Enumclaw Courier-Herald, March 04, 2015

Page 1

SEE INSIDE: Bob Milne to perform at The Chalet, page 2 . . . . WR girls advance in state tourney, others eliminated, page 3 Marianne Binetti: spring sprouting in the garden, page 21

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 | 75 cents

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Feds forgive Enumclaw debt

What’s Inside

Sports.................................Page 3 Views...................................Page 6 Family.................................Page 8 Obituaries.........................Page 9 Classified...........................Page 17

This Week...

By Kevin Hanson

• Block Party - LEGOS at the Enumlcaw Library, 4 p.m. today, March 11. The library supplies the Legos. • Lions Club Peace Poster Program 7 p.m. Thursday at Ganny Sue’s Pizzeria, Bonney Lake

Senior Writer

Courier-Herald... If your newspaper looks a little different this week – it is. This is the first week The CourierHerald features all the Plateau news in one publication. The Bonney Lake and Enumclaw newspapers were combined into one edition giving all the news in one place.

Weather Sunny skies should stick around today, Wednesday, with a high temperature of 51 degrees. Tonight’s low will drop to the miid-30s. Thursday should stay partly sunny before some clouds roll in Friday. The weekend looks good, with plenty of sun and highs in the middle 50s.

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Remember to turn your clocks forward Saturday night for daylight saving time

Dowman hangs out with Rutabaga the Moose and PanTHOR the Panther Pack the Russell at Bonney Lake High School’s Pack the Gym game last Wednesday. The Pack the Gym is an series of basketball games for the area’s Special Olympics teams. The Gym event Bonney Lake/Sumner team won the state title last Sunday, 52-28. Photo by Ray Still

Enumclaw has dodged a financial bullet that could have blasted a hole in city coffers. Specifically, a potential debt of nearly $600,000 to the federal government has been forgiven and wiped clean from the city slate. Mayor Liz Reynolds made the announcement – “great news,” she called it – during a short, Feb. 23 session of the Enumclaw City Council. At issue was money the city spent while planning for a multi-use Welcome Center. The proposed facility floated on the periphery of city government for 14 years, taking different shapes as it was addressed by three different mayors and several roster turnovers of the seven-member council. Finally, buy a 4-3 voted taken in August 2014, the council pulled the plug. As plans for the Welcome Center moved along, year by year, the city had received grant money to do the work, eventually spending well in excess of a half-million dollars. When the vote was taken to scrap the project, city leaders were fully aware federal authorities could ask that

SEE ENUMCLAW, PAGE 2

East Pierce fire commissioner Rick Kuss retires By Ray Still Staff Writer

E

ast Pierce Fire a nd Resc ue Commissioner Rick Kuss announced he will be retiring from his position on the board on March 1. “I have been in public service since I was 17 years old and planned to retire at 62,” Kuss wrote. “So after 44 years I am retiring and to do so I need to resign my position at East Pierce.” Kuss wrote in an email that his retirement has

nothing to do with teer firefighter in his recent disagreeSumner while he ment he had with was in high school, the rest of the board following in his concerning the profather’s and eldest cess for recruiting brother’s footsteps. and hiring a fire In 1975 Kuss Rick Kuss chief. was accepted into The fire board the Puyallup Fire decided to hire Department as a Greg Prothman to conduct full-time firefighter and a national search for a new was eventually promoted fire chief. Kuss disagreed to deputy fire marshal in with the decision, saying 1990. it was “one of the poorest Kuss then went to the decisions” he had seen as a law enforcement academy commissioner. and became a police invesKuss started his career tigator. in firefighting as a volunKuss became a fire com-

missioner with the Lake Tapps Fire Department in 1989, which became part of East Pierce in 2000. “It’s been a great career and I am very proud of the men and women of East Pierce Fire and Rescue,” Kuss wrote. “I’m glad I was able to do my part in helping to develop a high level of fire and emergency medical service to the citizens I served.” Kuss plans to spend more time with and spoil his granddaughter and new grandson and enjoy fishing and hunting season.

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Challenges facing East Pierce

One challenge the department is facing is a lack of a command structure, according to Kuss. Kuss’ retirement is the third retirement East Pierce has seen so far this year. Former Deputy Chief John McDonald retired at the beginning of February of this year, and Fire Chief Jerry Thorson plans to retire at the end of April. Both McDonald and

SEE RETIRES, PAGE 5

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Page 2 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

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National treasure Bob Milne to perform in Enumclaw By Ray Still Staff Writer

You normally have to travel to see a national treasure; Arizona has the Grand Canyon, Detroit hosts Rosa Park’s bus and the Statue of Liberty stands tall in New York. This weekend, though, living national treasure Bob Milne will be visiting Enumclaw to perform ragtime and boogie-woogie music at the Chalet Theater. Milne was declared a national treasure by the Library of Congress in 2004 after three days of interviews and filming his piano skills. Milne is an accomplished musician, but it was his

unique understanding of music that earned him his national treasure status. First of all, Milne doesn’t practice. Ever. Oh, and no sheet music either, because that would be cheating. Even so, Milne’s piano expertise may rival some of the greats. “Playing the piano has always been easy for me,” Milne said. “I can’t explain that. I don’t know how. I’ve never practiced a day in my life because as I said, it is easy for me.” When Milne was young, he would listen to his mother play the piano and when she finished, he would copy her by ear. She signed him up for piano lessons, but he only

ENUMCLAW FROM 1 $582,952 be repaid. It also was noted at the time that City Hall would fight to have the debt erased. Efforts were positive and a letter from the Washington State Department of Transportation formally absolved Enumclaw of any portion of the debt. The three paragraphs of economic salvation noted “the original scope of work consisted of planning for the preliminary site design

stuck them out for a year. “They were giving me these stupid scales and silly-sounding children songs and telling me to play these, and I was already listening to Beethoven,” he recalled. Some of the feats Milne can perform include being able to play three time signatures at a time; 3/4 time, 4/4 time and 5/4 time. Milne can also keep track of four different songs at a time, and when they’re over, he can tell you all about them. “Some neurology doctors made a study of me trying to figure out how I can do this. I don’t know myself how I do it,” Milne said. “They’ve been studying me for 5 years and have not come up with an explanation.”

and engineering” and admitted the city “has shown a good faith effort throughout the process to continue to move this project forward.” And, with that, the Federal Highway Administration determined the city is off the hook. In other action during a meeting that officially lasted 19 minutes, 32 seconds, the council: • received a positive report about the recent Wine and Chocolate Festival from Scott Gray, manager of the Enumclaw

What Milne can describe about his brain is he stores music he hears inside a clam shell. “Picture a clam shell. Picture it opened up,” he described. “I listen to somebody play a piece of music and I just open the clam shell and I put it in there and I close it. And I can let it out later.” Milne’s philosophy towards music is just as unique as his brain, too. Once word got out about his abilities, people would try to cajole him into playing a certain piece by handing him the sheet music. Milne, though, would turn them down. “I would look at the piece and I would say to myself, ‘I’ve been given an ability. I

was given the ability to do it without the music,’” he said. “’And if I violate that ability, it might be taken away from me.’” Instead of using his skills to show off how good he is, Milne believes it is more important to show off how good the music is. “I always tell piano students, don’t ever try to show anybody how good you are,” he said. “Show them how good the music can be. So if I sit down in some basement and practice all sorts of funky runs, doublehanded going in different directions, that’s trying to show somebody how good I am. I won’t do that. I have to be able to use my brains and create (the music) on the spot, in the moment and

Expo Center. After calculating expenses and revenues, the event posted a $26,000 profit, Gray said, adding that was the best showing for the event in five years. Looking ahead to next year, Gray said food vendors will be added and – to accommodate the tastes of a broader audience – at least one beer vendor will be added to the mix. • took action stemming from a 2012 restructuring project within the Enumclaw Police Department. Chief Jim Zoll told

Bob Milne will perform at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 8, at the Chalet Theatre in Enumclaw. keep on going.” Milne has been a professional piano player for more than 50 years, and averages between 200 and 250 performances a year, and makes his living traveling across the country to perform. “I feel so lucky that I can do something that other people like,” Milne said. “I happen to be doing something that I enjoy and people like me. It doesn’t get any better than that.” Milne will be performing at 2 p.m. on March 8 at the Chalet Theatre for one day only.

council members of a “housekeeping measure” that would do two things: add a captain’s position and change the term “patrolman” to “police officer.” It was the first reading for the ordinance, so no action was taken. It will appear again on a coming agenda for council action.

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Sports

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • Page 3

Three in regionals, only WR girls advance WHITE RIVER GIRLS By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer

Kristin Sturdivan prepares to launch one of her crucial 3-pointers during White River’s regional win. Photo by Kevin Hanson

To be the best, you have to play the best. That line of thinking meshes perfectly with the White River High girls basketball team, which appears Thursday in the quarterfinal round of the Class 2A state tournament. Game time is 3:45 p.m. in Yakima’s SunDome. Thursday’s opponent is Mark Morris (222), ranked No. 1 in the state. As proof of how good the Monarchs can be, they defeated White River by 31 points when the two squared off during a mid-January, nonleague tussle. Should White River knock off the Monarchs, they will play at 7:15 p.m. Friday against the winner of Thursday battle between River Ridge and Ellensburg, both unranked. If White River falls on Thursday, the Hornets will play at 12:15 p.m. Friday against the River Ridge/Ellensburg loser. The Yakima tourney is a double-elimination affair. Advancing to the Class 2A Elite Eight is nothing new for the White River girls program, which has enjoyed a remarkable run under coach Chris Gibson. The Hornets

LET US

Cater

have made the state field (the Sweet 16) in 15 of the past 17 seasons; recently, White River placed third three years ago and brought home fourth-place honors last season. The Hornets qualified for Yakima play Saturday afternoon at Puyallup, defeating the Blaine Borderites 60-51 in the regional round of the state tourney. The victory was a struggle from the beginning for White River, which usually breaks out to an early lead. Saturday, however, the Hornets missed everything from the field during the game’s early stages and were unsuccessful on six tries from the free-throw line. As a result, more than five minutes elapsed before White River cracked the scoreboard and Blaine enjoyed a 12-10 lead after a period of play. The Hornets spent the next two quarters slowly stretching a lead that reached 14 points by the end of the third quarter. Again, things turned difficult and Blaine eventually went on a nine-point run that cut White River’s lead to just 49-46 with 1:31 to play. That’s when senior Kristin Sturdivan buried a crucial 3-point bomb that snuffed the Blaine rally. White River put things away with some timely free throws and the inside work of sophomore Kendall Bird, who converted two offensive rebounds to putback buckets.

Bird and Amanda Lance led the Hornet effort with 19 points each and Sturdivan added 14.

WHITE RIVER BOYS By Kevin Hanson Senior Writer

When things looked bleakest, the White River High boys basketball team bounced back. Trailing 42-26 at halftime to the Squalicum Storm, the Hornets stepped on the floor and promptly rattled off a 16-0 run that tied Saturday’s contest at Puyallup High School – a game that marked the regional round of the state tournament. Perhaps digging from such a deep hole took its toll on the Hornets, who entered unranked yet gave the Storm all it could handle. In the end, the Bellingham boys posted a 68-59 victory and will play again Thursday in the Class 2A Elite Eight in Yakima. White River is done for the season. Saturday’s regional contest saw Squalicum bury four 3-pointers in the first quarter and four more in the second, appearing to have

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Page 4 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

All-league hoop honors for EHS and White River

BASKETBALL FROM 3 the game in hand. White River’s heroics continued after the 16-point outburst and the Hornets led 49-47 when senior Brandon Scheer nailed a jump shot with 4:58 to play. The Storm answered with an eight-point run, taking control for the final time. Squalicum hit seven of eight free throws to keep its lead down the final stretch. Sophomore Alex Wallen scored 19 points – 15 in the second half – to lead the Hornet offense. Playing their final games for White River, seniors Dustin France and Scheer added 16 and 14 points, respectively.

South Puget Sound League coaches, in both the 3A and 2A divisions, gathered recently to make their all-league selections. Voting was done at the conclusion of the regular season and the following Plateau players were honored.

Enumclaw boys

Senior Zac Webb was a second-team selection. Juniors Josh Erickson and Scotty Garvin received honorable mention.

Enumclaw girls

Junior Samantha Engebretsen was named to the all-league first team. Junior Kylie Rademacher was a second-team pick and senior Noelle Putman was an honorable mention selection. Additionally, the Enumclaw High girls program received the Sportsmanship Award.

SUMNER GIRLS By Sarah Wehmann

White River girls

Amanda Lance was tabbed as the SPSL 2A’s Most Valuable Player, taking home an award she shared a season ago. Named to the all-league first team were senior Kristin Sturdivan and sophomore Kendall Bird. Junior Darian Gore was a second-team selection and junior Maci Goethals received honorable mention. Chris Gibson, longtime coach of the White River girls program, shared SPSL 2A Coach of the Year honors.

It was announced Feb. 25 that KC Moulden, a senior at Enumclaw High School, was nominated by a community member and selected by WIAA staff as one of the Athletes of the Week for her in wrestling. Moulden pinned her way through the girls’ 235-

pound division during the Feb. 20-21 state wrestling tournament, to secure her third consecutive state title. She also was an academic state champion and became the only athlete in school history to be a three-time champion in any sport.

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Freshman guard Kennedy Cutter had a team-high six points. The loss ends the high school careers for five seniors. Sumner f inished the season with an overall record of 19-6.

Featured Artist for March

Alex Sutton Alex began exploring ceramics in 1988, when she met a Catholic nun that had taught art at Syracuse University, and was retired. From this nun, she learned to listen for the being of a thing, and to distill the essence of it so it could be directly perceived. When Alex moved to Seattle in 1993, she found an old ceramic kiln in the house she bought. She began making pottery and tiles, then melting glass. She uses a technique of glass frit, which is like making tiny mosaics of glass. Her ideas come from the natural world around us. Alex’s vision is not to produce a replica, but to capture the essence of a thing. She says: “Glass is a wonderful medium for this because it is a ‘solid’ fluid and inherently challenges our perception of the world around us.” Alex will be teaching fused glass at Arts Alive! on March 7 from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm. For more information or to sign up, stop by the Gallery or give us a call.

The Road to State

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Sumner freshman guard Annie Smith looks for the bucket during Saturday’s regionals game against West Seattle at Renton High School. Despite being injured during the 3A districts title game, sophomore guard JaneAllyn Norris, below, played in Saturday’s regional game. Norris looks down court for an open player during the fourth quarter. Photos by Sarah Wehmann

Each week throughout the school year, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association recognizes 12 varsity athletes, a male and a female from each of the six classifications, who exhibited an outstanding performance during the previous week.

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White River boys

Dustin France was voted to the all-league first team and Brandon Scheer made the second team; both are seniors. Junior Tyler Meadows and sophomore Alex Wallen received honorable mention.

