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Police Beat - May 20, 2013

PORCELAIN PUNISHER A Woodinville man’s house was ransacked by unknown parties who had gained entry through a sliding...

Blood drive — May 28

The Northshore Interfaith Alliance will hold its next blood drive Tuesday, May 28, from 1 to 7 p.m. (with a dinner break...

Public hearing on water use efficiency

At the May 21st regular meeting of the board of commissioners, a public hearing will provide the public the opportunity to...

In pursuit of unbuckled AND distracted drivers

 ‘Click it or Ticket’ patrols take on texters and talkers  Ever wonder why Washington has one of the highest seat...

Post 199 Snoqualmie Valley Post to host veterans’ tribute

All are invited to attend Post 199’s Tribute to Vietnam- Era Veterans in Carnation on June 2 between 2 and 5:30 p.m. We...

Woodinville High School to present Spring Pops Concert

Bite Rite members focus on healthy eating

NW native plants are Pipers Creek Nursery’s specialty

New water district commissioner chosen

Detectives seek good Samaritan in Cossey murder

Woodin Creek Village Development approved

New school and grade level reconfiguration could ease crowding

Sustainamania offers tips, tricks, tools on going green

Celebrate Woodinville 2013

Police Beat - May 13, 2013

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Chandler Olson dominates in 1600 meters

Chandler Olson dominates in 1600 meters

Photo by Derek Johnson. With the nearest competitor nine seconds behind her, Woodinville’s Chandler Olson cruises to victory...

Schreyer fires no-hitter as Lady Falcons advance

Schreyer fires no-hitter as Lady Falcons advance

Photo by Mark Hatlen . Woodinville’s Madi Schreyer throws a pitch during her no-hit performance against Issaquah May 13th....

Falcons crush Emerald Ridge, but season ends with loss to South Kitsap

Photo by Patti Sternberg . Woodinville’s Lee Wunderlich connects on one of his 3 doubles during a 14-0 win over Emerald...

Falcons top cougars for KingCo Title

Photo by Derek Johnson Woodinville’s Stephen White warms during the KingCo Tournament’s championship game on May 9th....

WHS Girls Golf: Machida knows the way to Vancouver

Photo by Derek Johnson Woodinville sophomore Yuri Machida prepares to tee off during the Kingco 4A tournament at Willows...

Bothell staves off Eastlake in Kingco tourney thriller

Hamilton stars as Falcons hold off Vikings, 5-3

WHS soccer: senior Michael Aldridge goes out a winner

A visit with Woodinville softball star Emily Jackson

Woodinville soccer: Disappointing season strengthens resolve

Bothell pitching silences Woodinville bats

Woodinville softball: new era, same old dominance

Woodinville serves up an impressive win against Ballard

Woodinville varsity baseball defeats Bothell in conference opener

Local wrestlers place in the top 3 at championship

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Pet of the Week - May 20, 2013

Pet of the Week - May 20, 2013

You won’t meet a more fun and exuberant boy than Moe! This 3-year-old, 77-pound Lab mix would climb into your lap if he...

Weekend Warriors Get Ready!

Summer is coming and you are ready to start moving again. If you have been a couch potato for the last few months it is time...

Four health checks every woman must do – for herself and those she loves

American women spend more time taking care of their families, homes and jobs than themselves. With so much time invested...

Facts matter when your health is at stake

  How to make the best decisions with your health care provider Learning that you have a disease or medical condition...

Sleeping Lady is a heavenly retreat

Courtesy photo. Guest room cluster at Sleeping Lady.Sleeping Lady works its magic on you almost instantaneously. The 67-acre...

‘2B Or Not 2B’

Pet of the Week - May 13, 2013

Don’t Snooze, You Lose

Fun tips for fantastic family vacations

Savannah charms, enchants and stirs the soul

Eclectic Austin never misses a beat

Applause - May 6, 2013

Pet of the Week - May 6, 2013

Local Fishing Report By: Screamin' Reels It’s time to fish Woodinville!

Applause - April 29, 2013

Valley View

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Valley View

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Helen Hoenig’s mission: to make Duvall the cleanest little town on the Eastside

Helen Hoenig’s mission: to make Duvall the cleanest little town on the Eastside

Helen Hoenig can’t stop herself from cleaning up. Here, she clears off an overhead branch. Photo by Connie BergHelen Hoenig...

