INSIDE | County might expedite sandbag removal plan [3]
.com
REPORTER
NEWSLINE 253-872-6600
KENT
Sports |
Kent-Meridan girls, boys battle in SPSL North track and field [14]
FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 2012
A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING
State budget cuts to city less than expected BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
State budget cuts to the city of Kent were “less painful” than what they could have been considering the budget shortfall dealt with by legislators. Kent will need to slash about
$600,000 from its budget because the state decided to keep all of a liquor excise tax for one year rather than sharing the usual portion with cities. That decision will cost the city about $300,000 the second half of this year and another $300,000
the first half of 2013, said Michelle Wilmot, city community and public affairs director, in her report April 17 to the City Council about the 2012 legislative session. “That’s the one cut we saw,” Wilmot said. “But with as much as $10 million at stake, the $600,000
is less painful.” Mayor Suzette Cooke and Chief Administration Officer John Hodgson met with department heads to try to figure out where to make budget cuts worth $600,000. City staff expects to have a proposal soon about where to make
cuts this year and next year. “There isn’t the wiggle room we usually have,” Cooke said. “We don’t have any cushion.” City officials were concerned the state might take away the nearly $4.9 million the city gets [ more BUDGET page 4 ]
State reveals top bidders for 4 Kent liquor stores BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Four high bidders received the rights to apply for spirits retail liquor licenses at the four Kent state-run liquor stores. The Washington State Liquor Control Board announced the winning bids Monday for the 167 state-run liquor stores that were part of an online auction
Teen charged for East Hill shooting
Show of color Lisa Michaels and her son, Gavin, weed a flower bed at Northwest Harvest last Saturday. About 300 volunteers – and their families – from Comcast took advantage of a sun-splashed morning to help beautify inside and outside of Kent’s main food distribution center, 22220 68th Ave. S. The effort was part of Comcast Cares Day, one of the nation’s largest single days of service by a corporation, with more than 2,200 volunteers around the state working on a dozen projects. Story, page 18. MARK KLAAS, Reporter
BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
King County prosecutors have charged a 16-year-old
concluded on April 20. The sum of individual bids for the 167 stores totaled $30.75 million, with rights awarded to 121 individual bidders, according to a liquor board media release. Voters approved Initiative 1183 last year to get the state out of the liquor business and [ more STORES page 22 ]
Seattle boy with first-degree assault in connection with a Kent shooting April 14 on the East Hill that left a 19-year-old man wounded. Raqwon J. Slade is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday, [ more SHOOTING page 3 ] Finding the
BEST
doesn’t have to
SCIENCE TEACHER, STUDENTS REACH EXCELLENCE Chamberlain
BY SARAH KEHOE
scientists.
skehoe@kentreporter.com
“My students learn to analyze data and make inferences based on the evidence, they learn how to break apart information and
Meridian Middle School science teacher Michele Chamberlain tries to teach her students to think like
Cutest 615569
Pet
Look inside for
Winners and Final
Community pg. 15
Community Volunteer Police Officer/ Firefi ghter Public Official Teacher / School
People - pg. 2
Attorney/Law Firm Bartender / Location Insurance Agent Pet Groomer Realtor Veterinarian Waiter-Waitress / Location
ist!
Restaurants pg. 8 & 9
Asian Cuisine BBQ Breakfast
Coffee Shop Family Restaurant Fine Dining Hamburgers Italian Cuisine Lunch Mexican Cuisine Pizza
Shopping - pg. 10 Health/Fitness & 11 - pg. 13 Antique
Chiropractor Dentist Eye Doctor
Shop Small/Large Appliance Store Bookstore
question it’s validity,” Chamberlain said. “These are the students who will be responsible for making great discoveries in the future, who will shape our world and change how future generations think.”
INSIDE
[ more SCIENCE page 5 ]
Pull-out section: Best of Kent winners
Healthcare Facility Massage Therapist Physician Skin Care/Cosmeti cs Spa Services
Services - pg. 4 &
5 Bank/Credit Union Car Dealer / Automotive / Tire Service Catering Hair Salon/Barber Shop Nail Salon Painter/Contractor Senior Living Facility A supplemen
t published by
Clothing/Shoe Store Consignment/Thrift Store Flower Shop Furniture/Home Decor Gift Store Grocery-Convenient Store /Location Jewelry Store Pet Store Plant Nursery Winery/Wine Shop
Locations - pg. 7
Favorite Park Favorite Family Destination
Gift Card Winner s
- pg. 16
the
REPORTER
KENT .com
Meridian’s Chamberlain, class earn top state honors
be a
MysterY!
Now in Progress! Voting starts Thurs. May 9 ontest PRIZES for 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place C
Go to: KentReporter.com Click on “Contests” and enter!
Winners published Sat. May 19 in the People & Pets 10am - 5pm GAME FARM PARK Section May 18
[2] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
Ex-King County Sheriff ’s Office media spokesman to run for sheriff BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
John Urquhart, former King County Sheriff ’s Office media spokesman, announced Tuesday at a press conference in downtown Seattle that he’s running for King County Sheriff. Urquhart will run against Voted
AMILY BEST FU AN20T11 A 09R R E ST , 2010 & 20 , 08
interim Sheriff Steve Strachan, a former Kent Police chief, on November’s ballot to replace Sue Rahr. Rahr resigned in March to become director of the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission in Burien. Urquhart, 64, of Mercer Island, released his statements from the press conference about
the reasons he decided to run for sheriff. “My campaign for King County Sheriff is based on leadership and accountability,� Urquhart said. “The Sheriff ’s Office is at a crossroads. We are headed down a road where we run the risk of losing support of the citizens we serve. I can’t let that happen. If we
Treat Mom to Something Special
in Kent 20
Sunday, May 13
W ERING T O F F O RATE BUFFETS! EPA
&(. .+ $ !
S
&)* .+ e s of W in All Bottle
ing Accommodat s ie rt Pa e rg La ns Now!
atio Make Reserv
F HALFrchOasFe of
with Pu s r Entree 2 Dinne
âœż âœż âœż âœż âœż âœż âœż âœż
# ! ! $ ! " " ! % !
! "/ âœż " ! #
Visit your Lake Wilderness branch and earn $150 when you: t Open a qualifying KeyBank Checking Account and enroll in KeyBank Relationship RewardsSM by May 4, 2012 and t Make three direct deposits each of $500 or more within three months of account opening plus t Make at least ďŹ ve payments and/or purchases per month for the ďŹ rst three months after account opening
&(- '' &(+ ,+ "# &( )+
23826 104 "WF 4& ,FOU t th
Earn $1501* just for switching to KeyBank!
Please drop by! Learn how you can receive $2002* when you open a new Key PrivilegeÂŽ Checking Account! We look forward to starting a rewarding relationship.
605111
4pm-10pm
[ more URQUHART page 4 ]
John Urquhart will run a campaign for King County Sheriff ‘based on leadership and accountabiity.’ REPORTER FILE PHOTO
150 reasons to visit your nearby branch
Champagne Brunch 9:00 am - 2:00 pm
DINNER SPECIAL
go down that wrong road, it will not be because our deputies don’t care. It will be because of a lack of leadership within the Sheriff ’s Office. “The citizens of King County want many things from their Sheriff ’s Office. They want a police agency that is tough on crime, but understands you can’t arrest your way out of every problem in society.� Urquhart discussed his decision to run with his wife and two adult daughters before making the decision official.
call 425-433-2501 visit your Lake Wilderness branch
614087
1
Bronze Sponsors - AAA Pest Control, Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC), Agent Alliance Group Table Sponsors - Around the Clock, Inc., BECU Financial Center - Kent, Bell Anderson, Curran Law Firm, Great American Casino, Golden Steer Steak & Rib House, Home Street Bank, Kent Grocery Outlet, Kent Community Foundation, Kent School District, Minuteman Press, MultiCare Medical Group, Omaha Woodmen, Sterling Savings Bank,The Boeing Company,Two Men & A Truck Auction Sponsors - A El Cielo Funeral Home, Act 3 Catering, Agent Alliance Group, Alaska USA Federal Credit Union, Alki Bakery, Allied Waste Services, American Colleges of Mixed Martial Arts, Argosy Cruises, Around the Clock, Inc., Arthur Murray Dance Studio, Auburn Symphony Orchestra, Auburn Collision and Detail, Azteca Mexican Restaurant, Baldwin Chiropractic, Barbara Smith, Best Western Plaza by the Green, BJS Stables, Blanc’ N Schwartz, Blessed with Less, Blue Island Beauty Salon, Buds & Blooms, CafÊ Pacific Catering, Cals Classic American, Candy Bouquet #6645, Central Avenue Mini Storage, Cindi & Tim Cameron, Charlene’s Baskets & Bows, City of Kent - Police Department, Cascade Gasket & Manufacturing Company, Charlotte Turpin, Cedar Mountain Spa Covers, Columbia Bank, Dave Hobbs, Dawn Colston, Diamond Driving School, Down Home Catering, Dr. George M. Stephens, D.D.S., Emerald Downs, Envision a Nu You Salon, ErgoHealth USA, Evergreen Massage Therapy, Essence of Fire, Firestone Complete Auto Care, FMC - Handy Pro, Full Circle Farms, Fred Meyer Stores, Geeks @ Site, Great American Casino, Greater Kent Historical Society, Golden Steer Steak & Rib House, Greg Girard, Greg Haffner, Attorney with Curran Law Firm, Industry Sign & Graphics, Handyman Connection, Hawthorn Suites, Hilton Garden Inn Seattle/Renton, Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites, James Gang Dental, Jeff Heiss Painting, Jeneah’s Place, Jerry Zelinsky - Farmers Insurance, JGP Marketing, Jim & Suzanne Berrios, John Schneider - Edward Jones, John Smith - Dial4Tech, Kelly’s Lattes, Ken & Sarah Sharp, Kent Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, Kent Community Foundation, Kent Grocery Outlet, Kent Reporter, Kent Sunrise Rotary, Lind Meats, Les Schwab Tire Center - Kent North, Kevin Hasslinger - Edward Jones, Maggie’s on Meeker, Mayor Suzette Cooke, Mama Stortinis, McLendons, McMonigle Veterinary Hospital, Medowsweet Farms, Meridian Valley Country Club, Mexico Lindo Restaurant, Mitzel’s American Kitchen, Mike & Erica Schmauch, Mud Bay, Museum of Glass, NW Electrology & Permanent Makeup, Pacific Metallurgical, Paolo’s Italian Restaurant, Pat’s Plumbing, Perk Up Place, PhotoVision Photography, Polly Shepherd, Pediatric Interim Care Center, Pegasus Northwest, Point Defiance Zoological Society, Rebecca Alstrom, Renton Rowing Club, Rio Beauty Creations, Robertson Photography Studios, Ron & Christina Palstring, Salon Ivoni, Seattle First Aid.com, Seattle/Tacoma KOA, Seattle Thunderbirds Hockey Club, Self Serve Garage, Senator Joe Fain, Service Business Equipment & Sales, SERVPRO of Kent, Silverwood Theme Park, Skacel Collection, Inc., Sonitrol Pacific, Starbucks Coffee Co.,Tacoma Rainiers,The Boeing Company,The Puyallup Fair,The RPM Studio,Tile Lines,Torklift Central,Torklift Central - RV Sales,Totally Blown Glass,Transworld Systems Inc., Trillium Employment,Two Men & A Truck, Urban Timber Coffee, LLC,Valley Cities Counseling and Consultation,Voso Impact,WCP Solutions,WWEE, Xocai Healthy Chocolate
Between 4/2/12 and 5/4/12, you must open a Key Express, Key AdvantageÂŽ or Key Coverage Checking Account and enroll in KeyBank Relationship RewardsSM and make at least ďŹ ve posted payments and/or purchases from the new checking account per month for the ďŹ rst three months after account opening plus within three months make a total of three direct deposits each of $500 or more to get $150. 2 Between 4/2/12 and 5/4/12, you must open a Key Privilege Checking Account and enroll in KeyBank Relationship RewardsSM and make at least ďŹ ve posted payments and/or purchases from the new checking account per month for the ďŹ rst three months after account opening plus within three months make a total of three direct deposits each of $500 or more to get $200. *One month is calculated as 31 calendar days from account opening date (three months equals 93 calendar days from account opening date). Limit one gift per qualifying account. Limit one gift per individual. The value of your gift will be reported on Form 1099-INT. Your gift will be deposited into your Checking Account within 90 days of meeting requirements. Qualifying purchase and payment transactions include checks, MasterCard signature, PayPassÂŽ and PIN-based purchases, Key Bill Pay, debit card automated payments, PayPalÂŽ transactions and Automated Clearing House (ACH) direct payments. Direct deposit transactions are limited to: payroll, Social Security, pension, and government beneďŹ ts. There may be an annual fee for the KeyBank Relationship Rewards program based on the type of checking account you open. Redemption of rewards points is subject to a service fee. The KeyBank Rewards Program Terms and Conditions and Activity, Bonus Points and Relationship Product Points Guide can be found at Key.com/rewards or at any KeyBank branch. Offer available to individuals without an existing checking account at KeyBank as of 4/1/12. Offer not available to individuals who have opened a KeyBank checking account in the last 12 months. Employees of KeyBank, its afďŹ liates, and subsidiaries are not eligible for this offer. If you close your account within 180 days of account opening, you will be charged a $25 account early closure fee. Accounts overdrawn or closed on 8/10/12 are not eligible for this offer. Accounts titled as Trust Accounts, Estate, Non-Individual, and No Access are excluded from eligibility. You must have a U.S. mailing address on 8/10/12 to be eligible. Offer is subject to cancellation without notice, and cannot be combined with any other offer. Other miscellaneous charges may apply. MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. This card is issued by KeyBank pursuant to a license by MasterCard International Incorporated. MasterCard PayPassÂŽ is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. KeyBank Instructions: Please use the Marketing code process. This offer is ONLY valid at the Lake Wilderness branch, located at 23928 225th Way SE, Maple Valley, WA 98038. Š 2012 KeyCorp. KeyBank is a Member FDIC. ADL4626.16
April 27, 2012 [3]
www.kentreporter.com
KENT
LOCAL
Police officer shoots, wounds man reportedly stealing vehicle BY STEVE HUNTER
shunter@kentreporter.com
A 46-year-old Kent Police officer shot and wounded a 35-year-old Federal Way man after responding to a report of a man in a stolen car at about 8:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Arbor Chase Apartments, 1615 W. Smith St. The driver started to leave the
area and was confronted by an officer, according to a Kent Police media release. At that time the officer attempted to stop the man and shots were fired by the officer. “He was shot once in each leg,” said Stan McCall, spokesman for the Federal Way Police, which has taken over the shooting investigation since
the incident involved a Kent officer. Paramedics transported the man to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, where he was treated for a broken leg but is expected to recover, McCall said. After the officer fired shots, the man drove away and crashed into an occupied car near the apartments. The two people in that car were treated and released at a local hospital. The driver then headed about 1 mile north and abandoned the vehicle behind a warehouse in North Kent. Officers found the man and
more story online… kentreporter.com
King County might move up vote on sandbag removal plan
FIRE DAMAGES APARTMENT COMPLEX
BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Dogged determination Kathy Duarte-Wilson follows her Lab mix, Julie, as she charges through the elite agility trail during qualifications at the King County 4-H Youth Dog Show at Argus Ranch last weekend in Auburn. Exhibitors throughout the county trained and groomed their pet dogs in hopes of qualifying them for the Puyallup Fair in September. RACHEL CIAMPI, Reporter
[ SHOOTING from page 1 ] May 3 at the Norm Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, according to the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. Slade remains in custody at the county jail in Kent with bail set at $250,000. Slade is charged as an adult because anyone ages 16-17 is considered an adult under state law if charged with a serious violent crime, including first-degree assault.
Kent Police arrested Slade the evening of April 19 after a standoff at a house in the 24500 block of 104th Avenue Southeast. The teen eventually exited the house and surrendered to officers, which included a SWAT team. The 19-year-old is expected to fully recover from his injuries despite being shot three times. According to charging papers, a dispute started the afternoon of April 14 among Slade and several others while riding a Metro
bus. Most of them knew each other. The arguing continued as they all departed the bus near the Jack in the Box. Two agreed to settle the argument by going up the street to 110th Avenue Southeast to fight each other. The charging papers did not indicate what the males were arguing about beyond something regarding “a past issue.”
more story online… kentreporter.com
Marti Reeder
MACADAM COURT
Spring is a great time to buy or sell your home!
Serving our Seniors in Tukwila, Burien & Des Moines!
REALTOR | BROKER | CRS
Call us today & schedule a tour!
marti-realtor.com
marti-realtor.com
For the 2012-2013 Season
STARFIRE SPORTS COMPLEX in Tukwila
Beginning May 3rd
206-992-1271
Mark your calendars! 614083
206-391-0388 206-391-0388 marti@marti-realtor.com
[ more SANDBAGS page 4 ]
AGES 7-17
• Home health & hospice care • 24/7 skilled caregivers with awake night shift • Extensive activities program tailored to residents needs
13534 Macadam Rd Tukwila 98168
A proposal to the King County Flood Control District Board to pay for removal of sandbags along the Green River might move a bit faster than initially anticipated. Kjristine Lund, executive director of the King County Flood Control District, said in an email Tuesday she is trying to get a special May meeting date of the board rather than waiting until the next scheduled meeting in July to consider a $7.5 million plan to remove sandbags by the fall along 26 miles of the river in Kent, Auburn and Tukwila. "I am trying to get a mid-May board meeting (a special meeting) so that bidding can occur to be ready for implementation before the rainy season," Lund said. "However, there is not a meeting scheduled for May yet." The sandbags have lined the trail for nearly three years for extra flood protection because of damage in 2009 to an abutment next to the Howard Hanson Dam on the upper Green
River. But the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced last fall it can operate Hanson Dam at full capacity, which means the sandbags are no longer needed. Cities now face the problem of how to pay to remove the bags without extra millions sitting around to pay contractors for the expensive job. The King County Flood Control District Advisory Committee, a 15-member body composed of mayors and council members from eight cities, has recommended the flood district board pay for 75 percent ($5.7 million) of the removal cost with the cities of Kent, Auburn and Tukwila paying 25 percent ($1.9 million) over a sixyear period. The flood district board is composed of the nine members of the King County Council. It is a special-purpose government that funds and oversees flood protection projects and programs. The board is funded through a county-wide property levy of 10 cents
Pacific Northwest Soccer Club* SOCCER TRYOUTS
ADULT FAMILY HOME
603624
A two-alarm fire in Kent destroyed three stories of a building at an apartment complex in the 23200 block of 88th Avenue South. Eleven families were displaced by the fire that broke out at about 4 p.m. April 20 according to a Kent Fire Department media release. There were no injuries and the displaced residents were allowed to move into unoccupied units at the complex. Investigators were unable to determine the cause of the fire, but it did not appear to be intentionally set. Three stories of one building were engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived at the complex. They were able to stop the fire from spreading to nine other units in the building. Red Cross assisted families who lost everything in the fire.
took him into custody. A records check showed the man has felony warrants for two counts of possession of a stolen vehicle. McCall said the man is under guard at the hospital by King County Sheriff ’s Office deputies because of the warrants. The Kent officer has 21 years of law enforcement experience. He has been placed on paid administrative leave, a common step after a shooting.
www.macadamcourt.com
For tryout details, please visit:
www.pacificnorthwestsoccerclub.org *(formerly GRFC and DosFC)
614175
[4] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
[ URQUHART from page 2 ] Urquhart retired in 2011 after 24 years with the Sheriff ’s Office. He worked many years as the media spokesman and also served as a patrol officer, field training officer, narcotics and vice detective and as an administrative aide to Rahr and former Sheriff Dave Reichert. Strachan, 47, became Chief Deputy of the King County Sheriff ’s Office in Janu-
ary 2011 after serving nearly five years as Kent’s Police chief. He previously was Chief of Police in Lakeville, Minn. Rahr appointed Strachan in March as interim Sheriff and the King County Council appointed him to the position April 2. Strachan and Urquhart must file by mid-May to run for Sheriff to complete Rahr’s four-year term that expires the end of 2013. Strachan has said he plans to run for the position.
KENT POLICE will offer a Prescription Drug Take Back Day so residents can safely get rid of their old medications. The event will run from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in front of the Kent Police Station, 220 Fourth Ave. S. The program is part of nationwide effort by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and local authorities to provide a safe and secure environment for the community to turn in unused or expired medications.
[ BUDGET from page 1 ] per year because of the streamlined sales tax mitigation funds and the $3.7 million it gets per year from the annexation sales tax for annexing the Panther Lake area in 2010. “The maintaining of the state-shared revenues was the bigger piece,” Wilmot said. The streamlined sales tax measured passed by the Legislature changed the state in 2008 from an origin-based system for local retail sales tax to a destination-based system. That cost Kent a lot of tax money with so many businesses in the city that ship or deliver goods to other areas of the state. The sales tax is now collected where the buyer purchases merchandise rather than where the product shipped from. Kent receives money from the state to help make
[ SANDBAGS from page 3 ]
A new option
Introducing Regional Medical Obstetrics, Gynecology & Urogynecology Whether you are expecting a child or managing a health concern, it’s important to have an experienced physician who listens to your concerns and answers your questions - completely.
