INSIDE | Developer ends plan to build cottage housing [3]
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Opinion | Community pulls together to help Kent boy [6]
FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013
Sound Transit seeks best light rail route through Kent BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Sound Transit officials are trying to figure out in the next few years where to build light rail
tracks when they extend the line along Kent’s West Hill by 2023. After numerous studies and public input, Sound Transit has narrowed the options to five
potential routes, mainly along Pacific Highway South or Interstate 5, as it aims for a decision on a preferred route by 2015 with a final selection in 2016.
Light rail is funded to be built from South 200th Street in SeaTac to Kent/Des Moines near Highline Community College, just north of South 240th Street.
But transit officials are designing a route to South 272nd Street in Federal Way, including [ more LIGHT RAIL page 5 ]
City seeks levee funds from flood district BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com
Kent city officials hope to persuade the King County Flood Control District board to transfer money saved in a couple of Green River levee projects to help fund other city levee projects along the river. Mike Mactutis, city environmental engineering manager, gave the Kent City Council an update about levee projects and potential funding by the flood control district at a July 2 council workshop. The flood control district is in the process of adopting its 2014 Capital Project list that includes projects through 2017.
ROAR FROM THE PAST The Society of Vintage Racing Enthusiasts (SOVREN) hosted the annual Pacific Northwest Historics Vintage Races at Pacific Raceways last weekend. The event attracts hundreds of cars, and thousands of enthusiasts and
spectators to raise money for the Seattle Children’s Hospital. The field included Porsches, BMWs, Alfa Romeos, Ferraris, MGs and other classic cars that took to the raceway’s 2.25-mile road course. Story, page 14. SHAWN SKAGER, Reporter
[ more LEVEES page 4 ]
Learning on the fly Sealfon recalls skills he learned in Vietnam after Army training BY ROSS COYLE rcoyle@kentreporter.com
Life rarely goes as planned, and even the best training doesn’t prepare us for everything. If there’s one lesson Michael Sealfon learned during his
yearlong tour in the Vietnam War, and the 40 years since, it’s that. Sealfon, who recently self-published a book on his experiences in Vietnam, says the tour shaped his perspective on life and problem solving, and affected him in the subsequent years
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as a reservist and working in private practice. A retired colonel and Ph.D who lives in Kent, Sealfon began his career at Penn State’s ROTC department, and commissioned into the Army Medical Service Corps, which encompasses everything not related to immediate patient care. Laboratory work, logistics and supply and aviation are a few examples of the MSC’s talent pool. Originally, the young lieutenant chose
Cornucopia Days are here BY MARK KLAAS mklaas@kentreporter.com
It’s a longstanding tradition, a festival like no other in the area that brings out the best in Kent while supporting many nonprofit organizations. Bill Westcott knows as much. A tireless volunteer worker for Kent Cornucopia Days for more than 20 years, Westcott joins his fellow [ more FESTIVAL page 2 ]
[ more SEALFON page 12 ]
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[2] July 12, 2013
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[ FESTIVAL from page 1 ] of course, the traditional Kent Lions, the festival’s producers, to keep a good thing going. “It’s one of the largest events in the state of Washington now. We get upward of 300,000 people at it,” said Westcott, volunteer festival coordinator. “It brings a lot of people into Kent who don’t normally come here, especially into downtown historical Kent. “I do it because it’s a fundraiser for the Kent Lions (and the Lions Foundation),” Westcott said, “but it also benefits upward of 250 nonprofit organizations who depend upon raising money at the event.” The 42nd annual festival, the oldest and largest of its kind in South King County, opened Thursday and continues through Sunday. Originally known as the Kent Lettuce Festival in the 1930s, Kent Cornucopia Days has grown in size and scope. The event features a fullsize carnival, a street fair of more than 600 booths offering a variety of items from food to crafts, live entertainment, exhibitions, games, shows and,
grand parade on Sunday afternoon. Hours vary with festivities beginning at 10 a.m. each day. The festival has diversified over the years, and now offers a 5-K run/ walk, dragon boat races on Lake Meridian, a soccer tournament sprinkled over seven area pitches, and a skateboard tournament. It might be symptomatic of an improving economy, but participation and sales have picked up, Westcott said. Carnival operators have reported improved sales for rides, above last year’s clip. “People are willing to spend money now,” Westcott added. Organizers also have run out of room for vendors. Some organizations were put on standby, waiting for the likelihood of a last-minute opening. “We’ve got more vendors than we have spaces for,” Westcott said. “We have all the spots taken.” Anywhere between 150 and 200 volunteers will work this weekend, ensuring the festival’s safety and success. “It’s just a ton of work,” Westcott said. “It’s not
getting easier as time goes by … there are more rules, more regulations, more insurance costs.” But it’s all worth it, considering it benefits the Kent Lions and other nonprofits. “We work well with the city of Kent. They do a great job for us,” Westcott added.
Notes The Kent Cornucopia Days 5K Fun Run and Walk turns 10 this year. The run begins at 9 a.m. Saturday at Three Friends Fishing Hole Park, 20025 Russell Road. Parking is available at Iron Mountain Storage. The 3.1-mile course is U.S. Track and Field certified and flat. For those who haven’t signed up yet, race day registration and packet pickup are available near the start/finish line at 7:30 a.m. For more information, visit KentArts.com or call 253856-5050. … New this year is a children’s activity area in the parking lot of the downtown Wells Fargo Bank, 204 W. Meeker St. … Admission is free. An information booth is at First and Meeker streets. … For more information, visit www.kcdays.com.
Sisters act: Lifelong Kent residents Lilly, Amy and Rosie Kato live today at the Arbor Village retirement center in Kent. COURTESY PHOTO
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The Greater Kent Historical Society Board of Directors chose sisters Lilly and Amy Kato and their sister-in-law, Rosie Kato, as Old-Timers Royalty for this weekend’s Kent Cornucopia Days. All three were born in
Kent in the 1930s and grew up in the O’Brien area when it was a town. They each married, raised families and contributed to the community. They called Kent home, returning here after serving four years at an internment camp during World War II.
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“This has been our home,” Lilly said. As for being honored as royalty at this year’s festival? “We really don’t deserve this, but it just came about,” Lilly said. Added Amy, modestly: “We don’t deserve such an honor.”
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KENT
LOCAL
Developer drops plans for cottage housing
KING COUNTY AWARDS VAN TO REFUGEE WOMEN’S ALLIANCE King County Councilmember Julia Patterson has provided an eight-passenger van to Refugee Women’s Alliance (ReWA), a nonprofit organization that assists refugees and immigrants living in King and Snohomish Counties. The van will help ReWA transport seniors and youth program participants to activities throughout South King County, according to a June 21 County Council media release. ReWA provides services in South King County, including programs in SeaTac and Kent. “Refugees in our South King County communities often face language, cultural and transportation barriers to accessing services and making a successful transition,” Patterson said. “ReWA helps people overcome these barriers.”
acres on the East Hill at the northwest corner of Southeast 240th Street and 116th Avenue Southeast. Cottage-style housing developments feature small, detached single-family homes clustered around a common open space with garages and parking located away from the homes. Ruth listed many reasons in the letter for dumping the cottage housing. “History of cottage developments in the greater Seattle and Puget Sound areas is that very few have
BY STEVE HUNTER
shunter@kentreporter.com
The developer who planned to build the city of Kent’s first cottage housing development has dropped out of the project. Bill Ruth, president of Kent-based W.E. Ruth Real Estate Inc., said in a June 12 letter to City Planning Director Fred Satterstrom that the company will abandon plans for the Blueberry Cottages development for “many and varied” reasons. The city had approved plans for 30 housing units to be built on 4
even gotten off the ground, most never left the planning stage,” Ruth wrote in the letter. “The scattered few that came out of the ground suffered poor sales, minimum profits and usually showed large losses. They sound good but end up bad.” The City Council approved cottage housing in 2008 under a demonstration ordinance in an effort to give buyers more options and get away from the cookie-cutter style of homes that dominate many developments. The recession delayed the project but Ruth Real Estate earlier
this year tried to get the project going again but couldn’t find financial backing from banks. “A short but sad analysis is that banks, large, small, traditional and hard money lenders in total say no under any circumstances,” Ruth wrote. “Lending on cottage projects has ultra bad history.” Ruths said cottage homes are very expensive to build per square foot. “Builders then cannot be competitive with other projects,” Ruth wrote. [ more COTTAGE page 4 ]
North Park residents criticize downtown Kent urban plan BY ROSS COYLE rcoyle@kentreporter.com
Controversy over the use of the North Park district took center stage at a Monday night public hearing at City Hall concerning the further development of Kent through the downtown urban plan. “To have a vibrant downtown, we need housing for all types of people,” said Alan Gray, who echoed the concerns of fellow Land Use and Planning Board members Barbara Phillips and Randall Smith regarding keeping low income housing available in the area. The existing plan, designed by city planner Gloria Gould-Wessen, would streamline downtown zoning by sectioning the area into six distinct regions based on their pedestrian and commercial characteristics: North, South, East and West districts, as well as Central Avenue and Historic districts. The zoning in these regions would be adjusted to more align with the goals for the downtown plan as well
OSPREY PERCH Alaska Copper & Brass this spring installed a nesting platform for local osprey. It is visible from State Route 167. Osprey are retrieving debris left out in farms and other fields to use as nesting material. These materials, as seen hanging from the platform, present a serious entanglement issue for the young that are now in the nest, observed Matthew Rinearson, of Alaskan Copper & Brass. Local farmers and businesses need to be made aware of the risks they are creating, Rinearson said. COURTESY PHOTO, Matthew Rinearson
City to host B&O tax filing workshop July 18 The city of Kent hosts a free training workshop on the city’s new business and occupation tax (B&O) on Thursday, July 18 from 9 to 11:30 a.m. in the City Council Chambers at City Hall, 220 Fourth Ave. S. Interested parties are asked to register online at KentWA.gov/CityTaxes. According to city auditor Robert Goehring, CFE, CPA, the workshop is designed to help filers understand the city’s B&O tax reporting respon-
sibilities. “Participants will learn about B&O tax reporting classifications, exemptions, deductions, gross receipts and square footage tax and how to file online,” said Goehring. “Besides filing online, taxpayers will soon be able to make payments online and set up taxpayer accounts.” Slated to go live in mid-July, a new B&O Tax Return System will allow filers to submit B&O tax returns
electronically, pay B&O tax via eCheck or credit card, complete and submit previously saved returns and view past returns that were filed online. “We’ve made some excellent technology upgrades to make filing very simple for the taxpayer. We’re pleased to provide these new options in advance of the July 31 due date for second quarter taxes,” Goehring said. For more information, call 253856-6266.
