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Explosive change Snoqualmie may change fireworks regulations. Page 2 Fate of the senate Local legislative race could shape state government. Page 3 New sheriff in town? Election sees two old hands who want to be top cop. Page 6 Spread the help Locals collect food for area’s needy. Page 8 Another win Football team wraps up Mercer Island. Page 12 Police blotter Page 14 October 25, 2012 VOL. 4, NO. 43 Playoff bound? Page 12 Your locally-owned newspaper, serving North Bend and Snoqualmie, Washington Prsrt Std U.S. Postage PAID Kent, WA Permit No. 71 POSTAL CUSTOMER By Michele Mihalovich Despite neighbor concerns, the Snoqualmie hearing exam- iner approved a temporary overnight shelter for youths, and it opened Oct. 22. Friends of Youth, based in Redmond, is the primary pro- vider of housing to homeless youths on the Eastside, Terry Pottmeyer, CEO of the group, said before Snoqualmie’s hear- ing examiner Oct. 8. She said the organization has been offered a $60,000 grant to open an overnight shelter for three months. The shelter is to operate from 8:30 p.m. to 8 a.m. Organizers had proposed that it serve up to eight home- less 18- to 24-year-olds at Friends of Youth’s existing counseling building at 7972 Maple Ave. S.E. in Snoqualmie’s historic downtown district. Ron McConnell, the hearing exam- iner, limited that number to six in his Oct. 16 ruling. Pottmeyer told McConnell at the public hearing that there has been a significant increase in homelessness among young people ages 11-24 in the past couple of years in Washington, and a lack of resources has cre- ated challenges, especially in By Michele Mihalovich The investigation into the Snoqualmie man who shot and killed a bear Sept. 10 has been completed, but it could be a while before charges are filed. Becky Munson, spokes- woman with the Snoqualmie Police Department, said her department completed its investigation, but wants to file charges at the same time as the state Department of Fish and Wildlife. Chris Moszeter, an officer with Fish and Wildlife, said in an Oct. 4 email, that he has completed his investigation, “but due to other requirements of my job, I have not had a chance to finish the report and file charges.” He said it could be a while until the charges are filed and the prosecutor’s office has reviewed the case, and con- firmed in an Oct. 22 email that charges have not been filed yet. The possible charges stem from an incident in the 34000 block of Strouf Street in Snoqualmie. SPD Captain Nick Almquist said at the time that the man, who is not being named, dialed 911 about 11:45 p.m. to report that he had shot a bear. Almquist said the bear was in the man’s garbage and that the man shot the bear with his handgun. Almquist also said the same man shot at a bear in November Charges held in bear shooting Overnight shelter OK’d in Snoqualmie See BEAR, Page 2 See SHELTER, Page 2 By Bent Wiencke A day hiker soaks in the fall colors from Rampart Ridge. Enjoy the view from Rampart Ridge By Michele Mihalovich The city of Snoqualmie is ask- ing voters to approve a public safety operations, street and park maintenance levy in November, saying levels of service could face cuts if not approved. The levy calls for a 24-cent increase per $1,000 of assessed property value. That means a citizen with a $413,000 home would pay about $99 more per year if the levy is approved. City officials said the levy could bring an additional $430,000 to city coffers. The Star sat down Oct. 18 with Snoqualmie City Administrator Bob Larson and former Snoqualmie Police Chief Jim Schaffer to hear why they thought the levy was necessary. Larson said Snoqualmie has experienced explosive growth in recent years. In 2003, Snoqualmie’s population was about 3,500 people. By 2010, the U.S. Census Bureau put the number at 10,670. While Snoqualmie is still growing, it’s bumping up by about 300-400 new citizens a year. The Washington State Office of Financial Management indicates the city’s 2011 popula- tion was 10,950, and estimates this year will top out at 11,320. Snoqualmie Finance Director Rob Orton estimates the city’s population in 2014 could be 12,000, based on the current Snoqualmie asks voters for property tax increase See LEVY, Page 3

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Explosive changeSnoqualmie may change fireworks regulations.

Page 2

Fate of the senate Local legislative race could shape state government.

Page 3

New sheriff in town?Election sees two old hands who want to be top cop.

Page 6

Spread the helpLocals collect food for area’s needy.

Page 8

Another winFootball team wraps up Mercer Island.

Page 12Police blotter

Page 14

October 25, 2012

VOL. 4, NO. 43

Playoff bound?Page 12

Your locally-owned newspaper,

serving North Bend and Snoqualmie,

Washington

Prsrt StdU.S. Postage

PAIDKent, WA

Permit No. 71

POSTALCUSTOMER

1

By Michele Mihalovich

Despite neighbor concerns, the Snoqualmie hearing exam-iner approved a temporary overnight shelter for youths, and it opened Oct. 22.

Friends of Youth, based in Redmond, is the primary pro-vider of housing to homeless youths on the Eastside, Terry Pottmeyer, CEO of the group, said before Snoqualmie’s hear-ing examiner Oct. 8.

She said the organization has been offered a $60,000 grant to open an overnight shelter for three months.

The shelter is to operate from 8:30 p.m. to 8 a.m.

Organizers had proposed that it serve up to eight home-less 18- to 24-year-olds at Friends of Youth’s existing counseling building at 7972 Maple Ave. S.E. in Snoqualmie’s historic downtown district. Ron

McConnell, the hearing exam-iner, limited that number to six in his Oct. 16 ruling.

Pottmeyer told McConnell at the public hearing that there has been a significant increase in homelessness among young people ages 11-24 in the past couple of years in Washington, and a lack of resources has cre-ated challenges, especially in

By Michele Mihalovich

The investigation into the Snoqualmie man who shot and killed a bear Sept. 10 has been completed, but it could be a while before charges are filed.

Becky Munson, spokes-woman with the Snoqualmie Police Department, said her department completed its investigation, but wants to file charges at the same time as the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Chris Moszeter, an officer with Fish and Wildlife, said in an Oct. 4 email, that he has completed his investigation, “but due to other requirements of my job, I have not had a chance to finish the report and file charges.”

He said it could be a while until the charges are filed and the prosecutor’s office has reviewed the case, and con-firmed in an Oct. 22 email that charges have not been filed yet.

The possible charges stem from an incident in the 34000 block of Strouf Street in Snoqualmie.

SPD Captain Nick Almquist said at the time that the man, who is not being named, dialed 911 about 11:45 p.m. to report that he had shot a bear.

Almquist said the bear was in the man’s garbage and that the man shot the bear with his handgun.

Almquist also said the same man shot at a bear in November

Charges held in bear shooting

Overnight shelter OK’d in Snoqualmie

See BEAR, Page 2 See SHELTER, Page 2

By Bent Wiencke

A day hiker soaks in the fall colors from Rampart Ridge.

Enjoy the view from Rampart Ridge

By Michele Mihalovich

The city of Snoqualmie is ask-ing voters to approve a public safety operations, street and park maintenance levy in November, saying levels of service could face cuts if not approved.

The levy calls for a 24-cent increase per $1,000 of assessed property value. That means a

citizen with a $413,000 home would pay about $99 more per year if the levy is approved. City officials said the levy could bring an additional $430,000 to city coffers.

The Star sat down Oct. 18 with Snoqualmie City Administrator Bob Larson and former Snoqualmie Police Chief Jim Schaffer to hear why they

thought the levy was necessary.Larson said Snoqualmie

has experienced explosive growth in recent years. In 2003, Snoqualmie’s population was about 3,500 people. By 2010, the U.S. Census Bureau put the number at 10,670.

While Snoqualmie is still growing, it’s bumping up by about 300-400 new citizens a

year. The Washington State Office of Financial Management indicates the city’s 2011 popula-tion was 10,950, and estimates this year will top out at 11,320.

Snoqualmie Finance Director Rob Orton estimates the city’s population in 2014 could be 12,000, based on the current

Snoqualmie asks voters for property tax increase

See LEVY, Page 3

PAGE 2 SnoValley Star OCTOBER 25, 2012

2

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in his Snoqualmie Ridge neighborhood, but that the bear was not injured

in the incident and that the man fired in self-defense in that incident.

Shooting a firearm inside city limits is a mis-demeanor, and if found guilty, a person could face up to a year in jail and/or a $5,000 fine, Almquist

said.Moszeter said at the

time that “there are a plethora of charges” that could be filed, ranging from killing a bear without a permit and after hours, to not securing garbage cans.

BearFrom Page 1

the Snoqualmie Valley.She said that during the

three months of operating an emergency overnight shelter, Friends of Youth would be able to ascertain the need for services in the area.

They could connect young people to needed services — such as mental health counseling — and provide a safe and stable environment until they can be transitioned to long-term housing.

But seven people who live and work in the area expressed concerns about safety and possible increased crime to the hearing examiner.

