Thursday, March 13, 2014

Puget Sound Energy to hold three "Energize Eastside" workshops

Energize Eastside – First Sub-Area Committee Workshop
Old Redmond Schoolhouse Community Center, 16600 NE 80th St., Redmond
March 19, 6:30 – 9:00 pm
 
Puget Sound Energy invites you to participate in the first in a series of workshops, as part of PSE’s Energize Eastside project. PSE has formed Sub-Area Committees to delve further into three geographic sub-areas on the Eastside. Over a series of two workshops in March and April (meeting details below), these Sub-Area Committees will be working side-by-side with community members to learn more about the Energize Eastside project,  understand local area issues and assess potential route segments against community values.   Read More >>

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

City of Redmond shows progress towards improving the environment

Four city planners delivered to the Redmond City Council two significant environmental progress reports at their last study session.  Environmental planner Cathy Beam gave a Climate Action Plan update on green building projects and Stream habitat planners Roger Dane and Tom Harding discussed restoration of  Redmond streams.  Read More >>

Vote YES On LWSD Growth Bond


We need students in permanent classrooms, not temporary ones, designed for the quality education we demand for our growing population.  A YES vote on next month’s LWSD Bond would do just that.  It will solve overcrowding at Redmond’s elementary and middle schools as well as Kirkland’s two large high schools.  It balances the district with a trending STEM high school on the west side. It gets Juanita High School out of the portables they have had for 30 years (plus gives their majority of classrooms windows)!

Being retired and living on a fixed income, I looked at my recent property appraisal and taxes.  It was great to see the value of my Kirkland improvements and land go up 17% while my real estate tax only went up 11%; hence, my current tax distribution rate went down!  We can afford the $10 per month on the average sized home and should want to for our future generations and neighboring communities.

The LWSD Board listened to the 30.74% who voted and reduced the Bond amount.  Be part of the overwhelming 57.79% majority that said yes in February to that one and VOTE YES now on this Bond by April 22nd to clear the 60% hurdle.
By Matthew Gregory

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Municipal League Recommends YES Vote on April 22 Metro Transit and Roads Ballot Measure

Municipal League Recommends YES Vote on
April 22, 2014 Metro Transit and Roads Ballot Measure
 
 
The Municipal League recommends a Yes vote on Proposition 1. We believe that our growing region needs to make investments in its transportation infrastructure, both transit and roads. We must ensure that the economy can thrive, people can move about, our urban areas can support the density that our comprehensive plans envision, and our environment can be protected.
 
Our recommendation to voters is made with some reluctance. We have repeatedly urged Metro to do more to control its operating costs and to address its long term structural issues of unsustainable cost growth and inadequate revenues to meet expenses. However, we acknowledge that the agency has taken many actions to meet the challenges of the great recession and a volatile funding source.
 
We encourage Metro to continue to work on issues of efficiency and cost control and to use peer benchmarking to do so. The Municipal League intends to continue to monitor Metro’s progress on these issues.  Read More >>    Summary of the Measure

BECU Celebrates Grand Opening of Redmond Neighborhood Financial Center

Tukwila, Wash. (March 10, 2014) —On Tuesday, March 25th, at 11:00a.m., BECU will celebrate the grand opening of a new Neighborhood Financial Center (NFC) at 16325 Cleveland Street in Redmond.  The new location is located in the Elan Apartment Complex near Tipsy Cow Burger Bar.  City Councilman John Stilin will be cutting the ribbon to officially open the new center.  Read More >>

Opinion: Letter to Dr. Pierce and School Board Members On The $404 Bond


Dr. Pierce and School Board Members:

Recently the LWSD put up for a vote two Levy and one Bond measures requesting more money for the District.  The Levy measures passed, however the Bond measure failed.  Per your email and information on the District webpage, a survey was conducted of 400 residents in the District to ascertain why the Bond measure failed.  As I was not one of the residents contacted, I thought I would explain my particular reasons for voting “NO” on the Bond measure.

I have lived in Redmond for over 30 years and 3 of my 4 children have graduated from Redmond High School; my fourth child is a freshman this year at Redmond.  My husband is also a graduate of Redmond High School.  Over the past 10-plus years I have watched as the District has repeatedly asked for more and more money to fund building projects to “modernize” aging buildings and build new schools.  My belief is that the District has used these funds in less than effectual ways and with dreadful results.  Read More >>

Monday, March 10, 2014

Donate blood in Redmond March 18

While you were sleeping… A 2-year old was receiving 19 units of O Positive blood following brain surgery for a brain tumor. Additionally, Puget Sound Blood Center and Children’s Hospital were partnering to get life-saving blood to a 13-year old with end-stage liver disease who needed 10 units of red blood cells, 4 units of platelets and 3 units of plasma.
 
