INSIDE | Gardening expert Marianne Binetti talks tomatoes [14]
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Kent Crusaders Rugby Club brings players together [16]
FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 2012
A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING
Kent gets EPA grant to study contamination BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has awarded the city of Kent $400,000 in two grants to inventory, assess
and prioritize contaminated sites in an effort to redevelop the properties. City officials will hire a consultant to help determine location of the sites, how contaminated they are and what
would be needed to clean up the properties. The grants are part of what’s known as the EPA’s Brownfields Program. “It’s not about a risk to the public,” said Josh Hall, city economic development
specialist. “It’s more about identifying idle property and trying to get the property back on the tax base and get development happening.” [ more GRANT page 2 ]
City awards contract to remove Green River sandbags
The United States Air Force Band of the Golden West Concert Band will perform at Kent’s 14th annual Fourth of July Splash at Lake Meridian Park. COURTESY PHOTO.
Air Force band to play at Fourth of July Splash
BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
BY SARAH KEHOE
Say goodbye to the nearly 19,000 giant sandbags along the Green River levees in Kent. The city of Kent awarded the sandbag removal job Monday to AGR Contracting, Inc., of Monroe, with the lowest responsive bid of $894,628. Thirteen companies bid for the project, including a high bid of $2.26 million by Steelhead Construtors, Inc., of California. City engineer Nick Horn estimated the project at $1.2 million. “The goal is to have all bags removed by the end of September,” said Kelly Peterson, city environmental conservation supervisor, in an email. “It may take longer to make any repairs to the trail if the sandbags caused damage.” Work to remove the giant sandbags is expected to start in mid-July, Peterson said.
skehoe@kentreporter.com
[ more SANDBAGS page 5 ]
Culture in motion Bill Mix, of Redmond, displays his Civil War postcards and photos at the Greater Seattle Postcard, Stamp and Paper Collectibles Show last weekend at Kent Commons. Nearly 20 dealers from the Pacific Northwest, California and Utah were at the event that featured close to one million items. RACHEL CIAMPI, Reporter newspapers
Residents are invited to celebrate America’s birthday in Kent with the United States Air Force Band of the Golden West Concert Band. The Fourth of July Splash runs from noon to about 11 p.m. Wednesday, July 4 at Lake Meridian Park, 14800 S.E. 272nd St. The Band of the Golden West will perform from 8 to 9:30 p.m. The Band of the Golden West is a select group of professional Airmenmusicians who support the global
Air Force mission by providing outstanding musical products and services for official military, recruiting, and community relations events and by fostering America’s rich national heritage. Touring the western states of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Nevada, the Concert Band performs a wide variety of music from standard concert band literature and military marches to jazz and pop arrangements, Broadway standards and patriotic music. The Band [ more SPLASH page 4 ]
Kent Cornucopia Days coming up this summer Chuck and Nancy Simpson, 2011 Cornucopia King and Queen.
st al 1 4 nu An
The 41st annual Kent Cornucopia Day’s celebration will be July 12 -15 with a multitude of activities,
entertainment, and fun for the whole family. South King County’s oldest and largest festival features a full size carnival and street fair with a wonderful array of
600 booths offering a variety of items including magnificent smells from over 35 food booths to tempt the palate and entertainment. South King County’s largest parade
Jo i n t h e F u n !
July 12-15, 2012 For more information, visit us at kcdays.com
featuring nearly 100 entries is downtown on Sunday, July 15. The 11th annual Cornucopia Dragon Boat Races [ more DAYS page 4 ]
LOOK FOR THE
CORNUCOPIA GUIDE
IN TODAYS PAPER!
643339
BY SARAH KEHOE skehoe@kentreporter.com
[2] June 29, 2012
www.kentreporter.com [ GRANT from page 1 ] Borden Chemical operated a plant from 1956 to 2001 on First Avenue where the Kent Station shopping mall now stands. The state Department of Ecology (DOE) listed Borden as one of the worst hazardous waste sites. Clean up efforts put the property back on the market. The shopping mall opened in 2005. “That’s a great example of brownfield redevelopment,� Hall said about Kent Station. “You take a site that
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Backyard Birding Paul and Lori Clark of Wild Birds Unlimited Nature Shop will be here on: Thursday, July 12th at 6:30pm. They will be sharing tips with us about Backyard Birding. Stop in and enjoy refreshments and an evening of shopping.
has chemicals, clean it up and redevelop it.� The EPA estimates there are more than 450,000 brownfields in the United States. The agency started the grant program in 1995 to help communities find and assess contaminated properties and eventually clean up the sites. “What we’re talking about is a site where maybe there was a gas station there and we need to know if there were petroleum leaks,� Hall said. “A lot of the study is if there are questions about a site, are they brownfields and do they need clean up?� One potential study site is the old Texaco station at the northwest corner of Central Avenue and James Street, Hall said. The site has been vacant for about four years. “That’s an important corner of real estate,� Hall said. “I’m pretty sure that will be a site we look at.� The city has no formal inventory of brownfield sites. A review of environmental databases maintained by the state DOE documents
Josh Hall, City of Kent economic development specialist, stands at the old Texaco station. STEVE HUNTER, Kent Reporter. the presence in the city of 1,047 potentially impacted sites, including 582 hazardous waste generators, 294 underground storage tank sites, 136 leaking underground storage sites and three Superfund sites. The EPA identified Superfund sites as the worst contaminated properties in the nation. Hall said the Superfund sites in Kent have already been cleaned up and are monitored, including the closed Kent Highlands Landfill at Military Road and South 240th Street and the closed Midway Landfill at 248000 Pacific Highway S. “The grants provide no money for clean up,� Hall said. “But it will give us an idea about what needs to be cleaned up for a developer.� City officials still need to determine the specific sites to be studied. “Some sites are in the industrial valley,� he said.
“Others are old gas stations or laundromats. Other sites we might not even think are brownfield sites but we will find out if there is hazardous material or petroleum there.� City officials will work with contaminated property lists identified by the state DOE and King County to help compile a complete inventory. Hall said consultants will identify up to about 10 sites that have petroleum or other hazardous materials for core samples to find out what’s exactly there and what would be needed to clean up the site. He said the project will take about three years to complete. The studies are expected to begin in a couple of months. Eventually, community outreach will be part of the project so that residents or businesses near a site can find out what was at the property and give input about possible redevelopment of the site.
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KENT
LOCAL
Needy Kent kids receive 1,350 books BY STEVE HUNTER
shunter@kentreporter.com
CONGRESSIONAL 9TH DISTRICT CANDIDATE PLANS TOWN HALL Democrat Dave Christie, who is running for Congress in the 9th Congressional District, will host a town mall meeting from 1-4 p.m. Saturday, June 30 at the Kent Commons Green River Room, 525 Fourth Ave. N. The redrawn 9th District includes portions of Kent and Auburn as well as northeast Tacoma, Federal Way, southeast Seattle, Mercer Island and Bellevue. Adam Smith, D-Tacoma, currently represents the 9th District and is running for reelection. Other challengers to Smith on the Aug. 7 primary ballot include Democrat Tom Cramer and Republicans Jim Postma and John Orlinski.
More than 400 children in three Kent public housing projects will get books to call their own because of a donation of 1,350 books. First Book-Seattle is working with the King County Housing Authority and Kent Youth and Family Services to promote children’s literacy in three low-income communi-
ties, according to a June 19 Housing Authority media release. Children living in Birch Creek, Valli Kee Homes and Cascade Apartments will benefit from the program. Children from birth to age 8 will get books to call their own. First Book is a nonprofit that gives schools and organizations grants to purchase brand new books for chil-
dren in need. The initiative is part of the King County Housing Authority’s broader effort to connect low-income housing, services and education for children living in three public housing communities on Kent’s East Hill. At the three complexes, 74 percent of children live in households where English is the second language, said Rhonda Rosenberg, spokeswoman for the King County Housing Authority, in an email. Twenty-one different languages are spoken and 32 countries of origin are represented. “One of the biggest obstacles to literacy for low-in-
Firework safety tips REPORTER STAFF
New Business City and business leaders gathered last week to celebrate the grand opening of C&G Hair and Beauty Supply, 24228 104th Ave. SE, Suite B. State Sen. Joe Fain (47th District), far right, joined owners Charles and Gwen Allen Carston welcomes in a reception and ribbon cutting ceremony on June 19. The store is collaboration with Lost Art Barbershop to help grow each other’s business. Gwen Allen Carston is part of the a steering committee with a passionate interest in the beautification of East Hill. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter
Kent residents invited to Speed Candidating event REPORTER STAFF
The Kent Chamber of Commerce hosts an event allowing voters to connect with local candidates in a fun Our goal at Sweet Themes Bakery is to offer good quality food that is made from scratch!
come children is the scarcity of reading material in their homes,� said King County Housing Authority executive director Stephen Norman. “Brand new books from First Book – Seattle, coupled with literacy programs provided by our long-time partner Kent Youth and Family Services, will help keep children on track to be able to read by the end of third grade.� Children in Birch Creek, Valli Kee Homes and Cascade Apartments come from families at the lowest level of poverty. Most of them live in homes where English is not the primary language spoken and the average
way. The event takes place from 5-8 p.m. on July 12 in the Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith St. Speed candidating is free for chamber members, $20 for nonmembers. Speed Candidating will feature the 16 candidates for state House and Senate seats in the Kent area talking
with residents in short intervals, much like the protocol for speed dating. There will be 16 tables with 10 seats, one seat for the candidate and nine seats for participants. Those wishing to participate must register as space is limited. Register by calling 253-854-1770 or emailing info@kentchamber.com.
