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Police Beat - February 6, 2012

Snow Bored Apparently burnt out with normal snow-related activities like sledding and snowball fights, a couple of frosty...

Kenmore residents needed for library board and landmarks commission

The Kenmore City Council is seeking residents to serve on the Kenmore Library Advisory Board and as a special member on the...

Kenmore residents needed for library board and landmarks commission

The Kenmore City Council is seeking residents to serve on the Kenmore Library Advisory Board and as a special member on the...

Senate passes gay marriage bill; House review next

Photo by Scott Panitz, WNPA Olympic News Bureau, TheWashington State Senate passed the same-sex marriage bill, ESSB 6239,...

NSD accepting 2012 nominations for Wall of Honor

Northshore School District (NSD) is accepting nominations for the Wall of Honor’s 2012 inductees. The Wall of Honor annually...

SEPAC presents ‘Stress & Self-care’ — February 29

Westhill Elementary, Northshore Jr. High are recipients of SEPAC grant

Letters to the Editor - Feb. 6, 2012

Heart Month campaign comes to Bothell

Applause - Feb. 6, 2012

Bear Creek Elementary explores ancient art of mosaics

Kol Ami to hold gently used book sale

Travel with a purpose opens eyes, widens world perspectives

Sky River Meadery moves to Woodinville

‘Late Nite Catechism 3 ...’ rescheduled

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Lady Falcons win in OT; playoffs next

Lady Falcons win in OT; playoffs next

Ali Forde sinks two of her 17 points as Inglemoor’s Julia Haining, bottom, dives by her feet. Photo by Don Mann. ...

Vikings finally grab a win at home

Vikings finally grab a win at home

Photo by Don Mann Inglemoor’s Brendan Lauck 2flips in two of his 16 points as Woodinville’s Matt Laitala takes a...

Local grapplers advance to regionals

Photo by Elena Burroughs Falcon sophomore Ryan Christensen, 37-0, was selected KingCo’s outstanding wrestler at the...

WHS gymnasts on their way

Photo by Nicole Boyd Team members are Julie Tollifson, Megan McCallum, Alex Puri, Madison Engel, Candace Nelson, Kate...

Lady Falcons blast Ballard by 25

Woodinville senior forward Diedre Miller, who grabbed nine rebounds, drives inside against Ballard. Photo by Don Mann....

Falcons emerge on the mat at Vikings’ house

Ballard boys shoot the lights out at Woodinville

Cougars nip Falcons 46-45

Lady Falcons roll on at Bothell

Sports Stats - Jan. 16, 2012

Woodinville wrestlers are right where they want to be

Forde delivers as Lady Falcons rip Roosevelt ROUGHRIDERS

Falcon boys fall to ‘Riders’

Bad Draw Wrestling Club begins second year

Fireballs are Recreational Cup District 2 champs

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Pet of the Week - Feb. 6, 2012

Pet of the Week - Feb. 6, 2012

Hunter is a personable 8- year-old dog at Homeward Pet, who is looking for a special home. This handsome fellow is seeking...

Orchid 101: Buying and Caring for Your Orchid

Orchid 101: Buying and Caring for Your Orchid

With unusual colors and foliage, orchids have captured the hearts and imaginations of people for hundreds of years. Known...

Share some love on Valentine’s Day

(Family Features) There’s no better way to say “Be Mine” than with a collection of Valentine’s Day cupcakes – a...

The Woodinville Winers visit Covington Cellars

Covington Cellars (www.covingtoncellars.com) is located in the North Industrial area of Woodinville which is home to about...

Win-Win Super Bowl Recipes

(Family Features)Registered dietitian Jodie Shield has put together some win-win tips and recipes that are sure to keep fans...

Pet of the Week - January 23, 2012

Applause - Jan. 23, 2012

3 Reasons Your Home May Be Making You Sick

Enjoy the Snow! Check the Attic!

Pet of the Week - January 16, 2012

Applause - Jan. 16, 2012

Ready to hit the slopes?

Symbiosis

Baby boomers: Don’t forget to care for your eyes as you age

You can kick the sugar habit!

Valley View

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AmeriCorps volunteers inspire and make a difference

AmeriCorps volunteers inspire and make a difference

Tolt student Alex Kero with AmeriCorps volunteer Kimberly Young. Photo by Jeannine Luce Since mid-November, volunteers...

Emergency preparedness training offered for deaf and hard of hearing community

Duvall Fire to present class on January 19 Duvall Fire will present an evening class on emergency preparedness for members...