In McConnell’s report, he noted that the neigh-bors did not provide evi-dence to indicate that the proposal to provide tem-porary housing at the site would result in increased crime or decreased prop-erty value.

One of the neighbors who spoke at the public hearing was Snoqualmie City Councilman Charles Peterson.

He wanted to make sure that if the proposed shel-

ter were approved, that it was only approved for the 90 days of operation, which McConnell did do in his report.

Peterson said Oct. 18 that he’d spoken to a couple of neighbors about the hearing examiner’s decision to approve the shelter.

“We’re happy that he listened to that concern,” he said. “Ninety days will give the neighbors and the city a chance to evaluate the program. And we’re happy that there will only be six beds instead of eight. We’re willing to watch it and see how it goes for 90 days.”

ShelterFrom Page 1

By Michele Mihalovich

In an effort to try and make it safer dur-ing Fourth of July fire-works season, the fire and police chiefs asked the Snoqualmie City Council to consider allowing fire-works in city parks.

Now, folks set off fire-works on city streets and sidewalks, prompting many complaints about traffic problems and fire safety, Snoqualmie Fire Chief Bob Rowe said at a Sept. 17 City Council meeting.

The police depart-ment also expends a lot of resources when it has to respond to every call about fireworks being illegally shot off in city parks, Police Chief Steve McCulley said.

But the council expressed many concerns about setting off fireworks at parks, especially mem-bers who live near parks.

Councilwoman Maria Henriksen said she lives near a park and she wouldn’t be able to sup-port the ordinance change.

“Last year, there was some progress, because there were no fires started in the park next door,” she said. “But in the past 13 years, we have had many

close calls at my house.”Henriksen also

expressed concerns about the fact that the city has 39 parks, and how offi-cials would monitor the activity. She also pointed out that there was no access to water should a fire start from the fire-works, and that burning embers from fireworks could rain down onto trees and cause a hazard for homes near parks.

“Well, I guess if I had to make a choice between fireworks being set off on streets or sidewalks so near to the awning of my home versus at a park, I’d go with a park,” Councilman Bryan Holloway said.

However, the proposed ordinance change did not include prohibiting citizens from shooting off legal fireworks on streets and sidewalks, it simply opened that activity up in parks as well.

Henriksen did offer another possible solution — one controlled area, possibly a city park, that is roped off with a ready water source.

She said she’d heard that the city of Maple Valley does that. However, Maple Valley does not allow any outside fire-works at its Fourth of July

celebration. There is a private community with about 800 homes that offers a roped off area for residents of the home-owners’ association, said Snoqualmie City Clerk Jodi Warren, who lives there.

The second part of the fireworks discussion moved toward making Snoqualmie’s hours for shooting off legal fire-works the same as North Bend and King County.

Snoqualmie’s hours run from 6-11 p.m. July 4, whereas North Bend and King County have set the times from 9 a.m. to mid-night.

“Given our future police services contract with North Bend, it would make sense to have our ordinances match to avoid confusion among law enforcement,” McCulley said at the council meet-ing.

Councilmembers said they had no problem supporting that change. However, the council asked that the entire mat-ter go back to the Public Safety Committee for refinement.

“You have until next Fourth of July to figure it out,” Mayor Matt Larson joked.

Snoqualmie council considers changes to fireworks law

OCTOBER 25, 2012 SnoValley Star PAGE 3

3

trend.In the past 10 years, Larson

said, police and fire calls are up, the number of parks and road-ways has increased, operation expenses have increased, the number of people demanding service has increased, but only one officer has been added to the police department, and zero firefighters or road workers have been hired.

Police service

In 2010, police responded to 4,806 calls, according to documents supplied by the Snoqualmie Police Department. In 2011, that number jumped to 6,017. As of Oct. 18 this year, police responded to 5,133 calls.

Snoqualmie isn’t Mayberry. Police are responding to vehicle accidents, arsons, assaults, bur-glaries, child abuse, drug pos-session, people driving while under the influence of drugs and alcohol, harassment, noise complaints, rape and other sex offenses, attempted suicides, thefts and vehicle prowls.

But its unofficial motto is “No call too small,” so yes, SPD is responding to a lot of calls where citizens have locked themselves out of their vehicles, or reports of bears in garbage cans.

SPD has one chief, one cap-tain, four sergeants and eight officers. It also employs a full-time police support officer, records technician and adminis-trative coordinator.

The department as a whole — which includes salaries, insur-ance, jail services, dispatch services and weapons — is expe-riencing an annual increase in expenses.

It spent $2,859,931 in 2009, increased by $137,004 in 2010, and went up $212,762 in 2011 from the previous year. This year, the city has budgeted $3,603,613 for the police depart-ment. Budgets for 2013 and 2014 haven’t been approved by the City Council yet, but Orton supplied estimates: $3.553 mil-lion in 2013 and $3.676 million in 2014.

“We’re not trying to say that there’s a threat that bad things are going to happen if voters don’t approve this,” Schaffer said. “But we are saying that there may be some calls that are too small. We won’t be able to responded to every call.”

Fire service

The Snoqualmie Fire Department in 2010 responded to 1,015 calls, a 6 percent decrease from 2009, according to annual reports supplied by Fire Chief Bob Rowe. A majority of those calls are responding with medical assistance; a very small amount of them are actual fire calls.

In 2011, the number of calls rose to 1,022. So far in 2012, the department has responded to 812 calls.

The 2012 numbers, however, cannot be verified. Rowe made a policy decision in late 2011 to not share call logs with the press, and therefore, the public.

Rowe cited the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, a federal pri-vacy act, as the reasoning for the change, even though the Star does not publish names or full addresses from the call logs.

The fire department cur-rently employs a fire chief, one training officer, one administra-tive assistant, three lieutenants and six firefighters. It also uti-lizes several trained volunteer firefighters, but the number changes throughout the year.

Rowe said he currently has 17 volunteers.

In 2010, the fire department accounted for $1.8 million of the city’s budget. In 2011, that number was about $1.75 mil-lion, and $1.95 million has been budgeted for this year.

Orton anticipates $1.96 mil-lion during the 2013 budget cycle and $2.05 million for 2014.

Road maintenance

Before Snoqualmie Ridge existed, the city maintained 9.6 miles of roads. Today, road crews are in charge of nearly 44 miles of roads, accord-ing to Dan Marcinco, direc-tor of public works.

Larson said three workers are in charge of maintaining sidewalks, road-ways, curbs and gutters, bou-levards, street trees and signs, striping, snow removal and street sweeping. And that num-ber hasn’t changed in 10 years, he said.

Larson also pointed out that the newish roadways up in Snoqualmie Ridge are already showing signs of wear and will have to be addressed soon.

The problem

Larson said the state has put a cap on the city’s ability to collect more than a 1 percent annual increase in property taxes, yet the city’s expenses have increased 3 percent.

According to documents from the state auditor’s office, Snoqualmie in 2009 brought in $9.471 million in revenue to its general fund, mostly from taxes, and spent $9.442 million in expenses.

In 2010, revenues were $9.7 million, with $9.4 million being spent on expenditures.

During the 2011 budget cycle, Snoqualmie revenues collected stood at $12.5 million, with $12.7 million being spent on expenses.

Today, the city has about 25 percent of its budget in reserves — often referred to as a rainy day fund, according to Larson.

In addition to giving the city a very healthy cushion, the reserve serves another purpose — receiving an excellent bond rating, he said.

The last time the city needed a municipal bond, which went toward updating streets and utilities in the his-toric down-town area, Standard &

Poor’s, a bond rating service, “applauded us for having so much in reserves,” and gave the city an excellent rating, which helped the city save thousands in interest, he said.

Schaffer, who is serving on the committee that supports the levy, said the city has had to periodically dip into those reserves, but it is not something the city wants to do on a regular basis.

City officials have also said they aggressively tried to reduce spending in recent years, includ-ing hiring freezes on new posi-tions, eliminating cost-of-living raises for management, reducing health and insurance costs, and making cuts to equipment for the fire, public works, parks and recreation departments.

Larson said Snoqualmie resi-dents have repeatedly said how much they appreciate the level of service they receive in the city.

“Thirty-seven percent of our population is under 18 years old,” he said. “That’s telling me that young families with chil-dren are moving to Snoqualmie, making a conscious decision to locate here, because of the great sense of community and the level of services we provide. We want to continue at the levels people are currently receiving.”

However, approval of the levy does not guarantee a police offi-cer or road maintenance worker will be hired.

Larson said the city won’t commit to that right now, but has committed to hire an addi-tional firefighter if the levy passes.

Arguments against

However, some in the com-munity aren’t very convinced that the city is in such a dire predicament.

Citizens Clayton Fong, Jim Renahan and Mark Hawkins wrote the “against” argument in the upcoming general elections voters pamphlet.