The Kent Fire Department Regional Fire Authority wants to remind residents and visitors that the Fourth of July, while a time to celebrate our country’s independence, is also a day of potential injuries and fires. Fire officials offer the following safety tips: 1. Go see one of the area’s many free firework displays, including the Fourth of July Splash at Lake Meridian. The Splash entertainment begins at noon and the fireworks show at 10 p.m. 2. Only purchase and discharge legal fireworks. Keep in mind that many of the fireworks you buy on Native American reservations are illegal in Kent, Covington, and other cities. 3. Always have a garden hose, bucket of water, or fire extinguisher nearby while discharging fireworks. 4. Always discharge fireworks under adult
annual household income is $18,500. Only about onethird of all East Hill public housing students are meeting standards across all content areas and grade levels. Birch Creek is a 262-unit family housing complex at 27360 129th Pl. S.E. Valli Kee Homes is a 114-unit complex at 23401 104th Ave. S>E. Cascade Apartments is a 108-unit complex at 20500 106th Ave. S.E. Anyone interested in donating quality children’s books to KCHA’s Read to Succeed education initiative should call Rickie Robinson at 206-574-1352.
supervision. Remember that fireworks and alcohol consumption do not safely mix. 5. When lighting fireworks, wear eye protection and only discharge one firework at a time. Place discharged fireworks in a bucket of water. 6. Do not discharge fireworks where ground conditions are dry and the danger of fire is higher. Also remember: 1. Fireworks go on sale June 28 but can only be discharged on July 4. 2. The city of Kent allows fireworks to be discharged between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. July 4. The city of Covington and unincorporated King County allow fireworks to be discharged between 9 a.m. and midnight. 3. Safety emphasis patrols by the Kent Police and Fire Departments will be out and illegal fireworks confiscated. Fines for illegal discharging/possession can exceed $1,000. 4. Illegal or unwanted fireworks can be dropped off at any Kent Fire Department fire station without penalty or fine.
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of the Golden West, based at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., has performed for thousands of listeners in live concert appearances and for millions worldwide via its numerous recordings and television and radio broadcasts. In addition to the headline concert by the U.S. Air Force Band of the Golden West, this year’s Splash includes live entertainment from local talent, as well as America’s Got Talent
contestants The BGP. Activities from noon to 5 p.m. include wooden toy boat building, bounce houses, Seattle Thunderbirds puck and shoot, the new Lake Meridian Park playground, Allied Waste recycling project, food booths, the popular pieeating contests and more. The fireworks display starts at about 10 p.m. Sponsors of the fireworks include Reber Ranch, the Lake Meridian Community Association and Kent Parks, Recreation and Community
Services. The city will offer free shuttle buses that run approximately every 20 minutes from parking areas to the park. The parking lots are Kent Fire Station No. 75, 15635 S.E. 272nd St.; Kentwood High School, 25800 164th Ave. S.E.; and Meridian Elementary School, 25621 140th Ave. S.E. For more information on the Splash and other cultural events, visit www. kentarts.com or call (253) 856-5050.
[ DAYS from page 1 ] will be held July 14 at Lake Meridian Park. The Kent Youth Soccer Association will also host the Cornucopia Cup featuring more than 150 teams this year. The 15th annual Kent Cornucopia Days Skateboard Tournament will be held on July 14th benefiting the Lions Camp Leo for diabetic kids.A 25 and 100-mile Bike Ride happens July 14, along with a Kids Pre-Parade Bike Ride on July 15 by the Emerald City Lights Bike Ride Organization.
The Kent Lions produces Kent Cornucopia Days each year. Members and their dedicated volunteers have devoted thousands of hours to planning and organizing this festival. The City’s Parks Department will again be actively involved organizing the 5K Fun Run / Walk. 2012 Events Dates: - July 4: 4th of July Splash, City of Kent - July 10-11: Downtown Sidewalk Sale - July 12-15: Funtastic Shows Carnival - July 12-15: Cornucopia
Cup Soccer Tournament - July 13-15: Street Fair (Kent Lions / Wayne Hobbs & Irv Hamilton Street Fair) - July 13-15: Lions Health Fair, Safety Fair, educational displays, art show and entertainment - July 14: Kent Cornucopia Dragon Boat Races - July 14: Kent Cornucopia 5K Fun Run / Walk - July 14: Cornucopia Inline Skate & Skateboard Tournament - July 15: Kent Cornucopia Grand Parade - July 15: Children’s Bike Ride.
Quadrant Homes looks to help nonprofits, food banks Nonprofit groups that focus on youth or the elderly and food banks that serve King, Kitsap, Pierce, Skagit, Snohomish or Thurston counties are eligible to apply for grants from Quadrant Homes. Quadrant Homes, a Bellevue-based subsidiary
education of the youth or the elderly, and to local food banks that support needy families in the region. Applications can be found at http://www.weyerhaeuser.com/Sustainability/GivingFund/HowToApply. Proposals should be
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www.kentreporter.com Bend area on the south end of the city. “These are being completed first to minimize delays between the sandbag removal project and other city projects in these areas,� Peterson said. “After these areas are finished, the contractor will remove the bags in a manner AGR Contracting determines to be most efficient.� The city contract requires the contractor to use rubber-tired or rubber-tracked equipment to minimize damage to the paved trail surface. About 2,300 giant sandbags within the Riverbend Golf Complex can be emptied for fill material along the perimeter of the golf course. The contractor must find sites away from the river for the rest of the sand as well as get rid of the black plastic covering the
bags. AGR Contracting will deliver the sand as fill material to Cedar Grove Composting, which will evaluate the sand for its best use in their operations. The Green River Trail will reopen when all work is completed, though some segments may open sooner, Peterson said. “The city asks the community for patience as this work is completed,� he said. Crews from SoundEarth Strategies Construction, LLC of Seattle started to remove giant sandbags Monday from around Kent Elementary School as part of a contract awarded by the Kent School District. The company also will remove bags from around Neely-O’Brien Elementary and Mill Creek Middle School.
Online learning available for Kent students state, with 25,985 students attending 40 schools, an operating budget of $253 million in 2011–12, providing $9,761 per student. The Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction reports that 352 Kent students are taking an online course, or 1.35 % of total student enrollment. Kent officials make online courses available to students through the Kent-Meridian Technology Academy. Though this study is designed to report student enrollment in online courses, it is worth noting that in the fall of 2011 the Kent School District delivered 6,700 laptop computers to every seventh, eighth, and ninth grader, and is fully rewiring school buildings to provide wireless access to
BY LIV FINNE lfinne@washingtonpolicy.org
Washington state has passed several laws to increase student access to online learning, as lawmakers recognize the potential of online courses to increase student learning, to improve instruction, and to provide students with more educational options. A national effort, Digital Learning Now, has launched a campaign to achieve the same goal. This study assesses the progress of online learning in Washington state and reports on the number of students enrolled in online courses in the five largest school districts in the state. The Kent School District is the fourth-largest in the
the internet. Washington Policy Center research indicates that the following policy recommendations, if adopted, would improve the quality of public education for all students. The Legislature should lift the ban on charter public schools and allow innovations in online learning to emerge, and bring needed competition to the regional district monopolies that currently operate Washington schools. The Legislature should discard the arbitrary staffto-student ratio funding model, and instead allow the funding to which students are entitled follow
the student to the school or online learning course of the family’s choice. The Legislature should require local school officials to give students access to all available online learning courses, without conditions or limitations. Students should be encouraged to take at least one online course in high school, so students can demonstrate at least a minimal familiarity with online learning technology. The Legislature should prohibit class sizes from being subject to collective bargaining negotiations, so education officials are not barred from adopting flexible staffing models.
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...obituaries 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.
