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Articles from the August 28, 2024 edition


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  • A group of anglers form a line in a river

    Go fishing!

    Judy Booth|Aug 28, 2024

    Samish River fishing is classified as "combat fishing" – it's so crowded fisher people jockey for a place to plunk their poles in the water. A mini-boatless Bristol Bay. Over 50 hopeful fisher people attired in hip waders, camouflage jackets, ball caps and sunglasses, holding nets and casting poles, crowded the Samish River Sunday morning at the Samish River bridge on Bayview-Edison Road west of Farm to Market Road. The bridge is across from those cool live-aboard boat moorings. At 9:30 a.m. f...

  • Leo Roozen honored at La Conner 'Magic of Rotary' dinner auction

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    It's rare to be the recipient of a Rotary International Paul Harris Fellow Award, presented to those who have made significant contributions to the organization's wide range of public service programs. That being the case, local tulip grower Leo Roozen is doubly esteemed by area Rotarians. Roozen received his second Paul Harris honor during the La Conner Rotary Club's annual dinner and auction at Maple Hall Saturday night. The chapter will contribute $1,000 in his name to their international...

  • Fitness club in former COA gets support at hearing

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    The couple planning to open a martial arts studio and fitness club on Maple Avenue at Washington Street didn’t face much of a fight when the project went before Town Hearing Examiner David Lowell last week. Tracy and April Emmanuelson-Barnett received overwhelming support during a well-attended one-hour public hearing on their application for a permit to revamp the former COA building on Maple Avenue. It has been vacant for two years after having been operated as restaurants since the 1970s, a non-conforming use in a residential zone. Lowell s...

  • League of Women Voters' forum tackles Skagit housing shortage

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    The challenges of balancing preservation of farmland, forest areas and wetlands with development of affordable workforce housing in Skagit Valley are many and abundantly clear. Solutions, though, are less apparent and more elusive – but sorely needed, and now. The Skagit County League of Women Voters brought attention to the issue, organizing a 90-minute public forum in Sedro-Woolley Aug. 21, emphasizing the challenge that has priced working families out of the valley and shrunk the labor pool. Some 100 people attended and more watched on Y...

  • Labor Day = Memorial Day

    Ken Stern|Aug 28, 2024

    13 issues printed since July 5, 2017. 16 weeks to paper’s final issue. Monday is Labor Day, the last of the summer season holidays and the unofficial start of fall. It is the picnic and barbeque holiday, the gather friends and family together occasion, the toast the kids before they head off or back to college or return to the classroom holiday. It is a holiday that is uniquely American, as if our laborers are special, and separate from the riff raff of all the other workers around the world. The U.S. Congress created Labor Day in 1894 to d...

  • Town's housing commitment?

    Aug 28, 2024

    The Hearing Examiner’s decisions shouldn’t be a popularity contest. The code, the council, and administration shouldn’t leave it up to a hearing examiner’s decision to ensure a future with adequate housing! If the Municipal Code isn’t strong enough to preference housing over commercial use...especially in already residentially- zoned areas!... what has to change? This is not a new problem. Is it the municipal code? Or the council’s or administration’s or planning department’s commitments to housing? (Especially affordable housing... whet...

  • Investigate Rylee Fleury's campaign

    Aug 28, 2024

    There are two candidates for Skagit County Commissioner, District 1, Ron Wesen and Rylee Fleury. I support neither, but I wish to know who will be representing the affairs of this county for the next term. Unfortunately Fleury is vague on professional experience, education and community service in the voters’ pamphlet and his personal statement sounds like it was written by someone else for him. He has a billboard on Hwy 20 as well as many yard signs and a large box truck plastered with large campaign signage on its sides. These cost a lot o...

  • Trump proves he is imperfect

    Aug 28, 2024

    Those who support the reelection of Mr. Donald Trump remind us that none of us are perfect, that to lash out at one over another is unfair, that we all have our faults. It must be said, however, that some individuals appear to be more imperfect than others, especially those in high places. “The US could have averted 40% of the deaths from COVID-19,” according to a Lancet commission (England) tasked with assessing Donald Trump’s health policy record. In seeking to respond to the pandemic, Trump has been widely condemned for “not taking the pan...

