Hot at the speedway
This week’s watchwords
Preston Peltier fights off numerous challenges to win his third straight Summer Showdown, Page C1
NEW FACES: A new state senator, and likely
a new state representative, will be named this morning at a joint meeting of the King and Snohomish county councils. The decisions will be made in Bothell.
WORLD CUP: In the semifinals, the U.S.
will play England on Tuesday. Sweden and the Netherlands will tangle Wednesday. The final is set for Sunday.
FOURTH OF JULY: Fireworks are banned in a bunch of towns, and may be set off on July 4 only in unincorporated areas of Snohomish County. The Thunder on the Bay show is set for 10 p.m. above Port Gardner. MONDAY, 07.01.2019
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Semi-automatic rifles now have new rules By Zachariah Bryan Herald Writer
EVERETT — As of Monday, getting a semi-automatic rifle has become a little more complicated. That’s because new rules aimed at curbing gun violence are taking effect, as a result of the voterapproved Initiative 1639. Now,
buyers will need to present training certification and go through more rigorous background checks. According to the law, the training must be sponsored by a law enforcement agency, a higher education institution, a nationally recognized organization or a firearms school with certified instructors. The law doesn’t
designate any central agency to oversee firearms training. The classes should cover basic safety, proper handling, storage, suicide prevention and state and federal firearms laws. Buyers need to prove that they completed the courses within five years of buying a semi-automatic rifle. Buyers also will need to
undergo a stricter background check, conducted by local law enforcement agencies. It will follow the same process as concealed pistol licenses, including a search for any outstanding warrants through the Washington State Patrol’s database, as well as mental health checks recorded with the Washington state Health Care
Authority. Also being considered is whether a person has been found not guilty of a crime by reason of insanity. It’s unclear how much more work the added background checks will make for sheriff ’s offices and police departments. Everett Police See RIFLES, Page A5
Holiday travel is hard to predict
‘Edmonds Kind of 4th’ Shubert Ho, 36, started a fundraiser as gratitude for firefighters saving his restaurant: ‘They have big jobs to do. They do good work and keep us safe’
LIZZ GIORDANO STREET SMARTS
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downtown in the fall. The California native decided in high school that he wanted to be a chef instead of an electrical engineer. “The rest is history,” he said He and his wife, Mira, a Hazelwood Elementary teacher, moved from Seattle to Edmonds in 2006 and are involved in community philanthropy and arts. They have two daughters. “Life for us is Edmonds, basically,” Ho said. Still, he was surprised when the Edmonds Chamber of Commerce invited him to lead
early 49 million people are expected to get away this Independence Day — a record-breaking number, according to AAA. But when vacations will start is difficult to predict. With a midweek holiday it’s really hard to tell what people’s travel habits are going to be, said Tom Pearce, a spokesperson for the state Department of Transportation. Expect a lot of people on the roads Wednesday, Pearce said, and travelers to extend their holiday through the weekend. But some people may take the whole week off. WSDOT has a mobile app, which can be found at www. wsdot.wa.gov/Inform/mobile. htm, so drivers can check travel times before heading out. During each of the last two July Fourth holidays and the days before and after, about 1 million trips were taken on Washington State Ferries, according to Justin Fujioka, a spokesperson for WSF. The same is expected this year between June 28 and July 8. He expects the travel rush to have already begun by Monday. The busiest times are forecast for the Fridays and Saturdays before
See 4TH, Page A2
See SMARTS, Page A2
KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALD
Shubert Ho, grand marshal of Thursday’s parade in Edmonds, is selling “Edmonds Kind of 4th” T-shirts, tank tops and hats to raise money for the South County Firefighters Foundation. The project was started by Ho in gratitude to firefighters for saving one of his restaurants from an April fire in a nearby outbuilding. Herald Writer
INSIDE
EDMONDS — He’s an Edmonds kind of guy. After Shubert Ho was chosen grand marshal of the city’s Fourth of July parade he cooked up a grand scheme. The 36-year-old restaurateur had aspirations beyond leading the massive party where some 20,000 line the parade route. Ho wanted spectators to be part of the show and for firefighters to benefit. He launched his own fundraiser with
Business ....................... A8 Classified...................... B6 Comics ......................... B5 Community Extra ......... B1
special “Edmonds Kind of 4th” T-shirts, tank tops and hats to support the nonprofit South County Firefighters Foundation in gratitude for them saving his business in an April fire. “They have big jobs to do. They do good work and keep us safe,” he said. He’s pretty busy himself. Ho is co-owner and executive chef of Feedme Hospitality and Restaurant Group, which includes Main Street restaurants Salt & Iron and Mar-Ket Fishmonger and Eatery, Bar Dojo in the Five Corners neighborhood, Dojo Togo food truck, and Shooby Doo catering. He plans to open a sushi restaurant
Crossword .................... B4 In Uniform .................... B3 Puzzles ......................... B5 Obituaries .................... A6
Opinion ........................ A9 Short Takes ................... B4 Sports ........................... C1 Vital Statistics ..............B2
Schedule time to enjoy it 73/56, C4
VOL. 119, NO. 126 ©2019 THE DAILY HERALD CO.
DAILY
By Andrea Brown
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LOTTERY POWERBALL: Saturday’s drawing was for $137 million. Saturday’s numbers: 13-17-24-59-62, Powerball: 8. The next drawing is Wednesday for $150 million. MEGA MILLIONS: Friday’s drawing was for $71 million. Friday’s numbers: 2-35-49-5363, Mega Ball: 1. The next drawing is Tuesday for $83 million. LOTTO: Saturday’s drawing was for $11.9 million. Saturday’s numbers: 12-31-3642-46-47. The next drawing is Monday for $12 million. HIT 5: Saturday’s drawing was for $100,000. Saturday’s numbers: 2-20-21-24-32. The next drawing is Monday for $100,000. MATCH 4: Sunday’s numbers: 1-5-16-20. DAILY GAME: Sunday’s numbers: 8-3-7. KENO: Sunday’s numbers: 4-7-9-11-2328-40-42-43-45-4647-48-58-59-65-7375-78-80.
CONTACTS Home delivery questions: 425-339-3200 Local news: Eric Stevick, 425339-3446, estevick@heraldnet. com Business news: business@ heraldnet.com Sports: Kevin Brown, 425-339-3474; kbrown@heraldnet.com National and world news, headlines: Mark Carlson, 425-339-3425; mcarlson@heraldnet.com Good Life, Homes, A&E: Sara Bruestle, 425-339-3046, sbruestle@heraldnet.com Photography: Andy Bronson, 425-339-3462; abronson@heraldnet.com www.heraldnet.com: Chuck Taylor, 425-339-3429, ctaylor@heraldnet.com
The Daily Herald
4th
From Page A1
the parade. After all, he’s, well, young. “Usually it’s someone who has lived a little longer,” Ho said. “I never thought I’d be asked.” Greg Urban, president of Edmonds Chamber of Commerce, said Ho was chosen for his contributions. “He has dedicated his expansion of his business efforts in Edmonds,” Urban said. “There have been a number of people who have come up through him and working for him and opened their own businesses.” And, yes, Ho is the first millennial marshal of the annual tradition that the chamber has been putting on since 1907. “His first comment when I offered it to him was, ‘I’m probably going to be the first under40 grand marshal of this parade,’” Urban said Ho accepted without hesitation, and with humility. “I thought, how can I promote the town as well as show my patriotic duties? And I thought of firefighters first because they saved our building in Bar Dojo.” The fire was in an outbuilding on a neighboring property of the strip plaza east of downtown. “There were flames about 50 feet tall,” Ho said. “It could have
Smarts From Page A1
and after Independence Day, along with July 3. To avoid the rush, aim for an early morning or late evening sailing, or leave your car behind. “There’s always space for walkons,” Fujioka said. On Thursday, drivers taking the 11:55 a.m. or 12:40 p.m. boat out of Edmonds could be delayed getting off the ferry in Kingston due to the city’s Fourth of July parade. Waits could be up to an hour, WSF said. The last time the Fourth of July fell on Thursday, the busiest day on the ferries was the Wednesday before, followed by the Saturdays before and after the holiday. The
SUBMITTED PHOTO
From left, Cabot Guidry, firefighter EMT, Justin Pickens, firefighter paramedic, the Capt. Keith Sessions, all of South County’s Edmonds Esperance Fire Station 20, with restaurant owner Shubert Ho.
very well burned down everything around it, the flames were that big. It even engulfed a tree next to it.” Bar Dojo sustained minimal smoke damage. “I talked to a couple firefighters there and I thanked them,” Ho said. South County’s Edmonds Esperance Fire Station 20 was the first
least crowded day was the Sunday following Independence Day — so perhaps extend that holiday to the very end. “Of the holiday weekends this is one of the busiest,” Fujioka said. However, peak ridership on the boats has yet to hit this summer. That usually comes mid-to-late July into early August, he added. The vast majority of travelers — 41.4 million, 4.3 percent more than last year — are expected to be on the road this year. Many might be heading to the Puget Sound with Seattle ranked third in the top 10 destinations based on AAA Travel bookings. “This holiday builds on the strong travel demand seen for Memorial Day, and with schools now out of session across the country, families coast to coast are eager to travel,”
company on scene. Ho recently went to the station with shirts and had them model for the sale. “They are pretty darn comfortable and fashionable, too,” said Justin Pickens, firefighter paramedic at Station 20. The money raised is to help people in the community, not the
Links WSDOT mobile app: www.wsdot. wa.gov/Inform/mobile.htm Best times to travel: www. wsdot.wa.gov/congestion said AAA Travel vice president Paula Twidale, in a press release. The travel agency, working with INRIX, a Kirkland-based traffic analytics firm, predicts the worst time for traveling in the Seattle area will be Thursday between noon and 2 p.m. Nationwide the most congestion is expected Wednesday. About 4 million people are forecast to fly, a 5.3 percent increase over 2018. For those staying close to home,
firefighters. It will go for taxi vouchers, food, medications and other items for people in need. “It is basically for things we encounter on calls that go outside of the scope of emergency response,” Pickens said. “The biggest source of (foundation) funding is voluntary, through our own employees direct payroll deductions.” The backs of the shirts have the logos for the firefighters foundation and Ho’s restaurants. Ho has been in previous parade cars to represent his eateries. For this new gig, he sought the advice of former grand marshal Ron Clyborne. “I said, ‘Hey, you have any tips?’ And he said, ‘Just have fun and smile and wave. That’s it,’” Ho said. Ho will be in a 1967 Thunderbird convertible that has been loaned out for the parade. “That’s a great honor as well,” he said. He hopes a lot of people will show up in “Edmonds Kind of 4th” shirts, which will be sold in front of his Main Street restaurants all week. Items are priced $19 to $29. He’ll have several on hand for himself. “I haven’t decided if I’m wearing a tank top or a T-shirt,” Ho said. “My wife says a T-shirt might be more appropriate for the front of the parade.” Andrea Brown: abrown@heraldnet.com; 425-339-3443. Twitter @ reporterbrown.-
Traffic alerts: www.wsdot.com/ traffic/trafficalerts Airport info and tips: www. portseattle.org/sea-tac Summer driving tips: www. nhtsa.gov/summer-driving-tips Community Transit and Everett Transit will both be running on a Sunday schedule on Thursday. WSDOT is suspending most highway construction projects this week. However, Monday and Tuesday crews will be working on Highway 9, which will close one lane in each direction from 8 p.m. to 5:30 a.m near Lake Stevens. Got a question? Email me at streetsmarts@heraldnet.com or call 425-374-4165. Please include your name and city of residence.
Local News A3
FRONT PORCH A listing of local events and information EVENTS Meet county council candidates Voters have the chance to meet candidates in two Snohomish County Council races from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday in Everett. The Snohomish County League of Women Voters is sponsoring tonight’s forum in the public meeting rooms of the county’s Robert Drewel Building, 3000 Rockefeller Ave. Eight candidates have filed to run for the District 2 seat that Councilman Brian Sullivan will be leaving because of term limits. That seat covers the Everett, Mukilteo and Tulalip areas. County Councilwoman Stephanie Wright faces two opponents as she tries for re-election to District 3, covering the Edmonds, Lynnwood and Woodway areas. The league plans to submit some questions to candidates in advance, but also intends to allow the audience the chance to submit questions. A moderator will ask all questions. More info: Jody Trautwein at jdtrautwein@semo.edu or call 573-579-2311
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Charges: Man threatened his family He showed up at an Everett home with several guns. His parents said he had become mentally unstable. By Zachariah Bryan Herald Writer
EVERETT — A man reportedly said he was going to kill his son when he showed up at his parents’ house in Everett last month and got in a shootout with
his stepfather. He allegedly brought with him a collection of guns, according to charging papers recently filed in Snohomish County Superior Court. In his truck, Everett police reportedly found a 12-gauge shotgun, a 44-caliber revolver and two 22-caliber handguns. They believe he brought a fifth firearm, a 380-caliber handgun, into the home May 28. While the gun wasn’t found, ammunition inside the truck matched casings
at the scene of the shooting, prosecutors wrote. The man, 52, was charged last week in Snohomish County Superior Court with first- and second-degree assault, as well as burglary. His bail was raised to $500,000. Prosecutors wrote that new evidence and witness statements “reveal the defendant’s deep rage with a multitude of individuals to include his mother, stepfather, son, and other individuals.” That,
combined with his willingness to threaten and use deadly force, as well as his apparent mental instability, justified the higher bail to keep him in custody. An Everett District Court judge initially set bail to $250,000. Charging papers said the man entered the home in the 2700 block of Larlin Drive through the back door. He threw a children’s board game against the wall, then See CHARGES, Page A4
SUPER KID
Yankee Doodle Dash On the Fourth of July, the Everett Family YMCA is holding the 20th annual Yankee Doodle Dash. Participants can either walk or run a 10K, 5k or 1-mile course, and will receive a finishers’ commemorative medal and T-Shirt. The event starts at 8 a.m. Registration fees depend on age and which course length is chosen. More info: www. ymca-snoco.org/ yankee-doodle-dash
OPPORTUNITIES Animal shelter training On Saturday the Everett Animal Shelter is holding an orientation at 333 Smith Island Road, Everett. Come learn about the shelter and volunteer opportunities. Volunteers make a commitment of working a two-to-three hour shift once a week for a minimum of three months. More info: www.everettwa. gov/178/Volunteering-Fostering or call 425-257-6000
MEETING Quilts and more Mukilteo Lighthouse Quilters will have a meeting 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. July 16 at Rosehill Community Center, 304 Lincoln Ave. The meeting will focus on the upcoming Mukilteo Garden & Quilt Tour as well as have a charity “sewin.” The tour is 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 20 and 21, and features quilts in gardens. Tickets are $15 advance; $20 day of. Ticket count is limited. More at www. mukilteogardenandquilttour. org More info: MLQuilters@ outlook.com or www.MLQuilters.org
SAVE THE DATE Movies in the park Four movies will be shown at two parks in Snohomish County starting July 11. On that date, “The Goonies” will be screened at Old School Park in Darrington, at 1026 Alvord St. Movie begins at 9:35 p.m. On July 18, at the same park “Ralph Breaks the Internet” will play starting at 9:28 p.m. On July 25 at Willis Tucker Park at 6705 Puget Park Drive, Snohomish, “The Incredibles 2” (showtime at 9:19 p.m.) will be shown. At that same location “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World” (showtime at 9:08 p.m.) will play Aug. 1.
KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALD
Jade Steigerwald, upcoming senior at Mariner High School, will represent her school on the Mukilteo School Board next year. This summer, Steigerwald is interning at Boeing.
Mariner senior to step up for classmates Jade Steigerwald is going to be a student leader on the Mukilteo School Board next year By Stephanie Davey Herald Writer
MUKILTEO — Jade Steigerwald, 16, hopes to become either a doctor or lawyer, but first needs to finish high school. She’s going into her senior year at Mariner High School and is spending the summer as an intern at the Boeing Co. She’s going to be a student director on the Mukilteo School Board next year, and hopes to someday go to the University of Washington. Question: What are some of your favorite classes? Answer: Band, obviously. Then math hasn’t been my favorite class for a long time, but I have an amazing math teacher this year and he makes me look forward to math. I would say the same with English, but those are because they are three fantastic teachers, like the best teachers I’ve ever had.
Q: How long have you been in band? A: For school since fifth grade, but I first picked up my instrument in fourth grade. I play the saxophone. Q: How did you start? A: When I was 4 I heard my grandpa play at my aunt’s wedding, and I was enthralled. I could not get it out of my head, and so I was telling my dad, “I love it, I love it,” and it turns out my dad played the saxophone in high school, which I didn’t even know. So I would beg him all the time to play saxophone for me, and he would every so often dust it off and play. When I was in fourth grade and I knew band was coming up in fifth grade, I just went to my grandpa and I was like, “Hey, I really want to play,” and he gave me a saxophone and I took off, done it ever since. Q: What bands do you play in?
A: We have a field show band, a pep band and a marching band. (She’s in all three.) Basically, everyone is in all of them though, it’s not some special thing. I’m in the highest band, which is wind ensemble, and I used to be in the jazz band, but along with having to drop swim this year I also had to drop jazz band. I’ve actually been working on my jazz technique and hopefully will be in again next year, because my class load is a little bit easier. Q: What are you looking forward to senior year? A: I’m really looking forward to being a senior in band, because we get celebrated a lot and you get flowers at the end of the football games — seems cute, I’m excited. I feel like other than that it’s not much different, still just trying to get A’s and finish high school and do good. I guess it’ll be nice to be the big man on campus.
Q: How did you get involved with the school board? A: When I was in ninth grade my mom was awarded the Lighthouse Award (as staff of the Mukilteo School District), which is a pretty generously big award I would say. So I went to the school board meeting, and there were these kids … and I remember watching and I thought it was so cool, and I told my mom, “Mom, this is so cool I want to do this,” and she said, “Well you can in two years, sweetie,” and I just never forgot that. Q: What do you hope to accomplish on the board? A: I’ve always been told I have a powerful voice and I’m very good at conveying my thoughts, and I think Mariner is sometimes an overlooked school. I really want to be in a position where I can take my voice and my thoughts See SUPER, Page A6
Retiring school spokesman was a steady voice Andy Muntz volunteered on many district committees before he was recruited to work for Mukilteo schools. He is retiring after 20 years with the district. By Eric Stevick Herald Writer
MUKILTEO — He was the dean of school communications officers in Snohomish County. For 20 years, Andy Muntz was a steady voice in the growing Mukilteo School District. During that time, there were unenviable tasks: explaining to reporters a former superintendent’s controversial $340,000 severance agreement, outlining the district’s position during acrimonious teacher contract talks and providing what information he could when the news was bad or sad. When a student was arrested and
eventually convicted for plotting a Columbine-like attack on his high school in 2018, it was up to Muntz to go on camera for a national broadcast. “Every day is an adventure,” he would often say. “You never know what each day will bring.” Friday was his last day in the office. Muntz, 66, begins his retirement today. “Oh, how we will miss him after these 20 years,” said Judy Schwab, who has served on the Mukilteo School Board for even longer. She said Muntz was wellinformed in every aspect of schools from budgets to bargaining to student rights. And he could
be relied on to deliver news of tragedy as he “had to do far too many times,” Schwab said. “His communication skills are superb, navigat- Andy Muntz ing the path between discretion, forthrightness and transparency.” Long before he was the school district spokesman, he was a volunteer and a dad: a Little League coach, a Kamiak High School band booster and field trip chaperone, a leader of levy and bond committees and integral part of district strategic plans and a superintendent search. At the time, he also was manager of customer relations at the Snohomish County PUD, where he’d talk to reporters when the power went out and supervise the utility’s education
program for local students. In 1995, Muntz was given the school district’s Community Leaders Award. Four years later, he was recruited away from the PUD. In retirement, Muntz will have more time for hobbies he’s always enjoyed, including writing about unlimited hydroplane racing. He caught the hydro bug as a child growing up in Tacoma and later became the public relations director for Seafair. Over the years, he has written two books about hydroplane racing and he edits a monthly magazine on the sport. Come fall, he will be back where he started with the district, serving as a volunteer on a committee that could some day recommend a school construction bond proposal. Eric Stevick: 425-339-3446; stevick@heraldnet.com.
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Monday, 07.01.2019
The Daily Herald
Probe expands beyond Boeing 737 Max, includes 787 By Steve Miletic The Seattle Times
Federal prosecutors have subpoenaed records from Boeing relating to the production of the 787 Dreamliner in South Carolina, where there have been allegations of shoddy work, according to two sources familiar with the investigation. The subpoena was issued by the Department of Justice, the sources said. DOJ also is conducting a criminal investigation into the certification and design of the 737 Max after two deadly crashes of that jetliner. The 787 subpoena significantly widens the scope of the DOJ’s scrutiny of safety issues at Boeing. The two sources who revealed the subpoena spoke on condition of anonymity because of the confidential nature of the inquiries. A third source said a handful of subpoenas were issued in early June to individual employees at Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner production plant in North Charleston, South Carolina. DOJ spokesman Peter Carr, in Washington, D.C., declined to comment Friday. A Boeing spokesman said, “We don’t comment on legal matters.” It wasn’t clear if the subpoena served on the company was issued by the same prosecutors overseeing the 737 Max investigation. But the third source, also speaking on condition of anonymity because of the confidentiality of the inquiries, said the subpoenas to employees at the South Carolina plant came from the “same group” of prosecutors involved in the 737 Max investigation, including DOJ trial attorneys Cory Jacobs and Carol Sipperly in the Fraud Section. Boeing divides its Dreamliner production between the South Carolina assembly plant, which rolled out its first plane in 2012, and the sprawling Everett facility where it has built jets for decades. The 737 Max is built in Renton.
MICHEL EULER / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner performs his demonstration flight June 17 at Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, east of Paris, France.
Federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., have been looking into the development of the 737 Max, including a new flight-safety control system known as MCAS, after one crash Oct. 29 off Indonesia and another in Ethiopia on March 10. Those disasters killed 346 people and led to worldwide grounding of the plane. The grand-jury investigation into the Max has been cloaked in secrecy, but some of the Justice Department’s activities have become known as prosecutors issued subpoenas for documents. The Department of Transportation’s Inspector General and the FBI are working with the DOJ. A Seattle Times story in March detailed how Federal Aviation Administration managers pushed its engineers to delegate more of the certification process for the 737 Max to Boeing itself. The Times story also detailed flaws in an original safety analysis that Boeing delivered to the FAA. Allegations relating to the 787
Dreamliner have centered on shoddy work and cutting corners at the company’s South Carolina plant. While there are differences in the 737 and 787 matters, prosecutors are likely looking into whether broad cultural problems run throughout the company, according to the third source and a person in South Carolina, who also spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the matter. That could include pressure to sign off on faulty work to avoid delays in delivering planes to customers, the source said. The New York Times reported in April that the North Charleston plant has been plagued by production issues and weak oversight that threatened to compromise safety. Production ran years behind schedule, due to manufacturing and supplier problems, before the plane entered service in 2011. The newspaper, citing a review of hundreds of pages of internal
emails, corporate documents and federal records, as well as interviews with current and former employees, described a culture that often valued production speed over quality. Confronting manufacturing delays at the plant, Boeing pushed its workforce to quickly turn out Dreamliners, at times ignoring issues raised by employees, the newspaper reported. The Dreamliner, introduced in 2007 and billed as Boeing’s most important new plane in a generation, featured lightweight carbonfiber fuselage and advanced technology. Initially assembled just in Everett, it was popular with airlines, prompting Boeing to break ground on a second Dreamliner plant in 2009 in South Carolina, which has the lowest percentage of union members of any state in the country. Last year, the Everett plant produced 55% of the 145 Dreamliners that Boeing delivered, while the South Carolina factory delivered
Charges From Page A3
allegedly pointed a handgun at his stepfather, and ordered him to get onto the ground. According to the parents, the man said he came because he allegedly wanted to find and kill his son. The man told his parents he was going to kill them,
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performed on his leg. His femur had been shattered, according to court documents, and he was expected to face a lengthy recovery time. The son had driven himself to the same hospital, with two gunshot wounds in his right shoulder and armpit. An officer heard the man telling medical staff that he didn’t do anything wrong, and wondering aloud why he had been shot, prosecutors wrote. The officer said the man appeared to be playing possum, opening his eyes slightly to see where police were and quickly closing them and pretending to be asleep. In the surgery room, the man reportedly claimed that his son stole his identity and that he was shot for “uncovering too much,” according to charging documents. Zachariah Bryan: 425-339-3431; zbryan@ heraldnet.com. Twitter: @ zachariahtb.locally owned and operated
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Prosecutors will be looking for any evidence of the “hallmarks of classic fraud” — misrepresentation to federal regulators and customers, one of the sources said, comparing the investigation with the Justice Department’s probe of Volkswagen that led to criminal charges in an emissions scandal. In 2017, Volkswagen pleaded guilty to three criminal felony counts and agreed to pay a $2.8 billion criminal penalty as a result of the company’s scheme to sell diesel vehicles in the U.S. by cheating on emissions tests mandated by the Environmental Protection Agency and the California Air Resources Board. Boeing has not been charged with any crime related to the 737 crashes or the 787 production.
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too, prosecutors wrote. He appeared to be in the midst of a mental health crisis, his parents told police. He reportedly made claims that didn’t make sense to them. He asked about people they didn’t know. He said they were hiding money from him, that his identity was being stolen, and that his biological mother adopted him and others without saying so. He allegedly kicked his stepfather in the ribs, and pistol-whipped his mother in the face, according to charging papers. “You’re gonna die,” he reportedly told them. The father escaped to the bedroom, where he retrieved a gun. The two exchanged gunfire through the hallway, court papers said. The father said he had fired all five shots as he chased his son out of the house. The father was transported to Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, where surgery was
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the rest. The biggest 787, the -10 model, is assembled only in South Carolina. The entire fleet was grounded in January 2013 after two batteryoverheating incidents: a battery fire on an empty 787 parked at the gate at Boston airport, then a smoldering battery on a flight in Japan that forced an emergency landing. The FAA lifted the grounding in April 2013 after Boeing modified the jets with beefed-up batteries, containment boxes and venting tubes. In the 737 Max investigation, prosecutors appear to be getting information from someone with inside knowledge of the plane’s development based on the questions they are asking, the third source said. That investigation was opened after the first crash, a highly unusual step for prosecutors after one crash, prompting speculation that someone had come forward with information, the source said. Still, prosecutors appear to be trying to figure out whether a crime occurred, given the general scope of their questions, the source said.
