In the Sept. 6 Reporter, John Hendrickson, who failed to win reelection to the Kenmore City Council in 2011, charges that I grossly misled the public. Yet it is he who misleads.
I had to chuckle when I read the letter “Keep Fireworks Legal in Bothell” because it was all about me, me, me and don’t ruin my fun.
The Reporter’s Sept. 6 editorial in which you asked drivers to “slow down and obey the 20 mph speed limit in school zones” resonates deeply with us who live on a residential street in a school zone.
I don’t believe Bothell should ban fireworks. My family has lived in this city for my entire life except for six years when we were overseas.
Is it not time for the city of Bothell to join neighboring communities in banning fireworks?
A longtime campaign member of Kenmore Council members Laurie Sperry’s and Allan Van Ness’s election team posted a July letter to the editor in which two issues were used to grossly mislead the public in support of the claim that: “Sperry and Van Ness deserve re-election.”
The July 19 print edition of the Bothell Reporter is the last issue of your paper I will ever read.
Ballots for the Aug. 6 primary election have arrived. There is one Northshore School Board position being contested in the primary.
I wish to express my gratitude and appreciation to Kenmore Mayor David Baker for helping me solve our problem in regards to the parking of neighboring cars in front of our mailbox.
In her letter to the editor of June 21 (“Appreciate Bothell and its history”), Erika Kienast asks, “How many of us truly love where we live?
Props are in order for the city of Bothell. It’s one of the few remaining cities that allows its residents to light off fireworks.
The city of Kenmore has agreed to sell the lower parcel of Kenmore Village for a $3 million loss. The sale price is half of what we paid for the property 10 years ago.
The city of Kenmore has done it again! During a recent Kenmore City Council meeting the city adopted new ordinances with no written versions of the ordinances for the audience to read.
As a Kenmore resident since 1973, I have followed the development of city events from King County operations, through incorporation and to the current council. The prospect of incorporation spurred my interest with the hope that Kenmore would become a creative, thriving entity on the north shores of Lake Washington.
How many of us truly love where we live? A lucky few, I’m sure.
For 10 years, politically active members of the Christ Church of Kirkland has imposed on Kenmore a singleminded political thought, deception, intolerance and outright hostility against anyone with political views that they do not agree with.
My name is Samantha, and I am in the eighth grade at Leota Junior High. I wish to write about the Northshore School District’s decision to bus the half day kindergarteners from their homes near Kokanee to Maywood Hills Elementary.
May is the third annual Milk Money Month for the Northshore Schools Foundation.
The Washington State PTA’s controversial partnership with McDonald’s continues to come under fire.
More than 300 supporters of public education gathered at the Northshore Schools Foundation’s “Light A Fire For Learning” luncheon and raised more than $120,000 to support students and teachers across our district on March 28.