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  • Swinomish Tribe collects but does not disburse taxes

    Mar 9, 2022

    The Swinomish Tax Authority used the same levy rate for 2022 as for 2021: $11.98 per thousand. But, the assessed value of homes in Shelter Bay and Pull & Be Damned increased from $178,838,070 to $196,284,197, an increase of $17,446,127. The Swinomish government hopes to collect $2,350,888 in taxes from Shelter Bay, Pull & Be Damned, Thousand Trails and Dunlap Towing. That’s $208,214 higher than last year. Three taxing districts will receive contributions from the Swinomish. These are: Fire District 13 at $300,000 ($100,000 more than last year),...

  • A poverty of riches

    Mar 9, 2022

    If you were to ask me last year what our state’s financial position would be, I likely would have given a fairly grim outlook. However, the state is seeing a boom in tax receipts so large it could make you blush. The opportunity to provide relief or prepare the state for future revenue decreases is ripe for the picking. Unfortunately, the mindset of Olympia’s legislative majority is a poverty of riches. It favors growing an already bloated and unaccountable bureaucracy while doing the bare minimum with our $15 billion surplus to help struggling...

  • Small boat fire snuffed by boat crews nearby

    Marissa Conklin|Mar 9, 2022

    Even the smallest of fires have the potential to stir up some trouble. A La Conner Maritime Service crew member noticed smoke coming from a sailboat at the end of J-dock in the La Conner Marina about 12:10 p.m. last Wednesday, March 2. He alerted Project Manager Joe Franett via radio to call the marina and 911. As other crew members alerted each other of flames coming from the boat’s aft cabin, Franett grabbed a fire extinguisher and launched a skiff with two other staff. They arrived on s...

  • Arrested development: Full game plan to stop store thefts

    Bill Reynolds|Mar 3, 2022

    It’s no secret that La Conner has a lot to offer. While the best things in life may be free, the goods and products, at local stores, galleries and eateries require payment. Some, though, as La Conner merchant and Chamber of Commerce board member Lisa Judy pointed out in last week’s Weekly News, try cashing in with the proverbial five-finger discount. Town officials and business leaders are hopeful that the newly expanded police services contract with the Skagit County sheriff’s office will help reduce incidents of shoplifting and theft. “We h...

  • Sgt. Jenny Sheahan-Lee again La Conner detachment chief

    Bill Reynolds|Mar 2, 2022

    The lineup at the Skagit County Sheriff’s Office La Conner detachment has been reshuffled. But residents here will not need a program or scorecard to recognize who is in charge. Sgt. Jenny Sheahan-Lee, assigned to La Conner between 2013-16, is returning, moving from supervisor of investigations. Mayor Ramon Hayes well recalls Sheahan-Lee’s prior tenure here. “Jenny did an excellent job,” Hayes told the Weekly News. “She’s very community-oriented and established a good rapport with everyone....

  • Water, agritourism, solar farms, growth probed at annual Ag summit

    Anne Basye|Feb 23, 2022

    Skagit County Commissioner Ron Wesen got the first word and Congressman Rick Larsen the last at the 6th annual Ag Summit hosted by Washington State University Skagit County Extension Feb. 11. The hybrid event, with lunch for those attending in-person, offered updates on everything from the county-sponsored farmland legacy and voluntary stewardship programs to new state rules for agricultural overtime pay. Water was a key topic. Skagit River water use is regulated by the Department of Ecology’s instream flow rule, protecting aquatic species a...

  • Skagit County Police Blotter

    Feb 16, 2022

    Sunday, February 8 8:31 p.m.: Road rage – Caller reported that 7 hours earlier a black Bronco had began following him and ended up road raging at him as the Bronco passed. Calhoun Rd, Greater La Conner. Monday, February 7 2:24 a.m.: Boat intruder– Caller reported a male in a green coat entered his boat while he was sleeping. The boat owner woke up and confronted the male, yelling at him to get off his boat. N. 1st St., La Conner. Tuesday, February 8 1:06 p.m.: Border Patrol Scam – Caller reported a phone scam. Caller said a...

  • Swinomish senate election has two contested seats

    Bill Reynolds|Feb 9, 2022

    This fall’s mid-term elections are already on the minds of voters here and around the nation. For Swinomish Tribal Community members, the 2022 election cycle begins Saturday with two senate races, one involving the 11-member panel’s chairman, Steve Edwards. Ballots will be cast at the tribe’s social services building. Edwards faces singer-songwriter Katherine Paul, the face of popular band Black Belt Eagle Scout, for senate seat 6. Former senator Joe Williams and Swinomish cultural events director Aurelia Bailey vie for seat 7, held by retir...