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The Daily Herald
Monday, 07.01.2019
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Melted Alaska sea ice alarms coast residents, scientists Associated Press ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Sea ice along northern Alaska disappeared far earlier than normal this spring, alarming coastal residents who rely on wildlife and fish. Ice melted as a result of exceptionally warm ocean temperatures, the Anchorage Daily News reported. The early melting has been “crazy,” said Janet Mitchell, of Kivalina. Hunters from her family in early June traveled more than 50 miles by boat to find bearded seals on sea ice. Bearded seals in the past could be hunted just outside the village but sea ice had receded far to the north. “We didn’t know if we’d have our winter food,” she said. “That was scary.” The hunters ran out of gas after harvesting eight seals and a walrus. They were able to call other residents to deliver fuel, Mitchell said. Rick Thoman, a climatologist with the Alaska Center for Climate Assessment & Policy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, posted on social media last week that the
MARY SAGE / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sandbags are stacked along the seawall in Kivalina, Alaska, in September 2017. Northern Alaska coastal communities and climate scientists say sea ice disappeared far earlier than normal this spring and it’s affecting wildlife. The Anchorage Daily News reported that ice melted because of exceptionally warm ocean temperatures.
northern Bering and southern Chukchi seas are “baking.” Sea surface temperatures last week were as high as 9 degrees above the 1981-2010 average, reaching into the lower 60s, he said, with effects on the climate system,
food web, communities and commerce. Kotzebue and Norton sounds were warmest but the heat extended far out into the ocean. The warmth is weeks ahead of schedule and part of a “positive feedback loop” compounded
by climate change. Rising ocean temperatures have led to less sea ice, which leads to warmer ocean temperatures, he said. The last five years have produced the warmest sea-surface temperatures on record in the region, contributing to record low sea-ice levels. “The waters are warmer than last year at this time, and that was an extremely warm year,” Thoman said. Lisa Sheffield Guy of the Arctic Research Consortium of the United States oversees an online platform that allows Alaska Native walrus hunters to share tips on sea ice, weather and hunting. The need for reporting ended May 31 because coastal sea ice had melted. “When we started in 2010, we would go until the last week of June,” she said. Guy is a seabird biologist who studied birds on St. Lawrence Island south of the Bering Strait. She’s worried that warmer temperatures will make it harder for seabirds to find the tiny seafood they eat, she said. The heat might push their prey deeper or away from the area.
Warmer ocean temperatures come as hunters report large numbers of dead seals off Alaska’s western and northern coasts, Thoman said. An unusually large number of dead gray whales have also been found off Alaska’s southern coasts, where sea surface temperatures are also unusually high, Thoman said. It’s not known whether the warm water has contributed, Thoman said. “Certainly it’s all happening at the same time,” he said. In March, the high temperatures were blamed for a large ice shelf breaking from the coast near Nome in March, dragging tethered crab pots. Nick Treinen lost two crab pots and others lost more. “It was unprecedented for March,” he said. The ice also swept away gold mining equipment, forcing a helicopter rescue for three miners who unsuccessfully tried to save it. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will conduct an unusually extensive fish survey in the Bering Strait this summer, Thoman said. It could provide clues for possible impacts to Bering Sea fisheries, he said.
Racist, anti-gay student flyers challenge Wyoming district By Maed Gruver Associated Press
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The leaflets distributed by students at a junior high school told pre-teens to “Join the KKK” and that “It’s not OK to be gay.” In the capital of the state known for the 1998 murder of gay college student Matthew Shepard, school officials have worked to respond to the spring incident. They’re holding community meetings and plan to hire a “diversity and cultural awareness” counselor while providing additional employee training. “We’ve got a pretty good plan to try to work on all of that,” said Boyd Brown, superintendent of Laramie County School District No. 1. Others aren’t so confident the Cheyenne school district is up to
the challenge. The new approach to student bullying and harassment sounds good, but “only time will tell if it’s upheld,” said parent Abby Kercher. A group of McCormick Junior High School students handed out the flyers and taped them up in hallways March 26, other students and teachers said. Brown has declined to say how many students were involved or whether any were punished, though Kercher said one eighth grader was suspended. The district replaced the school’s principal weeks after the incident. Parents and students report a long history of anti-gay and racist harassment at McCormick that continued through the rest of the school year. Some students kept violating a ban on Confederate flags by displaying the images on
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Deputy Chief John DeRousse said he expects the number of checks to go up, but he doesn’t know yet if the department needs to expand resources to meet the demand. “We know this will have an impact on the department but we only have estimates at this point,” DeRousse wrote in an email. To give adequate time for the background check, buyers will need to wait 10 days until they can take the rifle home, according to the new law. Gun owners also will need to think about how they store their firearms. Police won’t
their computers, said Kercher’s daughter, 14-year-old Ashlynn Kercher. “They just took it down a notch,” Ashlynn said. A summary of a school district investigation confirms bullying and harassment directed at — but also occurring between — minority, LGBTQ and disabled students at McCormick. Yet many details about the bullying and the school’s response remain unknown. School officials refuse to release a full report on the investigation, saying that doing so would violate the Family and Educational Rights Privacy Act. The Associated Press has joined the Wyoming Tribune Eagle newspaper and other news media in a lawsuit seeking the report’s release under Wyoming’s public records laws. The fliers came as not too
be knocking on people’s doors to see if their guns are sporting trigger locks or are locked up in a safe. But a person could be held liable if an unsecured gun was used by someone to injure themselves or others. Other laws have already taken effect. Since the beginning of the year, people under 21 can no longer purchase semi-automatic rifles. Those between 18 and 21 can only possess them when it’s in their home, or on property they own. A $25 fee also may be added to sales of semi-automatic rifles. The state Department of Licensing recently adopted a rule setting the fee at $18. The money will go toward the state’s general fund, and is meant to make up for the costs incurred by the state for implementing the new laws.
surprising to parent Fred Gallop after other McCormick students bullied his 13-year-old daughter with a racial epithet twice during the recent school year. “It was more like, ‘We’re starting to see a trend here,’” Gallop said. Ashlynn Kercher said other students bullied her for having a girlfriend. “If we held hands, a bunch of kids would start making fun of us, pointing and laughing” and using anti-gay slurs, Kercher said. LGBTQ advocates learned about the flyers from substitute teacher and Gay-Straight Alliance co-sponsor Kaycee Cook. According to Cook, McCormick Principal Jeff Conine’s first reaction was to tell her she was no longer welcome to teach at McCormick. Cook said she was reinstated weeks later.
Conine left his job soon after, though district officials have declined to say why. Brown said confidentiality laws prevent him from answering any questions about Cook or Conine. Conine doesn’t have a listed phone number and couldn’t be reached for comment. Meanwhile, school officials traumatized some student Gay-Straight Alliance members by calling them out of class for questioning in front of police officers about the flyers, Kercher said. “They felt really intimidated. Kids were crying,” Abby Kercher said. “These were the victims. You don’t need to have police officers in there. It was just handled wrong.” Brown acknowledged officers “probably shouldn’t have” been present at those meetings.
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and do something good. And I really thought the board of directors was a good place to start. It doesn’t really stop at the board of directors for me. I don’t want to be a politician or anything, but I want to do good for the community. Q: What do you hope to do after high school? A: I have two very different career paths. The first is a pediatric oncologist. … My other idea is (an environmental) lawyer. Q: Where do you want to go to school? A: UW. Q: Anywhere else? A: My dream, dream, dream school is (New York University). Q: Why? A: In ninth grade I was researching a bunch of schools. Back then I was dead-set on being a computer engineer. And NYU has an amazing program, so I was like, I want to go there, New York
sounds fun. And I changed to being an environmental engineer, and I kind of looked around and like, NYU has a great program, I still want to go there. … (Every major I was interested in) was there. I’ve looked at (photos of) the campus. It’s beautiful. It’s just a really prestigious school and in such a cool place. Q: Can you talk about your Boeing internship? A: It’s an eight-week internship, my entire summer. I’m so excited. My best friend did it last year and he talked so highly of it, I couldn’t get him to stop. He loved it, loved it, and actually works at Boeing now, he just got a job there. Q: What accomplishments are you proud of? A: Everything I’ve ever done, even the things I’m like, “Why did you do that, Jade?” I’m proud of accomplishing. Of course there are these big-ticket items … but even the little things get me one step closer to my overall goal. Stephanie Davey: 425-339-3192; sdavey@heraldnet.com; Twitter: @ stephrdavey.-
OBITUARIES AND MEMORIALS
Kenneth “Ken” Arthur Bailey
Jack Vernon Tingley Oct. 16, 1949 - June 24, 2019
Jack was born on October 16, 1949 in Anacortes, WA, t o Ve r n e a n d M a r g a r e t Tingley. Earlier this year he was diagnosed with lung cancer and passed away on June 24, 2019 in the late morning to be relieved from all pain while surrounded by family in his residence in Arlington, WA. He had wor ked in his family business, Precision Tire, for over 30 years with operations in Marysville and later in Mount Vernon, WA. Jack was preceded in death by his parents and youngest brother, Marvin. He is survived by his wife of 31 years, Belie; sons, Mark and Scott; daughter, B r a n d i K r e d i e t ( Way n e ) ; three grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; siblings, Linda Darrah (John) and Mel (Pattie), and many nephews and nieces. Memorial Services will be h e l d a t We l l e r F u n e r a l Home, 327 N MacLeod Ave, Arlington, WA at 1 p.m. on July 2, 2019 with refreshments following.
July 1, 1952 - June 16, 2019 On June 16, 2019 we lost a great man. Ken Bailey, 66, of Ar lington, WA, passed peacefully in his sleep due to a hemorrhagic stroke with his family by his side. He will be remembered by his wife of 48 years, Vickie Bailey; his kids, Ray Bailey, Kev i n B a i l ey a n d J e s s i e Youngquist; grand-kids, Zack Macie, Justin and Conner; his mother; siblings; numerous additional family and friends. There will be a “Potluck” Celebration of Life at Jordan River Trails, 14129 Club Way, Arlington, WA on July 20, 2019 between 1-4 pm.
Leo Thomas Moore Leo Thomas Moore, born October 3, 1923 in New Albin, IA, departed this life on June 20, 2019 in Monroe, WA. He was 95. Leo is survived by his son, Michael Moore of Rio Rancho, NM. He was preceded in death by h i s w i f e , T h e l m a A n n Moore in 2007. A Funeral Mass honoring Leo’s life will be held on Tuesday, July 2, 2019 at 11:00 am at St. Mary of the Valley Catholic Church, 601 W. Columbia St., Monroe. Memorial donations in his name may be made to the St. Vincent de Paul Society.
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Jack E. Davis Jack E. Davis was born November 8, 1930 in W i n c h e s t e r, I N . H e d i e d peacefully on June 12, 2019 suffering the effects of a d v a n c e d A l z h e i m e r ’s Dementia. Jack attended Bowling Green University and Ohio State University graduating in Mechanical Engineering with a minor in Aeronautical Engineering. He ser ved in the U.S. Air Force as a pilot flying both B-25 and B-29s during the Korean War. After his service he went to work for Boeing, star ting in the space program going on to various other projects ending up with the 747 Jumbo Jet at the end of his 33 year career. He is preceded in death by his parents, T.B. and Virginia Davis; brother, Jim; his wife, Phyllis; son, Rick, daughterin-law, Mary and grandson, Christopher. Jack is survived by his son, A n d r ew ; d a u g h t e r, D i a n a (Dolly) Kusulos, son-in-law, Bill Kusulos; grandchildren, Amanda (Davis) and Danny Po r t e r, B e n j a m i n D av i s , Olivia Kusulos and Peter Kusulos; great grand children, Aliah, Brynn, Chloe and Noah Por ter ; sister, J o a n n e , s i s t e r, J e a n n e , brother-in-law, Art; brother, J u n i o r a n d s i s t e r - i n - l aw, Louise. Preceding Jack in death were also second wife, Ramona and third wife, Barbara. Burial was held at Acacia Cemeter y, 14951 Bothell Way NE, Seattle, WA 98155.
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Plans submitted to limit Spokane River pollution By Kip Hall The Spokesman-Review
SPOKANE — Five of the largest entities releasing wastewater into the Spokane River have submitted their plans to limit a cancer-causing chemical from spilling into the waterway. Those plans all argue that a legal limit for polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, established by federal regulators would be too costly to meet in the coming years, potentially causing a need to dig more wells for fresh water in the Spokane aquifer or costing the city of Spokane’s utility customers an additional billion dollars to deal with millions of gallons of treated sewage. The state’s Department of Ecology now will evaluate those applications for what’s known as a variance from the pollution standards, even as it challenges a Trump administration that has signaled its intention to roll back those standards for all of Washington’s waterways. For conservationists in Spokane concerned about healthy fish and safe recreation on the river, that work is a contradiction. “It’s a very confusing situation, with the state saying it’s standing up for the tight water quality standard, while at the same time, creating kind of an off-ramp to ever actually meeting that,” said Jerry White Jr., Spokane’s Riverkeeper. For the state agency, it’s an effort to continue working toward the cleanest Spokane River possible. “This is a tool that makes sense for us to use,” said Colleen Keltz, communications manager for water quality at the Ecology Department. “We’re still working toward that end of 7 parts per quadrillion. That is where we’re going.” Keltz was referring to the 2016 adopted standard for PCBs approved in the last few months of the Obama administration. Following that approval, a group of industry interests petitioned the EPA to reconsider the standard, arguing it went well beyond safe levels initially approved by state regulators at 170 parts per quadrillion. But the EPA issued the more stringent standard specifically for PCBs, known to have flowed through the Spokane River for decades and regulated under federal law since 1976, based on heavy fish consumption rates in an effort to protect native tribes. At the same time, the city of Spokane asked the EPA for advice on seeking a variance from the new rule. That would allow the city, Mayor David Condon has argued in Congress and before federal regulators, to keep its promises to city utility ratepayers on keeping charge increases tied to inflation while it paid off so-called “green bonds” to build new treatment facilities. The federal review of the PCB standard governing pollution permits, and the statelevel review of requests for a reprieve from those standards by Spokane, Liberty Lake, Spokane County, Inland Empire Paper and Kaiser Aluminum, have continued independently of each other. But the EPA’s decision to ease the standards came at roughly the same time applications were due this spring for variances from the five dischargers, creating a sense of distrust in the conservation community about both state and federal regulators’ seriousness in removing the chemical from the river. “Our thinking is, look, when you get into the game of starting to revise or create exceptions and new water quality standards, the conditions in the community are such that you’ll never get back down to those tight standards,” White said. “Frankly, the pressure from everyone from Boeing, to King County, to Spokane, to the pulp and paper industry, as we’ve seen, is enormous.” The variance applications require all those releasing water into the river to make their pitch that the federal standard is unattainable, and to provide their own argument
about what the standard should be and what efforts they’ve already taken and will continue to take to limit PCB runoff. Those applications will be considered separately, said Cheryl Niemi, the Ecology Department’s water quality toxics and rulemaking lead for variances. “What we asked the dischargers to do is to give us the best estimate of the highest attainable condition,” said Niemi, referring to the standard the government or industry will look to meet over the course of the variance, which could be up to 20 years. “We’ll be looking at all that information, and we will be defining what that would be.” The three governments offered specific pollutant levels they believed could be met within a five-year frame. Liberty Lake set its goal at 993 parts per quadrillion, the city of Spokane at 792 and Spokane County at 566. That’s based on the level of treatment plant each government has built over the past several years, with the county opening a new treatment plant in 2011 and the city working on what it calls its next level treatment facility in Riverside State Park scheduled for completion in 2021. Kaiser and Inland Empire Paper pledged to provide a goal as part of the application process. Inland Empire, which is a subsidiary of the Cowles Co. that also publishes The Spokesman-Review, can’t yet provide an estimate because its new treatment technology will be finished this year and the company isn’t sure what the pollution levels will be in its runoff, said Doug Krapas, environmental manager for Inland Empire. “We had some pilot testing that we did, but all pilot testing does is give you a glimpse of what the reality will be,” Krapas said. “We’re really not going to know until it’s running.” Inland Empire says in its application that all PCB contamination from its pipes is generated by its paper recycling process. The chemical is not generated in the paper milling process. And, like Liberty Lake and others, Krapas notes that federal standards allow for PCB levels in inks and dyes that are billions of times greater than the water quality standard of PCB contamination adopted by the federal government. “We’re trying to do the environmentally responsible thing, destroying and removing a high percentage of the PCBs down to what’s allowable by EPA,” Krapas said of the paper recycling efforts at the mill. “We would like to continue that process.” Kaiser, in its application, notes that its water from the river is used as coolant during the smelting process. One of the potential alternatives to avoid river contamination is to install a new groundwater well, because PCB concentrations are far lower, if not nonexistent, in water drawn from the aquifer. But that would require a new well capable of pumping 4,500 gallons per minute from a source that provides drinking water for the entire region. Initial public comment on the proposed variances from the five entities is due to the Ecology Department by Tuesday, with follow-up public meetings scheduled for later this summer, Niemi said. A final rule won’t be approved until fall of next year, the department says. Still, that’s a quick timetable for changes to the region’s water quality standards that affect everyone, most notably tribal populations where native fish is a staple of the diet, White said. His organization, and other conservation groups in town, are urging people concerned about the river to make their voices heard. Future action could wind up in a courtroom, just as the state’s attorney general sued the Trump administration over its actions on water quality standards, White said. “We’ll be educating the public, and we’re certainly looking at other options as well,” White said. “I think everything’s being looked at right now.”
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Seattle hospital closes main operating rooms for air quality SEATTLE — Seattle Children’s Hospital has closed its main operating rooms as it removes mold detected in its facilities months ago. The Seattle Times reported that the hospital detected traces of Aspergillus mold in several operating and equipment storage rooms in May. Seattle Children’s spokeswoman Kathryn Mueller said the hospital initially only shut down four operating rooms but has since closed off the other 10. She said the risk to surgical patients is “very low,” but the hospital has contacted all patients who may have been exposed. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says Aspergillus mold can live
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indoors or outside. Most people breathe it daily without getting sick. But people with weakened immune systems are at a higher risk of developing infections in the lungs or sinuses from the mold.
Woman’s body found outside hotel in Bellevue BELLEVUE — Police say a woman’s body was found outside a Bellevue hotel. The Bellevue Police Department said a maintenance worker found the body near a sliding glass door of an unoccupied room at the Hilton Bellevue Hotel on Sunday. KOMO-TV reported there was no obvious sign of trauma. The woman was in her mid-20s. Police say she was not a guest at the hotel. The Medical Examiner has yet to release the cause of death. From Herald news services
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Grins, historic handshake at DMZ President Donald Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un agree to revive talks on the pariah nation’s nuclear program. By Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire Associated Press
PANMUNJOM, Korea — With wide grins and a historic handshake, President Donald Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un met at the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone on Sunday and agreed to revive talks on the pariah nation’s nuclear program. Trump, pressing his bid for a legacy-defining deal, became the first sitting American leader to step into North Korea. What was intended to be an impromptu exchange of pleasantries turned into a 50-minute meeting, another historic first in the yearlong rapprochement between the two technically warring nations. It marked a return to faceto-face contact between the leaders after talks broke down during a summit in Vietnam in February. Significant doubts remain, though, about the future of the negotiations and the North’s willingness to give up its stockpile of nuclear weapons. The border encounter was a made-for television moment. The men strode toward one another from opposite sides of the Joint Security Area and shook hands over the raised patch of concrete at the Military Demarcation Line as cameras clicked and photographers jostled to capture the scene. After asking if Kim wanted him to cross, Trump took 10 steps into the North with Kim at his side, then escorted Kim back to the South for talks at Freedom House, where
SUSAN WALSH / ASSOCIATED PRESS
President Donald Trump meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Sunday at the border village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarized Zone, South Korea.
they agreed to revive the stalled negotiations. The spectacle marked the latest milestone in two years of rollercoaster diplomacy between the two nations. Personal taunts of “Little Rocket Man” (by Trump) and “mentally deranged U.S. dotard” (by Kim) and threats to destroy one other have given way to on-again, off-again talks, professions of love and flowery letters. “I was proud to step over the line,” Trump told Kim as they met in on the South Korean side of the truce village of Panmunjom. “It is a great day for the world.” Kim hailed the moment, saying of Trump, “I believe this is an expression of his willingness to eliminate all the unfortunate past and open a new future.” Kim added that he was “surprised” when Trump issued an unorthodox meeting invitation by tweet on Saturday. Trump had predicted the two would greet one another for about “two minutes,” but they ended
up spending more than an hour together. The president was joined in the Freedom House conversation with Kim by his daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, both senior White House advisers. Substantive talks between the countries had largely broken down after the last Trump-Kim summit in Hanoi, which ended early when the leaders hit an impasse. The North has balked at Trump’s insistence that it give up its weapons before it sees relief from crushing international sanctions. The U.S. has said the North must submit to “complete, verifiable and irreversible denuclearization” before sanctions are lifted. As he announced the resumptions of talks, Trump told reporters “we’re not looking for speed. We’re looking to get it right.” He added that economic sanctions on the North would remain. But he seemed to move off the administration’s previous rejection of scaling back sanctions in return for piecemeal North Korean
concessions, saying, “At some point during the negotiation things can happen.” Peering into North Korea from atop Observation Post Ouellette, Trump told reporters before he greeted Kim that there had been “tremendous” improvement since his first meeting with the North’s leader in Singapore last year. Trump claimed the situation used to be marked by “tremendous danger” but “after our first summit, all of the danger went away.” But the North has yet to provide an accounting of its nuclear stockpile, let alone begin the process of dismantling its arsenal. The latest meeting, with the U.S. president coming to Kim, represented a striking acknowledgement by Trump of the authoritarian Kim’s legitimacy over a nation with an abysmal human rights record. Trump told reporters he invited the North Korean leader to the United States, and potentially even to the White House. “I would invite him right now,” Trump said, standing next to Kim. Speaking through a translator, Kim responded that it would be an “honor” to invite Trump to the North Korean capital of Pyongyang “at the right time.” Trump became the first sitting U.S. president to meet with the leader of the isolated nation last year when they signed an agreement in Singapore to bring the North toward denuclearization. In the midst of the DMZ gathering, Trump repeatedly complained that he was not receiving more praise for de-escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula through his personal diplomacy with Kim. Critics say Trump had actually inflamed tensions with his threats to rain “fire and fury” on North Korea, before embracing a diplomatic approach.
‘Just like everybody else’ 50 years of LGBTQ pride showcased in protests, parades By Sabrina Caserta and Rebecca Gibian Associated Press
NEW YORK — Exuberant crowds carrying rainbow colors filled New York City streets Sunday for one of the largest pride parades in the history of the gay-rights movement, a dazzling celebration of the 50th anniversary of the infamous police raid on the Stonewall Inn. Marchers and onlookers took over much of midtown Manhattan with a procession that lasted hours and paid tribute to the uprising that began at the tavern when patrons resisted officers on June 28, 1969. The parade in New York and others like it across the nation concluded a month of events marking the anniversary. Eraina Clay, 63, of suburban New Rochelle, came to celebrate a half-century of fighting for equality. “I think that we should be able to say we’ve been here for so long, and so many people are gay that everybody should be able to have the chance to enjoy their lives and be who they are,” Clay said. “I have a family. I raised kids. I’m just like everybody else.” Alyssa Christianson, 29, of New York City, was topless, wearing just sparkly pasties and boy shorts underwear. A Pride flag was tied around her neck like a cape. “I’ve been to the Pride parade before, but this is the first year I kind of wanted to dress up and get into it,” she said. Christianson said she was concerned that the movement could suffer setbacks during the Trump administration, which has moved to revoke newly won health care protections for transgender people, restrict their presence in the military and withdraw federal guidance that trans students should be able to use bathrooms of their choice. “I’m definitely a little scared of how things are going, just the anger and violence that comes out of it and just the tone of conversation
CRAIG RUTTLE / ASSOCIATED PRESS
People line up for the LBGTQ Pride march Sunday in New York.
about it. We’ve come so far, especially in the last few decades, that I don’t want to see that repressed in any way.” In May, Trump tweeted about Pride Month and praised the “outstanding contributions” of LGBT people. But his administration has also aligned with some religious conservatives in arguing that nondiscrimination protections for those same people can infringe on the religious beliefs of others who oppose same-sex marriage and transgender rights. Earlier in the day, a crowd of about 2,000 people gathered outside the Stonewall Inn. At the Queer Liberation March near the bar, some participants said the larger Pride parade had become too commercialized and heavily policed. “What’s important to remember is that this is a protest against the monetization of the Pride parade, against the police brutality of our community, against the poor treatment of sections of our community, of black and brown folk, of immigrants,” said Jake Seller, a 24-year-old Indiana native who now lives in Brooklyn and worked as one of the march’s volunteers. Protesters carried anti-Trump and queer liberation signs, chanting, “Whose streets? Our streets!” “We march for the liberation of our community so they can live
and celebrate their identity. So they can reclaim it. This will always remain a protest, not an advertisement,” Seller said. Other attendees focused on the progress that’s been made within the LGBTQ community over the last few decades. “We’ve come so far in the past 20 years,” said 55-year-old Gary Piper, who came from Kansas to celebrate Pride with his partner. “I remember friends who would be snatched off the streets in Texas for dressing in drag. They’d have to worry about being persecuted for their identity.” “But now we’re so much more accepted. I’m not saying we don’t have ways to go, but let’s celebrate how far we’ve come,” he said. The police presence at the march was heavy, with several officers posted at every corner. Metal barricades were erected along the entire parade route. In Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker chose the parade day to sign an executive order creating a task force to study the rights of transgender students. The task force will look at what schools are doing to promote LGBTQ rights to make sure students have “welcoming” and “inclusive” environments. ºIn Chicago’s parade, the city’s first openly gay mayor, Lori Lightfoot, was one of seven grand marshals. Lightfoot, who took
office in May, walked alongside her wife and wore a “Chicago Proud” T-shirt with rainbow lettering. The couple held hands at times, drawing cheers from onlookers. The procession was cut short as thunderstorms rolled through the area, forcing police to cancel the event about three hours after it began. The larger New York Pride parade had 677 contingents, including community groups, major corporations and cast members from FX’s “Pose.” Organizers expected at least 150,000 people to march, with hundreds of thousands more lining the streets to watch. Other Stonewall commemorations in New York included rallies, parties, film showings and a human rights conference. The celebration coincides with WorldPride, an international LGBTQ event that started in Rome in 2000 and was held in New York this past week. In San Francisco, a contingent of Google employees petitioned the Pride parade’s board of directors to revoke Google’s sponsorship over what they called harassment and hate speech directed at LGBTQ people on YouTube and other Google platforms. San Francisco Pride declined to revoke the sponsorship or remove the company from the parade, but Pride officials said the Google critics could protest the company’s policies as part of the parade’s “resistance contingent.” The San Francisco parade was also stopped for nearly an hour when demonstrators linked arms in the street to protest the police presence. About 40 people halted the parade for just under an hour and two people were arrested, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. Larraine and Peter Browne, who were visiting from Australia, told the San Francisco Chronicle they had never seen anything like the parade’s rainbow-colored display. “Look at the costumes!” 80-yearold Peter Browne said.
