Kent Reporter, August 14, 2015

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INSIDE | 7 Kent residents arrested in drug trafficking case [3]

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Sports | Kent teen eyes world powerlifting title after winning nationals [12]

FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 2015

Results ‘mixed’ about school zone traffic cameras impact BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com

It’s “mixed results” so far as to whether or not school zone traffic cameras in Kent are causing drivers to slow down. The statistics show that in the months of January and February

of this year fewer tickets were issued than the same two months in 2014. But from March to June the numbers this year were similar to the same months last year (see related chart, page 4). “I think it’s a big program and it takes time,” Kent Police Chief Ken Thomas said about the trends.

“One comparison is not enough to make decisions. But it’s mixed results. It was down significantly and then not so much.” A total of 12,578 tickets were filed with Kent Municipal Court during the first 19 months of the program from January 2014 through July 2015, according to

court statistics. City officials set up traffic cameras to catch speeders at NeelyO’Brien Elementary, 6300 S. 236th St., and Sunrise Elementary, 22300 132nd Ave. S.E. Police issue a $124 fine for a vehicle exceeding the 20 mph school speed limit by 1 to 9 mph and issue a $248 fine

for speeds of 10 mph or faster above the speed limit. The program has brought in more than $1 million to the city. The city will add cameras this fall at Meridian Elementary, 25621 140th Ave. S.E. (on SE 256th St.) [ more TICKETS page 4 ]

Allen to challenge Thomas for council seat BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com

An 18-year-old man faces a charge of reckless driving in connection with the March 31 “car-surfing” accident at the Kent-Meridian High School parking lot that resulted in the death of fellow student Lupo Benson, 18. King County prosecutors on Aug. 7 charged Tyler T. Reber, of Black Diamond, a 2105 Kent-Meridian graduate, with reckless driving, a gross misdemeanor.

Les Thomas no longer is running unopposed for a fourth term on the Kent City Council. Gwen Allen, executive director of the Kent Black Action Commission (KBAC) and owner of C&G Hair and Beauty Supply on the East Hill, will challenge Thomas as a write-in candidate on the Nov. 3 general election ballot. “I decided to run to give the voters options Allen in this next part of the democratic process for the general election,” Allen said in an email. “In my opinion, there should never be elections with unopposed candidates. In my opinion, we need term limits for our mayor and our council members.” If Thomas wins, it will give him a fourth, four-year term. Allen officially filed as a writein candidate with King County Elections on July 17. She also filed with the state Public Disclosure Commission (PDC), which oversees campaign contributions and expenditures. As of Tuesday, neither Allen nor Thomas had reported any contributions or expenses. Allen ran for the council in 2011 when she took fourth

[ more CHARGE page 13 ]

[ more ALLEN page 11 ]

more photos online…

Summer school on ice Youngsters sprint down the open ice during an agility drill at the Seattle Thunderbirds’ inaugural Stick Handling, Scoring and Skating Hockey Camp at the ShoWare Center on Monday. The camp’s new-and-improved format provided

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an advanced on-ice skill development experience for kids all ages. T-Birds staff and players provided professional coaching and training during the camp, which continues next week. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter

Celebrate Kent’s history at multiple events FOR THE REPORTER

Kent history comes to life this weekend with tours, open houses, a car show and other attractions throughout the city. Visitors and residents are invited to celebrate Kent’s past at multiple events in this weekend. The events are free and open to the public. Saturday brings: • Greater Kent Historical Museum and Mill Creek Neighborhood Historic Home and Garden Walking Tour, 855 E. Smith St., 10 a.m.-4 p.m., every half-hour. Turn-of-the[ more HISTORY page 11 ]

Teen faces reckless driving charge in death of classmate BY STEVE HUNTER shunter@kentreporter.com

Vivian and Phil Williams of the Washington Old Time Fiddlers Association perform pioneer-day selections during last year’s Experience Historical Kent Day. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter


[2] August 14, 2015

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1000’s OF ITEMS MARKED DOWN FOR THIS SALE Gurcharan Dhillon, right, leads children in a warm-up exercise at the Seattle Sports Camp on Aug. 2 at Meridian Middle School. HEIDI SANDERS, Kent Reporter

Seattle Sports Camp promotes healthy living, Punjabi culture BY HEIDI SANDERS hsanders@kentreporter.com

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“We never played before, said Gurdeep Jahlli, of Kent, who attended the camp with family. “We watched our kids.” Jahlli said in her culture it isn’t common for women to take part in sports. “Usually in our community we don’t come out much,” she said. Many of the women started coming to the camp with their families and would watch their children or husbands participate, Jahlli said. This year the women decided to give soccer a try. It is a good way to stay active, Jahlli said, adding, “We don’t have time to go to the gym.” The sports camp is a fun activity for families to do together, Jahlli said. “The kids are so excited and look forward to it,” she said. “The whole family can come outside together.” The camp wraps up for the year on Aug. 30. A banquet – with awards, food, singing and dancing – will celebrate the end of a successful sports camp season. Dhillon, who works in the Kent and Auburn school districts, enjoys being able to give back to his community. “I like to work for my community,” he said. “This is my hobby. This is my interest.”

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Gurcharan Dhillon wants children to be more active in the summer and learn more about their culture. Exercise, fun and games are ways to do just that. The Auburn man and substitute teacher decided to start the Seattle Sports Camp. Now in its sixth year, the free camp has become a gathering place for about 200 Punjabi men, women and children from around the area. This year the camp unfolds every Saturday and Sunday evenings in Kent at Wilson Playfields, 13028 SE 251st Place, and Meridian Middle School, 23400 120th Ave. SE. “Different families get together,” Dhillon said. “Their small children become friends.” Dhillon, 64, spent more than 20 years as a wrestling coach and understands the importance of promoting an active lifestyle for children. “Most of the students stay in their home, mostly in front of the TV,” he said. Dhillon said many families would like to send their children to India to get to know more about their culture, but the expense can be a barrier. The camp gives them the chance to connect with the

local Punjabi community. “We encourage the students to be Punjabi,” Dhillon said. Most of the instruction during the camp is in Punjabi, giving the children the chance to practice the language. “They don’t have time to learn our language,” he said. While the camp is geared toward the Punjabi community, Dhillon said anyone interested in the culture can attend. Navroop Singh, 11, a sixthgrader-to-be at Emerald Park Elementary, attended the camp this summer after he was invited by his father’s friend’s children. “I like exercising and running,” Singh said. Singh has made a lot friends through the camp “We talk and play and try to know each other,” he said. He also has enjoyed learning more about the Punjabi culture. “I’ve learned mostly people in India do different stuff than here,” he said. The activities for the children vary each week, and range from soccer to running. But children aren’t the only ones partaking in the fun. The men play volleyball or soccer. Even the women have recently taken up soccer.

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August 14, 2015 [3]

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Drug bust includes seven Kent residents FOR THE REPORTER

A lengthy drug trafficking investigation of a criminal group with ties to California and Mexico has resulted in 17 arrests – seven of whom are from Kent – and the seizure of pound quantities of methamphetamine and heroin. Over a 36-hour period last week, teams of local, state and federal law enforcement agents searched 20 locations throughout the Puget Sound region in the culmination of

an 18-month investigation involving court authorized wire-taps and extensive surveillance of members of the criminal group, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Some of those arrested made their initial appearances on the indictments last week in U.S. District Court in Seattle. “Heroin, and methamphetamine continue to wreak havoc in our communities,” U.S. Attorney Annette L. Hayes said. “I commend the law enforcement professionals who investigated this drug trafficking organization, taking large loads of drugs off the street, while also gathering key evidence to make

these arrests and prosecutions possible.” Beginning early Wednesday morning last week, federal state and local law enforcement officers served search warrants on 17 residences, three storage facilities and more than a dozen vehicles tied to the criminal group. Search warrants were executed in Auburn, Bellevue, SeaTac, Seattle, Tukwila, Renton, Kent, Port Orchard and Everett. An indictment and criminal complaints have been filed charging 22 defendants with conspiracy to distribute controlled substances including methamphetamine and heroin.

Haz mat team handles chemical spill at shipping facility

GREATER KENT AREA REUNION SET FOR SUNDAY The Greater Kent Area Annual Reunion (formerly known as Kent Old-Timer’s Reunion) will run from 1-4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 16 at the Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith Street. The name of the organization has been changed to reflect the growth of Kent since the first reunion in 1990. A short program begins at 1:30 p.m. and will feature a tribute to long-time residents who have given their time and service to the Kent community. Honorees for this year are Marvin Eckfeldt, Kenneth and June Iverson, and Jack and Shirley Meredith. There will be opportunity to visit with classmates and friends and also browse in the display room to view school annuals, newspaper clippings and other memorabilia.

Some of the defendants are charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering. During the course of the investigation law enforcement seized more than 29 pounds of meth, more than 18 pounds of heroin, 6 pounds of cocaine, approximately $178,000 in cash and sixteen firearms, including five assault rifles. Those arrested include seven from Kent: Will Edward Brambila, 26; Francisco Flores Penuelas, 43; Eduardo Guzman Valenzuela, 23; Heriberto Pacheco Juarez, 22; Ramon Zavala Zazueta, 44; Jesus Gastelum-Payan, 20; and Alfonso Leos Villasenor, 20.

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HISTORIC MOMENT Residents of Kent’s Mill Creek neighborhood celebrate as Mayor Suzette Cooke cuts a ribbon to mark the designation of the historic neighborhood as a landmark district last Saturday. The King County Landmarks Commission approved the Mill Creek Neighborhood Association’s nomination for the designation in November. County and city officials were on hand

Sign up for Community Police Academy FOR THE REPORTER

Registration is open for the fall 2015 Community Police Academy hosted by

the Kent Police Department. Classes are free and are on Wednesday evenings, for 10 weeks starting Sept. 16, and ending on Nov. 18. (Please note the first session will be Thursday, Sept. 17 due to a scheduling conflict). The sessions are from 7 to 9 p.m.

for the celebration. The district is a well-preserved concentration of houses that reflect the development of Kent during the first half of the 20th century. The district’s general boundaries are Clark Avenue North to the west, Hazel Avenue North to the east, Smith Street to the south, and a portion of Cedar Street to the north. HEIDI SANDERS, Kent Reporter

There is one Saturday session on Oct. 17, which will include optional tours of the Kent Correctional Facility (city of Kent jail) and Valley Communications Center (911 facility). After attending the first four classes, participants are also eligible for a ride-along with a Kent

Police officer. Classes are at the Kent Police/Fire Training Center, 24611 116th Ave. SE. Applications are available at KentWA.gov/CommunityPoliceAcademy. For more information, email John Pagel at jpagel@kentwa.gov or call 253-856-5884.

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Hazardous material teams from Kent and three other fire departments responded to a chemical leak at a shipping/receiving facility in the 6200 block of South 228th Street. A driver of a forklift hit and punctured a 55-gallon drum during the 11:39 p.m. Aug. 5 incident, according to a Kent Fire Department Regional Fire Authority media release. Paramedics evaluated and released the driver at the scene. Thirty employees evacuated the building and were in the parking lot when fire crews arrived. The forklift driver was the only person exposed to the chemicals. Once the specialized team of haz mat responders entered the building, they were able to find the leak and determine that there was no eminent danger as well as confirm that the punctured drum contained organic peroxide. The majority of the chemical was confined to the trailer it was in. Crews reported that there was only a small amount that had leaked out of the trailer on to the asphalt and nothing made its way into the building itself. Employees were able to return to work after the cleanup.

Saturday, August 22 1-8pm Tumwater Valley Golf Course www.TumwaterArtesianBrewfest.com


[4] August 14, 2015

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and Millennium Elementary, 11919 S.E. 270th St. (on 124th Ave. S.E.). “When it first kicked in January 2014 we had 649 tickets versus 423 in January this year so I think it’s making a significant difference,� Thomas said about the early results. “But in April we were close to the same numbers, May was close and June is higher in 2015 than 2014.� Police started the program at the request of Kent School District officials in an effort to get drivers to obey the 20 mph speed limit at two schools where traffic studies showed the most speed violations even before cameras went up. “I would’ve expected the trend to go down more,� Thomas said. School District officials certainly appreciate the cameras, which were approved by the City Council. “Neely-O’Brien reports that the cameras have had a significant impact,� said Chris Loftis, school district

spokesman. “Traffic is more consistently going the speed limit during arrival and dismissal times and anecdotally they’ve seen a significant reduction in reports of ‘near-miss’ accidents involving students, family members and passing traffic.� It’s been a similar impact at Sunrise Elementary. “Sunrise reports that they have noticed a positive change overall,� Loftis said. “However, they often see people slow down close to the camera, but evidently once some drivers feel it’s out of range, speed back up, often right at the crosswalk. This is obviously dangerous.� Thomas said it’s difficult to know how many drivers are repeat offenders or to get any numbers on drivers who comply with the speed limit. The traffic volume around the schools could change as well. “The whole goal is to keep the kids safe and I hope that’s taken place,� Thomas said. “We based it on need so we targeted

[ HISTORY from page 1 ]

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century and Great Depression-era homes. Tours start at the museum. • Neely-Soames Historic Homestead Annual Open House, 5311 S. 237th Place (along the Green River Trail) 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Tour the grounds and get a glimpse of the way residents lived in 1885. • Historic Downtown Walking Tours, corner of Second Avenue North and Meeker Street, 10-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-2 p.m. Each walk is limited to the first 25 people.

School zone speeding tickets (Filed with Kent Municipal Court) 2015 January: 423 February: 467 March: 904 April: 560 May: 920 June: 931 July: 7 Total: 4,212 2014 January: 649 February: 832 March: 1,032 April: 587 May: 978 June: 883 July: 4 August: 2 September: 1,006 October: 1,198 November: 623 December: 572 Total: 8,366 19-month total: 12,578

schools at the highest risk for kids.� Loftis said the two schools get dozens of calls

• Hydroplane and Raceboat Museum, 5917 S. 196th St., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Special free admission. The museum is one of the country’s primary resources for historical information on hydroplane racing. • 28th Annual Classic Ford Show and Mustang Roundup, 1157 Central Ave. N., 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Free spectator admission and awards for 40-plus classes of cars. • Soos Creek Botanical Garden and Heritage Center, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 29308 132nd Ave. SE, Auburn. Celebrating Kent’s 125th anniversary

each year from angry motorists regarding the cameras and their tickets. “One thing that is important for the public to know is that our schools are not involved in any way in the management of the cameras,� Loftis said. “While we appreciate safer streets and recognize that means traffic regulation and enforcement on our students’ behalf, we do not handle any ticketing problems or questions the community might have about the processes associated with the cameras and traffic enforcement.� Thomas said he’s interested to see the numbers this fall at Neely-O’Brien and Sunset compared to last year. He said cameras at one of the schools didn’t work for about a week last September, so the numbers could be higher in 2015. Thomas emphasized it’s still too early to tell exactly what impact the cameras are having on drivers. “I don’t think we have enough data to draw conclusions yet,� he said.

with historical displays, music and an art walk. For more information, visit www.sooscreekbotanicalgarden.org. Sunday brings: • Historic Cemeteries Bus Tour, 1:30-4:30 p.m. A docent will accompany guests on this informative tour of Kent’s historic cemeteries. While the tour is free, registration is required at kentwa.gov/Bustourregistration2015 for transportation planning. For more details, call 253-854-4330 or visit kentwa.gov/ExperienceHistoricalKent.