While you are reading this… someone else is receiving a blood transfusion.  Every two-minutes, someone in Western Washington needs transfused blood and Puget Sound Blood Center blood donors provide it every time.
 
I am writing you to ask you to donate at our next blood drive. You can donate every 56 days, and the need for your blood never stops.
 
Stay committed to saving lives.
Tuesday, March 18
9:00 am to 3:00 pm
(closed 11:00 am to 11:45 am)
CITY OF REDMOND
Public Safety Bldg.
8701 160th Ave NE
For information and to sign up contact
Maggie Lovell at (425) 556-2383

Writers Symposium at Ovelake School features acclaimed and popular poet Billy Collins

 
Poet Billy Collins, former United States Poet Laureate (2001-2003), brings his perspective on writing to The Overlake School's annual Writers' Symposium on March 17. The evening program, which is free and open to the public, will begin at 7:30 p.m., in Discovery Hall, 20301 NE 108th St., Redmond.
Collins is an American phenomenon. No poet since Robert Frost has garnered both high critical acclaim and broad popular appeal. His work has appeared in a variety of periodicals including The New Yorker, The Paris Review and The American Scholar. He is a Guggenheim fellow and a New York Public Library “Literary Lion.” His last three collections of poems have earned record sales for poetry, and his readings are often standing room only, attracting a widely diverse audience.  Read More >>

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Opinion: Realities of the proposed $404,000,000 bond

Susan Wilkins said...
The proposed $404,000,000 bond measure is a HUGE amount of money. It just seems like a small amount when compared to the previous $755M bond measure. To suggest that it will cost taxpayers only $10/month or a couple cups of coffee to pay off is utterly ridiculous. Our school board rushed this bond measure and didn't bother to check their math. Their calculations are wrong! The bonds will cost nearly 4 times as much as the district states!

Intuitively, $404,000,000 paid back over 20 years will cost $20.2 million per year just to pay for the principal. With 4.25% interest, taxpayers will need to pay back about $30 million per year, about the same amount as the Capital Projects Levy that just passed or $.91/thousand in assessed value. So paying off $404 million will cost the owner of a $500,000 house about $450 per year or $40 per month, not $10/month.

Sammamish residents are the biggest losers with this bond measure. They get nothing! No additional elementary classroom space, no new eastside ICS choice school (as was promised), and no new middle or high school space.   Read More >>

Thursday, March 6, 2014

What are the ramifications if the $404 Million bond fails?

During the last school board meeting...


School Board President Jackie Pendergrass asked what the price of the $404 million bond would cost the average taxpayer the first year, and staff came up with $10/month or "two coffees per month" according to Pendergrass.  Superintendent Traci Pierce ran down the following list of options staff would have at their disposal if the $404 million bond failed to pass:


1.  Reduce or eliminate all day kindigarden
2.  Double shifting (which would raise transportation and utility costs)
3.  Add portables wherever possible at $300,000/portable.  (The district is adding the equivalent population of one elementary school every year for the next four years).
4.  Year round school
5.  Construction costs of future schools would go up.
6.  Variances would not become an option. 


Reported by Bob Yoder

Concerned citizens tell school board why they voted No on the bond

There were several concerned citizens who made public comment to the LWSD school board last Monday about why they voted against the bond.   One was Rick Whitney who's father was an elementary school principal his whole life, a pro schools person, and this was the first time he voted against a school bond in his life. 


Rick said the cost of new schools is excessive and the ever increasing tax burden put on us is unacceptable.  He agreed with the levy committee's statement that the district has a consistent record of accountability and stays within budget but with one exception.  Rick said "One key thing is missing in that statement. The school district needs to strive for cost efficiencies to deliver high performing schools at the lowest possible cost to the taxpayers.  That's what I think is missing and the disconnect that caused you to lose this bond vote." 


Mike was the second speaker to the podium, a father of two children who went to Peter Kirk and Lake Washington High School.  He was Chairman of the "Yes on 1 &2 Not 3"sign campaign organized by businesses.  As a real estate developer Mike was surprised to learn that Monroe High School could be built for 23 million dollars vs. the 94 million dollars it took to build Lake Washington High School.  He couldn't believe that Peter Kirk is scheduled for a tear down saying "it had centuries" of life left with proper maintenance.  He said the tearing down and rebuilding must end and a committee of citizens, architects and professional could find solutions.   Mike also had experience with the City of Kirkland Growth Management Committee that put together the Comprehensive Plan and Capital Facilities Plan years ago.