ACROSS THE U.S.
Ten dead in plane crash near Dallas DALLAS — Ten people were killed when a small airplane crashed into a hangar as it was taking off from a Dallasarea airport Sunday morning, a spokeswoman for the town of Addison, Texas, said. Mary Rosenbleeth said no one aboard the twin-engine plane survived the crash at the Addison Municipal Airport, about 20 miles north of Dallas. The Beechcraft BE-350 King Air hit an unoccupied hangar soon after 9 a.m., according to the Federal Aviation Administration. The agency said that the blaze destroyed the plane. Video showed black smoke billowing from the building and a gaping hole in the hangar. Officials have not released the identities of the people who died. Rosenbleeth said the Dallas County medical examiner’s office confirmed the fatalities to the town and that authorities are still working to notify the families of the victims.
Facebook to make ads searchable BOSTON — Facebook says it will make advertisements for jobs, loans and credit card offers searchable for all U.S. users following a legal settlement designed to eliminate discrimination on its platform. The plan disclosed in an internal report Sunday voluntarily expands on a commitment the social medial giant made in March when it agreed to make its U.S. housing ads searchable by location and advertiser. Ads were only delivered selectively to Facebook users based on such data as what they earn, their education level and where they shop. The audit’s leader, former American Civil Liberties Union executive Laura Murphy, was hired by Facebook in May 2018 to assess its performance on vital social issues.
AROUND THE WORLD No agreement on candidates for top jobs BRUSSELS — European Union leaders struggled deep into Monday to narrow down a list of candidates for key posts at the helm of the 28-nation bloc amid deep divisions over how to best balance political, geographic and gender considerations. With the selection process bogged down for the second EU summit meeting in a row, the leaders were still considering Dutch socialist Frans Timmermans to replace Christian Democrat JeanClaude Juncker as president of the EU’s powerful executive arm, the European Commission. The move caused deep division within the European People’s Party-Christian Democrat group as it would surrender the key post to the rival Socialists & Democrats bloc despite EPP remaining the biggest group in the EU following last month’s election.
Japan resumes commercial whaling TOKYO — Japan has resumed commercial whaling after 31 years, meeting a long-cherished goal of traditionalists that’s seen as a largely lost cause. Whaling boats embarked Monday on their first commercial hunts since 1988, when Japan switched to so-called research whaling, but will stay within the country’s exclusive economic waters. Japan’s six-month notice to withdraw from the International Whaling Commission took effect Sunday. The Fisheries Agency said the catch quota through the end of this year is set at 227 whales, fewer than the 333 Japan hunted in the Antarctic in recent years. From Herald news services
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The developing Libra world Facebook’s digital currency may flourish in developing nations where many people don’t use traditional banking accounts By Ken Sweet Associated Press
NEW YORK — Europeans and Americans have their Visa and Mastercards. For everyone else, here comes … Libra? Facebook’s new Libra digital currency is aimed at a huge potential market for financial services — the entire developing world, with billions of people in areas such as India and SubSaharan Africa, where financial services are often less sophisticated and many people don’t use traditional banking accounts. Whether or not these billions will want to make the switch is anyone’s guess. The U.S., Europe and most developed economies already have large, efficient payment systems. These allow people to buy and sell goods in real time and send money person-toperson through services like Zelle, PayPal and Venmo. That’s why the companies that joined Facebook’s Libra association, as well as nonprofits involved with similar projects, say Libra’s potential lies elsewhere. In developing countries, many tens of millions still live far from a bank or money transfer center, or currently use a currency prone to inflation or volatility. Libra could address this issue by providing a universal, stable currency that is easily transferrable between persons or businesses without involving setting up an entire payment infrastructure. It also potentially could work at a lower cost. In the last decade, citizens of developing countries have widely adopted cellphones as a way to store money, sending text message-based payments either to businesses or persons. It’s been a broadly heralded development among policymakers and nonprofits focused on poverty because bank accounts are hard to come by or are too expensive. “The entire continent of Africa skipped right over cards and went straight into mobile payments,” said Sanjay Sakhrani, an industry analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, who covers Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and Western Union. But these payment systems are often constrained by the type of cellphone carrier each person is using. It’s not uncommon in places like Africa to carry multiple cellphones in order to have the necessary access to the right money transfer system. Libra could solve this problem by creating a universal currency that can be transferred across multiple cellphone networks and across borders. There’s also the issue of cost, which is cited by the World Bank as being the biggest
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A visitor uses his phone during the Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain. Facebook’s new Libra digital currency is aimed at a huge potential market for financial services, the entire developing world, with billions of people in areas such as India and Sub-Saharan Africa, where financial services are often less sophisticated and many people don’t use traditional banking accounts.
issue with financial systems outside of developed markets. Facebook says Libra would have a near-zero cost attached to it. The Colombian border city of Cucuta is one of the places where Libra could make a difference. Every day, thousands of needy Venezuelans cross into this sweltering town to buy food and medicines that are scarce at home. For many the first stop is Western Union, where they line up for hours to pick up cash sent by relatives living in abroad. The demand for cash remittances is so big in fact that migrants sometimes line up outside Western Unions the night before the branches open, sleeping on the sidewalk to keep their place in the queue. Digital currencies could make it easier to transfer funds to these migrants with no bank accounts, and save them hours of their time. Using them is also safer, says Typson Sanchez, a local software developer, because it prevents robberies. But despites its obvious benefits, merchants in Cucuta have been slow to adopt digital currencies, and only a handful currently accept it. “Merchants worry about the volatility” of currencies like bitcoin, says Sanchez, a software developer and co-founder
of Panda Exchange, a digital payments start up. Other merchants find existing digital wallets difficult to use, and worry about its legality. Sanchez hopes that Facebook’s Libra could help to overcome some of those obstacles. “They already have a very powerful platform with lots of users” Sanchez says. “They will be able to reach everyday people who are not into technology. And that’s something that many companies haven’t been able to do yet.” Vodaphone, the Europe-based cell carrier, has a large presence in Africa and other developing countries and operates its own mobile wallet system known as M-Pesa. Already a dominant carrier in Africa, Vodaphone sees the potential in Libra to enable customers to send money across borders at a much lower cost. There’s a lot of room for improvement. The average fee on a cross-border remittance is around 7%, according to the World Bank, with places in SubSaharan Africa charging as much as 10% to send a money transfer. Companies like Vodaphone and organizations involved with Libra like Mercy Corp and Women’s World Banking said they’ve joined at least in part to make sure they have a “seat at the table” in case Libra does take
off as a payment method. Libra’s real-life use cases are still at least a year off, and much likely longer. Some would argue that Facebook’s Libra is the wrong solution to the issue of accessing financial services in developing countries. In China, the dominant way to pay are WeChat and AliPay, two mobile apps that use messaging to send money either to a business or another person, at extremely low cost. Both apps are used by more than a billion people. “That to me is the simplest solution for developing countries,” said Nicholas Economides, a professor of economics at the Stern School of Business, an expert in electronic commerce and payment systems. “You don’t need to create a whole new currency. You just need the right app.” There’s a “well, why not?” factor into these companies’ involvement. Facebook asked for a minimum $10 million investment in Libra from its for-profit partners. For a company like Visa, which made more than $20 billion in revenue last year, the Libra investment is pocket change. In exchange Visa gets insider access to Libra and its potential technologies, as well as a seat at the table. Visa declined a request for an
interview regarding its involvement in the project, but a spokesman pointed to a blog post one of its executives published Tuesday, in which the company’s interest is described as reflecting “a spirit of openness and curiosity.” Mastercard has been looking into technology that underpins bitcoin and other digital technologies for some time, said Jorn Lambert, executive vice president of digital solutions at Mastercard. The company was attracted to Libra because it’s private, unlike bitcoin which operates on an open network, and it’s backed by reserve currencies. “This is a thing that could provide real consumer benefits, particularly in the developing world,” Lambert said. Women’s World Banking, a nonprofit focused on financial inclusion for women particularly in developing countries, also joined the association. WWB wanted to make sure the issues of women in developing countries — who are often less technologically literate than their male counterparts — were addressed. “Women are more than half of the unbanked population in the world. We wanted to be at the table to address women’s needs,” said Karen Miller, vice president of knowledge and communications.
Most retirees take Social Security too soon, study says By Sarah Skidmore Sell Associated Press
It’s tough to decide when to start taking Social Security benefits and it appears many people are shorting themselves with their choice. A new study finds that only 4% of retirees start claiming their Social Security benefits at the most financially optimal time. And current retirees collectively will lose $3.4 trillion in potential income to fund their retirement because they started drawing benefits at a less than ideal time. That’s roughly $111,000 per household, according to the research from United Income, an online investment management and financial planning firm. Americans typically can start claiming their Social Security benefits as early as age 62 and most adults do so by the time they turn 63. But the size of the monthly benefit grows for each year they wait, maxing out at age 70.
It’s not just a financial equation though. Deciding when to draw benefits depends on a myriad of personal factors such as age, health, other savings, marital status and plans for retirement. But the report’s authors say people aren’t spending enough time sorting through this process and policymakers could do more to encourage it. “If you have the discussions, you can you optimize your decisions,” said Jason Fichtner, former chief economist at the Social Security Administration and one of the report’s authors. “These discussions aren’t necessarily happening for everyone.” Those conversations are important because Americans are increasingly in charge of their own retirement planning and Social Security is a major component. It accounts for about one-third of all income annually received by U.S. retirees. And many Americans are underprepared to supplement
their retirement with their own savings. For about one-third of retirees, Social Security is their primary source of income. “It is not just about increasing your income, it’s about increasing your chances you’ll be able to afford retirement,” said Fichtner. The researchers also estimate that elderly poverty could be cut by 50% if all retirees claimed Social Security at the optimal time. They suggest policymakers make changes to encourage people to claim at a more financially advantageous age, such as improved education for those eligible for Social Security or changing the terminology to indicate that benefits may increase with time. For example, researchers suggest that instead of calling 62 the “early eligibility age” it could be labeled the “minimum benefit age.” While there is no one optimal age, the researchers found that 92 percent of retirees would be better
off waiting to claim Social Security until at least their 65th birthday. The exact timing is tough to pinpoint, even varying within households depending on age and who earned more. That being said, there are people who are better off taking the benefits as soon as they can, such as those in poor health who have less time to enjoy their benefits. For others, waiting for the ideal time to claim would mean losing wealth in their 60s as it would require them to live off savings or investment account withdrawals instead of Social Security benefits. “This shouldn’t be about ‘claim early’ or ‘claim late’, it should be a discussion,” Fichtner said. “If anything, just claim as late as you financially can.” The researchers analyzed the information of more than 2,000 households in a Social Security Administration sponsored survey. Using info respondents provided
about health, longevity, finances and other details, they used forecasting technology to simulate how much their households would be worth throughout retirement based on various timing options. The study did not assume any additional job income in calculating the optimal age. Why don’t people wait to claim later? Teresa Ghilarducci, a professor of economics at the New school and retirement expert, unaffiliated with the study, says that there are many reasons. That includes personal dynamics within a marriage, financial advisers who would lose out if you draw from investments early, a desire to boost income as many older Americans work low wage jobs and difficulty in estimating how long you have to live. While not a complete solution for insufficient savings, the study’s authors say that optimizing Social Security would improve the lives of millions of retirees.
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Editorial Board Josh O’Connor, Publisher Jon Bauer, Editorial Page Editor
MONDAY, 07.01.2019
Debates? Why, yes, I’ll have another There’s something refreshing in intelligent and intelligible responses regarding the issues.
T
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hew; they’re are over. The Dem debates are: D.O.N.E . Uh, OK, let’s be accurate, round one is done. Well, yeah, OK, there’s gonna be a bit more candidate chit chat between now and the July 2020 Democratic convention. But this one is done. Ah, what’s that? Ya say there’s gonna be eleven more debates? Eleven? Like 11, XI, 12-1, 6+5, 11 more? Nearly one-a-month from July to April 2020? You’re kidding. Right? No? Really? Almost a dozen more? A near-dozen more times to hear the candidates talk about themselves and how they would lead the country? To hear them talk about how they’ll beat Donald Trump? To hear them talk about Russia and election meddling, China and tariffs, health care, abortion, the opioid crisis, Iran, the War Powers Act, gerrymandering, corporate accountability, disability rights, ending Washington (DC) corruption, the Green New Deal and global warming, gun violence prevention, housing, immigration, infrastructure, jobs, wages and the economy, K-12 education and teacher pay, student loans and college affordability, LGBTQ-equality, legalizing marijuana, Medicare and Medicaid, national security, nuclear non-proliferation, pay equity, prescription drug costs, for-profit prisons, Puerto Rico recovery, racial justice, reproductive rights, Social Security, taxing the wealthy, universal child care, veterans and military families, voting rights, and Wall Street reform. For starters. Good. I mean, G.O.O.D! Because when election time rolls around in November 2020 we gotta know where the candidates stand on these issues. There can’t be any doubt, this time, about how she or he is going to govern or how they intend to rebuild America’s standing in the world and their
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ■■ MIGRANTS SEEKING ASYLYM
Demand an end to these abuses Like many Americans across the country, I am reading the daily news with feelings of abject horror surrounding the current status of migrant asylum seekers who are being detained by our government, particularly the children. As someone who is currently nearing the completion of my degree in emergency management and has become relatively well versed in shelter care, I am mortified by the reports of mistreatment and the ongoing failure to meet even the most basic needs that sustain comfort, safety and sanitation. The federal government, long ago, established planning materials and blueprints for how to conduct mass care of vulnerable populations, who include infants, children, the disabled, elderly and non-English speakers. Based on the reports by the legal representatives observing current conditions in these detention facilities, our government’s for-profit contractors are miserably failing to meet the standard protocols for human care. Our nation should be rising in unison to demand transparency and an end to these abuses; to demand unscheduled access and routine inspections by an established, non-partisan committee of professionals who are experts in emergency
What happens if U.S. becomes 1 big sanctuary?
TOM BURKE commitment to the rule of law. With a total of twelve debates, plus countless campaign stops, town halls, coffee klatches; then the primaries; then the convention, the Democratic choice for president won’t be a coronation, like the last time; or a con man’s con job, like the last time. People will have specific, hard facts on the Democratic side (and two years of lies, chaos, and self-interest on the Republican side, as all we hear from Trump is, “No collusion. No obstruction,” or, “She wasn’t my type.”) as they make their choice for president. I hosted a debate party Wednesday. While I wanted to hear what the candidates had to say, I also wanted to hear what folks thought about what they said and how they said it. And I did. I heard how people thought Beto was weak, unsure, and spoke in un-impressive generalities. How Castro surprised everyone.
mass care in order to evaluate conditions for all detainees at any site. The American people are paying for this travesty, we at the very least deserve to know what is going on behind closed doors and windows. There is no better way to end my correspondence than with the following words by Holocaust survivor, Eli Wiesel, “I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.” Karen Hunter Lake Stevens ■■ IRAN, U.S. CONFLICT
Would what Churchill say? When is this idiocy ever going to end. The U.S. has been meddling in the internal affairs of Iran since the 1950s, but judging from the current rhetoric the U.S. seems to be at it again. It is ironic that the U.S. seems so concerned about the possibility of Iran gaining nuclear weapons when our friend Israel is sitting on a pile of nuclear and chemical weapons. Finally in 2015 the U.S., China, Russia and members of the European Union met with the Iranians which culminated in an agreement, which for all intents and purposes was working until President Trump unilaterally withdrew from the agreement. Now it seems we are headed toward another conflict in the Middle East.
And Booker surprised everyone. And how Warren surprised no one and was the clear winner of the night. (But, they added, she needs to prove she can go toe-to-toe with Der Furor.) On Thursday night it was just my wife and me. And like everyone, we caught our breath as Kamala Harris nailed Joe Biden. And felt bad for ole Uncle Joe when it was clear he’d lost a step or ten over the years and finally said, “My time is up, I’m sorry.” Mayor Pete didn’t loose any ground and Gillibrand came off shrill. The others did OK, but it was Harris’s night. Now juxtapose these two nights against Donald Trump and the G20 in Japan, who, before he left, made clear he doesn’t think we should know what he says to our greatest enemy, Vladimir Putin, because, “What I say to him is none of your business.” (None of our business?) Now based on what I saw Wednesday and Thursday, I’m looking forward to the Trump/ UnTrump debates. I want to see Mayor Pete make him look small and old and a coward. I want to see Kamala Harris publicly prosecute his crimes, incompetence and racism.
Have your say To submit a letter to the editor, please include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) We reserve the right to edit letters, but if you keep yours to 250 words or fewer, we won’t edit letters for length. Send your letter to: E-mail: letters@heraldnet.com Mail: Letters section The Daily Herald P.O. Box 930 Everett, WA 98206
Maybe we should cool down and take a page out of the Iranians’ behavior after an American guided missile cruiser, the USS Vincennes, shot down an Iranian airliner killing all 290 passengers on board in 1988. The Iranians filed suit in the International Court of Justice, a suit they eventually won. To quote Winston Churchill “It is always better to jaw jaw than war war, “and on a more humorous note “The Americans usually do the right thing after they have tried every thing else.” Alan L Ross Everett ■■ CELLPHONES IN CLASSROOM
Students don’t need distraction I am writing in regard to The Herald article about Everett
I want to see Elizabeth Warren showcase his utter ignorance when it comes to policy and his utter failure to keep his promises to working America. I want to see Donald John Trump try to bully and bulldoze and intimidate someone who simply won’t be bullied, bulldozed or intimidated. I want to see more Trump endorsements like Vladimir’s, who said, “But do you know what I think? (Not really) I think that he is a talented person. He knows very well what his voters expect from him.” (Who’s next to endorse: Erdogan of Turkey? Duterte from the Philippines? Kim Jung Un, who sends him “beautiful” letters while building nukes and missiles?) And I want to see more truth ala Jimmy Carter who said, “There’s no doubt that the Russians did interfere in the election …. Trump didn’t actually win the election in 2016. He lost the election and he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf.” But since Trump laughingly told Putin, “Don’t mess with our elections,” and Vlad smilingly replied, “Of course I won’t,” we don’t have to worry about that any more. Do we. Tom Burke’s email address is t.burke.column@gmail.com.
Public Schools changing rules for cellphone use (“Everett schools clamping down on cellphone use in classroom,” June 23). Of course cellphones should not be used in school. Up until 20 years ago there were no phones except landlines and pay phones, and the world didn’t come to an end. Smart phones are not a necessity to survive. How is a teacher supposed to teach if kids are busy messing with their phones? Personally, I think the world would be a much nicer place if people choose to put their phone away and live life looking up instead of looking down at their phones all day long. Shirley Mann Lake Stevens ■■ SEAWOLVES RUGBY
Why no coverage in The Herald? I read the sports section four times today thinking I must have missed the article, but it turns out The Herald decided to not even mention the epic rugby game that was played this past Sunday. How can the Seattle Seawolves, a local professional major league rugby team, win a championship and The Herald not even mention it!? You are missing out on covering one of the most exciting professional sports team in the Seattle area and you should be embarrassed at the omission. Lindsay Marti Edmonds
he star of Thursday night’s Democratic presidential primary debate, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-California, was attorney general of California and, before that, district attorney for San Francisco. This put her in the vanguard of the Golden State’s sanctuary state and sanctuary city policies. Now, it seems, all the 2020 Democratic hopefuls — and Harris in particular — are trying to turn the United States into one big sanctuary country where crossing the DEBRA J. SAUNDERS border illegally is analogous to jaywalking. That’s why all 10 Democrats raised their hands Thursday night when asked if they wanted to make crossing the border without documentation a civil rather than criminal offense. They all also raised their hands when asked if they wanted to provide health care to unauthorized immigrants. During the debate, Harris framed the practice of shielding undocumented immigrants from federal immigration enforcement this way: “I know it as a prosecutor. I want a rape victim to be able to run in the middle of, to run in the middle of the street and wave down a police officer and report the crime against her.” It was a variation of an argument crafted earlier by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who as mayor of San Francisco pushed through the city’s first sanctuary policy in 1985. It applied to undocumented migrants from El Salvador and Guatemala. The law, expanded to all undocumented immigrants by city voters in 1989, would make San Francisco safer, she argued, because undocumented residents would not be afraid to report crimes to city police. But as the policy expanded, it didn’t just protect otherwise law-abiding immigrants — hard-working adults who came here to work and raise a family. It also has shielded gang members and criminals who harm women and children, as Harris well knows. San Francisco’s 2013 Due Process for All ordinance prohibited local law enforcement from holding unauthorized immigrants for federal immigration officials unless the inmate had been convicted of a violent felony in the past seven years. What could go wrong? Many a career car thief or repeat drug offender has enjoyed the same protection as the rape victim Harris said she wanted to protect. The most famous beneficiary was Jose Ines Garcia Zarate. After serving time for a seventh felony drug conviction, the feds sent Garcia Zarate to San Francisco on a 20-year-old marijuana charge. The district attorney did not pursue the moldy case, and so Garcia Zarate walked out on the street, where he found a gun used to kill Kate Steinle on a summer evening in 2015. Please tell me: What country passes laws to protect career criminals and repeat offenders from being deported? In his first term, President Obama had a smarter take when he directed federal officials to target unauthorized immigrants who were “violent offenders and people convicted of crimes.” He expanded the Secure Communities program, piloted by President George W. Bush, which cross-checked fingerprints taken at local jails with immigration databases. It was a smart plan. In fiscal 2013, The Los Angeles Times reported, 82 precent of deported individuals had been convicted of a crime. During the debate, however, Harris railed against Obama’s use of Secure Communities because, well, “The policy was to allow deportation of people who by ICE’s own definition were non-criminals.” (Actually, that’s also the definition of Thursday night’s debate team, as they all said they’d like to make unauthorized border crossing a civil offense instead of a crime.) Mark Krikorian of the pro-enforcement Center for Immigration Studies observed that Harris referred to rape as a real crime: “That’s a standard sanctuary city line,” says Krikorian. “At this point, it’s now Democratic Party orthodoxy that only people that have broken ‘real’ laws should be subject to deportation.” And those crimes would have to be tried and convicted and have been committed recently to warrant removal. The “tool in the toolbox” of being able to deport an undesirable newcomer who’s not supposed to be in the United States in the first place, Krikorian warned, would disappear. What would happen if Democrats were to end criminal penalties for crossing the border? Does anyone think there would be fewer unauthorized immigrants or more? And would they be more law-abiding otherwise or less? Email Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders @reviewjournal.com.
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$
Community Extra SECTION B
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THE DAILY HERALD
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WWW.HERALDNET.COM/LOCAL
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MONDAY, 07.01.2019
YOUR PHOTOS
Balloons over the Pilchuck Andy O’Shea, who lives in Snohomish with his wife, Michelle, and kids Grady, Kennedy and Riley, took this photo. “Our house is on hakf-acre on the Pilchuck River, and we regularly see balloons floating overhead,” he says. “This was a beautiful morning, we heard them first, then watched them float over us, Just beautiful.” This is a weekly showcase of our favorite photos from the reader galleries at HeraldNet.com. See more photos or share your own at www.heraldnet.com/yourphotos. Follow us on Instagram @everettherald
WAY TO GO LOCAL PEOPLE DOING GOOD THINGS IN THE COMMUNITY
PROVIDENCE GENERAL CHILDREN’S ASSOCIATION
Eleven $2,500 scholarships were distributed to students who volunteered at least 75 hours with Providence.
