Renton Reporter, September 05, 2014

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FOUNDED 1995

RETIRING | Longtime City Clerk Bonnie Walton is calling it a career after 18 years in Renton. [3]

NEW FACES | Meet the new majors at the Renton Salvation Army. [ 5 ]

FRIDAY, SEPT. 5, 2014

Police recover 200 cans of black market baby formula BY DEAN A. RADFORD dradford@rentonreporter.com

Renton Police recovered more than 200 cans of baby formula destined for the black market in Vietnam Aug. 28, following a year-long investigation. The formula, worth about $5,400, was returned to Safeway and QFC, two of the retailers targeted by thieves in recent months, according to Terri Vickers, a spokeswoman for the Renton Police Department. The suspect, a 32-year-old Renton woman, was booked into the SCORE regional jail in Des Moines for investigation of felony first-degree attempted trafficking in stolen property. She was released on Aug. 29 and as of Wednesday had yet to be charged. The investigation is continuing. Police found the baby formula stacked in her living room and in bags on the sofa. Arrested the afternoon on Aug. 28 in Pierce County were a man and a woman who had offered to sell investigators several cans of stolen baby formula, according to Vickers. They were booked

First day flowers and photos Tuesday marked the first day of school for students in the Renton School District. Above, a pair of students offer flowers to Highlands Elemnetary School Principal Janet Fawcett while a parent, right, snaps a photo of his son’s first day. PHOTOS COURTESY RENTON SCHOOL DISTRICT

[ more FORMULA page 10 ]

Renton woman won’t let MS slow her ride in Deception Pass Classic BY TRACEY COMPTON tcompton@rentonreporter.com

When Renton resident Scotia Brown was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, or MS, she was just one month away from delivering her third son. “I think I was just kind of in denial about it,” she said in a recent interview. “And being so young, I was just about to have my son and I just didn’t want to come to the conclusion, like I really have this

Your Residential Specialists

disease.” It’s the conclusion some people come to at age 29, which is the average onset of MS. Brown was just 26 when she was diagnosed. Now at 32, she’s in a different place, ready to share her story and help raise awareness about the disease. She will ride with about 2,000 other bicyclists in the Bike MS Deception Pass Classic Sept. 6 - 7 in Mount Vernon. The event, which takes place nationwide on different weekends, is in support of the more than 400,000 people in the U.S. who live with multiple sclerosis. According to event organizers, women are two to [ more RIDE page 12 ]

Renton’s Scotia Brown will ride 160 miles this weekend to raise awareness for multiple sclerosis in the Bike MS Deception Pass Classic. TRACEY COMPTON, Renton Reporter

206-949-1696 info@MarcieMaxwell.com www.MarcieMaxwell.com

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Event raises awareness for disease that affects more than 400,000


RENTON

AT A GLANCE

[2] September 5, 2014

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Weekend weather

Sunshine and clear skies with a high near 81 dropping to 57 overnight.

Saturday Sunny and warm with a high near 85, dropping to 59 overnight.

Sunday

Brad Strong and Jana Flener fly a kite shaped like a pirate ship this past month at Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park. BRIAN BECKLEY, Renton Reporter

Sunny again with highs reaching to 80 but a chance of rain overnight, low of 57. SEND US YOUR PICS! We want to see you, your friends and family members outdoors somewhere in Renton, whatever the weather. Send your photos to bbeckley@rentonreporter.com to be considered for publication on the new ‘At A Glance’ page.

You said it!

“ I won’t forget after the two tickets I got in the mail last year...” - Facebook user Breeann Loya on the story reminding drivers that school zone cameras would be turned on this week.

POOCH PLUNGE Sept. The annual season-ending event at Henry Moses Aquatic Center is set for this weekend, when dogs of all sizes will have their day at the water park. Call 425-430-6700 to see if space is available. Cost is $10 per session.

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ENERGIZE EASTSIDE MEETING Sept. The next public meeting on PSE’s ‘Energize Eastside’ plan is 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Renton Pavilion. Residents can hear the latest information on the project to replace 18 miles of transmission lines.

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CITIZENS ACADEMY Sept. The 53rd Renton Citizens Academy will meet for 12 weeks beginning Thursday. For more information call 425-430-7520. Class size is limited to 25 students, and all applicants must pass a background check.

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Poll results Do you think the city should ban medical marijuana dispensaries? Yes ........40% No.........60%

Visit www.rentonreporter.com to vote on this week’s poll question.

Investing in Housing ● Jobs ● Education ● Health ● Environment ● Transportation

Sunset Neighborhood Park Open House Meeting

Please join us in the master planning process to design a future 3.7 acre neighborhood park as a part of the Sunset Area Community Revitalization Program. This will be the final of three interactive open house meetings.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014 McKnight Middle School Commons Area 1200 Edmonds Ave NE Renton, WA 98056 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.

Questions? Call Community Services at 425-430-6619 Or email lbetlach@rentonwa.gov

3000 NE Fourth Street, Renton WA 98056 1115075

1100602

This page is a work in progress. What do you want to see included? Let us know! bbeckley@rentonreporter.com or 425-255-3484 ext. 5050

Coming up:

Friday

Light refreshments will be served.


September 5, 2014 [3]

RUN FROM THE COPS SEPT. 27

It’s time once again for the Renton Run from the Cops 5k Run. The nighttime run is Sept. 27 through the streets of Renton. It is a fundraising effort benefiting Special Olympics Washington. All proceeds from the event will benefit more than 10,000 individuals with intellectual disabilities who participate in Special Olympics Washington programs year-round. Registration is $40 per person and includes an event t-shirt. Day of registration is $50. For more information, visit the event website at http://runfromthecops2014. kintera.org/faf/home/default. asp?ievent=1115990

City Clerk Bonnie Walton retires after 18 years Walton served four mayors during time win City Hall BY TRACEY COMPTON tcompton@rentonreporter.com

Renton City Clerk Bonnie Walton laughs when asked what she’s going to do when she retires on Oct. 1. She’s presently on a long vacation until that time and so far she’s been to the San Juan Islands, had a celebration at Salty’s on Alki and still has plans to go to Hawaii. It’s all a long way from Renton City Hall, where Walton spent the past 18 years, including 12 as city clerk. “I think I will do something,” she said in an interview at Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park recently. “I feel happiest when I’ve helped somebody with something, something either volunteer or parttime, I don’t know. I’ll do something to still contribute.” Walton came to City Hall in 1993 as an office assistant hired by Marilyn Petersen, the city clerk at the time. She had worked for 14 years previously at a private school called the Thomas Academy in Auburn. The job in city government just sort of fit her needs at the time, having recently been a stay-athome-mom.