Paul Boeder, MD, FACOG
Paul Boeder, MD, FACOG is a board-certified OB/GYN specialist with nearly 20 years of experience. He has helped thousands of women with the unique health needs found in each season of life, from providing prenatal and childbirth care to alleviating the symptoms of menopause to helping strengthen weakened pelvic floors. In addition to his medical and obstetrics practice, he is skilled in minimally-invasive gynecological surgery. Dr. Boeder is a graduate of the Medical College of Wisconsin, where he also did his residency.
per $1,000 assessed value or about $40 per year on a $400,000 home. That brings in about $36 million a year for projects. The advisory committee proposal would delay specific projects planned by the flood district board in the Green River basin in order to pay for removal of the sandbags. Each jurisdiction in the county also receives a small portion of the flood district property levy to pay for any flood control projects within each city. Under the proposal, Kent, Auburn and Tukwila would use that money to help pay for sandbag removal rather than other projects for the next six years. Lund addressed the advisory committee’s recommendation at a meeting Monday of the King County Flood Control District Executive Committee, which is composed of four members of the county
up for that lost revenue. The state agreed to the annexation sales tax rebate to encourage cities to annex urban areas. Kent gets a portion of the state sales tax collected in the city to help pay for annexation costs. Kent also received a big boost from the 2012 Legislature when it approved $7 million out of the capital budget to help fund improvements to the Briscoe/ Desimone levee along the Green River. “Getting this money given the economy is huge,” said Wilmot, who added the $7 million levee funding ranked as the largest single expenditure out of the capital budget. State Sen. Joe Fain, RAuburn, helped secure the levee funding. “The levees matter a great deal to homeowners and businesses who worry about flooding throughout
the Kent Valley,” Fain said. “These investments help ensure the integrity of the levees and move us down the path toward certification. Eventually this will help lower flood-insurance premiums in the area and keep the valley’s economic engine strong.” The capital budget allocates funding for building and construction projects statewide. The Briscoe/Desimone levee is part of the city’s ongoing Green River Levee Improvement Program. The levee protects portions of Kent, Renton and Tukwila from flooding and is between South 180th Street and South 200th Street. City officials hope to start work on the Briscoe/Desimone levee in the spring of 2013 or later depending on additional funding for the estimated $15 million project.
council. The committee will decide whether to forward the recommendation to the full board. “I was asked to prepare the resolutions necessary for a decision which will include a budget resolution and another authorizing the executive (Dow Constantine) to enter into agreements with the Green River cities (Auburn, Kent, Tukwila,)” Lund said. “The direction was to have these documents as vehicles for voting by the committee. “I will likely draft them to reflect the advisory committee recommendation as a starting point, though the committee may amend them for different scenarios.” Lund said she is aiming for a special May 7 flood district executive committee meeting to consider the sandbag removal proposal so the committee can forward the measure to the full board possibly later in May. King County paid for the
installation of the sandbags in the fall of 2009 through the flood control district by delaying planned projects. Kent received $2.59 million from the county to place nearly 17,000 sandbags along 12 miles of levees to heighten the levees and help protect the city from flooding in case the thendamaged Hanson Dam could not hold back enough water. No heavy rainstorms struck since the January 2009 storm that damaged an abutment next to the dam, so the bags were never tested. Lund said she expects to know by next week whether any funds remain from the sandbag installation project. “There was some discussion that there is a small amount of funding remaining from the original budget to install the sandbags,” Lund said. “We are researching that amount which might help off-set the costs.”
Located on the Auburn Regional Medical Center Campus, the new practice offers the convenience of having imaging, lab and other services nearby. Regional Medical Obstetrics, Gynecology & Urogynecology accepts most major medical insurance, including Medicare and Medicaid. For more information or to schedule an appointment, please call 253-288-5377.
Azonic Custom Dentures
RegionalClinics.com
202 N. Division Street | Auburn, WA 98001
Thomas E. Hauser, L.D, D.P.D. -JDFOTFE %FOUVSJTU
To schedule an appointment, call 253-288-5377. Physician is an employee of The Regional Medical Clinic and is not employed by Auburn Regional Medical Center. The hospital shall not liable for the actions or treatments provided by physicians.
. 4USFFU 4& 4VJUF % "VCVSO
www.AzonicDentures.com
Custom Onsite Dental Services t 'SJFOEMZ 4UBò t 'VMM 1BSUJBM %FOUVSFT t *NQMBOU "UUBDINFOUT t 1SFDJTJPO "UUBDINFOUT t 3FMJOFT 3FQBJST Call Today and Save Money Now!
(253) 833-1834
607380
April 27, 2012 [5]
www.kentreporter.com [ SCIENCE from page 1 ] It is this unique approach to teaching that caused Chamberlain to receive the Mary Haviland Science Teacher of the Year Award from the Washington State Science and Engineering Fair. Her students also took home the Excellence in Scientific and Engineering Achievement Award for Schools. “I was thrilled to win the award, but also deeply touched,” Chamberlain said. “No one person wins this type of award based on their own merits. I work with an incredible team of dedicated science teachers at Meridian who believe in the value of studentcentered inquiry learning and our passion together drives the success of the department.” Chamberlain believes students learn best when teachers use creative ways
to engage them in the subject. “I do whatever I have to to get my students interested in what I am teaching,” she said. “I am not afraid to get dirty, get outside and up to my elbows in grime and gunk or get a bit silly to make a point or to help students understand a concept.” Chamberlain believes having students participate in a science fair is the best learning tool. “There is a big dif- The state science competition recently brought out the best in Kent School District students and teachers. COURTESY PHOTO ference in a student engaging in a lab activity than one stuck data, correlating it with fair and their enthusiasm ence program at Meridian. reading text books in a published research.” has been contagious,” she “I am absolutely in love classroom,” she said. “The Chamberlain uses forsaid. “My current students with teaching and am level of learning increases mer students as mentors benefit greatly from this sure I will be still up to logarithmically when stufor her current students. partnership as it validates my elbows in goo 25 years dents focus on a question “My former students the importance of what from now,” she said. “The they are deeply interested are able to give current they are studying.” students motivate me to in and then attempt to students the gift of their Chamberlain hopes to be the best I can be every make sense of their own experience for the science continue building the sciday.”
District students sweep awards at state science fair A record-breaking 45 students from the Kent School District were among the 560 competing at the 55th annual Washington State Science and Engineering Fair on March 30-31 at Bremerton High School. Schools represented were Meridian, Mill Creek and Sunrise elementaries. The district won high honors with nine firstplace efforts, 15 seconds, 15 thirds and three special awards.
First-place trophies were awarded to Anthony Rudenko, Ostap Ben, Rebecca Nielsen, Kelsey Newcomb, AJ Soccey, Garrett Stewart, Ravneet Purewal, Sheridan Brown, and Kelsey Evenson Second-place honors went to Jordan Ortiz, Juan Alvarez Villa, Ahbishek Mor, Makenna Heiss, Lauren-Julia Melamed, Gavin Michaels, Justin McDaniel, David Balint, Brittany Woke, Luis Moreno, Ilya Russu, Celeste Mader, Elana Cueto, Victoria Roberts, Radha Goewey. Third places went to Tristan Ingold, Benjamin Wadowski, Charlotte Ross-Lyons, Amelia Stergion, Chaya Nguyen, Josh
Missing Teeth? Unhappy with Your Dentures? Free Educational Seminar Thursday, May 17th at 6:00 PM Seattle Airport Marriott -3201 S. 176th Street
Tingstad, Skyler Mortensen, Rita Kanonik, Monique Dabalos, Kinza Mohammad, Kaarina Charlot, Junaina Shamdeen Ashley Spickelmier, Irie Frigillana and Kathryn Araki. In addition to Best in Category, Anthony Rudenko and Ostap Ben also won Museum of Flight awards and the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) award for their project on airplane flap design using a wind tunnel. Kelsey Evenson won an invitation to compete in the Broadcom MASTERS, a national competition for middle schools.
Replace Ice Damage now! 9/11’ Leyland Cypress
$69.95ea. Save $40.00
We offer a Free Educational Seminar to explain the advances in technology that have made the dental implant process a quick, same-day procedure. The doctors will discuss the procedure costs, financing options and answer any questions you may have, all at absolutely no cost to you. All attendees will receive a certificate for a FREE Consultation and CBCT Scan ($380 value).
Azaleas 2 gal. Bud & Bloom
or visit us at www.dentalimplantsbynealoms.com to reserve your seat
BRIEFS
Kent-Meridian High School invites anyone interested to join a discussion from their School Improvement Team social on May 3. Members are hosting a “Have a Voice Social” with snacks and beverages. They will discuss the new direction the team is moving in and give a brief presentation on next year’s goals. The event is from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the high school library. … Kent resident Oksana Solovyanchik received honors at the University of Washington, Tacoma. Solovyanchik landed on the dean’s list for autumn quarter with a 3.8 grade-point average and winter with a 3.9. She graduates with a nursing degree. … Kentlake High School is putting on “Beauty and the Beast” on April 27-28. The evening show starts at 7 p.m. and Saturday matinee is at 2. Tickets are $12 for general admission and $10 for students, children, and seniors. Tickets are sold at the door and online at brownpapertickets.com. … Kentridge High School is hosting “Legally Blonde - The Musical” on May 2-5 and May 9-12. Evening shows are 7 p.m. and Saturday matinees are at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10 and go on sale April 18. … Kent-Meridian High School is showing “Tartuffe” on May 9-12. There is a 7 p.m. curtain for all shows. Tickets: $8 for adults, $6 for students. … Kentwood High School’s “Man of La Mancha” is from May 16-19 and 24-26. There is a 7 p.m. curtain for all shows. Tickets are $10 at the door.
n e p O w o N tand S m r a F r Frage
Hear from patients who have had their smiles restored in just one day!
Call 206-569-6486
School
$7.95ea.
Your new farm stand in Kent!
12” Blooming Ivy Geranium Baskets
$23.95ea. Large Mushrooms
$1.79lb. Easy Stem Potatoes
99¢ea.
1 gal Sweet Mini Peppers Tomato/Pepper Plants 2 lb.bag ea.
$1.99
$3.29
Open Mon-Sat 9-6 • Sun 10-5 25189 Frager Road S. Kent, WA 98032 2 blocks south of LA Fitness off West Valley Hwy
206.387.8733 / 253.266.2394
616338
www.kentreporter.com Last week’s poll results:
“Do you favor low-priority enforcement of marijuana offenses in the city?� Yes: 85% No: 15%
The dangerous combination of teens, texting and driving has emerged as a bigger problem on local and national roadways. Rising statistics of crashes and injuries, even fatalities, suggest a need for more public awareness, peer-to-peer education among teens and involvement from institutions, notably schools. The dangers of texting and driving are well documented, but according to a survey just released by State Farm Insurance with Harris Interactive, teens still believe it’s OK to text and drive. A few facts from the survey: t 5FYUJOH BNPOH UFFO drivers has not declined: 57 percent of teens admit to texting while driving despite widespread media attention about the dangers of distracted driving. t 5FFOT XIP BENJUUFE UP UFYUJOH XIJMF driving were nearly three times as likely to report being in a car crash. t .PTU UFFOT VOEFSTUBOE UIFSF NBZ CF DPO sequences of texting while driving, but do not see it as severe as driving drunk. According to national data from highway safety groups, injuries and deaths related to distracted driving are VQ 5P RVBOUJGZ QFSDFOU PG BMM GBUBM DSBTIFT and 20 percent of injuries in 2009 across the country involved reports of distracted driving, BDDPSEJOH UP UIF /BUJPOBM )JHIXBZ 5SBÄ? D Safety Administration. [ more KLAAS page 8 ]
KENT .com
REPORTER
Sarah Kehoe reporter: skehoe@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600 ext. 5056
Steve Hunter reporter: shunter@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600 ext. 5052
Advertising 253.872.6731 Classified Marketplace 800.388.2527 Letters letters@kentreporter.com 19426 68th Ave. South Kent, WA 98032
A Division of Sound Publishing
For delivery inquiries 253.872.6610 or e-mail circulation@ kentreporter.com
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) recently celebrated its recent two-year anniversary in front of the Supreme Court. The controversial law finds itself in front of the highest court in the land Bę FS TUBUFT JODMVEJOH 8BTIJOHUPO KPJOFE together to challenge its constitutionality. After ferocious public debate and two years of implementation, the legislation still faces an uncertain fate — and supporters still find themselves working to convince a majority of Americans that this signature health care reform isn’t a bad thing. Current Gallup polling shows about three-fourths of Americans believe the law is unconstitutional. [ more GUEST OP page 7 ]
Jonathan Bechtle
Mark Klaas editor: editor@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600 ext. 27-5050
Anniversary of health care law nothing to celebrate
COMMENTARY
pshepherd@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600 ext. 1050
Dann Mead Smith
Polly Shepherd publisher:
â—? LET TERS...YOUR OPINION COUNTS: To submit an item or photo: e-mail submissions@kentreporter.com; mail attn: Letters, Kent Reporter, 19426 68th Ave. S., Kent, WA, 98032; fax 253.437.6016
Pesticides applied only to parking lot Last week a resident wrote to the Kent Reporter with concerns about the use of pesticides at Clark Lake Park and the potential risks and impacts to the park and park users. I want to clarify that we did make an application the week of April 12, but only within the small parking lot off of 240th. This is done to control weeds and invasive plants within the sidewalk, curbs and parking lot area. We did not and do not, however, apply pesticides anywhere else in the 130-acre park. The city practices integrated pest management principles in all of our parks. Specific to Clark Lake Park, our primary pest management goal is to control the invasive plants and weeds. Throughout the park, our primary control methods remain mowing and many hours of manual removal by
Letters policy The Kent Reporter welcomes letters to the editor on any subject. Letters must include a name, address and daytime phone number for verification purposes. Letters may be edited for length. Letters should be no more than 250 words in length. Submissions may be printed both in the paper and electronically.
city staff and numerous dedicated volunteers. Great progress has been made in recent years. The parking lot remains vulnerable, though. Invasive plants such as scotch broom, canary reed grass and blackberry often start JO IJHI USBÄ? D BSFBT BOE XPSL their way into the property from there. The application in the parking lot strategically targets this small yet vulnerable
area and better protects the rest of the natural area from the encroachment of invasive plants. By being strategic in our practices, we have reduced our use of pesticides throughout the park system and continue to seek further reductions as we continually refine our practices. I hope this additional information on our approach to pesticide use helps address some of the concerns voiced by .T -POH
– Jeff Watling, director of Kent Parks Recreation and Community Services
Protect the ducks with a screen I’m a baby duckling. I was recently rescued from one of the worst fates that awaits a duckling in all the city of Kent. From the time of my hatching, I was warned by my [ more LETTERS page 7 ]
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Results are in for Best Of Kent We have once again wrapped up the annual Best Of Kent readership poll. The winners and finalists are in the special section in today’s paper. The year-over-year increase of ballots, both online and in print, is amazing. I would like to thank all who took the time to vote for their favorites. It is so incredible to see this great community take such pride
in their retailers, people and service providers that make Kent a great city. We had multiple categories again this year where there were ties in the finalist rankings. I would like to congratulate everyone who received votes and thank the loyal readers of the Kent Reporter for their support. After many hours of counting votes for the great prizes donated
COMMENTARY
Vote online:
Driving the message home to distracted, texting teens
Polly Shepherd
“Do you expect to pay less for liquor in privatized stores?�
� Q U O T E O F N O T E : “My campaign for King County Sheriff is based on leadership and accountability. The Sheriff ’s Office is at a crossroads. We are headed down a road where we run the risk of losing support of the citizens we serve. I can’t let that happen. “ – John Urquhart, who announced his candidacy for King County sheriff.
EDITOR’S NOTE
?
Question of the week:
www.kentreporter.com
Mark Klaas
KENT
OPINION
[6] April 27, 2012
by Kent Station, the honor of drawing the winners went to my creative design manager, Julie Black. I am thrilled to present you the 2012 Best of Kent picked by the readers of the Kent Reporter. A very special thank you goes out to John Hinds and Sommer Ueda at Kent Station who generously donated all of the prizes to our lucky readers. Polly Shepherd is regional publisher of the Kent Reporter, Auburn Reporter and Covington/ Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter.
April 27, 2012 [7]
www.kentreporter.com
[ LETTERS from page 6 ] mama, “Stay away from storm drains – they are dark dungeons of death for any unsuspecting duckling.” But when you hurry across a five-lane highway with your bothers and sizers, it’s easy to become disoriented by the loud threatening noise of motor monsters coming at you. My 12 brothers and sisters and I were lucky. The compassionate citizen who notified the fire station and the firemen who rescued us are wonderful humans. But my mama returned home last night from a meeting of concerned Ducks Against Drain Disasters. There she learned that this terrible situation has been going on for a long time in Kent. Ever year ducklings fall into the death dungeons (storm drains), and many do not survive.
[ GUEST OP from page 6 ] According to the White House, individual liberty matters less than the law’s big benefits, which are supposedly just around the bend. The view from the states, however, is decidedly less optimistic. The problems with the PPACA are so severe that we feel called upon to join together on behalf of our two organizations and enumerate the specific harmful effects of the law. The PPACA imposes new burdens on states like Washington in three dangerous and damaging
Even though in the past, Samaritan citizens, city utility workers and police officers have come to their aid. It is terrifying for ducklings to be trapped beneath the highway and traumatic for mother ducks to lose their babies in this way. Ducks Against Drain Disasters would like to suggest a solution to this ongoing problem. Why not add screens to the storm drains? The expense should be minimal. Then in the future, community workers wouldn’t have to be dispatched to the drain site when they are needed elsewhere. Traffic showdowns wouldn’t occur, and mother ducks could nestle their babies beneath their wings at night with peaceful sighs of contented relief. – Laurie Saunders, Lucky-to-be-alive duckling No. 13
ways. First, it costs our businesses with new taxes. Second, it costs our residents with higher premiums. Third, it costs our state, threatening to reduce access to care for Medicaid recipients on the losing end of strained budgets. Tallying these cumulative economic burdens explains and justifies today’s stubborn public opposition. Rather than controlling costs, the law controls lives – even to the point of worsening them. Consider the costs to businesses, which are already holding down employment in anticipation of new
One option for removing sandbags
Change in tone with ShoWare?
Regarding the removal of the sandbags written on April 13 by Steve Hunter, there was mention of the relative cost associated with the removal and obvious concerns for the negative impact it would create for the city budget. I’m not sure how this would work with regard to unions and city workers, however, the thought came to me how you might do this relatively free. Is there anything wrong from a legal standpoint to utilize the inmates at the Regional Justice Center to help with the removal? They could certainly benefit in many ways by being outside, getting some exercise and perhaps paid a minimum wage if appropriate. Could be a win for the city and the inmates. – James De Donato
After reading Steve Hunter’s story on the Kent City Council’s recent approval of an economic study of the ShoWare Center (April 20), it occurred to me the council’s current rationale for owning an event center has changed over the past five years. As an example, see Reporter stories from July 7 and 21, 2008 (www.kentreporter.com/ news/22948384.html www.kentreporter.com/news/25600309. html). The theme in 2008 seemed to be “no worries.” The City of Wenatchee can attest that hope is not a plan when applied to an event center. What is Kent’s plan for future years if large subsidies for the ShoWare Center need to continue? – Don Villeneuve
legislation. The Joint Committee on Taxation finds that the law will be responsible for a total of $400 billion in new taxes and fees in the next seven years. Even the Obama Administration’s own Department of Health & Human Services (via the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) admits the law will push health care expenditures higher. Though the Obama Administration continues to deny it, the calculus is simple: more health care spending equals more expenses on alreadystrapped businesses.
What about the impact on our fellow citizens? The law has raised, not lowered, premiums. Consulting firm Aon Hewitt estimates that premiums in the individual market are some 5 percent higher this year because of the health care law. More is to come. The law wreaks havoc on our state budgets. In the first 10 years, it will increase Medicaid costs as people who currently qualify for Medicaid but opt out of the program are forced to enroll. While the U.S. Supreme Court focused on the key issue of whether PPACA’s individual
WALMART’S COMMUNITY GRANT PROGRAM gave money to five organizations aimed at helping the community. Communities In Schools of Kent, the City of Covington, The Boys and Girls Club of Covington, The Kiwanis Club of Covington and the Covington Rotary Club all received grants. The grants were distributed at Walmart in Covington during a ribbon-cutting ceremony that included a live mariachi band and speeches. Communities In Schools of Kent received $1,000. These funds will go toward continuing to provide services to the youth of Kent and Covington. The organization helps kids succeed.
mandate is constitutional, the law’s devastating economic consequences cannot be ignored. Its intended reforms raise taxes, increase premiums and balloon budgets while businesses, individuals and states struggle to gain the upper hand on their finances. Whether the Supreme Court finds it constitutional or not, this is one law America can’t afford. Dann Mead Smith is president of Washington Policy Center (washingtonpolicy.org) and Jonathan Bechtle is CEO of the Freedom Foundation (myfreedomfoundation.org).