Community bonfire on Duvall Days will inaugurate Eagle Scout project

Community bonfire on Duvall Days will inaugurate Eagle Scout project

George Howlett, 15, takes a break from putting the final touches on his Eagle Scout project, a community fire pit located...

Camp Gilead voted BEST Kids Camp in the NW by Evening Magazine’s ‘Best Northwest Escapes’

CARNATION – Camp Gilead has been voted BEST Kids Camp in the Northwest by King 5 Evening Magazine’s “BEST Northwest...

Acres of Diamonds gets new generator, thanks to Duvall Rotary Foundation

(L-R) Duvall Rotary Club members Lin McBride, Beverly Jacobson, Laurie Hauglie, Sandy DuVall, Foundation President Sharol...

CANDIDATE FILING FOR RIVERVIEW SCHOOL BOARD POSITIONS #1 and #5

Two school board positions in Riverview School District are open for election in November 2013.  The filing period is:  ...

Local programs for alcoholics/addicts

Local SPU students make dean’s list

Honoring our Vietnam War Era Veterans

Camp Korey Family Day set for June 1

CHS cheer coach Jackie Boak receives the 2013 Rising Star Award

Farmers market opening day made history

Road closure for Duvall Days

Firefighters pancake breakfast June 2

Zoo’s new Bamboo Forest Reserve exhibit opens

DUVALL DAYS FESTIVAL 2013

The Woodinville Weekly
Annual cemetery open house planned for Memorial Day PDF Print E-mail
Written by Woodinville Cemetery Association   
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 13:36

Cemetery PergolaCourtesy photo. Don Wilds stands in front of the cemetery’s pergolaEach year on Memorial Day, the Woodinville Cemetery opens its gates to visitors. The Woodinville Cemetery is not only where our city’s pioneers lay at rest, but the newly refurbished grounds are a focal point on the city’s main street.

On May 30, from noon to 4 p.m., members of the cemetery board will be present to answer questions and provide a printed self-guided walking tour. Photos of many of the pioneers will be displayed on their graves.

"Our self-guided walking tour is a wonderful local history lesson for both adults and children," says Linda McCune, president of the Woodinville Cemetery Association that manages the cemetery land. "Reading about a pioneer or seeing a photo brings history to life."

One hundred forty one years ago, the first white settlers ventured northeast from Seattle to claim homestead land in Woodinville. Friendly Native-Americans inhabited this area then and the Sammamish Slough was nine feet deeper and provided a short steamboat ride from Lake Washington to Woodinville.

The Woodinville Cemetery now lies in the heart of the town that those settlers created. It was in early 1870 that Ira and Susan Woodin left their livery-stable business in Seattle to claim their 160-acre homestead along the Sammamish Slough. Thus, Woodinville was founded.

The first recorded burial was in 1888 on the land owned by Ira and Susan Woodin who gave the southeast two acres of their homestead land for a cemetery where the town continued to bury its dead for over a century, and in 1988 the two acres formally became a non-profit corporation, run entirely by volunteers, with professionals doing the maintenance and burials.

Contrary to popular belief, the cemetery is still in use with several burials each month.

For further information, visit www.woodinvillecemetery.org or contact the cemetery sexton at info@woodinvillecemetery.org if you’d like to own a plot.

 
NSD considering schedule changes PDF Print E-mail
Written by Briana Gerdeman   
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 13:33

Northshore schools will likely change next year’s school calendar to make the school day 10 minutes longer with a two-hour early release or late arrival once per week.

The two-hour weekly release will replace the five current non-student days per year and give teachers time for training, planning and collaboration while maintaining the same amount of total instructional time for students. Before the new calendar is final, the proposal still has to be negotiated with the teachers’ union, the Northshore Education Association; ratified by the teachers; and approved by the school board, according to Leanna Albrecht, communications director for the Northshore School District.

But some Northshore parents and students are frustrated the school district is willing to make these schedule changes when it has been unwilling to switch to a later start time for high schools. They’re also concerned how the weekly release will affect working parents who will now need to find another source of child care and whether the change will reduce the quality of education for children.