City Clerk Bonnie Walton has spent 18 years serving the City of Renton. TRACEY COMPTON, Renton Reporter

Walton left the city briefly for a year-and-a-half while her husband took a job, but she returned fulltime in 1997. “Then when I worked there and came back I had liked the job,” she said. “I liked the people, I liked the place; I liked the work.” Walton has served the city under four mayors: Earl Clymer, Jesse Tanner, Kathy Keolker and Denis Law, the present mayor. During her employment the city’s population has grown from 43,470 in 1993 to 97,130 in 2014. She was

New season opens Friday at Renton Civic Theatre “Educating Rita” opens the 2014-2015 season his weekend at Renton Civic Theatre. Directed by Victoria Webb, the play is the story of Frank, an English tutor in his 50sww, who drinks and buries himself in books. In comes

promoted to city clerk in 2002 and was excited by the opportunity for ongoing education and learning that went with the job. “My goal was to make things better, make improvements…” Walton said. “Every time you go to a class or seminar you get pumped up.” She thinks most people have no idea what the City Clerk’s Office does. She’s quick to remind that her office “links citizens to their government, serves as a neutral office in the political arena, serves council, administrative staff and

Rita, a forthright 26-year-old hairdresser, who is eager to learn. The play follows their blossoming relationship as Rita wins over a hesitant Frank, with her innate insight and refusal to accept no for an answer. The student/teacher relationship gives Frank a new sense of self and Rita the knowledge she’s after. “Educating Rita” originally became a hit with

citizens equally and provides city-wide information and referral service, including oversight of the Lobby Information Desk Volunteer Program.” She also has provided legislative support administering the Council meetings, providing citywide records management, voter registration and election services and duties and other legal obligations as a function of her job. “Helping people I think is the nutshell of it,” she said. “Trying to put people at ease, citizens with government and learning and referring them where they need to go. I think it was just being able to help and know that it mattered.” City Council has had to deal with some controversial issues over the years and for Walton the issues that will stick most in her mind are around the Fairwood and West Hill annexation issues, which caused her office a lot of filing, but they were also exciting, she said. “It’s exciting and then a lot of detail to make sure you do everything right,” Walton said. “Just kind of a lot of interesting and varied things.” When she recalls her days with the city there’s not anything negative that sticks out in her mind. “I think overall they’re a great bunch of people and everybody’s doing their best and doing the best with what they have at the time,” Walton said.

Michael Caine and Julie Walters and was written by Willy Russell. Tickets are $22 for adults and $17 for students and seniors. The show runs Sept. 5 through Sept. 20. Show times at 7:30 p.m., Thursdays; 8 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m., Sundays. For tickets call the box office at 425-226-5529 or visit the website, rentoncivictheatre.org.

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[4] September 5, 2014

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September 5, 2014 [5]

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New faces at Salvation Army

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Major Kris Potter and his wife Camie are about 20 days into their new roles at the Renton Salvation Army. TRACEY COMPTON, Renton Reporter

said Kris. “The other side of that is our community relationships, whether its with other local churches or synagogues, or business groups…are a very important part of Renton.” He hopes the Renton community will welcome he and his wife and share their individual stories about their experiences with the Salvation Army. “We’re going to be endeared to the community and we’re going to open our hearts and become part of Renton,” he said.

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172 bags of food went to the homeless that month and 222 volunteers supplied 756 volunteer hours at the center. Volunteers are key to the Salvation Army’s mission and Kris did say he and his wife would work to get all of the Christmas red kettle bell-ringers staffed by volunteers this year and not paid workers. That will be one of their first projects. The Salvation Army serves 900 to 1,000 families every year at Christmas. About 15 percent of the budget is the red kettle campaign. “The bell-ringing effort as we move to an all volunteer program, would really help us to put more of that money back into the community as opposed to giving somebody a job, which is not our primary mission,” said Kris. He described the vision of the Salvation Army as two-fold: volunteerism and community relationships. “Volunteerism is what the Salvation Army has been about for its entire existence and we have a great volunteer community here,”

Your Residential Specialists 206-949-1696 info@MarcieMaxwell.com

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Some new faces can be seen at Renton’s Salvation Army. Major Kris and Camie Potter have taken over from the previous captains, Chris and Lisa Aird. The Potters come most recently from their five-year post in Salinas, Calif., which Kris Potter calls “the salad bowl of the world.” The Potters have two adult children and grandchildren. Kris called their experience in Salinas “incredible” in a recent interview and detailed what they were able to accomplish in Salinas. “We revamped a senior program that was kind of slowing down,” Kris said. “We had excellent community outreach programs to families, kids. We had a huge after-school program that was a real safety issue for Salinas was the hub of gang violence for several years.” Kris explained how many of the kids there would be jumped into gangs and the after-school program provided a safe environment for certain segments of town. There were between 100 to 125 kids in the Potter’s program from a variety of schools and backgrounds. The Potters also provided a lot of homeless prevention services to the Salinas community through the Salvation Army when they arrived in 2009. That was right in the middle of a bunch of homes being repossessed there and property values changing. “People were experiencing homelessness issues for

the very first time or at risk for being homeless,” he said. “We helped try and sustain (the) homeless. We established homeless prevention issues by helping people get permanent housing as soon as possible.” “Yeah, it was really fun,” said Kris. “We had a great time and we were able to impact thousands of people.” He and his wife, Camie, have been with the Salvation Army since 1993. Kris said they realized quickly that they don’t get to choose what they wear to work or where they work from year to year. They do choose their attitude, which he said is a positive one. “Because the communities we’re going to go serve in, they need us to be positive and to come up with some solutions to problems,” Kris said. There are no major plans or overhauls scheduled for the Renton Salvation Army under the Potter’s tenure. Kris thinks that Renton already has some phenomenal programs in place. In July the Renton Rotary Salvation Army Food Bank supplied 1,995 people with food through its grocery assistance program. About

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BY TRACEY COMPTON tcompton@rentonreporter.com

September. 6, 7, 13, 14, 20, 21 Saturdays 7:30 • Sundays 1:30 Music by HARRY WARREN Lyrics by AL DUBIN Book by MICHAEL STEWART and MARK BRAMBLE Director Kathleen Edwards Musical Directors Nathan Young & Tyler Kimmel Choreographer Jordan Kimmel Highline Performing Arts Center 401 S 152nd Burien, WA 98148

tickets and info @ www.hi-liners.org

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...obituaries Glee D. Wolf

Born July 2, 1919, on a wheat farm in Decatur County, Kansas, to Roy L. Lytle and H. Mildred Lytle (Dimmitt), Glee passed away after a short illness in Renton, Washington on August 14, 2014, at the age of 95 years. She will be lovingly remembered by her family, friends and former students. She is survived by her daughter, Nancy Glee (Wolf) Osborn, grandsons, Kevin C. Osborn (Michelle) and Kendall C. Osborn (Lisa). She will be missed by her great-granddaughters, Kaitlyn Osborn and Quinn Osborn, step-great-grandchildren, Helena and Greyson McLeod and nephews, Richard and Roy Lytle and their families. She was preceded in death by her husband, E. Deane Wolf, her parents, her granddaughter, Kimberly C. Osborn, and her brother and sister-in-law, Meredith and Jeanne Lytle and their son, Tom. Glee’s family moved to her grandfather’s homestead at Red Willow, near McCook, Nebraska when she was two years old. After graduating from Red Willow High School in 1936, she worked a year to earn money to attend Kearney State Teachers’ College. She received her one-year teaching certificate and began a long and successful 37 year teaching career in the rural schools of Red Willow County (11 years) and McCook School District, (26 years at East Ward). Taking night and summer classes, she received her B.A. in Education from Kearney State College in 1962. Glee retired in 1982, and she and Deane enjoyed traveling to all corners of the country, including Alaska and Hawaii. For several years they were “snow birds” in Arizona. In August 2005, Glee moved to the Chateau atValley Center, near her daughter in Renton,Washington.The community she enjoyed there for nine years became “almost” like home and she made many good friends. Her independent apartment was also near her beloved physician, Dr. Thomson. She enjoyed being part of her families’ mile-stone moments, attending Kaitlyn’s graduation from the University of Washington in June of this year. Having struggled to get her own education while working and raising a family, Glee’s desire was to help others who wanted the opportunity to go to college. Memorial donations may be made to the charity of your choice or to the Wolf Family Scholarship Fund (McCook College Foundation, P.O. Box 195, McCook, NE, 69001). A celebration of Glee’s life will be held at United Christian Church, (15509 116th Ave. S.E., Renton, WA 98058) on September 14th, 2014 at 4:00 P.M. Graveside services will be held at a later date, at the Danbury, Nebraska cemetery. 1126451


?