Reported by Bob Yoder  

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

When a "slow" market isn't really slow: the reality behind the Redmond real estate data

By KC Brants
 
Redmond’s real estate market kicked off with a bang this year.  In January, home prices were up 18 percent and sales were up 6 percent compared with the same time in 2013. But homes were selling more slowly, spending an average of 32 days on the market. So if sales and prices were up, why were homes taking longer to sell? The answer has more to do with competition than anything else.  Read More >>

Monday, March 3, 2014

WIAA District 2 Dance Championship Competition at Redmond High

Redmond High School is hosting the WIAA District 2 Dance Championship Competition on Saturday March 15th. Over 15 high school dance teams will be competing for the district title in dance. Dance competition categories include hip-hop, pom, lyrical and military, among others. Redmond High's own dance team recently competed at the Eastlake High School district competition and took fourth place!


Come out and cheer on your favorite team at this event! There will be food, raffle prizes and amazing dance performances. Doors open at 12n, first performance will begin at 1pm. Adult ticket price is $7, Students and Senior Citizens, $5. Children under 6 are free. Any questions please contact Cathi Bibby at 4bibbys@comcast.net.

Friday, February 28, 2014

News from LWSD schools

Four high school students selected as candidates for U.S. Presidential Scholars Program
Nikhil Auradkar (Eastlake High School), Jack Eggleston (International Community School), Hannah Yang (Redmond High School) and Alex Zhou (Redmond High School) have been selected as candidates for the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. Sixty-seven students from around the state are candidates. These students will now complete applications for the chance to become Presidential Scholars. Each year, up to 141 students nationally are named as Presidential Scholars, one of the nation's highest honors for high school students. The U.S. Presidential Scholars Program was established in 1964 by executive order of the President, to recognize and honor some of our nation's most distinguished graduating high school seniors. In 1979, the program was extended to recognize students who demonstrate exceptional talent in the visual, creative, and performing arts. Read More >>

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Redmond ranks 9th most exciting city to live in Washington State

As part of Movoto Real Estate’s efforts to find the best spots in every state, whether that be for retiring or stretching your dollars, we’re turning our Saturday Night Science on Washington to find which places there will really get the heart pounding. What did we find? The most electrifying, exhilarating, and yes, the most exciting city in The Evergreen State is Seattle. Still, Seattle wasn’t the only horse in this race. The city faced stiff competition to stand atop our pump-up podium. Here are the 10 most exciting places in Washington:
1. Seattle
2. Bellingham
3. Olympia
4. Mill Creek
5. Pullman
6. Vashon
7. Snoqualmie
8. Anacortes
9. Bremerton
9. Redmond
Not surprised with our No. 1 choice? What made Bellingham more exciting than Olympia? We know you have questions; we have answers. So, pull on your hiking boots, because we’re going to traverse the great state of Washington. First, however, you’ll need to know how we made our ranking—the secret knock to our ranking club, if you will.  Read More >>

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

LWSD Bond Fails - Proposition One and Two Pass

The final results are in at King County Elections and the LWSD Bond failed to pass by 2.21% of those voting.  Only 57.79% of those voting voted for the bond.  60% was needed.  The $775 Million price tag was just too much for the growing minority of voters to stomach.  The school board is meeting with staff to try to come up with an answer to the community.


Proposition One passed with 65% in favor.  Proposition Two passed with 64% in favor.  Only 30.74% of the registered voters in the District voted. 


Reported by Bob Yoder

Kathy Lambert to continue as Chair of County Council, Law, Justice, Health and Human Services Committee

Completion on 2014 Council reorganization includes appointments
to Budget and Transportation committees 
 
Metropolitan King County Councilmember Kathy Lambert will remain Chair of the Council’s Law, Justice, Health and Human Services Committee as the Council completes its yearly reorganization with the appointment of the chairs of the Council’s standing committees.
“I enjoy chairing the Law, Justice, Health and Human Services Committee as the issues we cover are ones that are important to King County and to me personally. Public Safety is one of our core responsibilities of county government and I’m privileged to serve in this area,” said Lambert.  Read More >>

Monday, February 24, 2014

Learn About Native Plants This Spring


The Washington Native Plant Society is now seeking applications for the Native Plant Stewardship Program in East and South King County. Participating cities in King County include: Kenmore, Kirkland, Mercer Island, Sammamish and SeaTac.