Providence gifts 11 with scholarships for their volunteerism At the annual meeting of the Providence General Children’s Association, eleven local students recieved $2,500 scholarships for their volunteerism. All recipients worked at least 75 hours at Providence Regional or at Camp Prov, a day camp for children with
disabilities. Scholarships awarded on May 30 at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett are funded by various Guild activities and sales at our incredible gift shops, The Boutique at the Pacific Pavilion and the Twig Shop on the Colby Campus. Winners include, Erin Potocsnak of Snohomish High School, Dorothy Bogdanovich Scholarship recipient, Atala Chavez of Kamiak High School, Julia Williams of Snohomish High School, Taylor Bair of Appalachian State University, Jessica LopezRamirez of Mariner High School, Angie Wang of Kamiak High School, Alice Cheng of Kamiak High School, Mackenzie Allinson of Lake Stevens High School, Camryn Kloes of Cascade High School, Megan Hawley of Lake Stevens High School and Anna Munoz of Lake Stevens High School. Jean Hardy was honored with the Carol Stuchell Award as an
INSIDE: Vitals, B2
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indispensable volunteer in the Twig Shop. Hardy shares the award with Twig Shop Managers Kathy Duffy and Linda Jubie.
Monroe Miracle League celebrates landmarks A baseball league for more than 50 individuals with disabilities of all ages, The Miracle League in Monroe, marked 20 years earlier this month. The league also recognized the 10 year anniversry of its playing field, Rotary Field. Knights of Columbus honor 3 The Knights of Columbus Council 763 awarded Quinn Wieber from SnoISLE Tech Skills Center, Benen Dufresne from Everett High School and Emilie Bader from Archbishop Murphy High School with $2,000 college scholarships. Religious education
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and participation, as well as community service and leadership skills were consider along with academics as the council chooses from the sons and daughters who applied and are graduating from high school. Three students winning scholarships from the Knights was an anomaly, but with three exceptional students, the group decided to honor all of them.
Everett adviser most outstanding of the year Kristen Harvey, advisor of the Health Occupations Students of America club at Everett High School, was awarded the Washington HOSA Outstanding Advisor of the Year Award for 2018-19. “I have been so blessed to work with this amazing organization and all of the amazing people
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that make it all happen,” Harvey said. “I am so excited to continue our work together.” She recieved the honor in Orlando, Florida, at the international leadership conference. The club, endorsed by the U.S. Department of Education and the Health Science Technology Education Division of Association for Career and Technical Education, is a national career and technical student organization.
Everett Public Schools Foundation awarded $4k donation
Ocean Research College Academy graduates 51
As part of Safeco Insurance’s nationwide Change Agent program recognizing volunteerism, McClain Insurance Services has been awarded $2,000 to donate
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to the Everett Public Schools Foundation. McClain Insurance Services was named a 2019 Change Agent for their participation in the Everett Public Schools Foundation’s Stuff the Bus School Supply Drive. Every August, McClain’s team participates in the Supply Drive and will match the $2,000 donation to the fundraiser. This will help collect new backpacks and school supplies for lowincome students in Everett, a school district with 38.5% low-income students.
In a ceremony on June 20, the 14th graduating class of Everett Community College’s Ocean Reasearch College See WAY TO GO, Page B2
Comics, B5
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Monday, 07.01.2019
The Daily Herald
VITAL STATISTICS MARRIAGE LICENSES Baker, Logan Thomas and Hagen, Amanda Nicole Crisman, Elizabeth Noreen and Robinson, Jared Brandon Robbin, Madison Anne and Walsh, Elliott Barcoe Malik Lovins, Malerie Rae and Lyon, Joseph Tyler Joynes, Jacob Allen and SpringerSimon, Dharyanne Kierra Iqbal, Rabia and Qamar, Hashir Ahmed Forgey, Amber Lyne and Nollette, Christopher John Paulis, Akim and Saimon, Jennifer Alkire, Angelique Marie and Parker, Derek Blais St,.Vincent Richelle Lyn and Gilpin, Derek Richard Robinson, Jeremiah Christopher and Foss, Jacquelyn Leigh Kendrick, Beverly Lorraine and Morgensen, Jon-Paul, Blackwell, Amanda Keeley and Miller, Ryan Robin Bahr, Ryan Michael and Cann, Jessie Marie Perkins, Karl Brent and Gulmatico, Calonge Joy Ester Bradley, James Stephen Iv and Bova, Crystal Ann Forgues, Matthew Wade and Wild, Mialie Jean Karvonen, Bridget Louise and Skoog, Jacob Thomas Bender, Andrew Ryan and Castleberry, Sophie Janelle Lane, Dekker Ryan and Keyes, Summer Kincaid Doyle, Randall Harold and Rafferty, Elizabeth Lawrence Cabales, Kari Lynn and Ibanez, Arlie Hipolito De, Oliveira Ponce Douglas Hammond and Rojas, Paula Katherine Valdez, Zehn Cinnamon and Zebell, Daniel Lee Bradley-Foxe, Bryhanna Christine and Upthegrove, Brandon Lee Trott, Steven William and Rounds, Lavonne Lee Nam, Gloria Youngju and Park, Sung Geun Bennett, David Patrick and Goeman, Beverly Ann Mathew, Philip Kuttikkattu and Mikkelson, Erika May Vu, Duc Huy Le and Pham, Trang Thuy Xuan Hines, Mercedes Haley and Sagen, Scott Edward Daly, Jason William and Hatfield, Britney Jane Robins, Sarah Christine and Singer, Austin James Grubb, Brianna Marie and Moldovan, Tiss Storey, Mackenzie Faull and Palacios, George Michael Rynerson-Oswald, Claire Elizabeth and Collier, Michael Todd Thompson, Jennifer Yeend and Sturgess, Nathan David Pratt, Angelina Denise and Tran, Jonah Lewis Farfan, Amores Victor Manuel and Villarroel, Andrea Beatriz Austell, Jeffrey Michael and Newberg, Samantha Louise Olsen, Melissa Jo and Guthrie, Tanor David Harrison, Michael and Avila, Jade Jallow, Yaya and Kimani, Frolence
Nyamunya Gutierrez, Morales Ana Lucrecia and Santos, Cristian Orlando Pholsena, Thepthara Nui and Davis, Brian Peter Plamadeala, Tatiana and Lozinschi, Dorin Bateyko, Sergiy Viktorovich and Hamza, Sofiya Yosypovich Chavez, Joel and Villabos, Erika Adilene Jensen, Sean David and Spear, Kathryn Marie Bello, Santos Alejandro and Martinez, Orea Susana Juana Axtman, Meagan Ann and Massena, Carson Lee St,.Marie Charlyn Jene and Startzman, Michael Ryan Dujardin, Tristan James Leigh and White, Emily Matavai Rivera, De Jesus Marion and Torres, Toribio Elmer Rodrigo Kim, Mintae and Kim, Keong Jin O,’keefe Courtney Lynn and Wise, Benjamin Tanner Finley, Danielle Dean and Pomeroy, Lucas Allan Copeland, Justin Mackey and Johnson, Leah Ashley Mccarty, Bret Cooper and Frase, Josette Wilson Foster, Rick Ervin and Foster, Alora Spring Bach, Earl Eaton III and Hoffman, Maggie Lynne Perez, Sophia Cathryne and Smith, Ronald Alan Mykhalyk, Roman Adamovich and Greben, Oksana Emanvilovna Lokey, Chelsea Rose and Furr, Caleb Julius Chavez, David Amador and Aust, Aubrey Lynn Dearborn, Cory Allan and Ebinger, Srisa Anela Makamae Kauai Skarshevskyi, SergII and Sledge, Tramoya Joi Montanari, Cari Cherlyn and Jacobsen, Lance David Hoye, Dillon Jeffery and Sandoval, Courtney Lynn Boyd, Meredyth Marie and Sealock, Trevor Charles Smith, Kirsten Elizabeth and Bott, Klyntin Arthur Kim, Sabrina Bowha and Han, Daniel Min Flowers, Haley Marie and Del, Valle-Contreras, Victor Javier Al, Mahna Zaid Musafer and Albahathly, Raheel Dhia Warner, Susan Kay and Keele, Amber Elizabeth Keith, Richard Leroy and White, Kimberly Kay Davies, Lachlan James and Carbis, Rachael Louise Cham, Mamalieu and Jobe, Mam Asta Rotter, Hailey Lynn and Gray, Kyle Christopher Thorsen, Robert Gregory and Fenstermacher, Kristen Carol Torres, Orozco Rafael and Uribe, Enedina Barrios, Solano Adrian and Rybarski, Angela Ruth Wyatt, Ryley Keith and Mccoy, Nikita Marie Marroquin, Karla Diane and Stave, Erik Josef Benham, Christopher Robert and Newton, Rachael Lynne
Way To Go From Page B1
Academy (ORCA) saw 51 students crossed the stage with both an associate degree and a high school diploma. In this one-of-akind program, students engaged with the local marine environment
as the catalyst for their education. “This cohort of students maximized their research opportunities as the first group of students to receive direct support from the National Science Foundation,”said Ardi
Hassan, Aitezaz and De-Leon, Christina Ann Giles, Kristi Sue and Engle, Daniel Paul Schneeman, Andrew Wesley and Mercer, Emily Marie George, Kimberly Louise and Thompson, James Kinberg Harris, Julie Ann and Matsushima, Darryn Hiroshi Niebuhr, Sergei George and Halverson, Riel Marie Garmon, Ashley Elizabeth and Borchardt, Zachary Scott Aguero, Rochelle and Burns, Nikolaus Robert Ahmed, Mohamed Samir and Kaifa, Liza Anis Skotdal, Paula Karla Aguanta and Delegencia, Ernesto Correos Cook, Matney Delmare and Snelson, Gregory Vance II Thomas, Matthew Kent and Valdez, Tina Darlene Schmidt, Sherry Lee and Gardner, Elvis James Sorrels, Adam David and Cochran, Larissa Marie Lowe, Abigail Raphae and Hare, Taylor James Harvey, Stuart Arthur Conway and Tiedeman, Michelle Louise Hakos, Cynthia Jan and Feijoo, Gutama Carlos Armijos Galen, Stanley Darrell Jr and Murray, Amy Jo Volk, Timothy David and Elrod, Shayli Kristine Enbusk, Sean Gregory and VanLien, Tamara Jeanene Peaker, Chana Rae and Hutsell, Timothy John Gray, Zachary Hampton and Durand, Danielle Taylor Phillips, Carmen Louise and Johnson, Jeffrey Allan Kim, Seounghyun and Downie, Sarah Helen Proctor, Anne Katherine and Verba, Aaron Joseph Eaton, Nathan Russell and Evans, Desiree Erin Marie Assila, Dodji Agbemebia and Yoplo, Wouady Benedicte Smith, Michael Fredrik and Ayres, Karen Ann Pavlyshyn, Olga Orestivna and Daniel, Alain Philip Surface, Alexandria Irene and Giddens, Christopher Michael Anthony Laberta, Steven Michael and Wayke, Christina Diane Waite, Hanna Elizabeth and Somers, Samuel Patrick Neri, Blanco Juan Jose and Galindo, Lopez Maira Jazmin Bourgette, Michael James Ted and Donovan, Johanna Christine Gallardo, Vega Carlos and Gonzalez, Mary Cruz Bennett, Wade Morgan and Rich, Jamie Lee Mcginness, Jacqueline Martine and Glaser, Justin Robert Diaz, Rodriguez Rosa Aide and Calvin, Lucas Jeffrey Anderson, Andrew Wade and Peterson, Shawntel Renee Branca, Adrienne Michelle and Huard, James Michael Saban, Nicolette Elaine and Olson, Kyle Richard Kimura, Randon Choji and La-
Kveven, executive director and founder of the program. In addition to two years of college credits, ORCA graduates have earned more than $50,000 in scholarships to universities across the nation. Students attending ORCA come from the following Snohomish County high schools: Arlington, Cascade,
purga, Flormina Ingasalo Holt, Carissa Noel and Fenton, Kevin Thomas Rowe, Kelsey Leanne and Cathey, Daniel Bruce Martin, Tara Anne and Trickle, Christopher Michael Kedin, Anton and Gourova, Natalia Richardson, Matthew Thomas and Tabb, Catherine Mary
DISSOLUTIONS Amanda Alisa Green vs. Terry Joe Pyatt Jennifer Ellen Darby vs. Benjamin Lance Van Gerpen Samuel Patrick Sailor vs. Shala M Sailor Gina Josephine Blondin Nka Pioli vs. Mark Anthony Blondin Timothy Lee Baumgardner and Tina Marie Baumgardner Ratsamy Souvannakhanty vs. Souriyo Souvannakhanty Christopher James Franklin and Tessa Marie Franklin Laura Sue Schwinler and Robert Dale Schwinler Miranda Morgan Mcneal Chang Nka Mcneal vs. Julian Hancheng Chang Kathy Melissa Mcdonald Nka Mcgill and Robert Joseph Mcdonald Charlene Brown and Benjamin Mills Kevin Laurence Lewis vs. Amanda Susan Lewis Nka Canales Michelle Marta Berger Nka Mcintosh vs. Joseph Michael Berger Marian Kathryn Lombardi Morris vs. Timothy John Morris Aaron J Berger and Shannon Berger Nka Cooper Kortny Hulse and Tyler Schmidt Moniqua Aree Northrop vs. Erik Lee Hyllengren Erika A Villabos Sanchez vs. Manuel Montes Valenzuela, Jr Valerie Villa Nka Cromwell and William Villa Campo Randy A Moore and Angie G Moore Thomas Michael Miller and Nancy Leona Miller Peter Chidozie Anakaraonye and Shania Anu Prasad William Aaron Little and Lindsay Catherine Bradley Eloise Lynn Hardman-Reinders Nka Hayes and Eric Charles Hardman Ashlee Dawn Graham Nka Dauphinais and Jeffrey Michael Graham Michaela Susan Sandstrom and Daniel Carlos Alonzo Rebecca Marie Hamilton and Tyler James Porter David A Anderson and Crystal J Hays-Anderson Nka Hays Josefina Toliao Colberg Nka Arciaga and Thomas Weldon Colberg Christina Marie Knightley vs. Trevor Dean Knightley Taryn Kaylor vs. Eli Kaylor Lisa Whitney and Larry Lee Williams, Jr Maria Isabel Joya Macedo vs. Hector Martinez Manriquez Chad Daniel Demiar vs. Ana Nikic Shawn Patrick Seeber vs. Yvonne Marie Seeber
DEATHS Adams, Bradley, 63, Snohomish, June 24 Aquino-Indalecio, Daniel, 22, Granite Falls, June 22 Ashcraft, Loretta, 79, Tulalip, June 22 Ayers, Robert, 55, Fairview, OR, June 23 Bannister, Marjory, 93, Kenmore, June 20 Beattie, Barbara, 84, Marysville, June 23 Bjelland, Elizabeth, 50, Lynnwood, June 18 Blue, Kenneth, 80, Monroe, June 22 Boyd, Beverly, 81, Lynnwood, June 23 Brizer, Steven, 60, Marysville, June 23 Cascio, Paul, 93, Woodinville, June 19 Claessen, Laura, 91, Everett, June 24 Colfelt, William, 81, Tulalip, June 25 Cox, Gertrude, 95, Everett, June 18 Daniels, Josephine, 92, Arlington, June 24 Davis, Richard, 84, Bothell, June 20 Devine, Marilyn, 83, Bothell, June 18 Dunn, Margaret, 62, Dayton, Nevada, June 8 Eaton-Armstrong, Betty, 93, Lynnwood, June 20 Eiden, Marlene, 82, Marysville, June 22 Erickson, Randy, 73, Everett, June 23 Estrin, Michael, 68, Sultan, June 19 Gardner, Byrl, 76, Everett, June 21 Gonzales, Pilar, 88, Everett, June 20 Grayson, Steven, 52, Mukilteo, June 22 Green-Rue, Leola, 89, Bothell, June 20 Hawkins, Bruce, 74, Edmonds, June 23 Hegge, Dean, 89, Lake Stevens, June 14 Hertlein, Wallace, 93, Edmonds, June 25 Hobson, George, 80, Snohomish, June 16 Jacobs, Leo, 99, Edmonds, June 17 Jobin, JR, Robert, 53, Marysville, June 22 Johnson, David, 85, Marysville, June 18 King, Donavyn, 19, Marysville, June 22 Kirk, Richard, 81, Marysville, June 21 Lampers, Carol, 68, Lake Stevens, June 22 Lockwood, Laura, 67, Everett, June 17 Lomas, Nancy, 74, Snohomish, June 20 Lux, Eugene, 92, Edmonds, June 21 Lynn, Darrell, 78, Everett, June 12 Martin, William, 66, Snohomish, June 24 Mathers, Ethan, 27, Everett, June 6 Mayberry, Helen, 96, Marysville, June 20 McCann, Marian, 96, Snohomish, June 23 Merck, Elmer, 76, Lynnwood, June 20 Merry, Timothy, 58, Lake Stevens,
June 14 Mestis, Alfonso, 66, Marysville, June 14 Meyer, Roselyn, 74, Lake Stevens, June 20 Miles, Duane, 68, Seattle, June 20 Molina, Arturo, 53, Bothell, June 23 Moll, Constance, 95, Camano Island, June 21 Moore, Leo, 95, Monroe, June 20 Morgan, John, 53, Darrington, June 18 Morrel-Franklin, Jeanne, 92, Everett, June 25 Myers, Terrill, 71, Vashon, June 20 Nelson, JR, William, 66, Edmonds, June 21 Niedo, Jr, Antonio, 46, Bothell, June 26 Noe, Ross, 89, Everett, June 19 Ottini, Mary, 91, Monroe, June 20 Palella, Clarice, 89, Snohomish, June 22 Pearson, Mary, 101, Edmonds, June 21 Porter, Jackson, 75, Shoreline, June 21 Prater, Donald, 84, Everett, June 19 Prestbo, Lyle, 65, Vancouver, June 18 Ranko, Laurie, 73, Everett, June 21 Reed, III, Leslter, 82, Marysville, June 24 Remboldt, Leuvina, 98, Everett, June 16 Rochelle, Kylee, 14, Bothell, June 17 Ross, Virginia, 71, Lynnwood, June 21 Sanders, Charles, 90, Everett, June 17 Satrom, Katherine, 94, Marysville, June 19 Scriver, Kimi, 90, Everett, June 21 Shanahan, Michael, 95, Edmonds, June 22 Shimizu, Aiko, 101, Mill Creek, June 22 Singh, Malkiat, 81, Marysville, June 21 Skelly, Thomas, 58, Bothell, June 24 Smith, Henry, 55, Lake Stevens, June 21 Solberg, Ralph, 90, Everett, June 17 Spellman, Peggy, 65, Lynnwood, June 24 Steinmetz, Scott, 57, Mountlake Terrace, June 17 Straughen, Michael, 59, Lake Stevens, June 16 Stull, Anita, 63, Marysville, June 21 Thomas, Tommy, 69, Lake Stevens, June 21 Ting, Songhan, 84, Everett, June 19 Tingley, Jack, 69, Arlington, June 24 Todaro, Anthony, 95, Lynnwood, June 22 Todd, Ernest, 55, Everett, June 16 Tuerk, Patricia, 97, Everett, June 22 Verlinde, David, 70, Gold Bar, , June 20 Ward, Sandra, 63, Everett, June 22 Watson, Mary, 94, Camano Island, June 19 Weimer, Richard, 83, Granite Falls, June 23 Woo, Margie, 90, Lynnwood, June 22 Workneh, Alemayehu, 46, Everett, June 20
Cedarcrest, Edmonds Heights, EdmondsWoodway, Everett, Kamiak, Lake Stevens, Lynnwood, Monroe and Stanwood. Know someone who deserves to be recognized? Email news tips@heraldnet.com or call 425-3393428. Please include first and last names and photos with captions.
MEDICARE?
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The Daily Herald Monday, 07.01.2019 B3 B3 The Daily Herald Monday, 07.01.2019
CLUBS & INTERESTS
SERVICE CLUBS There are multiple local chapters of these service clubs, which serve both locally and globally. Kiwanis International focuses on improving the lives of children. More info: locator.kiwanis.org/ FindAClub.
May 2019 at the Everett Public Library, 2702 Hoyt Ave. More info: Ralph, 425-210-9498.
at Old Country Buffet, 1816 S 320th St., Federal Way. The group used to meet in Everett. More info: Nancy Juntwait, njuntwait@gmail.com.
Lions Club is the world’s largest service club organization and has several global causes. More info: directory.lionsclubs.org.
Federal: The National Association of Active and Retired Federal Employees meets 12:30 p.m. third Wednesdays (except June to August) at Evergreen Lanes, 5111 Claremont Way, Everett. Lunch at 11:30 a.m. More info: Linda Cline, 360-7945851.
Rotary International brings together business and professional leaders. More info: www.rotary.org.
RETIREES
Everett area: A Brown Bag Senior Lunch Series is held 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. second Thursdays through
Alaska Airlines: Alaska Airlines retirees meet 11:30 a.m. last Mondays
State and Local, Everett: The Retired Public Employees Council of Washington Chapter 6 (Everett area) meets 1 p.m. first Tuesdays (September to June) at the Carl Gipson Senior Center of Everett, 3025 Lombard Ave. More info: Jim Brandley, 425-337-0884. State and Local, Lynnwood: The Retired Public Employees Council of Washington Chapter 37 (Lynnwood area) meets 1 p.m. first Thursdays
Ave. NE, Arlington. Potluck dinner at 6 p.m.; regular meeting, 7:15 p.m. Games and music follow. More info: Don King, 360-658-8107.
(September to June) at the Mountlake Terrace Library, 23300 58th Ave. W. More info: Brenda Williams, 425-486-5051.
meeting. More info: snohoybe@ gmail.com.
ANIMALS
Overeaters Anonymous: The 12step support group for individuals who want to recover from compulsive food behaviors has meetings in Everett, Camano Island and Marysville. To find a meeting or for more info: www.oa-nci.org or www. oa.org.
Beekeeping: Snohomish Youth Beekeeping Education meets 6-7:30 p.m. second Mondays (except December) at the Snohomish Library, 311 Maple Ave. Free community service group for ages 5-19 with hands-on educational activities about pollinators. Underserved and special needs groups encouraged. RSVP required one week before
THIS & THAT
Sisco Heights Community Club: Meets first Fridays (except December) at the Club House, 13527 99th
Toastmasters: There are multiple local chapters of this nonprofit club that helps members improve speaking and leadership skills. More info: www.toastmasters.org. Willow Place: Activities for adults with developmental disabilities are offered 9 a.m.-noon and 1-4 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays at Quilceda Community Services, 9610 48th Drive NE, Marysville. Exercise, crafts, games and music. Cost is $15. More info: 360-653-2324. Other interest groups are listed throughout the month. Send calendar items to newstips@heraldnet. com
IN UNIFORM RESOURCES
Tuesday) at Verdant Health and Wellness Community Center, 4710 196th St. SW, Lynnwood. Veterans can share a cup of coffee and their stories. The program is a partnership between local veterans groups and the city of Lynnwood. A service officer will be available for those seeking benefits information. More info: Gary Walderman, ckr_satx@ yahoo.com.
Northwest Veterans Museum: The Northwest Veterans Museum is located in the Wicker Building at Heritage Park, 19921 Poplar Way, Lynnwood. Hours are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and by appointment at other times. The museum displays exhibits of patriotic, military and war-related artifacts and memorabilia. Free admission. Donations accepted. Volunteers encouraged to apply. More info: info@nwveteransmuseum.org, 206-390-9982.
Resource workshop: A free Veteran’s Services Resource Workshop is offered 2-3 p.m. first Mondays at Everett Community Justice Center, 8625 Evergreen Way, Suite 108. Housing assistance, employment resources, resume help, health care answers, skills lab, PTSD counseling and more. Bus vouchers available. More info: 425-356-2800.
Veterans service officer: Snohomish County veterans service officer Jerry A. Gadek, who retired from the U.S. Air Force, is available 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. first Wednesdays at Verdant Health and Wellness Community Center, 4710 196th St. SW, Lynnwood. By appointment or walk-in. Learn about health and housing benefits. More info: 425388-7367, gerard.gadek@snoco.org. Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society: The nonprofit provides interest-free loans and grants for emergency and unexpected financial needs for active duty, retired military and their family members. Programs include budget counseling, financial education, nurse home visits, and more. NMCRS Everett is based at the Smokey Point Navy Complex in Marysville. More info: 425-304-3203, www.nmcrs.org. Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve: ESGR supports the men and women of the Guard and Reserves, including employer and supervisor awards programs, under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act. More info: 800-336-4590 option 1, esgr.mil.
Resource center: Lynnwood provides a volunteer-staffed Veterans Resource Center to help with claims and other resources, Tuesdays at Verdant Health and Wellness Community Center, 4710 196th St. SW, Lynnwood. Specialists from WorkSource and the Everett Vet Center are on hand 9 a.m. to noon, followed by local veterans groups from noon to 3 p.m. More info: Gina Israel, GIsrael@lynnwoodwa.gov, 425-670-5004.
1605, info@scmusicproject.org.
VETERANS GROUPS AMVETS: Mill Creek AMVETS Post 2018 is open to any honorably discharged veteran of any era as well as active duty, Reserve and Guard duty personnel. The post has set as a goal to reinvigorate a higher sense of patriotic respect for the flag and history in the community and local schools. To accomplish this it provides veterans to speak at assemblies and local events and is seeking contact with Gold Star families in the area. Monthly meetings are 6 p.m. first Mondays in room 210 at Mill Creek City Hall North, 15720 Main St. The next meeting is this evening. More info: amvetmillcreekpost2018@gmail.com, tinyurl.com/ MillCreekAMVETS. Coast Guard Auxiliary: 7 p.m. second Tuesdays, Port of Everett Conference Center, 404 14th St. More info: Melin Ford, 360-7941723 or melinford25@gmail.com. Fleet Reserve Association and Ladies Fleet Reserve Association Unit and Branch 18: Lunch noon, meeting 1 p.m. second Saturdays, 23003 56th Ave. W., Mountlake Terrace. More info: 425-771-2774.
Job help: Homeless, unemployed veterans can get help through Workforce Snohomish. Employment assistance, support services, help with VA benefits and housing. More info: Shannon Gaule, 425-921-3446 or shannon.gaule@workforcesnohomish.org.
Fleet Reserve Association Branch 170: 5 p.m. second Wednesdays, 6802 Beverly Blvd., Everett. More info: 425-353-2600.