“Do you think the Seahawks will be able to repeat as Super Bowl champions?”

Vote online:

www.rentonreporter.com Last week’s poll results: “Do you think the city should ban medical marijuana dispensaries” Yes: 40% No: 60%

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REPORTER 19426 68th Ave. S., Suite A Kent, WA 98032 Phone: 425.255.3484 FAX: 253.872.6735 www.rentonreporter.com

Ellen Morrison Publisher: emorrison@rentonreporter.com 425.255.3484 Lisa Yaskus, Advertising Sales lyaskus@rentonreporter.com Advertising 425.255.3484 Classified Marketplace (800).388.2527 Brian Beckley Editor: bbeckley@rentonreporter.com 425.255.3484, ext. 5050 Tracey Compton, Reporter tcompton@rentonreporter.com 425.255.3484, ext. 5052 Newsroom: 425.255.3484 Circulation inquiries: 253.872.6610 or circulation@soundpublishing.com

● QUOTE OF NOTE:

“I don’t have to be in a wheelchair; I don’t have to look like a regular MS patient. I can have this disease, but still live an active healthy lifestyle.” - Scotia Brown on not letting multiple sclerosis stop her

State’s wealthy backing gun control measure Two years after their money helped make charter schools possible, the Ballmers, the Gateses and the Nick Hanauers are using some of their loose millions to try to tighten gun laws in Washington. They’ve made six- and seven-digit contributions to the campaign for Initiative 594, the measure on the November ballot which would expand the state’s background check law to cover most gun sales conducted at gun shows and online. Their checks went to the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility whose strategists will, sometime after Labor Day, start spending the dough on television commercials claiming wider use of background checks will bolster public safety without infringing on anyone’s Second Amendment rights. The alliance can afford to wait because it is already getting a boost from a million-dollar ad campaign paid for by its nonprofit alter ego, the Center for Gun Responsibility. Since Aug. 8, the center has been running dozens of 30-second commercials as part of an “education” campaign dubbed “Background Checks Make A Difference.” The effort is set to end Sept. 5. The ads stress the value of background checks for enhancing public safety but never mention the ballot measure that its political self is promoting. What’s nice about this campaign finance nuance is it also allows the Center for Gun Responsibility to keep secret the source of its money. Center spokeswoman Molly Boyajian noted in an email that the nonprofit has received “gifts from local individuals, partner organizations, foundations, and our national partners.” One of those partners is Everytown for Gun Safety, founded by Michael Bloomberg, the super-rich, ex-mayor of New York. He’s pledged to spend boatloads of money in every corner of the country to help enact tougher gun control laws and elect pro-gun control lawmakers. I-594 fits his investment profile perfectly. While billionaires soak up attention for their prodigious checks, where is the National Rifle Association in all of this? Is it possible the NRA, the established pulpit of the gun-rights movement, will keep its money to itself in this fight? The NRA does have a political action committee to oppose I-594. But its coffers are pretty much empty. A significant infusion would be needed if the venerable organization intends to deliver a serious counterpunch. The NRA did contribute $25,000 to its PAC in July, then spent most of it on staff, probably to have them survey the landscape. They couldn’t have liked what they discovered. An Elway Poll in July found 70 percent of voters – many of them in the vote-rich Pugetopolis – “inclined” to back Initiative Jerry Cornfield

Question of the week:

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COMMENTARY

RENTON

OPINION

[6] September 5, 2014

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Ode to the Seahawks Football Night The Time clock is ticking down I grit my teeth with all my might Something big is about to happen It’s Seahawk Football Night! Pull out those smelly jerseys Air them out and put them on They say it’s like a “religion” They are worn from dusk to dawn Soon the town will be transformed Into shades of blue and green The seismic sounds of the 12th Man Have now become their “Signature Theme” The Seahawks and the 12th Man Are matched up like an epic tale You’ve got the good, the bad and the ugly It reads like the “Holy Grail” The Hawks are No. 1 in my playbook A cricle that has no end May the unity of this Football Team Bring us the same results again! Vicki Shamek, Renton

An open letter regarding construction noise This is my third attempt at contacting Charlie Conner, president of Conner Homes, regarding issues with the Cimmaron townhome project, therefore I am resorting to having to send this to you via the Renton Reporter. Regarding the Cimmaron townhome project in the Renton Highlands: I live adjacent to this construction site in a residential area and would like to request that the loud music be turned down or preferably not played at all before, during or after normal construction hours. I have called some of your employees to no avail. The music is played so loud that I can hear the “rancheras” inside my home with all doors and windows closed. Additionally, I have found long nails in my backyard, apparently tossed there by construction workers because they were bent and unusable. Please ask the site manager to speak to them and remind them they are in a residential neighborhood and reasonable noise levels and respect for adjacent properties must be observed. In addition to several townhomes in my community being flooded last summer by your site, this is the second summer in a row we are suffering from Cimmaron’s “Desert Storm” ef[ more LETTERS page 7]

● LETTERS...YOUR OPINION COUNTS:

To submit an item or photo: email letters@rentonreporter.com; mail attn Letters, Renton Reporter, 19426 68th Ave. South, Suite A, Kent WA 98032; fax 253.872.6735. Letters may be edited for style, clarity and length. 594. Three months earlier, in April, an Elway Poll found the level of support at 72 percent. Things could turn quickly. They did in 1995 when voters initially embraced a gun controltype measure then rejected it. Of late the state’s electorate has been in the mood for reshaping society in ways the government won’t. They’ve privatized liquor and legalized marijuana, charter schools and gay marriage.

Last year, voters seemed primed to pass a food-labeling initiative until opponents shelled out $22 million to successfully defeat it. The NRA can’t fork out that kind of money nor must it. Neither can it hope to succeed on its reputation alone. NRA leaders must decide whether it is worth trying to convince voters in one state in the far corner of the country to

defeat an initiative, or focus on keeping members of Congress from changing the background check law for the nation. The next few days will be very telling. Political reporter Jerry Cornfield’s blog, The Petri Dish, is at www.heraldnet.com. Contact him at 360-352-8623; jcornfield@ heraldnet.com and on Twitter at @dospueblos


September 5, 2014 [7]

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The seventh annual Renton FilmFrenzy is right around the corner. The 50-hour filmmaking competition is Oct. 3 to 5 and more than 25 filmmaking teams are expected to compete for $1,700 in cash prizes and the Curvee Award. As part of the event, filmmakers have 50 hours to write, shoot, edit and submit a short film. Participants are provided with a “CurveBall” or challenge at the beginning of the event, which

Screening will be 7 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 18, at the IKEA Performing Arts Center. The audience will have the opportunity to vote on their favorite film and a special FilmFrenzy Screening Curvee Award will be awarded.

could include incorporating a line of dialogue, a task or a specific location in Renton. There are two divisions: the Student Division and Open Division. Registration is now open for the competition and closes on September 30. The registration entry fee is $50 for the Open Division and $25 for the Student Division. Films can be up to four minutes in length and must be shot completely in Renton. All genres of film are welcome, although films must be appropriate for all audiences. The FilmFrenzy

[ LETTERS from page 6] fect. The grit resulting from construction covers our decks, back yards, windows, doors and exterior walls, making our outside areas unusable this whole summer. Couldn’t your people water down the site when dry and dusty, i.e. all summer? According to your online bio, “He supports the Evergreen Freedom Foundation

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and the Pacific Legal Foundation in the fight to preserve private property rights...”. Therefore, please ensure your contractors carry out your mission statement and respect private property rights of residents adjacent to the Cimmaron site. Thank you.

