th St Carnaton WA 98014 10) Darby Summers unit # 74 8721 - 384 Ave SE Snoqualmie WA 98065 11) TRB Logging & Trucking Todd R Burdulis units # 71-120 PO Box 2088 North Bend WA 12) Dale Wolford unit #4 3435 Auburn Way, Auburn WA 98072-7249 13) Amie Zachry unit #131 PO Box 223 Snoqualmie WA 98065 The purchase must be paid for at the time of the purchase in cash only. All purchased items sold as-is where are and must be removed at time of sale. Sale subject to cancellation in event of settlement between owner and obligated party. Dated this 25th of Sept 2011. Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record on September 21, 2011, September 28, 2011 and October 5, 2011. PUBLIC NOTICE #530777 City of North Bend, Washington Notice of Hearing on Final Assessment Roll

Utility Local Improvement District No. 6 (Tanner & Truck Town Sewer Project) NOTICE is given that the final assessment roll for Utility Local Improvement District No. 6 (the “District”) has been prepared as required by law and is on file and open to inspection at the office of the City Clerk at City Hall, 211 Main Avenue N, North Bend, Washington. Pursuant to Resolution No. 1212 adopted August 21, 2007, the City Council formed Utility Local Improvement District No 6 under Ordinances 1293 and 1312 in response to receipt of sufficient petitions from property owners within the ULID boundaries, to construct sewer system improvements along the North Bend Way, Cedar Falls Way, SE 140th Street, and Maloney Grove/ Thrasher Ave corridors from the City’s wastewater treatment plant to Truck Town and to assess in whole or in part the cost and expense of the improvements against the property in that district specially benefited thereby. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a Hearing Examiner will conduct a public hearing on the final assessment roll at or shortly thereafter 3:00 p.m., local time, on October 20, 2011, at Mt. Si Senior Center, 411 Main Avenue S, North Bend, Washington.

Any person objecting to their assessment appearing on the final assessment roll for the District is notified to make all objections in writing and to file them with the City Clerk at City Hall on or before October 20, 2011, and to appear at the hearing to present testimony and other evidence. All objections must state clearly the grounds of the objections and should contain lot, block and addition, section, tax number or other identifying description of the property. All objections not made timely in writing and in the manner required by law, shall be conclusively presumed to have been waived. At the time and place fixed for the hearing, the Hearing Examiner will sit as a board of equalization for the purpose of considering objections duly filed, together with all information and evidence in support of those objections, and for the purpose of considering such assessment roll. In order for a protest to be considered valid, it must include proof that the property is not being benefited to the amount of the assessment. At the hearing, or any adjournment thereof, the Hearing Examiner may recommend to the City Council to correct, revise, raise, lower, change or modify the roll or any part thereof, or set aside

the roll and order a new assessment. Following the hearing, and recommendation of the Hearing Examiner, the City Council will confirm the assessment roll by ordinance. When property has been entered originally upon the roll, and the assessment thereon is not raised, no objection shall be considered by the City Council or by any court on appeal unless the objection is made in writing at or prior to the date fixed for the original hearing upon the roll. Susie Oppedal, City Clerk City of North Bend, Washington Posted: October 5, 2011 Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record: October 5, 2011 PUBLIC NOTICE #531091 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KING In the Estate of: CLIFFORD W. BREITBACH Deceased No: 11-4-05370-6 SEA NOTICE TO CREDITORS EARL ANDERSON, 4254 278th Ave. SE, Fall City, WA, 98024, has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of

To place your Legal Notice in the Snoqualmie Valley Record please call Linda at 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@reporternewspapers.com

limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: October 5th, 2011. Date of filing: October 3rd, 2011. Law Offices of Ian Macrae Ian Macrae, Attorney for Estate P. O. Box 1329 Fall City, WA 98024 Phone: 425.222.7660 Published in the Snoqualmie Valley Record October 5, 2011, October 12, 2011 and October 19, 2011.