Carnation Farmers Market seeking manager for 2012 season

The Sno-Valley Tilth, which operates the Carnation Farmers Market, is accepting letters of interest for a new market manager...

DCC presents Jim Malcolm in Concert

Enjoy a witty and intimate evening of Scottish songs and stories with singer/songwriter Jim Malcolm, a Scots Triad award...

2012 community event grant applications available

The City of Duvall’s community event grant application is now available online and at City Hall. Grant funding is available...

Reflections of Christmas

Riverview Youth Council sponsors ‘Sox in a Box’ drive for YouthCare

Tolt Middle School ASB delivers 90 cans of SPAM to Hopelink

KCLS Study Zone tutoring schedule for Tolt Middle School

Sno-Valley Senior Center dinner is Jan. 14

Cedarcrest students compete in FFA job interview competition

State high court confirms lower court: funding for basic education is deficient

Woodland Park Zoo’s winter programs

Rabies vaccine mandatory in Washington state for dogs, cats and ferrets

Northwest Art Center spring adult workshops

The Woodinville Weekly
Local arborist branches out PDF Print E-mail
Written by Don Mann   
Monday, 06 February 2012 10:51
QuigleyIt might look the same from the outside, but things inside are just a little bit different.

Last Wednesday, Classic Nursery and Landscape Company of Redmond moved into its new location, where Tom Quigley’s Olympic Nursery had been for the past 22 years.

“We’re no longer in the retail business,” Quigley said, having sold Olympic to Classic owners Alan and Julie Burke, who moved their operation from its Avondale Road location to the 10-acre plot at 16215 140th Place NE in Woodinville.

Quigley said he will transition from the retail nursery business to independent arborist work while still operating out of a back room of his old facility.

“I’m becoming a tree guy,” he said. “It’s a new chapter, a different chapter, and I’m excited about it.”

The International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) certified Quigley — a towering local presence in the industry — to provide consultations for tree and plant appraisal as well as tree risk assessments. He will continue to assist homeowners, commercial property owners and contractors in selecting the proper trees for their desired projects.

Olympic Nursery was established in 1989, operating originally on one fertile acre in the Sammamish Valley. The nursery quickly grew to 10 acres and established itself as a premier provider of larger-sized ornamental trees used for privacy, screening and hedging.

Quigley remains the general manager of 70-acre Sammamish Valley Farm.  He is current chair and co-founder of the Sammamish Valley Alliance, a local non-profit working for local farms and farmers through education and farm events.

Quigley worked on local agriculture issues in the 1990’s and early 2000s, serving two years as chair of the King County Agriculture Commission. He was also a founding member of the Woodinville Farmers Market, which gave vision to the 21 Acres project, which today supports local agriculture by providing a unique connection to the soil through education, research, culinary enjoyment and farm appreciation.

Quigley’s latest endeavor can be found on his Web site:  tomquigleyarborist.com.

Classic Nursery and Landscape Company will continue to provide complete design and installation of all aspects of residential and commercial landscapes including perennial and container gardening.

 
Northshore schools earn 2011 Washington Achievement Awards PDF Print E-mail
Written by Woodinville Weekly Staff   
Monday, 06 February 2012 10:50

Nine Northshore schools representing elementary, junior high and high school have earned 2011 Washington Achievement awards:

Elementary

• Crystal Springs: Closing Achievement Gaps

• Maywood Hills: Closing Achievement Gaps

• Kenmore: Overall Excellence Closing Achievement Gaps

• Sunrise: Overall Excellence

• Wellington: Overall Excellence

• Woodin Elementary School: Overall Excellence Closing Achievement Gaps

Junior High

• Northshore: Closing Achievement Gaps

• Canyon Park: Closing Achievement Gaps

High

• Inglemoor: Overall Excellence Math

Schools are selected based on their statewide assessment data for the three previous years.

This data is analyzed using the Achievement Index and methodology approved by the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) and State Board of Education (SBE).

Schools are recognized for top performance in seven categories: overall excellence, language areas, math, science, extended graduation rate improvement (high and comprehensive high schools only) and closing achievement gaps.

Representatives from these schools will be honored at a ceremony on April 25 at Mariner High School in Everett.

 
Canterbury sale in the works — possibly — PDF Print E-mail
Written by Don Mann   
Monday, 06 February 2012 10:47
Canterbury
Entrance to Canterbury Square in downtown Woodinville. Photo by Don Mann.
There’s been some recent activity regarding Canterbury Square, the aging manufactured-home community that sits for sale on 20 acres of prime land in the heart of downtown Woodinville, a nugget that’s been crying out for redevelopment.