as encouraging specific types of growth and development in each. The plan also calls for the rezoning of a half block between Fourth and Fifth Avenues, south of Cloudy Street to a commercial use space, and rezoning several blocks between First and Fifth Avenues from single family low income housing to multi-family townhouse use. Several board members feared that the rezoning would push low income and single family housing out of the area in favor of more expensive townhouses and commercial enterprises. During her public address to the board, Tina Budell, with the North Park Neighborhood Association, laid into the plan, saying that it would irrevocably damage the neighborhood’s community. “Changing the designation of our neighborhood to MCU (Mixed Use Core Urban) will kill our neighborhood,” Budell said. [ more DOWNTOWN page 4 ]
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[ LEVEES from page 1 ] “One of the challenges is to get new projects on the budget and whether there are other places in the county to put funding from the transfers,” Mactutis said. The flood district is funded by a property tax assessment of 10 cents per $1,000 assessed valuation to fund projects. That tax brings in about $40 million per year to help pay for projects along six county rivers, including the Green, Tolt, Snoqualmie and Cedar. About $10 million pays for operating costs per year with $30 million going to fund capital projects, Mactutis said. About $7 million
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goes annually to the Green River basin. City staff wants the flood control district to include four levee projects in its 2013-18 capital projects budget in addition to the $18 million BriscoeDesimone levee approved earlier this year by the King County Flood Control District Board of Supervisors after a dispute between the city and county about the best repair method for the 2.5-mile levee. Kent staff has proposed $9.5 million for the Lower Russell Road levee; $8.4 million for the Russell Road Upper levee; $6 million for the Milwaukee No. 2 levee; and $400,000 for the Myers Golf levee. King County staff had budgeted $32 million for the Briscoe levee under its more extensive plan that the board voted down. That project will now cost an estimated $18 million, with construction starting this year. The county also has $5.8 million budgeted for the Horseshoe Bend levee that city staff says no longer is needed because the levee meets federal standards.
[ COTTAGE from page 3 ]
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Ruth wants city staff to approve a more traditional housing development for the property. “Our team has spent $100,000 trying to make Blueberry work,” Ruth said. “We shared this vision with many on the Kent City Council. Had we known what we know now, we would not have applied for the possible granting of this demonstration project.” Satterstrom, in a letter to Bill Ruth, said the city will honor his request to withdraw from the project. He said city staff will help Ruth find a suitable alternative plat design for the property. Satterstrom said the
Flood district levee work under way this summer REPORTER STAFF
The King County Flood Control District has three levee projects it is helping to fund this summer along the Green River in Kent. All three projects when completed are designed to meet the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s insurance standards for 100-year flood accreditation, according to county officials. County staff wants to keep $2.6 million in the budget for potential property purchase near the Horseshoe Bend levee. The county has budgeted $500,000 for the Lower Russell Road levee and $3.7 million for the Russell Road Upper levee.
Decision time The Flood Control District Advisory Committee will consider the capital projects budget at its July 18 meeting. The Flood Control District Executive Committee is expected to consider the capital projects at its
council will look at options that may include a revision of the ordinance, waiting for a period of time or abandoning the notion altogether. “Cottage housing had worked successfully in other communities and the city wanted to test the waters here,” Satterstrom wrote in the letter. “Your experience, even though it was unsuccessful, has given us insight to certain market and development conditions that will help the city to evaluate the merits of continuing to pursue this unique form of housing.” The council’s Economic and Community Development Committee will discuss cottage housing at a future date.
The projects include: • Hawley Road levee: Construct approximately 835 feet of levee on the east bank of the Green River, between Washington Avenue/West Valley Highway and SR 167 along the approximate alignment of Hawley Road. • Boeing levee: Construct a secondary levee and levee-wall combination behind a portion of
Sept. 16 meeting before the budget goes to the full board, which is composed of the members of the King County Council. “We need to revisit this,” said Council President Dennis Higgins about staying on top of the flood control district budget process. “If we don’t participate, we’ll be on the losing end of the bargain.” County staff also wants to do a System-wide Improvement Framework (SWIF) to aid in the development of a framework to address key flood risk reduction issues on the Lower Green River. The SWIF study has
a deadline of February 2015 and will prioritize capital projects to repair levees. Kent has already spent money to study the levee repairs needed in the city and city officials don’t want those projects delayed because of the SWIF study. “We do not object to SWIF but we’ve done the studies and don’t want to wait in the case of Kent because we’ve done the work,” City Public Works Director Tim LaPorte said to the council. The city’s projects are aimed to have the entire levee system within city limits accredited by the
[ DOWNTOWN from page 3 ] While the area discussed is only half a block, Budell fears that it will follow a progression seen over the past several years of slowly pushing low income housing out of downtown Kent. Budell says that the association provided Gould-Wessen with a number of ideas for development of the North Park area, but didn’t see any of those suggestions in GouldWessen’s presentation. Gould-Wessen denies that the idea has been in any part of her proposal, and that the rezoning of the block was made more with consideration of ShoWare Center’s proximity to the half block than a desire to move out the low income housing. In addition to the complaints regarding North Park, other residents voiced their opinions on focused methods for improving the atmosphere downtown. Wade Schwartz, who owns the Blanc n’ Schwartz Salon on Meeker Street, raised
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Federal Emergency Management Agency in order to remove properties behind the levee from FEMA flood maps to reduce development restrictions and flood insurance requirements in the Kent Valley. Councilwoman Elizabeth Albertson said it might be better to delay projects until the SWIF study is complete so cities can work on projects in tandem that help each city. “We need to make sure we spend wisely and are we putting money in the right place for the whole system?” Albertson said.
concerns that other businesses would be pushed out of downtown, or would take their stores elsewhere if costs became too high. As a recent example, he cited a fruit store which moved to the East Hill due to high costs of operating downtown. “It’s kinda sad when we see more businesses moving out than moving in,” Schwartz said. “It’s a tough row to hoe,” said board member Jack Ottini, after reminding the board and audience that as a 73-year resident of the city, he’s also seen the downtown footprint expand and that there’s no easy answer to managing the growth. Whichever choice the planning board picks, one fact is inevitable, as put forth by a 40-year Kent resident. “Growth is inevitable, you either grow or you die,” the man told the board. The board decided against voting on the plan Monday, instead tabling the issue until its next meeting at 7 p.m. on July 22 at City Hall.
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the existing Boeing levee. The levee is along the east side of the Green River between South 200th Street and South 212th Street. • Briscoe-Desimone levee: Construction of one of four flood walls on the right bank, landward side of the existing levee between South 180th Street and South 200th Street. Construction will reinforce existing levees with flood walls.
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www.kentreporter.com [ LIGHT RAIL from page 1 ] $8 million in the 2013 budget for project development. Officials want the route designed to Federal Way in case money becomes available to build the line that far. Cathal Ridge, South Corridor development manager of Sound Transit, presented an update about the project July 2 to the Kent City Council at a workshop. “By late 2016 the board will select a project (route) to build,” Ridge said to the council. Here are the options: • Interstate 5 westside This route along the west side of I-5 could cause problems because the state Department of Transportation (DOT) has limited right-of-way north of 240th Street. The DOT also may want to use the right-of-way to add toll lanes, Ridge said. • I-5 mix Part of the route along the west side of the freeway and part of it down the freeway median. Sound Transit is uncertain if the median is available if DOT wants to expand freeway lanes. • State Route 99 (Pacific Highway) Tracks could be elevated and go down the median of SR 99, also known as Pacific Highway South. This would cause minimal impact to existing vehicle lanes and businesses but would be an issue at crossing intersections and where the highway doesn’t have a median.
