Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

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FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 1256495 NORTHSHORE BEST OF 2014 B O T HELL/KEN M ORE REPO R T E R R EP O RTER .com NEWSLINE: 425.483.3732 KENMORE ˜ Heartbreak at state for Vikings Inglemoor High School center Deja Strother reaches for a rebound during the Vikings epic clash with Gonzaga Prep for the state title on March 7. The Inglemoor High School girls basketball team erased a game- long 10-point deficit but lost in double overtime. For the full story see page 10. MATT PHELPS, Kenmore Reporter BY DEANNA ISAACS [email protected] As construction of the new West-A portion of SR 522 ramps up for April, Puget Sound Energy has started to relocate utility lines due to conflicts with the planned changes to the thoroughfare. e lines, including gas mains and other services, are being moved this week just east of 61st Avenue Northeast in Kenmore. While PSE is working on relocation, the bus lane and right lane of eastbound 522 will be closed to traffic - leav- ing only one lane open for commuters. e work is expected to take approximately three weeks, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., during which the Business Access and Transit (BAT) lanes will be closed. e work is required to start construction of the West-A corridor, between 61st Avenue Northeast and 68th Avenue Northeast, in April of this year. For more information, please visit the Kenmore blog for SR522 updates at https:// sr522kenmore.wordpress. com/. Lane to close on eastbound SR 522 through Kenmore for three weeks for utility work Mayor, councilman to be investigated BY DEANNA ISAACS [email protected] e Bothell City Council approved a motion to investigate City Council actions concerning the sale of Wayne Golf Course. e motion came on the heels of one resident’s request that Mayor Joshua Freed step down from the City Council. Many residents at the March 10 meet- ing voiced their distrust of Freed’s connections to an unidentified invest- ment group in contract to purchase a portion of the property in Bothell. “I have heard citizens label it ‘insider trad- ing,’ City Council members and staff taking advantage of city actions, such as rezoning, for per- sonal profit,” said Bothell resident Dennis Scotstad. “Is City Council insider trading legal? Is it ethical? e city council needs to identify those who are tak- ing advantage of their city position for financial gain and go condemning those actions. I pro- pose that the City Council establish an ethics advisory committee to establish a clear and strong ethics Conflict of Interest investigation started for purchase of golf course Mayor Joshua Freed [ more MAYOR page 12 ] Closure between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. BY DEANNA ISAACS [email protected] K enmore Air opened its operations to citizens of the com- munity and unveiled their newest hangar along the waterfront of Kenmore on May 12. e new 14,000 square foot hangar has been a five- year in the making project and will be used to com- plete maintenance work on the DeHavilland Otter, very tall planes that could not fit into other hangars around Kenmore Air. “So today we’re celebrat- ing the completion of the hangar and an important part of the history of Ken- more and it’s legacy with the community,” said Rob Richey, director of main- tenance. “I really want to thank the Banks family for the dedication of this busi- ness in providing us such a great place to work.” For Kenmore Air, having the hangar not only means that the Otters will be more efficiently maintained, but that the mechanics of Ken- more Air will have a warm and safe place to work on the airplanes during the winter months. Kenmore Air unveils new Hangar Hundreds of people attended the unveiling and ribbon cutting ceremony of a new hangar at Kenmore Air. DEANNA ISAACS, Kenmore Reporter [ more HANGAR page 13 ] Murder | Alan Smith sentenced for the death of his estranged wife to 28.6 years in prison [5] WAYNE MANOR? | OneBothell wants golf course left as open space [11]

description

March 20, 2015 edition of the Bothell/Kenmore Reporter

Transcript of Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

Page 1: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015

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NORTHSHOREBEST OF

2014

BOTHELL/KENMORE REPORTER

REPORTER .com

NEW

SLIN

E: 42

5.48

3.37

32K E N M O R E˜

Heartbreak at state for Vikings

Inglemoor High School center Deja Strother reaches for a rebound during the Vikings epic clash with Gonzaga Prep for the state title on March 7. The Inglemoor High School girls basketball team erased a game-long 10-point de� cit but lost in double overtime. For the full story see page 10. MATT PHELPS, Kenmore Reporter

BY DEANNA ISAACS

[email protected]

As construction of the new West-A portion of SR

522 ramps up for April, Puget Sound Energy has started to relocate utility lines due to con� icts with the planned changes to the thoroughfare.

� e lines, including gas mains and other services, are being moved this week just east of 61st Avenue Northeast in Kenmore.