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The City Council on June 19 pre-authorized Mayor Suzette Cooke to sign a contract up to $1.6 million, the amount approved by the King County Flood Control District. The flood district will cover the costs by delaying levee projects along the river. The district is funded through a countywide property levy of 10 cents per $1,000 assessed value. “Finally we will have our Green River Trail back,� Cooke said in a city media release. “We all want to see these sandbags removed as fast as possible. Now that the dam is operating at full capacity, getting them down is a top priority. I will be so glad to see Kent stop looking like a war zone.� The bags stretch for
than half of the path of the Green River Trail, a popular walking and bicycling destination prior to the placing of the sandbags. Sandbags that are about 3-feet high 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 had repaired the abutment and can operate Hanson Dam at full capacity, which means the sandbags are no longer needed. No heavy rainstorms ever tested the sandbags. Crews will remove sandbags first between South 200th Street and South 212th Street as well as a portion of the Horseshoe
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OPINION
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● Q U O T E O F N O T E : “This law simply allows everyone to marry the person they love. Our job is to make sure voters understand this is about fundamental fairness for all Washington families.” – Zach Silk, campaign manager for Washington United for Marriage, on a referendum this fall seeking to roll back the bipartisan marriage law.
Fourth of July memories and celebrations
BY SHAWN SKAGER
sskager@auburn-reporter.com
Vote online: www.kentreporter.com Last week’s poll results:
“Is it time for a Republican governor?” No: 63% Yes: 37%
KENT .com
REPORTER
Polly Shepherd publisher: pshepherd@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600 ext. 1050
Mark Klaas editor: editor@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600 ext. 27-5050
Sarah Kehoe reporter:
COMMENTARY
“Are you voting to re-elect President Obama?”
Shawn Skager
Question of the week:
For me, every Fourth of July is special. As far back as I can remember, and more so than to any other holiday, I’ve looked forward to the annual celebration of when the United States declared independence from England. Unencumbered by any obligations, like buying gifts, the Fourth has always been simple. And in my hectic, complicated world, just being able to spend a day doing nothing except eating barbecue, drinking beer, blowing stuff up and watching baseball is a rare gift. This year, however, the Fourth of July has an added significance. This year my dad, John Skager, will be posthumously inducted into the Mandan, N.D. American Legion Baseball Hall of Fame. I grew up a Navy brat, courtesy of my dad’s 26-year career in the United States Navy. Although many of the Fourths in my youth were spent in far flung, exotic locales such as Greece, Australia and Utah, whenever we could, we returned to North Dakota – where I was born and my parents grew up – to spend the holiday with relatives. Now, I’ve heard many people brag about how good the Fourth of July celebrations in their hometowns are, and I’ve experienced a few as well. But let me tell you here and now — all of them pale in comparison to a Mandan Fourth. Typically, the festivities start around 10 a.m. with the Main Street Parade, followed by a host of activities such as the rodeo, the demolition derby, music in the park or just chilling with the cousins in a backyard, drinking beer and barbecuing. Paramount among the festivities, however, is the American Legion baseball doubleheader at the Legion Memorial Ball Park. In my extended family, baseball is like a religion, ranking somewhere near the top with God, country and family. [ more SKAGER page 7 ]
skehoe@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600 ext. 5056
Steve Hunter reporter:
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Support legislation in the fight against pancreatic cancer Cancer is a terrible disease that afflicts millions of Americans every year. Fortunately, modern technology has helped stymie the disease from ruining everything in its path. Thanks to major advances in treatment options for many cancers, survival rates have dramatically increased over the past three decades. In fact, the five-year relative survival rate for all cancers is now 67 percent. However, pancreatic cancer has not seen the same advances. It is an insidious disease that kills 74 percent of its victims within one year of being diagnosed and only six percent survive more than five years. Worse yet, the estimated number of cases of pancreatic cancer are expected to increase by 55 percent between 2010
During his term as Washington’s governor, Gary Locke’s mantra was “education is the great equalizer.” Locke, now the U.S. Ambassador to China, was correct, but in our country, today education is becoming the great separator. Here’s the problem. First, far too many students drop
out of high school – nearly 7,000 each day. That adds up to about 1.2 million students a year who don’t graduate with their peers. The consequences are clear. Forbes reports that in 2009, the average high school dropout made $19,540 a year, 40 percent less than their classmates who graduate. The deficit continues into the work-
(NCI) to develop a long term and comprehensive strategy concerning pancreatic cancer. But the bill needs your support in order to become law. Please join me and contact Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell and Congressman Dave Reichert. Ask them to pass the Pancreatic Cancer Research & Education Act and together we can ensure that this deadly disease gets the attention that it deserves. Go to www.knowitfightitendit.org to learn how you can take action today. – Julie K. Pember
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. Deadline for letters to be considered for publication is 2 p.m. Tuesday.
and 2030. Pancreatic cancer needs to be addressed so that these estimates do not turn into reality. Legislation, called the Pancreatic Cancer Research & Education Act (S. 362/H.R. 733), is currently being debated in Congress and would require the National Cancer Institute
Ways to keep education as the great equalizer MY TURN
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place, where the unemployment rate for dropouts is double that of graduates. Secondly, even those who do graduate from high school face problems. According to the Alliance for Excellent Education, remedial education for incoming college students costs the United States an estimated $5.6 billion a year. Remedial courses are necessary because high school graduates do
Following the leader to the painful pump It puzzles me that Americans, including me, stop at the gas station and pay record prices, buy fuel oil for their houses and pay record prices, buy propane or natural gas and pay record prices, go to [ more LETTERS page 7 ]
not test well enough in math, English, reading or science to get into entry-level college classes. According to Washington’s State Board for Community and Technical Colleges, 57 percent of high school graduates entering state community and technical colleges require varying degrees of remedial education. In the 2009-2010 school year, more than half of incoming students took what were termed “pre-college” courses at a cost of $65.7 million – money drained from the state’s general fund and tuition payments. [ more GUEST OP page 22 ]
June 29, 2012 [7]
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giant guy then, but he was one tough guy, and he had a heart to match,� Toman wrote. “What he lacked in size he doubled in courage and sheer guts.� It pleases me to no end to know that other people saw the same guy that I saw, the man who was, and always will be, my hero. This Fourth of July, I’ll once again get to celebrate, not only the holiday, but also my father, John Skager. It’s going to be the best Fourth ever.
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But the high point for me was talking with many of my dad’s high school friends while we were out at the ball park. Being able to see my dad through their eyes, as they shared stories with me, was crucial to my grieving process. Just little glimpses, like an e-mail received from Bruce Toman, who played high school football with my dad, mean so much as I continue to deal with the loss of my dad. “Your dad was not a
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the grocery store and pay record prices and few complain to the fed when oil companies announce record profits. To make matters worse, the fed is complaining that the national debt is out of control. Could it be that we’ve been outbid for our
senators and congressmen by the oil companies? If you think enough is enough, send this to your representatives in Congress and ask for an explanation that does not include “market forces� or “everything costs more� or “normal price fluctuation.�
In addition to his raw talent on the diamond, dad was also notorious for the way he played the game — all-out, all the time. Giving it his all, that was his approach to life. He passed that template on to me, and even though he’s gone now, it guides me still. This past year, just a couple months after dad died from esophageal cancer, I got the chance to spend another Fourth of July in Mandan. It was everything I remembered.
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[ LETTERS from page 6 ]
of the Braves, my dad still holds the record for being the youngest player to make the varsity squad, at 14. Although I never got to see him play baseball, I was lucky enough to have been the bat boy for my dad’s fastpitch team in the ’70s. Gifted with a rocket arm with a short release, courtesy of the time he spent behind the plate, my dad was legendary for his ability to gun down ambitious baserunners from his spot in right field.
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My grandfather, Melvin Skager, was a gifted semipro catcher, who played for the semi-pro Mandan Trainers after his return from fighting in World War II. My father kept up the family tradition in high school, winning two North Dakota state titles as the catcher for the Mandan Braves in the 1960s. According to my cousin, Michael Kaip, a manager for the current incarnation
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[ SKAGER from page 6 ]
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[8] June 29, 2012
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June 29, 2012 [9]
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Police break up large crowd at park BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Kent Police broke up a large gathering of high school students at Lake Meridian Park for a few “minor confrontations” that attracted a large crowd of spectators following the final day of school. The first signs of trouble started at about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 20 at the park along Southeast 272nd Street, said Kent Police Assistant Chief Pat Lowery in an email. Officers stayed in and around the park until it closed at dusk. No arrests were made. “In the end our assessment was that the problems we experienced were largely prompted by the
confluence of several high schools into the park on a single day, a very unusual circumstance,” Lowery said. A lot of kids congregated at the park on the first day of summer, an actual warm and sunny day. “There were a few minor confrontations between some of the youth that generated large crowds of spectators,” Lowery said. Police kept a close watch on the park the next day but had not noticed any similar disturbances. Lowery said officers are working with Kent Parks Department staff to ensure prompt and effective response to behavior problems at the popular, city-owned park. Police will cite individu-
als for disorderly conduct, malicious property damage, use or possession of alcohol or other offenses. People who violate city ordinances are being trespassed when appropriate or cited if the situation warrants it. “We have also increased our presence, particularly in the afternoon and early evening hours when attendance is at its greatest,” Lowery said. Kent Police also have a marine unit that patrols the lake and park. “They patrol on a random schedule with a focus on those days and times when lake traffic is the greatest,” Lowery said. “Park property patrols are augmented by uniformed and plain clothes patrols as well.” The city of Kent holds its annual Fourth of July Splash at Lake Meridian Park.