The proposed weekly release schedule will keep the same amount of instructional time by lengthening the school day by 10 minutes and eliminating the five non-student days per year. The district hasn’t decided yet if the additional 10 minutes and the two-hour release will be at the beginning or end of the school day, but Albrecht confirmed that high schools will not start any earlier than they already do. The weekly release day could be Monday, Wednesday, or Friday.

Northshore would have 31 to 35 early release or late arrival days per school year. Many neighboring school districts, including Bellevue, Issaquah, Lake Washington, Mercer Island, Riverview and Snohomish, already have calendars with around 30-40 release days per year.

"Teachers and principals need ... opportunities to learn new content and skills, partner and practice with others, assess, refine, reflect and revise their craft," Northshore Superintendent Larry Francois wrote in a message to colleagues and to the community.

"Being able to engage in these professional growth opportunities on a more regular, consistent basis is the purpose of moving to this different model of instructional planning and collaboration time."

Tim Brittell, president of the Northshore Education Association (NSEA), added that time for planning, collaboration and professional development is especially important now because of three major projects: changes to the evaluation system that will start next year, new common course standards, and Northshore’s reconfiguration from a junior high (seventh through ninth grades) to middle school (sixth through eighth grades) model.

Although teachers currently have five non-student days for planning and professional development, Brittell said it’s more efficient to do teacher training on a consistent schedule rather than having long gaps in between.

"Whenever you try to do something with stops and starts, it takes twice as long," he said.

Some parents are concerned the weekly early-release or late-start days will pose problems for working parents of young children, who will now have to find child care once a week instead of only five days a year. Albrecht said the district is "working with community partners to develop a menu of resources for families who may need student supervision support during a weekly 2-hour release day."

Wendy Reynolds, whose children go to Moorlands Elementary, might be one of those parents. She works only on Fridays as an ultrasound technician, "to keep my foot in the door" and enable her to go back to work full-time when her kids are older. If Fridays were chosen as the release day, she would have to get five hours of daycare instead of two, which she said would make her reconsider working.

At her job, she also has to do professional development, but she does it on her own time. She feels teachers should do the same.

"The teachers want to be treated like professionals, but with the contract they’re acting like they’re hourly employees," Reynolds said. "As professionals, we have to work until we get the job done."

But she thinks an even bigger issue than weekly release days are the early start times of Northshore high schools. She and other parents cite a growing body of research, such as studies from the University of Minnesota, that show teens have a biological need to go to sleep later and wake up later than older adults. The resulting sleep deprivation from waking up early makes it harder for teens to learn, and correlates with emotional and behavioral problems such as depression and alcohol and drug use.

A Woodinville High School senior, who was worried that using his name would prevent him from graduating, wrote in an email that he was "appalled at how this is happening when it was considered too burdensome to shift all school start times 20 minutes later."

Albrecht said parent representatives met with school staff to discuss starting high school later, but mutually agreed to stop discussions once the proposed cost of transportation for the later start exceeded $200,000 to $300,000.

She wasn’t sure how much the early release or late arrival calendar would cost in later transportation, transporting students to school five more days per year, and child care, but said "the district expects to implement the changes with a minimal overall cost."

Although a weekly release day may make collaboration more efficient for teachers, some think it will make students’ instructional time less efficient, even though the amount of instruction time will stay constant.

Leanne Hust is a school counselor and former teacher for the Seattle School District and has a child who attends Kenmore Elementary. Seattle School District has only five early release days per year, but Hust said those days aren’t productive.

"Six periods in a shortened day is basically a waste," she said. "... Students actually told me that at least half of their classes do nothing on the early release days when they only have 30 minute periods!"

In a partial school day, class changes, breaks and transportation still take the same amount of time, said Jami Lund, an education policy analyst for Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates for free markets, limited government and individual responsibility. That means all the cuts come from instructional time. Partial days are also an inefficient use of gas for the buses and insurance for the buildings to be open, since students are coming to school more days for the same amount of instructional time.

Many parents hope that a compromise might be possible.

"It would be a step in the right direction if the two-hour collaboration schedule was at the beginning of the school day, to allow students one day a week to start late," said A. Whelan, a Northshore parent.

Although Brittell said the teachers’ union isn’t campaigning for an early release versus a late arrival, a post from May 8 on the NSEA website read, "We have informed Admin that the strong preference of NSEA members is early release."