State honor for Moulden

Staff Writer

The Sumner High girls entered the 3A regionals as the No. 2 seed from the 3/4 district after losing 59-50 to Wilson in the 3A district championship game Feb. 21. The regional matchup was played at Renton High School against West Seattle, with the winner advancing to the state tournament beginning today, March 5. However, the Spartans’ season ended Saturday. The girls lost 56-18. Senior Jamie Lange, who tore her anterior cruciate ligament and partially tore her lateral collateral ligament during the district title game, sat out Saturday. The Spartans got off to a slow start Saturday and couldn’t catch up to West Seattle. At the half, Sumner was down 31-10. The girls went scoreless in the third quarter before putting eight on the board in the fourth.

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 5

Mother shoots and kills teenage daughter then commits suicide By Dennis Box Editor

East Pierce Fire and Rescue received a 911 call at 10:40 p.m. Friday reporting the deaths of a mother and daughter. Emergency medical personnel found a traumatic scene of a mother and her teenage daughter, both dead from gunshot wounds, at a residence south of Bonney Lake. Pierce County Sheriff ’s deputies investigated the scene as a murder-suicide. It is believed the 36-year-old mother shot and killed her 16-year-old daughter, then turned the weapon on herself. The Pierce County Medical Examiner’s Office released the cause of death Monday afternoon. According to the office, the daughter died from gunshot wounds to the

RETIRES FROM 1 Thorson have said their retirement plans had been in the works for several months, even up to a year. “The command structure has some big holes that need to be filled,” Kuss wrote. “The new chief is going to have to be very creative in filling those positions without creating staff burnout, all while finding the funding to do so.” Funding is the other challenge East Pierce will

head and chest and it has been listed as a homicide. The mother’s cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head and is considered a suicide. According to initial reports, the mother’s boyfriend found the two and made the call to 911. East Pierce responded to the scene and the Pierce County Sheriff ’s Office is the investigating agency. The Sumner School District is working with the staff and students at the school where the girl attended. The Bonney Lake police are assisting the district staff as needed. (Editor’s note: Names of the mother and daughter are being withheld to give the family and school district an opportunity to work through the aftermath.)

be dealing with this year. The department failed to acquire the supermajority of votes (60 percent) needed to pass a maintenance and operations levy during the 2014 election cycle. This resulted in the loss of more than $3 million in revenue. “Unless the new chief rolls in with a trunk full of gold or a magic wand, he or she is going to have to be creative in working towards renewing current funding sources, and/or finding new ones,” Kuss wrote.

Some parting advice Kuss had for the board is to look at the option of a fire benefit charge. Central Pierce Fire Department currently uses a fire benefit charge. The main difference between a fire benefit charge and a maintenance and operations levy is how property is assessed. A levy assesses total property value to charge residents, while a fire benefit charge is based on the square footage of structures on a parcel of

Howard Hanson Dam reservoir filling Water managers have begun slowly to augment downstream flows to help filling the reservoir at Howard Hanson endangered species of fish, including Dam at the headwaters of the Green Chinook and steelhead. Project managRiver. As is typical, the Army Corps of ers believe the regulated downstream Engineers began the process flows will aid spawning and in late February, allowing other life-cycle events for the water levels to rise within fish. the dam’s reservoir. Snowpack in the Green River Green River Basin It takes approximately is at a near record low three months to refill the level. The minimal snowreservoir. The current plan pack, coupled with recent dry targets a maximum pool elconditions, has resulted in a evation of 1,167 feet above low water supply outlook and a high sea level. That has been the spring refill likelihood that Green River flows could target since 2007. be well below average this spring. Low Water stored during the spring refill runoff could result in challenging spring will be used to provide water to the city refill conditions for Howard Hanson of Tacoma and its water supply partDam unless normal or above normal ners. Additionally, at least three-fifths rainfall patterns develop in the spring and of the reservoir’s supply will be used early summer. land, according to Central Pierce Deputy Chief of Administration Baron Banks. This means residential landowners would pay less under a fire benefit charge than commercial or industrial landowners. “The benefit charge spreads the tax base out and those types of structures who require more fire services pay more,” Kuss wrote. “I think it’s a much fairer way to provide funding, and chatting with Central Pierce

or Valley RFA (Regional Fire Authority) would have been a positive step.” Additionally, Banks said a fire benefit charge only requires a simple majority of votes (50 percent) to pass, unlike a levy. However, if a fire benefit charge is enacted for East Pierce, state law would require property taxes to drop from $1.50 to $1.00, according to Banks.

Status of the Commissioners

With Kuss retiring, the

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Views

Question of the Week A nationwide movement suggests the justice system should go easier on violent youth offenders. Do you agree? To vote in this week’s poll, see www.blscourierherald.com

THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 6

LAST WEEK: Do you think the Department of Homeland Security will shut down on Friday?

Yes: 31% No: 69%

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • www.courierherald.com

Too tough to tell what future holds Once again The Courier-Herald is off the press and the sky still appears to be propped up and in place, although I haven’t checked in the last 15 minutes. One moment, please…. OK, the sky is still up and I am still down – I will keep writing. I have been thinking a great deal recently about the multiple roles a newspaper plays in a community (My single-cell of gray goo needed a few extra injections of out-ofDennis Box date buttermilk to Editor keep up with this thinking stuff). All newspapers work and write in a community. The community may be a small town, a region, a county or a country. The process is similar in all, but the palette is different. A newspaper is a different kind of chicken. It is a business with First Amendment protection. Although like any constitutional right, it comes with limitations and, most importantly, responsibilities. Most businesses are concerned with keeping the doors on the hinges and selling widgets smothered in cheese. The intriguing part of a newspaper is the number of balls that must be kept in the air simultaneously to keep the presses running. I have read a pile of articles from around the country about the future of newspapers. Most are either misin-

Our Corner

SEE CORNER, PAGE 22

Volume 115 • Wednesday, March 4, 2013 • No. 25

1627 Cole Street, Enumclaw, WA 98022 253-862-7719 • Fax: 360-825-0824 E-mail: letters@courierherald.com Web site: www.blscourierherald.com

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Letters Enumclaw High student makes a pitch for voting ‘yes’ on bond proposal I am a junior, currently attending Enumclaw High School, and I can explain from my personal accounts why a new addition to our high school is needed. The problems within the building are more than a few leaks and heating issues. Last year I sat near the middle

of the classroom and every time I looked up there was a huge bulge in the ceiling that seemed to grow. We had to reconfigure the entire room so nobody would walk under the dripping panels that eventually did collapse. This was a major distraction to my learning and opened my eyes to all the other issues within our school. The heating and cooling system is another big problem that seems to be downplayed when others speak about it. I have classes in five different buildings – none maintain a similar temperature. I will go to first

period wearing a rain jacket and end up in my T-shirt, then throw the jacket on to run through the rain to get to my next class. In third period, I find myself wishing the rain jacket was thicker and that I had a blanket. I spend so much time deciding what I can wear that will be comfortable, yet I still end up fighting the temperatures. I have never gone an entire class period without hearing at least one complaint about the classroom being too hot or too cold. This is not just a minor issue; it occupies so

SEE LETTERS, PAGE 7

Striving to balance the way we think Do you know why federal senators serve six-year terms while representatives from the House serve only two? House representation is based upon population and, because representatives’ terms are shorter, they are closer to what the voters are thinking and feeling. Understanding and listening to public opinion is vital to the success of our representative democracy. Senators were originally elected by state legislatures, until the 17th Amendment was passed in 1913 allowing election by popular vote. The two

senators from each This tension state have six-year between shortterms to separate term and longthem from their term thinking in constituents – to Congress was meant give them longto create a balance term thinking. between forces that Rich Elfers Since they have six all of us deal with Columnist years to be re-electevery day of our ed, senators are not lives. Do we think as concerned about popular opinion. only for the moment, or do we plan They are supposed to deliberate on for the future? As I tell my civics and issues rather than reflect the mood of the public. SEE ELFERS, PAGE 7

In Focus

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 7

ELFERS FROM 6 government students, that depends. Depends on what? It depends on the circumstances of each situation and, for us humans, it is one of the most difficult things we have to do in order to navigate the endless decisions we face each day. When I was in my teens and 20s, I was impatient and impulsive. As a result, I made decisions in a hurry, not thinking of the potential consequences. After I made a number of major errors, saying things that popped into my head, for instance, I came to the realization that my impulsivity was getting me in trouble. I found that if I slowed down and thought things through and did some research, my decisions turned out to be better, especially if I weighed opposing extremes to decide where the best mid-point lay. As some self-help book advised, I learned to “hit the pause button” before making decisions. Over time, that approach allowed me to make better and longer-ranged plans than I had when

I lived in the moment. When the founders met in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 to write the Constitution, many had studied the governments of ancient Greece and Rome and the heritage of parliamentary democracy from the British. They had also studied what worked and what didn’t in colonial and state governments during the 180 years between the first permanent English colony in Jamestown in 1607 and that hot Philadelphia summer in 1787. That’s why they had the wisdom to create a Congress that balanced the importance of short-term thinking in the House with the long-term thinking of the Senate. We can learn from those men whom Jefferson in awe called “demi-gods” who created the Constitution. We can learn how to weigh the needs of the moment with the longer-termed realities of the future. Only when we develop the ability to live in the tension between those two extremes, as our founders envisioned for our Constitution, will we be able to live balanced and fulfilling lives.

ST. ELIZABETH BIRTHS A girl, Penelope Anne “Penny” Chevassus, born Feb. 2, 2015, to Elizabeth and Beau Chevassus of Enumclaw. A boy, Zackary Thomas Isbell, born Feb. 3, 2015, to Kacey Ortega and Benjamin Isbell of Bonney Lake. A boy, born Feb. 7, 2015, to Karalee and Jason Gregg of Enumclaw.

A girl, Evelyn Gwen Zahajko, born Feb. 10, 2015, to Ami and Mike Zahajko of Maple Valley. A boy, Elijah Jervis, born Feb. 11, 2015, to Karrisa and Jason Jervis of Graham. A boy, Cruz Patrick Donovan, born Feb. 12, 2015, to Kateri and Adam Donovan of Enumclaw.

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Inez Coyne

Inez Coyne passed away on February 24, 2015 surrounded by her family after a long battle with cancer. Inez was born to Ray and Helen (Phillips) Thieman along with her twin sister Ina on October 17, 1932 in Puyallup, Washington. She was later joined in the family by her two younger sisters Louise and Evelyn. Inez grew up on a small farm outside of Buckley and as a youngster she attended Kelly Lake School. Inez enjoyed canning fruits and vegetables grown on the family farm as well as helping with the livestock. She especially enjoyed her involvement with the 4-H club since her parents were involved with the leadership of the club. Inez graduated from White River High School in June 1951. On September 14, 1951, she married the love of her life, Ray Coyne. Ray was enlisted in the U.S. Navy and stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, which is where they first set up home. Later the Navy moved them to Alameda, California, before they returned to Washington as civilians. Ray and Inez had three children, Rhonda (Jerry) Dunlap, Dan (Darci) Coyne and Teri (Dave) Koch. They had eight grandchildren and thirteen great grandchildren, all of whom they enjoyed very much. After Teri started grade school, Inez went to work for the White River School District, as elementary secretary, a job she loved for 25 years. After she retired, she and Ray were able to do some traveling. She especially enjoyed family camping trips, cruises and trips to the Oregon Coast. Inez was a member of St. Aloysius Catholic Church and the Altar Society, and she also enjoyed making her famous potato salad for picnics and events at the Buckley Eagles. Inez is survived by her three children, her grandchildren and her great grandchildren. She is also survived by her three sisters, as well as Ray's sister Alice (Jerry) Alfano. The family would like to thank all of those who have helped Inez get to her many doctor and chemo appointments over the past 4-1/2 years. A special thank you goes to Bernice Greenwood and her co-workers at B' s Place in Burnett for Inez's wonderful care during the past 3 years. Memorials may be made to the Buckley Firefighter’s Assoc., PO Box 1015, Buckley, WA 98321 or Seattle Cancer Care Alliance Donations, PO Box 19023, Seattle, WA 98109. A visitation will be held, Thursday, March 5, 2015 from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. with the rosary starting at 7:00 p.m. both at Weeks’ Funeral Home in Buckley. A Funeral Mass will be Friday, March 6, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Enumclaw with burial at Buckley City Cemetery. Please sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes.com

LETTERS FROM 6 much of our precious time. It is almost impossible to concentrate when I am so uncomfortable. The maintenance staff is doing the best they can, but there is nothing else they can do to fix these problems. Beyond these commonly brought-up complaints, I can bring so many other issues to the table. The walls all over the building have stains and are becoming discolored. The bathrooms have stains, as well as having tiles that crumble and fall when a toilet is flushed, and leaky faucets that drip and cause mold. These problems have been addressed by staff, but solutions are only temporary. Our school has one major aspect that makes it modern: technology. The issue here is that the wiring through the walls is faulty and causes our new Promethean boards to fail. They consistently shut off in the middle of a lecture due to overheating. The teacher must continue to teach without the board or wait for it to cool down; either option delays the lesson plan. If a remodeled school was built, the wiring and set up of these boards would be taken into account. They would be properly installed and able to work with the performance we need.

Today’s News...Today! All New at: www.courierherald.com

Looking at the remodel of our high school from another perspective, the benefits are more than just practical. Students carry a sense of pride when they mention the school they attend. When I hear my classmates talk about our school, they are anything but proud. Not a single teenager I know wants to go to school in a cramped, dark, and outdated building. Many schools around us have been revamped to fulfill their students’ needs. When I walk in the doors of these schools, I am amazed. I think to myself how lucky they are. I wish that our school had the same effect on visitors: that they could walk in and see how we are able to learn in spacious classes, with new equipment that runs efficiently and far less distractions. Our education would flourish in a new building and so would our student body’s attitude. As a student affected by the many issues at EHS, I ask everyone with the ability to vote to please vote “yes” to help pass this bond. By attending school in this outdated and inadequate building, I have sacrificed my full ability to learn. A remodel is the solution to restoring our students’ ability to learn distracted and create a renewed sense of pride for our students and our community. Grace Sales Junior, Enumclaw High School

Performances opened eyes to wonders of arts To teach an old dog a new trick commonly brings one of two beliefs.

Stubbornness and traditional or tireless effort with little or no results. In my case, I happen to apply to both. That was, until the other evening. I was treated to some of the best entertainment that our Sumner School District has to offer. Since the early- to mid1970s, I felt as though art classes in public education offered nothing in common with my, or any others’, education. As I grew in maturity to become a taxpayer, that opinion also included that they probably were not a good choice to burden the budget with, either. But after experiencing the multischool choir concert, I must gratefully thank the students, music teachers and the district administrative staff for what I finally was taught after all these years. It was very well organized and the performances were sung well beyond what would be expected from all age groups. The song choices varied from African to Asian, to the finale of an American Christian hymn which received a standing ovation. I personally think this would have been a great night out even without my middle school daughter performing as my reason for attending. I hope in the future, the school district will consider inviting out senior citizens on the community, I believe they would truly connect with our local youth. Thanks again to all the performers and the gifted directors for schooling an old dog. Stephen McCasland Sumner

BRUCE (Jim) L. GOULD “Someday is not a day”

Bruce Gould peacefully passed away at home on February 20th, 2015 under the loving care of his family. Born June 26th, 1934, Bruce grew up in Phillipston, MA. At age 17, Bruce moved to Western WA where he resided during his adult life. He spent most of his life working in underground utility construction, owning his own company and eventually, retiring as Public Works Director for the City of Bonney Lake. Bruce enjoyed Nascar and as a young man raced at Spanaway Speedway - he told stories of helping with the construction of the original track. He loved to travel, especially with his family. He is survived by his sister, Jo (Don) Records; son, Douglas (Lisa); daughter, Cheryl (Steve) Steedley, grandchildren; Shaun, Anthony, Shannon, Crista, Melissa, 6 great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews. The family invites friends to join them for a Celebration of Life March 21st 2015 at the Tacoma Sportsman Club 16409 Canyon Road E, Puyallup at 1:00pm. In lieu of flowers the family requests donation to Everett Providence Cancer Center or Hospice.