Barbee’s Kent trial date stalled BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
The trial date has been continued once again for a Seattle man arrested in Kent and charged with promoting prostitution, leading organized crime, promoting sexual abuse of a minor and other charges. Shacon Fontane Barbee, 33, faces a Sept. 18 trial date after King County Superior Court Judge Mary E. Roberts granted Barbee’s attorney’s request for a continuance from a June 19 date. Defense attorney Brian Todd said he needed more time to prepare the case because of voluminous discovery as well as conduct witness interviews, according to court documents. Prosecutors did not join
in the request for the conof that money to Barbee. tinuance, said Ian GoodBarbee pleaded not guilty hew, spokesman for the to the charges against him. King County Prosecuting The charges include three Attorney’s Office. Barbee counts of promoting comalso had previous trial mercial sexual abuse dates continued in of a minor; firstCOURT September, Novemdegree promotber and February. ing prostitution; Barbee allegsecond-degree proedly made at least moting prostitution; $192,000 as a pimp and leading organized during one eight-month pe- crime. He also is charged riod, according to charging with three counts of firstpapers filed against Barbee degree theft in connection in July by King County with wrongfully obtaining prosecutors. money from the Social Kent Police arrested BarSecurity Administration bee in December 2010 near and one count of tampering a Kent hotel. with a witness. A then 19-year-old prosIf convicted as charged, titute told detectives that Barbee could face up to 15 she earned about $2,000 per years in prison. He remains week mainly from workin the county jail at the ing along Pacific Highway Norm Maleng Regional South in Kent and Denny Justice Center in Kent with Way in Seattle. She gave all bail set at $500,000.
REPORT
Kent School District awards and achievements KENTRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL RECEIVES SILVER MEDAL RECOGNITION Kentridge High School was given the rank of Silver Medal School in the nation’s top high schools. This was reported by US News & World Report. Additionally, nearly every year students from Kentridge High School receive national-level scholarships and are recognized as National Merit finalists.
KENT SCHOOL DISTRICT HOSTS REFUGEE EVENT In observance of World Refugee Day 2012, the Kent School District is hosting a free advance screening of the documentary film “A Place in the World.” The film is about a school located in a suburb of Atlanta, Georgia where over 60,000 refugees have been resettled. The event takes place Monday, June 18 from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at Kent Meridian High School, located at 10020 S.E. 256th St. World Refugee Day honors the courage, resilience, and determination of refugees. Today, 27.5 million people in the world are displaced by conflict and violence. Forced to flee, refugees lose everything; their family, friends, home, community and country. The film’s plot focuses on how the parents hold various ideologies, religions and values that come into conflict with one another. The children, whose identities are still being formed, are stretched between two worlds. Despite their differences, all the families want a better life for their children. After the screening, a panel of refugee students in Kent who have overcome challenges similar to those faced by children in the film and professionals will speak with students. The goal of the event is to help newly arrived refugee youth resettle in Kent schools and become contributing members of our larger community.
STUDENTS ATTEND BOEING JOB SHADOW Kent Career and Technical Education students attended the annual Boeing/Junior Achievement job shadow at Boeing facilities throughout the Puget Sound region. Kent-Meridian students visited the Auburn site this year. After receiving security badges, students boarded a Boeing bus and were transported to the tube, duct & reservoir center (TDRC). This plant supplies tubes and duct assembly units for all Boeing Commercial Airplane programs.
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STUDENTS ATTEND FASHION INDUSTRY CONFERENCE Six students from Kent-Meridian High School and eight from Kentwood High School attended the Second Annual Fashion Industry Conference at The Art Institute of Seattle. Students enjoyed a keynote speaker, workshops, a delicious lunch, and a style show presented by students and professional designers. Two students won scholarships to the Art Institute’s summer programs.
KENT STUDENTS ACCEPTED INTO THE WASHINGTON AEROSPACE SCHOLARS PROGRAM Sean Hansberry from Kentridge High School and Nicholas Tillotson from Kentwood will participate in the Washington Aerospace Scholars (WAS) program in June and July at the Museum of Flight in Seattle. The WAS is a competitive educational program for high school juniors from across the state. The scholars are among the 160 students who qualified for the residency program from 297 who applied in November.
ELSEWHERE Kentridge’s Natalie Kelly and Kentwood’s Carly Joy Vela were among 90 local and regional recipients of Leaders and Achievers Scholarship Program awards, the Comcast Foundation announced last week. Comcast asks schools to name students who demonstrate leadership abilities in school activities and who reflect a strong commitment to community service. “All the young people on this list have built impressive track records of service to others, and show great potential to community service throughout their lives,” said Len Rozek, senior vice president of Comcast’s Washington market. The Comcast Leaders and Achievers Scholarship Program provides $1,000 scholarships to students who strive to achieve their potential, who are catalysts for positive change in their communities, who are involved in their schools, and who serve as models for their fellow students. To date, Comcast has awarded more than $17 million to more than 17,000 Leaders and Achievers Scholarship winners. Sgt. Ryan Stone of the Army National Guard recently brought their High School Humvee program to Kentwood High School to demonstrate the technical skills needed to service these important military vehicles. There was also a short video showcasing career opportunities within the National Guard for students of all backgrounds and interests.
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After the plant tour, students participated in mock interviews with Boeing employees. They were given information regarding transferable skill sets, resumes and interviewing strategies.
[10] June 29, 2012
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ARTS AND CULTURE projects by individuals, organizations and community groups are eligible for funds from a new city of Kent program. Applications are open for Give Me Culture grants from the city of Kent Arts Commission. The grants will fund projects that serve the public in Kent. The council agreed to provide $5,000 to the Give Me Culture program out of the 2012 general fund. Funding amounts are available up to a maximum of $1,000 per project. There is no deadline for the program. For more information or to apply, visit www.kentarts.com, call 253-856-5050, or email rbillerbeck@kentwa.gov.
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Business news and activities DOWNTOWN KENT MINI MART OPENS A new convenience store in downtown Kent celebrated its grand opening Tuesday, June 26. Kent Mayor Suzette Cooke performed a ribbon cutting ceremony at Butchie’s Mini Mart, 402 W. Meeker St. The store offers coffee, tea, soda, beer, wine, candy, crackers, ice cream, household essentials and health needs and many other items. For more information, call the store at 253-2368634.
team in Kent,� said David H. Brown, president and CEO of Valley Bank. “With his background in business and community banking, including extensive expertise in commercial lending, he will be an exceptional resource for Valley Bank and its customers in Kent.� Langberg has a BA from Washington State University. His volunteer activities include the Chamber of Commerce, managing and coaching youth soccer, and participating in the American Cancer Society Relay for Life.
ELSEWHERE
Real Estate Investment Services (REIS), a commerBrent Langberg will cial real estate investment transfer from Valley Bank’s firm with offices throughmain office in Puyallup to out Puget Sound, recently its Kent branch announced the hiring on July 2 as vice of Tamarra Howell as president and a property manager commercial lendassistant in its Kent ing officer. office. Langberg will Howell has more be responsible than 10 years’ experifor managing the ence in residential bank’s full range Langberg real estate marketing, of commercial leasing and tenant relending services lations, most recently at the Kent office, as a licensed real estate 124 Fourth Ave. S. agent in Puyallup. “I am extremely pleased Howell previously held to announce the addition of the position of housing adBrent to our management
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vocate for Associated Ministries in Tacoma, where she worked with individuals and families in locating long-term affordable housing through a network of local landlords, homeowners and community service providers. “We are fortunate to have Tamarra as a part of the REIS Kent team,� said Chad Gleason, REIS owner and managing broker for the Kent office. “She brings a unique perspective with regard to customer service and tenant relations that will prove beneficial to our clients.� In addition, REIS announced that Liz Girouard has been promoted to sales and leasing broker in its Kent office. Girouard will work in marketing, leasing and tenant relations with regard to commercial retail properties along the I-405 and I-5 corridor. She held the position of property manager for a wide-ranging office and retail portfolio in Seattle, including the Pike Place Market while at Colliers International. Most recently, she was an assistant investment manager/property manager at Schnitzer West.