  • Anacortes water overcharges

    Aug 28, 2024

    I met with the mayor and the administrator of La Conner on Aug. 21. The purpose of the meeting was to see if the Town was going to contest the amount of money the Town of La Conner paid to the City of Anacortes for water for 2021 and 2022. The answer was “no.” The agreement between the town and the city calls for arbitration if there is a disagreement, but the mayor and the administrator found no problem, no need to sit down with the mayor of Anacortes. This, in spite of the fact that Anacortes, by my calculation, owes us $46,858 for 2021 and...

  • Once exotic, it's almost 'Tuesday' for electric vehicles

    Greg Whiting|Aug 28, 2024

    From 1999 – 2001, I worked for Florida Power & Light. Part of my job was to figure out how that company should make use of energy technologies that were just emerging from the laboratory into commercial use. Twenty-five years later, to borrow a line from Raul Julia in “Street Fighter,” some of the technologies I was studying “are Tuesday.” In other words, they’re no longer exotic. They no longer attract attention. They’re just what exists, barely worthy of comment. Compact fluorescent l...

  • LD 10 candidates spent heavily to win votes

    Ken Stern|Aug 28, 2024

    How much would you spend to win a seat in the Washington state Senate? To continue representing Legislative District 10, incumbent Sen. Ron Muzzall (R-Oak Harbor) spent $462,878 ahead of the Aug. 6 primary. That is $18.72 for each of the 24,724 votes he received. That won him 48.2% of the vote. He may spend that much more trying to win reelection in November. His opponent, Janet St. Clair, an Island County commissioner, came in second, both in votes and campaign spending. In gaining 23,391...

  • Corps of Engineers to start Swinomish Channel dredging Sept. 9

    Anne Basye|Aug 28, 2024

    Dredging in the Swinomish Channel will begin Sept. 9 and continue until mid-February, says the U.S. Army Corps of ­Engineers. Last dredged in 2018, the 11-mile long, 100-feet wide, 12-feet deep federal navigation channel is dredged every four to six years because “navigation through the channel is essential for commerce in the area,” said Sara Young, executive director of the Port of Skagit. Most of the work during the round-the-clock, six-days-a-week project will take place at the entrances of the channel. At the south end, the Skagit Rive...

  • Celebration of Life

    Aug 28, 2024

    A celebration of life will be held for Mike Chevalier from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 14, at the Shelter Bay clubhouse. Soft liquor will be served and Santo Coyote will cater a taco bar. Please come and share a favorite story about Mike....

  • Corrections

    Aug 28, 2024

    July 5, 2017, was the first issue of the La Conner Weekly News published under Ken Stern’s ownership. The editor apologizes to the publisher for this typo appearing in last week’s edition, the 372nd he has edited, of the Weekly News. The Aug. 21 editorial on housing incorrectly stated that COA, the previous user at 214 Maple Ave., operated under a conditional-use permit. It operated as a pre-existing, non-conforming use. The ability to use the site as a restaurant again became invalid after six months. The property’s zoning has been resid...

  • Volleyball players form a circle before practice

    Braves will rely on youth for volleyball this season

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    It was a back-to-work Monday morning this week for La Conner High School volleyball team players and coaches. After a busy summer of team camps and open gyms, head coach Pam Keller, assistant Kamea Luna and a roster led by lone senior Addie Wigal were eager to hit the Landy James Activity Court hardwood by 9 a.m. "We're very young this year," Keller said. She guided the Braves to a state tourney berth last year in her first season as head coach. "But this is a very coachable group," Keller...

  • Braves start 8-man grid season

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    Remember “Eight Is Enough,” the popular 1970s TV drama? It’s now the new mantra for La Conner High School football, at least for the next two seasons. Faced with declining enrollment as the smallest Class 2B school system in Washington, La Conner school officials opted following the 2023 season and a series of community meetings to downsize the team to eight players. The Braves will play an independent eight-man schedule this season and next. They will not be eligible for post-season action. Playoff spots are reserved for 1B schools. Durin...

  • School district's cell phone policy launching

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    Classes haven't started yet but two La Conner High School students already have homework. Emmalin Goodman and Kellie Cayou-Lockrem will be providing feedback to school board members on the district's new cell phone policy, their first task as the board's new student ­representatives. "We value your input," board member John Agen told the panel's student reps. "We'd like to have you be the most engaged student representatives we've ever had." Board President Susie Deyo said that rather than assig...

  • A girl sings and plays ukelele

    Junior Art Walk helps kids express themselves

    Stephanie Banaszak|Aug 28, 2024

    La Conner businesses shared a common thread of creativity last weekend with the first annual Junior Art Walk Friday. Area tweens and teens' – our next generation of artists – artwork was displayed in merchants' windows throughout Morris and First streets. The La Conner Swinomish Library hosted weekly art-making sessions on Wednesday mornings leading up to the event. Art supplies were purchased from Mystic Art Supply based on adult mentor artists' subjects. Instruction varied from sel...