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[8] September 5, 2014

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On July 2, a Renton resident who had parked his pickup truck at the Henry Moses Aquatic Center discovered that it had been stolen. He contacted the Renton police,

and an officer responded and took a report of the theft. This kind of personal violation happens throughout King County every year, and as the Renton Police Detective handling auto thefts, I see how traumatic it is to these victims. Fortunately, the City of Renton has taken proactive measures to help deter auto thefts and other crimes, and to help catch criminals who victimize the public. I had a new tool to work with in this case — integrated video systems and high-end cameras that the city has installed in public facilities such as Renton Transit Center and the Henry Moses Aquatic Center parking lot. The cameras at the Henry

Moses Aquatic Center not only captured the actual theft but did so with such fidelity that I could read the license plate of the car that the two suspects drove to the scene. That car turned out to be another stolen vehicle that had been taken earlier in the day. The image from the camera was so clear that when I distributed the photos, the thieves were immediately recognized by other autotheft investigators. Both suspects, a 38-year-old Seattle man and a 32-year-old women whose last known address was in Cle Elum, were arrested and have been charged with the theft of the truck and the possession of the stolen car. In addition to this recent

auto theft case, there are other instances where the city’s cameras and video surveillance systems have been effective. Recently, the cameras at Renton Transit Center helped document the events leading up to a stabbing. When a young woman was shot last year at Liberty Park, the city’s video-monitoring system provided important information on the actions leading to the tragedy. The systems installed by the City of Renton are very sophisticated, with high-resolution digital images that make it easier to identify offenders. The video feeds are accessible from the computers in police patrol cars, allowing [ more CAMERAS page 9 ]

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Traffic violations and ‘anger problem’ equal jail time The following information was compiled from Renton Police Department case reports. BY DEAN A. RADFORD dradford@rentonreporter.com

An Everett man was having a bad day at work Aug. 23 when he backed up toward a Renton Police officer’s cruiser about 15 feet away at the Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park boat launch. Now he was going to wrong way but he stopped short of the cruiser. He

continued to drive the wrong way through the parking lot. By now he had committed three traffic infractions, so the officer turned around to make a traffic stop. The Everett man sped up at “an alarming rate,” perhaps in an effort to elude the officer. The officer caught up to him at the park’s entrance. The heavyset driver jumped out of the driver’s seat, his face flushed and his mouth and hands clenched. [ more BLOTTER page 10 ]

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officers a better view of dangerous situations as they evolve. Renton continues to upgrade older cameras and components to enhance the value of these systems. Again, these video systems are limited to City of Renton public facilities. I believe these surveillance systems, along with our in-car recording capabilities, help us deter criminal activity, solve crimes, document police actions, and aid in the arrest and prosecution of criminals. They are only one tool, though, in the face of rising challenges. In the past year, we have seen a significant increase in auto thefts in our region. While rates are up by a significant amount throughout King County, Renton auto thefts year to date are almost 44 percent higher than during the same period last year. Older vehicles still comprise the bulk of our thefts. Many of the cars that we see stolen were manufactured in the 1980s and 1990s, before the development of sophisticated anti-theft systems. Other newer types of vehicles, such as commercial vans and many pickup trucks, are targeted because manufactures have only recently started putting anti-theft systems into them, and because such “working vehicles” often contain tools or salvageable metals.

hidden, a thief breaking into your car to rummage for loose change can find the key and steal the entire car. And a simple auto theft can quickly turn deadly. Many thieves are under the influence of drugs, and once a car gets into the hands of a thief, it can become a 3,500-pound projectile in an instant. Through innovations such as our video monitoring of public facilities, the City of Renton will continue to work to better protect the public. Ultimately, it’s the actions of citizens working with us to protect what’s theirs and to look out for each other that will help keep all of us safe.

While in the truck case, thanks to the cameras, we were able to arrest and charge the offenders, I’d like to stress that we’re all better off if these crimes never take place at all. A number of auto thefts occur when a car is left running and unattended, or when a spare key is left inside the vehicle. Thieves can see the exhaust from an idling car from blocks away; they even have a slang term for such targets: “steamers.” Even if you’re just running inside a building for a minute, it takes a thief just a few seconds to take your car. If you leave a spare key in the car, even if it is

1122811

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[10] September 5, 2014

www.rentonreporter.com [ BLOTTER from page 9]

by Dan Kellogg

What is Joint Tenancy? Joint tenancy is a form of ownership in which two or more persons own an asset jointly. Upon the death of one, the ownership of the asset is presumed to pass to the surviving joint owner(s) without probate. Sometimes joint tenancy is useful. But it may be inconsistent with the provisions of the Will and create uncertainty or conflict after death. In other cases, joint tenancy can disrupt a plan to minimize estate taxes. Protect your right to distribute your estate as you intend in a cost-effective manner. Consult an estate planning attorney. I have more than 40 years of experience providing thoughtful and comprehensive counsel for clients. Please call 425-227-8700 to make an appointment. Committed to you and the community.

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1125742

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Hidden bike stolen A well-hidden specialized mountain bike was stolen Aug. 21 from a yard on Lake Washington Boulevard. The thief must have known where he kept it or maybe spent a long time in the yard looking for valuables. The mountain bike is red, with a rack and pack on the back. A tire pump is attached to the frame.

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into jail for investigation of attempted firstdegree trafficking in stolen property. Charges are pending in Pierce County. The Renton Reporter is not naming the three people because they have yet to be charged. The Renton woman was the couple’s “fence,” according to Vickers. A can of the Similac formula costs about $30; the Renton woman paid the couple $15 for a can. The woman told the couple exactly what she wanted them to steal. “Basically, she put in an order,” Vickers said. Undercover officers developed a relationship with the couple, known to have engaged in organized retail theft, who stole thousands of dollars of formula during the investigation. That relationship led investigators to the Renton woman, who had previously purchased the couple’s stolen goods, according to Vickers. During five months this year, the Renton woman purchased from investigators more than $26,000 in what she believed to be stolen merchandise. She told investigators she shipped the stolen baby formula to “her sister in Vietnam.” The Renton woman was convicted in 2009 in federal court for Use of a Communication Facility in Aid of Racketeering in a federal investigation of brothels disguised as tanning salons and spas, according to Vickers. “Organized retail crime is a growing issue for retailers and for law enforcement. We appreciate the opportunity to partner with Safeway and QFC; without their assistance this case would not have come to fruition,” said Renton Police Chief Kevin Milosevich.

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Instead of getting back in his truck, he took another step toward the officer. This is how someone acts when they’re getting ready to fight. The two men struggled; an off-duty firefighter, described in the report as a Good Samaritan, offered to help the officer. “Dude, just calm down, relax and let this officer handcuff you so he can talk to you,” the firefighter said. More struggling ensued but eventually the 44-yearold man was handcuffed. Two officers arrived to help, but even then the man continued to resist efforts to control him. He ended up on the ground again. He finally talked. It was about 6 p.m. He was on his lunch break. He saw the officer behind him when he backed up, but figuring he was already caught, he just kept driving the wrong way. He admitted he has an anger problem. The suspect was booked into SCORE jail for resisting arrest.

Grady Way was robbed at gunpoint of about $450 late Aug. 18. The suspect, possibly Asian or white, pointed a black semiautomatic handgun in his right hand at the clerk and covered his face with his left arm. He told the clerk to open the register, then ordered him to get on the floor. The suspect told him to scoot back. The suspect removed a small cash box from a cabinet. The clerk stayed on the floor until he heard the door chime. A K9 unit searched for the suspect, who was described as 5-foot-6 and wearing a dark gray hooded sweatshirt and dark sunglasses.

