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  • Malcomson January Soroptimist volunteer

    Feb 10, 2021

    The Soroptimist Honored Student for January, Sarah Malcomson, has learned how to be flexible and stay positive with virtual classes. Sarah, a senior at La Conner High School, enjoys having school in the comfort of her own home, while improving her time management skills. Sarah is a National Honor Society student who enjoys finding time for volunteering. English and AP Environmental Science and Geography are Sarah’s favorite classes. In college she wants to continue to explore lots of academic i...

  • Sports media career turned La Conner native into true globetrotter

    Bill Reynolds|Feb 10, 2021

    It goes without saying that Jim Bergem thinks the world of La Conner, the hometown that helped launch a wide-ranging career that has taken him to the far reaches of the globe. Bergem, the 1986 La Conner High student body president, calls Spokane home these days. But given that he has made stops in Taiwan and Malaysia while working in media and marketing, the Inland Empire seems just a stone’s throw away. Bergem credits a lifelong love of sports, plus support from family and his La Conner teachers, with encouraging him to venture beyond the b...

  • Skagit County Sheriff’s Office POLICE BLOTTER

    Feb 10, 2021

    Monday, Feb. 1 2:08 p.m.: Dog gone – Report of a black dog walking in the roadway. Deputy checked the area, but were unable to locate. Best / Chilberg Rds., Greater La Conner. Tuesday, Feb. 2 3:17 p.m.: Nervy thief – Caller reported the theft of a portable security camera from inside their home. Bradshaw Rd., Greater La Conner. Wednesday, Feb. 3 9:56 a.m.: Prowling around – Caller reported a vehicle prowl. The caller said her purse was taken from her unlocked vehicle and there was no damage to her car. State St, La Conner....

  • Daffodils, tulips will bloom; festivals still iffy

    Anne Basye|Feb 3, 2021

    Daffodils will begin blooming in March. Tulips will arrive in April. Whether tourists will be allowed to follow is up in the air. “What we’re telling people is, we know we’ll be open, we just don’t know yet what the regulations will allow,” said Skagit Valley Tulip Festival Executive Director Cindy Verge. Some things are certain. There will be a Tulip Festival brochure that includes a map of daffodil and tulip fields. There will not be a Mount Vernon Kiwanis managed salmon barbecue. “There ar...

  • La Conner’s schools: The superintendent’s 2020-2021 report

    Rich Stewart|Jan 27, 2021

    Oprah Winfrey is quoted as saying, “The greatest discovery of all time is that a person can change his future by merely changing his attitude.” Our School District is in the process of another change, which means there is an impact on our community as well. The La Conner School District has set a target date of February 1 to begin bringing students back to school. This will be a phased approach starting with pre-first grade students in a hybrid model; the details are on the La Conner School District website. We are hopeful that by the end of...

  • Thanks Tribe for support

    Jan 27, 2021

    As a parent of teens in La Conner, I would like to express deep appreciation on behalf of myself, and all of the La Conner Young Life Committee members, to the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community for their faithful support. The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community generously donated $15,000 to La Conner Young Life. This is not the only year that the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community has donated. They have been a faithful supporter to the efforts of Young Life in La Conner for over a decade. This support has been invaluable in enabling countless...

  • ANN WILDER

    Jan 27, 2021

    Ann Wilder, a long-time resident of La Conner, WA and formerly of Grapeview, WA passed away in Anacortes, WA on Friday, January 15, 2021. She was born in St. Louis, MO, on June 20, 1932, to Paul and Norma Burgoldt. As a young child, Ann went to Catholic boarding school with her sister Jean, and later went to elementary/middle school in Minneapolis. They embraced wintertime and used to skate the river between towns. By high school, Ann was living in Connecticut and graduated from Greenwich High...

  • School board and teachers agree on back-to-school rules

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 27, 2021

    The La Conner School Board on Monday approved a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the school district and La Conner Education Association addressing requirements for returning to school during the COVID-19 pandemic. The agreement focuses on putting in place health screening, masking, social distancing and room cleaning and sanitizing standards to safely bring students and staff back to school. “This gives everybody some structure with which to work through the hybrid model,” interim sup...