  • Rufous hummingbird will fly south

    Rosi Jansen|Aug 28, 2024

    Summer is coming to an end and pretty soon the Rufous hummingbirds will follow their instinct and migrate south to Mexico and further. Right now they're constantly feeding and fighting with the Anna's hummingbirds in order to put on extra weight for their long way south. They make this trip individually, not in the security of a flock, but may be stopping in some places along the way. Most of the males have already left, but at our house we still see a lot of smaller females who may have been...

  • A&E BRIEFLY

    Aug 28, 2024

    Mark your calendars for these upcoming arts and entertainment activities. BrewFest on the Skagit. Annual fundraiser for the Lincoln Theatre Foundation, now sponsored by the Mount Vernon Chamber of Commerce. Saturday, Sept. 7, 2-7 p.m. Music by The Chris Eger Band, Eden and Friends for the Ghost. Cold beer, cider, wine and delicious food. South First Street and West Broadway, Mount Vernon. $37 ticket includes six samples. Tickets at mountvernonchamber.com/. Join local poet Susan Rich for an introduction to writing poetry about visual art, 4-5...

  • Legal Notices

    Aug 28, 2024

    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR SKAGIT COUNTY KEITH DEWEY, as his separate property Plaintiff vs. THE HEIRS & DEVISEES OF ROY E. HAGIN, Deceased; THE HEIRS & DEVISEES OF NELLIE E. HAGIN, Deceased; THE HEIRS & DEVISEES OF LEONARD E. HAGIN, Deceased; THE HEIRS & DEVISEES OF DOROTHY HAGIN, Deceased; AND ALL OTHER PERSONS UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY INTEREST IN OR TO THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY Defendants № 24-2-00745-29 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION THE STATE OF WASHINGTON TO: ALL PERSONS UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY INTEREST IN OR TO THE SUBJECT REAL PROPERTY, D...

  • A plate of cooked string beans

    Fresh beans

    Patricia Aqiimuk Paul Esq.|Aug 28, 2024

    This recipe prepared in an Instant Pot can also be cooked in a pot on the stove. For vegetarians, leave out the bacon and add your herbs of choice. Ingredients Green, yellow, purple beans, 2 cups Bacon, 1 slice Onion, 2 slices Water, 1 cup Preparation Rinse beans and remove stem end. Cut bacon into several pieces, place in pot with onion. Use sauté mode for bacon and onion. Do not overcook. Turn off sauté mode. Add whole fresh beans and water. Stir. Attach pressure lid and close valve. P...

  • Community Calendar

    Aug 28, 2024

    HEADS UP The La Conner wastewater treatment plant will close at 11 a.m. Friday, Sept. 6, to septage hauling, yard waste dumping and compost pickup. The plant is expected to be closed most of the day. NOT TO BE MISSED Join local poet Susan Rich for a short introduction to writing poetry about visual art, 4-5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7, at the Museum of Northwest Art. Get inspired by art in MoNA’s galleries and other poets writing around you. You will have the opportunity to have your work published on MoNA’s website and to read it at the Poetry Ope...

  • Burned house demolished, hauled off in just two days

    Bill Reynolds|Aug 28, 2024

    A Woodinville contractor made fast work mid-month of demolishing a La Conner home gutted in a June fire. Greater Seattle Construction needed just two days, Aug.14-15, to knock down a North Fifth Street house destroyed in a June 19 blaze that sent plumes of black smoke wafting over town and produced noxious fumes that lingered in the neighborhood for weeks. Nearby residents, some of whom said their houses sustained smoke damage and others impacted by the foul-smelling air, lobbied town officials...

  • Police Blotter

    Aug 28, 2024

    Sunday, Aug. 18 4:29 p.m.: The case of the unknown napper – Caller went to his sailboat and found that several hatches were open and it appeared someone had been sleeping in the bed. There was nothing missing from inside and the caller was unsure when someone was last there. A deputy couldn’t locate cameras or evidence on who had been there. Sailboat was locked and secured. N. Second Street, La Conner. Tuesday, Aug. 20 9:04 p.m.: Keep on truckin’ – Caller reported a suspicious truck in Pioneer Park with a male who seemed to be living in it....