• 30th Avenue South Elevated along the west side of the street that runs east of Pacific Highway South. Could be difficult to transition the track from Pacific Highway to 30th Avenue. • State Route 99 (Pacific Highway) hybrid Track would run along west side of street in some areas; down the median in some areas and along the east side in other areas. Track would be elevated in most areas, at-grade in others. “I’ve been tracking this for a couple of years and the hybrid (option) looks like the more elegant solution I’ve seen,” said Councilwoman Elizabeth Albertson in response to the proposals listed by Ridge. “We looked at all of the configurations and screened out a lot,” Ridge said. “It was not good to go all on the east side or all on the west side. It (the hybrid) is kind of the best of all worlds. But this is out there for consideration, it’s not how it has to be. There may be questions about why it’s on the east side or the west side (at certain spots).” Sound Transit also needs to determine where to put stations and how many stations to have. Right now the primary stations are expected to be at Kent/Des Moines near Highline Community College and at South 272nd Street (either along I-5 or SR 99). Light rail currently runs from Sea-Tac Airport to downtown Seattle. Sound Transit has started construction on a new 1.6-mile line from the airport south to
South 200th Street in SeaTac that is expected to open in 2016. That route will run on an elevated guideway primarily along 28th Avenue South and is budgeted for $72 million this year. Sound Transit gets the majority of its funding through sales taxes, vehicle licensing fees, federal grants and fare box revenue. Voters initially approved funding light rail in 1996 and approved a sales tax increase in 2008 to fund expansion projects through 2023 to Southwest King County, Overlake and Lynnwood. Ridge said once a route is picked, it will take until 2014 to compile a draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and until 2016 to get a final EIS. Design of the project takes another two to three years. Construction takes three to four years, with a projected start of construction in 2019. That pushes the project completion date to 2023. Councilman Bill Boyce asked Ridge if Sound Transit had heard any strong opposition to the project. “No, not yet,” Ridge said. “I don’t know if that’s good or bad. Maybe people don’t know about the project. But we sent mailings to everyone in or near the corridors.” For more information and to comment about Sound Transit’s light rail plans, go to www. soundtransit.org/Projects-andPlans/Federal-Way-TransitExtension.
n e p O w o N Sound Transit will expand light rail to Kent by 2023. COURTESY GRAPHIC, Sound Transit
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[6] July 12 , 2013
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OPINION
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O Q U O T E O F N O T E : “We need to make sure we spend wisely and are we putting money in the right place for the whole system?” – Kent City Councilwoman Elizabeth Albertson, on securing funding on city levee projects along the Green River.
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Golf course poses danger to those using sidewalk I was walking east on the public sidewalk at Meeker Street toward the Riverbend Golf Complex, carrying my 3½-pound dog when a golf ball hit her in the eye. It has caused serious damage to her eye, causing the eye to be removed and a loss of sight. My sister was with me and yelled at the golfers, but they did not come. We rushed her to the vet, who hospitalized her for several days, and we have made several followup trips. The incident was reported to the city of Kent. We filed a liability report with the city, advising the injury along with our vet bill and pictures, which in turn were forwarded to claims management. They have replied, advising they attempted to locate the golfer, but no one admitted it was their ball
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. that hit my dog. They advised that the city of Kent is not responsible for the negligent acts of golfers and denied our claim. There is no fence where we were walking and no warning signs to protect injuries from happening. I believe someone should look into this safety issue for
GUEST EDITORIAL
Upon review, the Legislature was predictable Now that the interminable journey of Washington’s 147 lawmakers is over, what is remarkable is how predictable everything turned out. Veteran observers of life under the Capitol Dome said in January that a divided Legislature, a rookie governor, a court order to boost school
funding and a slowly recovering economy created a perfect storm for bitter impasse and grudging compromise. In the aftermath of a regular session and two extra sessions spanning 153 days, that’s pretty much what happened. As expected, most of the signa-
COMMENTARY
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Dennis Brooke
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Every great cause requires a person to stop forward and make that dream a reality. Several years ago I had the pleasure of working with a leader in our town who underestimated her ability to make the dream of a critically ill young man come true. In 2008 Cullen Steele was diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension, a disease that requires the Kent boy to take a battery of drugs, including wearing a backpack that administers medication intravenously at six-minute intervals. Cullen, then a thirdgrader at Holy Family School in Auburn, was told he would eventually need a heart, double-lung transplant. But before the specialists at Stanford University would put him on the transplant list, his family had to raise $75,000 to help pay for expenses that wouldn’t be covered by his medical insurance. Fortunately for the Steele family, there is an organization called the Children’s Organ Transplant Organization, COTA, that exists just for this purpose. The people at COTA met with the family and local volunteers to help organize a one year fundraising campaign. At this point, Amy O’DonnellRiley stepped in to be the coordinator to help make Cullen Steele’s dream come true. Amy had a worthy cause and dedicated volunteers to help. But the path was rough. There were people who questioned why the focus on one kid, when there were plenty of people in need. Her pitch to a group of local government employees was turned down in favor of another charity. And as the year progressed it looked more and more unlikely that we were going to achieve the $75,000 goal. At one point of great frustration Amy was talking to me about whether or not she was the right person to lead this effort.
ture initiatives put forth by Democrats, Republicans and Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee wound up on the editing room floor. Those which survived were watered-down or made the subject of further study. Democrats couldn’t pass a universal background check for private gun sales, the Reproductive Parity Act to ensure health insurance plans cover abortion services
the public. We also want to make people aware of the danger to pedestrians walking on this public sidewalk to prevent this from happening to anyone else. – Marion Reed
Fireworks out of control When my neighbors on the East Hill in Kent started the Fourth of July fireworks on the evening of the third, I called 911. What I found was very disturbing. You can legally torture my dog from 9 a.m. until 11 p.m., but as no one does anything about it, you can illegally continue to torture him for several more hours and begin the torture again on July 5 and July 6. This is barbaric. When will we grow up and ban fireworks in Kent altogether? – Dolores Early or the Washington Dream Act to make undocumented immigrants eligible for state financial aid for college. They were thwarted on a transportation funding package and that brought down the controversial Columbia River Crossing project. Republicans couldn’t pass laws revising the workers’ compensation system, giving a letter grade to every school and allowing principals to choose teachers for their campus. [ more CORNFIELD page 8 ]
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[ BROOKE from page 6 ] She said, “I must be the world’s worst COTA coordinator.” I lamented with her, offered encouragement, and remembered the comment. Amy and her band of believers stayed the course. Auburn pastor Don Stevenson walked 1,200 miles throughout the state of Washington to raise money for the cause. A Buddy Holly tribute concert at the Auburn Avenue Theater brought the community together, raised money, and spread the word about Cullen. Friends and classmates “donated their birthdays” by asking for support for COTA instead of gifts. A Brownie troop donated their part of cookie sales to the cause. And during one particularly low point, Leon Sanders, the father of one of Cullen’s classmates, walked into an organization meeting with three checks totaling more than $6,000 – the results of scrap metal contributions by local businesses. As the good news piled up, I frequently had the chance to kid Amy by telling her, “Not bad for the ‘world’s worst COTA coordinator.’ ” But as the year wound down it looked like we would fall short of the $75,000 goal.
Industrial facilities recognized for environmental compliance Seventy area facilities that met or exceeded wastewater discharge permit requirements this year earned environmental compliance awards from King County’s Industrial Waste Program. Each year, the Industrial Waste Program, which operates as part of King County’s Wastewater Treatment Division, honors local facilities whose business practices contribute to regional pollution prevention goals. The Industrial Waste Program presented a Gold Award to 46 facilities – eight from Kent – for compliance with
At play: Cullen Steele, third from left, and friends at a Fabulous Murphtones benefit concert. COURTESY PHOTO
[ CORNFIELD from page 6 ]
You can help Cullen
As anticipated, the session’s signature achievement could be seen coming months in advance. Lawmakers triumphantly poured an additional $1 billion into the basic education of the state’s 1 million public school students. But it had to be done as they were under the duress of a Supreme Court mandate to pay the full price of the education the state promises rather than make local districts cover the tab. And lawmakers of both parties pretty much never hesitated at expanding Medicaid to cover as many as 300,000 more children and adults. With the federal government covering the additional costs, it wasn’t all that hard a decision. On taxes, neither party could claim total victory. House Democrats and Inslee could not get the $1.3 billion tax package they wanted and Republicans could not completely block all tax increases as they
Cullen Steele is now 14 and a priority candidate for the transplant list. He now carries two backpacks to deliver critical medication on an around the clock basis. Getting on the transplant list depends on his ability to have transportation from his Seattle area home to San Francisco in four hours or less – on a moment’s notice. If you can help in that area please contact me at dennis@dennisbrooke.com. If you’d like to make a tax deductible contribution to Cullen’s COTA fund go to cota.donorpages.com/PatientOnlineDonation/COTAforCullenS/. You also can go to www.COTA.org and search for Cullen Steele. Keep in touch with his progress at his Caring Bridge Site: www. caringbridge.org/visit/cullensteele.