The “for” and “against” argu-ments can be viewed at http://1.usa.gov/VABUMM.

Their argument is that prop-erty taxes are already high in Snoqualmie, and that the gov-ernment, like families, must live within their means.

They write that they support police and firefighters, but don’t believe that public safety is cur-rently at risk.

Renahan wrote in an Oct. 23 email, “For every next tax dollar I am willing to invest into our beautiful city, I want to priori-tize toward the school district and future city capital improve-ment projects (i.e. repaving of the parkway). We are in good hands with the leaders of public works and safety, and I am con-vinced they can find alternative measures to find the funding they need.”

LevyFrom Page 1

By Warren Kagarise

The candidate no longer in the race looms over the contest for the 5th Legislative District’s state Senate seat.

Cheryl Pflug, a Republican former senator and erstwhile candidate, is a constant presence in the race — in television spots supporting the Democrat in the contest and in diatribes from Republicans.

The acrimonious race to suc-ceed Pflug pits the Democrat, Issaquah City Councilman Mark Mullet, against Republican Brad Toft, a manager for a national financial services firm and a Snoqualmie resident.

In a race focused on the econ-omy and education, distractions abound — including Toft’s past

legal troubles and accusations of dirty campaign tactics from both sides.

Toft entered the race late last year, before Mullet announced plans to run and Pflug filed for re-election.

“I felt like it was time for a new generation of leaders to get involved at the state level,” he said. “Specifically with this Senate seat, it was apparent to me that the incumbent at the time, that she had lost interest in the voters and was not vis-ible here, and her record in the Senate was not indicative of the priorities that I thought should be in place in the Senate.”

Pflug represented the district in the Senate from January 2004 until earlier this year, after previ-ously serving in the state House

of Representatives. In May, Gov. Chris

Gregoire appointed Pflug to a $92,500-per-year spot on the Washington Growth Management Hearings Board. Pflug resigned from the Senate and withdrew from the race, set-

ting up a head-to-head contest between Mullet and Toft.

“I think voters in the 5th District in the past have had to choose between somebody who either had business experience or somebody who had progres-sive social values, so it was always mutually exclusive based on the candidates who had run in the last 20 years,” Mullet said. “What I’m finding is that people like to have both.”

Mullet joined the Issaquah City Council in 2010 after run-ning unopposed for the seat and, earlier this year, spearhead-ed a controversial plastic bag ban at Issaquah businesses.

“What I learned on the City Council is that people disagree with you, those are probably the most important meetings to

take, because that’s the only way you can learn what the other side is saying. That’s the only way you can figure out what the common themes are,” he said.

Democrats hold a 27-22 majority in the Senate, but con-servative Democrats sometimes caucus with Republicans. The close margin means both parties focused outsized attention on the contest between Mullet and Toft.

“You prepare yourself for the issues, and you hear that there’s going to be knives thrown at you,” Toft said. “What I was not prepared for was what this race would mean in this election, and stakes. The little, old 5th District has been pretty quiet, I think, and it’s not going to be quiet this year.”

Key endorsementsLocal legislative candidates

amassed a list of endorsements in the race for state Senate seats.5th Legislative DistrictMark Mullet� Cheryl Pflug, former state sena-torBrad Toft� U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert� State Rep. Jay Rodne� David Spring

Acrimonious 5th District race could reshape state Senate

“We’re not trying to say that there’s a threat that bad things are going to happen if voters don’t approve this,”

— Jim SchafferPolice chief

mate, of fighting for territory, of defining our lives. It is fall. And we know we must polish ourselves a little bit right now in order to fit in. We have to assess ourselves and ask what we can do to make our lives a little shinier, our hopes a little stronger, our promises to others more defined, more

definite.It is the time to let the fresh

cool air fill our lungs and let us remember other falls, other campfires, other friends. Younger friends, as we were younger. And as the golden leaves fall in the late autumn breezes, it will be time once again to cherish our mates and seek refuge from the winter wind.

Brought to you by Slim’s outdoors memoirs, “Sweetgrass Mornings.” Read a free sample at www.slimrandles.com.

OpinionPAGE 4 OCTOBER 25, 2012

Our choice for representatives

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ISSAQUAH PRESS, INC.P.O. Box 1328

Issaquah, WA 98027Phone: 392-6434

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Editorial Letters

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addressing local news will receive priority. Please limit letters to 350 words or less and type them, if possible. Email is pre-

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Fax: 391-1541 q Email: [email protected]

Home Country

Slim RandlesColumnist

Fall is the time for polishing, cherishing

WEEKLY POLL

How far will Mount Si go in the football playoffs?A. State finalsB. State playoffsC. State champsD. State of shock

Vote online at www.snovalleystar.com.

Local voters face clear choices on the Nov. 6 ballot.Here are our recommendations:

State Senate — Mark MulletThe race for the 5th District’s state Senate seat is ugly,

with both sides slinging mud in the effort to shift the bal-ance of power in Olympia.

Partisan bickering aside, the campaign has raised seri-ous ethical questions about Republican candidate Brad Toft, including questionable legal issues in his past and exaggerated claims about his education credentials. The campaign has shown that Toft simply lacks the integrity we look for in elected officials.

Democrat Mark Mullet’s experience in small business ownership and in local government as a member of the Issaquah City Council make him well positioned to rep-resent the 5th District. He has demonstrated an ability to bring creative new ideas to the community and build a coalition to get legislation passed by a majority. He brings the leadership we need in Olympia.

State House of RepresentativesPosition 2 — Chad MagendanzRepublican Chad Magendanz is the straightforward

choice to succeed longtime Republican lawmaker Glenn Anderson. Magendanz’s experience on the Issaquah School Board and as a state education advocate put him in a good position to address the top priority in the edu-cation-focused 5th District. He understands firsthand the impacts of budget cuts to local schools and has already proven himself as an education advocate in Olympia.

John Urquhart for sheriffThe sheriff’s office is mired in problems with personnel,

policies and procedures — all brought to light in recent audits. The next sheriff has a paramount duty to correct the issues and restore public confidence in the agency.

Neither candidate is ideal, but both interim Sheriff Steve Strachan and John Urquhart offer a deep respect for the agency and its mission to protect and serve.

We support Urquhart, whose strength is in his skill to communicate the agency’s mission and priorities to elect-ed leaders in King County and Olympia, deputies in the field and, most importantly, to the public.

Thanks for helping Mount Si football

On behalf of the Mount Si football program and the Wildcat Football Booster Club, we want to express our thanks to the entire Snoqualmie Valley for their support at the Oct. 12 game.

Watching the excitement that a community can share for a high school athletic event is something that all of us will never forget. Despite the out-come, that night’s game dem-onstrated all that is good about interscholastic athletics and about living in the Snoqualmie Valley.

A typical Friday night foot-ball game involves a lot of work from the staff at the school district and the high school, but the Bellevue game was new territory. Thanks to everyone in the Mount Si offices who dealt with the barrage of phone calls for tickets.

Thanks to all of the facilities employees for their efforts in preparation and cleanup of the stadium. Thanks to the Mount Si athletic office for all of its plan-ning, coordination and coopera-tion. Thanks to the technology

group for its assistance in mak-ing the game accessible for those not fortunate enough to get a ticket.

The game wouldn’t have gone so smoothly without all of your efforts.

The other element that makes every Friday night so success-ful is the involvement of all the different groups from the high school, including the cheer squad, the band, Associated Student Body and our large stu-dent body.

Each of these groups adds something special to the “Friday Night Lights” atmosphere of a Mount Si football game — some-thing that can’t be replicated at another KingCo school.

Mount Si football also wants to thank all of the local busi-nesses and families for their generous financial support. We are grateful for the community’s backing during our annual Wildcat Discount Card fund-raiser and for the businesses that allow our student-athletes to sell in front of their stores.

We are all busy preparing for the Liberty game at 7 p.m. this Friday at Liberty High School. With a 7-1 record, our team objective remains within reach:

playing in the Tacoma Dome. Go Wildcats!

Charlie Kinnune, football coachJeff Mitchell, president Wildcat

Football Booster Club

Do something about homeless on trail

I read the Sept. 26 editorial regarding the disturbing home-less situation on the Snoqualmie Valley Trail and am glad some-one finally spoke up.

My wife and children are afraid to ride or walk the trail without me present because of the crowd loitering along the trail. And they are not alone. It’s daunting to ride the gauntlet that lines the bridges along the trail.

If they are homeless and without work, where are they finding resources to purchase bicycles, walkie talkies, liquor and drugs? Are they dealing or stealing?

How is it possible they feel so comfortable hanging out threatening other people when they sit within spitting distance of the King County Sheriff’s Office? I ride the trail often,

This is the polished time, the pinnacle of life. This is fall, when everything puts on its best for the world to see, and that makes it special.