Music therapy: The Snohomish County Music Project offers Music YoU Jam group music therapy sessions for veterans and others coping with depression, PTSD or similar emotional disorders. The program aims to help regulate mood, manage stress, reduce isolation and foster resilience. More info: 425-258-
Snohomish County Disabled American Veterans Chapter 13: 7 p.m. first Tuesdays, dinner at 6, at the Lynnwood Eagles, 19223 Highway 99. More info: 425-299-3373, davsnohomish13@gmail.com.
Military Order of the Purple Heart Chapter 12: 7 p.m. fourth Tuesdays, Lynnwood Elks Club, 6620 196th St. SW. More info: 360-333-3163.
SERVICES
Hero’s Café: Hero’s Café, a social gathering for veterans, meets 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. fourth Tuesdays (except December, on the third
Washington Post 4330 in Redmond. More info: www.ussvi.org/base/ Seattle.asp. Veterans: An unaffiliated group of veterans of wars in foreign lands meets at 1 p.m. second Wednesdays, Carl Gipson Senior Center, 3025 Lombard Ave., Everett. More info: 425-257-8780.
AMERICAN LEGION Arlington: Legion Post 76 and Auxiliary meetings, 7 p.m. second Tuesdays. SAL meetings 6 p.m. first Thursdays. Auxiliary breakfast is served 9 a.m. -noon first Saturdays, and a lounge breakfast, second Saturdays. Dinners are 6 p.m. Fridays. The Post is at 115 N. Olympic Ave. More info: 360-435-2492. Bothell: Legion Post 127 meets at 21920 Highway 9, Woodinville. More info: bothelllegion.org, 425-483-5599, BothellALPost127@ outlook.com. Edmonds: Frank Freese Legion Post 66 meets 6 p.m. third Mondays, Post Hall, 117 S. Sixth St. Light meal served at 5:15 p.m. More info: Les, 206-546-6831. Everett: Sen. Henry M. Jackson Legion Post 6 meets 6 p.m. second Thursdays, Fleet Reserve Association Club, 6802 Beverly Blvd. More info: Marvin, 425-923-8172. Lake Stevens: Memorial Legion Post 181 meets 7 p.m. second and fourth Thursdays, Lake Stevens Community Center, 1812 124th Ave. NE. More info: Tony at 360-6313242, or Vern at 425-343-9637; info@ post181.org; www.facebook.com/ lakestevens.legion. Lynnwood: Legion Post 37 meets 7 p.m. third Thursdays, Lynnwood Elks Club, 6620 196th St. SW. More info: 425-585-0279.
Cedar Ave. Social hour at 6 p.m. Service officer hours by appointment only (360-659-5808). More info: 360-653-0155, legionpost178wa@ gmail.com, americanlegion178wa. cfsites.org. Monroe: Arthur Kincaid Legion Post 58 meets 7 p.m. third Tuesdays, Brookdale Senior Living, 15465 179th Ave. More info: Russell Dean at 425-359-7071. Mountlake Terrace: S. Al Wilcox Legion Post 234 meets 7 p.m. second Mondays, with 6 p.m. social hour, Legion Hall, 22909 56th Ave. W. More info: americanlegionpost234. org, americanlegionpost234@gmail. com, 425-776-5490. Snohomish: Earl Winehart Legion Post 96 meets 7 p.m. second Tuesdays, Legion Hall, 1201 First St. More info: 360-568-5340. Stanwood: Frank H. Hancock Legion Post 92 and Auxiliary meet 7 p.m. second Mondays, 26921 88th Ave. NW, Stanwood. Prime rib dinner, 4:30 p.m. second Saturdays, except July and August. Service office open 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. More info: 360-6298021.
VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS New members: The Veterans of Foreign Wars posts and auxiliaries of Snohomish County seek new members. VFW needs your last separation certification or other proof of eligibility. Auxiliary members are relatives, both female and male, of eligible veterans. For more information, call 425-337-1559. Arlington: Boyer-Daniel VFW Post 1561 and Auxiliary meets 7 p.m. first Thursdays at Arlington Free Methodist Church, 730 E Highland Drive. More info: 425-750-0680, 425760-0102 or vfw1561.org.
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Public Notices
Public Notices
Bids, RFQ’s, RFP’s
CITY OF ARLINGTON NOTICE OF NEIGHBORHOOD MEETING CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT - PLN#556 Notice is hereby posted that the City of Arlington’s Community and Economic Development Department, Planning and Land Use Division, will hold an informal Neighborhood Meeting regarding the following: Project Name: Reserve at Arlington File Number: PLN#556 - Conditional Use Permit Application Project Description: The Reserve at Arlington Partners, LLLP is proposing to construct a 4-story affordable independent living senior apartment building at the northwest corner of State Route 9 and 204th Street. The project consists of 150 apartments on a 4.38 acre site including 151 stalls of surface parking. The property is currently vacant and is bordered by State Route 9 to the east, Bar tell Drugs to the south, vacant proper ty to the west and commercial property to the north. The project has been designed to comply with the Mixed Use Development Regulations of Arlington Municipal Code 20.110. Primary access to the site will be taken from an existing access point on 204th Street. An on-site shared access easement between Bartell Drugs and the parcel just to the west allows for a secondary access. No access will be taken from State Route 9. A landscaped perimeter is proposed as a buffer to the site from State Route 9 and consists of canopy trees, evergreen trees, evergreen hedge shrubs and groundcover. Parking lot landscaping, building foundation plantings and open space landscaping is also proposed. An asphalt walking trail will be provided and is intended to become a part of the public trail system that will extend along Portage Creek as neighboring properties are developed. Outdoor amenities include a landscaped courtyard with a picnic shelter/BBQ area, community garden and outdoor seating areas with fire pits. Indoor amenities include a great room, media lounge, game room, multipurpose room, mail room/learning center, and fitness center and spa. A Binding Site Plan permit is being processed concurrently with this Conditional Use Permit to establish horizontal mixed use across the site. Applicant: Reserve at Arlington Partners, LLLP Contact: Carmel Gregory carmelg@cgengineering.com Tax Parcel ID# 31051100304000, 31051100400700 Date of Neighborhood Meeting: Tuesday, July 16, 2019 Time of Neighborhood Meeting: 5:30 - 6:30 pm Location of Neighborhood Meeting: City Council Chambers 110 East Third Street, Arlington, WA Purpose of Neighborhood Meeting: All conditional use permit applications require a neighborhood meeting per city code. The purpose of this informal meeting is to allow members of the public and other interested parties an opportunity to become involved early on in the permitting process and to help identify any concerns or issues the public has regarding this specific proposal. At this meeting, the public will have an opportunity to ask questions, review plans, and voice any concerns they may have. Staff Contact: Josh Grandlienard, Planner II joshg@arlingtonwa.gov Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863334
CITY OF MONROE, WASHINGTON PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING The Monroe Planning Commission’s next scheduled meeting will be held Monday, July 8, 2019 at Monroe City Hall, 806 W Main St., Monroe WA. 98272 starting at 7:00pm. The complete agenda and agenda items will be posted on the City’s web site prior to the regularly scheduled meeting. Leigh Anne Barr, PC Secretary Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863126
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed proposals will be received by the Snohomish County Purchasing Division for the following: RFI-02-19JR: SECURE DATA TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM PROPOSALS DUE: July 22, 2019, not later than 3:00 PM., Pacific Local Time Complete specifications may be obtained in person from the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, address below; by calling (425) 388-3344; or may be downloaded from our purchasing portal (you must log in) from: https://snoco.procureware.com/Bids Contact the County Purchasing Division at 425-388-3344 directly if unable to access documents online Electronic or hard copy proposals must be delivered before the due date & time either: 1. By email to purchasing@snoco.org. Please reference the RFI number in the subject line. 2. by hand to the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 6th Floor, Everett, Washington 98201, or 3. by mail to the attention of the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS 507, Everett, WA 98201. Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Depar tment of Transpor tation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all proposers that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit proposals in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against o n t h e gr o u n d s o f ra c e, c o l o r n a t i o n a l o r i g i n , o r s ex i n consideration for an award. Snohomish County Purchasing Division 104474 Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863510
CITY OF GOLD BAR The City of Gold Bar will hold a Public Hearing on 7/02/2019, during the regular Gold Bar City Council meeting at 7:00pm, in the Gold Bar Council Chambers. The Public Hearing is to discuss Resolution 19-08 relating to the Fee Schedule Amendment. For questions please contact City Hall at 360.793.1101 or check out our website at www.cityofgoldbar.us . Denise Beaston, Office Manager/Utility Clerk/ACO/Code Enforcement & EMC Published: June 26; July 1, 2019. EDH862851
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Island County Government Stabilization Center Bid Date: July 31 at 3PM INVITATION TO BID 1.1 NOTICE TO BIDDERS: Sealed bids shall be delivered and received at Island County Facilities Management Office located at 107 N E 6th Street, Coupeville, WA 98239 for the Stabilization Center Project 2000 until 3:00 p.m. Wednesday, July 31, 2019 for construction of the Stabilization Center located at 275 NE 10th Ct, Oak Harbor, WA 98277. Bids received after the time fixed above for receiving bids cannot be considered. Bids received on-time will be publicly opened and read aloud. 1.2 PROJECT DESCRIPTION: Construction of a new 10,260 SF single-story, wood-framed, slabon-grade, 10-bed voluntar y sub-acute detoxification facility exclusively for individuals within the boundaries of Island, San Juan, and Skagit County. The building will be ADA complaint and have full sprinkler coverage. The building contains single and double client bedrooms, group areas for client activities, client laundry room, a re-heat kitchen and an outdoor patient patio. 1.3 BIDDING DOCUMENTS: Bidding Documents are those prepared by BCRA Architects 2106 Pacific Avenue, Suite 300, Tacoma, WA 98402; 253-627-4367. Beginning Wednesday, June 19, 2019, Contractors may obtain plans and specifications from the Builders Exchange of Wa s h i n g t o n 2 6 0 7 We t m o r e Ave nu e, E ve r e t t , WA 98201(http://www.bxwa.com), telephone (425) 258-1303, fax (425) 259-3822. 1.4 BID SECURITY: A surety company bid bond executed by a State licensed surety company on a form acceptable to Owner, a cashier’s check or a certified check payable to the order of Island County Facilities Management, shall accompany each bid in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the Base Bid plus Additive Alternates. No bidder may withdraw its bid after the hour set for the opening thereof, unless the award of the contract is delayed for a period exceeding sixty (60) days. 1.5 REJECTION OF BIDS: The Owner reserves the right to waive informalities and to reject any and/or all Bids for any reason and, in particular, to reject a Bid not accompanied by any required bid security or data required by the Bidding Documents or a Bid in any way incomplete or irregular. 1.6 PRE-BID CONFERENCE: All interested bidders, contractors, and subcontractors are invited to attend an information session and a tour of the site during a mandatory pre-bid site visit 10:00 a.m. Thursday, July 18, 2019 at 275 NE 10th Ct, Oak Harbor, WA 98277, R13335-337-0980. By order of: Island County Board of Commissioners. EDH861823 Published: June 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30; July 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 2019. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed proposals will be received by the Snohomish County Purchasing Division for the following: RFI-03-19BC: DATA ACCESS GOVERNANCE PROPOSALS DUE: July 22, 2019, not later than 3:00 PM., Pacific Local Time Complete specifications may be obtained in person from the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, address below; by calling (425) 388-3344; or may be downloaded from our purchasing portal (you must log in) from: https://snoco.procureware.com/Bids Contact the County Purchasing Division at 425-388-3344 directly if unable to access documents online Electronic or hard copy proposals must be delivered before the due date & time either: 1. By email to purchasing@snoco.org. Please reference the RFI number in the subject line. 2. by hand to the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 6th Floor, Everett, Washington 98201, or 3. by mail to the attention of the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS 507, Everett, WA 98201. Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Depar tment of Transpor tation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all proposers that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit proposals in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against o n t h e gr o u n d s o f ra c e, c o l o r n a t i o n a l o r i g i n , o r s ex i n consideration for an award. Snohomish County Purchasing Division 104474 Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863513
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed submittals will be received by the Snohomish County Purchasing Division for the following: RFQ-10-19SR TOWER INSPECTION & LOAD STUDIES SEALED PROPOSALS DUE: July 18, 2019, not later than 3:00 P.M., Pacific Local Time Complete specifications may be obtained in person from the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, address below; by calling (425) 388-3344; or may be downloaded from: https://snoco.procureware.com/Bids Sealed Bids must be delivered before the due date & time either: 1. by hand to the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, 6th Floor, Everett, Washington 98201, or 2. by mail to the attention of the Snohomish County Purchasing Division, 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS 507, Everett, WA 98201. Note: Hand delivered submittals will not be accepted at any County location other than the County Purchasing Division as described above. Snohomish County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Depar tment of Transpor tation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all submitters that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded full opportunity to submit qualifications in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color national origin, or sex in consideration for an award. Snohomish County Purchasing Division 156619 - SERS Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863541 STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS NO. DOC1840905229 FOR PROFESSIONAL CIVIL, ELECTRICAL AND MARINE ENGINEERING SERVICES FOR HAT (GEDNEY) ISLAND SUBMARINE CABLE REPLACEMENT Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish County is requesting Statements of Qualifications (SOQ) from firms engaged in the lawful practice of consulting engineering who are interested in performing professional civil, electrical, geotechnical and marine engineering services, together with terrestrial and land surveying. If you are interested in submitting a proposal for this please visit w w w. s n o p u d . c o m , s e l e c t “ B i d s ” , s e l e c t “ S O Q N o. Doc1840905229” and complete the “Bidders Request Form” to be sent an invite from Ariba. Only those registered in ARIBA will receive updates regarding this SOQ. Submittals shall be submitted by 5:00 p.m., Pacific Time, Monday, July 15, 2019. For additional information pertaining to this SOQ, please visit w w w. s n o p u d . c o m , s e l e c t “ B i d s ” a n d s e l e c t “ S O Q N o. Doc1840905229.” If interested in receiving a packet please complete the Bidder’s Request Form. This Notice to Bidders, the P l a n h o l d e r s L i s t , A d d e n d a , B i d R e s p o n s e s, Awa r d Recommendation, and Bid Protest Procedures are available for viewing on the District’s website, in read only format. The electronic file is provided as a courtesy to the Prospective Bidders by the District. The Distr ict encourages minor ity and women’s business enterprises to request these contract documents and to bid on this work. DATE: June 27, 2019 Published: July 1, 2019. EDH863335
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SERVICES
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Everett: Old Guard VFW Post 2100 meets 6:30 p.m. third Tuesdays, 2711 Oakes Ave. More info: Don Wischmann, 425-760-9031, www. vfwpost2100.org. Auxiliary: 6:30 p.m. second Mondays. More info: 425-337-1559. Gold Bar: Martin-Osterholtz VFW Post 9417 meets 6 p.m. first Thursdays, 301 Third St. More info: Doug White, 425-870-7298. Auxiliary: 3 p.m. first Thursdays. More info: Arden King, 360-793-2786. Lynnwood: Walter A. Deebach VFW Post 1040 and Auxiliary meet 7 p.m. first Thursdays, Alderwood Boys and Girls Club, 19619 24th Ave. W. More info: Frank, 425-697-4102 (Post); Myra Rintamaki, 206-2350348 (Auxiliary). Monroe: VFW Post 7511 meets 6 p.m. second Thursdays in the conference room at 14286 169th Drive SE. More info: AJ Cruce, groupw50@ yahoo.com. Oak Harbor: Whitehead-Muzzall VFW Post 7392 and Auxiliary meet 7 p.m. first Mondays, VFW Riders at 6:30 p.m. second Fridays, 3037 N Goldie Road. More info: 360-6754048, vfwpost7392.org. Snohomish: Gay Jones VFW Post 921 and Auxiliary meet 1 p.m. second Saturdays, Boys & Girls Club, 402 Second St. More info: 425-397-7111.
Sultan: VFW Post 2554 and Auxiliary meet 7 p.m. second Thursdays, Volunteers of America Community Center, 605 First St. More info: 425heraldnet.com/classified 870-0235.
425-339-3100
Submariners: The U.S. Submarine Marysville: Legion Post 178 meets 7 Veterans Seattle chapter meets 6 p.m. third Thursdays, Post Hall, 119 classified@heraldnet.com p.m. third Wednesdays at VFW Lakewww.heraldnet.com
Bids, RFQ’s, RFP’s
Edmonds: VFW Post 8870 meets 6 p.m. third Wednesdays, with a light supper at 5:15 p.m., Edmonds American Legion Hall, 117 Sixth Ave. S. More info: 425-245-8545, dennisvfw8870@gmail.com, www. vfw8870.org. Auxiliary: Noon second Fridays at the Edmonds Senior Center, 220 Railroad Ave.
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No. 19-4-00987-31 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY In Re The Estate of: Dennis A. Schindler, Deceased. The person named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this Estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be b a r r e d by a ny o t h e r w i s e applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or m a i l i n g t o t h e Pe r s o n a l Representative or the Personal Representative’s attor ney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the cour t in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The c l a i m mu s t b e p r e s e n t e d within the later of: (1) Thirty d ay s a f t e r t h e Pe r s o n a l Representative ser ved or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the c l a i m i s fo r ev e r b a r r e d , except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: 7/1/2019 Personal Representative: Steve D. Schindler Attorney for Personal Representative Susan E. Skelton, WSBA 47154 1812 Hewitt Ave #210 Everett, WA 98201 (314) 276-2941 (360) 822-7224 Address for Mailing or Service: Susan E. Skelton Attorney for Personal Representative 1812 Hewitt Ave #210 Everett, WA 98201 P u bl i s h e d : Ju l y 1 , 8 , 1 5 , 2019. EDH863339
PUBLIC AUCTION The U-Haul office at 14429 Hwy 99, Lynnwood and 6443 E ve r g r e e n Way, E ve r e t t ; hereby notifies the owners of the following storage units that goods in said units will be auctioned off to the public to satisfy rent and fees past due. The sale will be c o n d u c t e d v i a storageteasures.com. The Everett auction will be held on or after July 1, 2019 with the search of “U-Haul Everett”. The Lynnwood auction will be held on July 1, 2019 with the search “U-Haul Lynnwood”. The auctions will start at 12:00pm and last for 14 days. UHC of North Lynnwood #0013 Clifford Diaz #1629 Danielle Perez UHC of Everett AA6985C/AA8440E Elizabeth Williams AA0726S/AA8241C Briand Dourling The articles will be sold by storage lot and the money collected will go to pay these debts owed. The auction is subject to cancellation. Contact Rachel Letherby for fur ther infor mation at (360) 319-1921. Published: June 24; July 1, 8, 2019. EDH862431
NO. 19-4-01018-31 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY In Re The Estate Of: PATRICIA M. GOFFETTE, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been a p p o i n t e d a s Pe r s o n a l Representative of this Estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representa t i ve ’s a t t o r n ey a t t h e address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the cour t in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Pe r s o n a l R e p r e s e n t a t i ve served or mailed the Notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of the first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decendent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: June 24, 2018 Personal Representative: John A. Goffette Attorney for the Personal Representative: Michael D. Hunsinger The Hunsinger Law Firm Address for Mailing or Service: 6100 219th Street SW, Suite 480 Mountlake Terrace, WA 98043 Court of Probate Proceedings and Cause Number: Snohomish County Superior Court Cause No. 19-4-01018-31 DAT E D t h i s 2 0 t h d ay o f June, 2019. THE HUNSINGER LAW FIRM Attorneys for Personal Representative By: MICHAEL D. HUNSINGER WSBA NO. 7662 Published: June 24; July 1, 8, 2019. EDH862447
Short Takes B4
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THE DAILY HERALD
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MONDAY, 07.01.2019
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We know about the rape accusation. Tips for summer How’s the rest of the book? swimming and safety MR. DAD | Armin Brott
By Sibbie O’Sullivan The Washington Post
The most notorious part of E. Jean Carroll’s new book “What Do We Need Men For?” has already made the rounds. For the few of you who missed it, here’s a quick summary: In her forthcoming book, E. Jean Carroll, a journalist and longtime advice columnist, asserts that in 1995 or 1996, Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room. Carroll is the 16th woman to publicly accuse Trump of sexual assault. In the days since her allegations came to light, they have been parsed and analyzed by the media, corroborated by witnesses — and denied by the president: “She’s not my type,” Trump said. However, a media storm is not a book, and the Trump bombshell — first mentioned, briefly, on page 4 and not discussed at length till more than 200 pages have passed — is just one piece of a much fuller story about the many hideous men who have assaulted, strangled, groped, hollered at
THE CLICKER Monday’s highlights on TV include: Sarah Jessica Parker and Thomas Haden Church return for new episodes of “Divorce.” In Season 3 of the dark comedy, the former spouses encounter several “bombshell surprises” that have spun their post-breakup lives in completely unexpected directions. (10 p.m., HBO). — Chuck Barney, East Bay Times
fun, but Carroll’s humor and jaunty writing can’t completely camouflage her pain over the damage caused by some of the men in her life. This creates a friction between style and content that can be unsettling. Carroll sets out the purpose of her book on page one: “The whole female sex seems to agree that men are becoming a nuisance with their lying, cheatand otherwise imposed ing, robbing, perjuring themselves on Carroll and assaulting … and so since she was a child. on.” So Carroll offers a They include big names Modest Proposal: that we including Les Moonves kill men and extract their as well as well as littlechemical elements and known, unnamed men, sell them. It’s a satirical such as the waterfront proposition, with a wink director of a Girl Scout to Jonathan Swift, that camp who, Carroll says, sets Carroll on an invesran his hands “inside tigation that frames the my shorts and under my book and gives it its title: blouse” when she was She will find out what, if 12. (In a footnote, she anything, men are for. absolves another biggie To that end, in Octotaken down by #MeToo: ber 2017, she set off in “I worked with Al Franher Prius (nicknamed ken, who was the least Miss Bingley; see “Pride pervy guy in New York. and Prejudice”) with her What the Democrats poodle, Lewis Carroll. were thinking when they Her stops are American made him leave the US towns named for women, Senate is beyond me.”) most of which are in the “What Do We Need Midwest and the South: Men For?” is more than Elnora, Indiana; Flormale bashing but it’s ence, Alabama; Maryscertainly that; it’s also ville, Ohio, are three. a story of a spirited “I will only eat in cafes woman with an indominamed after women, table personality and listen to music sung by a zest to get on with it women, drink wines that’s refreshing in this named after women, age of victimization and read books written by self-analysis. women, and wear clothes Carroll, 75, is a stylish designed by women,” writer and often funny; she tells us. As she drives her book is full of zingacross the country, she ers. Harvey Weinstein will be keeping a list: The “looks like he’s been Most Hideous Men of stuffed by an inebriMy Life List (we already ated taxidermist” — and know the biggest name her narrative bounces on it). It’s a lark that’s along like a huge spray both darkly humorof champagne bubbles. ous and deadly serious. It’s impressionistic and Sometimes, it can be often interrupted by hard to tell the difference. photos (i.e.., from her Regardless, she’s both first Communion and having fun and spitting when she was crowned angry. as Miss Indiana UniverWhat she finds in her sity), strings of all-caps travels is disheartenand points, ing. To Sales the question, Theexclamation New York Times Syndication Corporation advice620 listsEighth (i.e..,”Twelve “What doN.Y. we need men Avenue, New York, 10018 Places toFor Meet a Rich Call:for?” she is met with Information 1-800-972-3550 Man”) andFor witty foot- Monday, either silence or vague Release July 1, 2019 notes. This is all good replies such as “I can’t
say, ma’am” or “Well, I’m not sure.” When she asks a more specific question such as, “Name five women you’d like to see running the country,” one young woman comes up with a list that includes J.K. Rowling and Jackie Kennedy. Carroll’s investigation is troubling, too, in ways she may not intend: It reveals not only the struggle between the sexes but also geographic and class differences. It demonstrates the bubble that Carroll, who has spent most of her adult life on the East Coast, lives in. One woman she interviews, named Linda, doesn’t know who Harvey Weinstein is, and in a footnote, Carroll mentions that “many people” didn’t know who Weinstein is. I suppose that gives Carroll the liberty to describe Linda’s hair as looking as if it were cut by “the same person who did Demi Moore’s hair in G.I. Jane” and subsequently ask Linda, “Why don’t lady farmers color their hair?” These are unfortunate distractions from a witty and often disturbing book. It’s unfortunate, too, that despite the heavy accusations at its core, the book offers no realistic fixes, nor is it concerned with larger issues of masculinity, ones that may (or may not) explain male behavior. The typical answer to Carroll’s question, “What Do We Need Men For”? is, sadly, “not much.” This does a disservice to men in general. A better answer to Carroll’s question would be: We need men to vote a certain other disreputable man out of office, because women alone may not be able to. O’Sullivan is a former teacher in the Honors College at the University of Maryland. Her book of essays about John Lennon is forthcoming from Mad Creek Books.
