Whidbey News-Times, August 15, 2015

Page 1

Vol. 125, No. 65

News-Times Whidbey

SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 2015

An 18-year-old Texas man died Wednesday morning after falling 50 feet from a cliff on Pass Island, according to Island County Coroner Robert Bishop. The coroner ID’d the man as Scott Wuensch.

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Man, 18, falls to death at D. Pass

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Wuensch and his brother had driven up from Texas to visit the area. They were in a group of six teenagers who went hiking on Pass Island, which is the island in the middle of Deception Pass Bridge. Bishop said that the group walked down to the shore. Wuensch and another teenager starting hiking back up ahead of the rest of the group and waited. Wuensch went out on a limb of a Madrona tree, which broke and sent him falling. Bishop said he SEE DEATH, A16

Prosecutor sues land-use lawyer By JESSIE STENSLAND jessie@whidbeynewsgroup.com

Island County Prosecutor Greg Banks, on behalf of the state, filed a lawsuit against a land-use attorney the Island County commissioners hired to help with the amendment to the comprehensive plan.

The “memorandum in support of entry of order ousting the defendants from the office of the Island County prosecuting attorney” was filed Wednesday in Island County Superior Court. The lawsuit states that land-use SEE LAWSUIT, A16

Nurses rally as talks with WGH enter fifth month CEO ‘very encouraged’ by progress being made By DEBRA VAUGHN

dvaughn@whidbeynewsgroup.com

SEE NURSES RALLY, A11

Photo by Debra Vaughn/Whidbey News-Times

Nurses and their supporters gather on the lawn near the Captain Whidbey Inn in Coupeville. The nurses held a rally as union negotiations with Whidbey General Hospital go into week five.

IT off-island route extended to 2017 By DEBRA VAUGHN

dvaughn@whidbeynewsgroup.com

The only bus routes off the island will continue to run through at least June of 2017. The Island Transit Board of Directors voted Monday to continue operating the 411 routes that connect Whidbey and Camano Islands with Skagit County.

The routes were in limbo after the governor got cold feet about carrying through with a transportation project bill he signed that included a $2.3 million grant for Island Transit. The bill included a “poison pill” provision that could hinder his administration’s abilSEE ROUTS SPARED, A11

Greenbank Farm managers say they’re backing out of the picture By MEGAN HANSEN

mhansen@whidbeynewsgroup.com

Any hope that the Greenbank Farm Management Group could continue in an advisory role over the

farm were dashed Monday night as the farm management group said it’s done. The Port of Coupeville is moving forward with plans to manage the farm itself.

After outgoing port commissioners Marshall Bronson and John Carr voted last month to cease

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SEE STEPPING BACK, A15

WH I

They had hot dogs, balloons and a message: The nurses at Whidbey General Hospital won’t back down until their contract terms are met. A few hundred nurses and their supporters rallied at the Captain Whidbey Inn in Coupeville Thursday night in hopes of turning up the heat as the union and hospital management try to agree on a contract. “Management pays attention to what we’re doing, that we’re here demonstrating,” said P.C. Cable, a registered nurse. “We will take

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