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September 5, 2014 [11]

www.rentonreporter.com

Now is the time to feed and reseed your lawn for winter

Q. A.

Can saffron crocus be grown in our area? I love to cook with saffron but it is a very expensive spice! Anon, email Yes! Saffron crocus or crocus sativus is an underused herb and easy to grow in our area. You will need to order the bulbs online as I have not seen them for sale at local nurseries and you want to make sure you get the crocus for culinary use. Find them at www. dutchgrown.crocus-saffron.html and plant the bulbs as soon as they arrive so you can harvest the saffron this fall. These beautiful purple crocus bloom in the fall but should not be confused with the autumn blooming crocus (crocus colchicums) which are not edible. I suggest you plant and mark the location of the bulbs because after the autumn blooming the leaves will disappear. You will need at least 20 bulbs for a first year harvest but if not all the bulbs bloom this fall just wait until next autumn for an increased supply. To harvest saffron visit the bulbs on a sunny morning when the petals are wide open and pull the long red filaments or stigmas off with your fingers. Dry the threads indoors and store in an airtight container. Add these to a cup of hot broth or milk and let steep for 20 minutes. Now you have golden saffron for paella and Indian food or add this golden broth to mashed potatoes for a Midas touch on the

holidays. Saffron is the world’s most expensive spice but not because it is hard to grow – it is the hand harvesting of the thread-like filaments that makes it pricey. Even if you don’t intend to cook with saffron, add some crocus sativus to your garden for fall blooms in a rock garden or other sunny spot that has well-drained soil.

Q.

I have a huge clump of phlox in my garden that grows about five feet tall and blooms each summer with clumps of white flowers. They smell wonderful at night. Over the years I notice I am getting fewer blooms. Do garden phlox need to be divided? Is so when. Thank you. L.S., Renton Sounds like you are the proud owner of Phlox paniculata and the variety ‘David’ is a mildew resistant white flowering phlox that blooms at the end of summer. This perennial needs to be divided every few years or it will become old and cranky. Fall is the perfect time to divide phlox and other perennials. Dig the clump from the spoil, cut off side sections into clumps the size of your fist and replant into soil that has been improved with compost. Be sure to retire the old center of the clump to your compost pile. Phlox can suffer from mildew on the foliage so give it a spot in a mostly sunny site with plenty of space to ensure good air circulation. A mulch on top of the soil each summer will keep the roots cool and the tops producing those fragrant, white domes of bloom.

A.

Q.

There is a vine that looks like a clematis that is huge and covering a shed in our neighborhood. It is very fragrant and nobody prunes, waters or feeds this monster of a plant. I would love to grow it as a screening vine along a fence. Do you have any idea what it could be? M.P., Puyallup Sounds like you have met the Sweet Autumn Clematis or Clematis terniflora. This rapidly

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The month of September is a good time for lawn renovation. The hot, dry summer was a good indicator of the problem spots in your lawn as dry brown grass turns up where soil is compacted or full of boulders. Dig down into your brown areas to remove any clay soil, boulders or gravel under the surface of your lawn. Replace clay sections and fill in the space left from boulders with topsoil. Rake level then reseed or resod the area. Another way to improve a struggling lawn is to fertilize now with a winter lawn food. The most important time to feed a lawn in Western Washington is September and October. You can also fertilize in the spring but a fall feeding will ensure our lawn wakes up early in the spring to crowd out weeds.

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growing vine becomes covered with small but fragrant white blooms at the end of summer and into fall. It is happiest when given lots of room to sprawl and like all clematis does best in rich, moist soil with its top in the sun but the roots shaded – growing a clematis on the north or shaded side of a stump or shed is the perfect location as the top will head for the sunshine. Fall is a good time to add clematis vines to the garden and using this aggressive grower as a screen is fine if you don’t mind that it will lose most of it’s leaves each winter and dead brown foliage often clings to the stems. Don’t prune clematis now, wait until the vines go dormant in late winter or early spring. Spring blooming clematis should be prune just after they flower – and if clematis pruning has you confused just remember that all clematis grow best if they are never pruned at all – so give them room. Marianne Binetti is hosting a class on “The secrets of year-round color” at 9 a.m. Saturday at Windmill Gardens in Sumner. Learn how to use hydrangeas, heucheras and hellebores to create an easy care landscape with yearlong blooms. Go to www.windmillgarden.com or call 253-8635843 to register. Binetti will also be at the Auburn Famrer’s Market from noon to 2 p.m. Sunday speaking about “The Best Plants and Fall Tips for our Area.” Bring your garden questions and learn organic gardening tips for the lazy gardener. The event is at the Auburn Sound Transit Center and is free.

PUBLIC NOTICES KING COUNTY DEPT. OF PERMITTING & ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW (DPER) 35030 SE Douglas St., Ste. 210, Snoqualmie WA 98065-9266 NOTICE OF PERMIT APPLICATION REQUEST: Commercial Building Permit File: COMM13-0019 Applicant: Sandra Forman Pacific Topsoils Inc. Location: 5712 South 129th Street Seattle 98178 Proposal: Legalizing establishment of a retail sales site for landscape materials. Construction includes a small modular sale office, structural retaining wall, parking and drainage facilities. SEPA Project Manager: Sherie Sabour 206-477-0367 COMMENT PROCEDURES: DPER will issue an environmental determination on this application following a 21-day comment period that ends on October 6th 2014 Written comments and additional information can be obtained by contacting the SEPA Project Manager at the phone number listed above. Published in Renton Reporter on September 5, 2014. #11200631. Superior Court of Washington County of King In re the Estate of: MACARIA REYES MARTIN, Deceased. NO. 14-4-04723-9 KNT NOTICE TO CREDITORS The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this Estate. Any person having a

claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorneys at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the Notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate assets and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: August 29, 2014. PR: Merlita Trinidad Schug PETER W. MOGREN WSBA #11515 Of MOGREN, GLESSNER & ROTI P.S. Attorneys for Personal Representative 100 Evergreen Bldg.;P.O.Box 90 Renton, WA 98057-0090 (425) 255-4542 King County Superior Court Cause No. 14-4-04723-9 KNT Published in the Renton Reporter on August 29, 2014, September 5, 2014 and September 12, 2014. #1120521.

PUBLIC NOTICES To place a Legal Notice, please call 253-234-3506 or e-mail legals@reporternewspapers.com

PUBLIC NOTICES


[12] September 5, 2014 [ RIDE from page 1]

www.rentonreporter.com

Already an active person, Brown has incorporated more fitness into her routine three times more likely to get it than men. and changed her diet. She now bikes, runs It is a disease that affects the brain and and lifts weights to stay healthy. Her docspinal cord, resulting in loss of muscle tor advised her to remove gluten from her control, vision, balance and sensation, acdiet and she has discovered an eating regicording to webMD. men called the “paleo diet” that centers on Brown has been in training for a year fruits, vegetables and lean proteins. Brown to prepare for the race and will ride 160 has chosen to forego the typical MS meds. miles during the two-day period on the “So, having a clean good diet and eatPerkins Coie Team. ing whole foods, not processed foods, “I’m very excited,” she said. “I just desugary foods – things like that – and also cided that this is going to be the year that incorporating fitness has really I’m going to do it.” “I have all the helped me maintain my sympIt took her a little while to come to the reality that she has symptoms and there toms,” Brown said. She feels more energized MS and embrace it, but now she has to be a way where having taken gluten out of her I can kind of take said she’s taking it head on. diet and her symptoms have di“I don’t have to be in a wheel- control of it and be healthy even though I minished because of the actions chair; I don’t have to look like she’s taken, she said. a regular MS patient,” she said. have MS.” And she enjoys what bicycling “I can have this disease, but Scotia Brown has added to her life. still live an active and healthy “It’s a way that I can have me lifestyle.” time,” Brown said. “Being a mom of three Brown is participating in the Bike MS boys, you really don’t have time to yourevent to support a friend, who was reself. Time to get out and just enjoy myself cently diagnosed. Brown realized something wasn’t right when she started having and get into the nice breeze and weather. I can think.” minor symptoms like facial and body Now she wants to be an inspiration to numbness and headaches. There were women, who are more likely to get the times when she was at a loss for words disease. because her brain couldn’t think of what “I think having my voice heard is a lot to say. She’s also had blurry eye-sight. better than silencing it, not saying things Everyone’s symptoms look different with and kind of keeping it under wraps.” MS, she said. For more information about the event Then she went to see a doctor, who or the Multiple Sclerosis Society, visit confirmed it was multiple sclerosis. http://bikewas.nationalmssociety.org/ “So, it was just the realization that, ‘OK, site/PageNavigator/BIKE_WAS_LandI have this disease,’” she said. “I have all ing_Page.html. the symptoms and there has to be a way where I can kind of take control of it and Contact Reporter Tracey Compton at be healthy even though I have MS.” 425-255-3484 ext. 5052