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Kent female inmate cited for indecent exposure
shunter@kentreporter.com
Kent Police cited a female inmate at the city jail for investigation of indecent exposure after she allegedly lifted her shirt and flashed her breasts at a male inmate. Jail officials called the police after a male inmate notified them that he wanted to file charges against the woman, according to the police report. The incident occurred June 18 at the city jail, 1230 S. Central Ave. The man told police he stood inside his cell looking out his glass door toward the recreational yard when he saw the woman lift her shirt and expose her breasts to him. He told officers that the act alarmed and offended him because, “he did not like it.� When police talked to the woman, she admitted to the incident. She said she was trying to get accepted by the other “girls� in the jail. She said she refused to lift her shirt at first but did it because the other “girls� thought it would be funny.
The woman is serving a sentence for reckless endangerment. She is scheduled to be released in February. Pursuit Police arrested a woman for investigation of attempting to elude after she sped up to 100 mph along the Benson Highway with two patrols cars after her during a 6.8 mile chase. The pursuit occurred at about 11:58 p.m. June 17 after an officer on routine patrol saw a Chevy Suburban southbound on 104th Avenue Southeast without brake lights as the vehicle stopped at an intersection, according to the police report. The officer activated his emergency lights to pull the vehicle over when the driver turned into a parking lot in the 24900 block of 104th Avenue Southeast. The driver then sped out of the parking lot and the pursuit began northbound on 104th Avenue Southeast, also known as the Benson Highway. The driver reportedly ran red lights at the intersections of Southeast 240th Street, Southeast
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to the ground, he complied. He said he ran because he had been beat up in the past by police. The man denied that he urinated on the sidewalk. He said he was looking for his friends. Burglary Police arrested a man for investigation of burglary and vehicle prowl after a witness saw him reportedly cutting a fence at about 3:04 a.m. June 18 at a commercial business in the 8400 block of South 228th Street.
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ing lot near a restaurant in an area where people typically use the sidewalk, according to the police report. The officer shined a flashlight near the man and saw what looked like a wet spot on the sidewalk where the man had possibly urinated. When the officer rolled down the window in his patrol car and said, “Hey, come here,� the man took off running. When police caught up to the man and ordered him
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Nylon strips on tomato stems
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The end of June is when most of the foliage from spring-blooming bulbs can be removed to tidy up the beds. Wait until the daffodil, tulip or hyacinth greens have either turned brown or when the clump of leaves pulls away easily from the buried bulbs with just a slight tug. The dying foliage is sending nourishment to next spring’s flowers. This is also a good week to stake your tomato plants before the stems become heavy with fruit. Strips of cloth or nylon stockings make great ties for the succulent tomato stems. June is also the month to trim evergreen hedges like boxwood, arborvitae and laurel. When trimming large hedges be sure you leave the top of the hedge slightly more narrow than the bottom. This shape will allow rain water and sunshine to reach the root zone of the hedge. June is the month that belongs to roses, weddings and summer blooms. We live in a climate perfect for growing cut flowers and local growers have experienced a resurgence of interest in
(Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.) UI "WF 4 ,FOU 8" t t www.kentreporter.com
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the more fragrant blooms of old fashioned roses, the zingy color combos of dahlias and glads and a general awareness that local, sustainably grown flowers are a treasure worth searching out. You can buy locally-grown blooms at farmer’s markets, food co-ops or from flower stands along the side of country roads. A new book by Seattle author Debra Prinzing – “The 50 Mile Bouquet: Seasonal, Local and Sustainable Flowers� – celebrates the beauty and designs of buying locally grown cut flowers. This richly photographed book profiles the flower farmers of our area and contains interviews with studio floral designers and retail flower shops that focus on using local blooms in their designs. You’ll meet a bride that uses fresh dahlias to create contemporary hand-held bouquets in jewel toned colors, accented with dusty blue succulents. A flower farming couple that grows the cut tulips and lilac blooms sought after at Seattle’s Pike Place Market and you‘ll also find the story of the tenacious Peterkort family, who have been growing Marianne Binetti
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 R REPO 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.
The Compleat Home Gardener
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roses in Portland for three generations and are now the last rose farmers in Oregon. Designers, gardeners and flower lovers will enjoy the photographs and stories but everyone will be inspired to support our local flower growers and bring more joy and beauty inside from the garden. I could not finish flipping the pages of this book without running outdoors and collecting a free form bouquet of everything in bloom from my garden. It took me back to my early days working for a florist and these tips I learned about cut flowers: Channel Your Inner florist: Tips for enjoying cut flower from your garden t DVU Ę PXFST GSPN ZPVS HBSEFO JO the morning if possible as this is when they will be most full of moisture. t UBLF B CVDLFU PS WBTF UP UIF garden with you so the cut stems can be plunged immediately into water. A plastic wastebasket makes a great receptacle for cut flowers because its sturdy form makes it less likely to tip over when set down amidst the flowers. t PODF JOEPPST BMMPX UIF DVU TUFNT to absorb more water by storing them [ more BINETTI page 15 ] HEALTH SERVICES
I
FOUNDATION
Using Water
Wisely
Check soil moisture depth and root length with a soil corer. Water only when needed. Do it deeply (6-8�) and less often for long roots and healthier plants.
Join Wesley Homes at these community events: Auburn International Farmers Market SUNDAY, JULY 1, 9:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M. SUNDAY, AUGUST 12, 9:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
Auburn Sound Transit Plaza
Des Moines Waterfront Farmers Market SATURDAY, JULY 14, 10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M. SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
North end of the Des Moines Marina
Aging Expo - Aging Successfully in Auburn and Beyond SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 9:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.
Grace Community Church in Auburn
Discover Wesley Homes Luncheons
Wesley Homes
Des Moines 815 South 216th Street Des Moines, WA 98198
206.824.5000 866.937.5390 Wesley Homes
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3RD THURSDAY OF THE MONTH AT DES MOINES 3RD FRIDAY OF THE MONTH AT LEA HILL IN AUBURN KentConserves.com KentWA.gov
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Find out more about Wesley Homes Retirement Communities and Home Health services. Space is limited, so please call today to reserve a seat for you and a friend: Des Moines 206.824.5000; Lea Hill 253.876.6000.
Wesley Homes, a not-for-proďŹ t organization, is afďŹ liated with the PaciďŹ c Northwest Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church.
June 29, 2012 [15]
www.kentreporter.com comes to choosing vases for your cut flowers. A silver baby cup filled with the short stems of mini roses or a china teapot holding petunias and marigolds will add more flavor to your flowers than a recycled florist’s vase. t SFDVU ĘFTIZ TUFNT XJUI a sharp knife at an angle before you add them to
[ BINETTI from page 14] in a cool, dimly lit room away from sunlight. If you have cut flowers for a special event and want to keep them from fully opening, you can wrap some blooms like tulips and peonies in plastic bags and store them on their sides without water in your home refrigerator. t CF DSFBUJWF XIFO JU
Community Notes There is no deadline to apply for the program; applications will be reviewed as they are received throughout the year. For more information or to apply, visit www.kentarts.com, call 253-856-5050, or email rbillerbeck@ kentwa.gov.
Valley Medical Center’s Volunteers in Action are looking for retail gift and flower shop volunteers. All gift and flower shop proceeds fund special projects at the hospital and an employee scholarship program. Volunteers must be over 18 and able to donate four hours per week. An orientation and training program helps volunteers become familiar with new duties. For more information, call the Volunteer Services Department at 425.656.4031, extension 3.
the vase. Woody stems like those on lilacs will absorb water faster and last longer if you whittle the stem. This means to scrape the brown bark from the bottom few inches of the cut stem. t ĘPBU TIPSU TUFNNFE flowers like hellebores, clematis and begonias in bowls of water or use them to decorate your garden by
floating them in your outdoor rain barrel, bird bath or water fountain. t FOKPZ DVU ĘPXFST PVUdoors as well as indoors. A bouquet kept in the shade a patio table or displayed near the front door in a wall hung vase will be a delightful surprise and the cool nights help them last much longer than indoor
The camp, at the base of Mount Si in the Cascade foothills, is four miles east of North Bend. It is nestled in the woods on 360 acres of land.
Cost for the camp is $320, which includes transportation, cabin accommodations, supervision and all meals, field trip and camp shirt.
Organizers of the Kent Parks Residential Camp at Waskowitz will host a parent/camper informational meeting on July 11 from 6:30-9:30 p.m. at Kent Commons, 525 4th Avenue N. The meeting is an opportunity for parents and campers to meet the camp director and staff. A slideshow presentation will be presented. Kent is one of the few cities to offer a resident camp for boys and girls entering the fifth, sixth or seventh grade this fall. The Aug. 6-10 camp, now in its 33rd year, offers a wide spectrum of activities and professional management.