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August 14, 2015 [5]

KENT

OPINION

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O Q U O T E O F N O T E :

“In my opinion, there should never be elections with unopposed candidates. In my opinion, we need term limits for our mayor and our council members.” – Gwen Allen, who has decided to enter the City Council race as a write-in candidate.

OUR CORNER

Marriage, belief and change

www.kentreporter.com Last week’s poll results:

“ A recent study shows Americans have reduced their calorie intake. Have you? ” Yes: 67% No: 33%

KENT

REPORTER 19426 68th Ave. S., Suite A Kent, WA 98032 Phone: 253.833.0218

Polly Shepherd Publisher: pshepherd@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600, ext. 1050 Mark Klaas Editor: mklaas@kentreporter.com 253.872.6600, ext. 27-5050 Advertising 253.872.6731 Classified Marketplace 800-388-2527 Letters letters@kentreporter.com Steve Hunter, reporter shunter@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600, ext. 5052 Heidi Sanders, reporter hsanders@kentreporter.com 253-872-6600, ext. 5056 Delivery inquiries: 253.872.6610 or circulation@kentreporter.com

OUR CORNER

[ more STILL page 7 ]

O L E T T E R S...Y O U R O P I N I O N CO U N T S: To submit an item or photo: email submissions@kentreporter.com; mail attn: Letters, Kent Reporter, 19426 68th Ave. S., Kent, WA, 98032; fax 253.437.6016

Teachers deserve better pay Regarding: Liv Finne’s guest commentary (“More spending in schools doesn’t necessarily improve learning”, Reporter, July 31): Teachers have not received a pay raise for five years. The cost of living has increased 10 percent in five years. Teachers are getting a 1½ percent raise this year. Thus teachers have received an 8 percent pay cut in the past five years. Research has clearly shown that small class size improves learning for students. Forty-five percent of new teachers leave the profession after two years. The job is too hard, and the pay is too little. Teachers are required to pay for the expenses of the union negotiating team only. If you want to improve teacher quality, do what you

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.

petroleum products – in an effort to stop Shell’s ice breaker from leaving a local shipyard. Their goal was to stop Arctic oil exploration. But oil and gas exploration in the Arctic has been happening for nearly 50 years. It is not new, it is just different – and safer. Substantial oil deposits above the

Politics, spending part of education

would do in your business: increase the pay of your workers to attract more able workers. The providing of funds for supplies means that teachers do not have to use their own funds to provide supplies for your students. I believe the legislators got a

Arctic exploration is not new, just different – and safer Recently, activists paddled a flotilla of kayaks – made from petroleum products – into the Seattle harbor in an attempt to blockade a Shell Oil offshore drilling platform destined for the Arctic. Then activists in Portland suspended themselves from the St. Johns Bridge – using all sorts of equipment and supplies made from

12 percent raise this year. – Harold B. Valentin, retired teacher

Letters policy

MY TURN

MY TURN

Vote online:

Don C. Brunell

“Have race relations improved in America?”

Ray Still

?

Question of the week:

I consider myself extremely lucky to have spent most of my childhood in an amazingly accepting and loving church environment. Even so, many months and countless hours were spent in committee meetings and bending over the church charter, which expressly denied performing same-sex marriages. Eventually, the congregation decided the charter did not accurately reflect God’s love, and my community joined the ever-increasing number of churches that believe the idea of marriage in the church is not as limited as we used to think. Marriage is a concept that has followed countless civilizations and cultures throughout time and is one of the few that will continue to go hand-in-hand with homo sapien culture as we expand on earth and into the heavens. There are few things more beautiful than joining two individuals as one, to bring them together in union in love and before their god(s). But for hundreds of years (some historians say around 800 in Caucasian Christian culture) we’ve repeatedly denied, legally and religiously, the holy matrimony of countless same-sex couples who express the same love for their other halves as different-sex couples. So like my ancestors of old, I look around and ask, “Why?” Because there must be a reason why we’ve persecuted countless souls who only want to spend their lives with whomever they love. I’ve yet to find an answer that satisfies me. One I hear the most is, “it is against God’s word/law/will,” for these people to be together in any fashion. But I was taught God created us in his image, all of our perfections and all of our flaws. I was taught of a Son who said the greatest commandments were to love our Lord and to love each other, and how we can’t love God if

Arctic Circle were discovered nearly a century ago. In 1923, President Warren G. Harding created Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4 on Alaska’s North Slope to ensure our Navy had an adequate oil supply as it converted from coal-fired boilers on ships. When the Trans Alaska pipeline was proposed, environmental activists predicted unimaginable devastation. That didn’t happen. Since 1977,

Wanda Granquist said: “Let us keep the politics out of education” in her letter to the editor (“More spending enhances education”, Reporter, Aug. 7). Public education is 100 percent political. The only way to take politics out is to end public education. Even if all education were private, there is often political maneuvering within the private school administration. I guess the only avenue left is home schooling, which is not practical for all families. Ms. Granquist castigates Ms. Finne but offers no evidence that Ms. Finne is wrong. [ more LETTERS page 6 ]

nearly 17 billion barrels of oil have flowed through the 800-mile pipeline from Prudhoe Bay to Valdez, where it is shipped to Washington State oil refineries. The flow was interrupted only once, in 2001, when a drunk with a hunting rifle put a bullet in pipeline. As the Prudhoe Bay fields developed, wells were safely drilled in the Arctic Ocean. Endicott Island, a 45acre artificial island in Beaufort Sea, started producing oil in 1987. Today, there are oil platforms in Cook Inlet just south of Anchorage and in the [ more BRUNELL page 7 ]


[6] August 14, 2015 [ LETTERS from page 5 ] The goal is improved education of students, not pay or class size. The biggest funding improvement for all school levels is elimination of the federal department of education and shrinking of the administrative overhead within the state. Please compare the salaries of the federal administrators, and teacher salaries. Also compare superintendent salaries to teacher salaries. The administrators do not teach any students and in some cases hamper the teacher’s ability to do so. The proof of Ms. Finne’s point is comparison of spending per student by each school district across the United States, and the achievement level of the students in each district. I am certain that some districts have a higher achievement level than

www.kentreporter.com other districts that spent more money per student. Compare spending on education in the U.S. versus other countries that have surpassed the U.S. in educational achievement.

– Bill Malinski

Let state regulate, license guns Last year 10,000 Americans died from gun violence. One solution? Let’s have state-run gun shops, just as we do for drivers licenses. The state could then regulate and license guns, just as they do for cars. – Jack Sheppard

Act now to prevent wild fires From one year to the next, we’re now seeing wild fires more destructive and dangerous to homes and

businesses, including the loss of life to wild animals and man. As we’ve seen this summer, California is a tinderbox, and Washington state will be one, too, if we don’t act fast. Install sprinkling systems in the forests and wooded rural areas that surround homes and businesses. We’re wasting a lot of water from the Columbia and other rivers by letting it run out to sea. Let’s use that water and give the weary and courageous firefighters a hand. Hire workers in early spring to cut the brush and grasses and turn on the sprinklers to dampen the trees, shrubs and soil before the fire season begins. Washington state is spending millions to fight these fires. There is no time to lose. We need to act now before its too late. – Gus Olivo

Corey Ray Smith Corey Ray Smith, 55, beloved father, brother and friend, died Tuesday, July 21, after a long illness. He was surrounded by his children and loved ones at St. Francis Hospital in Federal Way at the time of his passing. Corey was a sensitive and caring soul, exemplary big brother, and loving father. He was committed from a young age to protecting and helping support his siblings, his mother, and later his own children and grandchildren. He was generous and compassionate beyond all expectations, and never hesitated to sacrifice his own comfort to ensure his children and others he loved had what they needed. He loved music, spending time with friends and family, and the occasional beer or shot of tequila, and is best remembered by those who knew him for his easy, distinct and infectious laugh. Even through life's hardest trials, he maintained a positive attitude and sense of humor that brought joy to everyone around him. Corey was born in Fullerton, Calif., on June 21, 1960, and was the eldest of five children born to Don Smith and Jean Elizabeth Hart. His formative years were spent in Yorba Linda, Calif., and other cities in Southern California. He started his own family, with wife Michele, when they married in 1978. They were together nearly two decades, raised three children, and remained close friends until Corey's passing. Corey also had a second marriage, to wife Jhan-Moneeh Chau, from 2007 to 2012, and for their honeymoon, he accomplished his life-long dream of cruising to Alaska. Though he was a proud native of Southern California, Corey also lived in Arizona, in the Northern California town of Shasta Lake City, and he settled in the Federal Way/Kent/Tacoma area in 1996. He spent his remaining years in Washington, close to his children and grandchildren. A bright, resourceful and multi-talented man, Corey was a hard and loyal worker who pursued several careers over the years. Those jobs included working as a foreman, and later office manager, for family-owned construction business Smith and Sons, as manager of several auto parts stores, and most recently as a freight coordinator for the Holland America Line, where he began working in 1996. He sometimes half-joked he'd actually always wanted to be an accountant, and though that wasn't meant to be, he used his considerable knack for numbers to do income taxes for friends and family year after year, always free of charge and with no expectation of returned favors. For the last few years, Corey suffered from a degenerative brain disease called Lewy Body Dementia. He spent his last birthday—which was also the first day of Summer and, this year, Father's Day—in the company of his children, grandchildren and surviving siblings. His family takes comfort in knowing he's left to reunite with his beloved mother Jean, late brother Craig, and other loved ones. Corey is survived by his father, Don Smith; sister Kimberly Smith Parris; brothers Christopher and Kenneth Smith; son Corey Ray Smith, Jr., and his partner Adriana Valencia Barajas; daughter Cassandra Anne Clark and her husband Casey; son Michael Ryan Smith and his wife Stephanie; grandchildren Taylor, Elyana, Caylee, Carter, Aviana; and many nephews, nieces, cousins, and others who loved him like family. A memorial for Corey will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 15, on Lake Meridian in Kent. The address is 25840 135th Lane SE. Another memorial will be held in Chico, Calif., on Sunday, Sept. 6., with the location to be determined. His ashes will be interred alongside his mother and brother at Whiskeytown Lake, in his home state of California. His children have established Corey Smith's Memorial page on Facebook to share pictures and memories, as well as a YouCaring account to help cover memorial and other end-of-life costs. To contribute, go to http://www.youcaring.com/michael-smith-403471.

Allow college to embrace trends Local Motors can 3-D print a car. Bon Vivant Elon Musk is pushing new boundaries without combustion. Google, Garmin and others have mapped just about everything there is to map. Did it ever occur to an antiquated, 19th century organization like the Labor Council that new technology is the way to go? Why not let smarter people than labor bosses, who resist change, open up the curriculum to new trends offering exciting, new jobs and room for advancement? Look ahead, not back. Maybe it’s time to let go of old ways like auto body shop and geographic info systems. You let go of the 8-track for something better. I know you did. Then let Green River College President Eileen Ely position the college by spotting industry trends on the upswing and burgeoning growth sectors with swathes of unfilled employment slots. Let American innovators fill these with our graduates, not foreigneducated workers with visas who have the right skill set. If the Labor Council so badly wants to maintain old technology, then let the Labor Council totally underwrite both programs. You’re rich. If you love them so much, that seems far more reasonable than telling 400,000 union members to

boycott the college in Kent and Auburn. Instead, Labor Council big shots could warmly invite the 400,000 strong to pony up for auto body and geographic information systems since the communique seems like it’s being drafted. I don’t know about you but I want to take a spin in something so creative Detroit couldn’t even dream it up or build it like it did in the good ole days. You’ll find me on the freeway of love next to the pink Cadillac. – Joy Etienne

Wrong approach with cameras The article, “City to add school zone speed cameras at two more sites� (Kent Reporter, July 31), brought to mind a very disturbing experience I had regarding the speed zone cameras at Sunrise Elementary School. Shortly after the cameras were installed, I received a citation for going 35 mph in a 20-mph school zone. I noted that the cameras approaching the school zone from the north are set several feet before the flashing warning lights and are located about two blocks before you reach the school. I always slow down when going through a school zone and was traveling within the 20-mph limit well before I reached the school. The cameras are set to pick up your speed for assessing the fine at the entry

point without regard for your speed through the rest of the school zone. I live in Renton, and there is a distinct difference in Renton’s approach from that used in Kent. In Renton the cameras are set at the school, not the entry point. For example, had I been traveling through the Talbot Hill Elementary School speed zone I would not have received a citation. Assessing the fine based on speed at the entry point, two blocks before the school, and ignoring speed through the rest of the school zone makes no sense. Clearly, Kent’s approach is all about money, not about school safety. – James Lowndes

Keep cannabis stores open Please leave the cannabis stores and users alone (“City plans to shut down medical marijuana shops,� Kent Reporter Aug. 7). There is scientific evidence that shows cannabis (pot, weed) saves lives and we all know evidence is what holds up in court. Please allow me to remind you city “officials� that you took an oath to help, serve and protect and I should also remind you that you are not, if you jail, fine and prosecute citizens for a nonviolent plant that saves lives. Thank you for your time and compassion to save lives. – Jason Fuller

ASSE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE programs (ASSE), in cooperation with your community high school, is looking for local families to host boys and girls between the ages of 15 to 18 from a variety of countries: Norway, Denmark, Spain, Italy, Japan, to name a few. To become an ASSE Host Family or to find out how to become involved with ASSE in your community, please call 1-800-733-2773 or go to www.host.asse.com to begin your host family application.

Steve W. Adams

Steve W. Adams, 64 of Kent, passed away suddenly on Sunday, July 26, 2015. He was a loved husband, father, son, brother, uncle, and friend. He was born on April 1, 1951 in Indianapolis, Indiana, the son of Elmer (Butch) and Margaret (Lucille) Adams. The family moved to California when Steve was young and he graduated in 1970 from Ganesha High School in Pomona, California. Steve married Mary McCarty on December 16, 1972. Steve and Mary moved to Washington in 1977 and they have resided LQ WKH .HQW DUHD IRU WKH ODVW \HDUV 7KH\ KDG Ă&#x;YH ORYLQJ FKLOdren between 1974 and 1990, four daughters and one son. He was a welder and fabricator vendor for a number of South King County companies for 30 years. He had many interests that he enjoyed but was most fond of raising fancy pigeons with his son, which he began in 2003. Steve survived by his wife Mary; daughter Patricia and husband Jason; daughter Jennifer and husband Doni; daughter Katherine; daughter Stephanie and husband Michael; son Johnny; his mother Lucille; sister Becky and husband Bryon; brotherin-law Gary; sister-in-law Susi; as well as numerous aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, other relatives, and friends. He was preceded in death by his father, Elmer (Butch), his brother Johnny, and his sister Debbie. A funeral mass will be said and celebration of life will be shared with family and friends later in August. Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association in honor of Steve Adams. If you would like to help the family, please visit their YouCaring page: http://www.youcaring.com/mary-adams-401626.