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SUMMER/WINTER Recreation, 3 bedroom, home all renewed, all redone 2006-2008. 30x36 garage/carport, GenTran system, air compressor with lines in garage. 2 sheds. Stainless kitchen. Appliances plus Bosch washer/dryer stay. Snow blower and freezer optional. Weippe, Idaho. Linda, Empire Realty Services, 208-476-7633. lindadavis@ orofino-id.com

Black Diamond

2 BEDROOM Cabin on Lake. Lots of wildlife. Rent $1,000, deposit matches rent. Deposit refundable. Must see. Call 360-886-1695 VU 3 bedroom house, washer/ dryer, all appliances, fireplace. Utilities paid. Large parking yard. Acess all freeways. (425)254-8801 or (253)709-4867 WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent

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ADVERTISING SALES CONSULTANT Looking for an exciting career in Sales? Sound Publishing, Inc. has an immediate opening for a n A d ve r t i s i n g S a l e s Consultant with the Issaquah/ Sammamish Reporter! The ideal candidates will demonstrate strong interpersonal skills, both written and oral, and have excellent communications skills; must be motivated and take the initiative to sell multiple media products including on-line advertising and special products, work with existing customers and find ways to grow sales and income with new prospective clients. Sales experience necessar y; Print media experience is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient with data processing and spreadsheets as well as utilizing the Internet. Position requires use of personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of active vehicle insurance. We offer a competitive salary (plus commission) and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an e m p l oye r m a t c h . ) I f you’re interested in joining our team and working for the leading independent newspaper publisher in Washington State, then we want to hear from you! Email us your cover letter and resume to:

SPORTS REPORTER The Bellevue Reporter and Issaquah/Sammamish Reporter, divisions of Sound Publishing Inc. is seeking a sports reporter with a minimum of 1-2 years writing experience and photography skills. This position is based out of the Bellevue office. The primary coverage will be sports and recreation, with occasional general assignment stories. Schedule includes evening and/or weekend work. As a repor ter for Sound Publishing, you will be expected to: be inquisitive and resourceful in the coverage of assigned beats; produce 5 by-line stories per week; write stories that are tight and to the point; use a digital camera to take photographs of the stories you cover ; post on the publication’s web site; blog and use Twitter on the web; layout pages, using InDesign; shoot and edit videos for the web . We a r e l o o k i n g fo r a team player willing to get i nvo l ve d i n t h e l o c a l community through publication of the weekly n ew s p a p e r a n d d a i l y web journalism. The ideal applicant will have a understanding of local spor ts and recreation. He or she will have a commitment to community journalism and ever ything from shor t, brief-type stories about people and events to examining issues facing the community; be able to spot emerging sports issues and trends; write clean, balanced and accurate stories that dig deeper than simple features; develop and institute readership initiatives. Candidates must have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be able to w o r k e f fe c t i ve l y i n a deadline-driven environment. Must be proficient with AP style, layout and design using Adobe InDesign; and use the p u bl i c a t i o n ’s w e b s i t e and online tools to gather information and reach the community. Must be organized and self-motivated, exceptional with the public and have the ability to establish a rapport with the community. We offer a competitive hourly wage and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) Email us yo u r c ove r l e t t e r, r e sume, and include five examples of your best work showcasing your reporting skills and writing chops to:

Drivers: Local-Home Nightly! Sumner, Kent & A u b u r n . G r e a t P a y, Benefits! CDL-A, 1yr Exp. Req. Estenson Logistics Apply www.goelc.com 1-866-336-9642 hreast@soundpublishing.com Drivers: or mail to: New Openings! Local Sound Publishing, Inc. P&D, Line-haul, & Re19426 68th Avenue S. g i o n a l R o u t e s Ava i l ! Kent, WA 98032 Great Pay & Benefits! ATTN: HR/ISS CDL-A or C, 2yrs Exp. Call Penske Logistics: Sound Publishing is an 1-855-867-3412 Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and Teams and Solo’s: Mid- strongly supports diverwest and West Coast sity in the wor kplace. runs, Late Model Equip- Check out our website to ment, scheduled home find out more about us! time, Excellent Miles, www.soundpublishing.com Paid Practical Miles, DiClimber rect Deposit, Paid Vacation. Call Now! 800-645- Climbers needed in King County for established 3748 company. Full time, year round Work. Must have Business min. 2 yr. Climbing exp. Opportunities Ve h i c l e a n d D L R e AVON- Ear n extra in- quired. Send email with come with a new career! Wor k Exp. to recr uitSell from home, work,, ing@evergreentlc.com online. $15 startup. For or call 800-684-8733 infor mation call: 888423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat Flexible Hours 9-1 Central) No Experience Necessary Reach the readers Work with Homeownthe dailies miss. Call ers face to face sched800-388-2527 today uling free estimates. to place your ad in Set your own schedule week to week. Our the Classifieds. reps average $500$750/week. Top reps Employment average $1,000General $1,500/week. Paid Infield or ientation. All materials and compaCARRIER ny apparel are providROUTES ed. Employees are required to have a AVAILABLE vehicle, Dr iver’s License and Cell phone. $500 Bonus after 60 IN YOUR days of employment. AREA Apply online at www.tlc4homesnw.com OR, Call our Corporate Call Today Office at 855-7201-253-872-6610 3102 Ext 3304 or 3308

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or mail to: Sound Publishing, Inc., 19426 68th Avenue S. Kent, WA 98032, ATTN: HR/BLVU Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com


September 5, 2014 [13]

www.rentonreporter.com

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M y C o m p u t e r Wo r k s. Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-800681-3250

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POMERANIAN Teacup puppies. 1 Blue Merle Male tr i-color. 1 Wolf Sable Male. Cute, Cudly Te d d y B e a r s , R e a l Playful, family raised. Shots, Wormed. health certificate. $450 Cash. 11 month black & white male & year old female, playful & good with kids and other animals house trained, shots wor ming up to date. $ 2 5 0 e a c h 425.870.7306

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A K C T I N Y TOY Po o d l e p u p p i e s. P l ay f u l , sweet, snuggly males. Hypo Allergenic. Ver y loving, well socialized, raised with children. Born 6/15. Black (possible Silver). Bred for health, disposition and good nature. Current on shots and worming. Includes health warranty a n d s t a r t e r p a ck a g e. $800 ea. 206-650-1988. KAKfarm@hotmail.com

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Electronics

9 PC. ASIAN DINING RM SET, excellent cond! Gorgeous, brilliant walnut top w/ black laquer. Includes table, 6 chairs, glass top & two leaves. Asking only $575 (retails for over $1500). Seattle 206-324-5278.