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Page 8 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

www.courierherald.com

Despite Mom’s effort, it’s still ‘Try me at 10’ Living With Gleigh

I have a fixation about keeping a fairly consistent sleep schedule throughout a weekend or extended holiday, so the first day back doesn’t seem like such a shock. Personally, I’m pretty good at this. I go to bed at 10 and get up at 6 with my daughter on normal weekdays; on holidays and weekends I try to go to bed between 10 and 11 and get up between 7 and 8. On the

Chew On This!

other hand, my children and husband do not, nor do they seem particularly interested in participating. I get that my husband doesn’t want get up at 3:45 on the weekends; I wouldn’t either. But he could go to bed at say 10 and get up whenever he wakes up, he only sleeps about six or seven hours anyway. Instead, he makes himself stay awake until midnight or 1 a.m. on Friday, after having gotten up that morning for work at that ungodly hour. “Awake” is relative, as he’s gotten really good at sitting in the office chair in front of the computer in a balanced lean, hand on the mouse, TV blaring away

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March 7

Evergreen Rabbit Breeders (Exhibit Hall)

7:00am - 5:00pm

March 14 & 15

Enumclaw Gun Show (Exhibit Hall)

Sat 9:00am - 5:00pm Sun 10:00am - 4:00pm

Mark your calendars! Enumclaw’s King County Fair opens at 10AM Thursday, July 16th! Anyone interested participating in the fair entertainment, activities, or exhibits should contact the Expo Center. Entertainment/Outdoor Exhibits contact:

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bedtime. I quit trying last school year when she was living at home and had only night classes at the local community college. I did learn during the summer that it was to my advantage to let them manage their own schedules as long as we didn’t have any plans the next day. They would often stay up so late, they said goodbye to their father as he left the house around 4 a.m. for work. Then the next morning, I had the house to myself for several hours. I have to admit, it was rather nice. Now that my oldest is out of the house, I know she is going to bed and waking up at different times every day

depending on her schedule. Oh well, I’ve done my part and it’s out of my hands. However, my youngest has a year and half more of high school; I still have a narrow opportunity to set her straight. So Friday I once again said, “In order to keep you from waking up in shock on Monday, what time shall I wake you up tomorrow?” She said, “Try me at 10.” Gretchen Leigh is a stayat-home mom who lives in Covington. She is still committed to her bedtime. You can also read more of her writing and her daily blog on her website livingwithgleigh.com or on Facebook at “Living with Gleigh.”

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go to bed at a somewhat decent hour so they’d wake up at a normal time (non-vampire hours; they seem to come alive around 9 at night). I am one of those mean parents who demand my daughters head for bed during the week at 9 so they get a good eight hours. I don’t care if they are in high school and practically of legal adult age (snort of derision); as long as they are living under my roof, they will not be sleeping on their desks at school. Putting these rules into place hasn’t helped in the least. My oldest is now away at college and I can’t do anything about her

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next to him, fast asleep. He can hold that stance for several hours. I used to wake him up on my way to bed and suggest he pack it in. He’d deny he’d even been asleep and say, “But it’s the weekend” or “I’m watching this,” and promptly fall back to sleep. I gave up a few years ago, figuring he’s a big boy and can take care of himself. In spite of their father’s bad example, I’ve tried to instill in my daughters how important it is to have routine sleep habits. I understand they aren’t interested in being anywhere at 7:35 a.m., like the hour high school starts, but they could attempt to

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By Gretchen Leigh

A boy, Adam Reece Weed, born Feb. 13, 2015, to Kelley and Joel Weed of Enumclaw. A boy, Fletcher Allen Noble, born Feb. 16, 2015, to Amanda and Evan Noble of Lake Tapps. A boy, Ashtin Tenley Moe, born Feb. 19, 2015, to Kristin and Andy Moe of Wilkeson. A girl, Kailey Janae Kok, born Feb. 24, 2015, to Ashley and Robert Kok of Bonney Lake.

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www.courierherald.com

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 9

Those of faith must be vigilant

OBITUARIES MARTHA McPHERSON

in school but Muslims can? And they are given a special class in which to do so? Hey, that doesn’t seem fair. Time for a civics lesson. Amendment I (Establishment Clause) - “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Congress shall make no law, but what about a state or a municipality or a school board? I should know that, but I couldn’t put it together in my head. So I called someone who’d know for sure. I called Chris Hurst (D- 31st District) and asked him. “Suppose some town over time became predominately populated by an ethnic group and they wanted the schools or city to represent their prac-

the U.S. and wanting I am a relithe government to gious man, a man Church make exceptions to of faith. I respect Corner our policies and propeople of all faiths tocols to accommoand people of no date their practices. religious faith at Ross Holtz This was heightall. I respect the The Summit ened a few years practices of reliEvangelical Free Church ago when a San gious people and Diego public school non-religious became the focus of people, so long as their practices don’t interfere with the international attention after it agreed exercise of my rights and I try not to to set aside time for Muslim stuinterfere with theirs – though, in all dents to pray in class. Officials at honesty, I’m a little less concerned Carver Elementary School had agreed to schedule a short break for prayer about the latter. During the past few years there has as part of the school day to meet been a growing fear about people forc- the requirements of the Islamic faith, ing their religious rights and practices (Americans United for Separation of on people outside their faith. This fear Church and State website, 2007). Wait! Wait! Can they do that? seems heightened by the great number of individuals immigrating into Christians don’t think they can pray

Martha Anna McPherson died Feb. 17, 2015, in Renton, Wash. She was 83. She was born Dec. 15, 1931, in Bellingham, Wash., to the late Charles and Christine (Swanson) Golden and was the great-granddaughter of LaConner and Coupeville, Wash., pioneers Alonzo and Martha Wells. She resided in Black Diamond the past 26 years. She became engaged to George McPherson in 1951 and they were married on April 19, 1952. She graduated with a bachelor’s degree in education from Western Washington University in 1954 and taught elementary school in Enumclaw for 20 years between 1965 and 1990. Prior to that time she taught elementary school in Everson, Wash., San Diego, Tachikawa Air Force Base in Japan, and Seattle. As an educator, her forte’ was teaching children to read. After retiring, she and her husband enjoyed traveling and hosting family and friends at their Lake Sawyer home. Through the years, she taught Sunday school at St. Catherine’s Episcopal Church in Enumclaw, sang in the Seattle Chorale, was

Experience Joy Plateau Church Family SEE CHURCH, PAGE 10

SEE OBITUARIES, PAGE 10

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Bible Classes for all ages......................................................................................9:30 am Morning & EveningWorship............................................................ 11:00 am & 6 pm Children’s Church ...............................................................................................11:00 am

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Worship Hour: Saturday 10:45 a.m. Bible Study 9:30 a.m. Wed. Bible Study 7:00 p.m.

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Sunday Worship: Wednesday Worship:

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Enumclaw Church of Christ

email:firstbaptistch1@qwestoffice.net

Calvary Presbyterian Church “A Joyful Family Centered in Christ” 1725 Porter St., Enumclaw 360-825-3820 ~ www.calvarypreschurch.org

Enumclaw Seventh-day Adventist Church

Now Meeting at 26007 SE 425th, Enumclaw WA 98022

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Saturday Contemporary Worship ~ 7pm Sunday Traditional Worship ~ 9am Sunday School for All ~ 10am Sunday Contemporary Worship ~ 11am

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Sacred Heart Catholic Church

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Jim Miller Anthony Wilson

2627 Kibler Avenue Enumclaw, WA 98022 (360) 825-5903

www.kiblerchurchofchrist.org


Page 10 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

CHURCH FROM 9 tices and point of view. Could they pass laws establishing some religion as primary in their community? Could they stop other religions from worshipping in their town?” Mr. Hurst is very learned in this argument and reminded me that all laws (state, county, city) are under the Constitution. He said a group could strengthen a position the Constitution takes, but cannot undermine or negate anything the Constitution says. Then he pointed me to the 14th Amendment, which spells out what he told me. So, no, a community or school board cannot make any provision that holds one religion over another and cannot prohibit any individual from freely exercising his/her faith. There is a lot of unwarranted fear out there, dare we call it paranoia? There is no prohibition in our schools against prayer. Any individual can pray to whomever they choose so long as it isn’t a distraction for others. And I cannot find any prohibition for a student to carry a Bible, or other religious material, to be read or studied during personal time. When I was in kindergarten, the best year I ever had in school, we had a snack time that included a short prayer. Some will probably remember: “God is great, God is good, now we thank Him for our food.” Since nearly everybody

www.courierherald.com

OBITUARIES FROM 9

in our community claimed to be Christian or Jewish, there was no conflict at all. In 1962 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against school-led prayer. Public schools could not require students to recite a particular prayer. In 1963 the court ruled schools could not require reading of the Bible. Many of us, actually 95 percent of us, were against the ruling, according to a 1991 survey. As late as 2011 a poll showed 65 percent of Americans still support school-led prayer. But the truth is, no one kicked God out of school. He goes where he wants and does what he wants. And no one is keeping your kids or grandkids from taking him to school with them. In our increasingly pluralistic society it would be ludicrous for a school to determine which religious prayer they would sanction. And who do you want teaching your kids religious values? Surely not someone of a different faith. I am convinced the courts got it right. Don’t sanction, don’t prohibit. But we must be vigilant. There are groups coming into our country who don’t believe in religious freedom. We must be careful to see that our constitution is not altered or diminished in order for a group, any group, to coerce public school students in religious thoughts or practices. That’s my opinion anyway. Tell your representatives your opinion. It will matter in the future.

a past chair of the Enumclaw League of Women Voters, and was a past member of the Enumclaw Garden Club. She is survived by husband George of Black Diamond; daughters Robin (John) Porter of Maple Valley and Kathy (Rob) Thomas of Renton; son Steve (Shinako) McPherson of Maple Valley; six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. She was preceded in death by brothers Wesley and Louis Feighner and sisters Mona Douglas, Hope Hansen, Kay Boehringer and Rachel McLoed. Memorials may be made to Doctors Without Borders, online at doctorswithoutborders.org. Memories may be shared in the online guestbook at www.molesfuneralhomes.com.

SHIRLEY BAKER Shirley Rae Baker, 60, of Puyallup, died Feb. 25, 2015. She was born Aug. 9, 1954, in Alexandria, Minn., to Harold and Phyllis Beltz. She was devoted to her church and passionate about her career as a teacher.

She loved kayaking, visiting the beach, camping and taking road trips. She took pleasure in crocheting, writing poetry and gardening, but, most of all, she loved Shirley Baker being a mother and spending time with her family. Services are by Weeks’ Enumclaw Funeral Home. All may sign the online guest book at www.weeksfuneralhomes.com.

JAMIE FINLEY Jamie Finley died Feb. 11, 2015, in Tacoma. He was born in Andalusia, Ill., to the late Donna and Harry Finley and graduated from Enumclaw High School. He served 12 years in the U.S. Navy, reaching the grade of chief petty officer. He is survived by wife Edita Finley; brother Tim; and sisters Kimberly and Cheryl. Services are planned for 10:30 a.m. Friday, March 6, at Tahoma National Cemetery.

Workforce Breakfast

Friday, March 13 @ 7:30am Pioneer Park Pavillion, 333 S Meridian, Puyallup “Wake Up!” Mar. 5 • 8a - 9a @ Dillano’s

“Wake Up!” Mar. 12, 19 & 26 8a - 9a @ Anthem

FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 2015 4 - 7 pm $20/PERSON Enumclaw High School Commons, 226 Semanski Street South, Enumclaw WHAT IS IT? Empty Bowls is an international grass roots effort to fight hunger. The basic premise: potters and other crafts people 1256385

create handcrafted bowls. Guests arrive for a simple soup meal and choose a unique bowl which they keep as a symbol and a reminder of all the empty bowls in the world.

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WHAT IS THE PURPOSE? The purpose is twofold: to raise awareness of the fight against hunger in our community and to raise funds to support local food banks.

per month

Contact: Jennifer Tribbett 360-825-2555 x2050 jtribbett@courierherald.com

www.puyallupsumnerchamber.com • info@puyallupsumnerchamber.com

WHO BENEFITS? Proceeds from this event support the efforts of Plateau Outreach Ministries and the Kiwanis Food Bank to feed those in need on the Enumclaw Plateau.

WHO’S DOING THIS? This project is spearheaded by a committee from organizations that include: • • • •

Enumclaw Mayor Liz Reynolds Enumclaw Kiwanis Plateau Outreach Ministries The Enumclaw School District

• Green River Community College Pottery Department • Enumclaw Rotary Club • Arts Alive! Center For the Arts

With the help and support of our sponsors:

where can I get a ticket? Tickets will be available at the door. Choose your bowl on a first come, first served basis. 100% of the money raised will go to feed people on the Enumclaw Plateau. Your participation will help meet a great need in our community. Join us--and bring a friend! For more information:

www.emptybowlswa.org www.facebook.com/enumemptybowls 1255745


www.courierherald.com

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 11

EHS choir shines on Disney stage Members of Enumclaw High School concert choir became stars of their own Disney show on Feb. 16, when they entertained resort guests at Waterside Stage at Downtown Disney. The group traveled more than 3,000 miles to the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida to take part in the Disney Performing Arts Program. The choral, under the direction of Paul Scott and Angela Wentz, entertained hundreds of Downtown Disney guests. It was the group’s first visit to the resort with the Disney Performing Arts Program. In addition to their performance, the group participated in the Disney Performing Arts “Disney’s Broadway Magic” workshop, where they performed a number from a Broadway

SEE CHOIR, PAGE 22

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Page 12 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

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SUMNER

MARCH • 2015

SCHOOL DISTRICT VISIT US ONLINE: SUMNERSD.ORG

SUPERINTENDENT MESSAGE As your Superintendent, I am committed to creating a learning environment where academic success is the standard for each child. My role is to make sure all students, teachers and administrators have the tools they need to guide each child to peak performance. The research is clear: the best school districts ensure a clear and viable curriculum is designed to prepare students for college and careers. In plain language, that means that we are committed to ensuring there is a pathway of success through the years of education for all students. We admit, this is a big commitment and challenge. A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of attending the third annual District STEM Fair and Art Show. What a fabulous exhibition of innovative student projects and creativity! Students were engaged in their presentations and motivated to share their learning surrounding science, technology, engineering and math. There were handson, digital exploration stations and connections to local STEM industry partners at this event as well as multiple teachers, administrators, and volunteers from every area. It was truly an environment that a Superintendent wants occurring on a daily basis in every classroom. In a STEM learning environment, powerful critical thinking and exploration practices are utilized to engage students in interesting learning in high-performing classrooms. In STEM classrooms, students ask relevant, important real-world questions, collaborate with peers, arrive at meaningful conclusions and explore STEM career components. Businesses are reporting a significant number of vacancies in STEM related career fields, and a growing need for more scientists, engineers and qualified technicians. Sumner School District is developing a clear and cohesive vision for STEM education. Currently, we have a position posted for an Elementary STEM Administrator, someone that will team with our Secondary STEM Administrator to help us achieve this goal throughout the district. We are committed to delivering a rigorous curriculum that continues to prepare students – at every level of their education - for college and careers.