August 14, 2015 [7]

www.kentreporter.com

Kent Station hosts end-of-summer event Aug. 20 Kent Station and Road Runner Sports host an end-ofsummer event for the family beginning at 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20. The third annual SOAKS – Summer’s (almost) Over At Kent Station – event features a street fair and an Adventure Run, which is been put on by Road Runner Sports on the third Thursday of every month from April through October. Ramsay Way will be shut down to make room for activity booths, including face painting, hula hoop competitions and martial arts demonstrations, as well as a bouncy house, gyroscope and an obstacle course sponsored in part by Clowns Unlimited. Participants will

[ STILL from page 5 ] we don’t love our neighbor. And I was taught that above all, if God is perfect, and God is love, then love is perfect, even with our human weakness and limitations. So when the Supreme Court legalized all marriage throughout the United States, given it was between two consenting adults, I finally saw our nation take steps toward accepting all love, legally and culturally. The concept of marriage has followed us throughout the ages, and we’ve morphed this idea to fit how we see the world. Some cultures have limited the definition of marriage to one man and one woman, despite humanity’s rich history of joining same-sex couples together in union

receive raffle tickets for every activity. The Adventure Run map will be revealed at 6:30 p.m. at which time everyone is welcome to walk, jog or run to as many checkpoints on the map as they wish, collecting raffle tickets at each stop, before returning to the Kent Station plaza by 7:45 p.m. More than $3,000 in raffle prizes will be announced and the $1 beer garden will be open. Agave Cocina & Cantina will host the family friendly after party where more raffle tickets and prizes will be given. Attendees are encouraged to bring schools supplies or cash donations to help Communities In Schools of Kent fill a bus. For more information and to register for the Adventure Run, visit kentstation.com or call Cynthia Tanis at 253-856-2301.

before their laws and their gods. But the issue surrounding same-sex marriage isn’t just about the history of marriage, or the history of religion. If changing culture were as easy as giving a small history lesson, there never would have been any controversy in the first place. What it comes down to is belief, and some people hold strong to the belief that marriage can only be between a man and a woman. I strongly disagree. Any couple who comes before God to be joined together in spirit, whether they be different or samesex, are equal in every way, including God’s love. If you don’t agree with me, that’s your privilege, and I think that’s totally chill. The legalization of all

[ BRUNELL from page 5 ] heart of one of the world’s most prolific salmon and halibut fisheries. Oil companies have been careful to leave the lightest possible footprint. Equipment and supplies are trucked over ice roads that disappear with the spring thaw. Even parked trucks have drop cloths placed underneath them to protect the fragile Arctic tundra. Wildlife continues to coexist. In its most recent survey, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game reported in 2011 that the state’s largest caribou herd had quadrupled since the pipeline was built. The grounding of the Exxon Valdez, which spilled 10 million gallons of crude into Prince William Sound in 1989, is the textbook definition of what to avoid. In the end, Exxon paid billions in fines, cleanup and restoration costs. Because of that disaster, double-hulled tankers

marriage doesn’t mean every American has to accept it straight away. It doesn’t even mean every church, pastor and priest has to perform marriages that they don’t morally agree with. The separation of church and state is a wonderful thing, and like President James Madison said, “Every new and successful example therefore of a perfect separation between ecclesiastical and civil matters, is of importance. And I have

are now required; tugs escort the tankers through narrow channels; and, cleanup equipment is prepositioned to quickly respond. So, is it safe to drill beneath Arctic ice? There are Russian platforms using American technology in the Arctic Ocean. Despite the harsh winters and thick ice, liquefied natural gas and oil from beneath the ocean floor is being shipped year around from Sakhalin Island. Shell, under the authorization of President Obama, is drilling off Alaska. Despite the marked drop in oil prices, Shell is investing billions to explore for oil and gas in the Arctic Ocean, which says a lot about its importance to America’s future energy supply. A 2008 U.S. Geological Survey estimated that areas north of the Arctic Circle have 90 billion barrels of recoverable oil, which represents 13 percent of the world’s undiscovered crude. Much of it is

no doubt that every new example, will succeed, as every past one has done, in showing that religion and government will both exist in greater purity, the less they are mixed together.” Long story short, government and religion function better when the two do not mix. The government’s job is to impart a legal and economic contract to those who want to be married before the law, and the church’s job is to present

offshore. American oil companies are using new technology, equipment, training and extensive environmental safeguards, and their operations are subject to intensive government oversight. Is it foolproof? No. But every form of energy production has an environmental impact. Big solar arrays and massive farms of wind turbines cover thousands of acres of wildlife habitat and have been deadly to birds caught in their paths. We need a mix of energy supplies to meet our needs and fuel our economic growth. The key is to act as wisely and carefully as possible. Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer and columnist. He retired after more than 25 years as president of the Association of Washington Business, the state’s oldest and largest business organization, and now lives in Vancouver. He can be contacted at theBrunells@msn.com.

two people before their creator to be joined together in love. Sometimes the church and state agree, but not always. So let’s at least have legal equality on Earth, and let God sort everything out later. The only thing besides love that I believe is true,

and will always be true, no matter how people feel, how they act or what they believe, is that we are all born equal. And I believe He would agree. Ray Still is a staff writer for the Covington Reporter and Enumclaw Courier-Herald. Reach him at rstill@courierherald.com.

...obituaries Richard A. Ray

Richard A. Ray passed away peacefully at his home Thursday, July 2, 2015 in Kent, WA at the age of 70. Richard was preceded in death by his beloved wife Doris, his parents, 2 sisters, and a stepdaughter. 1393036

Juanita I. Bell

Juanita I. Bell was born on December 12, 1923 in Seattle, WA; she passed away peacefully on August 4, 2015 at her home. Her family moved to Kent when she was 13 years old. She would shortly thereafter meet the love of her life, Donald Bell, who preceded her in death in 2006. They were married for over 60 years. She is survived by her daughter Barbara Michael, her sons Steve Bell, Brad Bell and Jeff Bell, 11 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. She graduated from Kent High School and went on to study at the University of Washington.Through the years she was an avid community volunteer, homemaker, traveled the world with her husband and loved to spend time at their vacation homes in Maui, Belfair and Lake Meridian. She was a member of St. James Episcopal Church in Kent and a long time member of the Orthopedic Guild. She was well known for her generosity and compassion for others. Her greatest joy in life was her family. She had a special fondness for her many friends and pets. There will be no memorial service at her request.

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Kent City Council candidate Tina Budell started work this month as an Information Technology project coordinator, security and compliance at Kforce, Inc., a professional staffing services firm. A previous job title for Budell appeared in the Aug. 7 Kent Reporter.

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


[8] August 14, 2015

www.kentreporter.com

KENT

CALENDAR Events

ExperienceHistoricalKent.

Kent Farmers Market: 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Saturdays, June 6-Sept. 26. Fresh produce, flower, vendors. Kent Lions program. For more information, visit www.kentfarmersmarket.com. Experience Historical Kent: 10 a.m.4 p.m., Aug. 15; 1:30-4:30 p.m., Aug. 16, throughout the city of Kent. Celebration features special exhibits and bus and walking tours of the city’s oldest homes, businesses and cemeteries. SCHEDULE OF EVENTS, Aug. 15: • Greater Kent Historical Museum and Mill Creek Neighborhood Historic Home and Garden Walking Tour, 855 E. Smith St., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. every half-hour. Turnof-the-century and Great Depression-era homes. Tours start at the museum. • NeelySoames Historic Homestead Annual Open House, 5311 S. 237 Place (along the Green River Trail) 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Tour the grounds and get a glimpse of the way residents lived in 1885. • Soos Creek Botanical Garden and Heritage Center, 29308 132nd Ave. SE, Auburn, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Hundreds of objects and photographs detailing the settling of the rugged Soos Creek Plateau, art walk, and entertainment by the Old Time Fiddlers Association. • Historic Downtown Walking Tours, Corner of Second Avenue North and Meeker Street, 10-11:30 a.m. and 12:30-2 p.m. Each walk is limited to the first 25 people. • Hydroplane and Raceboat Museum, 5917 South 196th St., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Special free admission this day only to the nation’s primary resource for historical information on hydroplane racing. • 28th Annual Classic Ford Show and Mustang Roundup, 1157 Central Ave. N., 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Free spectator admission and awards for 40-plus classes of cars. Aug. 16: • Historic Cemeteries Bus Tour, 1:30-4:30 p.m. A docent will accompany guests on this informative tour of Kent’s historic cemeteries. While the tour is free, registration is required at kentwa.gov/Bustourregistration2015 for transportation planning. For more details, call 253-854-4330 or visit KentWA.gov/

Tahoma National Cemetery Spirit of 45 Ceremony: 2 p.m. Aug. 16, Tahoma National Cemetery, main flag pole assembly area, 18600 SE 240th St., Kent. International tribute commemorates the 70th Anniversary of the end of World War II. To honor all military members who served during World War II. Brief presentations from WWII veterans. Parking limited. Visitors should plan on walking to and from their parking spot to the ceremony. Parking is available for disabled passengers and drivers with a shuttle to and from the ceremony assembly area. For more info, call 425-413-9614. Sixth annual Hops & Crops Music and Beer Festival: Noon-6 p.m. Sept. 12, Mary Olson Farm, 28728 Green River Road SE. 21-and-up event features a beer garden with 30-plus craft brews and ciders from local breweries, live music, tours. All proceeds from the event support educational programming at the farm. Barbecue and snacks available for purchase. Reber Ranch presents the festival. Tickets: $15 pre-sale, $20 at the gate. Taster admission includes taster mug and five tokens. $10 designated driver/no taste admission. Purchase tickets at the festival or online at wrvmuseum.org/ hopsandcrops.html Kent Chamber of Commerce Business Expo: 3-7 p.m. Oct. 20, ShoWare Center, 625 W. James St. Featuring 90 business booths, more than 10 restaurants for the Taste of Kent; do-it-yourself presentations, games and prizes; and giveaways. Network and create business connections. Free and open to the public.

Benefits Sleep Country’s School Supply Drive for Foster Kids: Now through Sept. 6. Donations of new school supplies can be dropped off at any Sleep Country store. For more information or to find the nearest location please visit the store locator at www.sleepcountry.com or call 888-887-

Got an event? submissions@kentreporter.com or post online at www.kentreporter.com 5337. Store hours are Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Saturday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Cash donations can also be made online and Sleep Country representatives will shop on your behalf. All contributions are distributed among Sleep Country’s foster care partner organizations. For more information, visit www.sleepcountryfosterkids.org. Bake sale to benefit the Goy family: 10 a.m., Aug. 15, Panther Lake Community Church, 10630 SE 204th St., Kent. Anatoliy Goy and his sons, Daniel, 9, and Alex, 7, were killed in a car accident in southwest Washington on June 20. Daniel and Alex were students at Kent’s Springbrook Elementary School. The boys’ mother, Mariya Goy, and brother, Andrey, 11, were injured in the accident. Bakers and buyers are needed for the benefit. For more information, call 253-234-1193. Kent Senior Lunch Program Dessert Concert: 6 p.m. Aug. 20, Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith St. Proceeds benefit the Kent Parks Deli and Cafe. Rock ‘n Roll Choir SilverSounds Northwest performs nostalgic tunes. Co-sponsored by Stafford Suites. Theme is “Get your Kicks ‌ “ based on the Rock ‘n Roll song “Route 66â€?. Other ‘50s and ‘60s era music will be featured. Advanced tickets are available for any size donation beginning July 14 in person at the center or with MasterCard/Visa by calling 253-856-5150.

Health TOPS (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly): 6:45 p.m., Thursdays, Swanson Court Clubhouse, 12200 SE 207th St., Kent, near Kentridge High School. Nonprofit weight loss support group. Cost: $32 to join and $7 monthly. For more information, call 253-709-5098 or visit www.tops.org or www.whywelovetops.com. Southeast King County Parkinson’s Disease support group: Meets on the third Tuesday of the month, 10:30

Rotary Club of Kent: Join the local Rotary Club of Kent every Tuesday for its weekly meeting and luncheon at Down Home Catering in historic downtown Kent, 211 1st Ave. S. For more information go to: www.kentrotary.com Kent Evening Toastmasters: 7 p.m., Wednesdays, Kent Commons, Interurban Room, 525 Fourth Ave N. Are you interested in practicing and improving your public speaking skills? Boosting your selfconfidence? Making yourself heard in that weekly meeting at work? Come practice your oratory skills with a friendly and informative group of people. With members ranging from beginners to experts, Kent Evening Toastmasters welcomes people of all skill levels. For more information, visit www.kenteveningtoastmasters.net.

Camps RYC Jungle Cruise Summer Choir Camp: Aug. 17-20, First Evangelical Presbyterian Church, 19800 108th Ave. SE, Renton. Rainier Youth Choirs present camp for singers entering grades three through eighth grade, 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily. Educational clinics, fun activities and group rehearsals. Free community concert on Aug. 20. Camp is funded in part by the City of Kent Arts Commission. Cost: $85 per student. Camp fees cover daily lunch, clinic materials and a camp T-shirt. For more information, visit www.RainierYouthChoirs.org.

Network

Caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease or other memory-related illnesses can be very overwhelming. We’re here to help.

The Kent Chapter of Business Network, Int’l (BNI): Meets every Wednesday morning at 7 at the Old Country Buffet, 25630 104th SE, Kent. Chapter is growing. Currently have 38 members. Do you want excellent, personal, word of mouth referrals for your business? Then come join us. For more information, contact Dr. Allan McCord at 253-854-3040.

We are offering FREE informative seminars at two convenient locations to provide support and education. All seminars are free and open to the public. Refreshments provided.

What is hospice? Who pays for it and who can beneďŹ t from this type of care? Learn more about hospice care, joint care planning and how it can help the resident, family and community.

Open House, Glover Empower Mentoring (GEM): 6:30-8:30 p.m. Aug. 26, Kent Library, 212 Second Ave. N. GEM is a mentoring for young men in Kent and South King County. For more information, visit gementoring.wix.com/gementoring or email gempowermentoring@gmail.com.

Greater Things Ministry: 9-11 a.m., Sundays in August, gazebo at Burlington Park, on Railroad Avenue North between East Meeker and East Smith streets in Kent. Free breakfast. Open to the community. Call Pastor Danny at 253-335-4727 for more information.

Living, Loving, & Thriving

Hospice 101: Who, What, When, Where and How?

Clubs, programs

Faith

Prestige Senior Living Auburn Meadows Expressions at Enumclaw

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2:00 PM

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.

Space is limited for this FREE educational series. For more information or to reserve your seat please call Expressions at Enumclaw at (360) 825-4565 or Prestige Senior Living Auburn Meadows at (253) 333-0171.