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TWO BURIAL Plots at Mountain View Cemeter y in Aubur n. In the sold out Centenial Circle section with a beautiful valley view. Selling below Cemetery pricing at $2000 cash each. To be sold together. 253-6537020

NOTICE Washington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (receipt) that shows the s e l l e r ’s a n d b u y e r ’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quantity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood. When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the delivery vehicle. The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a c o r d by v i s u a l i z i n g a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet. Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension. To m a k e a f i r e w o o d complaint, call 360-9021857. agr.wa.gov/inspection/ WeightsMeasures/Fire woodinformation.aspx

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AKC Poodle Puppies Teacups 1 Brown & White Parti Female; 1 Brown Female, 2 Silver and White Parti (1M 1F), 1 Red Male. Adorable full of love and kisses. Reserve your puff of love. 360-249-3612

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4 PLOTS in Washington Memorial Park in Seatac. Garden of Flowers, section 18. block 254, lot B, plots 1, 2, 3 & 4. Offered at discount - $6000 for all! Call 253-9394569

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2 PLOTS $5900 NEGOT Rest your loved ones side by side (plots 3 & 4). Monuments are okay. Desirable, sold out Heather Section located in Renton’s Greenwood Memorial Park. Seller pays transfer fees. Valued at $12,000 each. Private seller willing to entertain all offers. Call Andrew, 206-373-1988.

MASONRY FIREPLACE KIT built by Dietmeyer Ward. Desirable for it’s clean heat! Great design option, pick any stone to match your decor! Never a s s e m bl e d . S t a n d a r d size unit designed to heat 2000 - 3000 SF. C a s t i r o n d o o r, a n d clean out covers incl. Best offer asking $3000 (retail $6000) Vashon. Mary 206-463-4321.

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RENTON Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washing*UNDER WARRANTY* ton! Do you have a prov- Make $15 monthly paye n t r a c k r e c o r d o f ments or pay off balance success in sales and enof $293. joy managing your own Credit Dept. 206-244-6966 territory? Are you competitive and thrive in an KENMORE REPO energetic environment? Heavy duty washer & Do you desire to work in dryer, deluxe, large cap. an environment which w/normal, perm-press & offers uncapped earning gentle cycles. opportunities? Are you * Under Warranty! * interested in a fast Balance left owing $272 paced, creative atmosor make payments of phere where you can $25. Call credit dept. use your sales expertise 206-244-6966 to provide consultative print and digital soluNEW APPLIANCES tions? If you answered YES to UP TO 70% OFF the above, then we are All Manufacturer Small looking for you! Renton Ding’s, Dents, Scratches Reporter, a division of and Factory ImperfecSound Publishing, Inc. is tions looking for self-motivat*Under Warranty* ed, results-driven people For Inquiries, Call or Visit interested in a multi-me- Appliance Distributors @ dia sales career. This 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd. position will be respon206-244-6966 sible for print and digital advertising sales to an REPO REFRIGERATOR e c l e c t i c a n d ex c i t i n g Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. group of clients. As part side-by-side, ice & water of our sales team you disp., color panels are expected to maintain available and grow existing client UNDER WARRANTY! relationships, as well as was over $1200 new, develop new client relanow only payoff bal. of tionships. The success$473 or make pmts of ful candidate will also be only $15 per mo. goal oriented, have or- Credit Dept. 206-244-6966 ganizational skills that enable you to manage STACK LAUNDRY multiple deadlines, proDeluxe front loading vide great consultative sales and excellent cus- washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles. tomer service. This posiLike new condition t i o n r e c e i ve s a b a s e * Under Warranty * salary plus commission; Over $1,200 new, now and a benefits package including health insu- only $578 or make payrance, paid time off, and ments of $25 per month 401K. Position requires %206-244-6966% use of your personal cell Auctions/ phone and vehicle, posEstate Sales s e s s i o n o f v a l i d WA State Driver’s License PUBLIC AUCTION and proof of active vehiEstate of cle insurance. Sales exHenry McInaggart perience necessary; MeAuto shop equip.,some dia exper ience is a furniture definite asset. Must be Sat Sept 13th 9am computer-proficient. If Preview Fri 1pm-4pm you have these skills, 13825 6th ave. East Taand enjoy playing a procoma (Parkland active part in impacting area)South Bend lathe, your local businesses’ fi- Fullshop machs., precinancial success with adsion tools, auto parts $ ver tising solutions, memorabilia, Toro please email your re- 3S3200 Mower, 6 ft Carsume and cover letter to: go Trl., Yard and Garden,some nice furniture, hreast@sound much more. 10% buyers publishing.com premium. Check web for ATTN: REN. brochure, photos, lists. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Em- www.matherauctions.com Harold Mather inc ployee (EOE) and auctioneers strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. (253) 847-9161 WSL144 Visit our website to learn more about us! Treasure Hunting? www.soundpublishing.com Check out our Recycle ads before someone Schools & Training else finds your riches. AIRLINE CAREERS RENTON Start Here – Get hands Public Auction/ on training as FAA certiLandlord Lien fied Technician fixing Foreclosure Sale jets. Financial aid if 9/10/14 qualified. Call for free information Aviation Instiat 10:00 AM. tute of Maintenance 1- 1 9 7 5 TA M A R 6 0 X 1 2 877-818-0783 www.Fix- m o b i l e h o m e V I N : Jets.com 1659668612, May Valley MHP #55 11414 164th Ave SE Appliances PH: (425) 917-0459

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first GARAGE Door Opener p r e s c r i p t i o n a n d f r e e by Chamberlain, 1 1/2 shipping. HP, 2 wireless remotes, 1 wired opener. Asking V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S USERS! 50 Pills SPE$50. 425-255-2210. CIAL - $99.00. FREE L E AT H E R C OAT N ew Shipping! 100% guarane r s t y l i s h l a d i e s c a l f teed. CALL NOW! 855length size 9 coat. Worn 409-4132 very little! Asking $140. Retails $300 - $400. Wanted/Trade Diane after noon 425885-9806. CASH PAID For: Record WOODWORKING Tools LPs, 45s, Reel to Reel Refinished Hand Planes, Tapes, CDs, Old Magamade in the USA. From z i n e s / M o v i e s , V H S the 1950s. Bailey Plane, Ta p e s . C a l l T O D AY ! 18” $100. Stanley Plane, 206-499-5307 9”, $35. 206-772-6856. Child’s handmade rocking horse, beautiful cond. $45. Oak Computer stand with a pull out keyboard return $50. Ladies suede jacket, size small, plum color $20. Call after noon 425-8859806, 260-8535.