The City of Kent Arts Commission announces a new funding opportunity for arts and culture projects in Kent. Give Me Culture grants are small, flexible grants available to individuals, organizations and community groups. Funding amounts are limited to a maximum of $1,000 per project.
NOW OPEN ON KENT’S EAST HILL
LIVE MUSIC SATURDAYS at 8pm
SATURDAY, JUNE 30
Scholarship monies are available for Kent residents on free-and-reduced lunches.
872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply. For more gardening information, she can be reached at her Web site, www.binettigarden.com. Copyright for this column owned by Marianne Binetti. For more information or to register, please call 253-856-5030 or visit www.kentwa.gov.
BECU MEMBERS from top to bottom: Sam & Ernie S., Seattle; Irene B., Tukwila; Minh Chau N., Seattle; Jonathan & Laura F., Kent; Arnie & Grace M., Everett
CLOSE TO HOME FAR FROM BANKING AS USUAL THE BENEFITS OF BECU are never far from reach. We’re a local, member-owned credit union that offers convenient ways to do all your banking anywhere in the country. As part of the Co-Op Network, our members have access to thousands of surcharge-free ATMs* and partner credit unions, in addition to our Neighborhood Financial Kent is more Centers, online, and convenient than ever: mobile app options. It’s BECU ATMS a better way of banking 8 that’s always right CO-OP SURCHARGEwhere you need it. 9 FREE ATMS* We are BECU. Join us. Kent TOP Foods
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Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and 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
KENT PARKS CAMP MEETING JULY 11
KENT ARTS COMMISSION ANNOUNCES NEW GRANT PROGRAM: GIVE ME CULTURE
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[16] June 29, 2012
ABOUT TO RUCK
CONWELL COMPETES AT OLYMPIC TRIALS Will Conwell, a 2001 Kentwood High School graduate, threw well enough on Monday to advance to the finals in the discus at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials at the University of Oregon. Conwell unleashed a throw of 198 feet, 10 inches to take seventh place in the qualifying round. The top 12 throwers earned spots in the finals, which were Thursday after press deadline. The top three in the finals earn Olympic berths to London.
Savannah Benson tries to elude an opponent during a Kent Crusaders rugby game in May. The Crusaders U19 team, coached by Kentwood’s Rex Norris, finished this past season 26-3 with losses to the national champion and the runner-up. Courtesy of Kent Photo Survey
Kent Crusaders Rugby Club opens doors for players but also brings people together on and off the pitch BY KRIS HILL khill@covingtonreporter.com
Rugby opens doors, it brings people together, and that’s why Kentlake High graduate Devon Vieira loves it. “One the field you’ll be playing against girls you think are the worst,” Vieira said. “Afterward there’s socials and the home team feeds the team that traveled. You’ll talk and find that you have a lot in common with those girls you just thought you were terrible.” Vieira began playing in eighth grade when went out to a Kent Crusaders rugby club practice. Up that point she had been a soccer player. “A friend of mine wanted to stay in shape during the offseason, so, she suggested we play rugby,” Vieira said.
“I had literally never heard offering me rides. And the of it before but I heard there coach … he’s just awesome.” was tackling so it was really Rex Norris, who teaches intriguing for me.” social studies at Kentwood And then her friend who High and has served as the suggested they check it out head football coach there wasn’t able to play. So, it for the past eight seasons, was just Vieira and is the U19 girls “I had literally a bunch of rugby coach for the never heard of it girls she didn’t Crusaders. before but I heard know. Rugby opened there was tackling doors for Norris Vieira was intimidated because so it was really and Vieira said she was the young- intriguing for me.” he helped her Devon Vieira est player there. find opportuniAfter the first ties through the practice, though, sport. she had a feeling Vieira, who rugby could have a place in just graduated from Kenther life. lake in June, will attend “I was really pleased with Quinnipiac University in it because it was such a new Connecticut to play rugby. sport and I kind of knew at “I would not be going to that point I had potential this school if it wasn’t for in it,” Vieira said. “Also, the Norris, either, because he girls were all so kind. The believed in me all along and girls were coming up to me, he pushed me and saw pointroducing themselves and tential,” Vieira said. “From
day one he told me rugby would do great things in my life.” For Norris, who led the U19 team to a 26-3 record this past season with losses only to the national champions and the runner up to go along with the team’s 12th state championship, rugby has been a part of his life for quite some time. A native of west Texas, Norris moved to the area and met a guy who knew Tom Ingles, the former head football coach at Kentwood. When they found out he had played rugby in college and he could coach, Norris got his foot in the door at the school. More importantly, Norris met his wife thanks to a trip with the rugby squad to France. “It helped me get this job, it helped me get married,
it’s flown me all over the world,” Norris said. The U19 squad draws girls from close to 10 schools in the area, not just the Kent high schools, and it’s helped open doors for Cassidy Meyers. While Meyers may now be known for winning a state wrestling title this past winter as a junior at Kentwood, rugby may well be where her long term future is in athletics. Meyers took up rugby in seventh grade after learning about it from a classmate. “I thought it was kind of interesting,” Meyers said. “When I first started playing it was all really confusing. I had no clue what was going on and why there were doing the things that they were doing. After I had [ more RUCK page 17 ]
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girls and release some of that anger. As long as you can catch a ball and you can put one foot in front of another played in some games it was a lot of fun. There was adrena- you can play.â€? line constantly pumping through your body. And the girls She guarantees that anyone who tries it will fall in love on the team, they kind of change you in a way when you with rugby. got to know them.â€? Vieira has done her share of recruiting. She would Anyone can play rugby, Meyers said, there is no stereooften walk through the halls of Kentlake and see a girl she typical type of body or person. thought had potential. Like Vieira, Meyers is a former soccer player, having “I really just emphasize the fact that they’re playing with grown up playing the sport. the Kent Crusaders, that they’re not just going to be part Meyers didn’t try out for club soccer this year. of a team, that it’s like a family,â€? Vieira said. “I’ve Vieira stopped playing after her freshman season of met some of my best friends on the team. Rugby high school ball. season is one of the best times of the year because And like her teammate, Meyers wants to focus on it’s so much fun. You meet new people from all rugby, especially now that she’s a member of the U21 over and you travel a lot. Even though rugby is national team. In June she played in Colorado with intimating anybody can do it and excel at if they the national team and will play in New York in July. want to.â€? “When I started looking at the most passionate And it’s not just girls. Rex Norris sport I was in and I had to start focusing since these Norris’ entire defensive line played rugby. opportunities were coming in, I had to look at what And it doesn’t hurt that rugby opens doors. I wanted to do,â€? Meyers said. “Being on the United Norris added that there have been more than 30 CrusadStates U21 team is just a great feeling.â€? ers players, boys and girls, who have been on the national And if Meyers puts in the work, she has a shot at playing team. in the world cup, possibly even in the 2016 Olympics. “It’s very rare at the end that I don’t have a kid who Those opportunities were just too hard to pass up. tells me that they love the sport more than any other that Rugby may also open doors to college. they’ve played,â€? he said. Meyers has been talking to a school back east about playIt seems like Vieira is right — rugby does open doors ing rugby there. and brings people together. Her senior year at Kentwood she will play soccer in the fall for the Conquerors and she plans to wrestle in the For more information on Kent Crusaders visit the club’s winter. website at www.kentcrusaders.com. Once wrestling is over in late February she’ll be ready to play again with the Crusaders rugby team which starts practice in January and plays through the end of May. Maybe along the way she’ll find some more rugby players. First AME Church Rev. Dr. Carey Anderson, “If I go up to someone that has played sports before ‌ Senior Pastor I tell them that rugby is better than the sport they’re playing,â€? Meyers said. “I tell them to come out and hit some
[ RUCK from page 16]
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Many of the validated benefits of the Mediterranean diet derive from heart-healthy compounds contained in the olive fruit, including the polyphenols tyrosol and hydroxytyrosol. When it comes to olive’s power to support blood pressures already within a healthy range, research shows the bioactive compound oleuropein is primarily responsible. The problem is that optimal amounts of oleuropein are not found in the fruit. The highest concentrations of oleuropein are contained in the olive leaf – a part of the plant that is neither readily available nor commonly consumed. Oleuropein normally degrades during standard food processing. For this reason, Life ExtensionŽ introduces Olive Leaf Vascular Support. Olive Leaf Vascular Support consist of a patented, standardized oleuropein extract using a unique, gentle-processing technique. The suggested daily serving of two 500 mg vegetarian capsules of Olive Leaf Vascular Support supplies optimal concentrations of the proprietary, highly-stable oleuropein, for maximum benefit. Caution: Consult your healthcare provider before taking this product if you are being prescribed antihypertensive medication.