Edited by Will Shortz rossword NEW YORKCTIMES CROSSWORD ACROSS ___-dandy 4 Tramps 9 Wild guess 13 “___ we having fun yet?” 14 Humdinger 15 BMW rival 16 What M.B.A.s enter upon graduation 19 On bended ___ 20 Yoko who loved John Lennon 21 Spelling contest 22 Verbatim 27 Allows to expire 30 Slap the cuffs on 31 Prefix with friendly 32 Extra energy 35 Upper floor of a barn 1
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Canadian team in the N.B.A. How music can be stored Cause one’s bedmate to use earplugs, say “Moby-Dick” setting Gluttonous type Make a mess, as hot grease on a surface Tale that might feature a haunted house Christmas ___ (Dec. 24) ___ constrictor “Hey! Over here!” Kind of test … and a hint to a word hidden three times each in 16-, 22-, 38- and 48-Across
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“What a pity …” Like a haunted house Roof repair material R&B singer with the 2006 #1 hit “So Sick” Mascara misadventure “I wonder …”
DOWN Beanstalk climber in a children’s story 2 Golf club that’s not a wood 3 Simple 4 “Game of Thrones” airer 5 Opposite of ’neath 6 Sheep’s plaint 7 No longer having in stock 8 Old office worker who took dictation 9 ___ Paulo, Brazil 10 Increase in engine power 11 Chicago’s ___ Planetarium 12 Waited 17 Seats for parishioners 18 Frayed, as clothing 23 Stuff oneself with, briefly
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PUZZLE BY BRUCE HAIGHT
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Prison disturbances Exorcism target Poet Whitman Actor Jared Supply-anddemand subj. Ceremonial preOlympic event “Cheers!,” in Berlin A Marx brother Complimentary Pre-1917 ruler
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Scent Fruit that flavors liqueurs Desert crossed by the ancient Silk Road Spell-checker find Virile one Small egg Word after “on the” and “learn the” Site of 1690s witch trials
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That lady there
Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay.
Q: My family loves being in the water, whether it’s a pool, a lake, the ocean, or even a bathtub! But every summer, sure as clockwork, stories of children drowning start popping up like mushrooms. It seems to me that drownings aren’t really any more common than they used to be —there’s just more media coverage. But the big issue is what we can do to be safe around the water? A: You’re absolutely right: According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the number of drownings has stayed roughly consistent for the past few years. And media coverage of drownings tends to pick up in the summer —which, as far as I’m concerned, is a good thing. Roughly 350 children under 15 drown in pools and spas every year; three-quarters of those kids were under five. Each of those deaths is a tragedy —especially when you consider that most were preventable. In addition, every year, about 5,000 children under 15 are involved in nonfatal “submersion injuries” (better known as “neardrownings”) that require emergency room treatment. Many result in permanent injury (including brain damage) and, again, most are preventable. Here are some guidelines (some provided by the CPSC) that will help keep your family safer this summer. • Appoint a designated watcher —a responsible adult or teen —who will focus 100% on the people who are in or near the spa, pool, river, or other body of water. That means absolutely, positively NO reading, talking on the phone, playing games,
chatting with friends, or anything else. • Your designated watcher should pay particular attention to boys. Adults often play down boys’ roughhousing and excessive risk taking as “boys will be boys.” But the consequences of that lackadaisical attitude can be deadly. Boys are twice as likely as girls to drown in swimming pools. And African-American boys are 4 to 15 times more likely than White boys to drown in pools. Interestingly, girls are more likely than boys to drown in bathtubs, which is where 10% of drownings occur. • Make sure that all pools and spas are surrounded by a four-sided fence with a self-closing, self-latching gate. This will keep younger kids from wandering into the pool area. Experts estimate that having four-sided fencing could prevent 50-90% of drownings and near-drownings. • Pool covers can add an extra layer of safety, but be sure the cover complies with the highest safety standards and is strong enough for an adult to walk on. • Empty toddler pools and store them upside down. Children can drown in as little as half an inch of water. • Learn how to swim and teach your kids to swim. • Take a CPR class that teaches how to perform this life-saving procedure on children and adults. • Ensure that any pool and spa you use has drain covers that comply with federal safety standards. If you’re not sure, ask your pool service provider about safe drain covers. • Teach children to stay away from drains, pipes, and other openings.
DAILY CROSSWORD
The Daily Herald
Zits
Big Nate
Dilbert
Pearls Before Swine
Pickles
Baby Blues
Frazz
Red & Rover
B5
I don’t like my sister’s choice of name for her unborn baby Carolyn Hax is Her collapsing for you away. The following to see is extremely first appeared Feb. 2, manipulative and, 18 and 20, 2005. therefore, just as Dear Carolyn: selfish. “Incredible” My sister is pregpeople show love by nant for the first time, declining to pile on and I’m excited to the guilt. become an uncle. The Dear Carolyn: issue: The names she I have fallen for CAROLYN HAX has picked out are a co-worker. She TELL ME ABOUT IT so soap opera-esque started a few months that I want to ask how ago, and we have she could name her kid that. Any become close friends. About a advice? month ago, I asked her out and she — Va. became emotional, started to cry, Buy her a few of those stuffed and said no because she is having terry cloth rattles. Babies love them, family problems and can’t handle they’re washable, and, whenever anything else right now. A few you’re about to criticize your sister’s weeks later, I asked if her answer taste in names, you can stuff one in would have been different if her your mouth. family situation were better, and she Dear Carolyn: said yes, but I still can’t tell if she is I need help. I’ve been in a relabeing honest or just trying not to tionship for seven years. I want hurt me. out. No major problems between I think she does have feelings us; she is an incredible woman. It for me. Where do I go from here? I kills me to hurt her. My problem don’t want to keep bringing it up, is I just want to live on my own, but I want to know if something is always have. We’ve (I’ve) sepathere or not. Am I just not getting rated three times before, but she so the hint? completely falls apart that I end up — P.B. returning mostly out of a feeling of Even if she is being honest, responsibility. it doesn’t mean you’ll end up I know that prolonging this indef- together. A no is a no, no matter initely isn’t fair to either of us, and what the reason or degree, until she if I make a clean, permanent break comes to you with a yes. she will end up finding the right Plus, family problems can throw man for her. How do I end this with people off course in ways that are as finality? unpredictable as they are dramatic — Arizona — especially tear-inducing, dateYou’re fully aware of, and right inhibiting, emotional-credit-cardabout, your need to break up — maxing family problems like this you don’t want her, and she can’t woman seems to have. really want a guy who doesn’t want If you’d be her friend even if her. That means going back to her romance were never an option, whenever she falls apart is not an then just keep being that friend. No act of responsibility but of selfishagenda. If you’ve fallen too hard for ness. You’re unwilling to suffer the that, then tell her so, and ask her to let short-term discomfort necessary to you know if she changes her mind. a long-term cure. So stop. Break up. And cheer up: — Washington Post Writers Group
SUPER QUIZ Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: SIMPLE SIMON QUIZ Try this “training quiz” for kids. Each answer starts with “B.” (e.g., In which room do you spend the most time lying down? Answer: Bedroom.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What color is the sky? 2. The day on which you were born is your _____. 3. If an animal has feathers, it is a _____.
Mother Goose and Grimm
Monday, 07.01.2019
TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Monday, July 1, the 182nd day of 2019. There are 183 days left in the year. Today’s highlight: On July 1, 1991, President George H.W. Bush nominated federal appeals court judge Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court, beginning an ultimately successful confirmation process marked by allegations of sexual harassment. On this date: In 1863, the pivotal, three-day Civil War Battle of Gettysburg, resulting in a Union victory, began in Pennsylvania. In 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of Great Britain as the British North America Act took effect. In 1934, Hollywood began enforcing its Production Code subjecting motion pictures to censorship review. In 1946, the United States exploded a 20-kiloton atomic bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. In 1973, the Drug Enforcement Administration was established. In 1991, the Warsaw Pact formally disbanded. In 1995, rock-and-roll disc jockey Wolfman Jack died in Belvidere, North Carolina, at age 57. Today’s birthdays: Actress Olivia de Havilland is 103. Actress-dancer Leslie Caron is 88. Actress Jean Marsh is 85. Actor Jamie Farr is 85. Actor David Prowse is 84. Cookiemaker Wally Amos is 83. Dancer-choreographer Twyla Tharp is 78. Actress Genevieve Bujold is 77. Rock singer-actress Deborah Harry is 74. Movie-TV producerdirector Michael Pressman is 69. Actor Daryl Anderson is 68. Actor Trevor Eve is 68. Thought for today: “In an age of multiple and massive innovations, obsolescence becomes the major obsession.” — Marshall McLuhan, Canadian communications theorist (1911-1980). — Associated Press
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. A person who cuts men’s hair is called a ____. 5. A store that sells meat is called a _____ shop. 6. One of the hard parts of a skeleton is called a ____. PH.D. LEVEL 7. When water bubbles with heat we know that it is ____. ANSWERS: 1. Blue. 2. Birthday. 3. Bird. 4. Barber. 5. Butcher. 6. Bone. 7. Boiling.
— North American Syndicate Inc.
B6 Monday, 07.01.2019 The Daily Herald
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rentalconnectioninc.com
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Sports SECTION C
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THE DAILY HERALD
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WWW.HERALDNET.COM/SPORTS
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No home-court advantage The Seattle Storm suffer their first home loss of the season. Page C2
MONDAY, 07.01.2019
Astros complete sweep of the M’s
SUMMER SHOWDOWN
Three-peat for Peltier
But Seattle’s manager sees some positives in the way his team battled the AL West leaders. Associated Press
room on the inside and held on for the victory. “It was pretty intense,” Peltier said about the final eight laps. “Those last eight laps, you’re up on the wheel and every bone and muscle in your body is tensed up and you’re just anticipating, thinking, ‘Where do I need to get back to the throttle, where do I need to roll a little better?’ My spotter is telling me to expect a bump because he’s right there, so I was waiting to get hit pretty good and get knocked sideways. It was very intense, those last eight laps were good.” Fraser’s second-place finish
HOUSTON — The Seattle Mariners failed to win a game in their weekend series with the Astros, but that didn’t mean their trip to Houston was fruitless. At least not in the eyes of manager Scott Servais. “Our guys had good at-bats, very competitive games, you’re one swing or one big hit away from getting over the Seattle’s hump and Daniel winning a couple Vogelbach of these named to the games and AL All-Star we will,” team, C2 Servais said. “The experiences our guys are gaining right now are very valuable.” Rookie Yordan Alvarez drove in three runs to back up seven strong innings by Gerrit Cole and help the Astros to a 6-1 win Sunday to complete the threegame sweep. Houston won the first two games in extra innings, 2-1 and 6-5. The Mariners jumped to a 1-0 lead in the first inning Sunday when J.P. Crawford homered into the bullpen in right-center field with one out. Crawford has reached safely in 30 of his past 33 games and is hitting .309 in that span. “J.P.’s playing really well,” Servais said. “Doing everything defensively, the quality at-bats are really good. We need it to continue, he’s in a good spot right now.” Unfortunately for the Mariners, Crawford’s homer was their lone offensive highlight. The rest of the day
See SHOWDOWN, Page C3
See MARINERS, Page C2
>>
KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALD
Preston Peltier celebrates his first-place finish at the eighth annual Summer Showdown at the Evergreen Speedway in Monroe on Sunday.
The Colorado driver survives a tough challenge for his 3rd straight win By Nick Patterson Herald Writer
MONROE — Time after time, someone took a run at Preston Peltier. Time after time, Peltier shut those runs down. And as a result, Peltier is taking home yet another Summer Showdown trophy. Peltier claimed his third straight Summer Showdown as he won Evergreen Speedway’s premier race for Super Late Models on Sunday afternoon. The eighth annual Summer Showdown was an exciting race that featured plenty of action at the front of the field. That action continued right up to the final lap
of the 200-lap race as Peltier somehow managed to fend off a hardcharging Jason Fraser to win by a car length and claim the $25,000 winner’s check. “It feels good, especially because I don’t feel I had the best car here today,” Peltier, who hails from Brighton, Colorado, said about winning for the third straight year. “It was the best short-run car, but on the long run, this is a 200-lap race and you have to be there at the end. Thank God for circumstances and cautions falling the way they did. It kind of helped us out.” Peltier came into the race as the favorite. In addition to being the two-time defending champion, he
was the pole sitter. But unlike the past two years, this one didn’t come easily for Peltier. Fraser was all over Peltier’s back bumper throughout the final 27 laps of the race. Fraser, an Issaquah resident and former Evergreen Speedway regular, made pass attempts on almost every lap from 174 to 182, and in turn four of 182 Fraser was just about past Peltier on the inside when the two bumped, causing Fraser to spin out. The spin appeared to take Fraser out of contention, but a caution on lap 192 created a restart where Fraser was able to get himself back into second, and he again tried to pass Peltier on almost every turn. But Peltier gave Fraser no passing
AquaSox pitcher right where he always wanted to be Vancouver native Damon Casetta-Stubbs is looking to develop more “consistency” during his time in Everett. By Josh Horton Herald Writer
EVERETT — Damon CasettaStubbs tried to dictate where he landed in the 2018 Major League Baseball draft with the help of a baseball cap. The Vancouver native plopped on a Mariners cap when the draft started, with the hope Seattle would pick him. There’s no proof the headgear made the difference, but CasettaStubbs’ wish came true when the Mariners selected him in the 11th round. “If I had gotten drafted, I wanted to be drafted by the Mariners,” said
TONIGHT’S GAME Boise at Everett, 7:05 p.m. Radio: KRKO (1380 AM)
Casetta Stubbs, now a member of the Everett AquaSox. “It actually worked out pretty well. This is definitely the team I wanted to get drafted by and the place I wanted to start my career.” The 6-foot-4, 200-pound righthander had a commitment to
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AquaSox trailed Tri-City >> The 10-1 in the eighth inning
when the Herald went to press Sunday. For a recap of the game, visit www.heraldnet.com.
play baseball at Seattle University. According to a report from The Columbian, he set a $350,000 price tag to forgo college. The Mariners called after day two of the draft and worked out a deal with Casetta-Stubbs before taking him in the 11th round. There are no bonus designations for picks after the 10th round, but CasettaStubbs signed for $325,000, a fifthround value. “I wasn’t going to let my dreams come short for 25,000 See AQUASOX, Page C2
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Damon Casetta-Stubbs delivers a pitch during the Everett AquaSox game against Salem-Keizer on June 21 in Everett.
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HOME GAMES STARTING MONDAY vs. Boise Hawks at 7:05 PM Don’t Miss the Independence Day Celebration! Post-Game Fireworks presented by Pepsi & Game-Used Independence Day Hat Auction Wednesday, July 3 vs. BOI at 7:05 PM
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ATLANTA Monday, 07.01.2019 The DailyBRAVES Herald
MIAMI MARLINS
NEWYORK METS
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES
Astros lead the way with six All-Star selections
NL CENTRAL CALENDAR July
MON TUES 1 2 St. Louis 7:10 p.m. ROOT
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Boise 7:05 p.m.
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Associated Press
NEW YORK — The last time the Houston Astros went to Cleveland, they made a boozy, bubbly Next game: at NYC FC mess in the visiting locker room. 4 p.m., Wed., July 3 Now they’re invading the home clubhouse. Justin Verlander, Gerrit Cole and four of their Astros teammates will lead the American League Next game: New York squad at the All-Star Game in Cleveland on July noon, Wed., July 3 9. Major League Baseball unveiled full rosters for COLORADO ROCKIES ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS the midsummer showcase Sunday, and Houston topped all clubs with six players. No other AL team Grand Forks Tournament has more than three. TBD “Impressive,” Verlander said. “I mean, I think we could have a lot more.” Home Away Alex Bregman, George Springer and Michael Brantley will be in the starting lineup, and Verlander, Cole and Ryan Pressly are on the pitchTELEVISION ing staff. It will be the first trip to Cleveland for TODAY those Astros since Game 3 of last year’s AL DiviBASEBALL sion Series, when Houston won 11-3 to complete 4 p.m. ESPN Chicago Cubs a sweep. at Pittsburgh The Dodgers, Brewers and Rockies lead the NL BASKETBALL with four players each. The Los Angeles contingent 6 p.m. ESPN2 NBA Summer League includes Cody Bellinger, Clayton Kershaw, HyunTENNIS Jin Ryu and Walker Buehler. 9 a.m. ESPN Wimbledon Milwaukee will be represented by Christian Yelich, Mike Moustakas, Yasmani Grandal and TUESDAY Josh Hader. BASEBALL Colorado’s four all-stars are Nolan Arenado, 7 p.m. ROOT St. Louis at Seattle Trevor Story, Charlie Blackmon and David Dahl. BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN2 NBA Summer League Atlanta teammates Ronald Acuna Jr. and Mike SOCCER Soroka are set to be this year’s youngest players Noon FOX,13 Women’s World Cup: age at 21. Atlanta said it’s the first time two players USA vs. England under 22 from the same team made the All-Star 7:30 p.m. FS1 CONCACAF Gold team. Cup semifinal The NL team includes just three hitters in their TENNIS 30s: Moustakas and Grandal are 30, and Blackmon 9 a.m. ESPN Wimbledon turns 33 Monday. Depending on who serves as DH, the NL could have the youngest starting lineup in RADIO All-Star Game history. TODAY “I think it’s just the beginning here,” Braves BASEBALL manager Brian Snitker said. “As I’ve said, I think 7:05 p.m. 1380 Boise at Everett this is going to be a yearly occurrence because these kids are going to be around for a long time.” TUESDAY The Yankees have the AL’s best record but boast BASEBALL 7:05 p.m. 1380 Boise at Everett just three All-Stars: Gary Sanchez, DJ LeMahieu 7:10 p.m. 710 St. Louis at Seattle and Aroldis Chapman. “To me, I thought we were going to have around six or seven All-Stars from this team,” Chapman said through a translator in London.
Storm suffer first home loss of the season Staff and Wire Reports
SEATTLE — DeWanna Bonner and Brittney Griner each scored 20 points to help the Phoenix Mercury beat Seattle 69-67 in WNBA action Sunday at Alaska Airlines Arena on the University of Washington campus. It was the first home loss of the season for the Storm, who are splitting their home games this season between Alaska Airlines Arena and Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett. The Storm are 3-0 in Everett so far this season. The Mercury (5-5) took the lead for good at 57-56 on Griner’s basket with 5:05 remaining in the game. That sparked a 10-0 run that ended with Phoenix leading 65-56 on Bonner’s 3-pointer two minutes later. The Storm (8-6) closed the deficit to 65-62 before the final minute, and Jordin Canada was fouled attempting a 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds remaining that gave her a chance to tie the game at the foul line. But Canada missed the first attempt and the Mercury’s Leilani Mitchell secured the rebound after Canada intentionally missed the third one. Sami Whitcomb had 13 points, and Mercedes Russell and Alysha Clark added 12 each for the Storm. Canada scored 10 for Seattle, which won its first five games at home. For the box score, see the Scoreboard on Page C4.
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belonged to Alvarez, Cole and the Astros. After sitting out two days nursing a sore left knee, Alvarez didn’t waste any time getting back to work in his return to the lineup. He delivered a two-run double in the first inning and a run-scoring single in the third. “He’s a difference maker in the middle of the order when he gets pitches to hit and hits them hard,” Houston manager AJ Hinch said. “It’s nice to have him back, obviously. He’s still not moving around great … but he made a huge impact today.” George Springer drew a leadoff walk in the bottom of the first inning before a single by Jose Altuve and a walk by Alex Bregman loaded the bases. Alvarez then doubled on a line drive to right field to put Houston up 2-1. There was one out in the third when Bregman tripled to left field. Alvarez pushed the lead to 3-1 when he drove in Bregman on a single to right. Cole (8-5), who allowed just four singles after the homer to Crawford, struck out 10 and walked one to win his fourth straight decision. He leads the American League with 151 strikeouts this season. Cole was asked about throwing 100 mph in the seventh inning when his pitch count was already over 100. “I just like to leave it out there,” he said. “I just like to feel like I put in a good day’s work. When you get that privilege to go back out and you get the leash to go over 100 pitches, you respect that. You respect the guys that have been battling for you for the previous seven innings to keep the score where it is. So, you just want to leave it out there and make sure you did everything you could.”
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(dollars),” Casetta-Stubbs told the Columbian. He started his pro career last summer with the Mariners’ rookie-league affiliate in Peoria, Arizona, going 0-2 with a 13.50 earned-run average in six games. A year later, Casetta-Stubbs has settled into Everett’s rotation after beginning the year at low-A West Virginia, an aggressive assignment for a 19-year-old. “I wasn’t shocked,” Casetta Stubbs said of being reassigned to Everett. “They kind of told me that was the plan all along” A product of King’s Way High School in Vancouver, CasettaStubbs got off to a hot start in West Virginia, not allowing an earned run over his first two starts. After that, he struggled. Eight starts and 341⁄3 innings later, CasettaStubbs was 3-5 and his ERA had ballooned to 7.11. But his final start in West Virginia provided a nice confidence boost. Casetta-Stubbs
Guerrero to be youngest HR Derby participant TORONTO — Blue Jays rookie Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is set to become the youngest participant in Home Run Derby history when he swings for the $1 million prize July 8 in Cleveland. Major League Baseball confirmed Sunday LOS ANGELES DODGERS SAN DIEGO PADRES that Guerrero will participate, joining a field that includes Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr., Milwaukee’s Christian Yelich, the New York Mets’ Pete Alonso, Pittsburgh’s Josh Bell and Cleveland’s Carlos Santana. The final two participants will be announced Wednesday. Guerrero, son of Hall of Famer Vladimir Guerrero, will be 20 years, 114 days old for the derby, 116 days younger than Ken Griffey Jr., who took part in the 1990 event. The younger Guerrero was there when his father won the event in San Francisco in 2007. Bryce Harper is the only other 20-year-old to participate in the derby. Associated Press
Fans of the reigning champion Red Sox won’t be pleased that shortstop Xander Bogaerts and third baseman Rafael Devers were left out. Bogaerts has accrued 3.7 wins above replacement, per Fangraphs — trailing only the Angels’ Mike Trout among AL players — and Devers entered Sunday batting .324. Red Sox ace Chris Sale also was omitted despite ranking second in the league in strikeouts. Boston’s only representatives as of now are Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez. Verlander earned his eighth All-Star nod, tied with Kershaw and Trout for most among this year’s participants. The host Indians had three players selected: Carlos Santana, Francisco Lindor and Brad Hand. The rosters feature 31 first-time selections, including Washington’s Anthony Rendon, who said he may not attend to rest some nagging injuries. Since the start of 2015, the Nationals third baseman is fifth in baseball in WAR at 20.4. “It’s good to be recognized,” he said. For the complete all-star rosters, see the Scoreboard on Page C4.
MARINERS | Update
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS TUESDAY’S GAME
St. Louis at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. TV: ROOT Radio: ESPN (710 AM)
Probable Starting Pitchers Mariners right-hander Matt Carasiti (0-0, 0.00 ERA) vs. Cardinals righthander Jack Flaherty (4-5, 4.75)
Vogelbach named FRANCISCO GIANTS to ALSANAll-Star team Seattle Mariners slugger Daniel Vogelbach was selected Sunday to play in his first All-Star Game. He is the third player in Mariners history to be selected as a designated hitter, joining Edgar Martinez (six selections) and Nelson Cruz (two). Vogelbach, a 26-year-old designated hitter/first baseman, has flourished during his first chance at a full season in the majors, slashing at .244/.379/.519 with 11 doubles, a club-high 20 home runs and 48 RBI in 79 games. He entered Sunday ranked tied for seventh in the American League in homers, and has dazzled fans with his power while becoming one of the leaders in Seattle’s clubhouse with his easy-going demeanor. His consistent patience at the plate has also earned him 56 walks which are fifth-best in the AL — he’s ranked tied for eighth in club history prior to the All-Star break with that mark — and an on-base percentage that ranks eighth. Vogelbach is the only Mariners player selected to this season’s AllStar Game. The game will be played at 5 p.m. July 9 at Progressive Field in Cleveland, and will be televised nationally by FOX.
Injury update Second baseman Dee Gordon was out of the lineup on Sunday after leaving Saturday night’s game with a strained quadriceps muscle. Herald news services
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You just want to leave it out there and make sure you did everything you could. — Astros pitcher Gerrit Cole on throwing a 100 mph pitch in the seventh inning of Sunday’s game
After consecutive one-run wins in the 10th inning, the Astros didn’t need any late dramatics in this one. They padded the lead with a three-run eighth inning highlighted by a two-run single by Jake Marisnick. Mariners starter Marco Gonzales (9-7) allowed six hits and three runs. He walked three in five innings to snap a four-game winning streak in his first loss since June 2. Domingo Santana had two hits for the Mariners, who lost their fourth straight overall and fell to 1-9 against the Astros this season. As was the case throughout the series, the Mariners simply couldn’t come up with a big hit when they needed one. Santana singled with one out in the fourth before a two-out single by Omar Narvaez. But Cole struck out Kyle Seager to end that inning. Santana singled again with two out in the sixth, but Cole retired the last four batters he faced, including two strikeouts, to end his day and keep the Mariners from cutting the deficit. Collin McHugh got the first two outs in the eighth before Mallex Smith singled and Crawford. Ryan Pressly, who later in the day would be named to the American League All-Star team, took over and struck out Santana to end the threat.
scattered three hits over six scoreless innings in a win over Delmarva on June 11. “It was good to leave on a high note,” he said. Casetta-Stubbs has made three starts for the AquaSox with mixed results. He allowed just two earned runs over his first two starts, but lasted just three innings and allowed five earned runs in the AquaSox’s June 26 win over Vancouver. His next start, based on his turn in the rotation, likely will be Monday against Boise, although Everett hadn’t announced it’s probable pitchers for the opener of the three-game series. Along with making the Northwest League all-star team, CasettaStubbs said his biggest goal for the upcoming season is becoming more consistent with his outings. “I think I have the stuff to play everywhere, but just consistency is the big thing for me,” he said. “Not necessarily to be good every night, but put together a good outing — put five, six innings on the board and help the team by not having to eat up relievers.” Casetta-Stubbs hasn’t emerged
on any prospect lists, but his stuff is interesting. He works fast and tries to induce ground balls early in counts with a sinker that sits in the 90-to-92-mph range. His repertoire features a wipe-out slider he can employ late in counts as a putaway pitch. He also can sprinkle in a curveball and a changeup as secondary off-speed pitches. There are some mechanical aspects he’s hoping to improve, but more importantly, CasettaStubbs said he’s working to bolster his mental approach to pitching. Everett pitching coach Ari Ronick said he’s been impressed with Casetta-Stubbs’ ability to be hyper-focused on his development. “I think (that focus) is important, especially … with a player like Damon, who came out of high school, where he dominated and maybe hasn’t faced a lot of adversity yet,” Ronick said. “… This is the time to gain those physical and mental skills. It will serve him well in the long run. “I think he pitches beyond his years. He’s 19 years old and he pitches with a competitiveness that’s really fun to watch.”