Entertainment SHOWARE CENTER 625 W. James St., Kent. 253-856-6777. Order at www.tickets.showarecenter.

Classic models, from cars to trucks, will be on display for the 28th Annual Classic Ford Show & 50 Year Mustang Roundup at Bowen Scarff Ford-Lincoln in Kent on Saturday. The show, which runs 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., is open to all Ford, Lincoln and Mercury-powered vehicles. Spectators get in for free. Awards will go to 40-plus classes of cars. The dealership is at 1157 Central Ave. N. MARK KLAAS, Kent Reporter

Ford fiesta

The Legends Football League Cup: 3 p.m. Aug. 23, championship. Tickets: $10-$50. Marco Antonio Solis: 8 p.m. Aug. 30. World renowned singer and song writer and former lead singer of Los Bukis, a group he formed as a teenager. Popular in Mexico, throughout Latin America, Spain and the United States, Solis has more than 30 entries on Billboard’s Hot Latin Tracks. Tickets: $65-$175. Seattle Rock-A-Thon 2015: noon, Sept. 5. A 12-hour mega concert, featuring: Candlebox; Filter; Drowning Pool; Dokken; Pat Travers; Missing Persons; Girl on Fire; Divide The Day; Valora; Sin Circus; Kings of Spade; Aury Moore Band; Paul Hernandez Trio; Beyond Today; Alive She Cried; Home Wreckr; Vial 8; Girls love Rockets; and Chasing OZ. Tickets: $25-$100. The Experience, Maze featuring Frankie Beverly: 7 p.m. Sept. 19. A night of R&B and soul. Special guests: R&B Diva KeKe Wyatt, Kelly Price, and local favorite Mycle Wastman. Known for their hits “Happy Feelin’sâ€?, “Can’t Get Over Youâ€? and other hit singles, Maze and Beverly have put their stamp in the R&B/Soul music for over three decades. Tickets: $49.50-$119. ELSEWHERE Live music ballroom dances: 7:30 p.m. every Tuesday, Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith St. Open to all ages. Cover charge: $4 at the door for all ages, dancers and listeners. Refreshments served at 8:30 p.m. Program schedule: • First Tuesday: 17-member Big Band Kings of Swing, 7:45 to 9:30 p.m. Refreshments by the Lakeshore or Radcliffe Place; • Second Tuesday: Randy Litch, ballroom dance music, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Refreshments by the Weatherly; • Third Tuesday: Andy Burnett, rock ‘n roll music, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Refreshments by Stafford Suites; • Fourth Tuesday: Randy Litch, ballroom dance music, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Refreshments by Farrington Court; • Fifth Tuesday (when occurring): Randy Litch, ballroom

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2:00 PM

Safety in the Home Safety is important for everyone, but the need for a comprehensive safety plan is particularly important for a person with Alzheimer’s as the disease progresses. Taking steps to improve safety can prevent injuries and help a person with dementia feel more relaxed and less overwhelmed, maintaining their dependence longer.

Behavioral Health Care Expressions at Enumclaw

Join our celebration!

2454 Cole Street Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-4565

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Prestige Senior Living Auburn Meadows 945 22nd Street NE Auburn, WA 98002 (253) 333-0171

Prestige Senior Living www.PrestigeCare.com

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What is an Advance Directive? When a loved one is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease there are many questions. One of the most confusing aspects can be the legal documents that need to be signed while your loved one is still able to participate in decision making.

“Annie�: 7:30 p.m. Aug. 13, 14, 15; 2 p.m. Aug. 15; Kentridge Performing Arts Center, 12430 SE 208th St. At the Ridge Theatre (ART) presents one of the best-loved family musicals. Tickets: $10. Proceeds are awarded to the actors in the form of college scholarships. ART, a nonprofit community theater, celebrates its 15th year, with more than $300,000 in scholarships awarded. Tickets can be purchased online at www. showtix4u.com and at the door. For more information, visit attheridgetheatre.org

Reunions The Greater Kent Area Annual Reunion: 1-4 p.m. Aug. 16, Kent Senior Activity Center, 600 E. Smith St. Formerly known as Kent Old-Timer’s Reunion. Short program begins at 1:30 p.m., featuring a tribute to longtime residents who have given their time and service to the community. Honorees are Marvin Eckfeldt, Kenneth and June Iverson, and Jack and Shirley Meredith. Opportunity to visit classmates and friends and browse in the display room to view school annuals, newspaper clippings and other memorabilia.

Galleries, studios 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. Michael Tolleson Savant Art Center: 205 1st Ave. S., Kent. Art studio and autistic art mentoring center. To learn more about the center and its programs, call 253-850-5995, visit www.MichaelTollesonArtist.com or email michaeltollesonartist@ gmail.com. The center also can be found on Facebook.

50th Anniversary Dinner & Auction Celebration 4BUVSEBZ 4FQUFNCFS t 1. UP 1.

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Advance Directives

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August 14, 2015 [9]

Officer catches driver going 85 mph on East Valley Highway eat. The boyfriend made some comPOLICE ment to her about being drunk, so she ran back inside the house and started to chase him. She then threw a chair at him from about 3 or 4 feet away. The two have been in a relationship for more than 30 years.

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Man tosses girlfriend’s items out of vehicle Police responded to a domestic dispute between a man and a woman at about 4:43 p.m. on Aug. 2 outside a vehicle near South 228th Street and Fourth Avenue North. The woman told officers she and her boyfriend live in the vehicle, a 1998 Mitsubishi Montero, according to the police report. She told police her boyfriend became upset after she had knocked on the door of a friend’s place. They got in their

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Police broke up a small homeless camp on July 31 in the 24900 block of Frager Road. An officer saw two vehicles parked illegally along the side of the road and then followed a short path into the woods where he found an encampment with ropes tied to trees with blankets hanging from the ropes, according to the police report. Police also found a blue tent and a man and a woman living inside the tent. The officers told them they needed to clean up their camp and leave because camping isn’t allowed in that area. Officers cited the man for illegal camping.

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Officers arrested a 51-year-old woman for investigation of fourthdegree assault after she allegedly threw a chair at her boyfriend during a dispute and hit him in the face on Aug. 2 at a home in the 27200 block of 120th Avenue Southeast. The woman fled from the home but an officer found her sitting nearby by the side of the road, according to the police report. According to the boyfriend, the two were in an argument when the girlfriend went outside to call a cab to take her to the store to get something to

about 3:54 a.m. on Aug. 3 in a car repair shop parking lot in the 8400 block of South 200th Street. Officers responded to a suspicious vehicle call in connection with a black Toyota Celica, according to the police report. Police found a woman sleeping in the passenger seat of the Celica, the car’s ignition had been removed and someone hot wired the car to start it. Officers discovered the car had been stolen out of Auburn. They found a man in the backseat of a nearby car who allegedly had stolen the Celica. Police arrested the woman for investigation of possession of drug paraphernalia after they found two needles and a spoon in

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Woman throws chair at boyfriend

car, argued and then the boyfriend started to throw her things, including a cellphone, out of the vehicle. The boyfriend told her to get out of the vehicle. When she refused, he reportedly grabbed her and threw her onto the ground, scraping her elbow and knee. Officers arrested the boyfriend for investigation of fourth-degree assault and third-degree malicious mischief. The boyfriend said he accidentally threw her items out of the vehicle.

Pa cifi c

Kent Police arrested a 19-year-old man for investigation of reckless driving after he reportedly raced another vehicle at speeds of up to 85 mph in a 40 mph zone along the East Valley Highway. An officer on patrol near South 212th Street and the highway saw two cars racing at about 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 1, according to the police report. The cars were side by side as they raced northbound along the highway, also known as 84th Avenue South. The officer activated the overhead lights on his vehicle and chased after the cars. He pulled over one driver in the 19800 block of East Valley Highway. He told the driver to stay put until he came back so he could pursue the other driver. In the 18800 block of East Valley Highway, the officer caught up to the second car. Another officer went to check on the first car, but the driver had left.

The officer didn’t get a license plate number for the vehicle. The officer told the second driver, “You know better than to be racing. Why were you doing that?� The driver replied, “I know. I was just being stupid.�

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[10] August 14, 2015

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Area teens re-enact Mormon Pioneer Trek Kent area youth and adult leaders recently took a step back in time to embark on a challenging journey – a trip resilient Mormon pioneers made more than 150 years ago. The teenagers and leaders, approximately 140 strong and members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, completed the Mormon Pioneer Trek near Prosser in July. Rather than cross the plains of the Midwest, they

put their shoulders to the wheel in Bing Canyon, south of Kennewick, near the Washington-Oregon border. The church’s Kent Stake organizes the journey every four years, along with pioneer treks re-enacted by LDS youth throughout the world. Youth pulled handcarts with gear like those used by the early pioneers who began their journey between 1856-1860. The handcarts are approximately 6-by-8

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feet in size, with two large wagon wheels and a bar for pulling and pushing the cart along. Youth donned pioneer attire similar to that worn in the 1800s, cooked their meals on the trail, were treated to period music and slept under the stars. The teens were assigned to a family consisting of approximately nine youth, plus a “Ma” and “Pa.” Each person received a wrist band with the name and biography of a real pioneer. The trek took place on a barren desert trail approximately 18 miles in length. Throughout the trek, youth heard pioneer stories and encountered some of the ordeals of early pioneer life. The trek was strenuous and hard, which was part of the appeal. Over the course of three days, youth pulled the handcarts approximately 17 miles across hot sand, sagebrush and dirt. The end of the trek for the youth found familiar

faces, green grass, food and a popular hair washing station. They were able to view a list with the names of the pioneers on their bracelet to see if the person they were assigned survived the journey. After returning home, youth shared their experiences. They felt a connection to the Mormon pioneers. “This is the best church activity I’ve ever been a part of,” said Brandon Jessup, 16. In preparation for the trip, youth learned pioneerera dances, were assigned a pioneer personality to research, and were encouraged to learn about their own family history. Approximately 70,000 Mormon pioneers crossed the plains after the migration began in 1846. – Patrick Hanis contributed to this story.

Tough going: Nathan Hanis, left, and Parker Welch prepare to pull their handcart during the Mormon Pioneer Trek near Prosser.

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www.kentreporter.com [ ALLEN from page 1 ] in the primary to incumbent Debbie Raplee, Bill Boyce and Charles Lambert. Boyce beat Raplee in the general election. “It’s not really too surprising,” Thomas said about Allen taking him on. “The late entry is going to make it difficult for her. But she’s a great lady.” Allen’s name won’t be on the ballot and she won’t be in the voters’ pamphlet. “It was my choice and decision to file when I did,” Allen said about missing deadlines to get her name on the ballot. “After carefully following the do’s and don’ts of King County Elections, I realized that I could file for the primary or the general. After making sure that it was settled in my mind, heart and spirit, I rose to meet the challenge and go for the write-in.” She knows it’s a tough road to get elected as a write-in candidate, especially against an incumbent. “Yes, I have read and heard how hard write-in campaigns can be,” Allen said. “However, maybe now is the time to put that to the test. I took enough time to garner sup-

port from other citizens and family so that I could make a good run at it.” Allen also decided to drop her hyphenated name of Allen-Carston for the campaign. “I chose to run as Gwen Allen to make it easier for the voters,” she said. “My husband gives his approval.” The council appointed Allen on Aug. 4 to the city’s fireworks committee as Allen-Carston. She is part of the three-member committee that will write a statement in favor of a city ban on fireworks for the voters’ pamphlet. The Nov. 3 ballot proposition is only an advisory vote about what the council should do as far as banning fireworks. Word about Allen’s filing for office spread at the Aug. 4 council meeting when Thomas abstained from voting on Allen’s appointment to the fireworks committee. Even Mayor Suzette Cooke didn’t know at that time about Allen running for the council. “I would like to abstain from this particular vote since one of the members mentioned is running in opposition to me this fall,” Thomas said to Cooke.

The mayor replied, “I’m sorry, Councilmember Thomas as I am aware you have no opposition. You’re talking about in the election?” “I am, your honor,” he said. “No, there’s no opposition,” Cooke said. “I do,” Thomas added. “It’s been openly declared with a C1 (candidate registration form) in Olympia on to computers and the PDC, so with your permission I would like to abstain from this particular vote. I don’t want to turn this election into some kind of dog and pony show so that’s how I would like to proceed.” “All right, you will abstain from the vote,” Cooke said. Allen has no plans to turn the campaign into any type of show. “I’m not in this for any shenanigans, rhetoric or making this some kind of dog and pony show as my opponent has suggested,” Allen said. “I’m in it to win it for the sake of our future and generations to come.” Allen decided to challenge Thomas rather than unopposed incumbents Boyce and Dana Ralph because Thomas has been on the council for 12 years and

August 14, 2015 [11]

will be in office for 16 years if elected again. “His long-standing accomplishments, in the political realm, are appreciated, but, it would seem like, as some of his background information out there might suggest, his profession is being a council member,” Allen said about Thomas. Thomas doesn’t plan to change his campaign strategy much. “I’ll get signs out,” he said. “I may put out a few more than I planned to but that’s the only significant difference.” He remains curious how voters might respond to a write-in candidate. “It’ll be interesting to see how it plays out,” Thomas said. Allen led a campaign last September of KBAC and community members asking for Thomas’ resignation in connection with comments Thomas made at a council meeting after Councilwoman Deborah Ranniger asked for a moment of silence for Mike Brown, the 18-year-old black man shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Mo. Thomas objected to the moment of silence for some-

HomeStreet Bank & Kent Chamber of Commerce Business Expo Tuesday, October 20th 2015 from 3 p.m. – 7 p.m. ShoWare Center, 625 W. James St, Kent, WA 98032 Business Expo & Taste of Kent 2015 ~Bringing the World Home~

one he called a “thief.” Allen spoke to the matter during the council’s public comment period, asking for the resignation of Thomas. But she said last week Kent has many issues it needs to work on as a city, including new residents. “We are practically burst-

ing at the seams with new arrivals, from around the world and right next door in Seattle,” she said. “We need to be ready to welcome and receive folks as they show up to call Kent home. Learning how to live, work and serve, together should be at the forefront of all that we do.”

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[12] August 14, 2015

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KENT

SPORTS

Kentlake student excels in powerlifting BY HEIDI SANDERS

hsanders@kentreporter.com

SEATTLE MIST PLAY CONFERENCE TITLE GAME ON SATURDAY The Kent-based Seattle Mist face the Los Angeles Temptation in a Legends Football League playoff game on Saturday in Chicago for the Western Conference title of the women’s indoor football league. Seattle has a 4-1 record while Los Angeles is 3-2-1. The Mist have a 2-1 record this season against the Temptation. The winner advances to the Legends Cup on Aug. 23 at the ShoWare Center. The Chicago Bliss and Atlanta Stream play in the Eastern Conference title game on Saturday.

