Snoqualmie Valley Record, November 26, 2014

Page 1

Valley Record SNOQUALMIE

Camera thief brings NB wildlife study to an early end Theft of hidden cameras impacts plan to make I-90 safer for elk, cars

Div 1-bound: McCreadie heads to Santa Clara Broncos Page 11

BY SETH TRUSCOTT Editor

Carol Ladwig/Staff Photo

SCENE

Cedarcrest High School Resource Officer Lori Batiot stops to watch a science class conduct a hallway experiment. Mitchell Frimodt, left, and Morgan Walker measured the force vectors of Carson Graham’s chair.

Firefighters share lessons in Peru sister city connection Page 12

INDEX

On duty in schools School Resource Officer programs renewed at both Valley school districts BY CAROL LADWIG Staff Reporter

Letters 4 On The Scanner 6 8 Calendar 12 Puzzles Legal Notices 13, 14 Classifieds 15-18

Vol. 101, No. 27

Candy, tattoos, and information are the main things that Cedarcrest High School’s school

resource officer Sgt. Lori Batiot serves up in her shared role between department and district. The candy and (temporary) tattoos are ice-breakers to get students to make contact; the information, advice, and the accompanying healthy dose of role modeling are what she sees as her real purpose at the 900-student school.

The video image shows a masked man hiking along the damp, rocky shore of the South Fork of the Snoqualmie River, carrying a steel bar. Authorities with Washington State The person of interest Department of in the theft of nine wild- Transportation suslife cameras is pictured pect this is the man in this image taken who stole nine camby a hidden WSDOT eras installed along camera. the I-90 corridor at North Bend, causing an early halt to a wildlife study meant to make highway driving safer. SEE CAMERAS, 15

SEE RESOURCE OFFICER, 3

Valley groups unite for holiday giving campaign By Valley Record Staff

One VOICE and Snoqualmie Valley Kiwanis have teamed up with cities, churches, clubs and businesses to renew the annual Snoqualmie Valley Giving Tree effort. Now in year four, One VOICE

brings together more than 40 nonprofits, community service groups, religious organizations and private donors to serve Valley residents in need. Starting this month, volunteers set up trees at venues throughout the Valley to collect

donated gifts for children, from birth to age 18, and local families in need. One VOICE then gives out holiday gifts including diapers, blankets, hygiene and dental products, games and gingerbread house kits. SEE GIVING TREE, 3

Photos courtesy WSDOT

A spike elk gets safely under Interstate 90 near North Bend, in this image taken by one of WSDOT’s safety-study cameras.

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