Amy rallied her team. Pastor Stevenson talked a local choir into a benefit concert that raised more than $10,000. Leon organized a community scrap drive, and in the end the “World’s Worst COTA coordinator” raised more than $79,000. Because we beat the one-year deadline, COTA added $15,000 in matching funds for a total
of nearly $100,000. Sometimes success is showing up, recruiting fellow believers, and persevering through tough times. Fortunately for Cullen Steele and his family, Amy O’Donnell-Riley was there to do that. Dennis Brooke tells stories about life, leadership and sometimes Auburn at www. dennisbrooke.com.
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Those in Kent were: Electrofinishing Inc.; Exotic Metals Forming Co.; Hytek Finishes Co.; King’s Command Foods Inc.; Protective Coatings Inc.; Ralcorp Frozen Bakery Products; Seattle Public Utilities; and Vectra Fitness Inc. Kent’s Davis Wire Corp., Hexcel Corp., and Qualawash Holdings LLC were among 24 facilities that earned a Silver Award for having no King County monitoring discharge violations in 2012. Two Kent facilities – Electrofinishing Inc., and Protective Coatings Inc. – earned Commitmentto-Compliance Awards for meeting their respective discharge permit standards every month for five consecutive years with no violations of any kind.
vowed to do. In the end they agreed on measures closing a loophole in estate tax law and ending a break for users of landline telephones. Tension on this front eased after a June report on future tax collections predicted the state would take in $231 million more than forecast in March. This battle will flare up again. Inslee wanted to crack down on serial offenders of the state’s drunken driving laws by locking them up for longer prison terms after fewer convictions. The House and Senate found the idea too costly. They did agree to other changes aimed at keeping drunk drivers from getting behind the wheel after their arrest and getting enrolled in recovery programs. In retrospect, it’s easy to understand why so much failed or faltered. Liberal Democrats controlled the House and the first-term governor is a liberal Democrat, too. The Senate, meanwhile, was
under the management of the Majority Coalition Caucus made up of 23 mostly conservative Republicans and two pretty conservative Democrats who decided to join their GOP friends late last year. Such power-sharing hadn’t occurred around Olympia for a while. Certainly everyone knew what to expect from House Speaker Frank Chopp, DSeattle. No one was certain if the Senate marriage could hold together and operate under pressure. Neither did many know how Inslee would operate at all given his inexperience as an executive. Fair to say, everybody knows a lot more today. Maybe enough to predict they won’t need 153 days or nearly shutting down the government to get their work done next year. Political reporter Jerry Cornfield's blog, The Petri Dish, is at www.heraldnet.com. Contact him at 360-352-8623 or jcornfield@heraldnet.com.
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County honors Kent schools for ‘green’ efforts complete this level learn about and engage in water Eleven Kent schools conservation and pollution recently were recognized prevention practices. for successful conservaMeeker and Meridian tion practices from the middle schools, and King County Green Fairwood and CovSchools Program. SCHOOL ington elementary The program has schools were among three levels which 13 schools in the involve students and county that completstaff in learning about ed Level Two by engagand practicing conservation ing in energy conservation of natural resources. actions, such as turning off Crestwood Elementary lights in unoccupied rooms. was among five schools Kentridge High, Cedar honored this spring as a Heights and Northwood Level Three King County middle schools, Jenkins Green School. Schools that Creek Elementary, and FOR THE REPORTER
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MIND Research Institute wanted to know how students were succeeding at their interactive game for “ST Math,” and they invited schools to submit photos demonstrating students’ success. Kent’s Daniel Elementary’s third and fourth grades won the national contest and were rewarded with a pizza party on June 11 and a visit by Jiji, the real-life, human-size penguin that appears as a character in the interactive game. …
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Kentwood High School Sewing and Fashion students created 15 beautiful quilts to donate to the Pediatric Interim Care Center over the past
school year. Kelsey Newcomb, along with her teacher, Lynette Hansen, delivered the quilts on June 27. They were treated to a tour of the facility and learned about the Walk for Babies that will be held on Sept. 7. A plan was developed to have the Family and Consumer Science classes participate in the event next fall. … Nicole Madsen from Kent been selected to participate in the DO-IT Scholars Program. About 45 college-bound high school students with disabilities will come together on the University of Washington (UW) Seattle campus to participate in the program. DO-IT (Disabilities, Opportunities, Internetworking, and Technology) is funded by the state of Washington, the National Science Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Education. Seven elementary schools in the Kent School District recently were awarded funding by the U.S. Department of Agriculture for their Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program (FFVP). KSD schools participating for the 2013-14 school year in the FFVP program are Daniel, Kent, East Hill, Scenic Hill, Meadow Ridge, Park Orchard, and Springbrook elementary schools. Fresh fruit or vegetable snacks are served to all students in participating schools four to five days per week. Selections were based on those schools where free and reduced price lunch enrollment exceeds 50 percent.
Sen. Joe Fain, right, with Kent-Meridian High School Principal Wade Barringer. COURTESY PHOTO
State budget prioritizes education FOR THE REPORTER
Sen. Joe Fain (R-Auburn, 47th District)) is pleased with what the state Legislature’s new two-year operating and capital budgets mean for Kent students and their families. “After a difficult stretch the local economy is starting to recover and for the first time in years we were able to drastically increase funding for public schools,” said Fain, who serves on the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Education Committee. “Because of a shared focus and recognition that education is not only our constitutional duty but our ethical imperative
we worked to make sure that we made a strong investment in the future of Washington’s students.” The state’s overall operating budget provides $15.2 billion for K-12 education. Based on current budgets that means the Kent School District, which educates about 27,000 students per school year, could see as much as a $1,200 per student funding increase during the next two school years. “One of our main focuses this year was increasing our high school graduation rate and closing the opportunity gap,” Fain said. “By making strategic enhancements in the Learning Assistance Program and programs for bilingual students we can make sure that more students are successful.”
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Kent Mountain View and Kent Phoenix academies were among 21 schools that completed Level One by expanding recycling practices and focusing on waste reduction strategies, such as decreasing paper use. “Staff and students at these 39 schools have embraced recycling, reducing waste and other conservation actions, with assistance from the County’s Green Schools Program,” said Dale Alekel, program manager. The Green Schools Program offers a website, www. kingcounty.gov/GreenSchools, with helpful tools and resources.
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biochemistry for a less than altruistic reason. “Who do you know that likes chemistry? Nobody, right,” Sealfon said. “So if you want to get promoted without much interference, you chose biochemistry.” But after a week of medical school at Walter Reed Hospital in Virginia, he was sold on lab science and the study of virology. As a laboratory officer, Sealfon analyzed diseases found in soldiers and provided his findings so doctors could effectively treat them. Sealfon knew that it wasn’t a question of if but when he would be sent to Vietnam, and Uncle Sam called his number in March of 1970 while working as the senior laboratory officer at Fort Knox’s Ireland Army Medical Center. He arrived in the country on June 8, 1970 and began his real training overcoming a number of obstacles there. “You have a basic skill set,” Sealfon said, holding his hands roughly six inches apart. He then widened the gap to 12 inches. “Here’s your job.” There were a number of jobs that needed to be done that none of his training had prepared him for, and he had to work out as good a solution as he could with the resources he was given. His first task involved weeding out soldiers that would adversely affect his organization, including alcoholic and over-managing sergeants and a neurotic, obsessive major who he relied on for additional lab
Michael Sealfon at his Kent home, where he also operates a HAM radio frequency as a hobby. ROSS COYLE, Kent Reporter work. “Bad people,” he lamented, “One or two of them can kill an organization.” Beyond building an effective and loyal laboratory team, Sealfon also had to improvise solutions for disposing of lab waste and finding weapons. Seaflon’s lab hired a Vietnamese citizen to help dispose of the trash and laboratory bio waste, but he soon learned that she had also spent time sifting through the trash for anything of use. The practice was gross under normal circumstances and downright lethally dangerous in the context of medical waste. “She’s gonna bring stuff back to the village, they’re gonna get contaminated, we’re going to have an epidemic on our hands,” he said.
THE KENT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE offers a Speed Candidating event Thursday, July 18 to meet candidates for the Kent City Council, Kent mayor and King
of the disease). In exchange to test the officer unofficially, he received a small arsenal of rifles, grenades, flares and a pistol. The lessons Sealfon learned while in Vietnam – be it team molding, improvisation or negotiation – continued to serve him through his time in the civilian world and the reserves. “Maybe of all things it was the ROTC training, as an officer,” he said. “They always would stress: make a decision. It may not be right, it may not be wrong, you can’t sit back and think what to do, you have to be decisive, and I guess that stuck with me.” Michael Sealfon’s book, “A Lab Warrior: The experiences of a medical technologist in Vietnam”, is available by request at wa2ocg@aol.com.