NOW OPEN ON KENT’S EAST HILL
QC Nasal Spray
A breakthrough in allergy relief! Thorne’s QC Nasal Spray relieves dry and inflamed nasal membranes and sinus passages, sneezing, stuffy nose, watery nasal discharge, and headache caused by rhinitis and sinusitis. Thorne’s QC Nasal Spray is a homeopathically-prepared nasal spray utilizing Euphorbium 6X which is indicated for hay fever, headache, fluent nasal discharge, stuffy nose, sneezing, and post-nasal discharge with a raw, sore throat and Quercetin Chalcone 2X which blocks histamine release from mast cells and basophils, and inhibits the proinflammatory enzymes cyclooxgenase and lipoxygenase.
608552
MARDIX PHARMACY 13308 SE 240th, Kent
253-630-3833
Next to QFC in Meridian Valley Center
BACK DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND
Reckless
/0 $07&3 t $06/53: #-6&4 "/% 30$,
LARGE BEER GARDEN
HAPPY HOUR 3-7pm
DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS Karaoke - Wed & Sun 9pm to 1am
16 BEERS ON TAP FOURTEEN 50” BIG SCREEN TVs POOL/DARTS/GAMES FREE WI-FI
253-277-0500
SMITH St
104th Ave SE
The effective combination of these two homeopathic preparations will offer you immediate and long-term relief.
a Fe Rodeo t n a S
LIVE MUSIC SATURDAYS at 8pm
r
SE 256th St SE Ke ntKa ng ley Rd
10432 SE Kent-Kangley Rd OPEN 1OAM - 2AM
608554
[8] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com rules, risks for drinking, drug use, texting, talking on the cell phone and risky driving are reduced. “Research shows that good parenting really pays off when it comes to reducing crash risk for teens,” said Jonna VanDyk, occupant protection manager for the Washington Traffic Safety Commission (WTSC). Parents can play an important role, but not every teen connects with mom or dad. That’s where the WTSC – with partners like State Farm Insurance – is stepping in. An ongoing project in that partnership is challenging teen drivers to question themselves. “Could you be persuaded to put your cell phone in your trunk while you’re driving?” the project asked. As expected, the reaction was pronounced. “They really squawked at the idea. No way,” VanDyk said.
[ KLAAS from page 6 ] And the age group with the greatest proportion of distracted drivers was the under-20 group. In our state, from 2006 to 2008, there were 224,503 drivers involved in injury crashes, of which 20,205 of the crashes (9 percent) were caused by driver distraction of all types. Concerned officials in the public and traffic safety business consider a driver talking on a cell phone as impaired as a driver with a .08 blood alcohol level; a driver who is texting is as impaired as a driver with a .16 BAC. If you’re a parent of teenage drivers, as I am, this is alarming stuff. “It’s a significantly growing problem,” said Sgt. Robert Constant, supervisor of the Kent Police’s traffic unit. “It’s a challenge, especially with a generation that’s so techy, with the urge to text.” While difficult to quantify, texting drivers are a prevailing problem. As Constant observed: “It’s generally an upturning trend with everything from the introduction of the iPhone … to a continual barrage of media that’s available, and the attempt to communicate.” State and local leaders are accelerating the need to address the problem. The problem with and answers to distracted teen driving, as state traffic officials see it, begins at home. Data from the Washington Healthy Youth Survey shows when parents are more involved in the lives of their teens, and enforce clear, consistent
Problem persists Officials have found that teens understand the act is wrong, but are not inclined to do anything about it. The problem evolves around the teens’ compulsive use of the cell phone, for many the source of their inner-circle communicative world, much of which is nonverbal. That addiction becomes a significant problem when the phone buzzes or lights up while they are occupied behind the wheel.
25230 104th Ave SE Kent, WA 98030
Tom Jacobs Branch Manager
Robbyn Adelsman 253-569-0106
“It creates a sense of urgency or compulsiveness” when driving to respond to it, VanDyk said. “There is that urge to respond while driving.” Peer pressure, not wanting to ignore friends, leads to texting and driving. And a new study shows that 75 percent of young adults think there’s nothing wrong with that. “If this is the way you communicate with your peer group, you’ve become kind of desensitized as to how much that is taking away from whatever else might be demanding your attention,” VanDyk said. Peer-to-peer education is one way to attack the problem. The WTSC and State Farm, for instance, have gone back to school. There have been discussions, assemblies and other awareness projects. They have teamed up to provide teens with an opportunity, an incentive to take action while earning a $500 grant for a school group such as cheerleading, a sports team, choir or club. High schools can get involved. Teens need to help each other here. It is a good place to start. It is time to make it a priority. Hands-free devices are not a cureall. And teens don’t always do what their parents demand. “Teens listen to other teens, more so than us,” VanDyk said. “They can persuade fellow teens that texting and driving is dangerous.” To learn more about the programs, visit www.wtsc.wa.gov.
Court hearing for boy accused of rapes rescheduled for third time BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
A hearing scheduled in King County Juvenile Court in Seattle to determine whether a 16-year-old Kent boy charged with rape should be tried as an adult has been rescheduled for the third time. “The defense requested more time to prepare for the hearing,” said Dan Donohoe, spokesman for the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, in an email. The boy had been scheduled to be in court Monday, April 23. The defense attorney also received requests to the judge to reschedule hearings in March and February for more time to prepare for the case. The latest hearing date is May 21, Donohoe said. Prosecutors charged the boy Nov. 10 with two counts
Correction Meeker Middle School eighth-grader Dekker “Dutch” O’Farrell received
of first-degree rape and two counts of first-degree kidnapping with sexual motivation in connection with attacks on a 17-year-old girl and a 19-year-old woman on separate nights in late October on the East Hill along Kent-Kangley Road. Prosecutors will request that the boy be tried as an adult. The boy attended Kentwood High School in Covington, where Kent Police arrested him Nov. 7. If convicted in Juvenile Court, the boy would be incarcerated up to his 21st birthday, according to prosecutors. The minimum sentence in adult court is 28 to 36 years in prison with a potential maximum sentence of up to life in prison. Because the boy was 15 when the alleged rapes occurred, the Juvenile Court first handled the charges. A Juvenile Court judge must order adult prosecution for the boy and decline the case, which would send it to King County Superior Court.
more story online… kentreporter.com
the Kent Sunrise Rotary Club Service & Citizenship Award. The Kent Reporter listed the wrong Rotary Club in its April 20 edition.
Bring Your Challenges
Jose Alvarez 206-219-0523
Philip Baskaron 206-255-3400
Pat Conger 206-227-1959
Dawn Dubé 206-396-8926
Kathy DuBois-Schwab 206-380-6716
Jennifer Gilbert-Smith 253-630-1828
Jan Glenn 253-261-3025
Calvin Gligorea 206-795-0794
Phyllis Hay 206-295-7649
253-854-9400/ www.NWKent.PNWRealty.com Carla Vertrees Office Manager
Lorelei Windhorn 253-569-1058
Elizabeth Waloweek 253-217-6173
Denise Tholl 253-740-6986
Karen Hoffman 253-797-3939
VISIT US ONLINE FOR A LIST OF PARTICIPATING HOMES!
Prudential Northwest Realty Associates Teams Up With Realtors Nationwide for a National Open House Weekend
Homebuyers looking to take advantage of the extended and expanded homebuyer tax credits before they expire, should leave the weekend of April 28-29th open and plan on attending the annual National Open House Weekend! Buyers are encouraged to look for blue balloons the weekend of April 28-29th! Homes with signs featuring these blue balloons will be held OPEN to the public! Prudential Northwest Realty proud to be a part of this event. Check out my website for a list of all participating Open Houses! Open House Weekend is a collaborative effort of Realtors around the nation. By working together, we can help YOU reach all of your Real Estate Goals!
Stop By Our Open House on April 28-29
Julie Horton 206-300-0400
Len Huber 206-930-8079
Michele Hunt 206-334-7449
We’re excited to participate in this National Campaign to increase Real Estate public awareness. Hope to see you!
Bruce Spears 206-769-8529
An independently owned and operated broker member of BRER Affiliates, Inc. Prudential, Prudential logo and the Rock symbol are registered service marks of Prudential Financial, Inc. and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Used under license with no other affiliation of Prudential. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Pat Sheets 253-740-1102
Mary Saucier 253-639-8608
Teresa Saenger 206-510-8407
Florence Ong 253-347-0510
Heather McCurdy 253-653-3668
Teresa Lyman 253-709-0913
Cindy Lucas 206-714-9716
Cris LeCompte 206-595-7422
Zdenka Kalezic 206-407-4404
Cathy Jacobs 206-755-4840
Leon Lyman 253-639-3350
611117
Karen Stevenson 206-251-6200
April 27, 2012 [9]
www.kentreporter.com
KENT
COMMUNITY
KentHOPE meeting builds connections BY SARAH KEHOE
skehoe@kentreporter.com
KentHOPE had a record number of people attend their latest weekly planning meeting. “We had a large turnout that included individuals from neighborhood associations and several people who were new to the issue of homelessness and eager to participate,” said Pat Gray, KentHOPE member. “Everyone who attended is very committed to the goal of establishing a day center and volunteered specific skills to help during the
process and after the day center is established.” April 19 was the first general meeting of KentHOPE held in the evening. The executive committee, made up of Chris Gough and Mike Johnson from Union Gospel Mission, Daniel McDougall-Treacy of Valley Cities, Rev. Bill Kirlin-Hackett of the InterFaith Task Force on Homelessness and nine others from various faith communities in Kent, meets in weekly planning sessions. At this meeting, KentHOPE members discussed their vision of establishing a day center and eventual overnight shelter to
provide hope and assist those who are homeless in pathways to stable housing and a more secure future. The group has been seeking another location for their day center and a shelter for the homeless ever since the Kent City Council declined the use of the Kent Resource Center to house their needs. “Right now we are looking for another location for our day center and eventual shelter,” Gray said. “We are working with a realtor and viewing those that seem promising.” KentHOPE has 19 congregations represented either on their executive committee, general meeting
Tech Expo
ENTRIES SOUGHT FOR FREE CAR SHOW Torklift Central RV hosts a classic car show June 2 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. during its open house at 917 Central Ave. S. The first annual Stuff the RV Classic Car Show is free to enter and attend. Entries must be received by May 18. “To qualify for entry, vehicles can be no newer than 1976,” said Rick Shafer, general manager. “The year signifies when Torklift Central first opened for business.” Several prizes will be awarded during the event. A free catered barbecue lunch is also provided during the car show. The car show kicks off the Stuff the RV donation drive benefitting soldiers stationed overseas. To enter the car show, call 253-299-0076.
attendees, or receiving emails or calls from individuals indicating a desire to help. “We have had people in the community contacting us asking how they can help the homeless right now, so we have decided to publish on our web site and in a brochure all of the community meals and services that presently exist to help our marginalized population,” Gray said. “We are happy to take on the role of facilitator to connect volunteers with the services that now exist.” For more information, visit kenthope.co.uk/.
Carmela Lu, left, Maleeha Nizar, Lauren Kane and Olivia Van Rens – fourth- and fifth- graders at Pine Tree Elementary – focus on their Movie Making in the Classroom project Tuesday at the Kent School District’s Tech Expo at the ShoWare Center. The Boeing-sponsored Tech Expo is a showcase for the Kent, Covington and surrounding communities to understand the extensive use of technology in schools and businesses. Kent School District students and teachers demonstrated how technology is used in their classrooms alongside local businesses showcasing technology in both traditional and nontraditional careers. STEVE HUNTER, Kent Reporter SAXOPHONIST DARREN MOTAMEDY will return to Kent to play in the fifth annual Evening of Jazz & Art Showcase from 5-8 p.m. June 28 at the Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith Street. For more information about the showcase, call 253-856-5164.
Join the "FLD" phenomenon!
For responsible low income Kent cat owners…
May 6 9am - 3pm
Spay/Neuter for cats. $25 spay t neuter
underlying facial support which plumps your lips,
Call 253-520-6425 or email spaykent@hotmail.com
616577
Schedule an appointment today.
calling them the fountain of youth for denture wearers.
Dr. Lance Timmerman 2 0 6 .745.4 852 7100 Fort Dent Way · Suite 270 Tukwila, WA 98188 DrTimmerman.com
605004
“Facelift dentures changed my life.”
[10] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
e!
c
t as
n a h
C
L
Eat. Experience. Enjoy!
It’s not too late to take advantage of our delicious
April at 7pm April 10-15 Anniversary Dining Specials! Visit our website at muckleshootcasino.com for more details and month-long dining specials throughout the Casino. See Spice Bay Buffet, “8”, Coyaba Grill, Island Deli, Jugglers Deli for more information. Management reserves all rights.
2402 Auburn Way S., Auburn, WA 98002 800-804-4944 | muckleshootcasino.com
Chiropractor earns top certification
Business
BRIEFS
Gary Blackburn, doctor Elsewhere of chiropractic, recently t Yogurtland, pioneers of received certification by the self-serve frozen yogurt the Council of Extremity category, has come to Kent. Adjusting. The new franchise, 10216 Dr. Blackburn joins an SE 256th St., Suite elite group of only 106, in the East Hill 900 Certified ChiVillage Center, next ropractic Extremito Kent Meridian ties Practitioners in High School, is the the world. company’s fifth He is also a Cerlocation in the state. tified Chiropractic It officially opened Sports Physician, Friday. which indicates Blackburn Franchise owners exceptional Lauren and Gregg proficiency in the Bennett, who also own two assessment and treatment other Seattle locations, first of the root causes of recurstumbled upon Yogurtland ring pain in the spine and while visiting their daughextremities. ter in college in the San Blackburn has worked Francisco area last year. with Olympians, profesThey soon began looking sional athletes and teams, into franchise opportunities. and locally, has worked “As people are becomwith the Valley Regional ing more health-conscious Fire Authority in injury and moving from ice cream prevention and perforto healthier options, the mance training. frozen yogurt industry is Blackburn’s practice, booming,” Gregg Bennett Rebound, is at 11107 SE said. “I’m looking forward Kent-Kangley Road. to providing a healthier For more information, dessert option to kids and visit www.youcanrebound. families in local neighborcom. hoods.
“Kent is a great market for us as we will be the first in the city and our product is strongly appealing to the local demographic.” Since the opening of its first location in Fullerton, Calif. in 2006, Yogurtland has grown to more than 175 locations in the U.S., Mexico and Guam. t The Washington State Chapter of CCIM (Certified Commercial Investment Member) announces the launch of its newly designed website at www. CCIMWA.com. Designed and developed by Applied Imagination Media (AIM), the new site boasts user-friendly navigation, an event calendar, and a news blog where CCIMWA members are able to contribute news, ideas and opinions that are of value to other chapter members. t ć F Kent Staples Stores on 104th Avenue Southeast and East Valley Highway offer binder recycling. Shoppers will save $2 on a new binder for each binder they bring in to recycle. It is Staples’ first-of-its kind retail program with TerraCycle, Inc., which creates an eco-friendly, money-saving solution for customers to trade-in used binders.
THE ONLY GUTTER SYSTEM THAT HAS EARNED THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SEAL OF APPROVAL!
Patented One-Piece Gutter System! Serving Kent for Over 15 Years!
F % F O 5 7 stallation In
Card AND $250.00 Cashe. with purchas
Works with Fir AND Pine Needles!
LeafGuard Gutters never clog. Guaranteed. Or we will clean them for FREE.
253-200-1102 Call NOW for a Free Estimate
April 27, 2012 [11]
www.kentreporter.com
WE’RE HARD AT WORK ON WHAT MATTERS MOST IN
WASHINGTON. At Bank of America, we’re working every day to help support small businesses, homeowners and nonprofit organizations in Washington. We’re lending, investing and giving to fuel the local economy and create stronger communities.
HERE’S WHAT WE’RE DOING:
= $10 Million
= 1,000 Homeowners
Loaned
$222.5
MILLION
in new credit to Washington small businesses in 2011, to help them grow, hire and strengthen the area economy.
= $100 Thousand
Worked with
Contributed
20,881
$3.01
Washington homeowners facing financial difficulty since 2008, to modify their mortgages.
to Washington nonprofits in 2011 to help support their work in the community.
To learn more about how Bank of America is hard at work in Washington, please visit bankofamerica.com/Seattle
© 2012 Bank of America Corporation. Member FDIC. ARP2P4Z5
MILLION
[12] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
E (SBOO H J O F 0Q
America’s #1 Choice for Dental Implants
is now in
Seattle!
Face UIF XPSME i* TVGGFSFE XJUI CBE UFFUI since I was a teenager.  Imagine dealing with failing teeth so young in life.  As a musician, I’m often in front of an audience. I wanted a rock star smile ...
BOE OPX * IBWF POF w
- Kurt C., real ClearChoice patient
Tooth loss is not your fault. Doing nothing about it is. Come see how easy it is to live the comfortable life you deserve ...
0VS SJTL GSFF DPOTVMUBUJPO will show you how. CALL TOLL FREE
1.866.227.7592 TODAY and receive a free 3D CAT scan (a $700 value)
www.clearchoice.com .JDIBFM % #SPPLT %.% .4 t (VJMMFSNP $IBDPO %%4 t ,SJTUJOF (SBDF %%4 .4 Qualified patients can have their procedure in one day after initial workup without additional bone graft surgery. Results may vary in individual cases. America’s #1 Choice determined by an Independent Patient Survey 2011. Š 2012 ClearChoice Dental Implant Centers
April 27, 2012 [13]
www.kentreporter.com
Rebate Savings on Select WhirlpoolÂŽ Appliances t 8BUFS -FWFM 4FMFDUJPOT #NTW4501XQ
AmanaÂŽ Electric Dryer
SAVE 130
t %SZJOH 5FNQFSBUVSFT
ON THE PAIR
SAVE $ 300 AFTER REBATE**
SAVE $ 200
AmanaÂŽ Top Load Washer
$
LAST 3 DAYS
#NED4500VQ
WhirlpoolÂŽ 18 cu. ft. Top-Freezer Refrigerator
WhirlpoolÂŽ 25 cu. ft. Side-by-Side Refrigerator
t 4QJMM.J[FS™ Glass Shelves
t 1V3ÂŽ Water Filtration System $ &% -)"98#
#W8TXNGFWQ
FOR THE PAIR $
*WASHER MSRP 429 *DRYER MSRP $
NOW
*MSRP 799
598
698
SAVE $ 400 AFTER REBATE**
ON THE PAIR AFTER REBATE** WhirlpoolÂŽ DuetÂŽ Front Load Washer
$ K L L% $ ' $L L( % # L&% %*L $%$
#WFW9550WW
WhirlpoolÂŽ DuetÂŽ Electric Dryer t "VUPNBUJD $ZDMFT
#GI6FARXXF
#WED9550WW
WASHER MSRP $1099
Over the life of your ENERGY STAR qualified washer, you’ll save enough money in operating costs to pay for the matching dryer.1
$
Price Good 4-15/4-28. + $100 MasterCardÂŽ Prepaid Card Rebate** By Mail. Offer Good 4-19/4-29
An ENERGY STAR qualified Dishwasher is estimated to save about $50 in utility costs over its lifetime.1
*MSRP $2299
WhirlpoolÂŽ Tall Tub Dishwasher *MSRP 499
1998
$ NOW
*DRYER MSRP $1049
898 898
$
SAVE $ 100
Whirlpool GoldÂŽ 26 cu. ft. Satina Steel French Door Refrigerator
t 8BTI $ZDMFT
B309LC:@L@;2=,/0L?: 90B L # *L$% #H <@,741C492L,;;74,9.0>
An ENERGY STAR qualified Price Good 4-18/4-28. Refrigerator is estimated to save + $100 MasterCardÂŽ about $130 in energy costs over its Prepaid Card Rebate** By Mail. Offer Good 4-19/4-29 lifetime.1
Price Good 4-22/4-28
SAVE $450
Shown on optional pedestals
1098
NOW
$ NOW
$
An ENERGY STAR qualified Refrigerator is estimated to save about $130 in energy costs over its lifetime.1
*MSRP 1299
$
$
$
t 1MBDF 4FUUJOHT t &DP 8BTI $ZDMF
Price Good 4-15/4-28. + $100 MasterCardÂŽ Prepaid Card Rebate** By Mail. Offer Good 4-19/4-29
#WDF510PAYS
398
$
NOW
Price Good 4-22 / 4-28
Replacing your old appliance with an ENERGY STARÂŽ qualified model is the smart choice. ENERGY STAR products use less energy, save money on electric bills, and help fight global warming.
NOWâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the Time to Save on WhirlpoolÂŽ
@;L?:
WhirlpoolÂŽ Top Load Washer
=0-,?0L-CL8,47LB4?3 ?30L;@=.3,>0L:1 >070.?L # *L$% # <@,741C492L(34=7;::7H ;;74,9.0> L 110=L2::/ ;=47L K ;=47L L
See store for details.
SAVE $ 100
t 8BTI $ZDMFT #WTW4950XW
$% # # H !# ! L #
WhirlpoolÂŽ Electric Dryer t "VUPNBUJD $ZDMFT
SAVE $250
498
$
ON THE PAIR
NOW
Prices Good 4-15/4-28
*MSRP $599 DRYER
498
$ NOW
Over the life of your ENERGY STAR qualified washer, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll save enough money in operating costs to pay for the matching dryer.1
Prices Good 4-15/4-28
Wash 3 Baskets of Laundry in a Single Load!