  • Meaningful tax relief / 2022 Supplemental budgets

    Feb 9, 2022

    Washington state has an unusual problem right now: too much money. Soaring tax revenue and billions in federal coronavirus pandemic relief funds have left lawmakers with a robust bottom line as they work to develop and agree upon the state’s three supplemental budgets: operating, transportation and capital. Typically, supplemental budgets make minor adjustments to the current two-year budgets. But it’s not a typical year. After nearly two years of Congress giving out trillions to help the economy stay afloat during the pandemic, both red and...

  • Town council members fill committee assignments

    Bill Reynolds|Feb 2, 2022

    The newly formed La Conner Town Council began laying the foundation for 2022 by finalizing committee assignments and tightening up ordinance language related to hazardous buildings during its one-hour Zoom session last week. New Councilmember Ivan Carlson, III flagged what he termed “broad” and “subjective” terminology in an ordinance section for abating structural dangers, questioning non-tangible references to infringements upon aesthetic and sensory standards. “They’re too broad,” said Carlson. “I feel there would be unintended cons...

  • Helping military families, disabled veterans

    Feb 2, 2022

    It is clear that individuals and families need better options for long-term care. This is especially true in rural communities like ours, where people want the resources to age or take care of a loved one at home. Private insurance used to be an option, but it is not affordable for most of us now. Worse, many plans do not cover pre-existing conditions. This leaves families with terrible choices. Many spend their life savings, sell their homes and go into bankruptcy to pay for long-term care. We even see couples married for over 50 years get...

  • FCCs will be road to Skagit County ‘suburbanization’

    Anne Basye|Jan 19, 2022

    Changing county planning rules to permit fully contained communities (FCCs) “opens the door for making this county suburban,” said Margery Hite last Tuesday, Jan. 11, during an online Community Conversation sponsored by the Skagit Valley Food Co-op. “Growth in Skagit Valley: Our Future, Farming & FCCs” drew about 90 Zoom participants, La Conner residents among them. Hite is on the grassroots campaign ‘Right Growth, Right Place’ advisory group, which opposes permitting FCCs. She described FCCs and their likely impact on Skagit County in g...

  • Championing specific bills this legislative session

    Jan 19, 2022

    The Washington State Legislature convened at noon on Monday, Jan. 10, starting the clock on a 60-day legislative session. For the House of Representatives, at least for the first few weeks of session, that means another fully virtual format. For now, I am able to work out of my Olympia office. In the coming weeks, I will continue to push for changes that improve the public’s ability to take part in-person in the legislative process. Repealing the Long-Term Care Act There will be some tough public policy debates this session. One of the most c...

  • Advancing a sustainable economy

    Jan 12, 2022

    In my work as your representative over the last three years, I’ve had the opportunity to meet so many of you and your neighbors, listen to your concerns and learn about what issues affect your daily lives. From those conversations, it is clear the Legislature should support?a sustainable economy that?allows?all members of our community?to thrive.? Our?state must?improve access to higher education and family-wage jobs, foster?economic development and recovery in rural communities and prioritize healthcare and our quality of life. This s...

  • Louis Duane “Red” Bretvick

    Jan 5, 2022

    Louis Duane “Red” Bretvick, age 94, passed away on Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2021 in Mount Vernon, WA. Duane was born September 26, 1927, in Mount Vernon, WA to Laverne (nee McNeil) and Louis (Lud) Bretvick. He was raised in the family household on the north fork of the Skagit River. He attended La Conner schools and was a La Conner High School class of 1945 graduate. Following high school graduation he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, and honorably served in WWII and the Korean conflict. While in the Nav...

  • John Leaver and Bill Stokes finish town council terms

    Bill Reynolds|Dec 29, 2021

    The people have spoken, but the last word in La Conner’s 2021 election goes to Councilmembers Bill Stokes and John Leaver, whose terms expire as the year ends. Voters did not return them to the council table, instead choosing challengers Rick Dole and Ivan Carlson, III in November in campaigns emphasizing public and traffic safety, law enforcement, housing, protection of public open spaces and retention of La Conner’s much coveted quality of life. Stokes and Leaver – as well as longtime Councilmember Jacques Brunisholz, who resigned in...

  • CURTIS ANTHONY BUHER

    Dec 29, 2021

    Curtis (Curt) Anthony Buher passed away peacefully on December 20, 2021 at his home on Pleasant Ridge near La Conner, Washington. He was 66 years old. After being diagnosed with brain cancer in the Spring, Curt was able to spend his last months with family and friends. Curt was born Sept. 23, 1955 in Bremerton, Washington, to Donald and Juanita Buher. He was the youngest of four children. Curt grew up across the street from the town tennis courts and began playing with a shortened racquet when...