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To further complicate matters, the Army hadn’t provided him with any other manner of disposing of his trash, so he created his own with half of a 50-gallon drum, wire mesh and a gallon of isopropyl alcohol. And he started as he meant to go on, taking advantage of situations as they were presented to him and improvising solutions for other problems. In another instance, when his compound came under attack one evening, he used a parachute flare to provide light after the power was cut. When he needed to acquire weapons, he negotiated an under-thetable exchange of services with an officer that wanted to be tested for gonorrhea (officers could face disciplinary action for presence
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Q. I am very upset. I have a new clematis vine called Nelly Moser and I was so excited to see many buds on the plant. One of the buds opened up to reveal lovely purple striped petals on a huge flower. Then, shortly after I fertilized the plant the buds fell off. I used a 2020-20 plant food that I also use on my fuchsias. (My fuchsias are fine so I know I did not mix it up the plant food incorrectly.) What do
Public invited to park dedication While it may still look like a construction zone, Turnkey Park’s transformation is nearly complete. On Friday, July 19 at 4 p.m., Mayor Suzette Cooke, city officials, Parks staff and partnering organizations will celebrate the end of renovations that began in 2010 with a shelter, parking
A. I think your clematis
THE GARDENER
just had a hizzy fit because you dared to push a big meal right as she was getting ready for her grand performance. Clematis can be divas when it comes to the flower show. They do not like being fertilized or moved or having their skinny stems knocked or damaged. Is the entire plant wilting? Clematis are also susceptible to a disease called clematis wilt that strikes suddenly and there is no cure. If your buds fell off but the vine looks otherwise healthy just water but don’t feed. I have a feeling you’ll be forgiven and old Nelly will be singing “this buds for you” in another few weeks once she recovers from being fertilized while in bloom.
Q. I have a great new plant called Scabiosa “Mariposa.” You told me it would attract butterflies and you were right. I love the round purple blooms but after a few weeks these flowers start to turn brown - but I see new buds emerging. Is it okay to cut off the brown flowers? Do I cut off the stem as well as the flower heads? Do I need to fertilize this plant? Will it come back next year? I am a beginning gardener. R.B., Tacoma lot, fencing and landscaping. On June 7, KaBOOM!, Disney and more than 200 community members assembled a new playground along with picnic tables, benches and a learning garden. Turnkey Park is at 23312 100th Ave. SE. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, call 253-856-5113.
A. Congratulations on your butterfly garden – Scabiosa, also known as pincushion flower due to the round shape of the blooms is a nectar-rich perennial that attracts both humming birds and butterflies and it is a perennial so it will come back next year after going dormant this winter. The new variety you have is called “Mariposa” because this is the Spanish word for butterfly and the flat flower heads make it easy for butterflies to sit on the blooms as they sip up the nectar. As for deadheading, yes you should follow the stem of the faded flower all the way to the base of the plant and cut out the stem and faded bloom with one snip. This variety of Scabiosa will continue to bloom all summer, behaving like a free-flowering annual plant if you continue to remove faded flowers. You do not need to fertilize Scabiosa all summer long as you would a container garden or hanging basket of annuals. Many perennial plants will grow leggy and flop over if constantly fertilized. Use a slow release plant food in the spring when you see signs of new growth. Another growing tip is to try and keep the foliage dry when you water. Scabiosa loves full sun and soil that drains quickly – yellow leaves at the base of the plant means it may be getting too much water.
Meet Marianne Marianne Binetti appears at 11 a.m. Saturday at Macadam Winter Garden, S. 144th St. and Macadam Road, Tukwila, as part of the Tukwila Garden Tour. You can get tickets to the garden party and tour by calling 206-767-2305 or visiting the Tukwila Community Center.
Q. I have some shrub roses that are growing out of control. Can I prune them back now? How far back can I go? Thanks. P. Email A. There is still time to get snippy with your roses but don’t delay because once the month of August arrives roses do not like to be cut down to size. You can shorten any rose plant by one-third of its height in July and always remove the three D’s any time of year – that would be anything dead, diseased or damaged. If you have a shrub roses or landscape roses that are multi-branching such as the Flower Carpet or Drift rose this is the time of year to prune back with confidence removing all the faded blooms. Give your newly pruned roses a shot of fertilizer and you’ll be rewarded with a late summer flush of flowers
NIHON/WA Japanese Heritage-Washington Artists Through July 28
and color that will continue until October.
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DONATE TODAY: Kent Food Bank, 515 W. Harrison St., No. 107. For more information or to volunteer, call 253-520-3550 or visit www.skcfc.org/kentfoodbank.
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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 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply. For more information, visit www.binettigarden.com.
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you think? P.L. Longview
Marianne Binetti
The middle of July brings questions on summer maintenance. This is your last chance to control the size of some fall and autumn blooming perennials so get snippy with mums, phlox, sedum “Autumn Joy” and delphiniums. Continue to dead head or remove the faded flowers from annuals and perennials to encourage more summer blooms. Lawn mowing should change a bit during the warm summer months. Even if you love a closecropped lawn, this is the time of year to gradually allow the grass to grow taller between mowings. Just raise the mower each week until it is at the highest setting. The taller grass blades will help shade the soil and conserve moisture plus they will create shade that discourages clover and other sun-loving weeds.
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White River Valley Museum 918 H Street SE, (Les Gove Park) Auburn, WA 98002 • (253) 288-7433 M USEUM A DMISSION : $1 for children and seniors, $2 for adults Admission Free Each Wednesday & 4th Sunday Sponsored by: Auburn's Kiwanis of the Valley www.wrvmuseum.org 817840
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[14] July 12 , 2013
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KENT
SPORTS
Vintage cars draw fans to Pacific Raceways
SHOWARE SHOOTOUT 3-ON-3 BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT IN KENT JULY 27-28 The entry deadline is Saturday, July 20 for the fourth annual ShoWare Shootout 3-on-3 basketball tournament on Saturday and Sunday, July 27-28 at the ShoWare Center parking lot in Kent. The event is South King County’s premier 3 on 3 basketball event featuring age divisions for men, women, seniors, kids and wheelchair. Teams of all ages and sizes and genders are invited. Courts will be set up in the parking lot with games all day, each day. The entry fee is $75 per team for any division. Entry fee includes a guarantee of four games, a T-Shirt, and extra T-shirt if your team wins the championship game of the division. The schedule will be emailed 2-3 days before the first round of games and tournament brackets will be on site. Each division will play on its own court with a main court hosting the top divisions. Main court will be set up in the middle of the ShoWare parking lot. A total of 150-200 teams are expected . For more information, call 206-240-9029 or go to showareshootout.com.
BY SHAWN SKAGER
sskager@auburn-reporter.com
For 25 years, the Society of Vintage Racing Enthusiasts (SOVREN) has hosted the annual Pacific Northwest Historics Races. Every year the charitable event attracts hundreds of cars and thousands of enthusiasts and spectators to Pacific Raceways in Kent to raise money for the Seattle Children’s Hospital. To date, the event has raised more than $9 million for the hospital. The annual event is a smorgasbord of automobile fun for spectators, with some of the region’s finest Porsches, BMWs, Alfa Romeos, Ferraris, MGs and more exotic road iron vying for the checkered flag on Pacific Raceway’s 2.25-mile road course. In the paddock and pit areas, which are open to the public, fans can shop for auto parts and memorabilia and get close up to racing cars most people only dream of seeing in real life, such as the Porsche 917 driven by Steve McQueen in the 1971 movie “Le Mans”. For Auburn’s Tana Bryan, known as “The Datsun Lady,” this year’s event is the 18th she has volunteered at. In that time, Bryan said, she’s done everything from flagging on the track to guiding people around the massive three-day event. “I wouldn’t miss this for anything,” she said. “I’ve always been into old cars and it helps Children’s Hospital. It’s also a lot of fun. I bring one of my own cars
Seattle Mist cruises to win in Legends Football League REPORTER STAFF
The Seattle Mist clinched a women’s Legends Football League playoff spot with a 38-0 win over the Minnesota Valkyrie last Saturday night at the ShoWare Center in Kent. Seattle quarterback Laurel Creel received game most
Spectators get a close look at the Porsche 917K that was driven by actor Steve McQueen in the 1971 film “Le Mans.” The car was just one of many attractions at the 25th Pacific Northwest Historics Vintage Races, hosted by the Society of Vintage Racing Enthusiasts (SOVREN), at Pacific Raceways last weekend. The event raises money for Seattle Children’s Hospital. SHAWN SKAGER, Auburn Reporter to the car show every year. Every year I let somebody else drive my own car. This year I did the parade lap in somebody else’s car following my car.” Bryan, who runs a Datsun parts supply business, said she first caught the car bug in 1976. “I got my first (Datsun) for free in 1976, and I still have it,” Bryan said. “It’s a 1968 Datsun Fairlady and it has about 600,000 miles on it. I drove that as my daily driver for many years and I started buying parts cars for it. People wanted parts so I started selling parts and I’ve sold them all over the world since then. So I’ve been running that for about 25 years and I’m the president
valuable player honors, according to the Legends Football League website. Creel threw a 35-yard touchdown pass on Seattle’s first play of the game. The Mist improved to 3-0 in the Pacific Division with one regular season game left on July 20 in Las Vegas. Minnesota dropped to 0-2. In three games, Creel has completed 30 of 56 passes for 362 yards with 11 touchdowns. The Mist beat Green Bay and Los Angeles earlier this year.
of the NWDE (Northwest Datsun Enthusiasts) club.” In addition to being able to get her classic car fix and show off her Datsuns, Bryan said she has a personal reason for coming every year. “My daughter was a patient at Seattle Children’s,” she explained. “She has a very rare disease, scleroderma, an auto immune disease.” For Erica Lange, secretary for SOVREN, the event is still new to her. “I love the raising money for Seattle’s Children Hospital part,” Lange said, clearing spectators out of the way of McQueen’s Porsche as it took to the track. “I’m not as up on all the racing stuff.”