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There is one important quality that unites us all - our students and their potential to reach peak academic success. A culture of STEM teaching and learning in our schools is a strong component of that.

SCHOOL BOARD NOTES At the February meeting the Board of Directors … HEARD a school insight presentation from Donald Eismann Elementary students in which they demonstrated the impact of visual learning. APPROVED the application for a temporary waiver of the implementation of the 24 credit high school graduation requirement (Core 24). APPROVED the Natural Hazard Mitigation Plan as required by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

COMMUNITY SUMMIT Join with neighbors, local leaders, youth, and community organizations to examine topics of importance to the health of our communities. By participating in the Summit, you will gain information about local issues, be inspired to take action, and become meaningfully involved in creating solutions to addressing tough topics. COMMUNITY SUMMIT This event is free and open to the first 300 registrants; March 19, 2015 • 3:00 – 8:00 p.m. pre-registration is required. (Check-In begins at 2:45 p.m.) Register on the Sumner School District Website or call Mountain View Middle School, the STARR Project at (253) 891-6066. 10921 199th Ave. Ct. E., Bonney Lake

TEACHER TUESDAY Every Tuesday school is in session a teacher is recognized in the Sumner School District for impacting student success and making a difference. This is a weekly opportunity for us to honor the hard work teachers do all year long and say "thank you!"

Carolyn LeFevers Crestwood Elementary

Bryan Slater

Sumner High School

Tracey Brown

Sumner Middle School

Melissa Deckman

Bonney Lake High School

Visit the District Website to read more about these teachers and their dedication to student learning! PAID ADVERTISEMENT.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: THE SUMNER SCHOOL DISTRICT COMPLIES WITH ALL APPLICABLE FEDERAL AND STATE RULES AND REGULATIONS AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE BASIS OF RACE, CREED, COLOR, NATIONAL ORIGIN, FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN, SEX, MARITAL STATUS, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, AGE, HONORABLY DISCHARGED VETERAN OR MILITARY STATUS, OR THE PRESENCE OF ANY SENSORY, MENTAL, OR PHYSICAL DISABILITY OR THE USE OF A TRAINED DOG GUIDE OR SERVICE ANIMAL BY A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY. THIS HOLDS TRUE FOR ALL DISTRICT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES. INQUIRIES REGARDING COMPLIANCE AND/OR GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO THE SCHOOL DISTRICT’S EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OFFICER AND/OR SECTION 504/ADA COORDINATOR, TELEPHONE 253 891-6000.


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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 13

A GREAT PLACE TO LEARN!

MARCH • 2015

FOR EVERY STUDENT, EVERY DAY, IN EVERY CLASSROOM

FEBRUARY SCHOOL BOARD ROLL OF HONOR

BONNEY LAKE HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL Bonney Lake High School Drama and Music departments present this timeless rock musical by Broadway legend, Charles Strouse. Inspired by the phenomenon of pop singer Elvis Presley and his draft notice into the Army in 1957, “Bye Bye Birdie” is a musical about an up and coming rock and roll singer, Conrad Birdie. When Birdie is drafted into the army, it creates a rippling effect on the teenagers of the small Ohio town in which the play is set. A “Last Kiss” contest is born to publicize Birdie’s departure, which sends the whole town into a frenzy.

The School Board recognizes the Sumner School District’s Career and Technical Education (CTE) program for the February School Board Roll of Honor. CTE courses prepare students for a range of careers, requiring varying levels of education, from high school to post-secondary certificate to two-and four-year college degrees. CTE courses provide students with the academic knowledge and technical skills they will need as they advance to the highly competitive workforce of the 21st century, while exploring a variety of career areas. Currently, eighteen of the 20 fastestgrowing occupations within the next decade will require some CTE course of study. Sumner School District middle and high schools offer 78 CTE courses in the subject areas including: Skilled and Technical Sciences, Business and Marketing, Science and Natural Resources, Health and Human Services, Arts and Communications, and Information Technology.

Don’t miss this popular musical! Performances of “Bye Bye Birdie” are at the Sumner Performing Arts Center located at 1707 Main Street in downtown Sumner: March 13, 2015 – 7:00 p.m. March 14, 2015 – 2:00 and 7:00 p.m. March 15, 2015 – 2:00 p.m. Admission: $12 adults and $8 for students, children and senior citizens over 60. Tickets can be purchased by calling Bonney Lake High School at (253) 891-5700 or one hour prior to the show. Bonney Lake High School’s play is under the direction of Drama teacher, Brenda Williams; Amy Fuller is the music director for vocal performances and the pit band; and Linda Walrath is managing stage crew. BHS Drama & Music is donating 10% of the ticket proceeds to the Sumner/Bonney Lake Family Center to support children in our communities.

2015 STEM FAIR AND DISTRICT ART SHOW AWARD WINNERS

Congratulations to the following 1st place winners.

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• Zachery Czerwinski - Daffodil Valley Elementary “What is the best way to exercise your foot?” • Natalie Smeller - Donald Eismann Elementary “Melting Ice” • Kobe Rodriguez - Donald Eismann Elementary “Dissolution of Bones in Acid” • Andrea Guiley - Donald Eismann Elementary “Night Light” • Lemon Zalot - Liberty Ridge Elementary “Dog Training: Treats vs. Praise” • Ellie Weber - Liberty Ridge Elementary “Brrr... My toes are cold” • Logan Fisher - Liberty Ridge Elementary “Do Energy Wings Give You”z Wings • Kennadee Stevens & Claire Sagiao - Victor Falls Elementary “Magnetic Shoe Laces” • Zack Bailie - Lakeridge Middle School “NXT Card Dealer” • Lara O’Callaghan - Lakeridge Middle School “Catching Fire” • Autumn Lamont-Fowler - Sumner Middle School “All Caught Up” • Sarah Strickler, Christopher Clymore & Liam Stevens-Holeman - Bonney Lake High School “Anti-bacterial activity of herbal extract on ampicillin resistant escherichia-coli”

1st Place Middle School PAINTING & DRAWING Maddie Shockey -Lakeridge Middle School 1st Place Middle School PHOTOGRAPHY Emily Berrens -Sumner Middle School 1st Place Middle School SCULPTURE Sadie Babb -Lakeridge Middle School 1st Place High School MULTIMEDIA Sarah Strickler -Bonney Lake High School 1st Place High School PAINTING & DRAWING Delaney Lawrence -Sumner High School 1st Place High School PHOTOGRAPHY Zachery Szafryk -Bonney Lake High School 1st Place High School SCULPTURE Alejandro Fernandez -Bonney Lake High School

For a full listing of award recipients, visit the Sumner School District Website. PAID ADVERTISEMENT.

VISIT US ONLINE: SUMNERSD.ORG


Issue #17

Page 14 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

• • • • • • • •

www.courierherald.com

March 4, 2015

Cultural Competency We Day Calendar of Events Gold Star Award Battle of the Books ELA Go Digital Band Honors WRSD Hosts Visitors

CULTURAL COMPETENCY

WE DAY

In White River, we’ve been working on ways to address issues of racial equity, both in our curriculum and instruction, and in our practices, systems and policies. Since the 13-14 school year, our administrative team has worked with Puget Sound ESD Equity in Education staff, led by Director Melia LaCour, to broaden our leadership perspective, and learn how to best create systems that are racially equitable for all students. Focusing on these issues helps to close the achievement gap.

We Day is a movement afoot for today’s youth, inspiring and empowering a generation to shift from “me” to “we” – from a focus on the individual to the power of community – to engage them in service projects to impact their world.

As part of this process, we held student forums and asked our students about their perceptions, examined academics and behavior records. This fall we began using that information to create plans that support our work with Positive Behavior Intervention Support (PBIS) in each of our schools. We knew that the cultural competency focus needed to be a system focus. It was critical that this cultural competency work was connected to all district initiatives to ensure that district practices provided students and families with every opportunity for success. In addition, the Board of Directors recently adopted a Board Policy that addresses tribal history, sovereignty and culture. A major portion of this work is the incorporation of the “Since Time Immemorial” (STI) curriculum into our social studies classes. We have already started by including lessons into the Current World Issues/Civics classes at White River High School. This is a natural fit as we look at treaties and the Constitution, and the current issues that are working their way through the courts now regarding tax policy and other pertinent issues. Next, we’ll work to add the STI curriculum to our 7th grade Pacific Northwest History course. The district has been working with Dr. Laura Lynn from Puget Sound ESD to coordinate our efforts and ensure that these lessons are taught with the culturally responsive lens. At the elementary level, our English/Language Arts curriculum provides the opportunity for grade level teams of teachers to plan and implement culturally diverse selections unit by unit. As well, our K-5 social skills curriculum, Second Step, is designed to promote racial equity in each lesson. This is just one example of the thoughtful and thorough work being done in several areas throughout White River for the benefit of our students and staff.

Mike Hagadone

Director of Secondary Education 1255754

To earn a trip to the culminating We Day event at Key Arena in Seattle on April 23rd , leadership students must complete two service projects – one of local outreach, and one with a global focus. The students conducted a coin drive titled “We Create Change”, raising enough money to purchase a goat to fund sustainable living in Nicaragua. Their local outreach will be an Inclusion Dance on March 13th. The fun 70s theme dance will center around including special needs and general education students from White River, Bonney Lake and Enumclaw School Districts.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS March 5 –7:00 p.m. District Wide Band Festival - WRHS Gym March 11 – 5:30 p.m. School Board Meeting March 12 – 7:00 p.m. “Pops” Concert – WRHS Theater March 12&13 - Wilkeson STEM Fair March 13 – 7:00 p.m. Inclusion Dance - WRHS March 23 – 7:00 p.m. Glacier 7th/8th grade Band Concert March 25 – 5:30 p.m. School Board Meeting March 27 – Early Release for all students

GOLD STAR AWARD White River School District is one of the top-performing districts in the state in terms of sign-ups for the College Bound Scholarship program. Our performance in this area exceeded the state average and earned us a Gold Star Award. College Bound encourages students to dream big and pursue a college education. Because of great efforts and leadership in White River, students have greater opportunities toward reaching that goal. The program challenges low income middle school students to pledge to graduate from high school crimefree with a 2.0 GPA or higher. If they fulfill their pledge and meet the income criteria, the state will cover the average public college tuition, some fees and a small book allowance.

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 15

GLACIER MIDDLE SCHOOL: BATTLE OF THE BOOKS

ELEMENTARY ELA ASSESSMENTS GO DIGITAL Throughout Washington State, schools are working hard to prepare students for the new Smarter Balanced Assessments that will begin in just a few short weeks. Many of you already know that these computer adaptive tests will be administered online. While there are many advantages to this model, the promise of more timely feedback and more accurate scoring is something we are excited about.

Prepare to battle at the Battle of the Books competition for 2014 – 2015 school year. What is the Battle of the Books? Battle of the Books is a school wide, team based competition. Teams of students read a series of award winning books and then compete with one another to determine which team has the best understanding of the novels. Who can participate? 6th, 7th, and 8th graders from GMS.

We also know that we need to give students the opportunity to demonstrate their learning in a digital environment. This will help ensure that the scores that they earn are not influenced by lack of familiarity with the testing tool. That is why our Technology Learning Specialist, Lori Curtis, has worked closely with our English Language Arts team to create online unit assessments using Google Docs for grades 3-5. These exams mirror the formatting of the Smarter Balanced exams. Teachers are able to score the assessments and give students feedback digitally as well. This is just one example of how technology is changing the way teachers teach and students learn in White River.

When will the Battle take place? The battle will take place sometime in May or June 2015. What do students do? Student teams read books from a preselected list. Students can check them out at the school library, public libraries or purchase the books. At the beginning of the school year, there was an opportunity for students to create their own teams of 3 – 5 students. Each team member will decide which books they will be responsible for reading. How can the community get involved? Community members and parents can: 1) Read the books alongside our students and talk to students about the content. 2) Donate copies of the books to our school library or class rooms. 3) Donate prizes for the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place teams. 4) Host book talks with students during PACE enrichment or after school. 5) Volunteer on the day of the event.

Kayli Peloli and Sydney Lund work on the new assessments in Mrs. Schatz’s classroom.

If you would like more information regarding how you can get involved in Battle of the Books please contact LeeAnn Alfano, Assistant Principal at Glacier Middle School. 360-829-6149 or lalfano@whiteriver.wednet.edu

WRSD HOSTS VISITORS

BAND HONORS

Garrett Bown, Maverick Kajita and Tyler Ussery

Over President’s Day weekend White River High School students Garrett Bown, Maverick Kajita, and Tyler Ussery participated in one of our 2015 NAfME All-Northwest performing groups. These students are among over one thousand outstanding music students from Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming.

NAfME All-Northwest high school bands, orchestras and choirs met in Spokane, Washington for more than twenty hours of rehearsal under the direction of world-renowned conductors. These All-Northwest musicians were selected from over 5200 students who auditioned to participate in this outstanding event, which is managed by the Washington Music Educators Association. 1255753

The White River School District is a recognized leader when it comes to building and sustaining highly collaborative teams commonly referred to as Professional Learning Communities. The work of our teams has been the foundation of our school improvement efforts and school leaders from across the state and nation come to visit and see our teams in action. Just recently we hosted visitors from Kent, Tacoma, Wyoming, and Montana. In addition to these PLC visitors, a team of doctoral students from the Leadership for Learning program at the University of Washington recently visited White River to learn about the systems-approach to leading organizational change and school improvement.