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4th Sunday is Men’s Ministry & Family and Friends Sunday: with FAME Choir led by Sandra Smith-Jackson
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Worship Service: Sundays, 9:30 A.M. Emerald Park Elementary School 11800 SE 216th St. Kent, WA
Hit the trail east for some Old-Timey Patriotic 4th of July Family Fun!
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Bible Study: The Book of Revelation Wednesdays, 7:00 – 8:30 PM Kent Commons (525 4th Av. North in Kent) 641863
630064
Sports Note
Dogs of America. Last year, members of the union collected more than $263,000 for the charity. Originally formed in 1935 to represent hourly workers at the Boeing Co., District Lodge 751 of the International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers now represents some 32,000 working men and women at 48 employers across Washington, Oregon and California.
642110
and funny car races, which will take place that weekend. Tickets are $5 and good for one day’s entry to the races. Tickets are on sale at all District 751 union halls in Puget Sound, including the Auburn Hall at 201 A St. S.W. In addition to the professionals, amateur racers from DOG DAYS CHARITY EVENT SET FOR AUG. 17-19 AT PACIFIC District 751 will take part in the weekend’s activities, said RACEWAYS NEAR COVINGTON Robley Evans, who heads up the Pacific Raceways event for the union. Machinists Union District Lodge 751 is once again “There are probably 15 Machinists Union guys teaming up with Pacific Raceways for their annual who race,� he said. “Everything from drag racers to “Dog Days� charity fundraising event. motorcycles.� CHARITY The annual Pacific Raceways Guide Dogs All proceeds will go to Guide Dogs of America, a Fundraiser will run Aug. 17-19 at the Pacific California-based charity that provides service dogs Raceways drag strip, 31001 144th Ave. S.E. in to people across North America who are blind or unincorporated Kent. have impaired vision. District 751 is selling discount tickets for Pacific Machinists District 751 is the top fundraiser for Guide Raceways’ NHRA Lucas Oil Divisional top fuel dragster
13308 SE 240th, Kent
253-630-3833
Next to QFC in Meridian Valley Center
[18] June 29, 2012
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Community Note COLOR ME BADD TO PERFORM IN KENT SEPT. 8
The R&B group Color Me Badd will headline a Saturday, Sept. 8 concert at the ShoWare Center in Kent.
Mike Hughes, KV Industrial, LLS c/o IDS Real Estate Group, 515 S. Figueroa ST, 16th Flr, Los Angeles, CA 90071, is seeking coverage under the Washington State Department of Ecology’s Construction Stormwater NPDES and State Waste Discharge General Permit. The proposed project, Stryker Business Center at Pacific Gateway, is located at 20403 68th Ave in Kent, in King County. This project involves 16 acres of soil disturbance for stockpiling construction activities. Stormwater will be discharged to directly into Mill Creek. Any persons desiring to present their views to the Washington State Department of Ecology regarding this application, or interested in Ecology’s action on this application, may notify Ecology in writing no later than 30 days of the last date of publication of this notice. Ecology reviews public comments and considers whether discharges from this project would cause a measurable change in receiving water quality, and, if so, whether the project is necessary and in the overriding public interest according to Tier II antidegradation requirements under WAC 173201A-320. Comments can be submitted to: Department of Ecology Attn: Water Quality Program, Construction Stormwater P.O. Box 47696, Olympia, WA 98504-7696 Published in the Kent Reporter on June 22, 2012 and June 29, 2012 #641186. VALLEY MEDICAL CENTER District Healthcare System NOTICE OF BOARD COMMITTEE SCHEDULE Notice is hereby given that the Valley Medical Center Board of Trustees Ad Hoc Community Outreach Committee will meet Monday, July 9 at 4:00 p.m. in the Board Room of Valley Medical Center. BOARD OF TRUSTEES (District Healthcare System) By: Sandra Sward Executive Assistant to the Board Published in Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter, Renton Reporter, Kent Reporter on June 29, July 6, 2012 #642803
Request for Proposal Cultural Competency The City of Kent is soliciting proposals from consultants/firms experienced in providing workplace based training on cultural competency. The selected consultant will provide training to a group of employees during the calendar year. Desirable candidates would include those consultants/firms that meet the criteria contained within the RFP document. To be considered, interested consultants/firms will be required to respond as outlined within the RFP document. See Appendix A for a Proposal Questionnaire. Proposers will be required to submit five (5) copies of the Pro-
Color Me Badd had five hit singles in 1991-92 from their debut album C.M.B., including “I Wanna Sex You Up” and “I Adore Mi Amor.” Other groups performing at The Ladies Night Out, Volume 5 concert include Blackstreet, 112 w/Slim, After 7, Next and Rocky Sandoval. Comedian Ralph Porter will host the show. DJ Funk Daddy will spin music. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the show starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets, starting at $32, are scheduled to go on sale July 2 at www.showarecenter.com.
PUBLIC NOTICES posal Response in the form set out in the RFP document. Submittals are due no later than 2 p.m. on Friday, July 20, 2012, at the City of Kent Clerk’s Office located at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, Washington 98032. Failure to deliver a complete proposal packet to the City Clerk’s Office by the required time and date may result in the summary rejection of that proposal. The City of Kent will review the submittals and select qualified consultants/firms to be interviewed the week of August 6th. A Request for Proposal document is available upon request by downloading the information from the City’s procurement website http://kentwa.gov/procurement/. Questions regarding the proposal process must also be directed to Chris Hills at chills@kentwa.gov, or phoning (253) 856-5285. Your organization may not initiate contact with any other employee from the City concerning the RFP or any other related matter during the course of the request and selection process. Violation of this condition may constitute grounds for disqualification. Advertised in: The Kent Reporter, Seattle Times Publsihed in Kent Reporter on June 29, 2012. #642229. ASSESSMENT INSTALLMENT NOTICE LOCAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT #351 CITY OF KENT Construction of a new five-lane arterial extending from Auburn Way North (East Valley Highway) eastward up the hill to Kent Kangley Road at 116th Avenue, as provided by Ordinance 3496. Notice is hereby given that the twelfth (12th) installment of the assessment levied for the above named improvement, comprising Local Improvement District No. 351 under Ordinance 3513, is now due and payable and unless payment is made on or before July 5, 2012, said installment will be delinquent, will have a penalty of nine (9) percent added, and the collection of such delinquent installment will be enforced in the manner prescribed by law. Dated this 5th day of June, 2012. R. J. Nachlinger Finance Director City of Kent, Washington Published in the Kent Reporter June 22, 2012 and June 29, 2012. #627794. 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 two-way 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 1:30 p.m., local time, on July 25, 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 Com-
mittee 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 originally upon the roll, and the assessment thereon is not raised, no objection shall be considered by the City Council or by any court on appeal unless the objection is made in writing at or prior to the date fixed for the original hearing upon the roll. 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. Publsihed in Kent Reporter on June 29, July 6, 2012. #642244. ASSESSMENT INSTALLMENT NOTICE LOCAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT #353 CITY OF KENT Construction of the South 228th Street Extension, from 54th Avenue South to Military Road, with a bridge over the Green River, additional improvements to Military Road, sanitary sewer improvements between 42nd Avenue South and Military Road, improvements to South 228th Street between 54th Avenue South and 76th Avenue South, and sidewalk and street lighting on 76th Avenue South/ 4th Avenue North between South 220th Street and SR 167, as provided by Ordinance No. 3619. Notice is hereby given that the eighth (8th) installment of the assessment levied for the above named improvement, comprising Local Improvement District No. 353 under Ordinance 3695, is now due and payable and unless payment is made on or before July 15, 2012, said installment will be delinquent, will have a penalty of nine point seven five (9.75) percent added, and the collection of such delinquent installment will be enforced in the manner prescribed by law. Dated this 15th day of June 2012. R. J. Nachlinger Finance Director City of Kent, Washington Published in the Kent Reporter June 29, 2012 and July 6, 2012. #627889. NOTICE OF APPLICATION A Project Permit Application has been filed with City of Kent Planning Services on May 14, 2012. Following is a description of the applications and the process for review. The applications and listed studies may be reviewed at the offices of the Kent Planning Services, 400 W. Gowe Street, Kent, WA. DATE OF NOTICE OF APPLICATION: June 29, 2012 APPLICATION NAME:
QUIET MEADOWS SHORT PLAT APPLICATION NUMBERS: #ENV-2012-14 (KIVA# RPSW-2121463 #SP-2012-3 (KIVA# RPSS-2121891) PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant proposes to subdivide 2.99 acres into nine (9) single family residential lots, a stormwater tract and recreation tract. The property is currently developed with a single family residence and detached garage/shed which is shown to be retained on Lot 1. There are sensitive areas on the site. The zoning for this project is SR-6, single family residential. The project is located at 27415 148th Avenue SE and is identified as King County tax parcel number 3422059119. The project is near the intersection of SE 272nd Street and the private drive 148th Avenue SE. OTHER PERMITS AND PLANS WHICH MAY BE REQUIRED: Critical Areas Review, Civil Construction Permit, Final Short Plat PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD: June 29, 2012 to July 13, 2012 All persons may comment on this application. Comments must be in writing and received in Kent Planning Services by 4:30 P.M., Friday, July 13, 2012, at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, WA 98032. A public meeting is tentatively scheduled for 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, September 12, 2012. This public meeting will be held in the Planning Services Conference Room at 400 West Gowe Street, Kent, WA 98032. Please be advised this meeting date is subject to change. Please call to verify time and date at least a week before the scheduled meeting. If you have any questions, please call Sharon Clamp, Kent Planning Services, at 253-856-5454. Published in the Kent Reporter on June 29, 2012. #643618 INVITATION TO BID Notice is hereby given that the City of Kent, Washington, will receive sealed bids at the City Clerk’s office through July 10, 2012 up to 10:45 a.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: Boeing Secondary Levee and Floodwall Project Number: 09-3009 The project consists of construction of a secondary levee and a floodwall landward of the existing Boeing Levee along the Green River in Kent, Washing-
ton. The project will take place in the City of Kent’s Three Friends Fishing Hole Park. The earthen levee will be approximately 220 linear feet long through the parking lot of the park. The floodwall will be an “I-wall” consisting of driven sheet piles and reinforced concrete and will be approximately 750 linear feet long. In addition to building the levee and floodwall, extra fill material will be placed through portions of the site to retain access to the parking lot, the park and the Green River Trail after construction is complete. A retaining wall approximately 150 linear feet long will be constructed to hold additional fill material in the parking lot away from the floodwall. A total of 9,550 cubic yards of fill material is anticipated for this project. Complete restoration of the park is also included in this project. The Engineer’s estimated range for this project is approximately $2.4 to $2.8 million. Bid documents may be obtained by contacting City of Kent Engineering Department, Nancy Yoshitake at (253) 856-5508. For technical questions, please call Toby Hallock at (253) 856-5536. 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 19th day of June, 2012 BY: Brenda Jacober, City Clerk Published in Kent Reporter on June 29, 2012. #641272.