The sultry heat of summer has passed, and in its place we have cool mornings when the tiny snap of winter’s promise briefly touches our skin. There is a magic quality of light and feel in the air, and those of us who enjoy the outdoors know it’s time to go to camp. In our genes, we know it’s time to go to camp. It’s time to be in the woods with rod and bow and gun and rediscover ourselves.

In town, it’s time for the kids to be back in school, giv-ing their mothers time to think about themselves for a while. The antlers of the deer have now been polished to a bone white at the tips and a rug-ged brown elsewhere. They are prime, as is their owner. It is fall. It is the polished time. The trees, as the sap shuts down in the leaves, share their gold and reds with us and make com-monplace scenes only a few weeks ago into magical tapes-tries of nature.

It is the time of finding a

4

Deborah Berto Publisher

Kathleen R. Merrill Managing editor

Michele Mihalovich Editor

Sebastian Moraga Reporter

Ari Cetron Page designer

Nathan Laursen Advertising manager

Michelle Comeau Advertising rep.

See LETTERS, Page 7

OCTOBER 25, 2012 SnoValley Star PAGE 5

5

ment that I came to address.”

The series of audits lam-basted the way the agency examines shootings by deputies, disciplines per-sonnel and handles citizen complaints.

Urquhart said reports released by the county auditor in July and September damaged the agency’s reputation.

“If we can’t convince communities — not to mention the Department of Justice — that we take discipline seriously” then the agency’s standing could sink further, he said. “I don’t mean discipline from the standpoint of going after the officers. That’s not it. It’s the pro-cesses that have to be fol-lowed.”

Strachan said Urquhart, a longtime adviser to for-mer sheriffs Dave Reichert and Rahr, deserves some blame. Urquhart said Strachan’s claim is not accurate.

“I could advise — and I did on a very regular basis — but I couldn’t make policy,” Urquhart said. “I couldn’t change policy.”

Relationships define sheriff’s duties

Strachan and Urquhart said the relationship among the sheriff’s office and municipal police agencies in King County is critical. Both candidates said the sheriff’s office should act as a partner to local police departments.

“We have a history of

PAGE 6 SnoValley Star OCTOBER 25, 2012

6

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North Bend’s preliminary 2013 budget is online

The city of North Bend’s preliminary 2013

budget can be viewed online at http://north-bendwa.gov/Archive.aspx?ADID=1222.

The city will hold a public hearing at 7

By Warren Kagarise

The contest to lead the King County Sheriff’s Office could hinge on a series of audits into how the agency operates.

The sheriff oversees a budget of about $150 million and about 1,000 employees, and leads the largest local police organization in the state after the Seattle Police Department.

The contentious race pits Sheriff Steve Strachan, a former Kent police chief, against John Urquhart, a former sheriff’s office ser-geant and spokesman.

King County Council members appointed Strachan as sheriff in April, not long after former Sheriff Sue Rahr resigned to lead the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission, or state police academy.

Though the election is to fill Rahr’s unexpired term through 2013, the next sheriff faces a land-mark effort to reform the agency in response to audits critical of poli-cies put into place under Strachan’s predecessors.

Strachan, a SeaTac resident, served as a police chief and state legisla-tor in Minnesota before accepting the Kent post in 2006. In the Minnesota Legislature, he helped pass legislation to reduce the blood-alcohol limit to 0.08 percent. Rahr tapped Strachan as the chief deputy, or No. 2 spot, at the sheriff’s office in early 2011.

Urquhart, a Mercer Island resident, appeared as a familiar presence on TV screens and in news articles throughout the region for years as the agency spokesman. Before he became the public information officer, he served as a field training officer, a patrol officer and a street-level vice and nar-cotics detective.

The most significant issue for the next sheriff is the process of addressing problems uncovered in the recent audits.

“The issues that have been raised in the audits — none of those surprised me. I knew those coming in. It’s why I came here,” Strachan said. “Those are exactly the issues that go back years in this depart-

Key endorsementsThe candidates in the race for sheriff collected endorsements from law enforcement and political leaders.John Urquhart� U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert, a former King County sheriff� John McKay, former U.S. attorney for Western Washington� Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes� State Rep. Jay RodneSteve Strachan� Former King County Sheriff Sue Rahr� King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg

King County sheriff’s race pits insiders against each othersort of acting like, we’re from the county and we’re here to help — and we’re here to take over,” Strachan said. “We haven’t always played well in the sandbox.”

Smaller police agencies often rely on the sheriff’s office for aid in major incidents and investiga-tions. In September 2011, for instance, sheriff’s office investigators spearheaded the investigation into a shooting death at Clark Elementary School because the incident involved Issaquah officers.

The sheriff’s office also serves as the police agency for King County Metro Transit and Sound Transit sites in Issaquah and countywide.

Issaquah School District campuses also rely on the agency for school resource officers.

Under a contract between the sheriff’s office and the Issaquah School District, administrators pay the county $55,000 per year to fund a school resource officer at Liberty High School.

The school resource officer at Skyline High School in Sammamish is

funded through a separate contract between the city and the sheriff’s office, and the city and school district share costs.

(The school resource officer at Issaquah High School is provided by the Issaquah Police Department.)

In recent years, budget cuts battered the sher-iff’s office, and impacted patrols and property crime investigations in unincorporated areas near Issaquah and elsewhere in the county.

Strachan announced a plan Oct. 12 to hire 14 deputies in the months ahead by using dollars from the existing sheriff’s office budget.

Urquhart said the ini-tial step to the restore residents’ confidence in the agency is to encourage interaction between depu-ties and residents.

“We don’t have beat officers anymore because we can’t afford them, but we can still park that damn police car and get out and walk around,” he said. “My deputies are going to do that. They’re going to interact with the public.”

p.m. Nov. 6 at Mount Si Senior Center, 411 Main Ave. S., and final adop-tion is scheduled for Dec. 4.

Comments can be emailed to the city clerk at [email protected], or mailed to City Hall, 211 Main Ave. N.

Snoqualmie Arts Commission seeks local artwork

The Snoqualmie Arts Commission is accept-ing submissions for art-work from Snoqualmie Valley artists to hang in the next art showings at Snoqualmie City Hall and the Snoqualmie Valley

Chamber of Commerce Visitors Center, according to a city press release.

The art will be on dis-play from Nov. 1 to Jan. 31.

Submit entries to Lanice Gillard at [email protected] by Oct. 26, and include the image, size, medium and artwork title.

OCTOBER 25, 2012 SnoValley Star PAGE 7

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and I have not seen law enforcement anywhere near the location where they hang out.

It is apparent that this is a very unsafe situation for our community.

There used to only be

a few homeless people on the trail, and interactions with them were friendly and harmless.

However, as the popula-tion grows, the more they seem to behave as owners of the trail rather than visitors to it like the rest of us.

I do not intend to be heartless to the homeless.

However, I want my family and others in our

community to remain safe. There is obviously a great need here, and if the police do not start dealing with this issue in a mean-ingful way, something tragic is likely to happen eventually.

If everyone who is aware of the issue finally speaks up, maybe the police will take a more active role, and maybe we as a community can come

up with a better solution. In this vein, I intend to forward a copy of this message to the KCSO and to the city of North Bend.

Elliott Joseph “E.J.” BrinkNorth Bend

LettersFrom Page 4

By Warren Kagarise

The showdown in the 8th Congressional District is far different from the most recent contests for the seat.

Incumbent Republican Dave Reichert held on amid spirited challenges from Democrats in 2006, 2008 and 2010. Redistricting last year reshaped the landscape for the district, and the 2012 race is not attracting the same kind of attention — or money — as the ear-lier battles.

Reichert’s opponent is Issaquah Democrat Karen Porterfield, a nonprofit professional and adjunct instructor at Seattle University.

Porterfield grew up in Seattle, in a family active in Democratic politics, and settled in Issaquah more than a decade ago. She said the expertise she gained in affordable hous-ing development and in leadership roles at non-profit organizations means

she could offer a unique perspective in Congress.

“We don’t have some-body back there in either party who understands complex organizations and who is saying, ‘Well, wait a minute. Before we talk about, do we cut this 3 percent or 5 percent, have we talked about what priorities are, what do we want to be investing in? Maybe we don’t have this agency over here at all, or this program. Maybe we want to put a lot more money over here,’” Porterfield said in a recent interview. “That’s the dif-ference between efficient government and effective government. Effective government is achieving the goals that we want to achieve. Efficient govern-ment just says we’re doing it well.”