An ENERGY STAR qualified Refrigerator is estimated to save about $130 in energy costs over its lifetime.1
*MSRP $649 WASHER
#WED4900XW
AmanaÂŽ19 cu. ft. Bottom Freezer Refrigerator t Adjustable Glass Shelves "## 8&8
NOW
B4?3L7:BL8:9?37C ;,C809?>L:9L, <@,741C492L(34=7;::7H :=L 8,9,H ;@=.3,>0 LL,9/L@; See store for details.
SAVE 500 $
798 $798
NOW
AFTER REBATE**
Prices Good 4-15/4-28
*DRYER MSRP $999
Over the life of your ENERGY STAR qualified washer, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll save enough money in operating costs to pay for the matching dryer.1
NOW
Prices Good 4-15/4-28 + $100 MasterCardÂŽ Prepaid Card Pair Rebate** Good 4-19/4-29
t t 1V3ÂĽ 8BUFS 'JMUSBUJPO 4ZTUFN *MSRP $1099
(4' $ &9#
999
$
*MSRP $1499
Whirlpool GoldÂŽ 25 cu. ft. 4-Door Stainless Steel French-Door Refrigerator #GZ25FSRXYY
2499
$ NOW
*MSRP $2599 + $100 MasterCardÂŽ Prepaid Card Rebate** By Mail. Offer Good 4-19/ 4-29
1188
$
NOW
Price Good 4-18/4-28. By Mail. Offer Good 4-19/4-28 + $100 MasterCardÂŽ Prepaid Card Rebate**
SAVE $ 100
An ENERGY STAR qualified Refrigerator is estimated to save about $130 in energy costs over its lifetime.1
*WASHER MSRP $999
$
ON THE PAIR
WhirlpoolÂŽ 25 cu. ft. Side-by-Side Refrigerator
AFTER REBATE**
WhirlpoolÂŽ CabrioÂŽ Platinum Electric Dryer #WED8200YW
An ENERGY STAR qualified Refrigerator is estimated to save about $130 in energy costs over its lifetime.1
SAVE $ 200
WhirlpoolÂŽ CabrioÂŽ Platinum Top-Load Washer #WTW8200YW
$!
SAVE $ 411 AFTER REBATE**
An ENERGY STAR qualified Dishwasher is estimated to save about $50 in utility costs over its lifetime.1
Whirlpool GoldÂŽ Integrated Tall Tub Dishwasher t 5SJQMF 'JMUSBUJPO 4ZTUFN t 1MBDF 4FUUJOHT 8%5 1":#
*MSRP $549
448
$ NOW
Prices Good 4-22/4-28
**Mail-in offer only. See store for complete details. Offer good on select WhirlpoolÂŽ appliances. Void where prohibited by law. Cards are issued by Citibank, N.A. pursuant to a license from MasterCard International Incorporated. MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. Prepaid Card can be used everywhere Debit MasterCard cards are accepted..ÂŽRegistered trademark/TM Trademark of Whirlpool U.S.A. Š2012. All rights reserved. *All prices shown are Manufacturerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Suggested Retail Price. MSRP applies to the continental 48 United States and does not include such items as delivery, installation, installation accessories (i.e. range cords), or removal of old appliances. Actual dealer price may vary.
A P P L I A N C E S Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re proud to be a member of the largest buying organization in the country which brings you the combined purchasing power of thousands of retail stores nationwide. This huge buying power is passed along to our customers by means of lower prices every day on the finest name brand products in the world.
Store Hours: Mon-Fri 9 â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;til 7 4BU AUJM t 4VO AUJM
/& 4VOTFU #MWE t 3FOUPO 8"
Across from Albertsons & Starbucks in the Renton Highlands
XXX LJOHBOECVOOZT DPN t 425-277-0600
We do Business the Old Fashioned Way!
The merchandise in this advertisement was selected far in advance of publication. Therefore, if an item is out of stock, and a replacement is unavailable, we will offer a comparable value to you. We appreciate your understanding and your business. Any typographic, photographic, or production errors are subject to correction in pricing and description. All models shown may not be on display in all stores but are available from our warehouse stock. 613155
www.kentreporter.com
Tahoma track team at the top
KENT
SPORTS
[14] April 27, 2012
Bears girls, boys teams beat K-M to stay undefeated in SPSL North Division
BY TJ MARTINELL
tmartinell@maplevalleyreporter.com
KENTLAKE HIRES NEW BOYS HOOPS COACH Kentlake has hired Godfrey Drake to take over as head boys basketball coach, according to Bruce Rick, the school’s athletic director, who made the announcement Wednesday. Drake has worked as an assistant coach at Green River Community College the past four years. The Mississippi native had previously coached AAU basketball in his home state. He played college hoops at Southern Mississippi University, a Division I program, followed by a short stint in the European League.
Tahoma’s boys and girls track teams continued a double undefeated league meet streak with wins against Kent-Meridian on the Bears’ home track April 19. The Bears boys defeated last year’s 4A state champions 78-67, while the Bears girls won 105-44. Both Tahoma teams are undefeated in league meets. Tahoma coach Gary Conner stated in a telephone interview that he expected it to be a close meet. “They were good wins for both teams,” Conner said. “It turned out to be in our favor. I knew we were going to have to perform really well just to win. For us, we had to do well in all our areas.” Conner said the meet against Kentwood on Wednesday would give more of an indication of where Tahoma stands in the league. “What we’re hoping is to get through Kentwood,” he said. “If we can get through Kentwood (Wednesday)… hopefully (Tahoma has a shot at a) league title. Tomorrow’s meet is going to be tough for both boys
and girls so it’s going to be a lot of fun.” Bears senior Aaron Davis took home two first places in the 100 meters and the shot put, running a time of 11.53 seconds and throwing a distance of 48 feet and a half inch. His 100 meter time tied his personal record. Junior Jacob Larsen won the 800 meters with a time of 2:04.11. Senior Tyler Ward took first in the mile with a time of 4:45.99, a three-second improvement over his previous personal record from the March 21 meet against Mount Rainier. Sophomore Riley Campbell won the two mile with a time of 9:55.50. In field events, junior Dallas Hayes won the discus after throwing it 128 feet, 2 inches. Senior Joshua Benson won the javelin after throwing it 138 feet, 7 inches. Sophomore Deshon Williams won the high jump after jumping a height of 5 feet, 10 inches, while fellow sophomore Tucker Mjelde won the pole vault at 11 feet, 6 inches. Leading the Tahoma girls was Olivia Ranft, who won the 400 meters, the long jump and the triple jump. She ran the 400 meters in 1:00.42, a one second
Tahoma junior Elizabeth Oosterhout runs alongside Kent-Meridian senior, Alexia Martin, in the two mile. Martin took first with a time of 11:19.20. TJ MARTINELL, The Reporter improvement from her previous personal record. She long jumped 15 feet, 7.5 inches and triple jumped 32 feet, 6 inches. Junior Elizabeth Oosterhout won the 800 meters with a time of 2:25.07, a three second improvement over her personal record from the March 29 meet against Kentlake. Junior Paige Hammock took first in the 100 meters with a time of 13.22. Freshman Abby Atchison won the mile with a time of 5:35.30.
Junior Savanna Haverfield won both the 100 hurdles and the javelin, with a time of 16.01 and a throw of 103 feet, 11 inches respectively. Senior Cassidy Richmond won the 300 hurdles with a time of 49.56. The 1,600 relay team, comprised of Cheyenne Haverfield, Madeline Smith, Ranft and Richmond, won with a combined time of 5:30.21. In the field events, junior Kylie Eager won the shot put after throwing it a
distance of 33 feet, 4 inches. Senior Nadine Hyde won the discus after throwing it 113 feet, 1 inch. Senior Chelsea Muskelly won the high jump after a vertical leap of five feet. Royals senior Jarey Suiter took first in the 200 meters, crossing the finish line at 23.23. Sophomore Quincy Carter won the 400 meters after running a time of 52.84, a personal record. [ more TRACK page 15 ]
April 27, 2012 [15]
www.kentreporter.com
Kentwood, Kentlake suffer tough losses in fastpitch BY KRIS HILL khill@maplevalleyreporter.com
The battle for the top spot in the South Puget Sound League North Division continued among Tahoma, Kentwood and Kentlakeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fastpitch teams in the past week. On Monday, Thomas Jefferson knocked off Kentwood in a 10-inning thriller while Tahoma put together a 6-1 victory on April 18 over Kentlake for the Falconsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; first league loss of the season. Jefferson scored early and held onto a 1-0 lead until the bottom of the seventh when Rachel Burr hit the ball between first and second base that drove in the tying run for Kentwood. But, the pitching duel between Conqueror freshman Kendall Goodwin and Raiders hurler Rocky Hale continued, as the Jefferson defense was able to hold Kentwood. The Conks struggled to put down bunts in the bottom of the 10th when international tiebreaker rules come into play â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a runner is on second base at the start of the inning â&#x20AC;&#x201C; while an errant throw to
third base at the top of the 10th pushed the Raiders into the lead. Bailey Rundleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s bunt moved Michaela Patton over to third base for Jefferson. Katie Jackson, who pitched the final inning in relief for Hale and picked up the win in the circle, bunted and was able to reach when a throw to third base went over Bailey Marshallâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s head which allowed Patton to score. While everything came together for Jefferson it all fell apart for Kentwood, explained Conks head coach Jason Wisor in an email interview. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I think yesterday was the perfect storm of what has been the perfect storm season,â&#x20AC;? Wisor wrote. â&#x20AC;&#x153;With all the rainouts and in game cancellations this team has been frustrated that more games have not gotten in. The girls are working hard and getting better, it just so happens that yesterday we could not execute.â&#x20AC;? He credited Hale and Goodwin for pitching well. Wisor said with nine games left on the schedule the team will need to focus. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Yesterday both pitchers pitched well and both teams
[ TRACK from page 14 ] Junior Abu Kamara took first place in the 110 hurdles and the 300 hurdles, crossing the finish line with a time of 15.38 and 42.20 respectively. The 400 relay team, comprised of B.J. Phillips, Henry Hammond, Kamara and Suiter, took first with a time of 44.20, a mere .55 second ahead of the Bears team. The 1,600 relay team also won, with Suiter, Hammond, Phillips and Carter running a combined time of 3:38.87. In field events, Tyler Hammer won the long jump with
struggled to adjust to the zone established by the umpire,â&#x20AC;? he said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our goal will be to continue to play the best game we can. We need to eliminate the errors and execute in situations when they happen. Our goals are still in reach and we fully intend to accomplish them.â&#x20AC;? Kentwood hosted Tahoma Tuesday, and weather permitting the Conks were scheduled to get in five games this week. Meanwhile, through Monday, Tahoma had won three straight including a tough game against Auburn and a major morale booster in beating Kentlake on April 18. Kentlakeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s only lead of the game came in the first inning against Tahoma when Kellie Nielsen scored on an error. In the bottom of the first, Tahoma tied it up when Hayley Beckstrom hit a long single to drive in Halle Elliot, then the Bears locked down defensively while their bats got hot in the third and fourth innings. Jordan Walley and Beckstrom drew back to back walks. Morgan Engelhardtâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s single drove Walley in to
make it 2-1 Tahoma in the bottom of the third then Beckstrom scored when Lauren Maulden reached first on an error to make it 3-1. Elliott ripped a single through the middle infield then stole second base. Walley stepped up two batters later and send the ball to the center field fence for a double that drove in Elliott. Beckstrom dropped a single into shallow right field behind first base and Walley scored to make it 5-1. Tahoma tacked on one more run in the bottom of the sixth when Amanda Allisonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s single brought in Molly Lathrop, who slapped a single by the short stop then stole second base, to make it 6-1. Lathrop finished the day going 2-for-3 at the plate with a run scored and two stolen bases, Walley was 1-for-3 with a walk, two runs scored and an RBI while Beckstrom was 2-for3 with a single, a double, a run scored and two RBIs. Engelhardt went 1-for3 with an RBI, Lauren Maulden was 2-for-3 with a single and a double. Mariah Hill got the win
a leap of 20 feet, 6 inches. Hammond won the triple jump flying 39 feet, 6 inches. Royals sophomore Kariona Micks won the 200 meter race, crossing the finish lone at 27.18. Senior Alexia Martin won the two mile, crossing the finish line at 11:19.20. The 400 relay team, comprised of Micks, Jenica Rogers, Deedra Patterson and Stephanie Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Hara, took first with a combined time of 51.34. Junior Juliana Adams won the pole vault after vaulting 8 feet, 6 inches.
in the circle, pitching a complete game, giving up five hits â&#x20AC;&#x201C; all singles â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and one walk. A day earlier Tahomaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s defense saved a close win against Auburn. Center fielder Jena Waler hurled a perfect throw to home plate to get the runner for Auburn coming in for the tying run in the top of the seventh to seal the 4-3 victory. Kentridge bounced back on April 18 from a 11-3 loss to Kentwood a week earlier with a 6-0 victory over Auburn Riverside. Kayla Andrus led the Chargers offensively as everything came in pairs for her. Andrus finished the day 2-for-3 at the plate with a pair of singles, two runs scored, two stolen
bases and two RBIs. Abagail Bellin went 1-for-3 with a triple, a run scored and an RBI while Ashley Conradi was 1-for-4 with a single, a run scored and a stolen base and Hannah Overall was 1-for-3 with a triple, two runs scored, an RBI and a stolen base. Lizzet Dominguez got the win in the circle for Kentridge, pitching a complete-game one-hitter while striking out six. Kentridge couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t keep up the moment Monday, however, losing 4-2 to Auburn. Andrus was 1-for-4 at the plate, Bellin went 1-for2 with a single, a stolen base and an RBI while Bri Drury led the Chargers, batting 2-for-3 with a pair of singles and a run scored.
Enter the
Cutest Pet Contest
Hurry!
Voting Starts Thursday, May 3 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place
PRIZES! Go to: KentReporter.com Click on â&#x20AC;&#x153;CONTESTâ&#x20AC;? and vote for your favorite!
Ask Your Lawyer by Dan Kellogg
Friday & Saturday 8 pm Sunday 2pm
Tickets Available Now !
SATURDAY SPECIALâ&#x20AC;Ś May 5th ONLY!
Buy 3 Tickets, Get One FREE!
According to one recent survey, only slightly more than one-third of Americans have a will and fewer than half have any estate-planning documents in place. While very few people are comfortable with thinking about dying, it certainly helps to have a will. A will helps surviving family members cope with a most difficult period in their lives, and it designates an executor to carry out important decisions. Otherwise, people who die without a will (intestate) must rely on the court to distribute the deceasedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s property according to state law. This is a prospect that may be even more distasteful to most than drawing up a will, in which case, this important matter should be addressed. I understand how unpleasant it can be to spend time contemplating your own death. I will provide you with the understanding you want as well as the thoughtful counsel that you need to be certain your wishes are carried out after you are gone. In addition to wills, I also provide representation for legal issues involving estate planning, probate, elder law, Medicaid planning, and real estate. If you have any questions or would like to schedule an appointment, please call (425) 227-8700. I have offices conveniently located in Renton and Kent. Committed to you and the community.
$BMM OPX GPS SFTFSWBUJPOT t 48 %BTI 1PJOU 3PBE t DFOUFSTUBHFUIFBUSF DPN
www.dankellogg.com
Online voting for your favorite will be from Thursday, May 3 - Friday May 11. 1st, 2nd & 3rd Place Winners will be in the May 18 People & Pets section
Sat. May 19 10am - 5pm GAME FARM PARK 608225
615605
WHO WILL HAVE THE FINAL SAY?
[16] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
Kentwood continues to lead the North pack plate appearance. Michael Parrott pitched a complete game, walkWhile Kentwoodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s base- ing one, striking out three ball team has conquered while allowing six hits. the South Puget Sound Kentwood followed that League North division up the next day with a there is a battle going double digit win over on between Tahoma Jefferson. and Kentlake for SPSL It was a 9-6 second place. Kentwood lead Kentwoodâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s after two and a winning streak half innings before continued with a few errors and lot victories over Auburn, of hitting led to a 10-run Thomas Jefferson, and third inning for the ConKent-Meridian. querors, who tallied a total On April 20 Kentwood of 22 hits in five innings, put together a 6-2 win as they cruised to the win over Auburn, scoring two on April 21. in the bottom of the secOn Monday Kentwood ond and four in the bothosted Kent-Meridian. tom of the third, pounding The Conks scored nine out eight hits. runs on 12 hits against the Kade Kryzsko was Royals while Kentwood 1-for-3 with a two-RBI sent four different pitchers double, Taylor Jones finto the mound in the 9-0 ished 1-for-2 at the plate, victory. Skyler Genger went 2-forLucas Gately was 3 while Jarrett Retz was 1-for-2 at the plate with a 1-for-2 with an RBI. double and an RBI, Cash Tanner Wessling made McGuire was 3-for-3 with his hit count with a twoa double and an RBI, RBI double on a 1-for-2 Dalton Cryderman was batting performance. 1-for-2 with a double and D.J. Vallala hit a twoan RBI, Reese McGuire RBI double in his single was 1-for-3 with a triple BY KRIS HILL
khill@maplevalleyreporter.com
BASEBALL
and an RBI, Wessling was 2-for-2 with an RBI and a run scored, Retz was 2-for-2 with a run scored and an RBI and Kellen Wilson was 1-for-1 with a run scored and two RBIs. With those wins, Kentwood was 13-0 in league play, and all alone atop the SPSL North. With an 8-6 win over Jefferson, Tahoma improved to 9-4 in North play. Tahoma followed that up with a 3-0 victory over Kentridge on Monday. The Bears scored all three runs in the first inning and held the Chargers scoreless despite giving up seven hits. Sheldon Stober led Kentridge at the plate going 2-for-3 with a double while Devin Riley hit 2-for-4. Reed Johnson was 2-for-2 for Tahoma.
Kentridge tennis girls excel BY SARAH KEHOE skehoe@kentreporter.com
Despite some setbacks, the Kentridge girls are 4-1 in South Puget Sound League play. They lost to Kentwood in their last match despite a good effort. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We have some really good tennis players this year and once they really start to believe in themselves, good things will happen,â&#x20AC;? said coach Jennifer McIntosh. The weather has slowed the team down. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It has been a tough year with all of the rainouts. We are only at the halfway mark and we start playoffs next Friday afternoon,â&#x20AC;? McIntosh said.
Request a free information kit:
Individualized Learning For children 2 ½ to 6
! % % % % % $ % ! % 253-872-6600 ! % % % % " ! % " % % KENT % ! #% " % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
TWO LOCATIONS
.com
REPORTER
Thank you Kent for voting us
For your convenience! 23807 - 98th Ave S Kent, WA 98031 8:00am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 3:30pm
Downtown Kent
T R AY . N E T
318 - 3rd Ave S Kent, WA 98032 7:00am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5:30pm
â&#x20AC;Śbecause Home Matters
Search
253-859-2262
> All MLS Listings > Calculate your payment > Mortgage information > Interest rates > School Information
For further information, go to www.montessoriplus.org Serving Kent since 1981
608547
Tray Svendson
Team You Can Trust.
Windermere Real Estate | PKS, Inc.
218 1st Ave S. | Downtown Kent | salonivoni.com | 253.813.1700
206.940.1319 |
email:
t r a y @ t r a y. n e t
Thanks to all who nominated be Best Dentist in Kent!
How much will you need to retire? Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s talk.
Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m grateful to be part of this wonderful community.
A smileâ&#x20AC;Ś the gift you can give everyday.
Kevin P Hasslinger Financial Advisor 205 E Meeker St Kent, WA 98032 253-850-1241
Dr. Sue Hollinsworth www.edwardjones.com
New patients welcome! 253-631-8286 13210 SE 240th St., Ste B-3 Kent, WA 98042
www.drsuehollinsworth.com
607553 613186
merry maids
607225
*See club for details
607222
206.940.1319 Buying, Selling, Investing Made Simple
10% Off 1st visit for new customers!*
Whatever a child can do for himself, he should be allowed to do. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Maria Montessori
Kent East Hill
Visit
BEST SALON two years in a row!
more from Christine Ly who is a freshman and has a tremendous amount of ability and spunk,â&#x20AC;? McIntosh said. This team should have been stronger, but injuries have left Kentridge two players short. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That places us about the same as last year in strength but in different areas,â&#x20AC;? McIntosh said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Last year we were able to tie for the league, and we won the SPSL tournament.â&#x20AC;? The Chargers hope to make some noise in postseason matches.
Montessori Plus School
Promote your EVENT across the entire state!
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The schedule was heavily clustered due to different spring breaks and then we are starting playoffs even earlier than in the past. Hopefully the weather will cooperate, next week so we can finish.â&#x20AC;? The players have matches against Mount Rainier and Tahoma left to play. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Tahoma will be very competitive,â&#x20AC;? McIntosh said. McIntosh said the players who have stood out this season include Kyana Esber, Karissa Lau and Katie Ly. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I look forward to seeing
ÂŽ
Check our web brochure at www.MM346.isiedge.com
60
$
00
OFF
Save $60.00 Off The First Visit
New customers only, not valid with other offers.
253.833.6171 merrymaids@merrymaids346.com
607326
April 27, 2012 [17]
www.kentreporter.com
Police capture driver after high-speed chase stopped at the top of South 180th Street, the Kent officer went to the Wendyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and confirmed it was the same car he had pursued. The driver of the Honda told the officer, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t even racing,â&#x20AC;? but then declined to say anything else about the incident.
