It’s been nearly 40 years since the band Heart released their “Dreamboat Annie” album, and so to celebrate a merging of old and new, original guitarist Roger Fisher and his brother Michael are throwing a party at McMenamins on Valentines Day.
On a recent sunny Saturday morning, dozens of students and volunteers were busy squishing through mud, shoveling mulch into buckets to carry down a flight of wooden stairs and then laying it on a footpath winding down towards the heart of Bothell’s North Creek Forest.
One Kenmore resident is angry after he and his son were locked in a Rite Aid Monday night following a shoplifting.
A break in an Alderwood Water main should be cleared up by 4 p.m., company advises customers run cold water to flush out sediment.
“Are we ever gonna turn them back into great salmon runs? I doubt it. Can we keep it from getting worse? Absolutely,” Murdock said. “Is the political will there to do it? That’s an outstanding question that I don’t have the answer for.”
“What I’m doing as an abstract artist, I’m really dealing with lines, shapes, patches of color,” she said, standing in her basement, walls lines with dozens of works of art leaning against mattresses. “Abstract is a new world, it’s the only way an artist can really express what’s inside them,” she said.
The Practical Sparrow is the brainchild of long-time Country Village caterer Teresa Howard, 51, who recently sold her business of 21 years, Celestial Catering, to Alexa’s Catering and opened up downstairs, beneath the Rosewood Room. But she plans on keeping that independent spirit in her new store.
Although no finalized proposals have been presented to the Washington State Parks Commission detailing possible development by Daniels Real Estate to restore a seminary at Saint Edward State Park, battle lines are being drawn between those in favor of development and those opposing it.
At the meeting, interest in continuing with the RFA was approved 4-3, with Bothell Deputy Mayor Duerr and Councilmembers Tris Samberg and Joshua Freed opposed.
Caldwell is a 31-year-old graduate of the University of Washington Bothell’s business administration program whose been working at the Chamber since before she graduated in 2007.
A red pickup truck had plowed straight into Ruth Brumbaugh’s meticulously hand-painted fence. As her neighbor came outside to see what had happened, the driver scrambled free of the damaged section of fence before peeling off into the night in the 22900 block of Meridian Ave South
The cities of Shoreline, Lake Forest Park, Kenmore, Bothell and Woodinville all signed the measure, affirming their support for the measure.
Roads in unincorporated King County area are deteriorating, and adequate maintenance and improvements will cost the county at least an additional $260 million annually, a report released Wednesday by the county Bridges and Roads Task Force said.
During the Jan. 19 meeting, the city council voted 4-3 to drop their challenge to a Growth Management Hearings Board decision reversing the city’s Ordinance 2163, which allowed for greater development in around 220 acres of environmentally protected land in northeast Bothell.
“I figured if we had some suggestions from the public, that our process with coming up with a name would be enormously simplified,” Parks and Recreation Director John Keates said.
During the Jan. 11 Kenmore City Council meeting, city staff presented an outline for creating two baseball fields, overlaid with two more soccer fields and a cricket field on the current field.
Lauren Dillon-Merrill, a 30-year-old Kirkland resident recently opened a multi-business location in Bothell’s Logsdon Building, right above The Neverending Bookshop, offering digital arts and design services, photography, clothing design and an esoteric healing practice.
Salmon runs have steadily declined in Lake Washington for nearly 40 years, a phenomenon which has not escaped researchers, ecologists and environmentalists.
Housing in King County is in high demand and low to moderate income residents are feeling the crunch.
The group, composed of members of the organization Friends of North Creek Forest (FNCF) and students from the University of Washington Bothell’s Restoration Ecology Network (REN) are working to restore a quarter-acre patch of hillside. Restoration involves removing invasive species such as blackberry bushes and building up the hillside to prevent mudslides.