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REPORTER The Bonney Lake Courier Herald, a division of Sound Publishing Inc. is seeking a general assignment reporter with a minimum of 1-2 years writing experience and photography skills. This position is based out of t h e E nu m c l aw o f f i c e. The primar y coverage will be city government, business, sports, general assignment stories; and may include ar ts coverage. Schedule includes evening and/or weekend work. As a Repor ter for Sound Publishing, you will be expected to: be inquisitive and resourceful in the coverage of assigned beats; produce 5 by-line stories per week; write stories that are tight and to the point; use a digital camera to take photographs of the stories you cover ; post on the publication’s web site; blog and use Twitter on the web; layout pages, using InDesign; shoot and edit videos for the web . We a r e l o o k i n g fo r a team player willing to get i nvo l ve d i n t h e l o c a l business community through publication of the monthly journal and daily web jour nalism. The ideal applicant will have a general understanding of local commerce and industry, education, employment and labor issues, real estate and development, and related public policy. He or she will have a commitment to community jour nalism and ever ything from short, brieftype stories about people and events to examining issues facing the community; be able to spot emerging business issues and trends; write clean, balanced and accurate stories that dig deeper than simple features; develop and institute readership initiatives. Candidates must have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be able to work effectively in a deadlinedr iven environment. Must be proficient with AP style, layout and design using Adobe InDesign; and use the p u bl i c a t i o n ’s w e b s i t e and online tools to gather information and reach the community. Must be organized and self-motivated, exceptional with the public and have the ability to establish a rapport with the community. We offer a competitive hourly wage and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) Email us yo u r c ove r l e t t e r, r e sume, and include five examples of your best work showcasing your reporting skills and writing chops to: hreast@sound publishing.com or mail to: Sound Publishing, Inc., 19426 68th Avenue S. Kent, WA 98032, ATTN: HR/BLCH Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

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[14] September 5, 2014 Dogs

BEAUTIFUL AKC Registered German Shepherd Dogs (GSD) - European C h a m p i o n s h i p fa m i l y bloodlines. Black and Red/Tan. Raised in our home. 2 males and 1 fem a l e. H e a l t hy, l ov i n g and well socialized. Veter inar ian checked, wormed and 1st shots. Only FOREVER homes, must submit application. Call 425-891-0083 or email: 4GreatDogs@gmail.com View photos at www.4GreatDogs.com

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CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adoptions also. Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaranteed. UTD Vaccinations/ wor mings, litter box trained, socialized. Video, pictures, information/ virtual tour: www.chi-pup.net References happily supplied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-4595951

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RE-HOMING Chihuahua puppies, 2 black and tan a n d 1 t a n a n d bl a ck . B o r n M e m o r i a l D a y. Healthy, happy and energetic. All boys. They will come with a full body harness, leash and hard plastic pet crate. pictures OUR BEAUTIFUL AKC can be sent by text mesGolden Retriever pup- sage. $250 each. 206pies will be ready to go 474-9069. t o t h e i r n e w h o m e s Place an advertisement soon. They have been or search for jobs, r a i s e d a r o u n d yo u n g homes, merchandise, children and are well socialized. Both parents pets and more in the have excellent health Classifieds 24 hours a and OFA health clear- day online at ances. The mother is a www.nw-ads.com. Light Golden and the father is full English Cream Golden. $1250 ROTTWEILER pups, each. For more pictures p u r e b r e d , f a m i l y and infor mation about r a i s e d , 1 s t s h o t s , t h e p u p p i e s a n d o u r wormed. Tails & dew removed. home/kennel please visit c l a w s us at: www.mountain- Large heads. Males spr ingskennel.com or $700, Females $800. call Verity at 360-520- Parents are our fami9196 ly dogs and on site.

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Licensed, Bonded & Insured Notice to Contractors #CHARLHM026D6 Washington LATINO’S Home Services State Law LAWN & GARDEN Hauling & Cleanup (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all adverALL YARD WORK tisements for construcA+ HAULING AND LANDSCAPING tion related services inWe remove/recycle: clude the contractor’s Junk/wood/yard/etc. $10 off Lawn Mowing for current depar tment of Fast Service 1st Time Customers Labor and Industries 25 yrs Experience, registration number in Reasonable rates the advertisement. $50 off Full Cleanup Call Reliable Michael Failure to obtain a certifiMowing, Thatching & 425.455.0154 cate of registration from Weeding L&I or show the registraBlackberry Removal, tion number in all adver*EZ-Haulers Gutter & Roof tising will result in a fine Junk Removal Cleaning up to $5000 against the AND MUCH MORE. We Haul Anything! unregistered contractor. Check us out Online For more infor mation, HOME, GARAGE and call Labor and Industries www.latinoslawn YARD CLEANUP Specialty Compliance andgarden.com Lowest Rates! cclatinlg894p5 Services Division at (253)310-3265 1-800-647-0982 Satisfaction Guaranteed or check L&Is internet LOWEST PRICE site at www.lni.wa.gov Home Services Free Estimates Property Maintenance Find your perfect pet Senior Discount All Things Basementy! Lic/Bonded/Insured in the Classifieds. Basement Systems Inc. CALL JOSE www.nw-ads.com Call us for all of your 206-250-9073 basement needs! WaterProfessional Services p r o o f i n g , F i n i s h i n g , Legal Services Structural Repairs, HuHome Services midity and Mold Control R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Lawn/Garden Service Fresh Financial Start FCall 1-800-998-5574 LAWN By Filing Chapter 7 or * Flexible Payment Plans * Free Consultation * Stop Foreclosure * 25+ Years Experience * Saturday Appts Avail. Call the Law Office of Kevin J. Magorien, PS at

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ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE


September 5, 2014 [15]

www.rentonreporter.com

Lindbergh girls soccer looks to senior captain for leadership Despite the loss of five starters from last season’s girls soccer team, the Lindbergh Eagles are hoping last year’s leading goal scorer can return from an injury to lead them to the postseason. Last year, the Eagles finished second in the Seamount League with an 11-3-1 record and narrowly missed making their second straight trip to the state tournament, falling 1-0 to Kingston in the district playoffs. This year, Lindbergh will have to replace five starters from last year’s squad including First Team All-League selections Alicia Wasisco, Lindsey Pfluger and Liz Beltran. “It provides a great opportunity for our returning players and newcomers to step up and fill those roles,” said Head Coach Ryan Johnson in an email, when asked about the departed seniors. “I’m excited about the

progress we have made this past week and can’t wait to see how this season unfolds.” Despite these losses, the Eagles return their leading goal scorer from a year ago, senior captain Justine Yarington. After suffering a knee injury against Kingston, Yarington claims she’s ready for a new season with the Eagles. “After I tore my ACL last season, I spent eight months rehabbing and was finally cleared to play a full game,” she said in an email from the coach. “This season I’m extremely excited to be able to play my first full 80-minute game in over eight months with such a wonderful and talented group of girls.” As a junior, Yarington scored 18 goals and added nine assists. The Eagles should also benefit from an

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bergh’s back line will have some new faces in 2014. Robyn McLuen has moved from the midfield to help add depth while newcomers Valerie Yarington, Kiana De Jesus, and Smerh Reader will be called upon to fill the remaining two spots. Junior Elly Chambers will get her opportunity start at goalkeeper this season after backing up Liz Beltran and Audrey Cunningham the previous two seasons. Lindbergh opens the season Saturday, Sept. 6, at Kentlake.

Hips and knees are replaceable because time spent missing out on life isn’t. What’s the one thing people who have had joint-replacement surgery say? “I wish I’d done it sooner.” That’s because it didn’t take long to get back to doing things they’d given up due to the pain. If you’ve put part of your life on hold, then come to a free surgeon-led seminar at Swedish — where our surgeons do literally thousands of jointreplacement surgeries every year. Swedish surgeons were also the first in this area to perform MAKOplasty®, robotic-assisted surgery for partial knee joint replacement.

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experienced midfield this season as they return four starters from a year ago. Marcela Cardona, Mia Ramos, Zhane Spates and Morgan Earl combined for 48 starts during 2013. Junior captain Marcela Cardona expects the midfield to be dynamic this season. “I feel like we will be really strong on the attack and defensively,” added Cardona. Emmy Ayala, Kendall Goodman, and Veronica Hrenchir are also expected to contribute this season. Led by senior Allison Fernald, Lind-

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OR Thursday, Sept. 25, 6– 8 p.m. Swedish Orthopedic Institute 601 Broadway, Seattle (Corner of Broadway and Cherry St. – Hourly parking available under the building) To view classes offered at all Swedish campuses, visit swedish.org/classes.


[16] September 5, 2014

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