Police
BLOTTER
A man driving an aqua green Honda Civic CRX through Kent streets at speeds of more than 80 mph during a police pursuit thought he had lost the patrol car when he pulled into a Wendyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s drive-thru restaurant in Renton. Within moments, Renton Police surrounded the car at the drive-thru lane in the 17800 block of 108th Avenue Southeast at about 2:30 a.m. April 14, according to the police report. Kent Police arrested the man for investigation of eluding an officer. The driver escaped the Kent officer after about a 3-mile chase that took only a couple of minutes. But Renton Police had listened to the pursuit on the Kent Police radio station and figured the man might head up the South 180th Street hill after he left northbound Highway 167. A short time later, they saw the aqua green Honda at the Wendyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. The incident started with a 911 call to report about 20 to 30 vehicles getting ready to race in a parking lot in the 19000 block of 62nd
Avenue South in North Kent, a well-known area for weekend street racing. As a patrol officer headed northbound on 62nd Avenue South, he noticed two cars coming toward him. A Honda Civic had its headlights off but then the driver turned on the lights as he passed the patrol car. The officer turned his car around and activated his emergency lights in an effort to pull over the car. The driver of the Honda then sped up and went eastbound on South 196th Street. The driver ran a red light at South 196th Street and West Valley Highway, reaching speeds estimated at more than 80 mph. The officer continued to pursue the Honda, which sped southbound on the East Valley Highway and then eastbound on South 212th Street. The officer saw the car take the northbound onramp to Highway 167, but then lost sight of the vehicle and ended the pursuit. After Renton Police radioed they had the car
Carpinito Carpinito Grown
Police arrested a man for investigation of third-degree assault after he reportedly punched a Metro bus driver in the nose at about 5 p.m. April 17 downtown near Central Avenue and Meeker Street. Several officers later drew their guns and ordered the man to the ground near a Kent Transit Center bus shelter after reports that he might have a gun, according to the police report. Officers discovered the man had a black plastic gun in a satchel he carried on his shoulder. The incident began when a bus driver called 911 to report he had been punched by a passenger. The driver and another passenger then forced the man off the bus. The man held a plastic gun to the bus door before he fled on foot.
Brothers
HANGING IN BLOOM
w 1VMQ )BOHJOH #BTLFUT
1SPWFO TFMFDUJPO T UP DIPPTF GSPN "OE BMM ZPVS GBWPSJUFT
4w 1054
Carpinito Grown
Carpinito Grown
IN FULL BLOOM
+VNCP
TOMATO PLANTS
1 GAL.
BEAUTIFUL
ALL GRASS SEED
JAPANESE MAPLES
3 LB.
6QSJHIU PS 8FFQJOH (BMMPO 4J[F
20% OFF
#-&/%&% '03 5)& /035)8&45
15 YARDS
%FMJWFSZ QSJDFT UP NPTU BSFBT PG 4PVUI ,JOH $PVOUZ 4PNF BSFBT TMJHIUMZ IJHIFS
Download & print the pdf. It's FREE! Visit www.kentreporter.com/green_editions today!
YD. OR WEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;LL DELIVER* 35 YARDS 15 YARDS 10 YARDS $ $ $
YD.
YD.
YD.
%FMJWFSZ QSJDFT UP NPTU BSFBT PG 4PVUI ,JOH $PVOUZ 4PNF BSFBT TMJHIUMZ IJHIFS
t XXX DBSQJOJUP DPN $FOUSBM "WFOVF /PSUI t ,FOU 8" 0QFO %BJMZ .PO 'SJ BN QN 4BU BN QN 4VO BN QN t &YQJSFT
NOVEMBER 2011 SCENE GALLERY
613613
35 YARDS
YD. $ YD. $ YD.
$
green edition Plus access a treasure trove of previous issues of the Kent Reporter & award winning reader features. Want extra copies of the championship game?
TOPSOIL
$
Call TODAY for answers â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Richard Hicks - 206.931.6302
Kent/North 20632 108th Ave SE Kent, WA 98031
cover to cover!
Excellent Screened 3-Way Mix 60% Kent Valley Loam 30% Steer Groâ&#x201E;˘ & 10% Sand HAUL IT YOURSELFâ&#x20AC;Ś
FINE GRIND 25 YARDS
Renton 4735 NE 4th St Renton, WA 98059
full print editions online ~
WE DELIVER...
YD. YD. YD.
Short Sale Specialist can help you save your credit!
Now you can view our
BEAUTY BARK MEDIUM or COARSE 35 YARDS 25 YARDS 15 YARDS $ $ $
Stop Foreclosure Today!
cover to cover online
4
OSMOCOTE ALL PURPOSE FERTILIZER
Two offices to serve your needs:
Officers arrested a man for investigation of thirddegree malicious mischief after he reportedly used a key to slash the tire on his wifeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s car and later armed himself with a rock and then an AK-47 rifle.
24-7
1054
JUMBO PEPPER PLANTS
9
John L Scott/KMS This office is independently owned and operated.
MALICIOUS MISCHIEF
yourpaper
w $&%"3
Witnesses later called 911 to report the man had shown up at the Kent Transit Center. An officer drew a rifle which caused about a dozen people near the man to flee the area. The officer ordered the man to the ground and the man complied.
AFRICAN DAISIES ZONAL GERANIUMS NON-STOP BEGONIAS
FUCHSIA BASKETS
SUN BASKETS
Find out how to start a neighborhood Block Watch program at a class offered by the Kent Police on Wednesday, May 16 at City Hall, 220 Fourth Ave. S. The Kent Police Neighborhood Response Team and Community
ASSAULT
r Nursery &Garden Cente
$PMPS $PNCJOBUJPO
Education Unit will run the class from 6:30-8 p.m. in the Council Chambers. Attendees also will hear current crime statistics from Kent officers and learn ways to prevent the crimes. RSVP to Sara Wood, 253-856-5851 or swood@ kentwa.gov.
Kent Police to offer Block Watch class
OCTOBER 28, 2011 GALLERY
OCTOBER 21, 2011 GALLERY
OCTOBER 14, 2011 GALLERY
OCTOBER 7, 2011 GALLERY
KENT
REPORTER
.com
BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
The incident happened at about 10:13 p.m. April 17 outside of a house in the 27800 block of 130th Avenue Southeast, according to the police report. Officers responded to a domestic violence call and saw a man with a rifle who fled on foot and then jumped a fence into the backyard of a home. Police eventually caught the man coming out of a yard in the 13100 block of Southeast 279th Place. The man no longer had a rifle as officers surrounded him and ordered him to the ground. The man refused to go to the ground so an officer used a Taser to shoot the man with darts in the ribs and leg. The man fell forward onto his forearms and officers handcuffed him.
A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING, INC.
19426 68th Ave S, Suite A, Kent, WA 98032
â&#x2013;
(253) 872-6600
604225
[18] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com
Volunteers spiff up Northwest Harvest MUSIC & SPANISH POSITIVE & NURTURING ENVIRONMENT ages 3-5 years 601998
www.montessoritime.com
13125 SE 261ST ST, KENT 98030
New Beginnings Christian Fellowship 8:00am & 11:00am
19300 108th Ave. SE Renton, WA 98057
604237
www.thenbcf.org
t t
To advertise your services, call Kathy Dalseg 253-872-6731 or email kdalseg@ kentreporter.com
SAVE 20% ON A NEW FEEDER
BY MARK KLAAS mklaas@kentreporter.com
A large work party came to embrace and spruce up Northwest Harvest. About 300 volunteers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and their families â&#x20AC;&#x201C; from Comcast took advantage of a sun-splashed Saturday to help beautify inside and outside of Kentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s main food distribution center, 22220 68th Ave. S. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The place looks beautiful,â&#x20AC;? said Deborah Squires, community engagement director for Northwest Harvest. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t do it without them. Not only did they bring the beauty bark and the paint, they brought the muscle.â&#x20AC;? The effort was part of Comcast Cares Day, one of the nationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s largest single days of service by a corporation, with more than 2,200 volunteers around the state working on a dozen projects. During their visit last Saturday, volunteers in Comcastâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s service project
Volunteer Merrill Swanson of Comcast shovels bark at Northwest Harvest last Saturday. About 300 volunteers pitched in to help beautify Kentâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s main food distribution center. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter packaged 19,000 meals for distribution throughout Washington, Squires said. In all, volunteers generously gave an estimated $24,000 of free labor. Comcast brought along soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord to chip in. Volunteers cleaned the warehouse, swept and wiped down food storage racks. They painted
the interior of the conference room and warehouse offices. Teams performed landscape duty, pulling weeds, raking flower beds, spreading bark and picking up debris. They finished the morning by conducting a youth art project, making thank you cards and poster boards. Squires appreciates the
assist, especially now, with Northwest Harvest and supporting outlets faced with limited staffing and high demand for food. Northwest Harvest and its food bank networks produce 1.6 million meals a month for the hungry throughout Washington. To learn more about the nonprofit group, visit www. northwestharvest.org.
Gardening in the fast lane with annuals
615302
THE GARDENER
â&#x20AC;&#x201C; big, bold, yellow, green and orange leaves on a tall and tropical-looking plant. In a smaller pot use the tall-growing yellow marigolds or golden coreopsis. The fillers: Brightly colored begonias come in sunset colors and you can also find impatiens, geraniums and verbena that bloom in shades that range from fiery orange to lemon yellow. The spillers: Use the yellow foliage of creeping Jenny to spill over the edge of the pot or the bicolored blooms of heat-loving lantana for more floral punch. When you stick with the colors of yellow and orange Marianne Binetti
all with the same hue. You could use all pinks that range from the pale pearl of impatiens to the vivid intensity of fuchsias. Or try grouping plants with flowers or foliage within the purple and burgundy color palette. Royal purple verbenas, lavender lobelia and wine colored phlox make a trio of rich colors. Want more sunshine? Pot up this combo from the orange and yellow color family. Planting Recipe for a Sunshine Container of Citrus Colors The focal point plant or thriller in the center of the pot: Canna Tropicanna
youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re sure to have a summer of warm memories. Color Contrasts to Wake up the Landscape Add some drama or garden opera with shocking color contrasts. Play up the boldness of chocolate foliage with white or silver contrasts. Contrasting colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel will shout out load like a drama mama and really create a scene. Planting Recipe for a Backyard Patio Bed: Purple and Gold Can really be Bold The focal point or thriller plant: Spiky cordylines now come in rich purple and reds to provide a dramatic background for the shorter plants. [ more BINETTI page 19 ]
TUBES ...obituaries FREE! DELIVERY AVAILABLE
Place a paid obituary to honor those who have passed away, call Linda at 253.234.3506 paidobits@reporternewspapers.com Paid obituaries include publication in the newspaper and online at www.kentreporter.com All notices are subject to verification.
The Kent Reporter is published every Friday and delivery tubes are available T KEN R FREE to our readers who live in our E T REPOR distribution area. Our newspaper tube can be installed on your property at no charge to you. Or the tube can be provided to you to install at your convenience next to your mailbox receptacle or at the end of your driveway. Pick up your FREE tube at our Kent office, located at 19426 68th Ave S during regular business hours.
.com
COVINGTON www.covington.wbu.com (253) 639-6378
Spring is the time of year when the earth blooms, and color fills the landscape. We are lucky enough to garden in western Washington with a mild climate that allows bountiful blooms and vivid color almost year round. If you want to color your world with more beauty, for less money, invest in some fast-growing annual plants and dig in. Annuals may only live one year but they party hearty and live life in the fast lane â&#x20AC;&#x201C; and a colorful life is much more exciting. Color Families for Soothing Compositions First, chose a favorite focal point plant or your favorite color family. Now build a color theme using different blooming plants
(Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.) UI "WF 4 ,FOU 8" t t www.kentreporter.com
April 27, 2012 [19]
www.kentreporter.com [ BINETTI from page 18 ] Add fillers: Here is where you need the color contrast. Use vivid gold blooms of Goldilocks Rocks or mini marigold plants against the taller, darker focal point. Lime green could also be a bold contrast to deep purple. There are new mini petunias called Calibrachoa that have bicolored blooms of contrasting colors. Pretty Much Picasso is a new hybrid with vivid purple blooms outlined with lime green. This petunia is pretty much a spectacular plant due to great color contrasts. Many coleus plants also have colorful contrasts spilled all over their leaves like a painter’s palette. The spiller: As a groundcover plant or to spill from the sides of a
pot, the lime green Sweet Caroline sweet potato vine would make a great contrast to the deep purple tones. If you use petunias with bicolored blooms the solid color of a foliage plant provides a stunning backdrop for the big show. Color Punches to Fight off the Darkness We do have a lot of gray days in our gardens and our beautiful evergreens can cast dark shadows onto the landscape. Use white and silver plants to sneak in a knock out punch of color: Use white impatiens, white lobelia and white begonias for a planting bed in deep shade. The color white next to any bright color will amp up the intensity of the hue so be sure to include white bloom-
ers in your mixed displays for more vivid brights. For sunny areas plant droughtresistant white alyssum or any silver-leaved annual such as Dusty Miller. White geraniums planted in black pots make a fine impression that says “simple elegance.” An all-white flower garden can be dramatic and will show up best against a dark evergreen hedge or house color. Covering the Ground with a Grand Display of Color Make this the year you cover a sunny slope with drifts of hot pink petunias or vast stretches of bright red verbenas. New varieties of groundcover petunias and spreading verbenas make sensational swaths of blooming color more af-
fordable than even before. You only live once and having a yard that really does stop traffic should be on everyone’s bucket list. Or you could take that bucket, add some drainage holes and contain yourself, along with your petunias and verbenas. Planting more flowers is a gift to the neighborhood, the bees and butterflies and your beauty-seeking soul.
Marianne Binetti is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply.
COME PLANT TREES at West Fenwick Park, 3808 Reith Road on the West Hill on Saturday. The planting party is from 9 a.m. to noon, rain or shine. Volunteers are asked to dress for the weather, bring work gloves and a shovel, pruners or lopping shears if you have them. Starbucks will provide coffee and hot chocolate. Water also will be available. To keep our events manageable and safe, register by noon. Forms are at www.KentWAParks.com. Click on Volunteer. Or call 253-856-5110. The event is part of the city’s Green Kent Partnership, a 20-year commitment to restore and manage natural areas.
PUBLIC NOTICES VALLEY MEDICAL CENTER District Healthcare System NOTICE OF BOARD COMMITTEE SCHEDULE Notice is hereby given that the Valley Medical Center Board of Trustees Nominating Committee will meet on Friday, May 18 from 2:00-3:00 p.m. in the Health Sciences Building, Room D-310 of UW Medicine. BOARD OF TRUSTEES (District Healthcare System) By: Sandra Sward Executive Assistant to the Board of Trustees Published in the Kent, Renton, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporters on April 27, 2012. #612491.
Superior Court of Washington County of King In re the Estate of: ROBERT ROBINSON, Deceased. No. 11-4-03018-8KNT PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) PLEASE TAKE NOTICE: The above Court has appointed me as Personal Representative of Decedent’s estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must present the claim: (a) Before the time the claim would be barred by any applicable statute of limitations, and (b) In the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070: (i) By filing the original of the claim with the foregoing Court, and (ii) By serving on or mailing to me at the address below a copy of the claim. The claim must be presented by the later of: (a) Thirty (30) days after I served or mailed this Notice as provided in RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c), or (b) Four (4) months afer the date of first publication of this Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time period, the claim will be forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective for claims against both the Decedent’s probate assets and nonprobate assets. Date of first Publication: April 20, 2012. Personal Representative: Doug Larkin 1443 S 259th St. Des Moines WA 98198 Published in Kent Reporter on April 20, 2012, April 27, 2012 and May 4, 2012. #613308.
NO. 11-3-06143-8 KNT NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF RECEIVERSHIP Superior Court of Washington FOR King County In the Receivership of: SEA COIN LAUNDRY, a Washington Sole Proprietor business of Ly Suymeng & Chankaknica Chea. TO: CREDITORS OF SEA COIN LAUNDRY AND OTHER PARTIES IN INTEREST PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that on March 29, 2012, the King County Superior Court appointed Turning Point Consulting (“Receiver”) whose address is 918 Horton Street, #704, Seattle, WA 98134, as general receiver as defined by RCW 7.60.015, over the assets of Sea Coin Laundry whose address is 24437 Russell Rd, Suite 101, WA 98032-1786. Pursuant to the Order Appointing General Receiver, the Receiver has assumed control over the assets and business operations of Sea Coin Laundry (“Sea Coin”) pursuant to RCW 7.08.030(3) and RCW 7.60.025(1)(j). Correspondence to the Receiver may be sent to the Receiver in care of the address set forth below. CLAIMS: The Receiver currently is not able to predict whether any particular class of creditors can expect to receive payment on claims for pre-receivership debts owed to them. Nonetheless, all persons and businesses who believe they are owed money by Sea Coin on account of any goods, services, or credit provided to Sea Coin before March 29, 2012 or who claim to have any other obligation enforceable against Sea Coin on account of any transaction occurring before that date, should fill out a Proof of Claim form in order to share in any distribution of assets to members of the claimant’s class of creditors. The Proof of Claim form may be obtained by sending a request to the Receiver at the address listed below or by e-mail to chrisw@turning-point.com. The Proof of Claim form must be returned to the Receiver at the address listed below no later than May 13, 2012. The bar date for claims arising from the rejection of an executory contract or unexpired lease is 30 days after the date of rejection. The bar date for state agencies or taxing authorities is October 10, 2012. Creditors who fail to submit a proof of claim prior to the bar date will not share in any distributions, should any funds
become available for such distribution. The claim form must be mailed by the bar date to the Receiver at the following address: Sea Coin Laundry c/o Alan Chaffee Turning Point Consulting LLC. 12505 Bel-Red Road, Suite 110 Bellevue, WA 98005 The form does not need to be filed with the Court. Request for special notice. Pursuant to RCW 7.60.190(2), any person interested in the receivership as a party or a creditor may serve upon the undersigned and file with the clerk of the Court a written notice of appearance stating that he/she desires special notice of any and all proceedings in the administration of the receivership. Dated April 5, 2012. TURNING POINT CONSULTING, LLC By: ALAN CHAFFEE Court-appointed Receiver for Sea Coin Laundry. Published in Kent Reporter on April 13, 20, 27, 2012. #611114 CITY OF KENT, WASHINGTON NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL ASSESSMENT ROLL LOCAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT NO. 363 [S. 224th / 228th Corridor Project: East Valley Highway to Benson Road] NOTICE IS GIVEN that the final assessment roll for Local Improvement District No. 363 (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, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, Washington. LID No. 363 was established by Ordinance No. 3896 (2008) of the City of Kent, Washington (“City”) for the improvement of the next phase of the City’s S. 224th arterial corridor, east from the East Valley Highway (“Project”). The Project improvements include construction of a roadway beginning at the intersection of East Valley Highway and S. 224th Street via S. 218th/216th Street, terminating at the intersection of Benson Highway and S. 216th; the installation of curbs, gutters, sidewalks, a twoway left turn lane, planted center medians where possible, roadside planter strips, street lighting, undergrounding of overhead electrical facilities, storm water management facilities, a bridge over SR 167 and a new Garrison Creek bridge; and, sanitary sewer and water extensions and/or
stubs and appurtenances to provide service to properties not currently served by City utilities. NOTICE FURTHER IS GIVEN that the City Council has fixed the time for the hearing upon the final assessment roll for 3:00 p.m., local time, on May 14, 2012, before the Public Works Committee, in the Council Chambers in the Kent City Hall, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, Washington. Any person desiring to object to any 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 on or before the time and date fixed for the hearing on the final assessment roll or at commencement of the hearing itself. 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, and at such other times to which the hearing may be adjourned the City Council Committee 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. Property owners wishing to file a protest about the amount of the assessment must do so in writing and file any protest with the City Clerk at, or prior to, the public hearing. 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. One form of such proof would be an appraisal showing the value of the property before and after construction of the improvements. At the hearing, or adjournment thereof, the City Council Committee 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 Council Committee, the City Council will confirm the assessment roll by ordinance. When property has been entered origi-
nally 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. Brenda Jacober, City Clerk City of Kent, Washington Any person requiring a disability accommodation should contact the City Clerk’s Office in advance at 253-856-5725. For TDD relay service, call Washington Telecommunications Relay Service at 1-800-833-6388. Published in the Kent Reporter on April 20, 2012 and April 27, 2012. #613690. INVITATION TO BID Notice is hereby given that the City of Kent, Washington, will receive sealed bids at the City Clerk’s office through May 8, 2012 up to 10:45 p.m. as shown on the clock on the east wall of the City Clerk’s Office on the first floor of City Hall, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, Washington. All bids must be properly marked and sealed in accordance with this “Invitation to Bid.” Bids must be delivered and received at the City Clerk’s office by the above-stated time, regardless of delivery method, including U.S. Mail. All bids will be opened and read publicly aloud at 11:00 a.m. for the City of Kent project named as follows: 64th Avenue S. Channel Improvements Project Number: 10-3030C The project consists of the removal of three existing 60 inch diameter, 122 foot long culvert pipes, and the installation of one three-sided 20’W x 7’H x 106’L concrete box culvert with a castin-place base. Also included is the removal of approximately 3,000 tons of soil sediment, refuse and invasive plant species. As the 64th Avenue Channel is a primary drainage feature for the valley, all in channel work must be completed before the start of the seasonal wet season (October 1). The Contractor shall consider the long lead time to design, have reviewed, order and fabricate the large, concrete box culvert. The Engineer’s estimate for this project is approximately $1.5 million. Bid documents may be obtained by contacting City of Kent Engineering Department, Nancy Yoshitake at (253) 856-5508. For technical questions, please call Garrett Inouye at (253) 856-5548.