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Page 16 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

POLICE BLOTTER BONNEY LAKE

UNDER THE INFLUENCE: Officers responded Feb. 22 to a state Route 410 fast food restaurant to the report of a driver under the influence. An employee told officers, the driver was slurring his words and struck the curb while in the drive thru. The vehicle had left the scene before officers arrived and was seen leaving a store parking lot. Officers observed the vehicle swerving as well

as displaying expired tabs from March 2010. Upon contact, the driver told officers he pulled over only because the female passenger dropped something that she needed to pick up. The driver exited the vehicle and agreed to complete voluntary field sobriety tests and a breath test. The breath test result registered at 0.110. The driver was taken to the police station for DUI processing and the female passenger was transported home where she was

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released. THEFT: Officers responded Feb. 22 to the report of a vehicle prowl at a restaurant on SR 410. The reporting party told officers an unknown suspect got into his unlocked vehicle and took $40 and a sweatshirt. SUSPENDED LICENSE: Officers on a routine patrol Feb. 22 observed a vehicle driving south on 214th Ave. East. A records check showed the driver to have his driving status revoked along with an outstanding warrant. Officers transported the driver to the Puyallup jail where he was booked. He was also issued a criminal citation for third degree driving with a suspended license and a notice of infraction for driving without insurance. VANDALISM: Officers responded Feb. 20 to the 185th Ave. East to the report of mailboxes being knocked over or destroyed. Upon arrival, officers spoke with the reporting party who told them they were inside their home and heard voices outside. The husband told officers, he saw three male subjects flee from his mailbox. Upon further investigation, it appeared that roughly 13 mailboxes had either been damaged, tampered with or destroyed on 185th Ave. East, 68th Street East or on 188th Ave. East. Also while conducting a search of the area, officers observed a stop sign and another sign were found knocked on the ground. ASSAULT, MORE: Officers responded to the report of a physical domestic dispute between a mother and son. The husband has an Order of Protection against the son that does not allow him from being on the property. He came by and spoke with the mother but they began arguing and she asked him to leave. Before he left the scene, he hit the door hard enough to slam his mom’s hand into the wall causing it to swell and bruise. He also spit in her face before he left the residence. Officers conducted an area check with negative results. A criminal citation for assault and order violation were sent to the Bonney Lake Prosecutor.

FRAUD: Officers spoke Feb. 19 with the reporting party in the department lobby regarding a phone call the man received. He told officers he received a call from a man in the Dominican Republic claiming to be a police officer who told him his granddaughter was in jail and he needed to wire $1,300 for bail. He told officers, the man on the phone then put a crying female on to act as the granddaughter. The man went to a local SR 410 store and purchased a money order in the requested amount and wired it to the account provided. The man was later contacted by his granddaughter who was in Seattle and not in jail. WARRANTS: Officers were notified Feb. 18 by the Kent Municipal Court that a male subject had five outstanding Bonney Lake warrants. Officers assumed custody of the subject from the court house and transported him to the Enumclaw jail where he was booked.

ENUMCLAW

THEFT FROM VEHICLES: A Griffin Avenue resident told police Feb. 25 a Milwaukee brand battery and charger were taken from an unlocked vehicle. Later in the day, a Warwick Street resident reported copper wire and tools were taken during a vehicle prowl. There were no immediate suspects. MARIJUANA: A citizen reported possible drug activity Feb. 24 in a First Street parking lot. Contact was made with subjects who were advised of current laws regarding marijuana use. They agreed to move along. SYRINGE DESTROYED: An officer responded to a Noble Fir Circle address the morning of Feb. 23 after a citizen reported a syringe on the shoulder of the roadway. The item was located and taken to the police station for proper disposal. MANY CHARGES: A traffic stop at 2:17 a.m. Feb. 22 on Terry Lane resulted in both a driver and passenger being arrested and booked on multiple charges. The vehicle was impounded. BURGLARY THWARTED: Police

heard from an Alpine Place resident who interrupted a burglary attempt at 1:49 a.m. Feb. 20. Two trailers were involved; each was checked and police found no damage and nothing missing. The area was searched by no suspects could be located. SUSPICIOUS PERSON: Officers responded the morning of Feb. 20 to a Cole Street address after hearing of a man who entered a back yard and, possibly, a vacant residence. He fled on foot but was later located, arrested and booked. RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY: Police were told someone burglarized a Lincoln Avenue home sometime between 5 a.m. and 6 p.m. Feb. 20. There were no immediate suspects.

BUCKLEY

SHOPLIFTING: Officers were dispatched Feb. 23 to a city grocery store following a shoplifting report. They questioned a Sumner woman, 18, and a Buckley man, 23, who admitted to stealing food items; also, they were found to be in possession of the stolen food at the time. They were arrested, issued criminal citations and trespassed from the store. MULTIPLE WEAPONS: Police stopped a vehicle for speeding at 11:30 p.m. Feb. 18 on state Route 410. Officers discovered multiple weapons in the vehicle and found the driver, a 21-year-old Puyallup man, to be in possession of a loaded firearm and lacking a permit. He was issued a criminal citation and released at the scene, while the firearm was taken as evidence. AUTO THEFT: A victim arrived at the police station at 5:30 a.m. Feb. 18, reporting his vehicle had been stolen from a parking lot on state Route 410. ARSON AND MORE: While on patrol at 11:36 p.m. Feb. 17, police found a golf cart fully engulfed in flames. The incident occurred on Spruce Street at Van Sickle Avenue. Firefighters extinguished the blaze. Police also discovered someone had spray-painted the pavement and knocked down two new community mail boxes. ARRESTED, BOOKED: After

witnessing one vehicle following too closely behind another, police stopped a driver on state Route 410. It was discovered the 20-year-old Buckley man was driving with a suspended license; also, he was wanted on an outstanding warrant issued by Bonney Lake. He was arrested and turned over to Bonney Lake police, who booked the man into the Enumclaw jail. COMMITTED: Police responded to Wilkeson the night of Feb. 14 after hearing of a fight in progress. Officers contacted a man who had been listed as a missing person. He appeared to be intoxicated. The situation escalated and the man was involuntarily committed to a hospital, to be evaluated by a medical personnel. DRIVER BOOKED: Shortly before 10 p.m. Feb. 13, police stopped an Enumclaw man for speeding on state Route 410 near the Buckley cemetery. The motorist was found to be wanted on an outstanding arrest warrant for driving under the influence; he also was driving with a suspended license and his vehicle did not have a required interlock device. He was arrested, issued both an infraction and criminal citation and booked into the Fife jail. STUDENT ARRESTED: It was determined Feb. 12 that a Glacier Middle School student was wanted on an outstanding arrest warrant. The student was arrested and booked into Remann Hall in Tacoma. VEHICLE PROWL: A Pioneer Street resident notified police Feb. 12, reporting legal documents had been stolen from a truck. STOLEN BICYCLE: Police were notified the afternoon of Feb. 11, by an off-duty officer, of two males walking on Ryan Road in possession of a bicycle that may have been stolen. Officers made contact and determined the bike was stolen. SUSPECT DEPARTS: Officers were dispatched Feb. 11 to a possible burglary at a Jefferson Street address. It was determined an unknown suspect had trespassed on private property but left the scene prior to police arrival.

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 17

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2 BEDROOM APT $670 mo, $400 security dep, $40 credit check for ever yone over the age of 18. No smoking. No pets. 360-802-1221.

Auction Notice

Auction 030715 on 3/07/2015 at 2:00 PM Inspection starting at 12:00pm Bonney Lake DOL# 5284 - Enumclaw DOL# 5550 In accordance with the Revised Code of Washington (RCW 46.55.130) the above named will sell to the highest bidder for each vehicle described below.

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253-862-1210 • Sale Location: Cascade Towing 19425 SR 410 E, Bonney Lake, WA 98391 DOL # 5284 1996 Toyota Tacoma B63646Y 1992 Ford Crown Vic ABF6140 1994 Eagle Vision 731UMX 1999 Mazda 626 484YPC 1995 Ford Crown Vic 126YAG 1987 Chevy Camaro AFU1256 2000 Chevy Silverado B45885U 1992 Chevy Caprice AFZ0600 1991 Infinity Q-45 230FSY 1989 Honda Accord AKB0607 1991 Ford F-150 B44053U 1999 Saab 93 AEJ9028 1985 Chevy S10 Blazer AJF5232

2 bdrm , 1 bath in quiet neighborhood. Off street parking, common laundr y. Close to shops & hospital. $695 per month. First & last month & security deposit required. Call Jeremy 206-422-1031 ENUMCLAW

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2004 Chevy Cavalier AFK2589 2002 Ford Taurus 360ZCH 1991 Ford Explorer 780SCT 2000 Acura Integra 731UQU 2000 Ford Explorer DP29650 1998 Mitsubishi Eclipse 257XTX 1992 Acura Legend ANZ3208 2000 Mazda 626 ARA5631 1997 Ford Thunderbird AHJ3518 2000 GMC Safari B98065T DOL # 5550 1989 Mobile Trvlr MotorHome ARP6794 2008 Honda NPS580 992751

Apartments for Rent Pierce County

2 BR $900 NICE APARTMENT Water, appliances, garbage, laundry, sewer included. Nice quiet country setting. No pets. 253-891-9128. Lake Tapps, 98391. BUCKLEY DOWNTOWN APARTMENT Available March GREAT QUIET LOCATION! 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Washer/Dryer hookup in unit. $725/month $400 deposit No smoking, No pets, No exceptions. 360-825-8309 WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253951-6909. 1110 Griffin Enumclaw.

Real Estate for Rent King County BUCKLEY DOWNTOWN APARTMENT Available March GREAT QUIET LOCATION! 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Washer/Dryer hookup in unit. $725/month $400 deposit No smoking, No pets, No exceptions. 360-825-8309

Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial

Downtown Buckley

$300. DESIRABLE OFFICE SPACES AVAILABLE NOW Fully Updated starting at $300/ mo. Utilities pro-rated based on square feet

253-973-9735 206-769-0902

Clean Nest

Home and office cleaning. No job too big or small. 15 years exper ience in this area. Excellent references available upon request. Reasonable and comparable rates. I am ver y reliable, wor k hard and fast. Will clean your home as if it were my own. Call today to schedule a walk through. I cater to each individual cleaning needs. Call Robin (360)441-1282

CourierHerald.com

Professional Services Music Lessons

PIANO LESSONS For the young and young at heart.

Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial

O F F I C E S PAC E AVAILABLE Downtown Enumclaw 232 to 273 sq. ft office spaces. Each office equipped with two phone lines and two Ethernet ports for internet ready capability. High Speed Internet available immediately. Garbage and cleaning of common area included. Utilities prorate by s q u a r e fo o t o f o f f i c e s p a c e . C a l l To d a y. (360)802-8220. UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com

C O U N T RY G A R D E N BOUQUETS offers seasonal bouquets, wreaths & other handcrafted local items in “The Shop” (360)8253976 (253)332-9466

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting Place for Loved Ones Pricing from $750 to $7000 36424 312th Ave SE Enumclaw

(206)280-4071

White Vinyl, Ranch, Horse Fencing Cedar, Chain Link, Repairs, Gates Call James

253-831-9906

UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com Home Services Window Cleaning TOM’S WINDOW CLEANING Commercial, Residential Gutter cleaning, Gutter whitening, Moss control, Pressure washing, New construction Locally owned (360)802-8925 (253)740-3833

2000

FINANCE

General Financial

FREE GOLD IRA KIT. With the demise of the dollar now is the time to invest in gold. AAA Rated! For free consultation: 1-866-683-5664

Home Services Tree/Shrub Care Fruit Trees pruned professionally. Over 40 years exp. Free estimate. Call Jim 360-825-7158.

TEZAK’S TREE SERVICE (253)862-1700

tezakstreeservice.com Serving the area Over 30 Years FREE ESTIMATES Bonded~Insured Lic. # TEZAKTS0330C

Home Services Carpet Clean/Install

**Local Fence Co.**

Lic# allamal921p7

Green Editions, Stories, Photos and more go to:

Miscellaneous

Home Services Fencing & Decks

Bonded & Insured

Karen (360)802-9314

real estate rentals

Home Services

House/Cleaning Service

THE PROM PROJECT FUNDRAISER RUMMAGE SALE Fri 3/6-Sat 3/7, 8am-4pm Awesome prices on brand name jeans MissMe, Hudson, BNK etc, purses, shoes, adult clothing up to size 4X, household, linens, Christmas, tons of shorts $2, baby items .25, books, collectables and toys. HALF PRICE SAT.! Bonney Lake Community Church, 8201 Locust Dr.

WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent

Gosstekk Carpet & Upholstery Carpet, Upholstery, RVs, Autos. Schedule with a neighbor, both receive a discount! 360-829-4121 253-389-1698 Home Services Landscape Services

K&K Landscaping Lawn Maintenance

Trimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up Bark, Hauling All kinds of yard work!

LEE HOTEL, Clean rooms at an affordable price. Includes utilities and basic cable. 253951-6909. 1110 Griffin Enumclaw.

253-862-4347

General Financial

General Financial

FREE Medicare Quotes! Get Covered and Save! Explore Top Medicare Supplement Insurance P l a n s F o r Fr e e ! I t ’s Open Enrollment, So Call Now! 877-243-4705

Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800283-3601

Bonded & Insured

Lic# KKLANKL897MK

G E T C A S H N OW fo r your Annuity or Struc- SPACE FOR LEASE tured Settlement. Top DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Ser vice! 877- (253) 219-5952 693-0934 (M-F 9:35amSOCIAL SECURITY 7pm ET) DISABILITY BENEFITS. P RO B L E M S w i t h t h e Unable to work? Denied I R S o r S t a t e Ta xe s ? benefits? We Can Help! Settle for a fraction of W I N o r Pay N o t h i n g ! w h a t yo u owe ! Fr e e Contact Bill Gordon & face to face consulta- A s s o c i a t e s a t 1 - 8 0 0 tions with offices in your 706-8742 to start your area. Call 855-970-2032 application today!


www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

Page 18 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, March 4, 2015

3000

ANNOUNCEMENTS Announcements

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466

Found

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

DOG GONE IN BUCKLEY? The City of Buckley has a short term dog pound. If your dog is missing call (360)8293157.