 

The 10-week training is held on Fridays from April 18 through June 27, 2014, in Bellevue. This training is taught by top professionals on various topics such as native plants, habitat restoration and northwest ecology. In exchange for this free training, stewards will commit to 100 hours of volunteer service implementing the skills learned in these classes.  Each Native Plant Steward team will be formed to work on designated habitat restoration projects in one of our partner communities and in King County Parks.  Read More >>

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Attention Logging and Railroad Aficionados: Historian to Discuss 1920's Logging East of Redmond



As late as the 1920’s there were still many huge, old growth trees in the area east of Redmond and logging was dominated by the Siler Logging Company.  Felled trees were taken north by means of a specially-built 25 mile railroad that ran from Ames Lake to Bromart, just south of Snohomish.  Logging and railroad historian Eric Erickson will explore the Siler operations in detail on Saturday, March 8th at 10:30am at the Old Redmond Schoolhouse Community Center in Redmond.  He is speaking as part of the Redmond Historical Society Saturday Speaker Series.   Read More >>

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Imagine Overlake - Coming Soon

By Tom Hinman
Overlake is a shopping district adjoining Bellevue and Redmond neighborhoods that will be transformed over the next decade. Although Redmond is planning much of what will become the Overlake Village light-rail station area, developments in this community-to-be will be key to eastern Bellevue’s future as well.


Did you know that Sound Transit’s East Link station In Overlake Village will connect surrounding Bellevue neighborhoods to Seattle and connections north and south? This includes neighborhoods able to access the Overlake Village station from the north using a new bicycle/pedestrian bridge over SR 520.  Read More >>

Monday, February 17, 2014

NAMI Eastside Hosts Annual Children's Conference


NAMI Eastside, the East King County affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, is hosting a free children’s conference.  This year’s theme is “Understanding the Angry Child:  Strategies for Living with Emotional and Behavioral Health Disorders”.  The conference is free and will be held on Saturday, March 8, 2014, 9am-3:30pm at Northshore Baptist Church, 10301 NE 145th in Kirkland. 

The Keynote Address will be given by Linea Johnson and Cinda Johnson, authors of Perfect Chaos:  a daughter’s journey to survive bipolar, a mother’s struggle to save her.  They will share their story of Linea’s struggle with crippling bouts of suicidal depression and an eventual diagnosis of bipolar disorder, the various unsuccessful treatments including electroshock therapy, and the support of Linea’s family throughout.  Read More >>

Fundraiser for new playground at Redmond Elementary

Fundraiser for new playground at Redmond Elementary

Spaghetti Dinner Fundraiser on Friday, March 21 at the Old Redmond Schoolhouse Community Center.  Tickets & Details: http://www.gofundme.com/noodles.

REDMOND EL's PLAYGROUND IS A COMMUNITY ASSET.
- A safe gathering place for kids in our community.
- For many families nearby . . . the only outside place to play.

A PLAYGROUND FOR ALL SEASONS
- City of Redmond Community Center summer programs share it.
- Lake Washington Youth Soccer families use it in the fall.
- Redmond El students play on it all winter.
- Redmond West Little League families use it in the spring.  Read More >>

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Seven Named as STEM Lighthouse Schools


Will receive $18,000 and serve as mentors to others
OLYMPIA — A total of seven schools will serve as Science, Technology, Engineering and Math mentors to other schools in the state.
Known as Lighthouse schools, the seven were recently awarded $18,000 grants each that will promote and develop STEM education, including technical assistance and advice for other middle schools and high schools that are creating their own STEM environments.
The seven schools are:
  • Riverpoint Academy (Mead School District)
  • Cascade K-8 Community School (Shoreline)
  • Toppenish Middle School (Toppenish)
  • STEM School (Lake Washington)
  • Lakeside High School (Nine Mile Falls)
  • Columbia Crest Elementary School (Eatonville)
  • Franklin Pierce High School (Franklin Pierce)
“It’s a great honor to be chosen as a lighthouse schools,” said Randy Dorn, state superintendent. “It makes those schools leaders in STEM education. Other schools will look to the seven for guidance on how to successfully teach STEM…”

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Initial election results are posted

The following initial special election results were posted this evening on the King County Elections web page.  Final results will be posted on February 25 at 4:30.