Bids must be clearly marked “Bid” with the name of the project on the outside of the envelope, addressed to the City Clerk, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, WA 98032-5895. Only sealed bids will be accepted. No facsimiles will be considered. Each bid shall be in accordance with the plans and specifications and other contract documents now on file in the office of the City Engineer, City of Kent, Washington. Copies of the plans and Special Provisions may be purchased at a non-refundable cost of $50.00 for each set. Plans and specifications can also be downloaded at no charge at www.kentwa.gov/ procurement. Copies of the WSDOT Standard Specifications are available for perusal only. A cashier’s check, postal money order or surety bond in the amount of 5% of the bid is required. The City of Kent reserves the right to reject any and all bids on any or all schedules or alternates or to waive any informalities in the bidding and shall determine which bid or bidders is the most responsive, satisfactory and responsible bidder and shall be the sole judge thereof. No plea of mistake in the bid shall be available to the bidder for the recovery of his/her deposit or as a defense to any action based upon the neglect or refusal to execute a contract. Bidders must submit with their initial bid a signed statement as to whether they have previously performed work subject to the President’s Executive Order No. 11246. No bidder may withdraw his/her bid for a period of sixty (60) days after the day of bid opening. Dated this 18th day of April, 2012. BY: Brenda Jacober, City Clerk Published in the Kent Reporter on April 27, 2012. # 615382.
To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@ reporternewspapers. com
PNW MarketPlace!
[20] Apr 27, 2012
print & online 24/7 Office Hours: 8-5pm Monday to Friday
www.kentreporter.com Real Estate for Rent King County &%$%2!,å7!9
real estate for sale - WA Real Estate for Sale King County 2ENTON
#/6).'4/.
,!$)%3å /.,9 å 2OOMSåå AVA I L A BL E å I N å å 3 &åå HOUSE å X å WITHå åå BATHå ANDå LARGEå CLOSET åå å X å WITHå LARGEåå CLOSET å å &URNISHEDåå KITCHENå WITHå WASHER å DRY å ERå ANDå ALLå UTILITIESå INCLUD å å "%$2//- å å "!4(åå ED å #ONDOå FORå 2ENTå INå &EDER å ALå 7AY å å 'REATå LOCATION åå å MONTH å %ASYå AC å CESSå TOå FREEWAY å SHOP å PINGå å BUSå LINE å 7ASHER åå DR YERå INå UNIT å COVEREDåå PARKING å %NCLOSEDå PATIO åå STORAGEå ROOM å .Oå SMOK å ERS å .Oå PETS å å å +%.4
6!.4!'%å ',%.å åå ,OWå TOå -ODERATEå )NCOMEåå 3 E N I O R å # O M MU N I T Y å I Nåå 2ENTON å -ANUFACTUREDåå (OMESå FORå 3ALE å -ONTHLYåå ,OTå &EESå å ANDå åå INCLUDE å WATER å SEWER åå GARBAGE å RECYCLEå ANDåå LAWNå MAINTENANCE å å ,O å CATEDå ATå THEå EASTå HILLå OFåå 2 E N T O N å N E A R å 6A L L E Yåå - E D I C A L å # E N T E R åå !MENITIES å #LUBHOUSEåå ANDå 26å 3TORAGE å #ALLå FORåå APPOINTMENTå ANDå MOREåå INFO å
Advertise your service
WA Misc. Rentals Duplexes/Multiplexes !5"52.
800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com
real estate for rent - WA Real Estate for Rent King County
PNWHomeFinder.com is an online real estate community that exposes your profile and listings to two million readers from our many publications in the Pacific Northwest. Log on to join our network today.
å "%$2//- å å "ATHåå 7 $å HOOKå UPS å GARAGE åå #LOSEå TOå SCHOOLSå ANDåå PARKS å .Oå SMOKING å NOåå PETS å å å PERå MONTH åå 3ECTIONå å /+ å #ALLå å
Employment Computer/Technology
2ENTONå4ECHNICALå#OLLEGE
#OMPUTERå3YSTEMSåå 4ECHNICIAN
å " % $ 2/ / - å å B A T Håå H O M E å 3 M A L L å F E N C E Dåå Y A R D å G A R A G E å . E A Råå SHOPPING å BUSES å )NCLUD å EDå UTILITIES å å å
%.5-#,!7
3/54(å(),, å059!,,50
å9%!2å .%7å å 3&åå å BEDROOM å å BATHå DU å P L EX å R A M BL E R å - A S T E Råå WITHå BATHå å WALKå INå CLOS å ET å !LSO å FIREPLACE å SE å CURITYå SYSTEMå å ALLå APPLI å ANCES å å CARå GARAGEå åå LARGEå FENCEDå YARD å .Oåå PETSå ORå SMOKING å åå MONTHå å å DEPOSIT åå 9E A R å L E A S E å å
#!22)%2åå 2/54%3åå !6!),!",%
! $ / 0 4 å å ! å , O V I N Gåå #REATIVEå &INANCIALLYå 3E å C U R E å # O U P L E å 7A R M åå 3TABLEå &AMILYå LIFEå AWAITSåå PRECIOUSå BABY å %XPENS å ESåPAID å !../5.#%å YOURå FESTI å VA L å FO R å O N L Y å P E N N I E S åå &OURå WEEKSå TOå å MILLIONåå READERSå STATEWIDEå FORåå ABOUTå å #ALLå THISåå N E W S P A P E R å O R å åå å å FORå MOREåå DETAILS
Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper and on WA Misc. Rentals the web with just Rooms for Rent one phone call. 2 / / - å & / 2 å 2 % . 4åå å 5TILITIESå INCLUDED åå Call 800-388-2527 2ENTON +ENTå AREA å å for more information. åASKåFORå6ON
4HEå "AINBRIDGEå )SLANDåå 2EVIEW å Aå WEEKLYå COM å MUNITYå NEWSPAPERå LOCAT å EDå INå WESTERNå 7ASHING å TONå STATE å ISå ACCEPTINGåå APPLICATIONSå FORå Aå PART å TIMEå GENERALå ASSIGNMENTåå 2EPORTER å 4HEå IDEALå CAN å DIDATEå WILLå HAVEå SOLIDå RE å PORTINGå ANDå WRITINGå SKILLS åå HAVEå UP TO DATEå KNOWL å EDGEå OFå THEå !0å 3TYLE å BOOK å BEå ABLEå TOå SHOOTåå PHOTOSå ANDå VIDEO å BEåå ABLEå TOå USEå )N$ESIGN åå ANDå CONTRIBUTEå TOå STAFFåå BLOGSå ANDå 7EBå UPDATES åå 7Eå OFFERå VACATIONå ANDåå SICKå LEAVE å ANDå PAIDå HOLI å DAYS å )Få YOUå HAVEå Aå PAS å SIONå FORå COMMUNITYå NEWSåå REPORTINGå ANDå Aå DESIREå TOåå WORKå INå ANå AMBITIOUS å DY å N A M I C å N EW S R O O M å WEåå WANTå TOå HEARå FROMå YOU åå % / % å å %MAILå YOURå RE å SUME å COVERå LETTERå ANDåå UPå TOå å NON RETURNABLEåå WRITING å PHOTOå ANDå VIDEOåå SAMPLESåTO hr@soundpublishing.com /RåMAILåTO å")22%0 (2å$EPT åå 3OUNDå0UBLISHING åå å THå!VE å.% åå 3UITEå å0OULSBO åå 7!å
Have Units To Fill?
www.nw-ads.com email: classified@ soundpublishing. com Call toll free 1.888.399.3999 or 1.800.388.2527
I CAN HELP! Call Today to Place Your Ad in Rental Living!
Debra West 866-603-3215 dwest@soundpublishing.com
,ITTLEå .ICKEL å Aå DIVISIONåå OFå 3OUNDå 0UBLISHING åå )NC å ISå SEEKINGå ANå EX å PERIENCEDå )NSIDEå !D å VER TISINGå 3ALESå #ON å SULTANT å 0OSITIONå WILLå BEåå BASEDå OUTå OFå OURå4ACO å M A å O F F I C E å å 7E å A R Eåå LOOKINGå FORå CANDIDATESåå W H O å A R E å A S S E R T I VE åå GOAL DRIVEN å ANDå WHOåå POSSESSå STRONGå INTER å PERSONALå SKILLS BOTHåå W R I T T E N å A N D å VE R B A L åå )DEALå CANDIDATESå WILLåå NEEDå TOå HAVEå ANå EX å CEPTIONALå SALESå BACK å GROUND å PR INTå MEDIAåå EXPERIENCEå ISå Aå DEFI å NITEå ASSET å )Få YOUå THRIVEåå ONå CALLINGå ONå NEW å AC å T I VE å O R å I N A C T I VE å A C å COUNTS å AREå SELF MOTI å VATED å WELLå ORGANIZED åå ANDå WANTå TOå JOINå Aå PRO å FESSIONAL å HIGHLYå ENER å GIZEDå ANDå COMPETITIVEåå SALESå TEAM å WEå WANTå TOåå HEARå FROMå YOU å -USTåå BEå COMPUTER PROFICIENTåå ATå 7ORD å %XCEL å ANDåå UTILIZINGå THEå )NTERNET åå # O M P E N S A T I O N å I N å CLUDESå Aå BASEå WAGEåå PLUSå COMMISSIONå ANDåå A N å EX C E L L E N T å G R O U Påå B E N E F I T S å P R O G R A M åå %/% 0LEASEåEMAILåRESUMEåå ANDåCOVERåLETTERåTO å hreast@soundpublishing.com
).å9/52åå !2%!
2%0/24%2
Announcements
å " 2 å ( / - % å å " ! åå å MONTH å å DE å POSIT å å SQFT å 1UIETåå NEIGHBORHOOD å FENCEDåå YARDS å OAKå FLOORS å FAMILYåå ROOM å DOUBLEå GARAGE åå
Employment General
#ALLå4ODAY
announcements
"2!.$å .%7å 2EMODEL åå #OUNTRYå LIVINGå CLOSEå TOåå 7ESTWOODå %LEMENTARYå INåå A å C O Z Y å å B E D R O O M å åå BATHå HOME å .EWERå APPLI å ANCES å WOODå FLOORS å TILEåå KITCHENå ANDå BATH å ,ARGEåå FENCEDå BACKå YARD å PATIOåå ANDå GARAGE å .Oå PETS åå å -ONTH å å å)EAVEåMESSAGE
jobs
&4å POSITION å 2EQ D å å YRSåå EXPå INå COMPUTERå MAINTE å NANCEå TECHNOLOGYå PRO å VIDINGå HARDWAREå SUPPORTåå INå Aå NETWORKED å -ICRO å S O F T å E N V I R O N M E N T åå AMå nå PM å - å 4 H å A N D å A M å nåå Money to PM å&RIDAYS å Loan/Borrow #OMPLETEå ANå APPLICANTåå ONLINEå AT å WWW 24# EDU åå , / # ! , å 0 2 ) 6!4 % å ) . å ORå å å%/% 6%34/2å LOANSå MONEYåå ONå REALå ESTATEå EQUITY å )åå Sell it for FREE in the L O A N å O N å H O U S E S å R AWåå Super Flea! Call LAND å COMMERCIALå PROPER å TYå ANDå PROPERTYå DEVELOP å 866-825-90 1 or M E N T å # A L L å % R I C å A Tåå email the Super Flea å åå at theflea@ WWW FOSSMORTGAGE COM soundpublishing.com.
&%$%2!,å7!9å
#OVINGTON
3!,%3å0%23/.å NEEDEDåTOåWORKåINåAåå FUN åFAST PACED ENVIRONMENT
financing
% ! 3 4 å ( ) , , å # L E A N å åå "EDROOM å å BATH å !LLå AP å P L I A N C E S å R E C å R O O M åå F E N C E D å Y A R D å åå MONTH å FIRST å LAST å åå DEPOSIT å .Oå PETS å #REDITåå CHECK å åå
www.nw-ads.com Employment General
WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent
Reach the 56% of our readers who don’t use Craiglist and the 98.1% who don’t use ForRent.com* Whether you need to target the local market or want to cover the Puget Sound area, WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED!
* Pulse Research 2012
ååORå-!),åTO 3OUNDå0UBLISHING å)NC å THå!VENUEå3 +ENT å7!å !44. å(2 ,.3)3
1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527 Employment Media
2%0/24%2 2EPORTERå SOUGHTå FORå STAFFåå OPENINGå WITHå THEå 0ENIN å SULAå $AILYå .EWS å Aå SIX å D A Y å N E W S P A P E R å O Nåå 7ASHINGTON Så BEAUTIFULåå .ORTHå /LYMPICå 0ENINSULAåå THATå INCLUDESå THEå CITIESå OFåå 0OR Tå !NGELES å 3EQUIM åå 0 O R T å 4O W N S E N D å A N Dåå &ORKSå YES å THEå h4WILIGHTvåå &ORKS å BUTå NOå VAMPIRESåå ORå WEREWOLVES å "RINGåå YOURå EXPERIENCEå FROMå Aåå WEEKLYå ORå SMALLå DAILYå åå FROMå THEå FIRSTå DAY å YOU LLåå BEå ABLEå TOå SHOWå OFFå THEåå WRITINGå ANDå PHOTOGRAPHYåå SKILLSå YOU VEå ALREADYå AC å QUIREDå WHILEå SHARPENINGåå YOURå TALENTå WITHå THEå HELPåå O F å VE T E RA N å N EW S R O O Måå LEADERS å 4HISå ISå Aå GENER å ALå ASSIGNMENTå REPORTINGåå POSITIONå INå OURå 0ORTå !N å GELESå OFlCEå INå WHICHå BE å INGå Aå SELF STARTERå MUSTå BEåå DEMONSTRATEDå THROUGHåå PROFESSIONALå EXPERIENCE åå 0ORTå !NGELES BASEDå 0E å NINSULAå $AILYå .EWS å CIR å CULATIONå å DAILYå ANDåå å 3UNDAYå PLUSå Aåå WEBSITEå GETTINGå UPå TOåå O N E å M I L L I O N å H I T S å Aåå MONTH å PUBLISHESå SEPAR å ATEå EDITIONSå FORå #LALLAMåå ANDå *EFFERSONå COUNTIES åå #HECKå OUTå THEå 0$.å ATåå W W W P E N I N S U L A D A I L Y å NEWS COMå ANDå THEå BEAU å TYå ANDå RECREATIONALå OP å P O R T U N I T I E S å A Tåå HTTP WWW PENINSULADAI å L Y N E W S C O M S E C å TION PDNTABS VIZGUIDE åå )N PERSONå VISITå ANDå TRYOUTåå AREå REQUIRED å SOå 7ASH å INGTON .ORTHWESTå APPLI å CANTSå GIVENå PREFERENCE åå 3ENDå COVERå LETTER å RE å SUMEå ANDå lVEå BESTå WRIT å I N G å A N D å P H O T O G R A P HYåå C L I P S å T O å , E A H å , E A C H åå MANAGINGå EDITOR NEWS åå 0 / å "OXå å å 7 åå &IRSTå 3T å 0ORTå !NGELES åå 7! å å O R å E M A I Låå LEAH LEACH PENINSULA å DAILYNEWS COM
Employment Media
Employment Transportation/Drivers
2%4!),å3!,%3 å-!.!'%2 !REå YOUå Aå DYNAMIC å PRO å FESSIONALå INDIVIDUALå WITHåå INNOVATIVEå IDEASå ANDå EX å PERIENCEå INå BUILDINGå BUSI å N E S S å A N D å I N C R E A S I N Gåå PROFITS å 4HENå WEå AREå IN å TERESTEDå INå YOU å 3OUNDåå 0UBLISHING å )NC å ISå CUR å RENTLYå SEEKINGå ANå EXPERI å ENCEDå RETAILå SALESå MAN å AGERå TOå LEADå Aå TALENTEDåå STAFFå FOCUSEDå ONå GROWINGåå REVENUE å BUILDINGå BUSI å N E S S å R E L A T I O N S H I P S åå CREATINGå INNOVATIVEå ADåå STRATEGIESå ANDå STRENGTH å ENINGå ANå ALREADYå STRONGåå BRAND å 4HISå POSITIONå WILLåå M A N A G E å O U R å # O U R I E Råå (ERALDå PUBLICATIONSå INåå % N U M C L A W å " O N N E Yåå ,AKE å ANDå 3UMNER å å 4HEåå INDIVIDUALå MUSTå POSSESSåå STRONGå LEADERSHIPå SKILLS åå B E å A N å E F FE C T I VE å T E A Måå BUILDERå ANDå DISPLAYå Aåå COMMITMENTå TOå MULTI å PLATFORMå AUDIENCEå DEVEL å OPMENT å4HISå POSITIONå RE å QUIRESå ANå ACCOMPLISHEDåå MANAGERå WHOå DESIRESå TOåå WORKå WITHå Aå STRONGå AD å VERTISINGå TEAMå INå Aå HIGHåå QUALITYå MARKET å4HEå RETAILåå SALESå MANAGERå WILLå RE å PORTå TOå THEå 6ICEå 0RESI å D E N T å O F å % A S T å 3 O U N Dåå .EWSPAPERå /PERATIONS åå 2ESPONSIBILITIES å "UILDåå RELATIONSHIPSå WITHå KEYåå A D V E R T I S E R S å H E L P I N Gåå THEMå MEETå THEIRå GOALSåå ANDå GROWå THEIRå BUSINESS åå DIRECTå RETAILå SALESå ANDåå SERVICEå FUNCTIONSå FORå ON å LINE å ANDå COREå PRODUCTS åå TRAIN å MOTIVATE å RECRUITåå ANDå DEVELOPå Aå CREATIVEåå A N D å E N E R G E T I C å S A L E Såå FORCE å MENTORå STRONGå ANDåå EXPERIENCEDå SALESå STAFF å ERSå INå RETAILå ADVERTISING åå ANDå WORKå WITHå THEå 6ICEåå 0RESIDENTå TOå DEVELOPå ANDåå I M P L E M E N T å S T R A T E G I Cåå GOALS 1UALIFICATIONS å -INI å MU M å O F å T H R E E å T O å F I VEåå YEARSå OFå NEWSPAPERå AD å VERTISINGå EXPERIENCE å TOåå I N C L U D E å A T å L E A S T å T W Oåå YEARSå MANAGERIALå EXPERI å ENCEå ISå REQUIRED å "ACHE å LOR Så DEGREEå PREFERRED å !åå SUCCESSFULå TRACKå RECORDåå OFå GROWINGå MARKETå REVE å NUEå SHAREå WITHå Aå PROVENåå RECORDå OFå DEVELOPINGå ANDåå P O S I T I O N I N G å S T R A T E G I Cåå PLANS å WHICHå HAVEå RESULT å EDå INå INCREASEDå SALESåå ANDå PROlTABILITY å -USTå BEåå Aå PROVENå LEADERå WHOå ISåå ABLEå TOå BUILDå Aå STRONGåå TEAMå ANDå ALLIANCES å -USTåå POSSESSå EXCELLENTå COM å MUNICATIONå SKILLSå WRIT å TEN å VERBAL å INTERPERSON å A L å A N D å P R E S E N T A T I O N åå WITHå THEå ABILITYå TOå INFLU å ENCEå CLIENTS å PEERSå ANDåå OTHERå APPROPRIATEå AUDI å ENCES å å 3TRONGå MANAGE å RIALå SKILLSå SELECTINGå ANDåå D E V E L O P I N G å T A L E N T åå C O A C H I N G å A N D å T E A M å BUILDING å ANDå THEå CONFI å DENCEå TOå CHALLENGEå THEåå STATUSå QUOå INå Aå PROFES å SIONALå MANNERå AREå ES å SENTIAL 7Eå AREå ANå %QUALå %M å PLOYMENTå /PPOR TUNITYåå %MPLOYERå ANDå RECOGNIZEåå THATå THEå KEYå TOå OURå SUC å CESSå LIESå INå THEå ABILITIES åå DIVERSITYå ANDå VISIONå OFåå OURå EMPLOYEES å 7OMENåå ANDå MINORITIESå AREå EN å C O U R A G E D å T O å A P P L Y åå 0 L E A S E å E M A I L å R E S U M Eåå ANDåCOVERåLETTERåTO