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[20] June 29, 2012
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[22] June 29, 2012
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[ GUEST OP from page 6 ] day was extended from 7:35 a.m. to 5 p.m., students attend Saturday classes twice a month and enroll in summer school, adding 540 hours of study to their school year. Within a semester, the achievement gap between white students and students of color had vanished. Today, more than 90 percent of the class of 2012 is on track to graduate, compared with about 60 percent of their peers at Lincoln High.
An innovative program in Tacoma is changing those statistics. In 2007, only 17 percent of incoming freshmen at Tacoma’s Lincoln High School met middle school standards in math and only 34 percent met reading standards. In response, the Tacoma Public Schools created The Lincoln Center, a school within a school. The school
We need that kind of flexibility and innovation if we are to improve the value of public education. Lastly, we are failing to meet the growing demand for graduates skilled in math and science. Increasingly, jobs require skilled workers proficient in math and science, but a distressing 40 percent of students entering science, technology, engineering and mathematics tracks in college leave their programs
in the first year. These disciplines require time, discipline and hard work to master, and it is difficult to find teachers skilled in those subjects. Too often, teachers who have mastered math and science leave public education for better jobs in business and industry. One solution is to pay math and science teachers higher salaries to keep them in education. Another is to teach teachers how to teach math
and science. As a college freshman, my trigonometry instructor was an exceptional teacher. She could sense when students were not keeping pace and would provide extra help after class. If the whole class had a problem, she would stop, go back and review the material. As a sophomore, my professor had mastered calculus, but he was a poor teacher. He just went through the motions.
If we are to realize Gov. Locke’s goal of making education the great equalizer, we need to keep students in school, ensure they master their subjects before moving on, and find (and reward) teachers who can effectively teach the math and science skills students need to succeed in today’s high-tech world. Don Brunell is the president of the Association of Washington Business. For more about AWB, visit www.awb.org.
‌local flavor
Make Your Next Meal
a Mexican Fiesta! $ OFF ,BSBPLF 7
THANK YOU FOR 20 YEARS OF CONTINUED SUPPORT! Nominated for:
Best Breakfast Best Lunch #FTU 'BNJMZ 3FTUBVSBOU
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TH REES WI T N E R E NN S ANY 2 DI OF 2 BEVEORrdAerGs-ToE-Go E on S lid A Thurs. Not va when ordering. PURCH upon lid Sun. to
Mon-Fri BN QN t Saturday 7:00am-3:00pm Sunday 7:00am-1:00pm
Mary's Restaurant UI "WFOVF 4& t ,FOU &BTU )JMM
Tom Jacobs Branch Manager
Carla Vertrees Office Manager
Lorelei Windhorn 253-569-1058
Elizabeth Waloweek 253-217-6173
Denise Tholl 253-740-6986
Karen Stevenson 206-251-6200
Bruce Spears 206-769-8529
Robbyn Adelsman 253-569-0106
Directly across from Fred Meyer, Near the corner of 240th & Benson
t XXX FMDIBSSPLFOU DPN
Bring Your Challenges Jose Alvarez 206-219-0523
Philip Baskaron 206-255-3400
Pat Conger 206-227-1959
Dawn DubĂŠ 206-396-8926
Jennifer Gilbert-Smith 253-630-1828
Jan Glenn 253-261-3025
Calvin Gligorea 206-795-0794
253-854-9400/ www.NWKent.PNWRealty.com Housing Starts Jump 28.5% in May‌. Privately owned housing starts saw a substantial year-over-year jump in May, following an even greater upwardly revised increase in April, according to a report by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Teresa Saenger 206-510-8407
Florence Ong 253-347-0510
Karen Hoffman 253-797-3939
Len Huber 206-930-8079
Michele Hunt 206-334-7449
Prudential Northwest Realty Associates is an independently owned and operated member of BRER Affiliates Inc. Not affiliated with Prudential. Prudential marks used under license.
Mary Saucier 253-639-8608
Phyllis Hay 206-295-7649
Julie Horton 206-300-0400
Housing starts rose an estimated 28.5 percent on an annual basis in May. Housing starts have been rising on an annual basis since September 2011 and are now 48.1 percent above their April 2009 level.
Pat Sheets 253-740-1102
643867
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
628416
25230 104th Ave SE Kent, WA 98030
10218 SE 240th Street, Kent, Washington
va present co res 7/13/2012. Coupon s. Please pi or Holiday upon per table. Ex One co
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June 29, 2012 [23]
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[24] June 29, 2012
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Have a Safe & Enjoyable Fourth! The Kent Fire Department Regional Fire Authority encourages everyone to have fun and to be safe this holiday. When discharging fireworks, please follow these simple suggestions to minimize the chance of injuries and fires:
Legal fireworks are permitted but can only be discharged on July 4th from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. in Kent and until midnight in Covington and unincorporated King County. Police and Fire Investigators will be conducting patrols and confiscating any fireworks being discharged prior to July 4th, as well as any illegal fireworks.
1. Always have an adult present when lighting fireworks. 2. Keep a bucket of water and a garden hose or fire extinguisher close by. 3. Only discharge fireworks in a clear area.
Discharging fireworks on any school district property or in city/county parks is strictly prohibited.
4. Wear eye protection when lighting fireworks. 5. Move quickly away from fireworks once lit. 6. If a firework does not work, wait 30 minutes before approaching. 7. Dispose of all discharged fireworks in a bucket of water. Do not dispose of unused fireworks in water. 8. Call 9-1-1 to report illegal fireworks or ones being used in an unsafe manner.
tTHE LAW: It is not legal to possess any fireworks t before noon, June 28th. t Fireworks may be discharged only on July 4th Violation of fireworks law is a misdemeanor and can lead to a $1,000.00 fine and up to 90 days in jail.
Be a considerate neighbor and clean up any debris from fireworks you have discharged Drop off unwanted fireworks at any Kent area fire station. If the fireworks look altered or are homemade call 9-1-1 and request assistance in disposing of them. No police action will be taken if you request disposal of illegal fireworks.
Fireworks LEGAL to possess June 28–July 4
Novelties
Sparklers Morning Glory
Smoke
Reloadable Mortars (1¾" or less)
Helicopters
Multi-Aerials
Parachutes
Ground Spinners
Cones & Fountains
Roman Candles
Wheels
The following are NOT LEGAL to possess in Kent, Covington, and unincorporated King County
Firecrackers
Bottlerockets
Missiles & Rockets
WE WANT YOU …to have a safe and injury free 4th of July
IED and Homemade Items