L E Y, WA S H I N G TO N , AMENDING CHAPTER 2.06, REPEALING AND REPLACING CHAPTER 2.08 AND ADDING A NEW CHAPTER 2.10 TO THE BUCKLEY MUN I C I PA L C O D E A L L RELATED TO THE ADMINISTRATIVE POSITIONS OF CITY ADM I N I S T R AT O R , F I NANCE DIRECTOR AND CITY CLERK. For the complete text of this ordinance, please contact the City of Buckley at (360) 829-1921, ext. 7801, or stop by City Hall at 933 Main Street. # 617945 3/4/15 The Enumclaw School District is now accepting bids from contractors for the following services: Psychologist (1.0), OT (0.8 FTE), PT (0.8 FTE) and SLP (1.0 FTE) serving Elementary, Middle and High School students for the 2015-2016 s c h o o l ye a r. P l e a s e email hourly rates and availability of providers to stephanie_berryhill@ enumclaw.wednet.edu by March 17th. Town of Wilkeson, Pierce County, Washington NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING T h e W i l k e s o n To w n Council will conduct a hearing to solicit public input and comments on proposed updates to the Master Park Plan. Hearing will be held in the W i l k e s o n To w n H a l l Council Chambers on Monday, March 9, 2015 at 6pm. Regular council meeting will follow. # 616956 2/25/15, 3/4/15 NOTICE OF APPLICATION AND OPTIONAL SEPA ENVIRONMENTAL THRESHOLD DETERMINATION N OT I C E I S H E R E B Y GIVEN City of Bonney Lake received an application for a shoreline substantial development permit (SSDP) exemption and a State Environmental Policy Act (SE-

PA) Environmental Review for the replacement of an existing residential bulkhead within the City of Bonney Lake. The application was submitted on Februar y 19, 2015 and deter mined complete for the purpose of review on February 23, 2015. Project: Patr ick Bulkhead Repair F i l e N u m b e r s : PLN-2015-01788 & 01789 Description of Proposal: The applicant proposes to replace the existing bulkhead within the same footprint adjacent to a single family residence along the shoreline of Lake Tapps. Applicant: Sean Patrick, 4 9 2 1 1 9 7 t h Ave nu e East, Bonney Lake, WA 98391 Location: The project site is located at 4 9 2 1 1 9 7 t h Ave nu e East, Bonney Lake, WA 98391. Documents Submitted with Application: SEPA Checklist, JARPA, vicinity map, and site plan. Environmental Determination: The City of Bonney Lake reviewed the proposal for probable adverse environmental impacts and is likely issuing a determination of nonsignificance (DNS) for this project under the optional DNS process in WAC 197-11-355. This may be your only opportunity to comment on the environmental impacts of the proposed project. Staff Contact: Ryan Harriman, AICP, Associate Planner, City of Bonney Lake Community Development Depar tment, 9002 Main Street East, Suite 300, Bonney Lake, WA 9 8 3 9 1 , P h o n e : (253) 447-4350, Email: harrimanr@ci.bonneylake.wa.us. Written comments shall be submitted to the staff contact prior to the close of business on March 18, 2015. The environmental threshold determ i n a t i o n m ay b e a p pealed within fifteen (15) days after the completion of the comment period. # 617939 3/4/15

FOUND: BICYCLE. Near Kibler School in Enumclaw. Call to describe and claim. 360825-2121

3030

LEGALS

PROMOTE YOUR REGIONAL EVENT for only Legal Notices pennies. Reach 2.7 million readers in newspaCITY OF BUCKLEY, pers statewide for $275 WASHINGTON classified or $1,350 disORDINANCE NO. play ad. Call this news06 - 15 paper or (360) 515-0974 A N O R D I N A N C E O F for details. THE CITY OF BUCK-

Did you miss the last edition of The Courier Herald? Fear not! Green Editions are posted weekly at: CourierHerald.com

Legal Notices

Notice of Ordinance Adoption Ordinances Adopted February 24, 2015: AB15-04 – Ordinance No. 1508 [D15-04] – An Ordinance Of The City Council Of The City Of B o n n ey L a ke, P i e r c e C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n , Amending Por tions Of Chapter 10.16 And Section 15.08.040 Of The Bonney Lake Municipal Code Related To The Regulation Of Recreational Vehicles. AB15-16 – Ordinance No. 1509 [D15-16] – An Ordinance Of The City Council Of The City Of B o n n ey L a ke, P i e r c e C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n , Amending Section 18.39.070 Of The Bonney Lake Municipal Code Related To Building Design Standards In Midtown. AB15-19 – Ordinance No. 1510 [D15-19] – An Ordinance Of The City Council Of The City Of B o n n ey L a ke, P i e r c e C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n , Amending Sections 13.12.010 And 13.12.320 Of The Bonney Lake Municipal Code And The Corresponding Portions Of Ordinance Nos. 1266 And 1333 Relating To Fat, Oil, And Grease Deposits. AB15-26 – Ordinance No. 1511 [D15-26] – An Ordinance Of The City Council Of The City Of B o n n ey L a ke, P i e r c e C o u n t y, Wa s h i n g t o n , Amending Chapter 19.08 Of The Bonney L a ke M u n i c i p a l C o d e And Ordinance No. 1478 Relating To School Impact Fees. The full text of ordinances is available to view online at www.ci.bonney-lake.wa.us or upon request to the City Clerk. # 617947 3/4/15

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW

(253) 219-5952

4000

EMPLOYMENT

Health Care Employment

General

Professional Services Instruction/Classes

CNA - Full time. Evening and night shifts. Enumclaw Health and Rehabilitation Center Please apply within; 2323 Jensen. Or call: (360)8252541

Are you an adult who cannot read and has a great desire to read? I will teach you to read in 6 months totally free of charge. (360)496-1960

CNA’S Full Time Experience required. Friendly, caring attitude a must. Come join our dynamic team! Heritage House Assisted Living & Memory Care: Apply in person 28833 Hwy 410 E, Buckley, 98321

Professional Services Legal Services

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s CARRIER custody, support, proper ty division and bills. ROUTES B B B m e m b e r . AVAILABLE (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com E N U M C L AW H E A LT H legalalt@msn.com IN YOUR and Rehabilitation CenAREA ter. Experienced RN to join our dynamic group. Professional Services Music Lessons WA license required. For Call Today more information please Guitar and Piano 1-253-872-6610 call Mark Censis at: 360Lessons 825-2541 R e t i r e d Ta h o m a S. D. CNA teacher will come to you. Business Part time in adult family After 30 years of finding Opportunities home with a warm and ways to explain music, I friendly atmosphere. In AVON- Ear n extra in- am sure I can find a way Buckley area. come with a new career! for you. Introductory lesSell from home, work,, son is FREE. Call Brad 360.829.2609 online. $15 startup. For (206)999-9428. infor mation call: 888Green Editions, Stories, 423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat Photos and more go to: 9-1 Central) Employment General

CourierHerald.com

WANTED: looking for reliable person to mow lawn. Buckley areaSpiketon Rd. Please call cell phone (253)3296808 for more details.

Employment Publications

H o w To B e We a l t hy, Healthy and Travel For Life! FREE Report: Call 206-208-8343 or Fax to: 206-337-5053

Employment Transportation/Drivers

Schools & Training

CDL Driver Needed

AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com

Local Puget Sound area. Flatbed exper ience a must. Full time, MondayFriday. Good pay with advancement oppor tunities. Vacation and Holiday pay. Call: (253)261-4678 Driver: Delivery Openings! Excellent Comprehensive Benefits! 2 yrs CDL-A Experience For more information call Penske Logistics: 1-855-971-7417 Or Apply Online at www.GoPenske.com and refer to job #1501586

PIANO LESSONS For the young and young at heart.

Karen (360)802-9314 Professional Services Professional

Custom Upholstery By Van’s of Enumclaw. Free pickup, delivery and estimates. Monday - Friday 8am to 5pm. 23929 SE 440th, Enumclaw (360)825-5775

5000

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

home services

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

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

Sales Positions • Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Everett - Marysville - Renton

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If you answered YES then you need to join the largest community news organization in Washington. The Marysville Globe and Arlington Times, divisions of Sound Publishing, Inc. are looking for self-motivated, results-driven people interested in a multi-media sales career. This position will be responsible for print and digital advertising sales. The successful candidate will be engaging and goal oriented, with good organizational skills and will have the ability to grow and maintain strong business relationships through consultative sales and excellent customer service. Every day will be a new adventure! You can be an integral part of these communities while helping local business partners succeed in their in print or online branding, marketing and advertising strategies. Whether their marketing footprints are in Marysville, Arlington, Snohomish County or Western Washington - you have the opportunity to help them with their success. Professional sales experience necessary; media experience is a definite asset but not mandatory. If you have these skills, and enjoy playing a pro-active part in helping your clients achieve business success, please email your resume and cover letter to: hreast@soundpublishing.com, ATTN: MMSCMAR. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

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www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com Home Services General Contractors

B&R

Major Household Appliances Repair Most Makes & Models

A PROFESSIONAL

A-1 SHEER GARDENING & LANDSCAPING

ROOFING & REMODELING

HANDYMAN

ENUMCLAW, WA

General Contractor

30

Roofing ExperiYeenacers! Painting Gutter Cleaning Pressure Washing Plumbing Electrical Remodel & New Construction ALL Home Repair

• Residential • Commercial • Custom Homes • Remodeling

SMALL JOBS OUR SPECIALITY

829-1710

Lic# GLCCOSC904KF

360/893-2429

Raymond Stine

I’M BACK!

K.J. Lockhart Cons.

or cell 253/691-1324 www.rboydproservices.com

42 yrs. Lic. Contractor

Licensed • Bonded RICHABP014L4

owner

KENNEJL267 P.W.

Home Services

Backhoe/Dozing/Tractor

BACKHOE Bulldozing, Dump Truck, Clearing, Logging, Foundations, Ecology Block Walls

(253)355-1743 or (253)862-6484

*New Homes *Remodel *Add On’s *Roofing *Foundations *Siding *Windows *Tile *Remodel Kitchens, Baths

(206)300-2536 (360)829-7760

Interior / Exterior Painting and Home Repairs Build Wood Decks and Fences Dry Rot

253-350-3231

Home Services Carpet Clean/Install

PUGET SOUND DRYWALL CO.

Home Services Hauling & Cleanup

Gosstekk Carpet & Upholstery

New Construction, Basement, Remodels No Job Too Small!

Carpet, Upholstery, RVs, Autos. Schedule with a neighbor, both receive a discount! 360-829-4121 253-389-1698

(253) 862-7533

www.wrightsservices.com

Free Estimate Excellent Service Competitive Prices (360)825-7877 (253)939-4399

Home Services General Contractors

BONDED •INSURED PUGETSD178B4

Home Services Fencing & Decks

**Local Fence Co.** White Vinyl, Ranch, Horse Fencing Cedar, Chain Link, Repairs, Gates Call James

253-831-9906

Bonded & Insured Lic# allamal921p7

Home Services Gutter Services

1253211

Over 40 yrs. Experience Carpet Cleaning Upholstery Cleaning Carpet Repair Restretching Carpets Pet Odor Removal Squeaky Floor Repair

$OO ZRUN RZQHU ÀQLVKHG

1253242

Wrights Services

“Where Quality is the Difference.”

SXJHWVRXQGGU\ZDOOFR FRP

Rain Gutters BY ALL PURPOSE EXTERIORS

Serving Enumclaw, Buckley, Bonney Lake & Sumner Home Construction & Remodeling

Chris Eggers

owner • New Const. • Kitchens • Remodels • Bathrooms • Additions • Garages • Decks 1253214

360-825-1443 Cont# EGGERHC940LM Licensed • Bonded

CONTRACTOR’S NOTICE Adver tising placed by contractor’s must contain the contractor’s true name, address and current registration number according to Washington State Law 18.27,100. Violations could be subject to a civil penalty of up to $1000 per violation. To see if this law applies to you and for information on other provis i o n s o f t h e l aw c a l l Contractors Registration in Olympia. (360)9025226.

Gutter: • Repair • Screens Gutter Dome Screens the highest rated gutter cover

FREE Estimates Call now and save 10%

253-230-5884 Licensed and insured Lic.# ALLPUPE932DK Home Services Handyperson

Bonney Lake Handyman - Remodel - Kitchens - Repair - Baths - Maintenance - Windows - Roof - Gutters - Storm DamageRepair

Any Size Jobs!

253.863.4243 Cell 206.979.1302

Ofice

American Gen. Contractor Better Business Bureau Lic #AMERIGC923B8

Danny’s Landscape & Tree

#PUGETSC038KA

*EZ-Haulers Junk Removal

We Haul Anything!

HOME, GARAGE and YARD CLEANUP

All Pruning. Specialize in Fruit Trees, Ornamentals. Thatch, Seed, Sod, All Lawn Work, Retaining Walls, Fences, Roof Moss Control, Gutters

Senior Discounts

Danny: 253-391-3919

253-862-4347 Bonded & Insured

Lic# KKLANKL897MK

Pinnacle Landscape Services Now accepting new landscape maintenance customers. Weekly and bi-weekly service ava i l a bl e. M ow, B l ow and Edge. Irrigation installation and maintenance, fence, deck and hardscape installation. Licensed, bonded and insured. Lic# PINNALS909DW Call 206-383-4176 or email pinnaclelandscape@comcast.net

Home Services

AK Painting Inc

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

House/Cleaning Service

Clean Nest

Home and office cleaning. No job too big or small. 15 years exper ience in this area. Excellent references available upon request. Reasonable and comparable rates. I am ver y reliable, wor k hard and fast. Will clean your home as if it were my own. Call today to schedule a walk through. I cater to each individual cleaning needs. Call Robin (360)441-1282 Home Services Landscape Services

A-1 QUICK LANDSCAPING

25% OFF!

All kinds of yard work: sod, seed, tree pruning mowing and fencing. Senior Discount

CALL FOR FALL SPECIAL

253-228-9101 206-229-5632

Lic# quickl*984cr *Bonded/Insured

Plumbing Repair Septic Service Pumping & Repair Drain Cleaning O&M Inspections Real Estate Inspections

Serving South King & Pierce

Fruit Trees pruned professionally. Over 40 years exp. Free estimate. Call Jim 360-825-7158. UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com

TEZAK’S TREE SERVICE (253)862-1700

tezakstreeservice.com Serving the area Over 30 Years FREE ESTIMATES Bonded~Insured Lic. # TEZAKTS0330C

Exterior-Interior High Quality Work Fair Pricing

FREE ESTIMATES Call Ken (253)350-0982 akpainting@msn.com

Licensed, bonded, insured KPAINPC957CB

CODEMI*932KQ

Home Services Property Maintenance

Frontierseptic@qwestoffice.net

Home Services Tree/Shrub Care

Home Services Painting

CODE MECHANICAL Heating & Air Conditioning Residential/ Commercial Sales & Service Buckley (253)377-2787

Service, LLC Enumclaw Bonney Lake 360.825.5580 253.862.1227

Lawn Maintenance

Trimming, Pruning, Weeding, Clean-up Bark, Hauling All kinds of yard work!

Home Services Plumbing

6000

MISCELLANEOUS Appliances

AMANA RANGE

K&K Landscaping

Lowest Rates! (253)310-3265

Heating/Air Conditioning

Home Services Septic Service

Spring Clean-Ups

PUGET SOUND CONSTRUCTION

Home Services Drywall/Plaster

#hillijc232qz

Senior Discounts Free Estimates Expert Work 253-850-5405

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

1253247

1253235

Serving South King & Pierce Area Since 1973

Home Services Roofing/Siding

1253245

GAS & ELECTRIC FURNACES COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION

360-825-1132

Home Services Landscape Services

1253249

REFRIGERATION

Wednesday, March 4, 2015, THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Page 19

Home Services Handyperson

Home Services Window Cleaning

TOM’S WINDOW CLEANING Commercial, Residential Gutter cleaning, Gutter whitening, Moss control, Pressure washing, New construction Locally owned (360)802-8925 (253)740-3833

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

206-244-6966

KENMORE FREEZER

Repo Sears deluxe 20cu.ft. freezer 4 fast freeze shelves, defrost drain, interior light

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

KENMORE REPO

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

* Under Warranty! *

Balance left owing $272 or make payments of $25. Call credit dept.

206-244-6966

Ding’s, Dents, Scratches and Factory Imperfections

*Under Warranty*

For Inquiries, Call or Visit

Appliance Distributors @ 14639 Tukwila Intl. Blvd.

