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  • A deeper clean

    Rabbi Daniel A. Weiner|Apr 21, 2021

    It is a familiar ritual at this time of year, inspired by nature’s obvious cues: The need for Spring Cleaning. The budding flowers and greening trees of the outdoors evoke a desire to revitalize what is inside. We clean out garages and closets, defrost refrigerators, replant gardens and even delve into some cyber-hygiene of our hard and software. But with such wholesale rehabilitation of our physical spaces, our internal inventories of attitudes and behavior and the effort toward personal refinement they should inspire, often get short s...

  • School buses safe to ride

    Apr 21, 2021

    Dear Parents of La Conner Elementary School: A letter was sent from the elementary school principal stating that La Conner School buses are at greater risk and your child could become infected with COVID-19 on the bus. Your bus drivers would like to correct this statement. We have not had a single case of COVID-19 attributed to riding our buses. We are following the OSPI (Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction) protocol. The State of Washington requires buses to separate students as much as possible, assign seating, have windows down an...

  • Equity for all or only kids?

    Apr 14, 2021

    La Conner schools has a new superintendent come July 1: Will Nelson, now director of equity and student success at Arlington’s public schools. For Nelson, and all educators, providing an equitable education is a commitment to fairness, so that every student has the opportunity to obtain a quality education. Since some children navigate a variety of obstacles just to arrive at school while others are fortunate to enter classrooms holding silver spoons, there is a wide gap educators must bridge to get all students to a high level of learning. T...

  • Dumping donations a problem

    Apr 14, 2021

    Soroptimist International of La Conner would like to thank the La Conner Weekly News for the front page photo and caption highlighting the reopening of Vintage La Conner, our thrift store. We are also thankful for the article on page two asking the community to refrain from dumping donations on our porches. Unfortunately, the dumping continues. And it is a big problem for us. Our club is operating the store with fewer than normal volunteers and a challenged budget due to the pandemic. We are open three days a week, rather than six, as before...

  • A Town housing alternative

    Ken Stern|Apr 7, 2021

    There is no alternative. — Margaret Thatcher Dan Armland’s family had been around so long it was sometimes difficult for newcomers to Ma Donner to know where his farm property ended and the town’s boundary began. The ballfield on which generations of kids had grown up learning baseball and teamwork as well as playing frisbee fetch with their dogs was his family’s. So Mayor Herman Rays was not surprised when Armland called and asked to meet him for coffee at the Ma Donner Coffee Company. He was surprised when Dan told him, putting his s...

  • Many thanks for FD 13

    Apr 7, 2021

    I really want to say that the public relations and outreach Fire District 13 continues to provide to our Swinomish Indian Tribal Community has not only been creative but it has nurtured our Spirits too, throughout 2020 and continues in 2021. For example, FD 13 has a staff member call me every single morning through a “Good Morning” program I signed up for when I first fell ill a few years ago. I also qualified for it because I am a Swinomish Elder. I look forward to their phone call every morning, especially during this pandemic. If I don...

  • “Small d” democratic moments

    Ken Stern|Mar 31, 2021

    The La Conner community – actually a subset of parents, staff and residents of the school district – spent most of Saturday listening to and questioning candidates for the district’s superintendent position. Some folks returned Monday and Tuesday to provide input to the La Conner School District Board of Directors before a new superintendent was chosen today. Last Wednesday evening another portion of the community, again parents and residents, met with Town elected officials and staff over Zoom to discuss the purpose and shape of th...

  • Are we getting our money’s worth?

    Mar 31, 2021

    There has been a rise in crime in town: car prowls, burglaries and a robbery have occurred since the start of the pandemic. For heaven’s sake, the Town’s Department of Public Works has been robbed twice. It is worth noting the problems at the Port with the theft of expensive equipment from boat owners. The Town contracts with the Skagit County Sheriff’s department to the tune of $330,000 a year. Gone are the days of community policing, with Sheriffs walking through town, meeting merchants, residents and visiting the schools. Last year thing...

  • Life bridged communities

    Mar 31, 2021

    Thank you thank you Ken Stern for printing the whole tribal obituary of Mike Cladoosby, and thank you to the writer. It was like a history of the bridge between the Swinomish Tribe and La Conner. I didn’t know Mike Cladoosby personally but I feel I got to know him through the stories told in this obituary. What a pillar of the Tribe, the school and the La Conner community. Joan Cross La Conner...