As 18-year-old Rajjat Chauhan prepares to start his senior year at Kentlake High School, he is also getting ready to compete in the International Powerlifting League World Championships in November in Las Vegas. Chauhan qualified for the World Championships winning the Junior Men 18-19 Single Ply 148-pound class at the U.S. Powerlifting Association National Championships in July at Las Vegas. Chauhan, who has been training in powerlifting for six years and competing for the last three, said he was surprised to win at nationals. “I didn’t know I was go-

Rajjat Chauhan prepares to compete in the dead lift at the U.S. Powerlifting Association National Championships in July at Las Vegas. COURTESY PHOTO ing to take first,” he said. “I didn’t know I would qualify for worlds.” He set a national record in the squat and state records in all three lifts and the combined total with

Records fall, women rule at Northwest Nationals drag races REPORTER STAFF

Although Jack “Fast Jack” Beckman made a splash on Friday by becoming the first Funny Car driver to break the four-second barrier on

a 451.94 pound squat, a 209.44 pound bench press and a 440.92 pound dead lift totaling 1102.3 pounds. His father, Hardeep Singh Chauhan, inspired him to begin lifting.

the 1,000-foot drag strip at Pacific Raceways, it was the ladies of Top Alcohol who made the most noise at last weekend’s NHRA Northwest Nationals. Megan McKernan in Top Alcohol Dragster, and Annie Whitely in Top Alcohol Funny Car, posted wins in Sunday’s finals, McKernan defeating Garrett Bateman for her second win of the NHRA Mello Yello National

“My dad was a powerlifter back in India,” he said. Rajjat Chauhan’s uncle was also a champion powerlifter in Australia. “It just runs in the family,” he said. “That is what I

Drag Racing Series. In Top Alcohol Funny Car, Whitely won her third NHRA national event trophy, defeating Shane Westerfield in the finals with a winning elapsed time (E.T.) of 5.546 seconds, at a top speed of 265.43 miles per hour. Westerfield had beaten Whitely in each of their previous five meet-

wanted to do. Looking at all the trophies they have got me into it.” Hardeep Chahan coaches Rajjat and as well as 16-year-old Avtar Singh, a Kentwood High student. “I started going to the gym with him (Rajjat),” Singh said of his start in powerlifting, which he began competing in last year, although he has been training for several years. Singh took first place in the Junior Men 16-17 Raw 198-pound division at the Washington State Spring Fling in February at Kennewick. He set state records in his division with a 363.76 pound squat, a 192.9 pound bench press and a 418.87 pound dead lift for a total of 975.54 pounds. [ more KENTLAKE page 13 ]

ings. Prior to Sunday’s finals, however, it was Beckman in the Funny Car division who was the talk of the track. He broke the track record on Friday, becoming the first Funny Car driver to post a sub-four-second finish at Pacific Raceways. [ more RACES page 13 ]

Please join us as we celebrate summer on Friday August 28, 2015 5:00-7:00 p.m. for our Annual Neighborhood BBQ Western Theme – Entertainment provided by the Covington Blue Grass Band. Drawings for prizes! Mouthwatering BBQ with all the trimmings (dessert too) $6.00 per person/$8.00 couple

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Please RSVP 253-850-0333 by Tues. Aug. 25th

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www.kentreporter.com [ RACES from page 12 ] On Saturday night, Beckman reset the track and NHRA record with a blistering pass of 3.912 seconds. But in the semifinals on Sunday, Beckman suffered a mechanical breakdown – his engine dropped a cylinder – allowing Tommy Johnson Jr. to make the finals. Johnson went on to take the win with a pass of 4.073 seconds at 308 mph to Del Worsham’s 4.042 at 307.51 mph. “If you would’ve told me three weeks ago that we would make the two quickest runs in Funny Car history, back up the national record, win two races and close within five points of (teammate Matt Hagan) and (crew chief) Dickie Venables (for the series lead), I would say, ‘Sign me up for that,’” said

Beckman, a five-time winner this year. “That being said, it’s disappointing to get that far into the Western Swing, have a chance to sweep and not get it done.” Beckman earlier won the series’ two previous stops at Denver and Sonoma, Calif., before arriving in Kent. In Top Fuel, J.R. Todd beat Shawn Langdon, posting a 3.824-second, 323.04mph run. Langdon posted a 3.902 at 307.81 mph. In other racing, Jeff Lane, of North Bend, added to his trophy collection by taking the win in Comp Eliminator over Ryan Warter. Puyallup’s Glen Paine Jr. and Josh Dalrymple each picked up their first NHRA national event Wally trophy as Paine beat Gene Heaton, of Vancouver, Wash., in the Super Gas final. Dalrymple,

[ KENTLAKE from page 12 ] Chauhan also set state records at that competition in the Junior Men 16-17 Single Ply 132.2-pound division. The two boys spend about three to four hours in the gym five days a week training. During the school year, time is limited so training sessions are two to three hours. “It takes a lot of time,” Chauhan said. Chauhan said he would like to win a

out of Sunnyside, raced Fred Hoffman, of Shoreline, for the Super Street title in a battle of ’67 Camaros. Hoffman left early, drawing a red light foul, and Dalrymple ran it out to a 10.869-second, 156.50-mph lap for the win. Steve Wann and Tommy Phillips rounded out the list of winners. Wann, of Modesto, Calif., battled Brian Thompson in close Stock division final with the nod going to Wann and his ’62 Fury. Phillips, of Forney, Texas, had a nice .010-second reaction time on his way to his 33rd national event win, downing Nick Drzayich, of Auburn, in Super Comp. Northwest Division racers are back here at Pacific Raceways for their next Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series event, Aug., 21-23.

world championship title in sub juniors, which will have to be accomplished before he is 21. Singh also has his eyes set on taking a world title. “The goal is always to go to worlds and place in worlds,” he said. Chauhan said he plans to stay active in powerlifting. “I want to stay in there before I get too busy with my life,” he said.

Choose the right flowers for a wedding

THE GARDENER

peddle their petals direct to the consumer. Local florists that specialize in wedding flowers will often buy from local growers when the bride chooses flowers in season. 3. If the bride has her heart set on a certain flower (our daughter really wanted peonies – that were out of season in July) you can go on the Internet and find a grower from Alaska or Hawaii and splurge on these flowers for just her bouquet or as an accent flower amidst the less expensive blooms that are in season. Alaska has become a hot spot for wedding peonies as the long hours of daylight and cool summer weather makes the peony crop available almost all summer. Hawaii grows orchids year round and both states have family farms that will ship directly to private homes using ice packs and overnight express. 4. Meet with a florist about what type of flowers hold best in hot and sunny weather. Local florists can suggest flowers that resist wilting and they also have access to special sprays that keep petals from wiltMarianne Binetti

Flowers belong at weddings and there is a beautiful trend toward outdoor receptions and weddings. Our youngest daughter was married last month, and we used hydrangeas from my garden and the gardens of many friends and family to add to the joy of the celebration. In honor of summer brides everywhere, here are a few tips on using fresh flowers in a wedding. 1. Once you know the date of the wedding, talk to a local gardener about what flowers will be in season. Of course you can ship in roses for a winter wedding and even find tulips for a wedding in the early summer but you’ll pay three times the price when you import blooms from the other side of the world. 2. Choose flowers grown by local growers when possible. In Western Washington we are lucky to have farmer’s markets in many communities where local growers will sell direct to the public. Some of the flower growers have farms in Eastern Washington but make the trek over the Cascades every weekend to

See Marianne Marianne Binetti hosts “Dig In Seattle,” a garden and cooking show that is back on the air. You can watch the show via podcast at www.diginseattle.com or on Channel 22 KZJO TV at 12:30 p.m. Saturdays. The show focuses on local gardening tips and cooking demos from local chefs. ing and drying out. Don’t overlook the common mum. Chrysanthemums are not only available all year long but they hold up in heat and also cold weather, they come in a multitude of colors, shapes and flower forms and can cost half the price of imported roses or orchids. 5. Don’t depend on growing your own flowers. Timing is everything and weather conditions are unpredictable. Just because your pink lilies were in bloom last summer during the month of June does not mean they will flower at the same time next year. Ditto that your hydrangeas may not be the same color from one year to the next. [ more BINETTI page 14 ]

August 14, 2015 [13]

[ CHARGE from page 1 ] He is scheduled to be arraigned on Aug. 20 at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. If convicted as charged, Reber, who is not in custody, could face up to one year in jail. Kent Police initially investigated Reber for vehicular homicide after interviewing witnesses and reviewing security camera footage of the incident. Reber was driving an SUV through the school parking lot as Benson gripped the back edge of the hood near the windshield, with his chest on the hood and his feet toward the front of the vehicle, according to charging papers. Reber backed the SUV out of a parking spot and then appeared to rapidly accelerate through the parking lot at about 1520 mph and then made a sharp left turn. As Reber made the turn, Benson slid off the hood, his feet appeared to land first, but the momentum of his upper body continued toward the ground and the back of Benson’s head hit the pavement hard. Benson, a senior, died the next day Harborview Medical Center in Seattle from the head injury. This marks the first “car-surfing” case filed in King County, said Dan Donohoe, spokesman for the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. He said there were a couple of reasons to file a reckless driving charge rather than a vehicular

homicide charge. “We consulted with the victim’s family during our charging decision,” Donohoe said. “We balance out the wishes of the victim’s family and the circumstances of the crime.” In the charging papers against Reber, prosecutors say that he drove a motor vehicle with willful and wanton disregard for the safety of persons and property. Prosecutors also said Reber has no criminal or traffic history and that the state doesn’t oppose to his release on personal recognizance on the condition that he not drive a vehicle without a valid license and insurance and have no more moving violations. If the King County Superior Court judge agrees, that means Reber would remain free after his arraignment instead of being sent to jail. In a similar 2013 case in Salem, Ore., a 16-year girl pleaded guilty in 2014 to criminally negligent homicide in Marion County after she drove a car in a store parking lot that resulted in the death of a 17-year-old girl who was riding atop a vehicle in what’s known as “car surfing.” The driver received five years probation, prohibition against driving for five years and 120 hours of community service, including presentations to area high schools about the dangers of “car surfing,” according to a report on statesmanjournal.com.

BARTELL DRUGS welcomes donations of school supplies and hygiene products for its 12th annual “School Tools for Kids in Need,” Aug. 2-29 at all 64 Bartell Drugs locations. Bartell’s can be found in Kent at 12946 SE Kent-Kangley Road. For more information on Bartell Drugs and its locations, visit www.bartelldrugs.com.

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[ BINETTI from page 13 ] 6. Use potted plants when possible. Lining the bride’s walk down the aisle with pots of cyclamens, mums or hydrangeas can be less expensive and more practical than using cut flowers. Plus you can add the potted plants to your garden or give them away to guests when the event is over. 7. Fabulous foliage can add a lush look. Baskets of ferns made from

sword fern fronds, huge leaves from hosta and colorful foliage from heucheras are becoming more popular in wedding bouquets as brides seek to add an original twist to the wedding flowers. Succulents are also being used as cut flower alternatives in arrangements or as potted plants on tables. The more leaves, berries and spiky grasses you add to the mix the less flowers you will need to buy and the more resilient the display will be. 8. Visit Pinterest and become

inspired. The Pinterest website is like a bulletin board where you can post your favorite photos of any creative idea and also grab images from other creative people and try something new. Pinterest inspired us to create a “flower wall� using hydrangeas that filled a gold picture frame and also a centerpiece that can only be described as a ‘hydrangea waterfall’ that flowed off the table an onto the floor at the reception site. Pinterest is not

just about pretty photos – often you can visit a site with just one click that will share more details and how-to information about the project you see posted on the site. 9. Share the joy by sharing the flowers. After a wedding or large celebration the flower centerpieces can be sent home with guests to enjoy, brought to a church or my personal favorite delivered to a nursing home and given away to house-bound residents. When properly cared for

cut flowers centerpieces will last for a week to 10 days. After that the faded blooms can be recycled into a compost pile. 10. Remember to take a deep breath, inhale the fragrance of flowers and enjoy the day. Flowers are nature’s reminder that the world is a beautiful place and life should be enjoyed – so celebrate. For more gardening information, visit binettigarden.com.

PUBLIC NOTICES Superior Court of the State of Washington in and for the County of King WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiffs, v. MARK WILLIAMS; and JANET LAUREL a/k/a JANET LAUREL WILLIAMS, Defendants. No. 15-2-13114-1 SEA SUMMONS TO: THE DEFENDANTS A lawsuit has been started against you in the Superior Court of King County by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., plaintiff. Plaintiff’s claim is stated in the written Complaint, a copy of which is served upon you with this Summons. In order to defend against this lawsuit, you must respond to the Complaint in this action by stating your defense in writing and serving a copy upon the undersigned attorney for the plaintiff within 20 days after service of this summons and complaint within the State of Washington or 60 days if service is effected by personal service outside the State of Washington or by publication, or a default judgment will be entered against you without notice. A default judgment is one where plaintiff is entitled to what it asks for because you have not responded. If you serve a Notice of Appearance on the undersigned attorney, you are entitled to notice before a default judgment may be entered. If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly so that your written response, if any, may be served on time. This Summons is issued pursuant to Rule 4 of the Superior Court Civil Rules of the State of Washington. DATED this 26th day of May, 2015. RCO LEGAL, P.S. By Kathleen A. Allen, WSBA# 19655 Attorneys for Plaintiff 13555 SE 36th St,.Ste 300 Bellevue, WA 98006 (425)458-2121 Published in the Kent Reporter on August 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015; September 4, 11, 2015.#1391678 SAC Wireless proposes to collocate wireless communications antennas at a top height of 65 feet on an 85-foot utility pole at the approx. vicinity of 13028 SE 251 Street, Kent, King County, WA 98030. Public comments regarding potential effects from this site on historic properties may be submitted within 30 days from the date of this publication to: Trileaf Corp, Katie, k.rodriguez@trileaf.com, 2121 W. Chandler Blvd., Suite 203, Chandler, AZ 85224; 480-850-0575. Published in the Kent Reporter on August 14, 2015.#1393970. ERIKA DIAZ PO Box 1223