Reichert said the focus in the next Congress is on job growth and federal spending — a task han-dled by the budget-writing House Ways & Means

Committee.“As a member of

the Ways & Means Committee, I look for-ward to continuing my active role in writing and enacting legisla-tion that strengthens our economy,” he said in a statement. “We’ve got some tough issues to tackle, but by focusing on our key principles of less government spending, low tax rates and creat-ing a healthy economic climate, we’ll be able to restore confidence in our economy and get America back to work.”

Reichert rose through the ranks at the King County Sheriff’s Office and served as sheriff from 1997 to 2004. Voters elect-ed the Auburn Republican to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2004, a strong year for Republican candidates.

Reichert survived robust challenges from Democrat Darcy Burner, a former Microsoft project

manager, as Democrats toppled Republicans else-where in 2006 and 2008. In the 2010 election cycle, Reichert outpaced former Microsoft and tech execu-tive Suzan DelBene to retain the seat.

(DelBene is again a can-didate for the U.S. House, this time in the redrawn 1st Congressional District.)

The former 8th District stretched across East King County and dipped into Pierce County to include rural communities and Mount Rainier National Park.

The redrawn district breaches the so-called Cascade Curtain — a mountainous dividing line between liberal Western Washington and conserva-tive Eastern Washington — to stretch from Auburn to Wenatchee.

Redistricting reshapes electoral map

On the campaign trail, Porterfield is highlighting

Change in geography alters landscape for congressional racethe similarities between communities on both sides of the mountains.

“Each community is unique, and we choose to live there because of the things that make it special,” she said. “Government has a spe-cific role, and it’s different than business and it’s dif-ferent than community, which is nonprofits, the neighborhoods we live in, our religious institutions, schools — they have a

role. When communities are healthy and vibrant, everybody is playing their role well.”

Reichert said the change in geography did not alter how the district is represented in Washington, D.C.

“While representing both sides of the Cascades will present new oppor-tunities and challenges, I will continue to approach

See CONGRESS, Page 14

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WOMEN in BUSINESSSnoqualmie

By Sarah Gerdes

On Sept. 15, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints made a donation of more than three tons of food to the Fall City Community Food Pantry. It took the participation of 79 fam-ilies, 260 members from the Fall City-Snoqualmie congregation, to collect and donate nearly 6,000 pounds of food.

The effort was led under the direction of Robert C. Johnson, president of the Bellevue South Stake, who advocated holding the food drive for the third year in a row.

The food drive exceeded Johnson’s expectations, and he attributes it to the leader-ship of the local congregation’s bishop, Matt Smith, and Daric Schweikart, the project manager for the Day of Service.

“Daric worked with mem-bers to ensure each home on each street in each Snoqualmie neighborhood received a flyer,” Johnson said, noting that Schweikart had thousands of fli-ers printed.

Members then walked door-to-door hanging fliers the week before the food drive.

“This is the third year we’ve done the food drive. Some people remember it from years past,” Johnson said. “Our mem-bers embraced the notion of helping those who are suffering

and responded.”

Tough times, increased generosity

Studies of charitable giving have shown a tie between the

recession and a decline in the amount of donations. Loss of jobs, decreases in wages and increased inflation have contrib-uted to reduction or elimination of discretionary budgets.

“This is a tougher economy than last year,” said Smith, who added that the amount received this year was nearly double what was received in 2011.

“We have a very generous

community,” he said proudly. “People want to be able to help one another in tough times, and they did.”

Smith said he is especially appreciative of the service the United Methodist Church pro-vides for the area.

“We are grateful for the example of faithful service dem-onstrated by the Fall City United Methodist Church in the operat-ing of the Fall City Community Food Pantry,” he said. “They do a terrific job and it is hum-bling to be a small part of their inspired effort.”

The sentiment is recipro-cated. In a letter to Smith, FCCFP Co-chairman Richard Terbrueggen expressed his appre-ciation for the donation that will help feed 160 families.

“Again, we were overwhelmed with the gift of food, hygiene and household products that your church members deliv-ered,” he wrote.

Johnson said he believes donors are more compelled to aid those in their commu-nity, and has tailored stakewide efforts around this philosophy.

“We want to make sure the food stayed in the community it was collected,” Johnson said. “We partnered with those who are recognized as a critical point in the social services aspect of

communityPAGE 10 OCTOBER 25, 2012

10

Local people collect tons of food for food banks in the region

By Daric Schweikart

Treena Schweikart, 10, of Snoqualmie, poses with some food donations outside Fall City United Methodist Church.

See BANK, Page 11

By Sebastian Moraga

Indie folk songwriter Becky Alter takes the comparison to Joan Baez as a compliment.

“Some of my audiences swear I’m Joan Baez’s sister or daugh-ter,” said Alter, a Virginia-born, Austin, Texas-based artist with almost a decadelong career as a professional.

Alter will play Snoqualmie’s The Black Dog on Oct. 26 as part of her six-state tour that began this summer in Southern California.

Her debut album, “Becky Alter,” contains the song “Nana’s Lullaby,” a finalist for best folk-traditional song in the 2012 New Mexico Music Awards.

TinderBox, a music-pro-motions company out of Minneapolis, described her voice as ringing clarity and perfection.

“The vocals are smooth,” the review stated. “They almost make you forget where you are and what you’re doing.”

Alter recorded the album in Albuquerque, N.M.

“I am really happy with how

it came out,” said Alter, who shares the same name with a folk-and-soul singer based in the Caribbean.

While some fans delight in comparing Alter with the 71-year-old Baez, she has a more specific, to say the least, description for her own style.

“It’s Joan Baez,” she said, “charm-ing Ani DiFranco over lunch with Johnny Cash.”

A one-time urban planner, Alter shelved her career to go full time as a singer in 2011, but has played music for a long time, she said.

She has a background on clas-sical piano, but the rigors of life on tour have kept her from play-ing it much, so instead, a guitar is her companion.

She books her concerts as she tours.

“Booking on the road is chal-lenging,” she said. “Renewing

your vehicle registration on the road is challenging, but I love meeting new people, talking to

new people, hav-ing them tell me to come to their town. I love music and I love sharing with people.”

Despite what her fans may say, she’s fine with being a lookalike, but not a soundalike.

“I have a strong commitment to doing my own

thing and having my own sound,” she said. “I don’t listen to music to go ‘that inspires me to write something just like that.’”

Her influences include clas-sics like Beethoven and pop leg-ends Stevie Wonder and Aretha Franklin.

Her goals include having songs played as part of a TV or a film score.

Until that happens, she will keep composing and touring. She calls her tour the loop,

because it begins and ends in California, with stops in Utah, Montana, Idaho, Eastern Washington, Portland (Ore.), the Puget Sound area — including Snoqualmie — and then back south to Oregon and the Golden State.

Grueling road trips nonethe-less, you won’t hear her com-plain. The audiences like her and she returns the favor.

“I feel really lucky for how things have played out,” she said. “This tells me this is what I’m supposed to be doing.”

If you goBecky AlterIndie singer-songwriter8 p.m. Oct. 26The Black Dog8062 Railroad Ave. S.E.Snoqualmie831-3647www.beckyaltermusic.com

Texas songwriter comes to Snoqualmie

Contributed

Indie singer Becky Alter will play The Black Dog Café in Snoqualmie Oct. 26.

OCTOBER 25, 2012 SnoValley Star PAGE 11

11

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the community, and they were getting to a group that we wouldn’t normally get to.”

Year-round service

Smith has taken Johnson’s suggestions to another level. Three to four times a year, the young men in the ward volunteer at the Fall City Community Food Pantry, stocking shelves or creat-ing packets of nonperish-able items for families.

“We typically have half a dozen young adults, ages 16-18, scooping laundry detergent into sacks to be distributed that week or helping prepare food for the families that will come in that week,” Smith said.

The food drive will occur again in 2013.

“The need won’t decrease next year,” Johnson said, “and we need to be ready.”

North Bend families help stock food bank

Also participating in the annual LDS food drive were the North Bend and Mount Si congregations. The members of these

communities collected 5,105 pounds of food that was delivered to the Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank.

“The generous donations from the residents of North Bend and Mount Si replen-ished the empty shelves, helping us feed many in need,” Johnson said.

“The Day of Service Northwest was originally set up to honor those killed in the Sept. 11 events,” he added, recall-ing President Obama’s request for a day of remembrance and service.

Local LDS congrega-tions on the Eastside decided that commu-nity service was the most appropriate way to affect those living next door.

“This year, the saints of North Bend and Mount Si collected almost double of what they did last year,” Johnson said.

The event will be held again next year, at approx-imately the same time.

Those wishing to continue to support the Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank may drop off food or make donations at 122 E. Third St., North Bend, WA 98045 or go to www.mtsifoodbank.org.

Sarah Gerdes is a freelance writer. Comment at www.snovalleystar.com.

BankFrom Page 10

By Sebastian Moraga

There’s something out there ... again.

It’s spooky, but well-meaning. It’s two years old, but it can frighten you.