LWSD:  24.59% of the ballots were counted so far (26,344 ballots counted/107,150 total reg. voters)


Proposition 1:  63.64% Yes
Proposition 2:  62.56% Yes
Proposition 3:  56.92% Yes   (60% is needed to pass this proposition)
                         43.08% No

Monday, February 10, 2014

Letter: How LWSD uses taxpayer money to influence the outcome of the upcoming election


By Susan Wilkins

As part of the Lake Washington School District's plan to "modernize" Juanita High School, the district plans to tear down the 42-year-old building and replace it with a new building.  In 1968, King County voters approved the Forward Thrust Bond Measure that built pools around the county to teach children to swim.  Juanita High School and the Forward Thrust pool were both built at the Juanita High School site in 1971.   Read More >>

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Letter: LWSD Kids Deserve Proper Facilities - Please Vote Yes on No. 3


All students deserve to spend their learning day in proper educational facilities. Please view the photos below taken at four of our overcrowded schools and think about the children and their teachers who spend each and every day without running water, without bathrooms, without proper ventilation and without the security of being in the main school building during a school-wide lockdown.   And please remember, that inside the main buildings, we have as many as 30 students per classroom in elementary buildings.   Read More >>

Friday, February 7, 2014

Letter: Please vote YES, YES, YES

I agree 100% with Minerva. Whatever difference of opinion you may have with the District and whether they managed things accurately/correctly, by voting No, you are punishing our children and hurting them - not the district. It is our children and our future that count on the proper facilities (both for a proper education and safety). And for us to decide to take that away from them because you disagree with District planning, is unfair and misplaced. We can continue to point the finger at the State (for inadequate funding), poor city planning and developer, etc. Yet the fact remains that our children and our future our counting on us to do the right thing.

My vote is Yes, Yes, Yes!
Ellie O'Rourke
Rockwell Elementary Parent and Legislative Advocate

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Fourteen Year Old Publishes Ambitious Xbox Game




Warthog Wars available on Microsoft Xbox Indie Games Store

Redmond, WA – January 24, 2014 – Over a year of hard work, more than 400 hours invested, and about 6,000 lines of code is what it took 14 year-old Matthew Mistele to finally achieve his dream of becoming a published video game developer. "Warthog Wars" is now available on the Microsoft Xbox Indie Games store for download and purchase (priced at $3) by anyone with an Xbox. Also available are free downloads of the Warthog Wars game trailer video and PC versions of the game on Matthew’s web site at www.matthewmistele.com.

A year ago (then 13 year old) Matthew, now a freshman at The Bear Creek School in Redmond, drew up an ambitious plan to create a Xbox game with multiple game modes including campaigns, a survival mode (fight against the computer) and an Xbox live mode so he could compete against his friends over the Internet. He was just learning C# and had never written for the Xbox, so it was a lofty goal that at times seemed unattainable. But Matthew refused to give up, sacrificing long hours (both free time and not-so-free time), in his pursuit to create his very own Xbox video game.  Read More >>

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Bear Creek Rehabilitation Project moves forward


City Council approved $3,002,284.93 to hire KLB Construction to complete "Bear Creek Rehabilitation Package 1", as follows:

The Bear Creek Rehabilitation Package 1 project is located between SR 520 and Bear
Creek Parkway, east of the Sammamish River and north of the current Bear Creek
Channel in Redmond. The package 1 project construction involved the following:

Rough grading work of 2,600 feet of the future relocated channel

Completion of 1,000 feet of stream features of the lower relocated channel

Connection of the new channel to the Sammamish River

Completion of the archaeological recovery necessary to mitigate any significant

cultural resources found within the future channel alignment

Stockpile of material to be utilized in package 2 of the channel relocation

Relocation of 2,700 feet of paved trail   Read More >>

Monday, February 3, 2014

Letter: Reject Proposition 3

By Paul Hall


Letter:   It's pretty clear that this 3/4 billion dollar bond issue is not intended to solve the housing problem, Bob. Only 238 million is earmarked to address growth with 6 new schools and small additions to 2 others. The district's Six Year Facilities Plan relies on portables to handle the thousands of remaining unhoused students for years to come.

The other 517 million is to tear down and rebuild 6 more relatively new schools (leaving 12 more substandard for years more) and build two more small boutique schools. Almost 160 million (2/3 as much as the total amount planned for growth) is budgeted just for a new Juanita HS. The district's planning policies are obviously still skewed toward replacing schools rather than providing permanent housing and modernized facilities for all our kids and teachers.

By piggybacking the growth and replacement issues, the district's using the overcrowded housing conditions to force voters who want to address this problem to also approve the continued replacement (rather than modernizing) of a part of our relatively new remaining building inventory. We should reject Proposition 3 and give them a chance to come up with a more rational facilities plan or resubmit this as two separate issues.