Sandy, UT 84091 In the Third District Court of SALT LAKE COUNTY West Jordan Department, STATE OF UTAH ERIKA DIAZ CALDERON, Petitioner vs. DAVID VALDOVINOS MORENO, Respondent SUMMONS Civil No.154901310 Judge Stone The State of Utah to the above-named Defendant: You are summoned and required to answer the complaint for divorce ÂżOHG E\ WKH 3HWLWLRQHU ZLWKLQ days after the third date of publication of this summons. You PXVW ÂżOH \RXU ZULWWHQ DQVZHU with the clerk of the court at the following address: 8080 S Redwood Rd. Ste. 1701. West Jordan, UT 84088, 801-233-9700 and mail or deliver a copy to plaintiff at the address listed above. If you fail to do so, judgment by default may be taken against you for the relief dePDQGHG LQ WKH FRPSODLQW RQ ÂżOH with the clerk of the court. Published in Kent Reporter on August 14, 2015, August 21, 2015, August 28, 2015.#1392724 August 4, 2015 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Board of Directors of Kent School District No. 415 will meet for the purpose of adopting WKH 'LVWULFWÂśV EXGJHW IRU WKH ÂżVFDO year 2015-2016 at 7:00 p.m. on August 26, 2015, at the Administration Center, 12033 SE 256th Street, Kent, Washington. Any person may appear at said meeting and be heard for or against any part of said budget. A budget has been prepared by the ERDUG DQG ZLOO EH ÂżOHG DW WKH RI ÂżFH RI WKH GLVWULFW VXSHULQWHQGHQW from whom any person may obtain a copy upon request. Dr. Calvin J. Watts Secretary of the Board of Directors Published in the Kent, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamon Reporters on August 14, 2015 and August 21, 2015. #1392985. VALLEY MEDICAL CENTER District Healthcare System NOTICE OF BOARD COMMITTEE SCHEDULES Notice is hereby given that the Valley Medical Center Board of Trustees Executive Committee will be held on Tuesday October 13, 2015 and Tuesday December 8, 2015 from 11:30-12:00 p.m. in Conference Room B of Valley Medical Center. BOARD OF TRUSTEES (District Healthcare System) By: Sandra Sward Executive Assistant to the Board of Trustees Published in Kent, Renton, Covington/Maple Valley/Black Diamond Reporter on August 14, 2015, August 21, 2015 #1393020

CITY OF KENT NOTICE OF APPLICATION A Project Permit Application KDV EHHQ ÂżOHG ZLWK &LW\ RI .HQW Planning Services. Following is a description of the application and the process for review. The application and listed studies PD\ EH UHYLHZHG DW WKH RIÂżFHV RI Kent Planning Services, 400 W. Gowe Street, Kent, WA. DATE OF NOTICE OF APPLICATION: August 14, 2015 APPLICATION NAME/ NUMBER: COX FIRST ADDITION SHORT PLAT SP-2015-8 / KIVA #RPSS-2152376 PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant proposes to subdivide 1.87 acres into seven single family residential lots and a stormwater retention tract. . The subject property is currently developed with a single-family home, which will remain, and accessory buildings, which will be removed. Access to the lots will be from 110th Ave SE via a new private road. The project site is located at 27218 110th Avenue SE, idenWLÂżHG E\ .LQJ &RXQW\ SDUFHO number 322205-9184, and is zoned SR-6, Single Family Residential. OTHER PERMITS AND PLANS WHICH MAY BE REQUIRED: Civil Construction Permit, Final Short Plat. PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD: August 14, 2015 to August 28, 2015 All persons may comment on this application. Comments must be in writing and received in Kent Planning Services by 4:30 P.M., Friday, August 28, 2015, at 220 4th Avenue South, Kent WA 98032. A public meeting is tentatively scheduled for 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, September 17, 2015. This public meeting will be held in the Planning Services Conference Room at 400 West Gowe Street, Kent, WA 98032. Please be advised this meeting date is subject to change. Please call to verify time and date at least a week before the scheduled meeting. If you have any questions, please call Jason Garnham, Kent Planning Services, at (253) 856-5454. Published in the Kent Reporter on August 14, 2015. #1393832. Superior Court of Washington County of King In re: FATTIMA XASAN, Petitioner, and SHIRWA MOHAMED, Respondent. No. 13-2-28192-9 SEA 14-3-01193-1 SEA Summons for Petition to Modify Parenting Plan and Petition to Renew Domestic Violence Orderfor Protection by Publication (SMPB) To the Respondent: Shirwa Mohamed The petitioner has started two actions in the above court reTXHVWLQJ WKH PRGLÂżFDWLRQ RI D parenting plan or residential

schedule and requesting to renew the domestic violence order for protection. You must respond to this summons by serving a copy of your written response on the person VLJQLQJ WKLV VXPPRQV DQG E\ ¿O ing the original with the clerk of the court. If you do not serve your written response within 60 GD\V DIWHU WKH GDWH RI WKH ¿UVW publication of this summons (60 days after the 10th day of July, 2015), the court may enter an order of default against you, and the court may, without further notice to you, enter a decree and approve or provide for other relief requested in this summons. In the case of a dissolution, the FRXUW ZLOO QRW HQWHU WKH ¿QDO GH cree until at least 90 days after VHUYLFH DQG ¿OLQJ ,I \RX VHUYH D notice of appearance on the undersigned person, you are entitled to notice before an order of default or a decree may be entered. Your written response to the summons and petition for modL¿FDWLRQ RI SDUHQWLQJ SODQ PXVW be on form: WPF DRPSCU 07.0200, Response to Petition IRU 0RGL¿FDWLRQ $GMXVWPHQW RI Custody Decree/Parenting Plan/ Residential Schedule Information about how to get this form and the forms required to provide your response to the petition for renewal of order for protection may be obtained by contacting the clerk of the court, by contacting the Administrative 2I¿FH RI WKH &RXUWV DW (360) 705-5328, or from the Internet at the Washington State Courts homepage: http://www. courts.wa.gov/forms If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in these matters, you should do so promptly so that your written responses, if any, may be served on time. One method of serving a copy of your responses on the petitioner LV WR VHQG LW E\ FHUWL¿HG PDLO ZLWK return receipt requested. This summons is issued pursuant to RCW 4.28.100 and Superior Court Civil Rule 4.1 of the state of Washington. Dated: July 6, 2015 Veronica Freitas, WSBA No. 19405 File Original of Your Response with the Clerk of the Court at: 516 3rd Ave Seattle, WA 98104 Serve a Copy of Your Response on: Petitioner’s Lawyer 210 Summit Ave East Seattle, WA 98102 Published in the Kent Reporter on July 10, 17, 24, 31, 2015; August 7, 14, 2015. #1368035. INVITATION TO BID Notice is hereby given that the City of Kent, Washington, will receive sealed bids at the City &OHUNœV RI¿FH WKURXJK August 25, 2015 up to 11:00 a.m. as shown on the clock on the east ZDOO RI WKH &LW\ &OHUNœV 2I¿FH RQ WKH ¿UVW ÀRRU RI &LW\ +DOO

4th Avenue South, Kent, Washington. All bids must be properly marked and sealed in accordance with this “Invitation to Bid.â€? Bids must be delivered and received at the City Clerk’s RIÂżFH E\ WKH DERYH VWDWHG WLPH regardless of delivery method, including U.S. Mail. All bids will be opened and read publicly aloud immediately following 11:00 a.m. for the City of Kent project named as follows: 76th Avenue South Storm Drainage Improvements Project Number: 08-3019 The project consists of the installation of storm drainage conveyance at the approximate 21000 Block of 76th Avenue South. The project includes approximately 190 linear feet of 12 and 18 inch diameter storm drainage pipe, and associated EDFNÂżOO DQG SDYHPHQW UHVWRUD tion. The project will address surface water drainage issues along 76th Avenue South. The Engineer’s estimated range for this project is approximately $114,000.00-$131,000.00. Bid documents may be obtained by contacting City of Kent Engineering Department, Nancy Yoshitake at (253) 856-5508. For technical questions, please call Stephen Lincoln P.E. at (253) 856-5552. Bids must be clearly marked “Bidâ€? with the name of the project on the outside of the envelope, addressed to the City Clerk, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, WA 98032-5895. Only sealed bids will be accepted. No facsimiles or electronic submittals will be considered. Each bid shall be in accordance ZLWK WKH SODQV DQG VSHFLÂżFDWLRQV and other contract documents QRZ RQ ÂżOH LQ WKH RIÂżFH RI WKH City Engineer, City of Kent, Washington. Copies of the plans and Kent Special Provisions may be purchased at a non-refundable cost of $50.00 for each set. 3ODQV DQG VSHFLÂżFDWLRQV FDQ also be downloaded at no charge at www.kentwa.gov/ procurement. Copies of the :6'27 6WDQGDUG 6SHFLÂżFDWLRQV are available for perusal only. A cashier’s check, cash or surety bond in the amount of 5% of the bid is required. The City of Kent reserves the right to reject any and all bids on any or all schedules or alternates or to waive any informalities in the bidding and shall determine which bid or bidders is the most responsive, satisfactory and responsible bidder and shall be the sole judge thereof. No plea of mistake in the bid shall be available to the bidder for the recovery of his/her deposit or as a defense to any action based upon the neglect or refusal to execute a contract. Bidders must submit with their initial bid a signed statement as to whether they have previously performed work subject to the President’s Executive Order No. 11246.

No bidder may withdraw his/her bid for a period of sixty (60) days after the day of bid opening. Dated this 14th day of August, 2015. BY: Ronald F. Moore, City Clerk Published in Kent Reporter o n August 14, 2015 . #1393084. CITY OF KENT NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING DATE AND TIME AND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ECONOMIC & COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council Economic & Community Development Committee will hold a SPECIAL MEETING AND PUBLIC HEARING at 4:30 P.M. on MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015, in Kent City Council Chambers West, Kent City, 220 4th Avenue South, Kent, WA, to consider the following Agenda item(s): 1) Land Use Plan and Zoning Districts Map and Text Amendments a. Consideration of city-wide amendments of the Land Use Plan and Zoning Districts Map designations, which also will update the Comprehensive Plan. b.Also under consideration are amendments to Kent City Code Sections 12.06.070, 15.02.260, 15.03.010, 15.06.050, 15.07.060, 15.09.050 and Chapter 15.04 pertaining to development UHJXODWLRQV FODUL¿FDWLRQV GH¿ nitions, allowed uses, and standards and criteria for granting a request for rezone. c. The information for this item can be found in the August 10, 2015 agenda packet found at http://kentwa.gov/content.aspx?id=23364 2) Comprehensive Plan Update a. Consideration of an update to the Comprehensive Plan, including amendments to the text, goals and policies. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that any person wishing to submit written comments on this proposal may do so prior to the meeting by email to Charlene Anderson, Long Range Planning Manager at canderson@kentwa.gov. Oral or written comments can also be submitted at the meeting. The public is invited to attend and all interested persons will have an opportunity to speak. For agenda information please call Julie Pulliam in Economic & Community Development, Planning Division, at 253856-5454. The Agenda Packet can be accessed through the City’s Website beginning on August 17, 2015 at: http://kentwa.gov/content.aspx?id=23364 Published in the Kent Reporter on August 14, 2015. #1393837.


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seeking a hardworking and detail-oriented Public Relations Specialist to provide production suppor t on website , email newsletters, publications, and social media for the King County Council and the entire Legislative Branch. This is an exciting oppor tunity to join the King County Council as a contributing member of its Communications team. T h e P u bl i c R e l a t i o n s Specialist must be a detail-oriented, customer-focused, and selfmotivated individual who works well with other team members to convey public policy and legislative actions to the public and constituents of King County. The successful candidate must possess the necessary technical background skills and be a good team player. They will pursue their tasks with energy and drive, and u t i l i z e e f fe c t i ve t i m e management skills, multitasking, and be willing to attend to other projects as required.

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EXECUTIVE EDITOR T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News in Por t Angeles, Wash., a six-day morning newspaper and 24/7 online news operation serving the beautiful two-county North Olympic Peninsula, seeks a w e b - s a v v y exe c u t i ve editor with excellent writing, editing and pagination skills and proven m a n a g e m e n t ex p e r i ence. Reporting to the publisher, this is the No. 1 position in our newsroom. The executive editor provides day-today newsroom leadership, overseeing online n ew s c ove ra g e w h i l e spearheading the publication of our print newspaper and overseeing all its sections and special supplements. Particularly important on the print side are firstrate InDesign skills. T h e exe c u t i ve e d i t o r also oversees our website (avg 1.2 million page views monthly), Facebook pages and Twitter account and helps deve l o p a n d i m p l e m e n t strategies to grow the PDN’s social media, mobile and video audiences. The right candidate can identify major news and trends pertinent to our print and online readers, edit a story on deadline and help coach repor ters into tur ning their ideas into top-flight reads — and also has the ability to quickly fix a we b s i t e p r o bl e m a n d edit an occasional video or podcast. Affordable Port Angeles, gateway to Olympic National Park and Victoria, British Columbia, gets half the rainfall of Seattle yet is close enough to enjoy Seattle as well as our rain forests, great fishing and other outdoors activities and pleasant lifestyle. ?Port Angel?es just finished second in Outside magazine’s 2015 “Best Town Ever” online contest, beating out Santa Barbara, Calif., Flagstaff, Ariz., Bar Harbor, Maine, and two western cities. We a r e a m e m b e r o f Sound Publishing Inc., the largest community media organization in Washington state, and o f fe r a f u l l r a n g e o f fringe benefits. To apply, please e-mail to hr@soundpublishing.com (1) a resume including at least three professional references; (2) at least three relevant work samples (or a link to them); (3) a cover letter addressing the specific job requirements we’ve outlined. Please also include your salar y requirements.

REPORTER The Snoqualmie Valley Record, 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 the Nor th Bend office. The primar y coverage will be 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 are looking for a team player willing to get involved in the local 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 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 trends; wr ite 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: hreast@sound publishing.com or mail to: Sound Publishing, Inc., 19426 68th Avenue S. Kent, WA 98032, ATTN: HR/SNOQ Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE). Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

PAGINATOR Peninsula Daily News, a six-day morning newspaper serving the beautiful North Olympic Peninsula of Washington, has a full-time opening on its design/copy desk in Port Angeles. The successful c a n d i d a t e mu s t h ave demonstrated and creative layout/pagination skills using the Adobe Suite, copy editing experience, good grammar and syntax skills, be AP style-savvy, know current events, write accurate and catchy headlines and possess sharp InDesign skills (we have a Macintosh-based computer system). Daily newspaper experience preferred; will consider a t o p - d rawe r c a n d i d a t e from a weekly newspaper looking to move to a daily. The design/copy editor will produce pages and put together sections. The shift is daytime Sundays through T h u r s d ay s . T h e s u c cessful candidate also will post stories on the PDN’s website as well as have Facebook and Twitter responsibilities. Affordable Port Angeles, gateway to Olympic National Park and Victoria, British Columbia, gets half the rainfall of Seattle yet is close enough to enjoy Seattle as well as our rain forests, great fishing and other outdoors activities and pleasant lifestyle. Por t Angeles just finished second in a national magazine’s “Best Town Ever” contest after beating out all four other We s t e r n c i t i e s i n t h e contest. Peninsula Daily News publishes two zoned a.m. editions in Clallam and Jefferson counties. Pay commensurate with experience; full benefits package includes medical/dental/vision insurance, 401(k), paid vacation with immediate eligibility and sick pay. Finalists may be invited to a tryout; preference given to candidates from the Northwest and We s t C o a s t . P l e a s e send cover letter, resume and clips of pages (PDFs are acceptable) with at least three professional references to hr@soundpublishing.com

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Employment General

Employment Transportation/Drivers

EDITOR Sound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the weekly publication on beautiful Va s h o n I s l a n d , T h e Vashon Island Beachcomber, in Washington State. This is not an entry-level position. Island residence is required. The successful candidate must have a demonstrated interest in local political and cultural affairs, possesses excellent writing and verbal skills, experience editing reporters’ copy and other submitted materials and be proďŹ cient in designing and building pages with Adobe InDesign. Must represent the newspaper in the community and know the value and have experience with social media. Must lead, motivate, and mentor a small staff. We offer a competitive compensation and benef i t s p a ck a g e t h a t i n cludes medical, dental, vision and life insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and a 401K with an employer match. If you are interested, please email your cover letter, resume, and samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: ATTN: EDVAS in the subject line. Sound Publishing is the largest community news organization in Washington State and an Equal Oppor tunity Employer. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

EDITOR Sound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the Journal of the San Juans in the beautiful San Juan Isl a n d s o f Wa s h i n g t o n state. This is not an entry-level position. Requires a hands-on leader with a minimum of three years newspaper experience including writing, editing, pagination, photography, and InDesign skills. editing and monitoring social media including Twitter, FaceBook, etc.