#/-0!.9å $2)6%23å åå 2ECENTå 4RUCKINGå 3CHOOLåå ' R A D U A T E S å 9O U R å N EWåå CAREERå STARTSå NOW å å 5Påå TOå å TUITIONå REIM å BURSEMENTå FORå Aå LIMITEDåå TIMEå ONLY å å 'REATå 0AYå åå " E N E F I T S å å % X C E L L E N Tåå 4RAININGå 0ROGRAMå )N å D U S T R Y L E A D I N G å S A FE T Yåå PROGRAM å .EWå TOå TRUCK å ING å #ALLå USå FORå OPPORTU å N I T I E S å åå WWW JOIN#234 COM
hreast@soundpublishing.com
$ 2 ) 6 % 2 3 å å # H O O S Eåå Y O U R å H O M E T I M E å F R O Måå 7E E K L Y å / . / & & åå / . / & & å & U L L å O Råå 0A R T T I M E å $ A I L Y å 0AY åå 4O P å E Q U I P M E N T å 2 E å QUIRESå å MONTHSå RECENTåå EX P E R I E N C E å å å W W W D R I V E K å NIGHT COM $2)6%23å å )NEXPER I å ENCED %XPERIENCED å 5N å BEATABLEå CAREERå /PPOR å T U N I T I E S å 4 R A I N E E åå #OMPANYå $RIVER å ,EASEåå /PERATOR å ,EASEå 4RAIN å ERS å !SKå ABOUTå OURå NEWåå 0AYå 3CALE å å å å WWW CENTRALDR I å VINGJOBS NET Business Opportunities
).4%2.!4)/.!,å #5, å 452!,å %XCHANGEå 2EP å RESENTATIVE å %ARNå SUP å P L E M E N T A L å I N C O M Eåå PLACINGå ANDå SUPERVISINGåå HIGHå SCHOOLå EXCHANGEåå STUDENTS å 6OLUNTEERå HOSTåå FAMILIESå ALSOå NEEDED åå 0ROMOTEå WORLDå PEACE åå WWW AlCE COM REPS Janitorial Employment
*!.)4/23 0ART TIME å%VENINGS åå -ONDAY &RIDAY å å2ENTON å -USTåBEå5 3 åCITIZENå åå PASSåBACKGROUNDåå CHECK å HOUR
Schools & Training
!44%.$å #/,,%'%å ON å LINEå FROMå HOME å -EDICALåå
"USINESSå #RIMINALå *US å TICE å (OSPITALITY å *OBåå PLACEMENTå å ASSISTANCE åå #OMPUTERå AVAILABLE å &I å NANCIALå !IDå IFå QUALIFIED åå 3#(%6å CER TIFIED å #ALLåå å WWW #ENTURA/NLINE COM
stuff Auctions/ Estate Sales
+%.4å 0UBLICå!UCTION åå ,ANDLORDå,IEN å&ORECLOSUREå3ALEå åå ååå ATå å!- å
å + 2 / 0 & å 8 åå MOBILEå HOMEå 6). å åå -ERIDIANå -OBILEå %STATES åå 3På å å å THåå !VENUEå3% 0H å
ORåMAILåTO 3OUNDå0UBLISHING å)NC åå Cemetery Plots å THå!VENUEå3 åå +ENT å7!å
#%-%4%29å 0LOT åå !44. å(2 3-% 1UIET å PEACEFULå SPOTå UN å .OåCALLSåORåPERSONAL DERå Aå STUNNINGå SHADEåå åVISITSåPLEASE TREEå INå SECTIONå å %NUM å C L AW å # E M E T E R Y å OVE R å Employment Transportation/Drivers LOOKSå GORGEOUSå -OUNTåå 2 A I N I E R å " E A U T I F U L L Yåå MAINTAINEDå GROUNDSå ATåå $2)6%23 å TH å ,OCALå +ENTå &LATBEDåå å 3%å å 3T å )Fåå SOLDå BYå THEå CEMETER Y åå /PENINGS å %ARNå +åå TOå +å YEAR å 'REATåå THISå PLOTå WOULDå SELLå FORåå "ENEFITS å #$, ! å YRåå å 3AVEå YOURSELFåå SOMEå MONEY å CALLå TOå DIS å %XPERIENCEå2EQUIRED CUSSå THEå DETAILS å *EFFå ATåå
Apr 27, 2012 [21]
www.kentreporter.com Cemetery Plots
ĂĽ #%-%4%29ĂĽ 3PACES ĂĽ SIDEĂĽ BYĂĽ SIDE ĂĽ INĂĽ 3UNSETĂĽ (ILLSĂĽ -EMORIALĂĽ 0ARK ĂĽ "EL LEVUE ĂĽ 3PACESĂĽ ĂĽ ANDĂĽ ĂĽ INĂĽ ,OTĂĽ ĂĽ INĂĽ THEĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ OFĂĽ !SSURANCE ĂĽ !SKINGĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ EACHĂĽ ORĂĽ BESTĂĽ OF F E R ĂĽ # A L L ĂĽ $ A W N ĂĽ A TĂĽ ĂĽ -/.5-%.4ĂĽ 0,/43ĂĽ INĂĽ THEĂĽ GORGEOUSĂĽ 'ETHSE MANEĂĽ #EMETERY ĂĽ 3IDEĂĽ BYĂĽ SIDE ĂĽ CLOSEĂĽ IN ĂĽ NEARĂĽ EN TRANCE ĂĽ NOTĂĽ FARĂĽ FROMĂĽ SIDE WALK ĂĽ %ASYĂĽ WALKĂĽ FORĂĽ VISIT I N G ĂĽ ! L L ĂĽ P A I D ĂĽ A N DĂĽ INCLUDEDĂĽ ISĂĽ THEĂĽ 'ROUNDSĂĽ #ARE ĂĽ ĂĽ ,AWNĂĽ #RYPTĂĽ BOX ESĂĽ TOĂĽ ENCLOSEĂĽ YOURĂĽ CAS KETS ĂĽ PLUSĂĽ THEĂĽ OPENINGĂĽ ĂĽ CLOSINGĂĽ COSTS ĂĽ &RIENDLYĂĽ H E L P F U L ĂĽ S T A F F ĂĽ 6A L U E DĂĽ ĂĽ 3 E L L ĂĽ FO R ĂĽ O N L YĂĽ ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ
!#!#)!ĂĽ "52)!,ĂĽ 0LOT ĂĽ ĂĽ ,AKEĂĽ #ITY ĂĽ !CA CIAĂĽ -EMORIALĂĽ 0ARK ĂĽ "IRCHĂĽ 3ECTION ĂĽ ONEĂĽ GRAVEĂĽ SITE ĂĽ , OVE L Y ĂĽ O L D E R ĂĽ S E C T I O N ĂĽ BEAUTIFULLYĂĽ MAINTAINED ĂĽ !ĂĽ FEWĂĽ STEPSĂĽ OFFĂĽ THEĂĽ ROADĂĽ NEXTĂĽ TOĂĽ THEĂĽ FOUNTAINĂĽ ANDĂĽ 'REENBELTĂĽ ATĂĽ THEĂĽ TOPĂĽ OFĂĽ THEĂĽ PARK ĂĽ 0ERPETUALĂĽ FEEĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ !CACIASĂĽ PRICEĂĽ FORĂĽ THISĂĽ SECTIONĂĽ ISĂĽ ĂĽ 7EĂĽ AREĂĽ ASKINGĂĽ ĂĽ ANDĂĽ AREĂĽ LOOKINGĂĽ FORĂĽ AĂĽ QUICKĂĽ SALEĂĽ TOĂĽ CLOSEĂĽ THEĂĽ ESTATE ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ #HRISĂĽ ĂĽ ' / 2 ' % / 5 3 ĂĽ 6 ) % 7ĂĽ ĂĽORĂĽEMAIL 0LOTSĂĽ ATĂĽ 7ASHINGTONĂĽ -E CCCCODDINGTON GMAIL COM MORIALĂĽ INĂĽ 4HEĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ OFĂĽ #OMMUNION ĂĽ 7ELLĂĽ KEPT ĂĽ L O V E L Y ĂĽ ĂĽ Y E A R ĂĽ R O U N DĂĽ MAINTENANCEĂĽ INCLUDED ĂĽ &RIENDLY ĂĽ HELPFULĂĽ STAFF ĂĽ 3ECTIONĂĽ ĂĽ BLOCKĂĽ ĂĽ PLOTSĂĽ " ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ NEARĂĽ 6ETERANĂĽ SECTION ĂĽ !SKINGĂĽ BELOWĂĽ CEMETER YĂĽ PRICE ĂĽ ĂĽ 7ILLĂĽ SEPARATE ĂĽ ĂĽ 0LOTSĂĽ LO CATEDĂĽ ATĂĽ ĂĽ )NTERNA TIONALĂĽ"LVD !#!#)!ĂĽ -EMORIALĂĽ 0ARK ĂĽ ĂĽ 3)$%ĂĽ "9ĂĽ 3)$%ĂĽ ,/4 3ĂĽ h"IRCHĂĽ 'ARDENv ĂĽ ĂĽ ADJA INĂĽ 2EDMOND SĂĽ "EAUTIFULĂĽ CENTĂĽ CEMETERYĂĽ PLOTS ĂĽ ĂĽ #EDARĂĽ ,AWNĂĽ #EMETERY ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 3 E L L I N G ĂĽ ĂĽ %NSUREĂĽ YOUĂĽ ĂĽ YOURĂĽ LOVEDĂĽ EACHĂĽ ORĂĽ ĂĽ BOTH ĂĽ ,O ONESĂĽ SPENDĂĽ ETERNITYĂĽ TO CATEDĂĽ INĂĽ 3HORELINEĂĽ ĂĽ . ĂĽ GETHER ĂĽ 7ELLĂĽ MAINTAINEDĂĽ 3EATTLE ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ ORĂĽ EMAILĂĽ GROUNDSĂĽ ĂĽ FRIENDLYĂĽ STAFF ĂĽ %MMONSĂĽ *OHNSON ĂĽ 1UIET ĂĽ PEACEFULĂĽ LOCATIONĂĽ ĂĽ INĂĽ 4HEĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ OFĂĽ $EVO EAJ MSN COM TIONĂĽ SECTIONĂĽ ! ĂĽ SPAC ESĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ ALL ĂĽ # % - % 4 % 2 9 ĂĽ 0 , / 4ĂĽ 0URCHASEDĂĽ FROMĂĽ #EDARĂĽ ' R E E N WO O D ĂĽ - E M O R I A LĂĽ ,AWN ĂĽ THEYĂĽ AREĂĽ SELLINGĂĽ ATĂĽ 0ARKĂĽ INĂĽ 2ENTON ĂĽ /NEĂĽ PLOTĂĽ ĂĽ EACH ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ AVA I L A BL E ĂĽ I N ĂĽ B E A U T I F U LĂĽ 2HODODENDRONĂĽ SECTION ĂĽ ĂĽLVĂĽMESSAGE 0 U R C H A S E D ĂĽ I N ĂĽ ĂĽ Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll find everything AMONGĂĽ 2ENTONĂĽ FAMILIESĂĽ ANDĂĽ VETERANS ĂĽ 4HISĂĽ SEC you need in one TIONĂĽĂĽISĂĽlĂĽLLED ĂĽLOCKĂĽINĂĽPRICEĂĽ website 24 hours a NOW ĂĽ ĂĽ &ORĂĽ MOREĂĽ day 7 days a week: DETAILS ĂĽ CALLĂĽ !LICE ĂĽ nw-ads.com.
Cemetery Plots
Cemetery Plots
Flea Market
3 4 5 . . ) . ' ĂĽ 6 ) % 7 ĂĽ / &ĂĽ -ERCERĂĽ )SLAND ĂĽ 3EATTLE ĂĽ " E L L E V U E ĂĽ / L Y M P I CĂĽ -OUNTAINSĂĽ ĂĽ -TĂĽ 2AINIER ĂĽ 0LOTĂĽ FORĂĽ SALEĂĽ INĂĽ THEĂĽ PRE MIERĂĽ 3UNSETĂĽ (ILLSĂĽ -EMO RIALĂĽ 0ARKĂĽ #EMETERY ĂĽ 'OR GEOUSĂĽ SERENEĂĽ SETTINGĂĽ HASĂĽ BEAUTIFULLYĂĽ MAIN TAINEDĂĽ GROUNDS ĂĽ #ORDIALĂĽ ANDĂĽ FRIENDLYĂĽ STAFFĂĽ TOĂĽ HELPĂĽ WITHĂĽ ALLĂĽ YOURĂĽ NEEDS ĂĽ ,OT CATEDĂĽ INĂĽ ,INCOLNĂĽ -EMORI A L ĂĽ ' A R D E N ĂĽ , O T ĂĽ ĂĽ 3PACEĂĽ ĂĽ 4HISĂĽ SECTIONĂĽ ISĂĽ FILLED ĂĽ PRE PLANĂĽ NOW ĂĽ 2ETAILSĂĽ ĂĽ WILLĂĽ SELLĂĽ FORĂĽ ONLYĂĽ ĂĽ 0LEASEĂĽ CALLĂĽ3TEVEĂĽ
7!3().'4/.ĂĽ -%-/ 2)!,ĂĽ #EMETERY ĂĽ 3EATAC ĂĽ ĂĽ 3IDEĂĽ BYĂĽ 3IDEĂĽ 0LOTSĂĽ INĂĽ THEĂĽ 'ARDENĂĽ OFĂĽ 3UNSET ĂĽ %XCELLENTĂĽ LOCATION ĂĽ FLATĂĽ PLOT ĂĽ %ASYĂĽ ACCESSĂĽ FROMĂĽ ROAD ĂĽ ĂĽ PERĂĽ PLOT ĂĽ 7ISHĂĽ TOĂĽ SELLĂĽ ALLĂĽ ATĂĽ ONCEĂĽ ORĂĽ TWOĂĽ ATĂĽ AĂĽ TIME ĂĽ 7ILLINGĂĽ TOĂĽ NEGOTIATE ĂĽ
#%,,ĂĽ 0(/.% ĂĽ NEWĂĽ INĂĽ B OX ĂĽ +YO C E RA ĂĽ 3 ĂĽ CAMERAĂĽ PHONEĂĽ WITHĂĽ BLUE TOOTHĂĽ WIRELESS ĂĽ MOBILEĂĽ W E B ĂĽ A N D ĂĽ M O R E ĂĽ ĂĽ &EDERALĂĽ 7AY ĂĽ
Reach the readers the dailies miss. Call 800-388-2527 today to place your ad in the Classifieds.
Reach thousands of readers with just one phone call.
For All Your Recruitment Needs
ASK THE EXPERT
Professional Services Legal Services
$)6/2#%ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ WITHĂĽ CHILDREN ĂĽ .OĂĽ COURTĂĽ APPEARANCES ĂĽ #OMPLETEĂĽ PREPARATION ĂĽ )NCLUDES ĂĽ CUSTODY ĂĽ SUPPORT ĂĽ PROP ER TYĂĽ DIVISIONĂĽ ANDĂĽ BILLS ĂĽ " " " ĂĽ M E M B E R ĂĽ ĂĽ WWW PARALEGALALTER NA TIVES COMĂĽ DIVORCE USA COM Home Services General Contractors
!,,ĂĽ3ERVICEĂĽ#ONTRACTING /VERĂĽ ĂĽYRSĂĽEXP ĂĽIN ĂĽ
2EMODELĂĽDĂĽ(OMEĂĽREPAIRĂĽ D "ATHSĂĽĂĽDĂĽ+ITCHENS DĂĽ"ASEMENTSĂĽĂĽDĂĽ!DD /N D #ABINETSĂĽĂĽD #OUNTERSĂĽĂĽ
D #USTOMĂĽ4ILEĂĽ D 7INDOWSĂĽĂĽ
D &ENCESĂĽD $ECKSĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ 2EF AVAIL ĂĽ D
,IC "OND )NSĂĽĂĽALLSEC LQ
#ONN SĂĽ "ACKHOEĂĽ $UMPTRUCKĂĽ 3ERVICE
&OUNDATIONS
%XCAVATIONĂĽ 3TORMĂĽ
3EWERĂĽ 7ATERĂĽ
7ETĂĽ"ASEMENT #ALLĂĽFORĂĽ&2%%ĂĽESTIMATE
3ENIORĂĽ$ISCOUNT 9%!23ĂĽ%80 "%%#(#" $
h/NEĂĽ#ALLĂĽĂĽĂĽ $OESĂĽ)TĂĽ!LL v
ĂĽ7INDOWSĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ$OORS
ĂĽ#ARPENTRYĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ$ECKS
ĂĽ&ENCESĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ&RAMING
ĂĽ$RYWALLĂĽANDĂĽ2EPAIRS ,IC ĂĽ ĂĽ"ONDEDĂĽ ĂĽ)NSURED 3TEVE ĂĽ
Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: nw-ads.com. Home Services Handyperson
Whether you need to target your local market or want to cover the Puget Sound area,
WEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;VE GOT YOU COVERED!
Flea Market
flea market
Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper and on the web with just one phone call. Call 800-388-2527 for more information.
Home Services Landscape Services
Home Services Landscape Services
Home Services RooďŹ ng/Siding
./ĂĽ*/"ĂĽ
!NYĂĽKINDĂĽOFĂĽ
TOĂĽSMALL
9!2$7/2+
-)'5%, 3ĂĽ LAWN SERVICE
2//&).'ĂĽ 2%-/$%,).'
$10 off Lawn Mowing for 1st Time CustomersĂĽ
3ENIORĂĽ$ISCOUNTS &REEĂĽ%STIMATES %XPERTĂĽ7ORK
Home Services Handyperson
ORĂĽTOĂĽ")'
"ARKĂĽ 7EEDĂĽ 4RIM
0RUNEĂĽ .EWĂĽ3OD
4HATCHING
www.handymanhero.net
-OWING ĂĽĂĽ0RUNING ĂĽ4RIMMING ĂĽ 4HATCHING ĂĽ!ERATING
7EEDING ĂĽ ĂĽ"ARKĂĽ3PREADING "LACKBERRYĂĽ2EMOVAL ANDĂĽ-5#(ĂĽ-/2%ĂĽ
0AVINGĂĽ0ATIOSĂĽ
2OCKERY 2ETAININGĂĽ7ALLS
'ENERALĂĽ#LEANUP
LISCENSED BONDED INS D
#ALLĂĽ3TEVE
Home Services Hauling & Cleanup
ĂĽ
%: (AULERS
LIC STEVEGL KZ
*UNKĂĽ2EMOVAL
ĂĽĂĽ
,OWESTĂĽ2ATES
Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper and on the web with just one phone call. Call 800-388-2527 for more information.
!,,ĂĽ9!2$ĂĽ7/2+ 34/2-ĂĽ#,%!.50 &REEĂĽ%STIMATES Satisfaction Guaranteed ,ICENSEDĂĽ ĂĽ)NSURED #!,,ĂĽ-)'5%,
",!#+"%229 ĂĽ"253( 2%-/6!,
7EĂĽ(AULĂĽ!NYTHING (/-% ĂĽ'!2!'%ĂĽANDĂĽ 9!2$ĂĽ#,%!.50
!MERICANĂĽ'EN ĂĽ#ONTRACTORĂĽ "ETTERĂĽ"USINESSĂĽ"UREAU ,ICĂĽ !-%2)'# "
Home Services Landscape Services
(!5,).'ĂĽ %8#!6!4)/.ĂĽ "!#+(/%ĂĽ "/"#!4ĂĽ7/2+ ,OTĂĽ#LEARING
Clean & Green Landscaping
($IRT ĂĽ#ONCRETE ĂĽ !SPHALTĂĽ2EMOVAL (3TUMPĂĽ2EMOVAL
Home Services Lawn/Garden Service
ĂĽ
LAWN PK SERVICE Spring Clean Up
Spring Clean-Up r 5IBUDIJOH r "FSBUJPO r 1SVOJOH r 4QSJOLMFS 4ZTUFNT r .BJOUFOBODF
(3MALLĂĽ"LDGĂĽ$EMOLITIONĂĽ (,ANDSCAPINGĂĽ3ERVICES ĂĽ2ESIDENTIAL ,ITEĂĽ#OMM
253-951-7736
3PRINGĂĽ#LEAN 5P
!&&/2$!",%
-OWING ĂĽ4RIMMING ĂĽ %DGING ĂĽ#LEANUP ĂĽ"ARKĂĽ 3PREADING ĂĽ"LACKBERRYĂĽ 2EMOVALĂĽ ĂĽ-ORE
ĂĽ 'UARANTEEDĂĽ7ORK
,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽAĂĽNEWĂĽPLACE ĂĽ #HECKĂĽOUTĂĽ WWW PNWHOMElNDER COM FORĂĽLOCALĂĽ ĂĽNATIONALĂĽLISTINGSĂĽ
Free Estimates & Senior Discounts
4HATCH ĂĽ7EED ĂĽ"ARK ĂĽ(AUL ĂĽ 4REEĂĽ2EMOVAL ĂĽ%TC 0RUNING ĂĽ'UTTERS ĂĽ2OOF ĂĽ -OSSĂĽ#ONTROL ĂĽ3PRINKLER )NSTALLĂĽ ĂĽ2EPAIR
,IC "OND )NSĂĽĂĽĂĽ ,IC ĂĽ 4ILERS *(
Home Services Tree/Shrub Care
* *ĂĽ 42%%ĂĽ3%26)#%
253-631-1199
ĂĽ3ENIORĂĽ$ISCOUNT
www.PKLawnService.com
&REEĂĽ%STIMATES
!&&/2$!",% ,!7.ĂĽ#!2%
)NSUREDĂĽ ĂĽ"ONDED
3PRINGĂĽ$ISCOUNTS
()ĂĽ-!2+ ,!.$3#!0).'ĂĽ ĂĽ '!2$%.).'