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They treat it like fun, but PE teacher Allison Hoover, the checkpoint commander for the drill, said students do take it seriously. “They know what it’s about,� she added. If the dam were to fail and the 18-billion-gallon Tolt Reservoir overflowed, safety consultants estimate it would take about 48 minutes for the first of the water to reach the city of Carnation, and another 30 minutes, 78 total, to peak at more than 12 feet deep within the city. Flooding from a dam breach is projected to reach as far west as Everett,

and as far east as Snoqualmie Falls. Seattle Public Utilities, which owns and operates the reservoir, maintains an elaborate early-warning system at the reservoir, and tests it every Wednesday in Carnation with a siren and pre-recorded announcement. The system should give residents about an hour’s notice to evacuate. The last students to leave the school, a group of 29 Kindergartners and first-graders, made use of their hour by playing games, picking flowers, and observing everything. “This looks just like my neighborhood,� one boy announced. “Look! A spider web for Halloween!� said another.

...obituaries Remember your loved one

One thing 6-year-old Joshua Ward didn’t see on his walk was his mom, Christie Dick, but she was there at the end of the trail, waiting to congratulate her first-grader for completing his first drill after three weeks at his new school. “I looked everywhere for you!� she said. Joshua didn’t get a chance to say much because he arrived just in time to catch the bus back to school, but Dick expected she’d hear all about it when he got home. “He was really excited about it this morning,� she said. Her family just moved to the area from Idaho, and although she was used to warning sirens in her hometown, she said the first couple of times she heard the Tolt Dam siren, she was ready to jump in the car with the kids and drive to safety. “I’m kind of glad that do this,� she said. “I think it’s a great idea that they do.�

In Brief

Students serve on Riverview board The Riverview School

Places to Worship

SNOQUALMIE VALLEY Mount Si Lutheran Church

" $)63$) '03 5)& &/5*3& 7"--&: Join us at our new DT Snoqualmie location

8086 Railroad Ave. SE

EVERY SUNDAY @ 8:30AM & 10:00AM

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530456

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DT Snoqualmie since 1889 425-888-1697

38701 S.E. River at Railroad Ave www.snoqualmieumc.info

Dogs

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39025 SE Alpha St. Snoqualmie, WA 98065 r XXX PMPT PSH Rev. Roy Baroma, Priest Administrator

r XXX TUBOUIPOZ DBSOBUJPO PSH

Please contact church offices for additional Please contactinformation church offices for additional information

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Dogs

Dir., Family & Youth Ministry – Lauren Frerichs “Like� us on Facebook – Mt. Si Lutheran Youth Family Harvest Carnival Oct. 23 4-7pm

Mass Schedule

Paid obituaries include publication in the newspaper and online at www.valleyrecord.com

pets/animals

Sunday Worship: 8:15 a.m. Traditional, 10:45 a.m. Praise Sunday School/Fellowship 9:30-10:30 a.m.

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9:00 am ~ Bless This House Band 10:30 am ~ the Chancel Choir

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PUZZLE ANSWERS FROM PAGE 12

WELCOME TO OUR LADY OF SORROWS CATHOLIC CHURCH

Snoqualmie United Methodist Church

Miscellaneous

411 NE 8th St., North Bend 1BTUPS .BSL (SJGĂ˝ UI t mtsilutheran@mtsilutheran.org www.mtsilutheran.org

Both Austin and Kylie will attend all regular board meetings while school is in session, but no executive sessions. Once a month they will provide reports to the school board on Cedarcrest student activities, topics and general concerns. Austin and Kylie will also participate in some board training sessions, such as the WSSDA Annual Conference and the WSSDA Legislative Conference in Olympia.

at Benson Barn

Open Minds Open Hearts Open Doors

Place a paid obituary to honor those who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506 paidobits@reporternewspapers.com

All notices are subject to verification.

Board student representatives for the 2011-12 school year are Cedarcrest High School senior, Austin Koons, serving his second year in this position, and junior Kylie Leslie, a firstyear representative.

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