Still, she said, she enjoys the event and the opportunity to help lure in the next generation of car enthusiasts. “It’s great for the families to get out and just look around,” she said. “We want the public to learn about racing. We need to build interest because we want people to learn about these cars and vintage racing and get involved.” Among the several classic cars on display at the track was Jack and Bobbie Berg’s 1956 MGA convertible roadster. “It’s basically all original,” said Berg, an Auburn resident. “It’s been painted but it’s never been restored.” As he buffed the car’s paint
into a higher level of shine with a cloth, Berg shared how he and his wife became the second owner of the British-made gem, which has just 55,778 original miles. “The original owner is a friend of mine, we sail together,” Berg said. “And we were at his house for dinner one night, a whole group of us, and he hauled this out and said, ‘Is anybody interested?’ Of course, I said, ‘yeah.’ My wife said no.” Berg said after a year of persuasion and an outing to a MG Northwest Centre car club meeting, he finally got the go ahead from his wife. “Now if I was to leave her or something like that, which wouldn’t happen because we’ve been married 41 years, she’d take the car and give me everything else,” Berg said. “She loves the car that much.” Berg said he and his wife attend several car shows and events every year, but this one is special. “This is a charity event, all the profits go to Children’s Hospital and that’s why I’m here,” Berg said. “I love to go to car shows and talk to car people. I don’t want to say car people are the friendliest people in the world, but as a rule they are. I’ve taken this to hot rod shows and been accepted, with all the big chrome V8s with 400 or 600 horsepower. This one though, is a neat event with all the money going to the hospital. It’s really important.”
T-Birds assistant takes new job REPORTER STAFF
Seattle Thunderbirds assistant coach Darren Rumble has accepted the head coaching position with the Moncton Wildcats of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. “Darren did a very good job for us, and we wish him all the best with his new team as a head coach,” said Seattle Thunderbirds general manager Russ Farwell in a July 5 media release. It was a difficult decision for Rumble, who was an assistant coach with the T-
Birds for the past two seasons. He joined the T-Birds on June 28, 2011. “Russ and Steve (head coach Steve Konowalchuk) are two of the finest people I have ever had the privilege to be associated with, both personally and professionally,” Rumble said. “This was not an easy decision as the T-Birds are on the upswing and there are going to be some exciting times ahead for the team. Professionally, though, this was an opportunity to be a head coach I couldn’t pass up. I would like to thank all the T-Birds fans for their support the last two years .”
JULY 20 - 21
FREE • FAMILY • FUN
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Events Kent Farmers Market: 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdays, through Sept. 28, Town Square Plaza Park, corner of Second and Smith. Kent Lions community service project. Vendors offering a variety of fresh locally grown farm-based foods, hand-crafted items, live entertainment and more. Free admission. Information: 253-486-9316, www.kentfarmersmarket.com. 42nd annual Kent Cornucopia Days: July 12-15, Town Square Plaza and throughout downtown Kent. General hours: July 12 – 3 p.m. until closing for the carnival; July 13 – 10 a.m.- 8 p.m. for the festival and street fair, 2 p.m. until closing for the carnival; July 14 – 10 a.m.-8 p.m. for the festival and street fair, 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. for the dragon boat races, 10 a.m. until about 6 p.m. for the skateboard and inline tournaments, noon until closing for the carnival; July 15 – 10 a.m.-5 p.m. for the festival and street fair, 2 p.m. for the parade, noon until closing for the carnival. South King County’s oldest and largest festival features a full-size carnival and street fair with more than 600 booths offering a variety of items, including tastes from more than 35 food booths. Entertainment, beer garden, carnival with rides, Kent Youth Soccer Association Cornucopia Cup tournament, parade, skateboard tournament, dragon boat races at Lake Meridian Park and more. The Kent Lions produces the event, a community service project that benefits more than 250 charitable organizations. Free admission. Info: 253-852-LION (5466), www.kcdays.com. Open house on possible sale of Riverbend Par 3 golf course: 6-9 p.m. July 15, Riverbend Par 3 Club House, 2030 W. Meeker St., Kent. Kent residents can weigh in as the city determines whether or not to sell its par 3 golf course. A 20-acre component of the Riverbend Golf Complex, the city is exploring the sale as a way to put the facility on stable financial footing, as well as reinvest in the 24-year old facility, which also includes an 18-hole course, driving range, retail shop and restaurant. Interested parties unable to attend the open house are encouraged to provide feedback online at KentWA.gov/par3survey. For more information, visit KentWA.gov.
games. Information: www.emd3on3.com or www.facebook.com/emd3on3
Benefits Inaugural Kent-Meridian High School Football Classic: 8 a.m. Sept. 14, Foster Golf Course, 13500 Interurban Ave. S., Tukwila. Powered by the National Charity Golf Association. Fundraising event to support much-needed equipment for the Kent-Meridian High School football team. $100 entry fee includes green fee and cart. Registration begins at 7 a.m. Format: 2-person scramble. More information and registration can be found at www.golfncga. com/KMF.html or email tom@golfncga.com or call Rich Murchinson at 425-770-6459 or Chris Carter 206-714-5309.
Health Kent4Health Outdoor Walk: 9-11 a.m. and 6-7:30 p.m., every Wednesday through Sept. 4. Get outside and enjoy your local park trails. For schedules, locations and more info, visit www.kent4health.com. Southeast King County Parkinson’s Disease support group: Meets on the third Tuesday of the month, 10:30 a.m., St. John The Baptist Catholic Church, 25810 156th Ave. SE,Covington. Group’s monthly lunches are on the first Tuesday of the month at the Auburn Senior Activity Center, 808 Ninth St. SE, Auburn. For more information, contact Stephanie Lawson at 206-579-5206. Gamblers Anonymous: For meeting times and locations, call toll free the Gamblers Anonymous Hotline 1-855-222-5542. Visit www.gawashington.org or www. gamblersanonymous.org for additional information.
Clubs, programs Autism Support Group: 6:30-8:30 p.m., second Wednesday of the month, Kent Convenant Church, main conference room, 12010 SE 240th St. Share resources and encouragement. Childcare available with 72-hour advance reservations by calling Fabiana Steele at 253-631-0222, ext. 325. For more information, visit www.kentcov.org. NAMI Support Groups: 6:30-8 p.m., every second and fourth Tuesday of the month, 515 W. Harrison St., Kent. Friends and family support group for family members and friends who are affected by mental illness. Free. For more information, call 253-854-6264 (NAMI) or ermail namiskc@ qwestoffice.net, or visit www.nami.org. Valley Mothers of Multiples Club: First Christian Church of Kent, 11717 SE 240th St. Free. Inviting new and established parents/ guardians of multiple order children to attend monthly meeting for support, resources and social activities. Club has monthly speakers and group sharing sessions. 425-445-7845. www.valleymomc.org
Volunteers Soos Creek Botanical Garden: Soos Creek Botanical Garden, 29308 132nd Ave. SE, Auburn. If you love plants, gardens and gardening, the 22-acre garden wants you. Volunteers are asked to dedicate 3-10 hours a week in either garden maintenance, docent tours or marketing. Volunteers need not be master gardeners. Soos Creek Botanical Garden is a nonprofit organization. Information: 253-639-0949, www. SoosCreekBotanicalGarden.org. Green Kent Work Party: 9 a.m.-noon July 27, Springwood Park, 12700 SE 274th St., Kent. Meet near the big slide
on the northwest corner of the park. Register at kentwa.gov/GreenKentEvent. aspx?id=23534. The Royal Revamp: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Aug. 23, Kent-Meridian High School, 10020 SE 256th St., Kent. Volunteers needed to work with students, parents, alumni and staff to weed, clip and bark the campus. Carpinito Brothers donating bark. Join the effort any time with shovel, rake, wheelbarrow and tools. Community barbecue at 3 p.m. Information: Debbie Theisen, K-M campus manager, 253-373-7416 or Debbie. theisen@kent.k12.wa.us.