  • Windstorm fells trees, cuts power, disrupts lives

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 20, 2021

    It is often said that an ill wind blows no good. That being the case, the storm that blew through here last week was plenty sick. Fierce winds downed trees and power lines, caused major property damage, and left some residents in the La Conner area without electricity for up to four days. Images of the early Wednesday morning storm painted a grim picture. A Ford pickup parked at Jim White’s State Street residence was totaled by a fallen tree. A large Douglas fir blew over near the community k...

  • Elementary students will be in class Feb. 1, maybe

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 13, 2021

    La Conner students have done plenty of homework this year, due to the remote learning format adopted to curb spread of COVID-19. School officials have been loaded with homework, too. Their assignment: develop a plan to safely transition students to in-person instruction. A Feb. 1 start was part of the framework unanimously approved by school board members during a 75-minute Zoom meeting Monday night. La Conner Schools’ Director of Special Programs Andy Wheeler outlined the plan, which had been d...

  • School sports calendars again revamped

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 13, 2021

    Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, high school sports schedules have changed again and again. Still more changes were announced last Wednesday. The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA) executive board, in response to new pandemic guidelines outlined by Gov. Jay Inslee, has ruled practices for the traditional fall sports season can begin Feb. 1. After several planned launches dating to last summer, the WIAA is now calling the seven-week fall campaign Season 1. “The change in guidelines,” WIAA Executive Director Mick Hof...

  • 1970 album preserves La Conner Rotary Club history

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 13, 2021

    These days news is often shared via platforms and messaging networks that are ephemeral in nature. Think Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter, as examples. They are literally here today, gone tomorrow formats. But there is still room – on bookshelves and elsewhere – for time-honored means of sharing and preserving news, such as journals, clipbooks, and scrapbooks. The thick collection of news accounts from the pages of the Puget Sound Mail compiled 50 years ago by late La Conner business leader and Rotary Club officer Paul Thompson is a...

  • See local dancing duo on KOMO-4 at 6 p.m. tonight

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 6, 2021

    They love classic cars, but when Jerry and Jeri Kaufman of Burlington go for a spin it is just as likely to be on the dance floor. The couple’s love of dancing, apparent to all during La Conner Live summer Sunday concerts at Gilkey Square, will be featured on an “Eric’s Heroes” segment airing tonight (Wednesday) as part of the KOMO-4 6 p.m. newscast. Those in Seattle who have previewed the profile say it’s much-watch TV. No surprise here, where the Kaufmans are much admired for their rare zest f...

  • County has 3,105 COVID-19 cases

    Ken Stern|Jan 6, 2021

    Over 3,000 Skagit County residents tested positive for the novel coronavirus in 2020, with over one third, 1,021 COVID-19 cases in December. With the 658 reported November infections, over half, 56% of Skagit County’s COVID-19 cases, have been reported in the last two months. Last month 13 people died from COVID-19, one-third of the 40 deaths reported by Skagit Public Health. Fifty-three people were hospitalized in December, 27% of the 194 infection-causing hospitalizations last year, according to Public Health.. “The epidemiological and dea...

  • Teaching art remotely a creative endeavor

    Bill Reynolds|Jan 6, 2021

    Going digital has been the norm in public education since the COVID-19 pandemic forced classes on-line last spring. But within the La Conner Schools art department the learning curve has been less steep. District tech director Ryan Hiller brought a digital art class into the curriculum several years ago and last September veteran art teacher Patty Weber began teaching a technical art class on distance education platforms. Weber, who majored in Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Oregon,...

  • Robert Salazar retiring, delivers mail for La Conner one last time

    Bill Reynolds|Dec 30, 2020

    After two decades behind the counter, there is no denying Robert Salazar has put his stamp on the La Conner Post Office. His quick wit, gregarious spirit and positive outlook – traits that have defined Salazar even as he has dealt with serious health issues – have endeared him with postal patrons since his arrival here in 2000. “So many people stop in every day to say hello to Robert,” La Conner Postmaster Deborah Crump told the Weekly News. “Some of them are people who aren...

  • Charity Dakota Jordan Soroptimist volunteer

    Dec 30, 2020

    Charity Dakota Jordan, a junior at La Conner High School, is someone who has her priorities clearly in order -- first school and then work, she says. Charity, the Soroptimist International of La Conner Honored Student for December, balances being a Running Start student at Skagit Valley College with a job. Students in Running Start graduate the same year as their classmate with a LCHS diploma and a SVC Associate’s Degree earned under guidance of counselors at both institutions. Charity learns h...