206-244-6966

REPO REFRIGERATOR

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

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

Credit Dept. 206-244-6966

STACK LAUNDRY

Deluxe front loading washer & dryer. Energy efficient, 8 cycles. Like new condition

* Under Warranty *

A+ Rating

Jim Wetton’s

domestic services

PLUMBING

Domestic Services Child Care Offered

Residential & Commercial Service & Repairs

Bonney Lake Montessori is now enrolling children 30 months to five years for preschool and childcare programs. We are a State licensed facility, specializing in kindergarten readiness. Call to schedule a classroom tour and meet our teachers! (253)862-8599

Water Heaters Remodeling Drain Cleaning New Construction Your Fast, Friendly, Service Specialists since 1987

Call “RABBIT”

360 825-7720 CONTR#JIMWEP#137PB

JT’s Plumbing Repair est 1987

John Long (360)825-3007 (253)334-9698 *Plumbing Repairs *Drain Cleaning *Fixture Installations JTSPLR*110JP

Cemetery Plots

ACACIA Memorial Park, in lovely “Birch Garden”, (2) adjacent cemeter y plots, #3 & #4. Selling $3,000 each or $5,500 b o t h . Va l u e d $ 5 , 0 0 0 each. Located in Shoreline / N. Seattle. Call or email Emmons Johnson, 2 0 6 - 7 9 4 - 2 1 9 9 , eaj3000@msn.com

Mountain Crest Memorial Park A Beautiful Resting Place for Loved Ones Pricing from $750 to $7000 36424 312th Ave SE Enumclaw

(206)280-4071 Electronics

DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 800278-1401 Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & PHONE with FREE HD Equipment and install for under $3 a day! Call Now! 855-7528550

Mail Order

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? G e t a p a i n - r e l i ev i n g brace - little or NO cost t o yo u . M e d i c a r e Pa tients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 800-900-5406 Medical Guardian - Toprated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert monitoring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterproof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 per month. 800-6172809 The #1 WORST Exercise for Aging. Did you know certain exercises accelerate the aging process, while others slow, or even REVERSE aging? Discover the secret routines to FIGHT aging process.Visit www.ReverseAging123.com Unique oil proven to REGROW lost hair Go t o w w w. R e G r o w Yo u rHair123.com to discove r h ow yo u c a n E N D hair loss & even regrow lost hair cheaply, easily, & NATURALLY

NEW APPLIANCES Get The Big Deal from UP TO 70% OFF D i r e c T V ! A c t N o w - V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S All Manufacturer Small

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

1255671

Home Services Appliance Repair

%206-244-6966% Cemetery Plots

2 S X S C E M E T E RY Plots $7000 for both. Desirable Greenwood Memorial in Renton. Located in the sold out Azalea Garden. Right off the road, level approach; lot 1152, block 85, spaces 3 & 4. Extras include, vase, liner and double h e a d s t o n e. W i l l p ay transfer fee. 425-2261499.

$7000; 2 CEMETERY PLOTS in the beautiful Garden of Meditation. Desirable sold-out section in Washington Memorial. Call before its gone. Section 14, block NOTICE TO READERS 97, lots A2 and A3. Patti People providing child 360-497-2114, (private care in their home are seller. I pay transfer fee). required to have a state $8000 SUNSET HILLS l i c e n s e. C o m p l e t e l i - Cemetery plot or 2 plots censing information and for $15000. Panoramic daycare provider verifi- Seattle city view! Well cation is available from manicured Garden of the state at 1-800-446- Prayer location, Belle1114. vue. Easy access, right off the road. Highly desirable. Lot 78, spaces 3 Green Editions, Stories, & 4. Owner pays transfer Photos and more go to: fee. Private seller, call CourierHerald.com Loyd at 509-674-5867.

$ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o. Fr e e 3 Months of HBO, starz, S H OW T I M E & C I N E MAX. FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only. IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-8974169 Firearms & Ammunition

WANTED: Case & buckknives etc. Axes & hatchets. Old Logging To o l s. 2 5 3 - 3 5 5 - 1 7 4 3 , 253-862-6484 Flea Market

FREE ADS FOR FREE STUFF! Now you can clean up and clear out your item for FREE w h e n yo u ’r e g i v i n g i t away fo r f r e e. O f fe r good for a one week ad, up to 20 words, private party merchandise ad. No business, service or commercial ads qualify for the free offer. Call (360)825-2555 ext. 202 to place your free ad in the Recycler. Food & Farmer’s Market

SMOKE HOUSE & MORE The Best in the Northwest! Salmon, Chicken, Jerky, Pepperoni, Hams. Custom smoking services available. Bring your fish & meats to me.

32721 Railroad Ave. Black Diamond (360)886-9293

USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL - $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 855409-4132

VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! Lowest Price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor visit needed! Discreet H o m e D e l i ve r y. C a l l 855-684-5241 Miscellaneous

Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for F R E E DV D a n d b r o chure. K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs-Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odorless, Non-Staining. Effective results begin after spray dries. Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware P r o t e c t Yo u r H o m e ADT Authorized Dealer: B u r g l a r y, F i r e , a n d Emergency Aler ts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, INS TA L L E D T O M O R ROW! 888-858-9457 (MF 9am-9pm ET) Wanted/Trade

GUN FANCIER Wants t o bu y p i s t o l s, r i f l e s, shotguns. Old or new! P h o n e q u o t e s g l a d l y. Cash of course. Call 206-526-8081. FFL/ Background check provided.

UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com


www.courierherald.com or www.blscourierherald.com

Page 20 , THE ENUMCLAW, BONNEY LAKE & SUMNER COURIER-HERALD, Wednesday, March 4, 2015

7000

ANIMALS

Final Days!!

Dogs

Call Today!

Financing Available

For a money saving coupon ... Go to Facebook.com/PermaBilt RV SHOP w/ATTACHED GARAGE '+( x ), x )+ +( x *, x 1 w'+(

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20,399

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18,630

267mo.

$

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (1) 12’X12’ & (2) 10’X8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

27,348

$

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4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

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ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE: • 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation • 18 Sidewall & Trim Colors With Limited Lifetime Warranty (Denim Series Excluded) • Free In-Home Consultation • Plans • Engineering • Permit Service • Erection • Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Engineered For 85 MPH Wind Exposure B & 25# Snow Load* *If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

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12’x9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cross hatching & cam-latch closers, (2) 4’ x 8’ split opening unpainted wood Dutch doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 4’ x 3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

18,357

$

24,352

$

16,688

$

$

240mo.

<=DMP= * ;9J ?9J9?= *( x *, x 0 Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 4’x3’ double glazed cross-hatch vinyl windows w/screens, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

14,233

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12,998

187/mo.

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4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 12’x14’ arched raised panel steel overhead door with lites, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door 4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip strip crack control, (2) w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl 10’ x 7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/selfwindows w/screens, 18” eave & gable overhangs, (2) 12”x12” gable vents. closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $

SQUARE FEET

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 9’X8’’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave & gable overhangs, (2) 12” x 18” gable vents, 2’ x 36’ poly eavelight $

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12,812

$

$

11,595

167mo.

$

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19,725

$

$

2” fiberglass vapor barrier, 18 sidewall and trim colors with 45 year warranty.

10’ X 9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cam-latch closers, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

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4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control for entire footprint, 14’ x 9’ sliding door w/crosshatching & cam-latch closers, 3’ x 6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

$300 (+) RAT TERRIER PUPS $300. Unbelievably cute, loving little babies with plenty of “Ratitude”. We have chocolates, black and tans and they’re all toys. Ta i l s d o cke d & d ew claws removed and by the time they go home, t h ey ’ l l h ave h a d t w o shots and been wormed several times. Ready for new homes. 360-2739325. Rochester. $500 AKC English Mastiff/ Great Pyrenees puppies. Perfect for families, security and as gentle as can be! AKC Mastiff Dad & Mom is a beautiful Great Pyrenese. All red or brown colored pups w/ some black markings. Pick you puppy, before their gone, call Francis now 360-535-9404 Kingston, WA. 9 AUSTRALIAN Shepherd Pups. Pure Bred. Parents very docile and friendly! Mom on site. 6 males and 3 females. Tails & dew claws done. Shots & worming will be. Taking deposits now, will make good family pets! $ 4 2 5 f o r Tr i - C o l o r s ; $500 for Blue Merles. Call: 360-631-6089 for more info. AKC German Shepherd Puppies. Black, black / tan, and Panda colors. $ 7 5 0 + t a x . Pa r e n t s OFA ’d . Shots, wormed, ve t c h e c k e d . Ya k i m a 509-965-1537.

Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 3/9/15.

AKC Poodle Puppies Teacups 1 Black/Silver Phantom Female, 2 Brown/White Parti Males, 1 Brown Male, 1 Tiny Toy Silver/ White Parti Male. Full of Love and Kisses. Reserve your puff of love. 360-249-3612 AKC PUG PUPPIES! First shots and wormed. We have adorable male fawns. Well socialized with animals. Ready for great homes soon. Mom and Dad on site. Available at $700 ea. 360-929-7860 or tctrimmer@msn.com Oak Harbor, Whidbey Island.

AKC Standard Poodle Puppies. Standard AKC Poodle Puppies. Parents genetically tested, good lines, great temperament. 2 year health guaranteed & up to date on shots. www.ourpoeticpoodles.com or call 509-582-6027 UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com DACHSHUND PUPPY male, red brindle $350. all puppy shots, wormed, family raised. 253653-8346.


www.courierherald.com

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 21

Spring projects sprouting around the garden The Compleat Home Gardener Marianne Binetti Columnist

soil moisture. These spring projects will require soil and mulch resources – so here is the garden gossip: buying soil can be a dirty business. The sale of “topsoil” is not

a regulated industry in our state. It’s time to educate yourself and ask questions before purchasing topsoil for landscape or lawn renovation projects. My mail tells me the biggest consumer complaint about buying topsoil, bark or compost is that products can be contaminated with horsetail or other noxious weeds. Consumers have also reported having a load of “soil” delivered that is full of large rocks, building debris like nails and sheet rock and even undecomposed food scraps and

garbage. Gardeners in Western Washington are lucky to have many vendors of soil, compost and mulches with excellent reputations who have been in business for many years. Here are some tips from successful soil companies that have managed to keep their products weed- and debrisfree and their customers happy through the years. Ask if the company does product testing and how often they test the soil. Jami

1.

Burke of Corliss Resources is a horticulturist that helps create the compost and topsoil at the indoor compost making operation for Corliss Resources in Sumner. “Our soil is tested quarterly and we undergo strict testing as a registered organic material with the Washington State Department of Agriculture,” he said. “Constant monitoring of the heat and oxygen is key to creating clean, weed free compost.”

SEE BINETTI, PAGE 22

1255813

Marianne Binetti offers a free seminar beginning at 7 p.m. March 14 at Old Redmond Schoolhouse Community Center, 16600 N.E. 80th St. in Redmond. The topic will be “Delightful Gardens in Dry Shade.” Register at www.brownpapertickets.com/event/887959. Spring projects sprout this time of year. March is good time to restore and rejuvenate an old lawn, start some raised beds for vegetables and weed and mulch the flower and shrub beds to keep out future weeds and conserve

Dogs

Garage/Moving Sales King County

Automobiles Others

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

AU TO I N S U R A N C E S TA R T I N G AT $ 2 5 / MONTH! Call 877-9299397

FOOTHILLS AUTO GLASS

FUGATE

Quality Windshields

ENUMCLAW

Certified Technician

FUGATE COUPON

Pickup Trucks Dodge

CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adoptions Also, $100 Each. Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaranteed. UTD Vaccinations/ wormings, litter box trained, socialized. Video, pictures, information/ virtual tour: www.chi-pup.net References happily supplied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-4595951

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES $425. 3 beautiful 6 week old females. Black & Tan, 1st shots, d e w o r m e d . H a p p y, healthy, ready to go. . 360-496-1390 or 360496-1394. Randle, WA.

MINI Australian shepherd Purebred Puppy’s, r a i s e d w i t h f a m i l y, smart, loving. 1st shots, wor med. Many colors. $550 & up. 360-2613354 Tack, Feed & Supplies

$5 LOCAL HAY!!!!!!!!! 2nd cutting Enumclaw 360-761-9298.

THE PROM PROJECT FUNDRAISER RUMMAGE SALE Fri 3/6-Sat 3/7, 8am-4pm Awesome prices on brand name jeans MissMe, Hudson, BNK etc, purses, shoes, adult clothing up to size 4X, household, linens, Christmas, tons of shorts $2, baby items .25, books, collectables and toys. HALF PRICE SAT.! Bonney Lake Community Church, 8201 Locust Dr.

SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW

(253) 219-5952

8100

Automobiles Honda

Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com Pickup Trucks Ford

All Types of Auto, Truck (foreign & domestic) Glass, Side, Back Mirrors & Back Glass

Vans & Minivans Plymouth

Saturday by Appointment

253/261-6066 360/829-9915 SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW

(253) 219-5952

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

Enumclaw

Estate Sale. SaturdaySunday, March 7th-8th, 9AM-3PM, 1124 Mount a i n V i l l a D r. ( b e h i n d Grocery Outlet). Antiques, glassware, housewares, quilts, electronics, sewing/ quilting items, sewing machine, tools, planting pots, patio furniture, office supplies, decor items. Please, no earlies, cash only.

Ask About NO COST Chip Repair Latest Technology

1988 Ford F-150 Custom V8, 302 cu. in., 5.0L, 5 speed manual t ra n s m i s s i o n , 1 4 5 8 0 0 mileage. Blue and white with matching Gemtop box cover. $3000. Call (425)233-4733

Green Editions, Stories, Photos and more go to:

2005 HONDA ACCORD XL FSBO $8500 4 door s e d a n i n S i l ve r. O n l y 95,000 miles. Reliable, dependable. Nice cond. Great gas mileage; 30 HWY MPG. Purchased new car, so I don’t need this one. Call for details 206-801-7534. Edmonds

Cash JUNK CARS & TRUCKS

Free Pick up 253-335-3932

Auto Service/Parts/ Accessories

All Insurance Welcome

UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the

CourierHerald.com

Garage/Moving Sales King County

GOLDEN DOODLE pups Non shedding. Not just a pet, but one of the family! Wonderful with children. Parents & grand parents on site. Wormed & shots. High intelligence. $1,000. Call Chris 360-652-7148.

OLDER DODGE RAM WANTED diesel pickup w/ Cummins turbo (4WD). Call Dan, private cash buyer 360304-1199.