  • Selling ballfield a mistake

    Mar 31, 2021

    I was saddened and frustrated to hear about the town council and mayor’s decision to sell the Hedlin Ballpark, most of which will be developed into housing. I think this is a tremendous mistake by town leaders that will erase a cherished place for La Conner’s youth citizens. For kids growing up in La Conner the Hedlin Ballpark was the place many of us first learned to play baseball, soccer or failed at attempts to fly a kite. Its pastoral backdrop is seared into our memories along with wads of bubble gum, sunflower seeds and the unforgettable f...

  • Creating tax fairness

    Mar 31, 2021

    Republicans in the state legislature oppose new taxes. Always have, always will. In his column in last week’s Weekly News, Senator Ron Muzzall follows the party line. He opposes SB5096, recently passed by the state senate by a 25-24 margin, calling it an underhanded attempt to institute a state income tax. He is wrong. This bill is about tax fairness. It would impose a 7% tax on capital gains over $250,000 a year. It will affect only about eight thousand of the state’s almost eight million residents, and it would raise, according to est...

  • America in decline, like Rome

    Mar 31, 2021

    Some have written about the slowing down of our court system during the pandemic. The history of Rome shows us how bad our current situation really is. In its early days, Rome suffered from a terrible epidemic. Rome’s public affairs depended on everyone being involved. The epidemic sickened not only public officials and militia members but also brought the justice system and elections apparatus to its knees, says historian Livy. The problem in America today is that our people are not engaged in processes of government like Romans were. Rome r...

  • If I ran the zoo

    Mel Damski|Mar 31, 2021

    COVID-19 has been demanding social isolation, which is a real challenge for someone like me. But isolation does not mean stagnation and I have been blessed with a wonderful companion, my dog Rosie, who turns 1-year-old on April Fool’s Day. Rosie and I spend a lot of time driving around Skagit County admiring what a beautiful place we get to live in. When I see something particularly stunning, I stop my car and take my iPhone out of my pocket and snap a picture, like the one you are looking at r...

  • Creating affordable housing

    Ken Stern|Mar 24, 2021

    La Conner is growing. In 2021 its housing stock will increase with developments on and above Maple Avenue. Ten homes will be built on the current ballfield. Mayor Ramon Hayes’ Maple View complex five blocks south adds four more. On Snapdragon Hill, C.J. Ebert is developing lots for another seven residences. These will all be market rate homes, selling for whatever price the developer and buyer agree to. These high priced homes will be good news for the town government, increasing the property tax base and adding stable dollars to its budget for...

  • Lundsten leaves county planning commission

    Mar 24, 2021

    Statement of resignation read March 9, 2021 I am resigning from the Planning Commission, effective immediately. I choose not to serve with a group that inappropriately and actively has sought to repress free ex- pression of ideas, by me, other Commissioners, and the public. As you know, the Planning Commission censured me for disagreeing with them in public, outside of deliberations. I am not asking the Planning Commission or the Board to remove the censure. I have protested and done my best, and I failed to convince the Commission to change...

  • Happiness, happiness, you shall pursue

    Rabbi Joshua Samuels|Mar 24, 2021

    In last year’s World Happiness Report – published before COVID-19 changed our lives in profound ways – the United States ranked 18th out of the 153 countries studied. And in a Harris poll from a few years ago, 33% of Americans surveyed indicated they were happy. This suggests that roughly 67% of us are not very happy with our lives. No doubt the numbers are probably more dim these days. These statistics are baffling considering that to many of the greatest minds ever, achieving happiness is of the utmost importance, and we are f...

  • At the start of the second year of our COVID-19 normal world

    Ken Stern|Mar 17, 2021

    One year. It is a sad anniversary, a year since the coronavirus pandemic turned the world on its head. It has been a year of forced changes, uncertainty, sickness and death. It has been a year of working from home, reduced hours and lost jobs. It has been a year of closed schools, students trying to learn from home and parents, usually moms, adjusting their schedules, with many moms giving up their jobs to supervise and support their children. 2020 was the year of no: No eating out; no festivals, concerts or parades; no fireworks; no sports; no...