Parents, students, staff and the community are invited to give feedback about the calendar through a survey on the Northshore School District website until May 27.

 
Council discusses CBD, GB permitted uses PDF Print E-mail
Written by Briana Gerdeman   
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 13:32

The Chrysalis School, an independent private school, will be allowed to reopen next school year in a new location after the city council unanimously passed an ordinance allowing secondary schools for seventh to 12th grades in the Woodinville’s industrial zone.

Chrysalis teachers, many of whom attended Chrysalis themselves or whose children attend the school now, spoke at the meeting about the school’s importance to the community.

"I really hope you pass this, but I would teach out of the back of one of those moving trucks if I have to, and I don’t think there’s a teacher in this building who wouldn’t do that,"

MaryKate Meyer, a teacher at Chrysalis for eight years, said. "We are a devoted, loving, caring community. We’re not just a school."

Karin Fogle, the the director and founder of the school, explained that the lease on the school’s current building is up in six weeks, so Chrysalis has an urgent need to find a new building before classes start in September.

The city council also continued its public hearing and discussion of permitted uses for Woodinville’s Central Business District (CBD) and General Business (GB) zone. A moratorium on certain uses will expire in July 2013, so the council must decide before then whether and how to allow several types of businesses — marinas, software development, gas stations, and conference centers.The city currently distinguishes between software development and software publishing companies, according to Erin Martindale, senior planner for the development services department. Software development companies, which are primarily concerned with creating computer programs, are allowed; software publishing companies, which manufacture and distribute CDs with software, are not. The proposal would allow web publishing, but not manufacturing CDs, in the CBD and GB.For gas stations, the planning commission lessened the requirements for the screen blocking the pump area from the road, but didn’t change the requirement to use wood in the canopy or the ban on using corporate colors and translucent materials.

Daniel Gowen, who represents Jackson’s Food Stores and the Shell Station, pointed out that changes to the typical design of a gas station would make customers doubt the brand and the quality of the gas.

"Basically, [the city council] want[s] to take everything that is the identity of a gas station away. It’s what differentiates them," Gowen said. "It’s hard to fit in and stand out — we have a lot of competitors out there, and we need to differentiate ourselves from them. And if people, like I said last time, sense that there’s something that’s not brand consistent, they’re going to think there’s something wrong with that station ...You should be able to identify yourself, to fly your colors, and do it in a tasteful way."

The city also clarified that businesses that don’t meet the new criteria will be grandfathered in to the new code. Those nonconforming uses will remain with the property, so if a landowner rents to a business that no longer conforms with the code, another business of the same type could rent the same property.

The public hearing about permitted uses in the CBD and GB will continue at the next city council meeting on May 21 at 7 p.m.

 
Owen family files lawsuit against state of Washington PDF Print E-mail
Written by Shannon Michael   
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 13:30

A lawsuit has been filed against the state of Washington on behalf of a Bothell family that was involved in a deadly accident on December 21 while traveling on Highway 2 east of Stevens Pass.

The six claims, filed May 14 with the state Attorney General’s office, claim the state Department of Transportation failed to close down Highway 2 after over 100 trees had fallen in the area in the three days leading up to the accident.

The accident instantly killed Tim Owen, 58, and Cheryl Reed Owen, 56, when a tree struck their SUV as they were traveling east of the pass.

Severely injured passengers included the couple’s daughters Jessica (Jessie) Owen, 27, and Jaime Owen-Mayer, 25; along with Jaime’s husband Steven Mayer, 25.Only the Owen’s son, Jeremy Owen, 22, was able to walk away from the crash.

According to a Seattle Times article, the claims filed allege the tree that fell on the Owen’s vehicle snapped in the same way that hundreds of other trees had snapped and fallen in the Mount Baker and Wenatchee areas in the previous few days. Highway 2 over Stevens Pass was not closed due to falling trees, unlike the Mount Baker highway, which was closed for several days.

The state Department of Transportation closed down the highway only after a second vehicle was struck the day after the Owen’s accident. The lawsuit does not list any specific amount of damages in the claims filed on behalf of the Owen family, however the three severely injured family members have already incurred over $1 million in medical bills. They still need much more rehabilitative care and therapy in order to recover from their injuries.