Night on a Dark Trail, the Halloween-themed show, returns to Snoqualmie Ridge for 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30 p.m. perfor-mances Oct. 26 and 27.

The show offers a haunted trail with inter-active scenes and dance performances by Valley dance troupes Cascade Dance Academy and

Ignite Dance and Yoga, organizer Mark Henning wrote in an email.

This is the show’s second year. It remains nonprofit, with volun-teers joining hands with Snoqualmie Ridge Renters and Owners Association, the city of Snoqualmie, Church on the Ridge, Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank, the dance troupes and a handful of businesses, such as Mark’s Pet Pals, owned by Henning.

Net proceeds from ticket sales will benefit the food bank. Tickets

are $10 and may be purchased at www.mtsi-foodbank.org or at the Snoqualmie Valley ROA, 7713 Center Blvd. S.E., Suite 100, Snoqualmie.

The show has silly parts and scary parts, according to the website www.nightonadarktrail.weebly.com. The show is suitable for fourth-graders up to adults.

The starting point of the trail will be on Southeast Douglas Street, one-third of a mile east of the intersection of Snoqualmie Parkway. The show starts in the

eastside parking lot of the Trailside Building and enters the trail heading west.

“The work and plan-ning being done is to present a fun activity for the Snoqualmie Valley community for the young and the young at heart,” the website stated. “The proceeds will go benefit those in need in our com-munity.”

Sebastian Moraga: 392-6434, ext. 221, or [email protected]. Comment at www.snovalleystar.com.

Snoqualmie Ridge will again host Night on a Dark Trail

Halloween fever hits the Valley

The following is a list of Halloween-themed events in the Valley.

SnoqualmieHalloween Train

11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 27-28Snoqualmie Depot at the Northwest Railway Museum 38625 S.E. King St., SnoqualmieTickets are $15 for adults, $12 for people 62 and older.Children’s tickets are $10.Wear a costume and get $2 off the cost of your train ticket.

Trick or Treat on Snoqualmie Ridge11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 27.Starts at Snoqualmie Ridge IGA 7730 Center Blvd. S.E., SnoqualmieThis event is free to com-munity members.

Downtown

Snoqualmie Treat Harvest10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 31Children 6 and younger can gather goodies from downtown businesses on Halloween day.Look for the red balloons for participating mer-chants.

North BendPumpkin Patch Swim

& Dive-In Movies3:30-5 p.m. and 5:30-7 p.m. Oct. 26Si View Pool400 S.E. Orchard St.Registration required; call 888-1447Admission is $5 per per-son.

Si View Haunted House6 -8:30 p.m. Oct. 27Si View Community Center400 S.E. Orchard St.Admission is $3 per

person.Mount Si Lutheran

Church Harvest Carnival4-7 p.m. Oct. 28Benson Barn14120 424th Ave. S.E.Chili cook-off, games, costume contests, crafts, food and activities for everybody.Admission is free with a nonperishable item for the Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank. Wearing of costumes is encouraged.

of reason to believe.

“We have a lot of depth and a good pool to pick from down on the farm,” he said referring to the JV squad. “So we will be OK.”

Furthermore, the last two forays into for-eign territory yielded a 3-0 win against Lake Washington and a 2-1 thriller victory against Bellevue.

The team remains hun-gry, Brown said, to make its trademark push in the sec-ond half of the season. Its ster-ling record in its last few matches gives it a chance for home-field advantage in the playoffs.

“Four-0 should give us a lock,” he said before the Lake Washington match. “These next four games are big.”

Mercer Island and Liberty loom large in the schedule, Oct. 23 and Oct. 25. The Wildcats lost to the Islanders and Patriots earlier this year.

On Oct. 11, the team sent off its “Senior Posse”

in fine style on Senior Night, with a 3-1 win against Sammamish. It followed the Senior Night win with beatings of the Lake Washington Kangaroos and Bellevue Wolverines.

With junior Corra on the mend, the midfield looks young, Brown said. In the meantime, though, other experienced players have picked up the baton.

Defender Claire Larsen is playing great defense, Brown said. Against

Sammamish, she had 14 touches with no errors on the ball.

“Very hard to do,” Brown said. “She had a great week.”

Nevada-Las Vegas recruit Miranda Rawlings followed up her sterling performance against Lake Washington with two goals against Bellevue.

“She’s got mad skills, and the last two games she has played like a shark with blood in the water,” Brown wrote after the

Kangaroo game.The rest of the team

has followed co-captains Larsen and Rawlings in playing well.

“Four wins, zero losses and one tie in the second half,” Brown wrote on the team’s website. “We are meeting our goal!”

Kickoff against Liberty is at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25.

Sebastian Moraga: 392-6434, ext. 221, or [email protected]. Comment at www.snovalleystar.com.

SportsPAGE 12 OCTOBER 25, 2012

12

By Sebastian Moraga

It’s been a month of challenges and triumphs for the Wildcats’ girls soc-cer team.

They are still primed to walk with heads held high into the playoffs, unbeaten in their last five matches. But if they do, they will have to do it without All-

Conference midfielder Leah Corra, who is out for the season with a bad knee.

Their schedule will command that if they make the playoffs, they do so on the road, with their last four matches away from Meadowbrook Way.

Still, coach Darren Brown said there is plenty

By Michele Mihalovich

Anyone worried about the Mount Si Wildcats’ confidence being shaken after the Bellevue loss should save it.

The Mount Si High School football team came out of the gate Oct. 19 with fire in its eyes, and put up three touchdowns in minutes against Mercer Island, and concluded with a 38-7 win against the Islanders.

In the first quarter, defensive end Keenan McVein ran three yards for Mount Si’s first touch-down of the night after Evan Johnson intercepted an Islander pass.

Quarterback Nick Mitchell and wide receiv-er Trent Riley worked their magic again, when

Mitchell tossed 33-yard and 4-yard passes to Riley, resulting in two more first-quarter touchdowns.

In the second quarter, wide receiver Tyler Button posted a touchdown after catching a 24-yard pass from Mitchell, and Cameron Van Winkle kicked a 23-yard field goal, for a 31-0 lead at the half.

The third quarter marked the last one in which either team posted points.

Mercer Island intercept-ed a Mitchell pass, which led to the Islanders’ only touchdown of the night, later followed by a 3-yard run by Johnson.

And sadly for Mercer Island, which was cel-ebrating homecoming, the night ended with the

Mount Si win.The Wildcats

now have a 7-1 record, and face Liberty High School (3-5) at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 at Liberty in Renton.

This is the last game before Mount Si heads into the KingCo 3A playoffs. The Wildcats secured the first-round home game Nov. 2 in the Washington State Champion-ships round of 32, according to the Wildcats’ website.

Mount Si football rebounds with 38-7 win against Mercer Island

By Calder Productions

Mount Si High School’s Evan Johnson intercepts a Mercer Island pass Oct. 19.

Girls’ soccer squad readying for end-of-season push to playoffs

By Calder Productions

Miranda Rawlings had one of her finest games of the season against the Wolverines in Bellevue Oct. 18. In the picture, Rawlings goes against the Wolverines during their game in Snoqualmie Sept. 24.

For all your SnoValley Star advertising needs

contact Michelle 425-392-6434 ext. 228

SchoolsPAGE 13OCTOBER 25, 2012

13

By Sebastian Moraga

Amy Soltys admits that in a way she asked for it.

About 10 years ago, pregnant with her first child and wanting to honor her father Carl, Amy sought a name other than Carla for the baby.

With that in mind, she attended “The Nutcracker,” a ballet whose lead character is named Clara.

“We liked Clara,” Amy said. “We said, it’s kind of Dad’s name but shuffled around.”

Fast-forward to 2012 and the Soltyses spend most days shuffling — zooming actu-ally — around from place to place, because of a ballet dancer named Clara.

Clara Soltys, that is.“We are all kind of sleeping

and breathing ballet,” Amy said. “We are all excited, but we are a little shell-shocked.”

The reason for the excitement is that Clara has earned a role in the Pacific Northwest Ballet’s production of “The Nutcracker” in Seattle.

Clara’s role requires trips to Bellevue for ballet class with the PNB, to Seattle for rehearsals and then back to North Bend, often snoozing in the back seat of her parents’ car.

“It’s an adjustment,” Amy said. “But she loves it. She glows. She walks out of those classes, even the classes that are dry as dust, in my opinion,

and she’s just excited. She’s tired but she’s excited.”

In “The Nutcracker,” Clara plays a small servant, appearing in the

beginning of Act Two, with the story’s three main characters.

She auditioned in September for the role, taking what Amy called a nontraditional route to the prestigious PNB.

“What they do at the PNB, they start you at preschool and work your way up,” Amy said.