  • Darlene Peters memorialized on national TV newscast

    Bill Reynolds|Dec 30, 2020

    Her remarkable devotion to others as she worked and traveled was well known to all in the Swinomish and La Conner communities where Darlene Peters grew up. Now the entire country knows, too. Peters was among recent COVID-19 victims whose memories were honored and many contributions saluted during the national PBS NewsHour broadcast Christmas night. “Out of all the COVID-19 deaths each week,” said Peters’ lifelong friend and former Swinomish Indian Tribal Community Senate Chairman Brian Cladoosby, “five are honored and their stories shared....

  • La Conner volleyball team serves Christmas spirit

    Bill Reynolds|Dec 23, 2020

    Though sidelined all fall by the COVID-19 pandemic, La Conner High’s two-time defending state title volleyball team has still been able to show its championship mettle. Team members have served up two major public service projects in response to the virus crisis, designing and creating custom La Conner Braves face coverings benefitting the Skagit Valley Hospital Foundation and delivering holiday goodie bags to La Conner Retirement Inn. The team has also shared a Zoom Christmas card with the L...

  • COVID-19 affects mental health

    Dec 23, 2020

    The COVID-19 pandemic is affecting people mentally, as well as physically, across the world, and in our local communities. As a 16-year-old high school student-athlete, I feel the isolation of not being with my peers and the anxiety that comes with not being able to participate in activities that I love. While I understand, rationally, the reason why I am not able to attend school or participate in sports, I wonder about the social/emotional health of our nation’s youth. According to the New York Times, “The proportion of children’s emerg...

  • KIRBY WALTER JOHNSON

    Dec 23, 2020

    Kirby Walter Johnson, 79, beloved husband, father, and grandfather, and lifelong Skagit Valley resident, died at home in La Conner on Thursday, December 10, 2020. Kirby was born on March 13, 1941 to Curtis and Dorothy Johnson. He graduated from La Conner High School in 1959, then earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Stanford University in 1963. Kirby then served in the U.S. Air Force from 1963 to 1967. In 1965, he married Pam Dalan at the Methodist church in La Conner. They first met in 1949 at Karen Irvin’s ballroom dancing class in...

  • Hoopla in the Loop-La celebrates students

    Dec 23, 2020

    Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the La Conner Schools campus has been a remote location this semester. That changed for a couple hours Wednesday afternoon. The La Conner Elementary School parking area morphed into a festive convergence zone with teachers donning favorite Christmas garb – and, of course, masks – while lined up to greet students and families as they drove through the school’s circular drop-off zone. Kids hung out of car windows, waving joyfully, and sharing gleeful s...

  • Avery Sloniker November Soroptimist volunteer

    Dec 16, 2020

    Avery Sloniker is the Soroptimist Honored Student for November. Avery is a senior at La Conner High School. This busy young woman is also a full time Running Start student at Skagit Valley College and enjoys sports and doing volunteer work. Avery is studying history, psychology and, her favorite class, political science at SVC. To stay connected with her friends at the high school Avery participates in the school band where she plays the trombone. She also is enrolled in Advisory at the high...

  • Online music classes have different rhythm

    Anne Basye|Dec 9, 2020

    The Gilkey Square tree lighting. Fall and spring concerts. Regional music educator festivals. Christmas wreath sales. Pep band. Maybe Disneyland. COVID-19 wiped the 2020-21 school music calendar clean, leaving La Conner Director of Bands and Choirs McKenzie Clark and his students to make music on-line. That is a challenge for an essentially face-to-face endeavor. When meeting in person, music classes begin with call-and-response warm-up exercises. Clark sings or plays a line; students repeat...

  • Delay of game: COVID-19 holds up high school sports schedules

    Bill Reynolds|Dec 9, 2020

    The tipoff to the La Conner High basketball season has been delayed once again. The reason is the COVID-19 pandemic, which has rebounded this fall: a tenacious, relentless full-court press. Because of statewide spikes in coronavirus cases, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA) executive board has delayed the start of Season 2, including boys’ and girls’ basketball and wrestling, from Dec. 28 to Feb. 1. The delay is the latest in a series of high school sports’ schedule changes prompted by the pandemic. In response to th...

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