Sunday’s game Astros 6, Mariners 1 Seattle Smith cf Crawford ss Santana rf Vogelbach 1b Narvaez dh Seager 3b Beckham 2b Murphy c Moore lf Totals
AB 4 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 31
R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
H BI BB SO 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 6 1 2 14
Avg. .230 .310 .278 .244 .288 .218 .226 .268 .197
Houston Springer cf-rf Altuve 2b Bregman 3b Alvarez dh White 1b Reddick rf-lf Stassi c Straw ss Kemp lf Marisnick cf Totals
AB 4 5 4 3 4 4 4 4 2 1 35
R H BI BB SO 1 0 0 1 1 1 3 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 6 12 6 4 6
Avg. .306 .255 .266 .317 .212 .301 .179 .298 .232 .256
Seattle Houston
100 000 000 — 1 6 1 201 000 03x — 6 12 0
E—Santana (10). LOB—Seattle 5, Houston 9. 2B—Alvarez (4), Stassi (1). 3B—Bregman (1). HR—Crawford (3), off Cole. RBIs—Crawford (22), Altuve (24), Alvarez 3 (21), Marisnick 2 (24). CS—Moore (4). Runners left in scoring position—Seattle 2 (Santana, Seager); Houston 5 (Bregman, White, Stassi 3). RISP—Seattle 0 for 2; Houston 4 for 13. GIDP—Vogelbach, Springer. DP—Seattle 1 (Crawford, Beckham, Vogelbach); Houston 1 (Straw, Bregman, White). Seattle Gonzales, L, 9-7 Wright Houston Cole, W, 8-5 McHugh, H, 1 Pressly, H, 20 James
IP 5 3 IP 7 0.2 0.1 1
H 6 6 H 5 1 0 0
R ER BB SO NP 3 3 3 5 104 3 2 1 1 50 R ER BB SO NP 1 1 1 10 109 0 0 1 0 17 0 0 0 1 5 0 0 0 3 15
ERA 4.39 8.28 ERA 3.28 5.59 1.47 4.57
Inherited runners-scored—Pressly 2-0. PB—Murphy (3) . T—2:52. A—32,485 (41,168).
Mets apologize to two members of 1969 team for ceremony error Associated Press NEW YORK — The New York Mets have publicly apologized to two living members of its 1969 World Series championship team who were included in a video montage of dead players during the 50th anniversary celebration. With a message that filled up one Citi Field scoreboard about 15 minutes before Sunday night’s game against Atlanta, the Mets expressed deep regret to Jim Gosger and Jesse Hudson for displaying their names and images in error during the “We Remember” segment of Saturday’s ceremony. The club said it had spoken with both former players to apologize and wants to thank them along with their families and friends for their “gracefulness and understanding.” The 76-year-old Gosger had 16 plate appearances for the 1969 Mets and returned to the team from 1973-74. Hudson, 70, pitched two innings for the 1969 club in his only major-league game.
The Daily Herald Monday, 07.01.2019
NBA spending spree begins Portland gives Lillard a 4-year deal; Durant leaving Golden St. for Brooklyn Associated Press Damian Lillard wasn’t a top-five draft pick. Tobias Harris wasn’t a lottery pick. Khris Middleton wasn’t even a first-round pick. Their bank balances soon won’t know the difference. Free agency opened Sunday in the NBA with more than $2 billion in deals getting struck in the opening hours — and that’s even without Kyrie Irving officially joining Brooklyn, as has been expected, or any word from Kawhi Leonard about his future plans to either stay with NBA champion Toronto or move elsewhere. Lillard agreed to a $196 million, four-year extension with Portland that will kick in for the 2021-22 season. Harris is staying in Philadelphia for $180 million over the next five years and Middleton gave Milwaukee a bit of a discount in agreeing to a $178 million, five-year deal — $12 million shy of what he could have commanded. Even injuries couldn’t derail the spending. Kevin Durant announced that he’s leaving Golden State and joining Brooklyn on a $164 million, four-year deal — even though he’ll miss next season with an Achilles injury and could have gotten $221 million for five years from the
Warriors. And Kristaps Porzingis, who hasn’t appeared in an NBA game since Feb. 6, 2018, because of a knee injury, will sign a $158 million, five-year contract to stay with Dallas. All deals were confirmed to The Associated Press by people with knowledge of the agreements, all speaking on condition of anonymity because the NBA moratorium prevents new contracts from being signed until 9 a.m. PDT Saturday. “From the trade to the Sixers in February, through the regular season and playoffs and now on to free agency, this contract is a culmination of so much in my life and basketball career,” Harris wrote in an essay published on ESPN.com. “It’s also a new beginning.” There were a lot of new beginnings Sunday. Jimmy Butler agreed to a fouryear, $142 million deal that will send him to Miami. Butler made it clear to the Heat that he wanted to be in Miami, and over the next three hours the basic framework of a trade was worked out. Miami is sending Josh Richardson to Philadelphia and was still working on a package to Dallas to make the Butler move happen. Goran Dragic was considered at one time for inclusion in that trade, though by night’s end he was still with Miami
and the Mavs and Heat were still working through options. Irving and Leonard remained on the market — at least technically in Irving’s case — after the initial flurry of free agency. Even with their deals still not closed, nine players agreed to contracts that will be worth $100 million or more. Lillard, Harris, Middleton, Durant, Porzingis, Butler, Kemba Walker ($141 million, four-year deal with Boston), Al Horford ($109 million, four years from Philadelphia) and Nikola Vucevic ($100 million, four years with Orlando) were the big early winners, with more likely to come. The 76ers moved quickly to add Horford once the parameters of the Butler trade to Miami were complete. Point guards did particularly well, and likely will keep doing well. Lillard, Irving (when he gets his $141 million for four years from Brooklyn, as expected) and Walker guaranteed themselves nearly a half-billion dollars. Terry Rozier left Boston for Charlotte — essentially the swap for Walker — on what will be a $58 million, three-year deal that will be completed via trade. Ricky Rubio also cashed in, getting $51 million for three years from the Phoenix Suns, and restricted free agent D’Angelo Russell was
believed to be a target for both Minnesota and the Los Angeles Lakers. Meanwhile, the Leonard watch continued with no hints from his camp. The NBA Finals MVP and now two-time champion will meet with the Raptors in the coming days, Toronto coach Nick Nurse said. Nurse said the NBA champs believe they “have a really good chance” to keep Leonard. In other key deals Sunday: — Indiana is set to acquire 2017 rookie of the year Malcolm Brogdon from Milwaukee and sign the shooting guard to a four-year, $85 million deal. — Harrison Barnes, as expected, is remaining in Sacramento on what will be a four-year, $85 million contract. — The Pacers lost forward Bojan Bogdanovic to the Utah Jazz, which agreed to pay the forward $73.1 million over the next four years. — New York is signing Julius Randle to a $63 million deal. — Former NBA MVP Derrick Rose will sign a two-year, $15 million contract with the Detroit Pistons. — San Antonio kept Rudy Gay on a two-year, $32 million deal, and added veteran forward DeMarre Carroll on a two-year, $12 million deal.
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U.S. advances to Gold Cup semifinals PHILADELPHIA — The United States was outplayed during the second half by 79th-ranked Curacao but managed to advance to the CONCACAF Gold Cup semifinals with a 1-0 victory Sunday night behind Weston McKennie’s goal in the 25th minute. The defending champion U.S. extended its Gold Cup winning streak to nine games and plays Jamaica on Wednesday in Nashville, Tennessee, in the second semifinal, a night after Mexico faces Haiti in Glendale, Arizona. The U.S. reached the semifinals for the 10th straight Gold Cup and 14th in 15 overall. Christian Pulisic, the Americans’ 20-year-old star midfielder, fed McKennie for the goal. Pulisic cut in from a flank and crossed, and McKennie headed in the ball from 4 yards out for his second goal in 12 international appearances. Playing near his hometown of Hershey, Pennsylvania, Pulisic shot just wide in the second minute and was denied in the fourth when goalkeeper Eloy Room, while falling to his left, reached to his right to tip Pulisic’s shot over the crossbar. Curacao had 60 percent of the possession in the second half. American goalkeeper Zack Steffen made a leaping save on Leandro Bacuna in the 84th minute. The 30th-ranked Americans have outscored opponents 12-0 in the tournament, the championship of North and Central America and the Caribbean, and have held opponents scoreless for 405 minutes overall.
Stricker sets record at U.S. Senior Open
KEVIN CLARK / THE HERALD
Preston Peltier (48) leads the pack through turn four Sunday afternoon during annual the Summer Showdown at Evergreen Speedway in Monroe.
Showdown From Page C1
was his first podium at Summer Showdown. “(Finishing second) is disappointing, honestly,” said Fraser, who was racing a Super Late Model for the first time this year and racing at Evergreen for the first time in four years. “We came here to win. I should have won this thing so many times, and I just didn’t get it done, truthfully. I felt he was the better driver today. We had a better car, I did the best I could, but I would have had to use him up pretty good to win. I’d have had to make some contact, slow him down and I just don’t feel good about those kind of wins.” Garrett Evans finished third to round out the
podium. It was the Northwest racing legend’s third podium at Summer Showdown. He finished second in both 2014 and 2015. Fraser wasn’t the only driver who nearly had Peltier’s number. Derek Thorn was considered Peltier’s greatest challenger coming into the race, as the Lakeport, California, resident has twice been on the Summer Showdown podium and was leading the SLR Southwest Tour in points — indeed, Thorn skipped an SLR race in Bakersfield this weekend and surrendered his points lead in order to race at the Summer Showdown. Thorn and Peltier traded the lead throughout the first 100 laps prior to the mid-race break. They did the same following the break, with Thorn regaining the lead on lap 152 and creating separation. But four laps later, Thorn lost power and was forced to pit. He never
rejoined the race. “Something broke, maybe in the engine or drive train somewhere, but we lost power and that was the end of our day,” Thorn lamented. “We’ve been here a lot, five or six times, and by far this was the best car we had,” added Thorn, who was second in 2016 and third in 2015. “I thought this was our best chance to win, and then we have something out of our control happen. We’ve had the speed, we just have never had the luck here. One of these days maybe we’ll have both.” Evergreen points leader Tyler Tanner, who won four of the previous five Super Late Models races at the track this season, started from the No. 5 position, but lost ground right from the beginning. He headed to the pits on lap 44 and never returned.
AUTO RACING | Roundup
Bowman earns his first NASCAR Cup win Associated Press JOLIET, Ill. — Alex Bowman held off Kyle Larson for his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory, leading a terrific performance for Hendrick Motorsports at Chicagoland Speedway on Sunday. Bowman had one of the fastest cars during practice, and the strength of his No. 88 Axalta Chevrolet showed after the race was delayed by a storm. He had just six top-five finishes in 133 starts on NASCAR’s top series before his stellar day on the bumpy 1.5-mile oval. The 26-year-old Bowman took second at Talladega, Dover and Kansas this year, and he said he was sick of hearing about the hole on his resume. “I was just tired of running second,” Bowman said. “I don’t want to do that anymore. I feel like this is the last box, aside from going and chasing a championship, that I needed personally for myself to validate my career.”
Larson put together another memorable run a year after he lost an epic last-lap duel with Kyle Busch on the same track. Larson passed Bowman with about seven laps left, but Bowman quickly regained the lead and smartly navigated his way to the victory. “He was struggling, and we were able to get to him and get by him, but he did a good job,” Larson said. “He did a good job regrouping and figuring out how to make his car drive better.” Joey Logano, who leads Kyle Busch by 18 points for the top spot in the series standings, finished third. Jimmie Johnson was fourth, and Brad Keselowski rounded out the top five. It was Hendrick’s second victory of the season after Chase Elliott won at Talladega in April. Led by Bowman and Johnson, Hendrick placed each of its four cars in the top 11. “So proud of everybody at Hendrick Motorsports,” Bowman
said. Joe Gibbs Racing and Team Penske dominated the first part of the Cup season. Logano, Keselowski and Ryan Blaney finished in the top six for Penske at Chicagoland, but it was a difficult day for the top performers at JGR. Martin Truex Jr. never really threatened and had to settle for ninth after winning last weekend in California. Kyle Busch had issues with his car on his way to 22nd. “Little bit of a tough day, but we soldiered home to a fifth and a sixth in the stages and ninth at the end,” Truex said. “When you have a tough weekend, that’s a good day to get a top 10.” It was hot and humid when polesitter Austin Dillon led the field to the starting line, but thunderstorms quickly rolled in and halted the race after 11 laps. The wind picked up and rain pounded the track after the drivers and crew members retreated to their trailers. When the race resumed after a
delay of more than three hours, it was a completely different situation. The temperature dropped more than 20 degrees, forcing the teams to adapt on the fly after the cars were set up for hot, slick conditions. Austrian Grand Prix SPIELBERG, Austria — Max Verstappen won the Austrian Grand Prix for a second straight year as Red Bull ended Mercedes’ unbeaten streak this season. The Dutchman recovered from a poor start to work his way up to the front of the pack from eighth place, and overtook leader Charles Leclerc in a Ferrari with just two laps to go. However, stewards were investigating Verstappen’s move to pass Leclerc as both cars touched. Starting from pole position for the second time in his career, Leclerc led the race almost throughout but just missed his first career win. Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas completed the podium, ahead of Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and championship leader Lewis Hamilton, who started fourth after a grid penalty and lost time to replace the front wing of his Mercedes after 33 laps and finished fifth.
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Steve Stricker made his U.S. Senior Open debut one for the record book by closing with a 1-underpar 69 to set the 72-hole record and win by six shots. Stricker birdied the opening hole on the Warren Golf Course at Notre Dame and was never seriously challenged. He finished at 19-under 261. The previous record was 264 by Kenny Perry in 2017 at Salem Country Club. The 52-year-old Stricker won a PGA Tour Champions major for the second time this year. He won the Regions Tradition in May. Jerry Kelly (69) and defending champion David Toms (68) tied for second. The victory gets Stricker into the U.S. Open next year at Winged Foot, where he tied for sixth in the 2006 U.S. Open, a key moment in resurrecting his career. For the complete leader board, see the Scoreboard on Page C4.
Motorcycle racer dies in race he won 4 times COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — A prominent motorcycle racer has died after he crashed near the finish line of a race he had won four times, the Colorado Springs Gazette reported. Carlin Dunne died Sunday at the 97th Broadmoor Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, officials said in a news release. The newspaper reported that Dunne, who is from Santa Barbara, California, crashed his 2019 Ducati Streetfighter V4 Prototype near the finish line. A n a mbu l a n c e wa s dispatched to the finish area after the crash. A Gazette reporter witnessed bike shrapnel going over the right edge of the road about 20 yards from the finish line. The Gazette reported that throughout the morning, riders had trouble with a small hump in the road near the summit. Multiple witnesses said they believed Dunne hit the bump at a high speed, which caused his front wheel to spin out. The newspaper said this is the seventh death associated with the Hill Climb. Herald news services
C4
Monday, 07.01.2019 The Daily Herald TODAY
Northwest Weather
73°56°
City
Bellingham 75/59
Washington Bellingham Colville Ellensburg Everett Forks Friday Harbor Moses Lake Ocean Shores Olympia Port Angeles Pullman Spokane Seattle Tacoma Walla Walla Wenatchee Yakima
Clouds and sunshine
TOMORROW
63°55°
Mount Vernon 78/56
Chance showers
WEDNESDAY
Oak Harbor 72/58
67°55° Chance showers
THURSDAY
71°56°
Pleasant with clouds and sun
74°56°
FRIDAY
Mostly sunny
Stanwood Arlington 74/57 78/55 Granite Falls 77/55
Marysville 78/56
Langley 72/57
Lake Stevens 77/55 Snohomish Sultan 79/57 79/57
Everett 73/56
Mukilteo 74/58
Tides Everett
Time
High Low High Low
Almanac
3:18 a.m. 10:39 a.m. 6:09 p.m. 11:10 p.m.
Feet 10.6 -2.1 11.3 7.1
City
Index 76/56
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Tacoma 80/55
Port Townsend High Low High Low
Time
2:15 a.m. 9:36 a.m. 6:02 p.m. 9:51 p.m.
Feet 8.3 -2.1 8.3 6.6
Sun and Moon
Everett
Arlington
High/low ..................................... 75/53 Normal high/low ....................... 68/53 Records (1995/1949) ................. 88/40 Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.15 S 24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.00” Month to date ............................. 0.69” Normal month to date ............... 2.05” Year to date ............................... 10.41” Normal year to date ................. 17.69”
High/low ..................................... 78/48 Normal high/low ....................... 68/53 Records (2013/1977) ................. 88/44 Barometric pressure (noon) ... 30.14 S 24 hours ending 5 p.m. ............... 0.00” Month to date ............................. 0.90” Normal month to date ............... 2.75” Year to date ............................... 12.03” Normal year to date ................. 24.52”
Air Quality Index
Pollen Index
Weather Trivia
Today
Q: Can you get a sunburn on an overcast day?
through 5 p.m. yesterday
Yesterday’s offender ................. Ozone
38 0 50 100 150 200 250 300
400
500
Good: 0-50; Moderate: 51-100, Unhealthy (for sensitive groups): 101-150; Unhealthy: 151-200; Very unhealthy: 201300; Hazardous: 301-500 WA Dept. of Environmental Quality 0
100
200
300
400
Road Reports:
www.wsdot.wa.gov
Avalanche Reports:
www.nwac.noaa.gov
Burn Ban Information: Puget Sound: 1-800-595-4341 Website: www.pscleanair.org Forecasts and graphics, except the KIRO 5-day forecast, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
AUTO RACING Camping World 400 Sunday Chicagoland Speedway Joliet, Illinois Lap Length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (8) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 267. 2. (14) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 267. 3. (19) Joey Logano, Ford, 267. 4. (4) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 267. 5. (12) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267. 6. (10) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 267. 7. (21) Erik Jones, Toyota, 267. 8. (11) William Byron, Chevrolet, 267. 9. (18) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 267. 10. (1) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 267. 11. (13) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 267. 12. (25) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 267. 13. (5) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 267. 14. (2) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 267. 15. (9) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 267. 16. (15) Aric Almirola, Ford, 267. 17. (16) Ryan Newman, Ford, 267. 18. (27) Chris Buescher, Chevrolet, 266. 19. (3) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 266. 20. (7) Michael McDowell, Ford, 266. 21. (24) Paul Menard, Ford, 266. 22. (17) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 266. 23. (23) David Ragan, Ford, 265. 24. (28) Daniel Suarez, Ford, 265. 25. (26) Bubba Wallace, Chevrolet, 264. 26. (31) Ross Chastain(i), Chevrolet, 264. 27. (29) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 264. 28. (22) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 264. 29. (38) Matt Tifft, Ford, 263. 30. (30) Corey LaJoie, Ford, 263. 31. (33) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 260. 32. (32) Bayley Currey, Ford, 258. 33. (36) Josh Bilicki, Chevrolet, 257. 34. (37) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 249. 35. (20) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 239. 36. (34) BJ McLeod, Ford, 238. 37. (6) Clint Bowyer, Ford, Accident, 172. 38. (35) Quin Houff, Chevrolet, Track Bar, 100.
Austrian Grand Prix Sunday At Red Bull Ring Spielberg, Austria Lap length: 2.68 miles 1. Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing Honda, 71 laps, 1:22:01.822, 26 points. 2. Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, 71, +2.724 seconds behind, 18. 3. Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes, 71, +18.960, 15. 4. Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari, 71, +19.610, 12. 5. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, 71, +22.805, 10. 6. Lando Norris, McLaren Renault, 70, +1 lap, 8. 7. Pierre Gasly, Red Bull Racing Honda, 70, +1 lap, 6. 8. Carlos Sainz, McLaren Renault, 70, +1 lap, 4. 9. Kimi Räikkönen, Alfa Romeo Racing Ferrari, 70, +1 lap, 2. 10. Antonio Giovinazzi, Alfa Romeo Racing Ferrari, 70, +1 lap, 1. 11. Sergio Perez, Racing Point BWT Mercedes, 70, +1 lap. 12. Daniel Ricciardo, Renault, 70, +1 lap. 13. Nico Hulkenberg, Renault, 70, +1 lap. 14. Lance Stroll, Racing Point BWT Mercedes, 70, +1 lap. 15. Alexander Albon, Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda, 70, +1 lap. 16. Romain Grosjean, Haas Ferrari, 70, +1 lap. 17. Daniil Kvyat, Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda, 70, +1 lap. 18. George Russell, Williams Mercedes, 69, +2 laps. 19. Kevin Magnussen, Haas Ferrari, 69, +2 laps. 20. Robert Kubica, Williams Mercedes, 68, +3 laps. Driver Standings: 1. Lewis Hamilton, 197; 2. Valtteri Bottas, 166; 3. Max Verstappen, 126; 4. Sebastian Vettel, 123; 5. Charles Leclerc, 105
BASEBALL Houston Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle New York Tampa Bay
West Division W L Pct GB 53 32 .624 — 46 38 .548 6½ 46 39 .541 7 42 43 .494 11 37 51 .420 17½ East Division W L Pct GB 54 28 .659 — 48 36 .571 7
nt
se
ab
low
e rat
de
mo
h
hig
ry ve
First Jul 9
Full Jul 16
66/57/sh 73/53/sh 72/54/sh 63/55/sh 62/52/sh 65/55/sh 81/56/sh 64/57/sh 67/56/sh 62/53/sh 73/51/pc 75/53/sh 67/57/sh 67/53/sh 80/58/pc 74/56/sh 79/51/pc
Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 86/66/c 93/67/c 89/62/t 73/58/pc 93/75/s 87/73/pc 90/73/t 95/75/pc 92/72/t 81/58/t 93/75/pc 85/55/pc 85/69/pc 80/69/pc 85/64/pc 98/74/s 81/56/t 90/71/t 89/71/t 89/74/pc 90/73/pc 90/74/s 86/60/t 88/70/pc 89/73/t 99/76/pc 90/73/t 73/52/c
City
Today Hi/Lo/W Amsterdam 69/54/pc Athens 87/72/s Baghdad 109/78/s Bangkok 93/79/t Beijing 94/70/pc Berlin 84/55/t Buenos Aires 52/42/s Cairo 97/78/s Dublin 65/47/pc Hong Kong 91/79/sh Jerusalem 85/63/s Johannesburg 64/33/s London 71/51/pc
Idaho Boise Coeur d’Alene Idaho Falls Lewiston Sun Valley Twin Falls Oregon Astoria Bend Eugene Klamath Falls Medford Newport Ontario Pendleton Portland Salem
92/58/pc 84/56/pc 86/49/pc 89/61/pc 81/53/pc 89/58/s
85/55/pc 72/51/sh 86/51/pc 80/57/pc 79/50/pc 83/54/s
67/56/c 75/46/sh 76/53/sh 77/42/pc 82/56/pc 62/54/c 93/63/pc 87/58/t 79/58/sh 76/54/pc
67/54/pc 73/43/pc 76/51/pc 76/41/s 84/54/s 63/51/pc 88/57/pc 79/53/pc 72/57/pc 75/54/pc
Today Hi/Lo/W Fargo 80/61/pc Fort Myers 93/75/pc Fresno 94/64/s Grand Rapids 86/71/t Hartford 86/66/s Honolulu 88/75/pc Houston 87/73/t Indianapolis 89/74/t Jackson, MS 91/70/pc Kansas City 89/72/s Knoxville 90/70/pc Las Vegas 105/81/s Little Rock 89/70/t Los Angeles 83/63/pc Louisville 93/76/pc Memphis 91/75/pc Miami 92/76/t Milwaukee 86/70/t Minneapolis 78/66/t Mobile 93/74/pc Montgomery 95/75/pc Newark 87/69/s New Orleans 92/75/pc New York City 84/70/s Norfolk 83/67/s Oakland 69/57/pc Oklahoma City 87/68/pc Omaha 93/74/pc
Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 86/61/pc 93/76/t 93/63/s 88/70/t 88/66/pc 86/75/pc 88/75/t 89/73/t 91/71/t 89/72/s 89/70/s 104/79/s 90/71/pc 80/63/pc 92/76/t 90/75/pc 92/77/t 82/66/t 86/68/t 92/75/t 95/75/t 89/71/pc 90/74/t 86/71/pc 95/74/pc 71/57/pc 91/70/pc 89/71/pc
City
California Eureka 62/53/s Redding 92/64/s Montana Butte 78/46/t Great Falls 81/50/pc Helena 84/53/pc Libby 86/54/c Missoula 84/51/pc Alaska Anchorage 73/56/s Barrow 52/43/sh Fairbanks 70/52/c Juneau 77/55/pc British Columbia Kelowna 84/58/pc Vancouver 74/59/pc Victoria 71/57/s
City
City Orlando Palm Springs Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Sacramento St. Louis St. Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Stockton Syracuse Tallahassee Tampa Topeka Tucson Wash., DC Wichita Yuma
Boston Toronto Baltimore
44 40 .524 11 31 53 .369 24 24 59 .289 30½ Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 53 30 .639 — Cleveland 45 38 .542 8 Chicago 39 42 .481 13 Kansas City 29 55 .345 24½ Detroit 27 52 .342 24 Sunday’s games N.Y. Yankees 12, Boston 8 Cleveland 2, Baltimore 0 Kansas City 7, Toronto 6 Tampa Bay 6, Texas 2 Washington 2, Detroit 1 Chicago White Sox 4, Minnesota 3 Houston 6, Seattle 1 Oakland 12, L.A. Angels 3 Today’s games Kansas City (Sparkman 2-3) at Toronto (Richard 0-4), 10:07 a.m. Baltimore (Bundy 3-10) at Tampa Bay (Morton 8-2), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Suarez 2-1) at Texas (Minor 8-4), 5:05 p.m.