Clara has been a ballet dancer since age 3, but this was her first audition at the PNB level. To Mom’s surprise, Clara got in at Level Two, instead of the begin-ner level.

“And after two classes at PNB, she got a part in ‘The

Nutcracker,’” Amy said. “It was kind of a shock to the whole system.”

Amy praised Clara’s North Bend ballet teachers Cristie Coffing and Sara Werner, at Si View Youth Dance, for preparing Clara well.

“She knew a lot of the posi-tions and the movements,” Amy said of her daughter. “She could associate the language with the moves.”

The PNB standards were very exacting, Clara said. Experienced as she was, she still found some things difficult.

“The most difficult part is having to try and do the splits,” she said. “I used to do it side-to-side and now they want us to do it front-to-back with both legs.”

Still, ballet is ballet, and it’s a thrill for Clara to be a part of the PNB.

Even if it means long trips across King County.

“Being out here in North Bend, that’s a lot of time in the car, but this is a huge lifetime experience for her,” Amy said. “How do you say no to that? If she’s gifted enough and works hard enough that she can do this and maintain her grades, you can’t say no to that. It’s her dream.”

North Bend fourth-grader to join Pacific Northwest Ballet

Contributed

Clara Soltys, in the foreground, with her two dancing instructors from Si View Dance, Sara Werner and Cristie Coffing.

“We are all kind of sleep-ing and breathing ballet.”

— Amy SoltysMother

By Sebastian Moraga

A full week of NBA games has fewer high-fives than a pep assembly at an elementary school. And if said assembly ends with the students getting big-time prizes for their gener-ous spirit, you can make that two weeks.

That’s exactly what happened at Cascade View Elementary School, where students reaped rewards from their Sept. 22 Walk-a-Thon, where they raised $6,000 more for their school than the initial goal of $30,000.

Not only did they get prizes that would make a grown-up jealous — can you say Kindle Reader? — but they also watched their teachers put on flash mob-style choreography while wearing tie-dyed shirts and, in the case of physical edu-cation teacher Amy Corder and Principal Ray Wilson, fluffy wigs and funky sunglasses.

“I find it easier to dance in front of a class if I’m not myself,” Corder said.

The fundraiser yielded $500 to every classroom in the school, said Sommer Reynolds, Walk-a-Thon chairwoman, plus $250

to the first-grade classroom of teacher Heather Anderson for raising the most money, $2,263.

And then came the raffle of individual prizes, from American Girl dolls to drawing sets to Legos to the Kindle Reader, who

went to one shocked Cameron Pearson.

“I almost fainted,” she said.Schoolmate Kimberlyn

Wicker won the art set, even though she only wrote her first name on the raffle ticket. Since

she’s the only Kimberlyn in the entire school, nobody ques-tioned who had won.

“That’s a unique name,” Reynolds said to her. “You should thank your parents.”

Every one of the 20-plus priz-

es was met with ovations and backslaps. Nobody, not even the students who waited for every drawing with fingers crossed on both hands, let the disappoint-ment of losing get the best of them.

“You guys did really great,” Reynolds told the crowd. “I didn’t see any tears.”

As if on cue, a smattering of children pretended to weep, “Boo-hoo-hoo.”

The star of the show was a student who raised the most money by himself, Lucas Jeans. He was named principal for a day and will get to join Wilson in several of his daily duties, including a trip to Starbucks for a treat.

Shy as a rabbit, Lucas only smiled when he was presented with a robe and a crown. When Wilson asked him about his first order of business as principal, the deafening chorus of children yelling “ice cream” “recess” and “no classes” stood in stark con-trast with the silent would-be principal. Then Wilson whis-pered in his ear.

“Ask for a raise,” the boy said.“I like this kid already,”

Wilson said.

Cascade View Elementary School rewards students after walk

By Sebastian Moraga

Cascade View Elementary School teachers and its principal Ray Wilson, at right, perform for the students during a pep assembly to celebrate the 2012 Walk-a-thon results. The school raised $6,000 more than its $30,000 goal.

PAGE 14 SnoValley Star OCTOBER 25, 2012

14

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North Bend

Good deed pays offA North Bend man

turned in a $100 bill to police that he found next to the North Bend Shell gas station Oct. 9. Police completed a found proper-ty report and returned the money to the man who turned it in.

Stolen car stereoA North Bend woman

reported that between noon and 5 p.m. Oct. 6, someone stole a car stereo and Luke Bryan CD from her unlocked vehicle.

Don’t come back A woman suspected of

multiple shoplifting inci-dents was given a letter Oct. 6 notifying her that

she could not enter the Vanity Fair store at North Bend Outlet Mall.

I’ll take that to goA deputy observed at

8:15 a.m. Oct. 6 that a window had been broken at Teriyaki Town, 434 Main Ave. S., and the cash register was smashed and lying on the floor. The owner was contacted and it appears $90 was taken from the register.

Bike theftA woman reported Oct.

9 that her son’s bike had been stolen. Her son told the deputy that he’d seen a “hobo-looking guy” riding around earlier on a similar bike, and that there’s been an increase in “bum” activity along the river lately.

Hit and runA woman reported Oct.

9 that someone hit her vehicle the night before while it was parked at The Pour House Bar & Grill, 330 North Bend Way.

Snoqualmie

Red means stopAt 3:20 p.m. Oct. 12,

a Snoqualmie driver slid into a stop sign at the corner of Douglas Avenue Southeast and Southeast Muir Street.

Drunken drivingAt 11:41 p.m. Oct.

13, an officer observed a driver speeding, with a defective headlight, on Snoqualmie Parkway. Eric R. Nusbaum, 30, of North Bend, according to the police report, was arrested for driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol and was trans-ported to the Issaquah Jail.

Friendly mobAt 1:55 a.m. Oct. 15,

police received a 911 hang-up call at 38600 S.E. King St. When no one answered on call back, police drove to the address, which is Smokey Joe’s Tavern. A group of bar patrons confronted a “DUI driver” who was attempting to leave. The driver was pulled from the vehicle and left on foot prior to the officer’s arrival.

‘Harvested marijuana’

At 1:05 a.m. Oct. 17, officer observed a vehicle traveling on Southeast King Street without a front license plate. The officer noted red and watery eyes of the driver, as well as the smell of “harvested marijuana” coming from the inside of the vehicle. Brandon Michael Cassidy, 29, town not listed, was arrested for driving under

Police blotter the influence and was taken to the Issaquah Jail.

DUIAt 10:10 p.m. Oct. 18,

officer observed a driver on Railroad Avenue in a vehicle with a nonwork-ing license plate light, and pulled the driver over. Amy Jean Hyde, 31, no town listed, was arrested for driving under the influence and was taken to the Issaquah Jail.

North Bend fire calls

One fire engine responded to an unau-thorized fire call at 8:52 p.m. Oct. 12 in the 12000

block of 412th Avenue Southeast.

One fire engine responded to a cooking fire call at 10 p.m. Oct. 15 in the 42000 block of Southeast North Bend Way.

Three fire engines assisted a “police or other governmental agency” at 10:05 p.m. Oct. 15 in the 100 block of Southeast North Bend Way. No rea-son was listed.

Two fire engines responded to a power line down call at 3:44 a.m. Oct. 16 in the 46000 block of Southeast Edgewick Road.

The Star publishes names of those arrested for DUI and those charged with felony crimes. Information comes directly from local police reports.

my work in Congress just as I approached my career in law enforce-ment — to gather the facts and do what’s best for our communities and our country,” he said. “I represent all of the people in the current 8th District, no matter if they live in Bellevue, Black Diamond, Orting or Duvall. The same will hold true if elected to represent the new 8th District. Everyone will be represented equally from Stehekin to Eatonville.”

The old district gained a reputation as a swing district because vot-ers split preferences between Democrats and Republicans in statewide and federal contests.

Officials created the seat after Washington gained a seat in Congress following the 1980 Census.

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat, lost the district — but prevailed in the race — by about 4,700 votes to Republican challenger Dino Rossi, although Murray garnered more votes in population-

dense King County.Democrat Barack

Obama beat Republican John McCain in the dis-trict by more than 55,000 votes in 2008. But, farther down the same ballot, Rossi collected 5,000 more votes than Gov. Chris Gregoire, a Democrat.

Still, no Democrat has ever represented the 32-year-old district in Congress. Reichert fills a seat held by Jennifer Dunn — mother of King County Councilman Reagan Dunn — for a dozen years.

Porterfield points to encouraging results in a poll the campaign com-missioned in January. The results from Las Vegas-based McGuire Research Services showed a more independent streak among the 8th District electorate, she said.

Todd Donovan, a political science pro-fessor at Western Washington University, said the Washington State Redistricting Commission created a safe seat for Reichert last year.