1 9 9 7 G ra n d Voya g e r, new brakes, 2 new tires. Runs great & well maintained. $3,000. (253)862-4477

GARAGE SALES

Mobile Service for Your Schedule

1255668

Dogs

CHEVY, BUICK & GMC are Eligible For FREE Oil Change/Tire Rotation Combo! Visit www.Shop.Best Mark.com for more info and registration. For questions please call us at 800-969-8477 www.Shop.BestMark.com or call

Vehicles Wanted

Vehicles Wanted

CARS/TRUCKS WANTE D ! To p $ $ $ $ $ PA I D ! Running or Not, All M a ke s ! . Fr e e Tow i n g ! We ’r e L o c a l ! 7 D ay s / Week. Call 1-800-9598518

Wanted: 190SL, 230SL, 280SL, Mercedes or other pre-1972 Foreign Sportscar or Convertible. Porsche, Jaguar, Ferrari, etc. ANY CONDITION! FA I R O F F E R S ! M i k e 520-977-1110.

CASH FOR CARS! Any M a ke, M o d e l o r Ye a r. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1888-545-8647 Green Editions, Stories, Photos and more go to:

We will beat any price on the 13 major brands we sell 13 major tire brands 30-day price guarantee All makes and models

In the unlikely event you find tires for less, we’ll beat that price up to 30 days after your purchase! Requires presentation of competitor’s current price ad/offer on exact tire sold by dealership within 30 days after purchase. See Fugate Ford for details. Ends 3/31/15

Mon. 7am-6pm Tue.-Fri. 7am-7pm Sat. 8am-4:30pm Call for Appointment

1257209

526 Roosevelt Enumclaw 360 825-7731 800 539-7595

CourierHerald.com

UP-TO-DATE NEWS for the Plateau Area Communities:

CourierHerald.com SPACE FOR LEASE DOWNTOWN ENUMCLAW

(253) 219-5952

Did you miss the last edition of The Courier Herald? Fear not! Green Editions are posted weekly at: CourierHerald.com


Page 22 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

BINETTI FROM 21 Corliss Resources also sells topsoil that mixes their weedfree compost with sand and loam and offer both a two-way mix suitable for lawn renovation and a three-way mix for landscaping and garden beds. Learn more at www.corlissresources. com. Ask what goes into the product and where the ingredients come from. Jason Gwerder makes mountains of Moo Doo on his family farm in Enumclaw and uses only the resources given to them from their organically fed and free range cow, calf and dairy operation. “We have a closed loop system for feeding and caring for our animals,” Gwerder said. “We know our manure-based mulching product will be weed-free because we heat our product to 180 degrees and age it for two to five years. We don’t truck in raw materials so we know exactly what goes into our Moo Doo – it all comes from our organic farm from start to finish.” Learn more about Hy Grass Farms at www.moo-doo.com. Ask where the product is created and who oversees the operation. Tagro is municipal sludge or biosolids recycled by the city of Tacoma into a mix with sawdust and bark that can be added as an amendment to lawns and garden beds. Tagro is not sold as a topsoil but rather as a product to improve existing soils. Tagro is made on site in Tacoma and is available for

3.

All the Dirt on Words to Know

• Compost – a soil amendment of well-rotted organic matter often made from collected yard waste. Compost can be used to improve existing soils and is excellent for raised bed vegetable gardens. • Two-way mix – usually a mix of compost and sand. This is the best for layering on top of a well-aerated lawn and sprinkling lawn seeds on top for lawn renovation. The sand in the mix means it will drain well and can be used to rake over moss and low spots in the lawn. • Three-way mix or five-way mix – Compost, sand and loam

CORNER FROM 6

plus, in some cases, sawdust and bark are mixed. This creates a soil that holds water better than a two-way mix but drains better than compost. It’s good for creating planting berms for trees and shrubs and can also be used for growing vegetables and flowers. • Mulch – anything that goes on top of the soil to block out weeds and seal in moisture. In some areas, rocks and gravel are used as a mulch but in Western Washington bark and wood chips are the most common mulching materials. • Composted manure Western Washington is dairy country and well-composted dairy manure is available from some local farmers for use as a soil amendment and in some cases as a weed-blocking mulch. To avoid weed seeds, the manure should be heated in a pile and aged so it is well rotted.

formed or in service of great and glorious Wizard of I Am. I learned long ago to never predict the future. I can barely predict where I will be in the next seven minutes, or remember where I am supposed to be in the next seven minutes. The writing goddesses Sarah and Becky are constantly telling me where I should be and pointing out I am not there… wherever there is. Nothing like youth and a functional brain complete with memory. I must have had that once. Most of the articles I come across concerning newspapers are authored by someone who is not producing a paper. Here is a secret: No one has a clue what’s ahead – including those attractive guys with beer cans strapped to their heads calling for the apocalypse. I have been looking over The Courier-Herald editions from the early 1900s. One thing stood out to me. Papers change and adapt to time and place. In the 1920s, The CourierHerald printed everything from

• • • Marianne Binetti has a degree in horticulture from Washington State University and is the author of “Easy Answers for Great Gardens” and several other books. For book requests or answers to gardening questions, write to her at: P.O. Box 872, Enumclaw, 98022. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a personal reply. For more gardening information, she can be reached at her Web site, www.binettigarden. com.

CHOIR FROM 11 musical and learned about the elements required to bring one together, including music, staging, costuming and props. Vocal, instrumental and dance ensembles from all around the world apply to perform each year as a part of Disney

Copyright for this column owned by Marianne Binetti.

local to national and international news. Beside a story about the president might be a piece about the spirited rummy game at Mrs. Morticia Whedudle’s house. I will not be covering rummy games anytime soon. I am working on a bringing in a mystery columnist raised on the Plateau who is conversant with moo cows and milking. (There is a scurrilous rumor started by an anonymous source named S.G. with apparent hair that she is a secret vegan. I will be investigating this in a future column.) In my estimation the essential ingredient for a newspaper is finding the right slurry of news, community, sports and fun. I believe writers who are interested in the subject will produce better stories – stories readers want to read. Of course, newspapers have two avenues today – the print publication and the web. That is broad and colorful palette. Editor’s Note: Seattle Opera’s presentation of Handel’s “Semele” is excellent. It is an opera the young will enjoy. It is not just for boring buttermilk-drinkers like me. Performing Arts at both the Disneyland Resort and the Walt Disney World Resort. Once selected, they are given the opportunity to perform at the resort for an international audience of theme park guests. Millions of performers have graced the stages of the Disney Parks in the more than 25-year history of the program.

THUNDERBIRDS HOCKEY

SATURDAY MARCH 7

7:05

2.

pick up or delivery. Donald Boe is the local Tagro expert and explains that creating Tagro is a dual-digestion process that uses beneficial organisms to digest the solids and also a three-temperature heat cycle to remove odor, weeds and other pathogens. Tagro is tested and graded by the EPA and has earned a Class A ranking for exceptional quality. Visit www.Tagro.com. Consumers should visit company’s websites to understand what they offer. Consumers also need to know that finding occasional clods or dirt lumps, small rocks or a bit of stringy material in a load of compost or topsoil does not detract from the overall quality of the product. What you should be concerned about are visible weeds, especially horsetail, undecomposed branches, fresh manure, cigarette butts, plastic pieces or any undecomposed food scraps.

www.courierherald.com

Boy Scout Night

KAMLOOPS BLAZERS


www.courierherald.com

Wednesday, March 4, 2015 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Page 23

BLACK DIAMOND NEWS Farmers Market accepting applications from vendors

press.com. Anyone with questions can call Mira at 360-886-2963.

The Black Diamond Farmers Market is accepting vendor applications for the 2015 season. Changes for the coming year include new hours, 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. Fridays from June 5 to Sept. 29. Also, there will be weekly events like the June 5 Rhubarb Fest, Aug. 21 BlackBerry Blues, June 26 Wild West Days and Christmas in July. Organizers also are touting more produce, more vendors, more food and more music. All vendor booths will be outdoors this year, with tents circling the front and north side of the building. This will allow for better parking and pedestrian traffic. Vendors pay $10 per booth per week. Application forms are available on Facebook or at BlackDiamondFarmersMarket.word-

Black Diamond residents can get help with energy bills

interviews. Scholarship recipients are enrolled as members of the Army ROTC battalion at their colleges. The scholarship entitlements include tuition and fees, as well as an annual book allowance and a monthly stipend for up to 10 months of each school year the scholarship is in effect.

Upon graduation from college and completion of the ROTC program requirements, the student receives a bachelor’s degree and a commission as a second lieutenant in the Army. All scholarship students incur a military service obligation of eight years, which may be fulfilled by either serving on active duty or in the Reserve Components of the Army. Harder is a 2014 graduate of Enumclaw High School.

Healthy Kids Day GORDON FAMILY YMCA

Join us as we spend the day in Sumner on Saturday, April 11. The Gordon Family YMCA is hosting Healthy Kids Day 10am-1pm. This event is open to the community, so bring the whole family for fun activities before the Daffodil Parade comes through Sumner.

Saturday, April 11 | 10am-1pm GORDON FAMILY YMCA 16101 64th St E Sumner WA 98390

• Fun and healthy activities for the whole family • Learn about the Gordon Family YMCA • Sign up to become a charter member • Free t-shirts for the first 100 youth 1257269

IN THE MILITARY Brianne T. Harder has received an Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps scholarship to attend Washington State University. Scholarships are awarded on a merit basis, reflecting academic achievement, extracurricular activities, physical fitness, specific performance or accomplishment, leadership abilities and personal

FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

The Black Diamond Community Center and the Salvation Army are now offering appointments for energy assistance. Low-income families, seniors and disabled persons in Black Diamond, Ravensdale, Maple Valley, Covington and east unincorporated Kent (ZIP code 98042) are eligible. One voucher per household can be issued for up to $150. Clients must have received an “Urgent Notice” or a “Final Notice.” Call 360-886-1011 to set up appointments, available Monday through Thursday.

For more information, visit ymcapkc.org/gordonymca

FOR MORE NEWS AND PHOTOS GO TO COURIERHERALD.COM

“When I went to my bank that I had been with for a long time to get a loan, they were inflexible and unwilling to meet my terms. Kirk stopped by to see me at the perfect time and was able to find a solution that worked for both me and Commencement Bank. The whole process was so easy and the bank made me feel welcome. I can’t say enough about how amazing they are. ”

-Helen Boisjolie

1257210

Pictured left to right: Kirk Parce - VP/Commercial Loan Officer Helen Boisjolie - Windermere Real Estate

360.625.0660

commencementbank.com

1186 Myrtle Ave, Enumclaw 98022


Page 24 • THE COURIER-HERALD • Wednesday, March 4, 2015

www.courierherald.com

buy 1, get 1 free buy a meat or sandwich plate O 2 large drinks, get the second plate free!

OPEN DAiLY 11 am -9 pm 21109 Hwy. 410 Bonney Lake, WA 98391

253.862.0425 dickeys.com

1256208

Second of equal or lesser value. Not valid with other offers. Bonney Lake location 3-31-15 only. Expires 09/30/13

Salon 410 20 WOMEN’S HAIRCUT

$

Advertise on this page for as low as $75!

Expires 3/31/15

FOURTEEN FOILS!

thewickedwaxco.com

Men’s Candles On sale for the month of March .

$12.95 Reg. $14.95

CITRUS • WOOD • AQUA

$ 100% pure natural b eexwax

INCLUDES:

✔ SHAMPOO ✔ STYLE & DRY Long Hair Extra

NEW CLIENTS With Coupon. Not to be combined with any other offer. Expires 03/31/15

!

2oz Tins

Beeswaxscented Birthday Cake Black Tea & Berries Cinnamon Apple Grapefruit Honeydew Lavender Lilac Plumeria Vanilla

55

Our BEST

FILL YOUR FREEZER WITH QUALITY, NATURAL & GRASS FED PRODUCTS.

Natural Fed

1255673

BEEF SIDES Grass Fed BEEF SIDES $3.49/lb PORK (half or whole) $3.79/lb $1.99/lb

30 lbs. SPLIT - 1/2 HOG PACK Regular Price $13900

YOU SAVE $ 5000

89

OLSON’S MEATS & SMOKEHOUSE

We Are A Full Service Old Fashioned Butcher Shop!

sh FreSAUSAGE

KIELBASA, GERMAN GARLIC POTATO SAUSAGE

5

$ 98 lb.

1255692

Total Price

$

00

OUR BEST!

$5.50

135 Jefferson Ave Ste K • Buckley boyadzhieva1980@gmail.com Evening Appointments Available

BEEF •PORK •POULTRY

50 lb Economy Pack ITEMS #CUTS AVG. WT. ITEMS #CUTS AVG. WT. T-Bone Steak 4 4 lb. Smoked Pork Chops 4 2 lb. Rib Steak 4 4 lb. Lean Ground Beef 10 10 lb. Sirloin Steak 2 1 lb. Country Sausage 4 4 lb. Sirloin Tip Steak 2 1 lb. Bnls. Chicken Breast 4 4 lb. Hanging Tenderloin Steak 2 4 lb. Hawaiian Pork Roast 1 4 lb. Fillets 4 2 lb. or Italian Porketta Tri-Tip Marinated 1 2 lb. Retail $369.00 SAVE $80 Boneless Chuck Roast 1 4 lb. Bnls Turkey Thighs Marinated 1 4 lb. Total Price 70lb

28900

$

package

20104 SE 436th, Enumclaw

(Located 5 miles west of Enumclaw on Hwy. 164)

Fresh

We now have

Corned Beef Hash Sausage

Good thru 3/31/15 All major credit cards accepted EBT

r Ordrely! Ea

EASTER HAMS also available PRIME RIB LEG OF LAMB

5

OLSON’S MEATS & SMOKEHOUSE 360-825-3340

We Are A Full Service Old Fashioned Butcher Shop!

Order Now… Pay Later! Order now, we will select and age your beef in our aging cooler. We will then custom process according to your instructions. You pay when you pick it up. (up to 30 days from ordering)

$ 98 lb.

1R/lb. eg

$6.98 . lb.

“JUST HAPPY CATTLE”

Mobile Farm Slaughter! Custom Processing! Send Us Your Livestock!

CORNED BEEF

$

Natural Fed Beef

is Grass and Pasture Fed Beef, “Naturally Grazing Daily” Their diet is supplemented with grains, vegetable, and corn silage which intensifies the marble effect in the meat for maximum flavor and tenderness. No Antibiotics or Added Hormones!

360-825-3340

ENJOY OUR FAMILY RECIPES ON ALL ITEMS! SAVE

Yanka Styles at Salon 410

Call to set up your appointment! 206-393-7950

OUR BEST BEEF • PORK • POULTRY 2015 STOCK UP SALE Our BEST

Don’t Trust your Hair to Luck… Trust Yanka!

Tues-Fri 10-6pm, Sat 10-5

1256938

1258180

Full Color Ad! Contact your rep today! TAMIE 360-802-8219 • MARTHA 360-802-8218 JEN 825-2555 x2050

INCLUDES:

✔ PRECISION CUT ✔ SHAMPOO ✔ STYLE & DRY

Call to reserve your order today! Through 3/31/14

All major credit cards accepted

EBT

20104 SE 436th • Enumclaw (Located 5 miles west of Enumclaw on Hwy. 164)

Hours: Mon: 8am-5pm, Tue-Fri: 8am-6pm, Sat 8am-5pm, Closed Sunday

Mobile Farm Slaughter! Custom Processing! Send Us Your Livestock!


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