National League East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 50 35 .588 — Philadelphia 44 40 .524 5½ Washington 42 41 .506 7 New York 38 47 .447 12 Miami 32 50 .390 16½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 45 39 .536 — Milwaukee 45 39 .536 — St. Louis 41 41 .500 3 Pittsburgh 39 43 .476 5 Cincinnati 38 43 .469 5½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 57 29 .663 — Colorado 44 40 .524 12 San Diego 42 41 .506 13½ Arizona 43 43 .500 14 San Francisco 36 47 .434 19½ Saturday’s late games Arizona 4, San Francisco 3 San Diego 12, St. Louis 2 Sunday’s games Cincinnati 8, Chicago Cubs 6 Philadelphia 13, Miami 6 Washington 2, Detroit 1 Milwaukee 2, Pittsburgh 1 L.A. Dodgers 10, Colorado 5 San Francisco 10, Arizona 4 St. Louis 5, San Diego 3, 11 innings N.Y. Mets 8, Atlanta 5 Today’s games Chicago Cubs (Alzolay 1-0) at Pittsburgh (Williams 2-2), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Houser 2-2) at Cincinnati (Mahle 2-8), 4:10 p.m. San Francisco (Samardzija 4-7) at San Diego (Allen 2-0), 7:10 p.m.
2019 All-Star Rosters July 9 at Progressive Field, Cleveland p-voted by players; m-selected by MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE Manager — Alex Cora, Cleveland Starters Catcher — Gary Sanchez, N.Y. Yankees First Baseman — Carlos Santana, Cleveland Second Baseman — DJ LeMahieu, N.Y. Yankees Shortstop — Jorge Polanco, Minnesota Third Baseman — Alex Bregman, Houston Outfield — Mike Trout, L.A. Angels Outfield — George Springer, Houston Outfield — Michael Brantley, Houston Designated Hitter — Hunter Pence, Texas Reserves Catchers p-James McCann, Chicago White Sox Infielders p-José Abreu, Chicago White Sox p-Matt Chapman, Oakland p-Tommy La Stella, L.A. Angels p-Francisco Lindor, Cleveland m-Daniel Vogelbach, Seattle Outfielders p-Mookie Betts, Boston p-Joey Gallo, Texas p-Austin Meadows, Tampa Bay m-Whit Merrifield, Kansas City Designated Hitters p-J.T. Martinez, Boston Pitchers Starters p-Gerritt Cole, Houston p-Lucas Giolito, Chicago White Sox m-John Means, Baltimore m-Mike Minor, Texas p-Charlie Morton, Tampa Bay p-Jake Odorizzi, Minnesota m-Marcus Stroman, Toronto
62/52/s 94/65/s 72/47/t 67/50/t 74/52/t 78/53/t 78/50/t 73/58/pc 60/50/c 73/52/c 76/57/c 74/51/sh 69/58/sh 66/57/sh
Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Madrid 97/66/s 96/69/pc Manila 83/77/t 85/79/t Mexico City 72/53/t 73/53/t Moscow 76/56/sh 71/54/s Paris 77/56/pc 76/56/pc Rio de Janeiro 90/73/pc 86/73/pc Riyadh 113/80/s 110/81/s Rome 89/67/s 88/68/s Singapore 88/80/pc 89/78/t Stockholm 70/51/t 60/46/r Sydney 63/48/pc 67/49/pc Tokyo 77/71/r 78/72/pc Toronto 80/64/c 81/66/pc
San Francisco 68/56
Chicago 91/75
Denver 82/59
Northwest League North Division W L Pct. GB Spokane (Rangers) 10 7 .588 — Tri-City (Padres) 8 8 .500 1½ Everett (Mariners) 8 8 .500 1½ Vancouver (Blue Jays) 5 12 .294 5 South Division W L Pct. GB Hillsboro (D-backs) 11 6 .647 — Salem-Keizer (Giants) 10 7 .588 1 Boise (Rockies) 8 9 .471 3 Eugene (Cubs) 7 10 .412 4 Saturday’s late games Hillsboro 4, Eugene 3, 10 innings Vancouver 4, Spokane 0 Sunday’s games Vancouver 5, Spokane 4 Hillsboro 6, Eugene 4 Salem-Keizer 11, Boise 9 Everett at Tri-City, late Today’s games Salem-Keizer at Spokane, 6:30 p.m. Boise at Everett, 7:05 p.m. Hillsboro at Vancouver, 7:05 p.m. Eugene at Tri-City, 7:15 p.m.
BASKETBALL WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Las Vegas 7 5 .583 — Seattle 8 6 .571 — Los Angeles 6 6 .500 1 Minnesota 6 6 .500 1 Phoenix 5 5 .500 1 Dallas 4 7 .364 2½ EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Washington 9 3 .750 — Connecticut 9 4 .692 ½ Chicago 6 6 .500 3 New York 5 7 .417 4 Indiana 5 9 .357 5 Atlanta 2 8 .200 6 Sunday’s games New York 74, Atlanta 58 Dallas 89, Minnesota 86 Los Angeles 94, Chicago 69 Phoenix 69, Seattle 67 Today’s games No games scheduled
Mercury 69, Storm 67 PHOENIX (69) Bonner 6-18 4-4 20, Carson 3-6 1-1 7, Griner 10-14 0-0 20, January 3-9 0-0 7, Mitchell 3-11 0-0 6, Cunningham 2-5 2-2 7, Little 0-2 0-0 0, Lyttle 0-3 2-2 2. Totals 27-68 9-9 69.
Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 94/77/t 107/74/s 90/72/pc 108/83/s 88/71/t 83/64/pc 72/57/pc 84/69/pc 98/71/pc 82/57/pc 87/58/s 87/57/s 92/73/pc 92/79/pc 95/66/s 88/74/t 72/64/pc 70/55/pc 76/55/pc 90/58/s 83/65/pc 96/76/pc 92/77/t 91/73/s 103/77/pc 94/76/pc 93/72/s 108/72/s
Detroit 84/71 Washington 87/68
Kansas City 89/72
Los Angeles 83/63
Atlanta 91/75
City
p-Justin Verlander, Houston Relievers p-Aroldis Chapman, N.Y. Yankees m-Shane Greene, Detroit p-Brad Hand, Cleveland p-Ryan Pressly, Houston NATIONAL LEAGUE Manager — Dave Roberts, L.A. Dodgers Starters Catcher — Wilson Contreras, Chicago Cubs First Baseman — Freddie Freeman, Atlanta Second Baseman — Ketel Marte, Arizona Shortstop — Javier Baez, Chicago Cubs Third Baseman — Nolan Arenado, Colorado Outfield — Christian Yelich, Milwaukee Outfield — Cody Bellinger, L.A. Dodgers Outfield — Ronald Acuna Jr., Atlanta Reserves Catchers m-Yasmani Grandahl, Milwaukee p-J.T. Realmuto, Philadelphia Infielders m-Pete Alonso, N.Y. Mets p-Josh Bell, Pittsburgh m-Kris Bryant, Chicago m-Paul DeJong, St. Louis p-Mike Moustakas, Milwaukee p-Anthony Rendon, Washington p-Trevor Story, Colorado Outfielders p-Charlie Blackmon, Colorado p-David Dahl, Colorado p-Jeff McNeil, N.Y. Mets Pitchers Starters m-Sandy Alcantara, Miami p-Walker Buehler, L.A. Dodgers p-Luis Castillo, Cincinnati p-Jacob deGrom, N.Y. Mets m-Zach Greinke, Arizona m-Clayton Kershaw, L.A. Dodgers p-Hyun-Jin Ryu, L.A. Dodgers p-Max Scherzer, Washington m-Mike Soroka, Atlanta Relievers p-Josh Hader, Milwaukee p-Will Smith, San Francisco p-Kirby Yates, San Diego
Today Hi/Lo/W 93/76/pc 109/77/s 86/68/s 111/83/s 83/67/pc 78/63/pc 79/58/sh 82/68/s 91/66/s 76/58/t 88/57/pc 87/57/s 94/74/pc 90/79/pc 93/68/pc 89/74/t 74/63/pc 68/56/pc 76/56/s 90/58/s 81/65/s 94/75/pc 91/78/pc 91/72/s 106/78/t 87/68/s 91/70/s 110/75/s
New York 84/70
Minneapolis 78/66
El Paso 101/76
Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W 68/51/pc 91/70/s 110/82/s 89/77/t 95/71/c 71/51/pc 58/39/pc 98/76/s 63/49/pc 90/82/t 85/64/s 58/31/s 70/53/pc
Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Billings 84/61
Source: NAB
World Weather
Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Seattle 80/58
Last Jul 24
h
hig
500
More Information
American League
Trees Grass Weeds absent Molds N.A.
New Jul 2
5:13 a.m. 9:12 p.m. 4:17 a.m. 8:20 p.m.
Today Hi/Lo/W Albany 85/65/s Albuquerque 89/66/t Amarillo 91/63/s Anchorage 73/56/s Atlanta 91/75/pc Atlantic City 81/71/s Austin 91/71/t Baltimore 87/67/s Baton Rouge 91/71/pc Billings 84/61/pc Birmingham 92/75/pc Boise 92/58/pc Boston 77/67/s Buffalo 79/65/pc Burlington, VT 84/63/pc Charlotte 94/72/pc Cheyenne 77/55/t Chicago 91/75/t Cincinnati 89/71/t Cleveland 86/71/pc Columbus, OH 88/72/c Dallas 89/74/t Denver 82/59/t Des Moines 91/71/pc Detroit 84/71/pc El Paso 101/76/t Evansville 91/74/pc Fairbanks 70/52/c
A: Yes, ultraviolet rays penetrate clouds
through 5 p.m. yesterday
Sunrise today ....................... Sunset tonight ..................... Moonrise today ................... Moonset today .....................
75/59/pc 85/55/pc 85/57/pc 74/56/pc 69/53/c 73/55/pc 91/61/pc 66/57/c 79/53/c 68/54/c 83/56/pc 85/57/pc 80/58/pc 80/55/pc 88/61/pc 87/62/pc 88/53/pc
City
National Weather
Gold Bar 79/57
Lynnwood 76/57
Mill Creek Monroe 76/57 79/57 Kirkland Redmond 79/58 80/58 Seattle 80/58 Bellevue 79/58 Port Orchard Auburn 80/56 81/57
Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Houston 87/73
Fairbanks 70/52 Anchorage 73/56
Juneau 77/55
Miami 92/76
Honolulu 88/75 Hilo 85/70
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
National Extremes
(for the 48 contiguous states) High: Death Valley, CA .................................................. 114
Low: Crater Lake, OR ...................................................... 30
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
SEATTLE (67) Canada 4-11 2-4 10, Clark 5-6 0-0 12, Howard 4-15 0-0 9, Russell 5-8 2-3 12, Whitcomb 5-13 0-0 13, Langhorne 1-4 2-2 4, MosquedaLewis 3-7 0-0 7, Paris 0-0 0-0 0, Zellous 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-65 6-9 67. Phoenix Seattle
19 15 17 18—69 12 21 15 19—67
3-Point Goals—Phoenix 6-27 (Bonner 4-9, Cunningham 1-4, January 1-6, Lyttle 0-1, Carson 0-1, Mitchell 0-6), Seattle 7-23 (Whitcomb 3-11, Clark 2-2, Howard 1-2, Mosqueda-Lewis 1-5, Langhorne 0-1, Canada 0-1, Zellous 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 29 (Griner, Mitchell 7), Seattle 37 (Howard 8). Assists— Phoenix 13 (Mitchell 4), Seattle 20 (Whitcomb 5). Total Fouls—Phoenix 9, Seattle 13. A—8,002 (10,000).
GOLF Rocket Mortgage Classic Sunday At Detroit Golf Club Detroit Purse: $7.3 million Yardage: 7,340; Par 72 Final Round Nate Lashley, $1,314,000 63-67-63-70—263 Doc Redman, $788,400 68-67-67-67—269 Wes Roach, $423,400 67-68-67-68—270 Rory Sabbatini, $423,400 65-69-68-68—270 Joaquin Niemann, $239,075 68-66-69-68—271 Ted Potter, Jr., $239,075 68-67-68-68—271 Patrick Reed, $239,075 68-68-65-70—271 Brandt Snedeker, $239,075 70-69-65-67—271 Brian Stuard, $239,075 66-72-65-68—271 Cameron Tringale, $239,075 68-67-65-71—271 J.T. Poston, $175,200 70-63-66-73—272 Sepp Straka, $175,200 68-67-70-67—272 Byeong Hun An, $136,875 68-66-69-70—273 Viktor Hovland, $136,875 70-69-70-64—273 Hideki Matsuyama, $136,875 68-67-68-70—273 J.J. Spaun, $136,875 66-73-68-66—273 Wyndham Clark, $105,850 68-70-68-68—274 Brice Garnett, $105,850 69-67-71-67—274 Talor Gooch, $105,850 65-72-67-70—274 Billy Horschel, $105,850 69-70-71-64—274 J.B. Holmes, $68,529 67-68-70-70—275 Mackenzie Hughes, $68,529 66-70-72-67—275 Sungjae Im, $68,529 69-68-66-72—275 Danny Lee, $68,529 66-71-69-69—275 Denny McCarthy, $68,529 69-68-69-69—275 Roger Sloan, $68,529 70-68-69-68—275 Kyle Stanley, $68,529 69-69-70-67—275 Jimmy Walker, $68,529 68-71-70-66—275 Jonas Blixt, $46,416 67-68-72-69—276 Cameron Smith, $46,416 70-68-71-67—276 Joey Garber, $46,416 67-72-68-69—276 Jason Kokrak, $46,416 66-71-68-71—276 Peter Malnati, $46,416 68-66-68-74—276 Martin Piller, $46,416 66-69-71-70—276 Bronson Burgoon, $34,466 66-70-72-69—277 Shawn Stefani, $34,466 69-70-68-70—277 Kevin Streelman, $34,466 66-70-68-73—277 Nick Taylor, $34,466 68-70-69-70—277 Josh Teater, $34,466 68-69-73-67—277 Aaron Wise, $34,466 69-69-67-72—277 Charles Howell III, $34,466 65-67-71-74—277 Sam Burns, $26,280 70-67-71-70—278 Max Homa, $26,280 68-69-71-70—278 Anirban Lahiri, $26,280 69-68-72-69—278 Adam Schenk, $26,280 65-71-71-71—278 Ryan Armour, $18,980 64-69-74-72—279 Cameron Champ, $18,980 66-65-75-73—279 Luke Donald, $18,980 67-69-72-71—279 Rickie Fowler, $18,980 68-68-72-71—279 Dylan Frittelli, $18,980 66-70-72-71—279 Kevin Kisner, $18,980 66-70-72-71—279 Vaughn Taylor, $18,980 70-69-69-71—279 Nick Watney, $18,980 64-72-69-74—279 Chase Wright, $18,980 65-70-73-71—279 Harris English, $16,571 66-68-71-75—280 Carlos Ortiz, $16,571 67-70-74-69—280 Seth Reeves, $16,571 68-71-71-70—280 Brendan Steele, $16,571 68-70-71-71—280 Dominic Bozzelli, $15,914 69-69-75-68—281 Roberto Castro, $15,914 70-69-72-70—281 Bud Cauley, $15,914 69-69-72-71—281 Colt Knost, $15,914 70-68-72-71—281 Andrew Landry, $15,914 71-67-70-73—281 Anders Albertson, $15,184 69-67-76-70—282 Chad Collins, $15,184 67-72-70-73—282 Tom Hoge, $15,184 67-70-73-72—282 Wes Homan, $15,184 71-68-71-72—282 Scott Stallings, $15,184 66-72-70-74—282 Kyle Jones, $14,746 70-69-74-70—283 Stewart Cink, $14,600 65-73-72-74—284 Smylie Kaufman, $14,454 69-70-80-69—288
NW Arkansas Championship Sunday At Pinnacle Country Club Rogers, Ark. Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,438; Par 71 (36-35) Final Round Sung Hyun Park, $300,000 66-63-66—195 Danielle Kang, $141,128 68-63-65—196
Hyo Joo Kim, $141,128 67-64-65—196 Inbee Park, $141,128 62-69-65—196 Brittany Altomare, $83,633 66-65-66—197 Ryann O’Toole, $55,249 69-65-64—198 Mi Jung Hur, $55,249 68-66-64—198 Daniela Darquea, $55,249 66-65-67—198 Carlota Ciganda, $55,249 63-66-69—198 Nicole Broch Larsen, $38,183 69-66-64—199 Amy Yang, $38,183 68-66-65—199 Jenny Shin, $38,183 65-68-66—199 Tiffany Chan, $29,601 69-66-65—200 Gaby Lopez, $29,601 67-67-66—200 Lauren Kim, $29,601 66-68-66—200 Paula Creamer, $29,601 63-70-67—200 Linnea Strom, $29,601 66-65-69—200 Jessica Korda, $20,994 69-67-65—201 Mirim Lee, $20,994 68-68-65—201 Jeong Eun Lee, $20,994 70-65-66—201 Katherine Kirk, $20,994 68-67-66—201 Minjee Lee, $20,994 68-67-66—201 Austin Ernst, $20,994 68-67-66—201 Annie Park, $20,994 64-71-66—201 Lizette Salas, $20,994 67-67-67—201 Azahara Munoz, $20,994 70-63-68—201 Aditi Ashok, $20,994 66-67-68—201 Jin Young Ko, $20,994 65-66-70—201 Cheyenne Knight, $15,611 69-67-66—202 Giulia Molinaro, $15,611 67-68-67—202 So Yeon Ryu, $15,611 68-66-68—202 In Gee Chun, $15,611 68-66-68—202 Lydia Ko, $12,241 69-69-65—203 Shanshan Feng, $12,241 68-70-65—203 Nasa Hataoka, $12,241 65-72-66—203 Marina Alex, $12,241 65-71-67—203 Maria Torres, $12,241 64-71-68—203 Anna Nordqvist, $12,241 68-66-69—203 Ariya Jutanugarn, $12,241 64-70-69—203 Ashleigh Buhai, $12,241 66-66-71—203 Mel Reid, $9,008 68-71-65—204 Sei Young Kim, $9,008 68-71-65—204 Brooke M. Henderson, $9,008 69-69-66—204 Kristen Gillman, $9,008 69-69-66—204 Chella Choi, $9,008 70-67-67—204 Mi Hyang Lee, $9,008 68-67-69—204 S. Santiwiwatthanaphong, $9,008 63-70-71—204 Clariss Guce, $7,045 70-68-67—205 Jennifer Song, $7,045 68-69-68—205 Stacy Lewis, $7,045 68-68-69—205 Louise Ridderstrom, $7,045 69-66-70—205 Pavarisa Yoktuan, $7,045 67-68-70—205 Jasmine Suwannapura, $7,045 67-65-73—205 Georgia Hall, $5,778 68-70-68—206 Mariah Stackhouse, $5,778 67-71-68—206 Pajaree Anannarukarn, $5,778 71-66-69—206 Yu Liu, $5,778 69-68-69—206 Moriya Jutanugarn, $5,778 71-65-70—206 Katherine Perry, $5,778 65-71-70—206 Peiyun Chien, $5,018 68-71-68—207 Lindy Duncan, $5,018 73-65-69—207 Jing Yan, $4,663 72-67-69—208 Mina Harigae, $4,663 70-69-69—208 Pernilla Lindberg, $4,663 74-64-70—208 Isi Gabsa, $4,663 68-70-70—208 Wei-Ling Hsu, $4,663 66-71-71—208 Ayako Uehara, $4,308 71-68-70—209 Haru Nomura, $4,308 70-69-70—209 Kendall Dye, $4,308 67-71-72—210 Sandra Gal, $4,106 66-72-72—210 Tiffany Joh, $3,979 72-67-74—213 Angela Stanford, $3,979 70-69-74—213
U.S. Senior Open Sunday At The Warren Golf Course at Notre Dame South Bend Ind. Purse: $4 million Yardage: 6,943; Par 70 Final Round Steve Stricker, $720,000 62-64-66-69—261 David Toms, $350,440 62-67-70-68—267 Jerry Kelly, $350,440 64-64-70-69—267 Bob Estes, $188,477 67-65-68-70—270 Kirk Triplett, $156,983 64-68-71-69—272 Scott McCarron, $114,444 72-69-70-64—275 Chris DiMarco, $114,444 66-66-73-70—275 Paul Goydos, $114,444 67-69-69-70—275 M. Angel Jimenez, $114,444 66-71-67-71—275 Stephen Ames, $114,444 70-67-66-72—275 Tom Lehman, $79,185 68-69-70-69—276 Woody Austin, $79,185 68-69-70-69—276 Paul Broadhurst, $79,185 71-67-68-70—276 Fran Quinn, $63,216 68-70-69-70—277 Doug Garwood, $63,216 70-69-68-70—277 Retief Goosen, $63,216 66-65-72-74—277 Tom Watson, $46,359 69-68-73-68—278 Steve Jones, $46,359 71-66-72-69—278 Jay Haas, $46,359 70-68-71-69—278 Duffy Waldorf, $46,359 65-69-74-70—278 Jeff Gallagher, $46,359 69-67-72-70—278 Kent Jones, $46,359 70-67-69-72—278 Ken Duke, $46,359 70-70-66-72—278 Tom Byrum, $28,798 73-67-72-67—279 Lee Janzen, $28,798 70-70-71-68—279 Wes Short Jr., $28,798 68-70-72-69—279 Phillip Price, $28,798 72-68-70-69—279 Joe Durant, $28,798 67-69-73-70—279 Vijay Singh, $28,798 65-72-71-71—279 Colin Montgomerie, $28,798 68-72-68-71—279 Scott Parel, $28,798 67-73-67-72—279 Bernhard Langer, $28,798 66-68-70-75—279 Gary Orr, $20,464 70-68-72-70—280
Ken Tanigawa, $20,464 68-69-72-71—280 Roger Chapman, $20,464 70-69-70-71—280 Jeff Sluman, $20,464 67-71-69-73—280 Billy Andrade, $20,464 66-68-69-77—280 Clark Dennis, $16,252 69-70-71-72—282 Prayad Marksaeng, $16,252 72-69-69-72—282 Mark O’Meara, $16,252 68-73-69-72—282 Kevin Sutherland, $16,252 67-70-72-73—282 Corey Pavin, $16,252 68-72-67-75—282 Bart Bryant, $12,633 72-68-73-70—283 Peter Fowler, $12,633 71-68-70-74—283 Tom Werkmeister, $12,633 72-67-70-74—283 Mark Brown, $12,633 66-69-72-76—283 Jean-Francois Remesy,$9,935 70-69-74-71—284 Rocco Mediate, $9,935 72-69-72-71—284 Marco Dawson, $9,935 72-68-70-74—284 Jeff Maggert, $9,935 70-67-71-76—284 Toru Suzuki, $8,826 65-72-76-72—285 Billy Mayfair, $8,826 68-72-73-72—285 Kirk Hanefeld, $8,826 69-71-72-73—285 Brad Bryant, $8,570 71-70-73-72—286 Gary Nicklaus, $8,449 68-71-75-73—287 Paul Lawrie, $8,449 70-71-71-75—287 Kohki Idoki, $8,328 69-72-73-74—288 Tim Petrovic, $8,247 69-70-74-76—289 Scott Dunlap, $8,169 71-70-78-72—291
MLS
SOCCER
WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles FC 11 2 4 37 39 14 LA Galaxy 10 7 1 31 24 22 Seattle 8 4 5 29 27 21 FC Dallas 7 7 5 26 27 25 San Jose 7 6 4 25 28 27 Minnesota United 7 7 3 24 30 26 Houston 7 6 3 24 22 22 Real Salt Lake 7 8 2 23 24 28 Portland 6 8 2 20 25 28 Vancouver 4 7 8 20 21 25 Colorado 5 9 4 19 28 36 Sporting Kansas City 4 6 7 19 27 29 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 9 5 5 32 34 25 D.C. United 8 4 7 31 25 19 Montreal 9 8 3 30 24 31 Atlanta 9 6 2 29 23 15 New York 8 6 3 27 30 20 New York City FC 6 1 8 26 27 19 Toronto FC 6 7 5 23 30 31 Orlando City 6 8 3 21 24 22 New England 5 8 5 20 20 35 Chicago 4 7 7 19 26 27 Columbus 5 11 2 17 16 27 Cincinnati 3 13 2 11 15 42 Sunday’s game Portland 1, FC Dallas 0 Today’s games No games scheduled
Women’s World Cup SEMIFINALS Tuesday At Lyon, France England vs. United States, noon Wednesday At Lyon, France Netherlands vs. Sweden, noon
DEALS
BASEBALL American League BALTIMOE ORIOLES — Optioned LHP Tanner Scott to Norfolk (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned SS Yu Chang to Columbus (IL). Reinstated 3B Jose Ramirez from paternity leave. DETROIT TIGERS — Optioned OF Victor Reyes to Toledo (IL). Recalled LHP Gregory Soto from Toledo. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Sent SS Adalberto Mondesi to Northwest Arkansas (TL) for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned RHP Luke Bard to Salt Lake (PCL). Assigned SS Wilfredo Tovar outright to Salt Lake. Recalled 1B Jared Walsh from Salt Lake. MINNESOTA TWINS — Assigned LHP Gabriel Moya outright to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Recalled RHP Chance Adams from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Sent RHP Ben Heller to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a rehab assignment. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Placed OF Stephen Piscotty on the 10-day IL. Recalled INF Franklin Barreto from Las Vegas (PCL). SEATTLE MARINERS — Sent RHP Sam Tuivailala to Arkansas (TL) for a rehab assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Designated RHP Casey Sadler for assignment. Selected the contract of LHP Brendan McKay from Durham (IL). TEXAS RANGERS — Sent RHP Kyle Dowdy to Nashville (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Signed RHP Austin Bibens-Dirkx to a minor league contract.