ĂĽĂĽ,IC ĂĽ! 3(%', *-
!LEX SĂĽ'ARDENING
4ILEx2OOFx3PECIALTIES
-BOETDBQF r :BSE $BSF .PX r &EHF r 5IBUDIJOH 5SJN r 1SVOF #FBVUZ #BSL r 8FFE
$ANNY SĂĽ,ANDSCAPING ĂĽ4REEĂĽ3ERVICE
ĂĽ#LEANUPĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ4RIMMING
ĂĽ7EEDINGĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ0RUNING
ĂĽ3ODĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ3EED
ĂĽ"ARKĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ2OCKERY
#OMPLETEĂĽ9ARDĂĽ7ORK ĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ
ĂĽ/&&ĂĽ
#OMPLETEĂĽ2EROOFS -OSTĂĽ2OOFS !LLĂĽ4YPESĂĽOFĂĽ2OOlĂĽNG 2EROOlĂĽNGĂĽ 2EPAIR #LEANINGĂĽ &REEĂĽ%STIMATESĂĽ
Find what you need 24 hours a day.
LIC GARRICL CQ BONDED INS
! ĂĽ3(%%2 '!2$%.).'ĂĽ ĂĽ ,!.$3#!0).'
S 2//&).'ĂĽS
2ES ĂĽ2OOlĂĽNGĂĽ3PECIALIST
ĂĽĂĽĂĽ ĂĽĂĽĂĽ
FREE Estimates & Senior Discount $POUBDU -:
#OMPLETEĂĽ9ARDĂĽ7ORK ĂĽDTree Service DHauling DWeeding DPruning DHedge Trim DFence DConcrete DBark DNew Sod & Seed DAerating & Thatching
ĂĽ
ĂĽ
-OWING ĂĽ7EEDING ĂĽ"ARKĂĽ $UST ĂĽ"LACKBERRYĂĽ2EMOVAL ĂĽ 'ENERALĂĽ#LEANUP ,OWĂĽ2ATES &REEĂĽ%STIMATES
RONS?LAWNS YAHOO COM
,)# ĂĽ**4/0*0 ** +./,,ĂĽ42%%ĂĽ3%26)#%
h4HEĂĽ4REEĂĽ0EOPLEv
,!7. -!).4%.!.#%
3ENIORĂĽ$ISCOUNT &2%%ĂĽ%34)-!4%
&REEĂĽ%STIMATES
206-387-6100
#ALL
,IC ()-!2-, *"
2EMOVALS
4OPPING ĂĽ0RUNING
4REEĂĽ2EMOVAL 4HINNING ĂĽ 3TUMPĂĽ'RINDING
"RUSHĂĽ(AULING ĂĽ%TC &2%%ĂĽ%34)-!4%3
ĂĽ
WWW KNOLLTREESERVICE COM ,)#%.3%$ ĂĽ"/.$%$ ĂĽ).352%$
Want more business this year?
Tiffany Walker Recruitment Solutions Specialist 10 years print media experience 866-603-3213 twalker@soundpublishing.com With options ranging from one time advertising to annual campaigns, I have the products and the expertise to meet your needs.
Flea Market
'%ĂĽ 46ĂĽ INĂĽ CONSOLE ĂĽ vĂĽ SCREENĂĽ ĂĽ vWĂĽ XĂĽ vHĂĽ XĂĽ v D ĂĽ ĂĽ / " / ĂĽ #(),$ĂĽ *!#+%4 ĂĽ (ELLYĂĽ (ANSENĂĽ CM ĂĽ SIZEĂĽ ĂĽ WITHĂĽ SNAPĂĽ OFFĂĽ HOOD ĂĽ %X CELLENTĂĽ CONDITION ĂĽ 2ED ĂĽ #HINAĂĽ (UTCH ĂĽ REALĂĽ WOOD ĂĽ W H I T E ĂĽ A N D ĂĽ BL U E ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 4R E A D M I L L ĂĽ ĂĽ &EDERALĂĽ 7AY ĂĽ
607854
Cemetery Plots
601651
www.nw-ads.com
LET ME HELP I can deliver your message to tens of thousands of doorsteps in your market. !#%ĂĽ(ANDYMANĂĽ 3ERVICE )NT ĂĽ ĂĽ%XT ĂĽ0AINTING $RYWALLĂĽ0ATCHING ,AWNĂĽ ĂĽ9ARDĂĽ-AINT 'ARBAGEĂĽ(AULING
#ALLĂĽ*OHNĂĽ4ODAYĂĽ
,IC !#%(!(3 $
Call me today to find out more Jennie Morello 866-296-0380 jmorello@soundpublishing.com Whether you need to target the local market or want to cover the Puget Sound area, WEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;VE GOT YOU COVERED!
[22] April 27, 2012
www.kentreporter.com [ STORES from page 1 ] privatize sales. That change becomes effective June 1. Stores must have at least 10,000 square feet to sell liquor under the initiative, but the state-run stores are excluded from that rule. Initiative 1183 directed the liquor board to auction the state store properties at their current location. However, the state leases the properties, not owns, creating a unique circumstance for the auction. Successful bidders earned the exclusive right to apply for a liquor license at the current location within its current footprint. All state store properties are below the 10,000 square foot threshold established by the initiative. Successful bidders will need to secure a lease with the property landlord. If they are unable to secure a lease, they may re-sell their right or request an alternative location within a 1-mile radius of the existing location. Here is the rundown on the four Kent stores: t ,FOU 1BOUIFS -BLF 20514 108th Ave. SE. Winning bid $141,000 by Ramesh Rabadia, of Renton. Store had $3.7 mil-
Happy Motherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Day! Opens at 3:00 on Sunday May 13th Dinner for Two - $30.50 May 11, 12 & 13
Fine Dining in a Casual Atmosphere
Thank you for nominating us the 2012 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Best Asian Cuisineâ&#x20AC;? Renton Of
Renton Of
www.Goldenpeacockfairwood.yolasite.com
Phone: (425) 226-1802 r 14412 S.E. Petrovitsky Road Renton, WA 98058 )PVST .PO 5IVST 'SJ 4BU r 4VO
.":
$0.1-*.&/5"3: $"3/"5*0/ (add $15.25 per person)
##2 1PSL r &HH 3PMMT Cantonese Style Chow Mein (FOFSBM 5BP T $IJDLFO r .POHPMJBO #FFG 7FHFUBCMF $IPX :VL Golden Special Rice
Dine In or Take Out Now Accepting Reservations
604229
Take 5 Special t5 Linest5 Weekst Runs in ALL the Sound Classified papers
Advertise your Vehicle, Boat, RV, Camper or Motorcycle
Home Furnishings
Medical Equipment
.%7ĂĽ 15%%.ĂĽ PILLOWTOPĂĽĂĽ MATTRESSĂĽ SETĂĽ W WARRANTY ĂĽĂĽ 3ELLĂĽ ĂĽ +).'ĂĽ 0),,/74/0ĂĽ MAT ĂĽ TRESSĂĽ SET ĂĽ ĂĽ PIECE ĂĽ BRANDĂĽĂĽ NEWĂĽ INĂĽ WRAP ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ .%7ĂĽ #(%229ĂĽ 3LEIGHĂĽĂĽ BEDROOMĂĽ SET ĂĽ )NCLUDESĂĽĂĽ DRESSER ĂĽ MIRRORĂĽ ĂĽ NIGHT ĂĽ STAND ĂĽ 3TILLĂĽ BOXED ĂĽ 7ILLĂĽĂĽ LETĂĽ GOĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ & 5 , , ĂĽ / 2 ĂĽ 4 7 ) . ĂĽ M A T ĂĽ TRESSĂĽ SETS ĂĽ NEW ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ . % 7 ĂĽ ! $ * 5 3 4! " , %ĂĽĂĽ B E D ĂĽ W M E M O R Y ĂĽ FO A MĂĽĂĽ M A T T R E S S ĂĽ , I S T ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 3 A C R I F I C E ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ , % !4 ( % 2 ĂĽ 3 / & ! ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ LOVESEAT ĂĽ FACTORYĂĽ SEALEDĂĽĂĽ W LIFETIMEĂĽ WARRANTY ĂĽ ,ISTĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ -USTĂĽ SELLĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ
$58)!.!ĂĽ !$* ĂĽ %LECTRICĂĽĂĽ ( O S P I T A L ĂĽ 3 T Y L E ĂĽ " E D ĂĽĂĽ -ADEĂĽ INĂĽ 3WEDEN ĂĽ 4WINĂĽĂĽ SIZE ĂĽ VER YĂĽ CLEAN ĂĽ VER YĂĽĂĽ COMFOR TABLE ĂĽ %XCELLENTĂĽĂĽ CONDITION ĂĽ (EADĂĽ ĂĽ FOOTĂĽ OFĂĽĂĽ THEĂĽ BEDĂĽ CANĂĽ BEĂĽ RAISEDĂĽĂĽ ANDĂĽ LOWEREDĂĽ BYĂĽ AĂĽ QUIETĂĽĂĽ E L E C T R I C ĂĽ M O T O R ĂĽ 7 A SĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ N E W ĂĽ ! S K I N GĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ OFFER ĂĽ 'REATĂĽ FORĂĽĂĽ READINGĂĽ INĂĽ BEDĂĽ ORĂĽ JUSTĂĽĂĽ LOUNGING ĂĽ -ERCERĂĽ )SLANDĂĽĂĽ
Build up your business with our Service Guide Special: Four full weeks of advertising starting at $40. Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today.
Miscellaneous
/! + ĂĽ # ! " ) . % 4 3 ĂĽ P L U SĂĽĂĽ TOPSĂĽ ANDĂĽ ALLĂĽ APPLIANCESĂĽĂĽ FROMĂĽ KITCHENĂĽ REMODEL ĂĽĂĽ !PPLIANCESĂĽ AREĂĽ WHITE ĂĽĂĽ %VERYTHINGĂĽ INĂĽ GOODĂĽ CON ĂĽ D I T I O N ĂĽ ĂĽ O B O ĂĽĂĽ
0 2 ) # % ĂĽ 2 % $ 5 # % $ ĂĽĂĽ , E A T H E R ĂĽ , I V I N G ĂĽ 2 O O MĂĽĂĽ & U R N I T U R E ĂĽ ( I G H ĂĽ E N D ĂĽĂĽ QUALITY ĂĽ CONTEMPORAR Y ĂĽĂĽ I V O R Y ĂĽ S E T ĂĽ ) N C L U D E SĂĽĂĽ MATCHINGĂĽ SOFA ĂĽ ĂĽ LOVEĂĽĂĽ SEATSĂĽ ANDĂĽ ĂĽ OTTOMANS ĂĽĂĽ "EAUTIFUL ĂĽ MUSTĂĽ SEEĂĽ TOĂĽĂĽ A P P R E C I A T E ĂĽ % X C E L L E N TĂĽĂĽ C O N D I T I O N ĂĽ ĂĽ O B O ĂĽĂĽ
Sport Utility Vehicles Dodge
Dogs '2%!4ĂĽ$!.%
garage sales - WA ! + # ĂĽ ' 2 % !4 ĂĽ $ ! . %ĂĽĂĽ 0UPPIES ĂĽ .OWĂĽ OFFERINGĂĽĂĽ Garage/Moving Sales King County &ULL %URO S ĂĽ (ALF %URO SĂĽĂĽ ĂĽ 3 T A N D A R D ĂĽ ' R E A TĂĽĂĽ !..5!,ĂĽ25--!'%ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ $ A N E S ĂĽ - A L E S ĂĽ ĂĽ F E ĂĽ "!+%ĂĽ3!,% MALES ĂĽ %VERYĂĽ COLORĂĽ BUTĂĽĂĽ 3ATURDAY ĂĽ!PRILĂĽ THĂĽ & A W N S ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ U P ĂĽĂĽ AM PM (EALTHĂĽ GUARANTEE ĂĽ ,I ĂĽ 4HEĂĽ2IVERĂĽ%STATES C E N S E D ĂĽ S I N C E ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ ĂĽh)vĂĽ3TREETĂĽ.% $REYERSDANESĂĽ ISĂĽ /REGONĂĽĂĽ !UBURNĂĽ STATE SĂĽ LARGESTĂĽ BREEDERĂĽ OFĂĽĂĽ 'REATĂĽ $ANES ĂĽ !LSO ĂĽ SELL ĂĽ (OUSEWARES ĂĽ*EWELRY
INGĂĽ 3TANDARDĂĽ 0OODLES ĂĽĂĽ #RAFTS ĂĽ3PORTINGĂĽ'OODS
+ITCHENWARE ĂĽ"OOKS
WWW DREYERSDANES COM 4OOLS ĂĽ3OMEĂĽh,IKEĂĽ.EWv #ALLĂĽ )TEMSĂĽANDĂĽ,OTSĂĽ-ORE
ĂĽ $/$'%ĂĽ $URANGOĂĽĂĽ 3 ,4 ĂĽ X ĂĽ ĂĽ O B O ĂĽĂĽ 'REATĂĽ SHAPEĂĽ INSIDEĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ OUT ĂĽ 'RAYĂĽ ,EATHERĂĽ INTERI ĂĽ OR ĂĽ ROOFĂĽ RACK ĂĽ TOWĂĽ PACK ĂĽ A G E ĂĽ ĂĽ M I L E S ĂĽĂĽ #$ &- !-ĂĽ STEREO ĂĽ AUTO ĂĽ M A T I C ĂĽ T R A N S M I S S I O N ĂĽĂĽ 2UNSĂĽ VERYĂĽ WELL ĂĽ 2EGULARĂĽĂĽ MAINTENANCEĂĽ WITHĂĽ RECENTĂĽĂĽ OILĂĽ CHANGE ĂĽ 3ONĂĽ WENTĂĽ OFFĂĽĂĽ TOĂĽ COLLEGE ĂĽ STEALĂĽ OFĂĽ AĂĽĂĽ DEAL ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ *OEĂĽ ATĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ&EDERALĂĽ7AY Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories
&EDERALĂĽ7AY
% 3 4!4 % ĂĽ 3 ! , % ĂĽ 4W OĂĽĂĽ WEEKENDS ĂĽ &RIDAY ĂĽ 3AT ĂĽ URDAYĂĽ ĂĽ 3UNDAY ĂĽ AM ĂĽ PM ĂĽ ĂĽ 3 ĂĽ THĂĽ 0L ĂĽĂĽ ! U B U R N ĂĽ 7 ! ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ #HR ISTMAS ĂĽ MATER IALS ĂĽĂĽ YARN ĂĽ MIXEDĂĽ ITEMS ĂĽ WAYĂĽĂĽ TOOĂĽMUCHĂĽTOĂĽLIST
Musical Instruments
#ASH x*5.+ĂĽ#!23ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 425#+3ĂĽ
&REEĂĽ0ICKĂĽUP
ĂĽ 2 ! ) . ĂĽ / 2 ĂĽ 3 ( ) . % ĂĽĂĽ 0RICEDĂĽ TOĂĽ SELL ĂĽ !DULTĂĽ ANDĂĽĂĽ CHILDRENĂĽ CLOTHES ĂĽ SHOES ĂĽĂĽ SURROUNDĂĽ SOUNDĂĽ SYSTEM ĂĽĂĽ Advertise your service HOUSEHOLD ĂĽ RECLINER ĂĽ LOVEĂĽĂĽ 800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com S E A T ĂĽ T O Y S ĂĽ B O O K S ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ MU C H ĂĽ M O R E ĂĽ &R I D AY ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ Motorcycles 3ATURDAY ĂĽ AM PM ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ 3 ĂĽ STĂĽ3TREET 2ENTON
ĂĽĂĽ
! . 4 ) 1 5 % ĂĽ 3 1 5 ! 2 %ĂĽĂĽ ' RA N D ĂĽ 0 I A N O ĂĽ ' O O G L EĂĽĂĽ 3QUAREDĂĽ 'RANDĂĽ FORĂĽ MOREĂĽĂĽ INFO ĂĽ 4UNED ĂĽ GOODĂĽ CONDI ĂĽ TION ĂĽ ĂĽ NEGOTIABLE ĂĽĂĽ
Reach thousands of homes with the Classifieds Call us today at: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 email: classified@soundpublishing.com or on the web at: www.nw-ads.com
Find what you need 24 hours a day.
lion in gross sales in 2011. t ,FOU 8FTU 8BTIington Ave. S. Winning bid $125,100 by Rajinder Singh, PG ,JSLMBOE 4UPSF IBE million in gross sales in 2011. t ,FOU .JEXBZ 1BDJÄ&#x2022;D )JHIXBZ 4 8JOOJOH CJE CZ :BO 4VL Kim, of Vancouver. Store had $2.8 million in gross sales in 2011. t ,FOU &BTU UI Ave. SE. Winning bid $160,100 by Kidest Belete, of Renton. Store had $4.2 million in gross sales in 2011. Rabadia, in addition to UIF 1BOUIFS -BLF TUPSF CJE also had the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s highest winning bid of $750,000 for the Tacoma store at 7048 1BDJÄ&#x2022;D "WF XIJDI IBE $6.2 million in gross sales in 2011. The state liquor board ran two simultaneous auctions to achieve â&#x20AC;&#x153;maximum reasonable value,â&#x20AC;? as stated in the initiative. Ä&#x2021;F Ä&#x2022;STU XBT GPS FBDI individual store. The second was for all store locations available for a single bid, XJUI UIF TUBUF UBLJOH UIF higher of the two. The sum of individual bids exceeded the $4.6 million all-store high bid by a nearly 7-to-1 ratio.
pets/animals
9/2+)% ĂĽ 9/2+3()2%ĂĽĂĽ 4ERRIER ĂĽ !+#ĂĽ 2EGISTERED ĂĽĂĽ " O R N ĂĽ ĂĽ ( O M EĂĽĂĽ RAISED ĂĽ 7ILLĂĽ BEĂĽ SMALL ĂĽ &A ĂĽ THERĂĽ ONLYĂĽ ĂĽ LBSĂĽ ĂĽ OZ ĂĽ6ERYĂĽĂĽ FRIENDLYĂĽ ANDĂĽ LOVINGĂĽ PUP ĂĽ PIES ĂĽ FULLĂĽ OFĂĽ MISCHIEF ĂĽĂĽ -OTHERĂĽ ANDĂĽ FATHERĂĽ ON ĂĽ SITE ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ 7ORMEDĂĽ ANDĂĽ FIRSTĂĽĂĽ SHOTS ĂĽ &EMALES ĂĽ ĂĽĂĽ -ALES ĂĽ ĂĽ ĂĽ #ALLĂĽ ANY ĂĽ TIME ĂĽ ĂĽ ORĂĽĂĽ Bottomless garage sale. $37/no word limit. Reach thousands of readers. Go online: nw-ads.com 24 hours a day or Call 800-388-2527 to get more information.
ĂĽ#ASHĂĽ FORĂĽ!,,ĂĽ-AKESĂĽ7EĂĽĂĽ BUYĂĽ ĂĽSELLĂĽ5SEDĂĽ
-OTORCYCLES
"%.4ĂĽ")+%ĂĽ ĂĽ(WY ĂĽ ĂĽ ,YNNWOOD
ĂĽ
wheels
ĂĽ!UBURNĂĽ7AYĂĽ. ĂĽ
www.kentreporter.com
April 27, 2012 [23]
[24] April 27, 2012
Choose Valley for a Remarkable Birth Experience The Physician Team at Valley Women’s Healthcare: (top to bottom) MaryEllen Maccio, MD; C. Robert Bigler, MD; Amy Atwood, MD; Bilha Zomer, MD
www.kentreporter.com
In January, Valley Women’s Healthcare joined the Valley Medical Center Clinic Network. Excellent, safe care is our top priority so we felt it was in the best interest of our patients as well as our practice to form a partnership with our area’s premier hospital leader, Valley Medical Center. What This Change Means for Our Patients This change will not affect office care. Drs. Bigler, Zomer, Maccio and Atwood, as well as all of our staff, will remain in our current Auburn location and continue to provide our patients with excellent OB/GYN care. It is important to note our physicians have now moved all in-hospital care to Valley Medical Center in Renton, including all surgeries and deliveries.
We Chose Valley for Their Remarkable Birth Experience Valley Medical Center parents-to-be enjoy a comfortable home-like setting with an expert level of care unlike any other in South King County. Specially trained staff deliver family-centered care in a safe, nurturing environment designed to provide a full complement of support services for moms and their newborns that we feel is vitally important, including: § Level III Neonatal ICU provides the highest level of care between Seattle and Tacoma
§ In house neonatal team specially trained to care for the tiniest of newborns
§ In-house anesthesia service 24/7 to assist with pain management, Caesarean section and emergency deliveries
§ Maternal fetal medicine specialists
§ 24/7 obstetric hospitalists dedicated to the safety of our patients and new arrivals
§ Lactation specialists § Pediatric specialists
For more information about The Birth Center at Valley Medical Center, visit valleymed.org/birth.
Make your appointment with Valley Women’s Healthcare today! 253.939.9654
1 East Main Street, Suite 100, Auburn, WA 98002