Thank you Kent for nominating us
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Entertainment SHOWARE CENTER 625 W. James St., Kent. 253-856-6777. Order at www.tickets.showarecenter. com. Events include: American Idol Live!: 7:30 p.m. July 19. The 40-show concert tour comest to Kent. Tickets: $66, $46, $33.50. ELSEWHERE “Beauty and the Beast!” : 7:30 p.m. July 25-27, Aug. 1-3, Aug. 8-10; 2 p.m. July 27, Aug. 3, 10; 4 p.m. July 28, Aug. 4, Ridge Theatre, Kentridge High School Performing Arts Center, 12430 SE 208th St., Kent. Tickets and more information available at www.attheridgetheatre.com. Beauty and the Beast Musical Theatre Camps: July 29-Aug.2. pre-Kfourth-grade camp; Aug. 2-6, fifth-eighth grade. Ridge Theatre, Kentridge High School Performing Arts Center, 12430 SE 208th St., Kent. If your child qualifies for free/reduced lunch in the public schools, then you can receive a reduced price for this day camp. At the Ridge Theatre (housed at Kentridge High School Performing Arts Center). Registration details at www.attheridgetheatre.com.
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Speed Candidating: 5-8 p.m. July 18, Kent Senior Center, 600 E. Smith St. Meet City Council, mayoral and King County candidates. Tables of 8-10 people will be set up. You will have a new candidate at your table every 10 minutes. Food and drinks will be served. Cost: $10. Goodguys 26th Wesco Autobody Supply Pacific Northwest Nationals: July 26-28, Washington State Fairgrounds, 110 Ninth Ave. SW, Puyallup. (Enter at Blue, Gold or Red Gate). Hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday; 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Saturday; 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday. More than 2,500 hot rods, customs, classics, muscle cars and trucks through 1972; exhibits; swap meet; entertainment, activities for kids. Admission: $8 general admission $18; $6 children 7-12; 6 and under free. Information: 253-841-5045, www.good-guys.com
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Fourth annual ShoWare Shootout: July 27-28, ShoWare Center parking lot, 625 W. James St. Kent. Presented by Republic Services. South King County’s premier 3-on-3 basketball event featuring age divisions for men, women, seniors, kids, wheelchair. Teams of all ages and sizes and genders are invited. Entry fee: $75 per team, includes a guarantee of four games, a T-shirt and extra T-shirt if your team wins the championship game of the division. A portion of the proceeds from the event will be given to Kent Youth and Family Services. Entry deadline July 20. For more information, call 206-240-9029 or go to showareshootout.com. Inaugural EmD3-ON-3: Aug. 10-11, Emerald Downs, 2300 Emerald Downs Drive, Auburn. At least 30 side-by-side halfcourts to be placed in the parking lot north of the grandstand, Open to teams and players of all ages and abilities. Cost per team: $120 with each team guaranteed at least three
817664
CALENDAR
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[ CALENDAR from page 15 ] â&#x20AC;&#x153;Little Mary Sunshineâ&#x20AC;?: 7 p.m. Aug. 2-3, 3 p.m. Aug. 3, Performing Arts Building, main campus, Green River Community College, 12401 SE 320th St., Auburn. Brought to life by Heavier Than Air Family Theatre, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Little Mary Sunshineâ&#x20AC;? is a musical that gently spoofs old-time favorites with lighthearted humor, while showcasing a personality all its own. From Colorado Rangers to the lovely Mary Sunshine; a chorus of giggling schoolgirls to the benevolent Indian chief; hearts are won and lost and won again in this delightful, laugh-filled and charming stage production. A show you wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want to miss, Little Mary Sunshine features local teens from the companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s popular musical theatre camp. Tickets $8. Information: 253-833-9111, ext. 4966, www. heavierthanair.com
Keith Knight: July 16. Considered by many to be one of the finest finger picking guitarists in America, Knight breathes new life into Appalachian, ragtime and delta blues and Americana music. Scott Cossu: July 23. A mix of jazz and classical music with ethnic influences from this acclaimed musician, composer and recording artist. Bottomline Duo: July 30. Best described as light humor with serious music, this husband and wife team combines the warm depth of the double bass with the melodic beauty of the cello. Their performances are masterful, charming and entertaining. Reilly and Maloney: Aug. 6. The enormously popular duo of Ginny Reilly and David Maloney are together again, delivering their signature brand of acoustic, contemporary folk. Rod Cook and Toast: Aug. 13. Blues, rock, country, Americana, surf and American roots music.
KENT SUMMER CONCERT SERIES KENT STATION TAKE-OUT TUESDAYS
REPUBLIC SERVICES WEDNESDAYS
Performances Noon-1 p.m., Kent Station Plaza, 417 Ramsay Way. Free.
Performances noon-1 p.m., Town Square Plaza, Second and Harrison. Free.
Roberto the Magnificent: July 17. He rides very tall unicycles, bounces on industrial strength pogo sticks, and juggles sharp knives, flaming torches and spinning hand saws â&#x20AC;&#x201C; all while keeping audiences in fits of giggles.
THURSDAYS AT THE LAKE
Doktor Kaboom! â&#x20AC;&#x153;Look Out! Science is Comingâ&#x20AC;?: July 24. An interactive one-man science variety show, Doktor Kaboom! creatively blends theatre arts with the wonders of scientific exploration.
Tommy Castro and the Painkillers: July 18. Castroâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s signature brand of rocking rhythm and blues has garnered him numerous Blues Music Awards and nominations. His sound is funky with soulful vocals and inspired blues-rock guitar.
ShĂłkoto: July 31. A family-friendly mixture of traditional and contemporary African and world music that is sure to make your soul sing. ShĂłkoto offers a dynamic fusion of rhythms from Ghana, Brazil, Cuba, Peru and the Deep South. Recess Monkey: Aug. 7. Kids and parents love rockinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; to Recess Monkey. This trio blends various musical influences with clever and comical lyrics. There are hints of pop, folk, zany surf rock and swamp-tinged country. Caspar Babypants: Aug. 14. Caspar Babypants puts on a fun, simple, sing-along show for kids age 0-5 and their parents to enjoy together. Old folk songs and good time rock and roll mix together to make the show a timeless treat for all ages.
Performances 7-8:30 p.m., Lake Meridian Park, 14800 SE 272nd Street (shuttle bus service available). Free.
Men of Worth: July 25. Irish Scottish folk music duo combines humor, exciting tunes, and soulful, heartfelt ballads to bring to life the musical heritage of Scotlandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s outer islands and Irelandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s west. Cedric Watson and Bijou Creole: Aug. 1. Spearheading the emerging generation of Cajun and Creole musicians, Watson is a fiddler, vocalist, accordionist and songwriter of enormous talent. He moves with ease between fiddle and accordion and adds his strong blues-inflected vocals. Bill Coffey and His Cash Money Cousins: Aug. 8. High-energy, roots-rock and retro-country singer/songwriterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s songs swerve from upbeat, jangly country pop to the darker, more lonesome side of Americana.
The Changing Colors: Aug. 15. Hailing from the tiny hamlet of Manitou Springs, Colo., The Changing Colors is a band led by twin brothers Conor and Ian Bourgal. Using the simplicity of acoustic guitar and the melancholy tone of lap steel, they sing of longing and beauty, hope and regret.
Galleries Centennial Center Gallery: 400 W. Gowe St., Kent. Hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. Closed weekends and holidays. For more information, call 253-856-5050 or visit artscommission@kentwa.gov.
Museums Greater Kent Historical Society: 855 E. Smith St., historic Bereiter House, Kent. Hours: noon-4 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday, and by appointment. Admission: suggested $2 donation; no tickets are required for entrance. Parking is available behind the house off East Temperance Street. GKHS is a nonprofit organization that promotes the discovery, preservation and dissemination of knowledge about the history of the greater Kent area.