While PSE is working on relocation, the bus lane and

right lane of eastbound 522 will be closed to tra� c - leav-ing only one lane open for commuters.

� e work is expected to take approximately three weeks, between 9 a.m. and

3 p.m., during which the Business Access and Transit (BAT) lanes will be closed.

� e work is required to start construction of the West-A corridor, between 61st Avenue Northeast and

68th Avenue Northeast, in April of this year.

For more information, please visit the Kenmore blog for SR522 updates at https://sr522kenmore.wordpress.com/.

Lane to close on eastbound SR 522 through Kenmore for three weeks for utility work

Mayor, councilman to be investigatedBY DEANNA ISAACS

[email protected]

� e Bothell City Council approved a motion to investigate City Council actions concerning the sale of Wayne Golf Course. � e motion came on the heels of one resident’s request that Mayor Joshua Freed step down from the City Council. Many residents at the March 10 meet-ing voiced their distrust of Freed’s connections to

an unidenti� ed invest-ment group in contract to purchase a portion of the property in Bothell.

“I have heard citizens label it ‘insider trad-ing,’ City Council members and sta� taking advantage of city actions, such as rezoning, for per-sonal pro� t,” said Bothell resident Dennis Scotstad.

“Is City Council insider trading legal? Is it ethical?

� e city council needs to identify those who are tak-ing advantage of their city position for � nancial gain and go condemning those actions. I pro-pose that the City Council establish an ethics advisory

committee to establish a clear and strong ethics

Con� ict of Interest investigation started for purchase of golf course

Mayor Joshua Freed

[ more MAYOR page 12 ]

Closure between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.

BY DEANNA ISAACS

[email protected]

Kenmore Air opened its operations to citizens of the com-

munity and unveiled their newest hangar along the waterfront of Kenmore on May 12.

� e new 14,000 square foot hangar has been a � ve-year in the making project and will be used to com-plete maintenance work on the DeHavilland Otter, very tall planes that could not � t into other hangars around Kenmore Air.

“So today we’re celebrat-ing the completion of the hangar and an important part of the history of Ken-more and it’s legacy with the community,” said Rob

Richey, director of main-tenance. “I really want to thank the Banks family for the dedication of this busi-ness in providing us such a great place to work.”

For Kenmore Air, having the hangar not only means

that the Otters will be more e� ciently maintained, but that the mechanics of Ken-more Air will have a warm and safe place to work on the airplanes during the winter months.

Kenmore Air unveils new Hangar

Hundreds of people attended the unveiling and ribbon cutting ceremony of a new hangar at Kenmore Air. DEANNA ISAACS, Kenmore Reporter

[ more HANGAR page 13 ]

Murder | Alan Smith sentenced for the death of his estranged wife to 28.6 years in prison [5]

WAYNE MANOR? | OneBothell wants golf course left as open space [11]

Page 2: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[2] March 20, 2015

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Page 3: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [3]March 20, 2015

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Kenmore and KWAC to provide canoe and kayak classes

� e city of Kenmore is partnering with the Kenmore Wa-terfront Ac-tivities Center at Squire’s Landing Park to provide recre-ational pad-dling programs for the public. � e city’s newly-acquired park property on the calm Sammamish River make it an ideal location for all paddlers, especially youth and beginners.

“Canoe and kayak pad-dling is so good for the mind and body. � ere’s nothing like being up close and personal with the water while at the same time getting some really good exercise,” said Dan Henderson, head coach for KWAC’s canoe and kayak programs.

Sign up kids for a three-day-per-week a� ernoon and Saturday schedule, four weeks at a time, start-

ing in May or one-week summer youth camps for kayak and canoe. � e week-long paddling camp will be held Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on July 20-24 and August 17-21.

To learn more and to sign up for classes and ses-sions, visit http://kenmore-wac.org.

Competitive programs for kids and paddling

classes and programs for adults are also

available.“� e beauty

of Kenmore’s paddling pro-grams is that

the breadth of programs provide

the full paddling spectrum—from casual recreational all the way up to Olympic-bound competitive paddling and everything in between,” said Kenmore Mayor Da-vid Baker.

Rainstorm leads to manhole over� ow

Crews with King County’s clean-water utility responded quickly early Monday morning to a wastewater over� ow from a manhole on the North Creek Interceptor, a major regional sewer line

in service since 1970.Heavy rain Sunday led

to high water volumes in the pipeline, which carries wastewater from homes and businesses in the Bothell area to the Brightwater Plant for treatment. � e over� ow occurred at about 12:15 Monday morning near the intersection of 208th Street Southeast and 14th Drive Southeast.