  • Reflections on a year

    Dr. Howard Leibrand|Mar 17, 2021

    March provides the first of several heavy anniversaries for Skagit County. On March 10, 2020, the first case of COVID-19 was reported in Skagit County. On March 13, Gov. Jay Inslee closed schools in order to protect students, staff and the community at large from COVID-19 spread. On March 17, Skagit County first became aware of the Skagit Valley Chorale outbreak, which would lead to the loss of two Skagitonians – some of the first known casualties from COVID-19 in Washington state. On March 23, the first “Stay Home, Stay Healthy” ord...

  • A chance to “Choose to Challenge”

    Ken Stern|Mar 10, 2021

    Monday was International Women’s Day, celebrated around the world. It is always a good idea to look back, whether it is two days or two centuries, almost as critical as looking forward. The future is where everyone lives. We can take this slogan with us: “‘Choose to Challenge.” It was the theme for International Women’s Day, March 8, 2021. It is the theme for a year and for a lifetime. “A challenged world is an alert world. And from challenge comes change. So let’s all #ChooseToChallenge.” It is as easy as raising your hand. That is the message...

  • COVID-19 lessons to learn

    Mar 10, 2021

    COVID-19 has a lot to teach the human family. The underlying chronic malaise of the body politic is glaring inequality and its consequence, sheer poverty, which means lack of adequate income, shelter, health care, food, job security and education. In short, human misery. School is a great leveler, and without it children from poorer homes are having almost insuperable difficulties trying to continue their education through home-schooling. It has been hard enough for middle-class families in book-lined homes. What happens to children in noisily...

  • Culture cancels freedom

    Mar 10, 2021

    As the pitiful craziness grows called “cancel culture,” and freedom of speech is denied, I want to submit just one quotation: “Liberty is meaningless where the right to utter one’s thoughts and opinions has ceased to exist.” Frederick Douglass (born a slave, became a free man, was a friend to Abraham Lincoln, and a hero to Martin Luther King). Nancy Burlison Shelter Bay...

  • Tribe tax system unfair

    Mar 10, 2021

    The Swinomish Tax Authority reduced the levy rate for 2021 to $11.98 per thousand from $12.35 per thousand. The assessed value of homes in Shelter Bay and Pull & Be Damned remained roughly the same, so most taxpayers will see a 3% decrease in taxes. The Swinomish government plans to collect $2,142,674 in taxes from Shelter Bay, Pull & Be Damned, Thousand Trails and Dunlap Towing. It will contribute $1,077,702 to three taxing districts. These are: Fire District 13 at $200,000, La Conner Library at $27,702, plus $250,000 to a sinking fund for...

  • Human impacts on the environment

    Mar 3, 2021

    The word “environment” has become to some a political word. In the last four years the presidential administration in Washington dismantled many environmental policies and rules. For instance, the Obama-era Clean Power Plan was replaced, the Endangered Species Act was redefined and the Oil and Natural Gas extraction ban was lifted. The Coal Ash rule, which regulates the disposal of toxic coal waste, was weakened and mercury and Clean Air standards were revised. During this time a coal lobbyist and an oil and gas industry ally were leading the...

  • Our everyday local leaders

    Ken Stern|Mar 3, 2021

    Hardy souls that ventured beyond the Washington Street sledding hill during the hefty snowstorm Saturday, Feb. 13 and trudged downtown saw the Town’s public works staff laboring mightily, blowing, shoveling and plowing First Street’s sidewalks and roadway. Once the staff finished First, they came back Sunday to finish Morris Street, go up Maple Avenue and circle the town’s perimeter, blowing snow off Caledonia Street’s sidewalk. The Town’s staff did yeoman’s work in difficult weather. That they are the backbone of La Conner’s infrastructur...

  • When is enough enough?

    Sen. Ron Muzzall|Mar 3, 2021

    My mom was a great cook and baker. Every year as we neared my birthday, she would ask what kind of cake I wanted. It was the same every year, but she would ask anyway before making the four-layer chocolate cake with a pudding-based filling and a hard frosting. As much as I loved that cake, I could not make it through a second piece. In other words, no matter how good it was, enough was enough. It often resulted in a queasy feeling in my stomach. I am having that feeling right now. While this pandemic has been no party, I am a little concerned...

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