The district is “more solidly Republican” after redistricting, Donovan said. The analysis bears out “in looking at the numbers, looking at the maps and looking at the money that’s not coming in for the Democrat,” he added.

“When they divided up the state, the 1st District was where they had to make all the compro-mises, because there was no incumbent,” Donovan said. “A lot of those com-promises were, let’s take the existing Democratic and Republican districts and probably make them a little safer.”

CongressFrom Page 7

Public meetings

North Bend

� Planning Commission, 7 p.m. Oct. 25, City Hall, 211 Main Ave. N.

� Finance and Administration Committee, 4 p.m. Nov. 6, City Hall

� City Council, 7 p.m. Nov. 6, Mount Si Senior Center, 411 Main Ave. S.

� Planning Commission, 7 p.m. Nov. 8, City Hall

� Public Health and Safety Committee, 4 p.m. Nov. 13, City Hall

� Economic Development Commission, 7:45 a.m. Nov. 15, Community and Economic Development Office, 126 E. Fourth St.

� Community and Economic Development Committee, 1:30 p.m., Nov. 20, Community and Economic Development Office

Snoqualmie� Public Safety Committee,

5 p.m. Oct. 25, Nov. 8 Snoqualmie Fire Station, 37600 S.E. Snoqualmie Parkway

� Public Works Committee, 5 p.m. Nov. 5, 19, City Hall, 38624 S.E. River St.

� Planning and Parks Committee, 6:30 p.m. Nov. 5, City Hall

� Planning Commission, 7 p.m. Nov. 5, City Hall

� Finance and Administration, 5:30 p.m. Nov. 6, City Hall

� Arts Commission, 6 p.m. Nov. 12, City Hall

� City Council, 7 p.m. Nov. 12, City Hall

� Community and Economic Affairs Committee, 5 p.m. Nov. 13, City Hall

� Shoreline Hearings Board, 5 p.m. Nov. 14, City Hall

Snoqualmie Valley School District

� 6:30 p.m. Oct. 30, district office, 8001 Silva Ave. S.E., Snoqualmie

Churches� Fair Trade Sale at Our

Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church, 39025 S.E. Alpha St., Snoqualmie, Oct. 27-28 after all masses. Oct. 27 mass is at 5 p.m. Oct. 28 masses are at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.

� Mount Si Lutheran Church’s annual Harvest Carnival, 4-7 p.m. Oct. 28, Benson Barn, 14120 424th Ave. S.E., North Bend. Free to the community; donation of canned goods for Mount Si Helping Hand Food Bank encouraged. Children are encouraged to wear costumes. Email Lauren Frerichs at [email protected] to

learn more.

Classes� Super Sitters workshop

for children ages 11-15 at Encompass. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Oct. 27, 1407 Boalch Ave. N.W., North Bend. $40. Register by calling 888-2777 or at www.encompassnw.org. The class cov-ers parent expectations, child development and home security.

Events� For Halloween events in

the Valley, see Page 11.� Mount Si High School

Choir presents A Haunted Hallows’ Eve, 4-9 p.m. Oct. 26, $5 entry fee. Costumes encour-aged, all ages welcome. Proceeds will benefit the school’s choir. Contact Lisa Esteb at 941-9036 to learn more.

� Mount Si Lacrosse Fall Clinic, 6 p.m. Oct. 26, for girls and boys grades two through eight at Mount Si High School’s stadium. No fees or special gear needed. Register at www.mount-silacrosse.org.

� Guided tour of Meadowbrook Farm, 10 a.m. Oct. 27, meets at Snoqualmie Middle School, 9200 Railroad Ave S.E., in Snoqualmie.

� Halloween Train, Oct. 27-28, starting at 11 a.m. at the Snoqualmie Depot, 38625 S.E. King St. and starting at 11:26 a.m. from the North Bend Depot

at 205 McClellan St. Roundtrip fares are $10 for children ages 2-12, $12 for adults age 62 and older and $15 for other adults. Show up in costume and get $2 off. If in full costume, you will get a prize.

� Downtown Snoqualmie Treat Harvest, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 31, children ages 6 and younger can gather goodies. Participating business will have balloons outside.

� Lunch and Learn, noon Nov. 1, Snoqualmie Fire Station, 37600 S.E. Snoqualmie Parkway. Topic of the month is “Hospitalization for Acute Medical Care,” with Dr. Kim Witkop, vice president of Medical Affairs for the Snoqualmie Valley Hospital District. Open to the public. Register at www.snoqualmie-hospital.org.

� Snoqualmie Valley Schools Foundation fundrais-ing show of Disney’s “Wreck-It Ralph”, 2 p.m. Nov. 4, North Bend Theatre, 125 Bendigo Blvd. N. Tickets are $15 per person, two for $25 or $50 for a family of five. Admission includes a soda and popcorn for each tick-et. All proceeds go to foundation programs and grants.

� Veterans’ Day Assemblies, 2:30 p.m. Nov. 6, Snoqualmie Elementary School; 10 a.m. Nov. 7, Cascade View Elementary School; 2 p.m. Nov. 7 Chief Kanim Middle School; 8:20 a.m. Nov. 8, Mount Si High School,

breakfast to follow; 10:30 a.m. Nov. 8, Twin Falls Middle School; 2:15 p.m. Nov. 8, North Bend Elementary School; 7:30 a.m. Nov. 9, Snoqualmie Middle School; 9:15 a.m. Nov. 9, Fall City Elementary School; 9:30 a.m. Nov. 9, Opstad Elementary School.

� ValleyFest craft festival, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nov. 10, Mount Si High School, 8651 Meadowbrook Way S.E. Gifts, clowns, face-painting, passages, great food and plenty of crafts. Special guest: Santa.

� Santa’s Toy Shop Toy Drive at the North Bend Substation of the King County Sheriff’s Office, 1550 Boalch Ave N.W., Nov. 1 to Dec. 11. New, unwrapped toys for children tots-to-teens welcome. Office is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday to Thursday and 8:30 a.m. to noon Friday. Santa will visit the toy shop at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 1.

� The Snoqualmie Valley Museum presents: “Beyond Smokey: The USFS In The Snoqualmie Valley,” 1-5 p.m. Saturdays through Tuesdays, 320 Bendigo Blvd. S., North Bend

North Bend libraryUnless otherwise noted,

all events will occur at 115 E. Fourth St., North Bend. Call 888-0554 to learn more.

� Sno Valley Writers Work Group, 3 p.m. Oct. 28. For

adults only. Join other writers for exercises, critique and les-sons on voice, plot and point of view. Contact [email protected] for an assignment prior to class.

� Merry Monday Story Time, 11 a.m. Oct. 29. For chil-dren to age 3 with adult, siblings and older children welcome. Songs, rhythm instruments, action rhymes and a tiny tale for the very young.

� E-reader assistance, 6 p.m. Oct. 29. Learn how to download KCLS e-books to your e-reader or computer during this demon-stration for adults.

� Toddler Story Time, 9:30 a.m. Oct. 30, ages 2-3 with adult. Younger children and sib-lings welcome. Share the world of books with your child and come for stories, songs and sur-prises

� Preschool Story Time, 10:30 a.m. Oct. 30, ages 3-6 with adult. Siblings welcome.

� Study Zone, 3 p.m. Oct. 23, 30. Free homework help for teenagers from volunteer tutors.

� One-on-one Computer Assistance, 1 p.m. Oct. 31. For adults.

� Pajamarama Story Time, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 31, for all young children, with adult.

Snoqualmie libraryUnless otherwise noted, all

events will occur at 7824 Center Blvd. S.E., Snoqualmie. Call 888-1223 to learn more.

� E-reader Assistance, 11 a.m. Oct. 25. Learn how to download KCLS e-books to your e-reader or computer during this demonstration for adults.

� Preschool Story Time, 1:30 p.m. Oct. 29, 10:30 a.m. Oct. 31, ages 3-6 with adult. Siblings welcome.

� Toddler Story Time, 9:30 a.m. Oct. 31, ages 6-24 months with adult. Younger children and siblings welcome. Enjoy rhymes, familiar songs and stories.

� Anime and Manga Club, 3 p.m. Oct. 31. Come watch anime movies, eat popcorn and practice your anime drawing. All skill levels welcome. For teens.

� Study Zone, 3 p.m. Oct. 31. Free homework help for teenagers.

Submit an item to the community calendar by emailing [email protected].

The future of jazz is now

CalendarOCTOBER 25, 2012 PAGE 15

15

File

Future Jazz Heads, a live-performance workshop for teen musicians, returns at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31 to Boxley’s, 101 W. North Bend Way. Students from schools, including Twin Falls Middle School and Mount Si High School, have been featured performers at the workshop. Learn more or make reserva-tions by calling 292-9307 or emailing [email protected].

October 2012

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

PAGE 16 SnoValley Star OCTOBER 25, 2012

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