EDITOR Sound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the weekly publication on beautiful Va s h o n I s l a n d , T h e Vashon Island Beachcomber, in Washington State. This is not an entry-level position. Island residence is required. The successful candidate must have a demonstrated interest in local political and cultural affairs, possess excellent writing and verbal skills, experience editing reporters’ copy and other submitted materials and be proďŹ cient in designing and building pages with Adobe InDesign. Must represent the newspaper in the community and know the value and have experience with social media. Must lead, motivate, and mentor a small staff. We offer a competitive compensation and benef i t s p a ck a g e t h a t i n cludes medical, dental, vision and life insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and a 401K with an employer match. If you are interested, please email your cover letter, resume, and samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: ATTN: EDVAS in the subject line. Sound Publishing is the largest community news organization in Washington State and an Equal Oppor tunity Employer. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

Drivers: Local-Home Nightly! Seattle, Sumner & Kent Openings. Great Pay, BeneďŹ ts! CDL-A, 1yr Exp. Req. Estenson Logistics Apply www.goelc.com 1-855-996-3463

REPORTER The award-winning w e e k l y n ew s p a p e r, Bainbridge Island Review, on Bainbridge Island, WA, has an opening for a general assignment reporter. We want a skilled and passionate writer who isn’t afraid to tackle meaty news stories. Experience with photography and Adobe InDesign p r e fe r r e d . A p p l i c a n t s must be able to work in a team-oriented, deadline-driven environment, possess excellent writing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to write about multiple topics. Must relocate to Kitsap County. This is a part-time position, up to 29 hours per week, and includes paid vacation, sick and holid ay s . E O E . N o c a l l s please. Send resume with cover letter, three or more non-retur nable clips in PDF or Text format and references to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/GARBIR Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd W, Main Unit Everett, WA 98204

Cedar River Water& Sewer District is hiring for a F/T ENTRY LEVEL SWR/WTR MAINT. TECH in M.V./Fairwood area. Understanding and background in underground utility operation and maintenance pref. Full beneďŹ ts, starting salary $15-$18/hr. D.O.E. open until ďŹ lled. For more information see: www.crwsd.com Fax resume to 425-228-4880 or email to svance@crwsd.com

We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you are interested, please email your cover letter, r e s u m e, a n d u p t o 5 samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: AT T N : E D J S J i n t h e subject line. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to ďŹ nd out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com REPORTER The award-winning newspaper Whidbey News-Times is seeking an energetic, detailedoriented reporter to write articles and features. Experience in photography and Adobe InDesign p r e fe r r e d . A p p l i c a n t s must be able to work in a team-oriented, deadline-driven environment, possess excellent writing skills, have a knowledge of community news and be able to write about multiple topics. Must relocate to Whidbey Island, WA. This is a fulltime position, 32 hours per week that includes excellent benefits: medical, dental, life insurance, 401k, paid vacation, sick and holidays. EOE . No calls please. Send resume with cover letter, three or more nonreturnable clips in PDF or Text format and references to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/GARWNT Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd W, Main Unit Everett, WA 98204

Northwest Gourmet Foods is a family owned business producing fine dressings, sauces and mayonnaise for food service, retail, and private label clients. We are located in Renton at 600 SW 7th Street. We are currently looking for experienced, energetic, honest and hardworking employees. CURRENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE ARE * BATCH MAKER and * GENERAL PRODUCTION WORKERS. APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE ONSITE. If you have any questions please call 425-793-5001.

CREATIVE ARTIST Sound Publishing, Inc and The Whidbey News Times, a twice-weekly community newspaper located in Coupeville, WA, has an immediate opening for a full-time Creative Artist. Duties include performing ad design, designing promotional materials, providing excellent internal and external customer service. Requires excellent communication skills and the ability to wo r k i n a fa s t p a c e d deadline-oriented environment. Experience w i t h A d o b e C r e a t i ve Suite, InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator and Acrobat strongly preferred, as is newspaper or other media experience. Must be able to work independently as well as part of a team. We offer a great work environment, health benefits, 401k, paid holidays, vacation and sick time. Please email your resume, cover letter, and a few samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to ďŹ nd out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com Business Opportunities

Real- Estate Careers Earn your real estate license before the market goes back up. Evening classes. We Take Payments

Live Instructed. Blue Emerald Real Estate School King Co:

Employment Publications

HOW TO EARN $1,000 DAILY! Get Paid up to 72 Times Daily! Unlimited Earnings!!! Free Mone y M a k i n g We b s i t e ! ! www.EasyMoneyFormula.com Schools & Training

AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualiďŹ ed. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com S TA R T A N E W C A REER in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Te c h . I f yo u h ave a G E D, c a l l : 8 5 5 - 6 7 0 9765

Appliances

STACK LAUNDRY Deluxe front loading washer & dryer. Energy efďŹ cient, 8 cycles. Like new condition

* Under Warranty * Over $1,200 new, now only $578 or make payments of $25 per month

206-244-6966 &INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE

www.SoundClassifieds.com

24 hours a day Cemetery Plots

2 PLOTS AT RENTON MEMORIAL PARK; side by side in the beautiful Azalea Garden. Value $16000 selling for $5000 Seller pays transfer fee. Call 206-470-9680. Rare, 6 adjoining lots in the Garden of Devotion at Sunset Hills Memorial. sold out for 30 years. Outstanding views. Worth $24,000 each. All $45,000 or $8,000 each. Seller pays transfer fees. Call Mike at (661)6954734 or mike.duey@att.net

Electronics

Flea Market

C E M E T E RY P L OT I N TRANQUIL SETTING. Easy access, right off r o a d . L eve l p l o t # 5 7 , with panoramic Seattle City view! $8,000. Located in the desirable Garden of Gethsemane, Sunset Memorial Park. Well maintained lot. Includes transfer fee and e n d ow m e n t c a r e fe e. This section is closed. S p a c e s a r e ava i l a bl e only via pr ivate sale. Please call Darleen, private seller, at 425-2143615. Bellevue.

Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now$19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, S H OW T I M E & C I N E MAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Suppor t Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-8974169

R E F R I G E R ATO R , G E 23.6 cu.ft, frost free. Almond color, excellent cond, $145. Call 206772-6856.

Selling 2 bur ial plots (side by side) in coveted “Chimes Garden� section (Lot 685, Block 56, Spaces 2 3) of Greenwood Memorial Park in Renton, Wa. All plots in this section are sold out, it’s a popular location because of the beautiful sounding chimes, view of Veteran’s Mausoleum directly across the famous Jimi Hendrix Private Estate Mausoleum. $9000 per plot or $15,000 for both plots. Call Jennifer, (425)2389810 Electronics

1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527

stuff

www.soundclassifieds.com Cemetery Plots

Dish Network – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) 800-278-1401 2 CEMETERY PLOTS in the Veteran’s Section Of Washington Memor ial Park, located in SeaTac. Easy road access, near beautiful mausoleum. Purchaser must be, or have a militar y family m e m b e r. Va l u e d a t $3195 each. Reduced price asking $2200 ea. 206-979-6254.

Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & PHONE with FREE HD Equipment and install for under $3 a day! Call Now! 855-4193334 Need extra cash? Place \RXU FODVVLĂ€HG DG WRGD\ Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.SoundClassifieds.com.

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Safety Chains for highrise construction or roofing 2 for $80. Oak Computer stand with a pull out keyboard return $50. Call after noon 425-8859806, 425-260-8535. S E I KO QUA RT Z D I VER’S WATCH - excellent shape, comes with two bands. 200 meter depthe range. Instant day / d a t e H a r d i ex C r y s t a l $150 obo. 253-857-0539 WOODWORKING Tools ReďŹ nished Hand Planes, made in the USA. From the 1950s. Bailey Plane, 14â€? $45. Stanley Plane, 9.5â€?, $32/obo. call 206772-6856.

flea market Flea Market

Mail Order Computer desk $15. nightstand $20. Dresser $10. 2 vacuum cleaner Canada Drug Center is 1 5 e a , E x c e l l e n t ! N o your choice for safe and text/email 253-205-1063. affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian D u a l p u r p o s e H a n d mail order pharmacy will Truck + dolly heavy provide you with savings duty, like new, $50. Call of up to 90% on all your 253-813-5612 medication needs. Call MEN’S SUIT: Beautiful , today 1-800-418-8975, 3 piece Charcoal grey for $10.00 off your first name brand suit. Size p r e s c r i p t i o n a n d f r e e 36-38. Like new, $150. shipping. 425-885-9806. CPAP/BIPAP supplies at Motorcycle Jacket large little or no cost from Alsize excellent shape $50 lied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies deCall 253-813-5612 livered right to your door. PA P E R S H R E D D E R Insurance may cover all Fellowes Power Shredcosts. 800-902-9352 der P11C, brand new in box, never used $65. V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S GAS WEED WACKER - USERS! 50 Pills SPEH o m e L i t e 1 7 � g a s CIAL - $99.00. FREE straight trimmer, brand Shipping! 100% guarannew in box, never used teed. CALL NOW! 844$85. 253-857-0539 586-6399

Appliances

AMANA RANGE Deluxe 30� Glasstop Range self clean, auto clock & timer ExtraLarge oven & storage *UNDER WARRANTY* Over $800. new. Pay off balance of $193 or make payments of $14 per month. Credit Dept.

206-244-6966 KENMORE FREEZER Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft. freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain, interior light

*UNDER WARRANTY* Make $15 monthly payments or pay off balance of $293. Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

KENMORE REPO Heavy duty washer & dryer, deluxe, large cap. w/normal, perm-press & gentle cycles.

* Under Warranty! * Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.

206-244-6966

NEW APPLIANCES UP TO 70% OFF All Manufacturer Small Ding’s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections

Professional Services Legal Services

Home Services Property Maintenance

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s custody, support, proper ty division and bills. BBBmember. (503) 7725295. www.paralegalalt e r n a t i ve s . c o m l e g a lalt@msn.com

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

Home Services General Contractors

“One Call Does It All!� * Windows * Doors * Decks * Fences * Drywall and Repairs * Custom Tile Work

Lic. - Bonded - Insured Steve, 206.427.5949 Need extra cash? Place \RXU FODVVLĂ€HG DG WRGD\ Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.SoundClassifieds.com.

Home Services Handyperson

For Inquiries, Call or Visit

206-244-6966

UNDER WARRANTY!

(253)250-0402

was over $1200 new, now only payoff bal. of $473 or make pmts of only $15 per mo.

blueemerardrealestate.com

Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

* Cleanup * Trim * Weed * Prune * Sod * Seed * Bark * Rockery * Backhoe * Patios 425-226-3911 206-722-2043 Lic# A1SHEGL034JM

ALL ASPECTS LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE Cleanup, Shrub/Tree Pruning & Lawn Care. Pressure Washing. Thatch & Aeration. 20+Years Experience.

Dave 253-653-3983 Painting, Landscaping, Pressure Washing, Remodeling, RooďŹ ng. 20 + Years Experience!

Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.

Custom deluxe 22 cu. ft. side-by-side, ice & water disp., color panels available

A-1 SHEER GARDENING & LANDSCAPING

Emerald City Maintenance

*Under Warranty*

REPO REFRIGERATOR

Home Services Landscape Services

ÔInterior Painting ÔTexture Match ÔWall Repair ÔPressure Washing ÔCeramic Tile ÔCarpentry ÔDrain Cleaning ÔGeneral Handyman

253-335-2869 ask for Charlie! Licensed, Bonded & Insured #CHARLHM026D6

253-221-5952

Home Services Landscape Services

Home Services Plumbing

HI MARK LANDSCAPING & GARDENING

EXPERIENCED PLUMBER

Special Spring Clean-up

New to area. WA License pending. Residential/Comm. New Construction. Repairs. Remodels.

DTree Service DHauling DWeeding DPruning DHedge Trim DFence DConcrete DBark DNew Sod & Seed DAerating & Thatching DRemodeling Kitchen & Bath & Painting

Call Paul 253-766-7428

Senior Discount FREE ESTIMATE

ROOFING & REMODELING

206-387-6100 Lic#HIMARML924JB

Home Services Lawn/Garden Service

PK

LAWN SERVICE

Summer Clean Up Landscape Yard Care Mow • Edge Thatching Trim • Prune Beauty Bark Weed Free Estimates & Senior Discounts

1373578

[16] August 14, 2015

253-631-1199

Home Services RooďŹ ng/Siding

Senior Discounts Free Estimates Expert Work 253-850-5405

American Gen. Contractor Better Business Bureau Lic #AMERIGC923B8

Reach over a million potential customers when you advertise in the Service Directory. Call 800-388-2527 or www.SoundClassifieds.com Home Services Tree/Shrub Care

www.PKLawnService.com

Find your perfect pet LQ WKH &ODVVLĂ€HGV www.SoundClassifieds.com

Lic#EMERACP880EE/Bond/Ins.

LATINO’S LANDSCAPING All yard work, bark, cleanup, tree trim, pressure washing, etc. Free Estimates.

253-468-7279 206-852-3429

CHEAP YARD SERVICE AND A HANDYMAN

Pressure washing gutter cleaning, etc. Fence, deck building Concrete, Painting & Repairs. And all yard services. 206-412-4191 HANDYHY9108

J&J TREE SERVICE Free Estimates

253-854-6049 425-417-2444 Removals, Topping, Pruning Insured and Bonded. www.jandjtopperstreeservice.com Insured. Bonded. Lic#JJTOPJP921JJ.


www.soundclassifieds.com

www.kentreporter.com

August 14, 2015 [17]

Financi n Availab g le!

Miscellaneous

Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for F R E E DV D a n d b r o chure. Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarantee. Offer Expires Soon. Call now 1-888906-1887 GET HELP NOW! One Button Senior Medical A l e r t . Fa l l s , F i r e s & Emergencies happen. 24/7 Protection. Only $14.99/mo. Call NOW 888-772-9801 KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harr is Bed Bug killer C o m p l e t e Tr e a t m e n t Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs-Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odorless, Non-Staining. Effective results begin after spray dries. Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware

For a $300 Off coupon ... Visit us at Facebook/PermaBilt Concrete Included!

16,125

$

213mo.