At its last meeting local real estate developer Doug Reiss of Dave Weidner Apartment Homes introduced  himself to the Woodinville City Council during public comment and announced he and his partner had entered a purchase and sale agreement with the Canterbury Homeowners Association.

The agreement includes a six-month feasibility study of the redevelopment of Canterbury Square before any money actually changes hands.

Reiss spoke about a vision that was “fairly aligned” with the city’s, appealed for council’s support in working together, and touched upon a “win-win” design for an exciting downtown residential/ retail component to Woodinville.

Reiss later sat down with the Woodinville Weekly to expand on that vision.

“First of all we’re talking about apartments and not condominiums,” he said. “I think city council realizes that’s what’s viable in today’s market.”

Reiss noted that during a previous meeting, council produced a map that showed where it wanted retail development in its rezoned central business district.

“They want 135th Ave. to extend through Canterbury and intersect with 171st St. and we think that makes sense, too,” Reiss said. “They want retail along that street and we agree that’s what should be there. And it should be nice, upscale: wine bars, clothing stores, restaurants — an attractive retail addition to Woodinville. They talked about wanting this to be a people-place, so we want to create a nightlife atmosphere as well as a daytime atmosphere. So in our vision we’d have apartments above that ground floor retail along the main street.  That’s the city’s vision and that’s our vision.”

Reiss was reluctant to say what price he and Weidner would be paying for the parcel should the feasibility study prove to be a go.

In 2006, it was noted, CamWest Development, Inc. was set to pay the homeowners association $35 million before it rescinded the offer when the economic forecast grew dark.

“I will tell you the homeowners association had to significantly compromise because that price was in a different economic climate,” he said. “That was six years ago and things were very different.” CamWest was then interested in building condominiums for sale, he said.

So what will be successful for Reiss’s group that didn’t look to be successful for CamWest?

“They were looking at less density and the (building) height limit has now changed from 50 to 57 feet,” he said. “In order to be successful, in order for us to provide the infrastructure the city wants, we’re going to have to have density.”

Woodinville City Manager Richard Leahy recently stated that Canterbury’s redevelopment alone could provide up to 75 percent of the 2,000 dwelling units that the Growth Management Act (GMA) has mandated the city needs to make available by 2020.

Reiss would not put his finger on a specific number of units he intended to build.

“We’re less concerned with GMA mandates and more concerned with economic viability,” he said.

Unlike a lot of properties and development opportunities which are adjacent to residential areas, Reiss said, this one is not. And that’s what makes it unique.

“Instead of swimming upstream against community interest, what we’re doing is enhancing the community in that the local businesses will like this arrangement because it will bring new customers,” he said.

“It will increase walkability and create an exciting people-place, during the day, during the evening and on the weekend. It’s absolutely a key piece of land and it’s not like it’s out on the periphery next to this subdivision or that subdivision; it’s right downtown.”

He compared the project to the redevelopment that’s happening in Redmond, Kirkland and Bothell.

“They’re bringing people into the downtown core,” he said. “They’re eliminating automobile and traffic and pollution. This is the trend and it’s a good one, instead of the urban sprawl you get with massive apartment complexes out next to a whole bunch of houses.”

Ginger Buchanan keeps her fingers crossed for the sale to go through but has heard it all before.

President of Canterbury Criers Association and a CHA member who still resides in one of the complex’s 128 units, Buchanan said 114 of the 116 owners voted to approve the sale — the third time a sale has been approved since 2006.

“A lot of people really want to get out of here and the average age of the 37 owners still living here is 86,” she said. “Right now we have more renters than homeowners. We need to get it sold and the sooner the people at City Hall decide what they want here, the better.”

The council is still making its way through new Ordinance No. 524 which amends downtown zoning code regulations, set to begin second reading on the item for approval after taking 11 months to pass first reading.

“Ever since Woodinville became a city it’s been a struggle every step of the way,” Buchanan added. “They get the master plan laid out and then they make these amendments to it. They just cannot make a decision. And then they argued about the height and it was a matter of a few feet. I mean, we’re not talking 10 stories here.

“The planning director had said none of the prospective builders who’ve come to him want to build retail, but apparently Weidner does. So what’s the problem?

“They’re stalling over itty-bitty issues. We just want it sold; we need to move on. It’s not fair to make us sit here all these years wondering what we should plan for. This is not the way to treat older people.”

From the city’s point of view, Assistant to the City Manager Alexandra Sheeks said the following: “This is a private party transaction and as a courtesy we don’t discuss a party’s plans with third parties. What I can tell you is Mr. Reiss has begun his six-month due diligence period and they have not filed an application for development.”