  • LOUIS DUANE BRETVICK “RED”

    Dec 29, 2021

    Louis Duane Bretvick, age 94, a longtime La Conner resident, passed away on Tuesday, December 21, 2021. Visitation will be held at Kern Funeral Home on Wednesday, January 5, 2022 from 11:00 AM to 8:00 PM, followed by visitation on Thursday, January 6, 2022, 9:00 AM to 10:00AM. Funeral services will be held on Thursday, January 6, 2022, 1:00 PM at Salem Lutheran Church followed by graveside services at Pleasant Ridge Cemetery. A complete obituary will be published in a future edition of the Skagit Valley Herald. Funeral arrangements are under...

  • Council signs 5 year Sheriff’s agreement

    Ken Stern|Dec 22, 2021

    The La Conner Town Council agreed, with Councilmember John Leaver voting no, to a five year agreement with the Skagit County Sheriff’s Office at its Dec. 14 meeting. New to the contract is patrol and community policing services, with twice weekly pedestrian patrols on Morris and First Streets. Deputies will now handle dangerous dogs, parking, blocking rights of way and camping on public property. La Conner becoming a base in a precinct-type system may be three years away, Administrator Scott Thomas said. Mayor Ramon Hayes introduced the i...

  • PUBLIC HEARING: 2022 annual budget vote by town council Tuesday

    Ken Stern|Dec 12, 2021

    Before the La Conner Town Council approves the 2022 annual budget Dec. 14, it will hold a public hearing during its Tuesday meeting. The hearing is listed under unfinished business near the start of the 6 p.m. meeting. The council will then vote on an ordinance to approve the 2022 budget. The meeting will be over Zoom only. Council will vote on its 2022 agreement with Skagit County Sheriff’s Office immediately before the public hearing. The agreement is for the years 2022-2026 with $338,547 “the cost for contract services provided from Jan...

  • Country Inn has new owners

    Ken Stern|Dec 8, 2021

    Meet Katie Hayton and her siblings, Amy Schwab and Dan Senff. They, and their spouses, are the new owners of the La Conner Country Inn. Sales papers were signed Dec. 1, Hayton told the Weekly News in an interview Sunday. The new owners know La Conner real estate and business well. Their grandfather owned the Second Street block the Country Inn is on and the AGA grocery store on the Swinomish Channel at Morris Street. Seaport Books, handmade la conner and other businesses are in the enlarged and...

  • Annual town budget close to final totals

    Ken Stern|Dec 1, 2021

    La Conner town’s council is posed to pass the town’s 2022 annual budget at its Dec. 14 meeting. At their Nov. 23 meeting, held on Zoom only, members, the mayor and staff seemed in general agreement on the items they discussed. No resident was present or spoke during the budget public hearing agenda segment. Discussion centered on social infrastructure, first the need to catch up with equipment for the fire department. The department budget will be raised to about $175,000 from October’s $144,596 initial amount. Fire Chief Aaron Reinstra and m...

  • I am against the proposed 5-year sheriff’s contract

    John Leaver|Nov 24, 2021

    My thoughts about law enforcement in La Conner: • The sheriff is a town “vendor.” If any vendor has complaints regarding provision of contracted services, it makes little sense granting the vendor a longer, five-year contract which, except for commitment to walk First Street twice weekly, is essentially the same. Logic dictates finding an alternative vendor or re-thinking the contract entirely. • Current/ proposed contract provides 80 hours weekly patrolling Zone 1 and “guaranteeing” a ten minute response. • During 2020-20...

  • Lots of happenings at the library

    Susan Macek and Jared Fair|Nov 24, 2021

    5 Festival of Tiny Trees From “Kiss Me Under the MistleJoe,” to “Skagit Valley Tree of Plenty,” 29 tabletop trees featured in local businesses created a buzz in downtown La Conner last weekend, as the holiday season kicked off with the Festival of Tiny Trees Trail. Started five years ago in the library as a silent auction of decorated tabletop trees, the event took a year off in 2020. This year a new twist featured local merchants, many of whom wanted to showcase a tree in their shops. A total of 29 trees were decorated by local businesses a...

  • Gathering religiously in pandemic times

    Rabbi Joshua Samuels|Nov 17, 2021

    In last year’s Pew Research Center survey on religion in America, we learned that the COVID-19 pandemic actually bolstered one’s religious faith. Nearly 30% of those surveyed reported a strengthening of their faith because of the pandemic. This number was almost double that of most other developed countries. In the early days of the pandemic my congregation saw an uptick in our Friday night sabbath observance numbers, even though we had gone entirely virtual. It was clear that people wanted to feel connection even if they were not able to sta...

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