$

• 18 Sidewall and Trim Colors With Limited Lifetime Warranty (DENIM Series excluded) • Engineered For 85 MPH Wind Exposure B and 25# Snow Load* • 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation • Free In-Home Consultation • Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Plans • Engineering • Permit Service • Erection

1272415

Small Bldg Demolition Bobcat/Backhoe Asphalt Removal

Hundreds of Designs Available!

Lot Clearing Excavation Hauling

10,587

$

11,466

$

lockset,

153mo.

$

RV GARAGE 32’ x 36’ x 12’

26,989

$

DELUXE 2 CAR GARAGE 20’ x 24’ x 8’

24,679

$

2’

355mo.

$

eavelight,

10’

continuous

20,833

$

flow

ridge

vent.

300mo.

$

DELUXE L SHAPE GARAGE 24’ x 48’ x 9’ & 24’ x 24’ x 9’

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/stainless steel lockset & self-closing hinges, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, bird blocking at gables.

32,588

$

35,650

$

469mo.

$

3 STALL BARN 20’ x 48’ x 9’

DAYLIGHT GARAGE & SHOP 24’ x 36’ x 10’

Concrete Included!

poly

22,494

$

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ & (1) 9’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/stainless steel lockset & self-closing hinges, 3’6”x3’9” PermaBilt awning w/enclosed soffit, 5/12 roof pitch, cofer truss, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

*If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

Concrete Removal

Bonded & Insured Lic# GARRICL956CQ

14,765

$

ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

Icy, Debris & Stump Removal

Free Estimates 253-261-0438

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 14’x7’ 10’x9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cam-latch closers, 8’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self- raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges 6’x4’ metal framed cross-hatch sliding door w/cam-latch closers, closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel

Yard and Garden

Blackberry & Brush Removal

MODIFIED GRID BARN 30’ x 36’ x 10’

1 CAR GARAGE 16’ x 20’ x 8’

2 CAR GARAGE & HOBBY SHOP 24’ x 30’ x 8’

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges 4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x9’ (3) 12’x12’ PermaStalls w/aluminum framed sliding doors, aluminum & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 18” eave raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing stall fronts & 2”x6” tongue & groove walls, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/ & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, bird blocking at both gables. hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’ poly eavelight, (2) 12”x12” gable vents. self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

pets/animals

14,298

$

13,271

$

191mo.

$

22,654

$

DELUXE TRUE GAMBREL 30’ x 28’ x 12’

Dogs

20,799

$

299mo.

$

GARAGE & RV CARPORT 24’ x 28’ x 12’

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 10’x10’ aluminum framed cross-hatch split sliding door, 30’x28’ 50# loft w/staircase, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (3) 3’x3’ double glazed cross-hatch vinyl windows w/screens, 18” gable overhangs, (2) 8’ roof prows, 24”x24” cupola w/weathervane, bird blocking at both gables.

45,959

$

42,289

$

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1)

$

15,699

$

$

226mo.

29,393

$

26,721

$

Facebook.com/PermaBilt

800-824-9552

1370586

288mo.

$

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 10’x14’ & (1) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt 10’x11’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/ door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’x3’ double glazed vinyl self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 12”x18” gable vents. window w/screen, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, (2) 12”x12” gable vents.

17,105 609mo. PermaBilt.com

$

19,986

$

HIGH BAY GARAGE 14’ x 30’ x 16’ with (2) 30’ x 12’ x 9’ WINGS

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

2 HAVANESE PUPPIES Curious, sweet, happy, and playful. Full grown between 8 - 10 lbs. Hypo Allergenic option because they have hair not fur and do not shed. Quieter breed. 2 Black females. $995 I will drive to Seattle to deliver. Call Shambra 208-255-9766. www.joyfulhavanese.com AKC German Shepherd Puppies. European blood lines, black and red. Both parents hip and elbows OFA cer tified, first shots, wormed. Females $900ea. Ready n o w. w w w. g e r m a n pups.net (360)457-9515

21,818

$

385mo.

$

Buildings Built: 19,838 Square Feet: 21,150,131 As of 7/11/2015

Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 9/7/15.

Expand your market

advertise in the classifieds today!

1-800-388-2527 SOUNDCLASSIFIEDS.COM Classifieds@soundpublishing.com

SOUND

classifieds


[18] August 14, 2015 Dogs

www.kentreporter.com Dogs

AKC English Lab Pups $550 - $800. Chocolate & black Labs with blocky heads. Great hunters or companions. Playful, loyal & healthy. Family raised & well socialized, OFA’s lineage, first shots, de-wormed and vet checked. Parents on site. 425-422-2428.

Sell it free in the Flea 1-866-825-9001

Dogs

AKC Standard Poodle Puppies. Blacks & Browns, Males & Females. Parents genetically tested, good lines, great temperament. 2 year health guarantee & up to date on shots. www.ourpoeticpoodles.com or call 509-582-6027 Need extra cash? Place \RXU FODVVLÀHG DG WRGD\ Call 1-800-388-2527 or Go online 24 hours a day www.SoundClassifieds.com.

Dogs

GOLDEN DOODLE PUPPIES non-shedding, wo r m e d , s h o t s, G i r l s $700; Boys $600. 2 older Males, $400/ea. Highly intelligent. Wonderful with children; not just a pet, but one of the family. Sire Blonde Standard medium Poodle. Dame; small Golden Retriever. 360-652-7148. CHIHUAHUA Puppies, for pricing. Financing Find your perfect pet call Ava i l a bl e. Adult AdopLQ WKH &ODVVLÀHGV tions Also, $100 Each. www.SoundClassifieds.com Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long GREAT DANE Puppies and Short Haired. Health All males; 9 weeks old, Guaranteed. UTD Vacciborn June 3 rd . Fawns. nations/wormings, litter D a d i s A K C. M o m i s box trained, socialized. p u r e b r e d . S h o t s & Video, pictures, informawor med. $700 each. t i o n / v i r t u a l t o u r, l i v e 253-761-6067. puppy-cams!! www.chi-pup.net References happily supplied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-4595951

Dogs

PUPPY KISSES FOR Sale! Bernese Mountain Dog cross puppies. 4 puppies, 9 weeks old 3 b oy s & 1 g i r l ! S u p e r cute! Great family dogs! Both parents on site. Call Christine for details $600. 360-858-1451. www.facebook.com/ SeedMountainFarm www.facebook.com/SeedMountainFarm

www.soundclassifieds.com General Pets

Micro Mini Pigs For Sale I n R e d m o n d WA . We breed and sell micro mini pigs. Our breeders are top of the line with great temperaments small in size and pass this on to their babies. Please visit our website fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n www.minipigranch.com

Rat Terrier, 2 year old male. Happy, energetic, loyal, easily trainable. H e ’s a g o o d b oy bu t must sacrifice $100. (206)396-4328

garage sales - WA Garage/Moving Sales King County Kent, WA 98031

Use your newspaper for more than hitting flies.

ROTTWEILER AKC Puppies. Great Imported line, large blocky heads, excellent temperament & pedigree, Family raised, gentle parents. $ 1 , 5 0 0 / e a c h . 360.513.8383

Buy and sell with us.

SOUND

classifieds

Soundclassifieds.com call toll free: 1-800-388-2527 email: classifieds@soundpublishing.com

PANTERA Lago Estates A n nu a l C o m mu n i t y & Bake Sale!!! Saturday August 22, 9 AM - 3 PM. Great stuff: huge bargains, bake sale. 11436 SE 208th. Maple Valley form by clicking the MULTI FAMILY SALE! “Place an ad” link at Fri. & Sat. August 14th & www.SoundClassifieds.com 15th. 8am-4pm. Furniture, Garage full of tools, to put an ad in the clothing, shoes and so &ODVVLÀHGV RQOLQH DQG much more! Parkhaven in your local paper. Place, follow signs from 169. YELLOW LAB PUPPIES, family raised, gor- Garage/Moving Sales General geous, born July 20th, parents AKC registered, Kent OFA health clearances, Community Wide Garc h a m p i o n bl o o d l i n e s. age Sale. 10 families Puppies ready 1st week plus. Saturday/ Sunday of September. Worming, 8 / 1 5 - 8 / 1 6 . 9 a m - 5 p m . 1st shots & vet checks. Meadows at Riverview. Come check out puppies Riverview Blvd to 226th and thru the gates. Fur$800. (425)868-7706 niture, bikes, exercise Parent photos at labrooklabs.com/more equipment, toys, games and more. puppies

MINI Australian shepherd Purebred Puppy’s, r a i s e d w i t h f a m i l y, smart, loving. 1st shots, wor med. Many colors. $550 & up. 360-261- Use our handy online ad 24 hours a day 3354

PUG PUPPIES! Thoroughbred, parents on site. 4 male fawns $500 . Gets along well with children, other dogs, and any household pets. It has a high socialization requirement. Pugs are lovable lap dogs who like to stick close to their owner’s side. Call or email (707)5808551, sheldon_tammy @yahoo.com

Estate Sales

Enumclaw 100 Year’s Estate Sale Fri/Sat 8-4 - The same family has lived in this house for over 100 years. If it existed some of it is here. Just a few of the items - Craftsman chairs, coat stand, rocker etc. - 2 Morgan chairs - 4 1940s waiting room c h a i r s - S t i ck l ey a r m chairs - book cases - curio cabinets - radios from nearly ever y decade victrola in good condition - t r e a d l e s ew i n g m a chine - Queen Anne settee with 6 chairs - dark oak bed set - 20 gallon Pacific Stoneware crock - whiskey jugs - milk bottles - Fenton - Limoge lead crystal - 100+ teacup saucer sets - 4 sets d i s h e s - Fr a n c i s c a n , Meito, Haviland many others - vintage kitchen vintage lace, crochet, embroidery and linens waterfall vanity and dresser set - dressers steamer trunks - hifis tur ntables - lots of r e c o r d s 4 5 s, 7 8 s, 3 3 1/3s, lamps, toys, books, vintage clothing, - NO JEWELRY - NO GUNS NO COINS - NO STAMPS - Please bring packing materials - All Sales Final - Cash Only 1407 Porter St.,

Automobiles Others

Yo u c o u l d s ave o ve r $500 off your auto insurance. It only takes a few minutes. Save 10% by adding proper ty to quote. Call Now! 1-888498-5313 Miscellaneous Autos

ABANDONED VEHICLE AUCTION Special Interest Towing 25923 78th Ave S. Kent, WA 98032

Every Tuesday at 11 AM Viewing at 10 AM

(253) 854-7240 Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Cash JUNK CARS & TRUCKS

Free Pick up 253-335-3932 Motorhomes

RENTON E S TAT E S A L E 18615 107th Ave SE, R e n t o n Fr i d ay Au g 14-Sunday Aug 16, 9 am - 5 pm. Furniture, 1998 Thor Pinnacle. 30’ comic books, collectibles class A wide body. Ford 460 chassis, basement model with only 55,000 miles. Sleeps 6, walk around queen, 2 TV’s, 2 A/C, awnings, outside shower. Excellent condition inside & out. $14,000 (425)255-6763

transportation

Tents & Travel Trailers

1999 RV SPACELINER in great cond.! Sleeps 6 +. All the extras! Ready to roll!! Asking $5,000. Auburn. Call 253-631A U T O I N S U R A N C E 7130. S TA R T I N G AT $ 2 5 / Reach thousands MONTH! Call 877-9299397 of readers with just Automobiles Others

www.SoundClassifieds.com find what you need 24 hours a day

one phone call: 800-388-2527

We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations: • King County • Kitsap County • Clallam County • Jefferson County • Okanogan County • Pierce County • Island County • San Juan County • Snohomish County • Whatcom County • Grays Harbor County Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We offer a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.

Accepting resumes at: careers@soundpublishing.com or by mail to: 19426 68th Avenue S, Kent, WA 98032 ATTN: HR Please state which position and geographic area you are applying for.

Sales Positions

Reporters & Editorial

• Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Bellevue - Everett - Kirkland - Whidbey Island

• Regional Publisher - Kirkland

• Social Media & Marketing Communications Contractor - Everett

• Reporter - Bellevue - Everett

• Regional Sales Account Manager - Bellevue

Creative

• Editor - Vashon Island - Friday Harbor

• Creative Artist - Everett (PT) - Coupeville

Transportation • Driver (Class B) - Everett

Material Handling • General Worker - Everett

Featured Position

Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com

REGIONAL PUBLISHER Sound Publishing is seeking a dynamic executive to lead the Bothell/Kenmore, Redmond, and Kirkland Reporter publications in the beautiful northwest. These are award-winning publications, with an office based in Kirkland, WA. The City of Kirkland is located on the shores of Lake Washington just east of Seattle. We want a proven leader with the entrepreneurial skills to build on the solid growth of these publications. Ideally, the Publisher will have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper operations with emphasis on sales, marketing, financial management, and a strong appreciation for quality journalism. Additionally, the candidate should be well-suited to working with community groups and advertisers. As Publisher, you will help develop strategy for the operation as it continues to serve a rapidly expanding and diverse market area. Qualified applicants must be well versed in leading and developing sales teams and culture on all media platforms, have excellent communication skills and be innovative and agile in responding to changing business and audience needs. This position receives a base salary plus bonus; and a benefits package including health insurance, paid time off, and 401K. Qualified applicants should email a cover letter and resume to: careers@soundpublishing.com ATTN: PUB Sound Publishing is the largest provider of community news in the Northwest, with over 40 daily, weekly and monthly publications located throughout the Puget Sound and North Olympic Peninsula regions. EOE Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:

www.soundpublishing.com


www.kentreporter.com

August 14, 2015 [19]

Tell Valley Medical Center:

Invest in

Patient Care Nurses and healthcare workers at Valley Medical Center told the hospital that we need to /58:7@) ;<$6($:(; *7: ;<$*Ćž6, $6( :)':>/<5)6< $6( :)<)6</76 <.$< 2))8 ,:)$< '$:) $< $33)CE &>< the hospital said NO. ) $:) ;8)$2/6, 7><F @):C 8$</)6< ();):@); 9>$3/<C '$:) A/<. ,>$:$6<))( ;<$*Ćž6, ;<$6($:(;F 7 8$</)6< ;.7>3( .$@) to wait for the care they need.

SupportValleyCaregivers.com 1393583


[20] August 14, 2015

www.kentreporter.com

OOPS. When life happens, thankfully the urgent care you and your family need is right here.

With 5 locations in South King County, access is close and convenient, and online wait times allow you to choose the quickest option for your care. Urgent Care Clinics at Renton Landing, North Benson, Newcastle, Covington & Maple Valley Open 7 days a week: Monday through Friday, 8 AM – 8 PM, Saturday & Sunday, 8 AM – 4 PM Can’t wait for an appointment with your primary care provider? Need medical care after hours for a non life-threatening OOPS type of moment? No problem, VMC’s urgent care clinics are here for you.

1375989

Walk-in appointments welcome, or call 425.656.4000 to schedule a reserved appointment. Check our wait times at valleymed.org/wait-times.


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