PUBLIC NOTICES District Court, Pierce County, Washington Regarding the Name Change of Christopher Edward Odenthal Minor by Deedra P. Moseley Parent No. 3Z801516C NOTICE OF HEARING FOR NAME CHANGE The State of Washington â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Directed to NICHOLAS JOHN ODENTHAL <RX DUH KHUHE\ QRWLÂżHG WKDW SXU suant to RCW 4.24.130, the mother of the above named PLQRU FKLOG KDV ÂżOHG D 3HWLWLRQ WR &KDQJH WKH 1DPH RI &KULVWRSKHU (GZDUG 2GHQWKDO WR &KULVWRSKHU Edward Moseley. The hearing on this matter shall be on August 1, 2013, at 9:00 AM at the courthouse located at: Pierce County District Court 930 Tacoma Ave S. Rm 127 Tacoma, WA, 98402 Failure to appear at this hearing may result in the name change of the above listed minor. Dated 6/26/2013 )LOH \RXU UHVSRQVH ZLWK Pierce County District Court 3XEOLVKHG LQ WKH .HQW 5HSRUWHU on July 5,12, 19, 2013. #817879. CITY OF KENT LAND USE & PLANNING BOARD NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING JULY 22, 2013 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City of Kent Land Use and Planning Board will hold a Public Hearing on MONDAY, JULY 22, 2013 at 7:00 P.M. in Kent City Council Chambers, 220 S. Fourth Avenue, Kent, WA 98032. The Hearing Agenda will include the following item(s): 1.Downtown Subarea Action Plan (CPZ/CPA-2012-1) Downtown Subarea Action Plan-Zoning Districts & Comprehensive Plan Map Amendments (CPZ/CPA-2012-1) Draft Downtown Subarea Action Plan (DSAP) Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (DSEIS) Mixed Use Overlay Regulations Code Amendment (ZCA2013-2) (GGW) The Land Use & Planning Board will continue WKH SXEOLF KHDULQJ IURP -XO\ WK WR FRQVLGHU WKH '6$3 SROLF\ GRF ument that contains actionable
LWHPV LQWHQGHG WR LPSOHPHQW WKH vision for downtown Kent; to consider zoning and land use SODQ PDS DPHQGPHQWV ZLWKLQ WKH 'RZQWRZQ 6XEDUHD DQG WR ZHO come comments on the analysis RI WKH SRWHQWLDO LPSDFWV RI DO WHUQDWLYH ODQG XVH SDWWHUQV ODQG XVH SODQV DQG SROLFLHV WUDQVSRU WDWLRQ SDUNV DQG UHFUHDWLRQ ZLWK in the Downtown Subarea Further, the Board will consider SURSRVHG FRGH DPHQGPHQWV WR Kent City Code (KCC) Title 15, =RQLQJ &KDSWHU 'HÂżQL tions, as well as 15.04.190, 195, 200, 205 and 15.09.046 related to the mixed use overlay in the *HQHUDO &RPPHUFLDO *& ]RQ ing district, and correcting a code reference to design guidelines ZLWKLQ GRZQWRZQ 7KH PL[HG XVH RYHUOD\ DPHQGPHQWV ZLOO DSSO\ FLW\ ZLGH 2.ZCA-2013-1 Residential Facilities Regulations Code Amendment (KG) To consider SURSRVHG FRGH DPHQGPHQWV WR Kent City Code (KCC) Title 15, =RQLQJ &KDSWHU 'HÂżQL tions, as well as 15.04.020 & .030 related to residential IDFLOLWLHV JURXS FDUH DQG JURXS living facilities. $Q\ SHUVRQ ZLVKLQJ WR VXEPLW oral or written comments on WKHVH SURSRVDOV PD\ GR VR DW WKH KHDULQJ RU SULRU WR WKH KHDULQJ E\ H PDLO WR 3ODQQHU .DWLH *UDYHV (KG) at: NJUDYHV#NHQWZD JRY or WR 3ODQQHU *ORULD *RXOG :HVVHQ (GGW) at: JJRXOG ZHVVHQ# NHQWZD JRY 7KH SXEOLF LV LQYLW ed to attend and all interested SHUVRQV ZLOO KDYH DQ RSSRUWXQLW\ WR VSHDN For further information or a FRS\ RI WKH VWDII UHSRUW V RU WH[W RI WKH SURSRVHG DPHQGPHQW V FRQWDFW WKH (FRQRPLF &RP PXQLW\ 'HYHORSPHQW 2IÂżFH DW <RX PD\ DFFHVV the Cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s website for available GRZQORDG GRFXPHQWV SHUWDLQLQJ to the Land Use and Planning Board at: KWWS NHQWZD LTP FRP FLWL]HQV 'HIDXOW DVS[" 'HSDUWPHQW,' . Any person requiring a disability accommodation should contact the City in Advance for more information. For TDD relay service for Braille, call 1-800-833-6385, for TDD relay service for the hearing impaired, call 1-800-833-6388 or call the City of Kent Economic & Community Development directly at
(253) 856-5499 (TDD) or the main line at (253) 856-5454 &KDUOHQH $QGHUVRQ $,&3 Planning Manager Dated July 9, 2013 3XEOLVKHG LQ WKH .HQW 5HSRUWHU on July 12, 2013. #830574. NOTICE OF APPLICATION $ SURMHFW SHUPLW DSSOLFDWLRQ ZDV ÂżOHG ZLWK &LW\ RI .HQW 3ODQQLQJ Services on June 24, 2013. )ROORZLQJ LV D GHVFULSWLRQ RI WKH DSSOLFDWLRQ DQG WKH SURFHVV IRU UHYLHZ 7KH DSSOLFDWLRQ DQG OLVW ed studies may be reviewed at WKH RIÂżFHV RI .HQW 3ODQQLQJ Services, 400 W. Gowe Street, Kent, WA. '$7( 2) 127,&( 2) $33/,&$7,21 July 12, 2013 $33/,&$7,21 1$0( NUMBER: $0:$< %8,/' ,1* (;3$16,21 1257+ (19 .,9$ 536: *5$'( ),// 3(50,7 5, 352-(&7 '(6&5,37,21 The DSSOLFDQW SURSRVHV WR FRQVWUXFW DQ DSSUR[LPDWHO\ VTXDUH foot building addition on the north side of the existing Amway ZDUHKRXVH EXLOGLQJ ZLWK DVVR FLDWHG DVSKDOW SDUNLQJ DUHDV ODQGVFDSLQJ VWRUP GUDLQDJH LP SURYHPHQWV ZDWHU DQG VDQLWDU\ sewer connections and franchise XWLOLW\ XSJUDGHV 7KH H[LVWLQJ Amway building is located on a VHSDUDWH SDUFHO LQ FRPPRQ RZQ HUVKLS GLUHFWO\ VRXWK RI WKH VLWH (7250 S 228th St). A small area on the eastern side of the site is ZLWKLQ WKH \HDU Ă&#x20AC;RRGSODLQ 7KH &LW\ RI .HQW :HWODQG ,QYHQ WRU\ LQGLFDWHV D SRVVLEOH ZHWODQG on the site, however a wetland GHOLQHDWLRQ UHSRUW IRXQG QR ZHWODQGV SUHVHQW 27+(5 3(50,76 $1' 3/$16 :+,&+ 0$< %( 5(48,5(' Civil Construction SHUPLW %XLOGLQJ SHUPLW 13'(6 SHUPLW VWUHHW XVH SHUPLW DQG SOXPELQJ HOHFWULFDO DQG PHFKDQLFDO SHUPLWV 38%/,& &200(17 3(5,2' July 12, 2013 â&#x20AC;&#x201C;July 26, 2013 $OO SHUVRQV PD\ FRPPHQW RQ WKLV DSSOLFDWLRQ &RPPHQWV PXVW EH in writing and received in Kent Planning Services by 4:30 P.M., Friday July 26, 2013 at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent WA 98032. )RU TXHVWLRQV UHJDUGLQJ WKLV SURMHFW SOHDVH FRQWDFW (ULQ George at (253) 3XEOLVKHG LQ WKH .HQW 5HSRUWHU on July 12, 2013. #830734.
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[18] July 12, 2013
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Congratulations!
We are proud to recognize the following people for High Achievement in June 2013.
Calvin Gligorea TOP PRODUCER & TOP LISTER
Leon and Teresa Lyman TOP PRODUCER
Cris LeCompte TOP PRODUCER
Elizabeth Waloweek TOP PRODUCER
Rhonda Ingalls TOP PRODUCER
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Lorelei Windhorn TOP PRODUCER
Teresa Saenger TOP PRODUCER
Len Huber TOP PRODUCER
Kent /Auburn Office
Marilyn Schroeder TOP LISTER 818607
Jan Glenn TOP PRODUCER
Relax... Whether you’re buying or selling, the Classifieds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods; You’ll find everything you need in one website 24 hours a day 7 days a week: www.nw-ads.com.
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July 12, 2013 [19]
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Experience the Stellar Life at Farrington Court! â&#x20AC;˘ Please visit us at the Cornucopia Fair, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, July 12th through July 14th. Booth #859! â&#x20AC;˘ Vote smart! Come and join us at the Kent Senior AcĆ&#x;vity Center, July 18th from 5-8 PM for a Speed Candidate Networking event. Tickets are $10 and include catering by Mitzellâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Find out where the candidates for Mayor, City of Kent, King County and Kent School Board stand in this fallâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s elecĆ&#x;on. Co-sponsored by Farrington Court. â&#x20AC;˘ Be sure to mark your calendar for September 7, 2013! Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s when Ciscoe Morris from, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Gardening With Ciscoeâ&#x20AC;?, will be visiĆ&#x;ng Farrington Court. Call us for more details.
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Utility lines include: electrical; natural gas; sewer; cable TV; and water. What can residents do to protect themselves and their property? Call before you dig. Any time you plan on digging more than 12 inches deep, you must first call 811 or 1-800-424-5555. By making this call at least two business days before you dig, you will alert utility companies in your area of your intent and allow them to mark their underground lines on your property. This call is required by state code RCW 19.122. There is no charge for the marking of utilities to homeowners. The cost is paid for by the utility companies to help prevent damage to their buried lines. For more information, go to the 811 website www.callbeforeyoudig.com.
[20] July 12, 2013
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A FREE EVENT
Women’s Fitness & Nutrition Mini-Bootcamp
Boost Your Fitness, Safety and Nutrition IQ with this FREE GLOW Bootcamp Just drop by! No registration required Functional fitness evaluations Massages Tai chi Self-defense training Nutrition for active women Osteoporosis prevention Mini running workshops AED demos Free health screenings Refreshments
WHEN Sunday, July 14, 2013 Noon – 4 PM
LOCATION Pinnacle Physical Therapy & Medical Wellness 17307 SE 272nd St (Kent Kangley Rd) Suite 126 Covington, WA 98042 Questions? Call 425.271.GLOW (4569)
829581