King County reported the over� ow to health and regulatory agencies, and employees with the County’s environmental laboratory will sample and monitor water quality in the wetland as well as nearby North Creek over the next few days.

Construction is un-derway on a project to upgrade the pipeline and add additional capacity to support the growing com-munity.

King County’s North Creek Interceptor Project entails construction of approximately 10,000 feet of new sewer line. King County’s project team is currently working closely with project neighbors to keep people informed about construction-related activities and schedules.

Detailed informa-tion about the project is available online at www.kingcounty.gov/NCI.

CommunityBRIEFS

Page 4: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

It’s said that those who took up the battle standard during World War II were “the greatest generation” and I don’t deny this in

the least. In February, I had the honor to speak with a

Kenmore citizen about his e� orts during World War II some 71 years prior. It was a unique privilege to speak with Jack Van Eaton about his life before, during and a� er World War II, but more so than many may realize.

I am a second generation descendant of two Holocaust survivors. Much of my Polish and German relatives of that age were in the ghettos and concentration camps of WWII. Photographs and names of my family members adorn the walls of the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., and I’ve had the horror and honor of hearing my family’s stories of what they went through in the war.

I grew up knowing not to ask Bubbie, Yid-dish for grandmother, about the numbers tat-tooed into her arms. I grew up with names of Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen, and Sobibor etched into my memories, and knew the meaning of the word ‘genocide’ by the age of 8. I grew up knowing I should never forget, that it was too terrible to let happen again.

Both of my grandparents survived the worst of World War II.

According to my mother, Bubbie and her family boarded a train in Lodz ghetto headed for a death camp. For some reason, the train had to stop before they reached their destination, Bergen-Belsen, a camp where over 37,600 people met their de-mise and the one made infamous for being the death camp where Anne Frank met her demise.

Luckily for me, Bubbie never made it to Bergen-Belsen. According to my mother, Bub-bie escaped the train while it was stopped, run-ning for her life and leaving family she couldn’t take with her behind on the trains. Bubbie didn’t get o� scot free, though. A� er � eeing the train, SS o� cers caught up to her and she went � eresienstadt concentration camp, where some 33,000 people met their ends and another 90,000 people were transferred to other death camps across Nazi controlled lands.

My grandfather, Zadie, was not so lucky. When he was at Auschwitz, he and his wife were separated. Before they even got o� the unloading docks at the Auschwitz train station, a German SS o� cer had taken Zadie’s tod-dler daughter and killed the little girl. No one in my family, to my knowledge, knows what happened to Zadie’s � rst wife, but given over 3 million Jews were killed in concentration camps during WWII, it’s pretty clear what had happened.

According to Jack, German troops knew how bad it was, too. You know it’s bad when

someone goes back for an enemy pilot because he’s, seemingly, better than those others behind barbed wire.

� e war impacted more than just my father’s side of the family. An uncle on my mother’s side who had fought with Allied forces in WWII could never quite meet my father’s eyes;

being in a division that had liberated a camp, my uncle couldn’t forget what he had seen.

My relatives went through some of the worst that Nazi Germany had to o� er. Without those who answered the call of battle 71 years ago, men like Jack Van Eaton, I likely would not have been born.

It was because of the sacri� ce many of my family members made, whether as the oppressed or helping free those oppressed by the Nazis, that I joined the military at the age of 17, staying in the delayed entry program until I graduated high school.

For me, meeting Jack Van Eaton, hearing his war stories, and watching him knighted as a Chevalier in the French Legion of Hon-our reminded me why I joined the military. It wasn’t for me, it was for all the people who came before me - those who survived or gave the ultimate sacri� ce.

However, it wasn’t just myself who was hon-ored to have a connection to this amazing man.

Russell Korets, pastor of the City on a Hill Church and a descendent of Unkrainians who survived Nazi concentration camps, also spoke about the impact men like Van Eaton had on his life. Without the Allied forces coming to the rescue of Europe, Korets may not have been born. Korets bequeathed upon Van Eaton a statue of an eagle, wings spread wide, in honor of Van Eaton’s deeds during WWII and in thanks of what he and Allied forces had done for the region and for the world.

“During WWII, I was on the other side, not me, but my family, I come from Ukraine,” Ko-rets said. “Ukraine and Russian Soviet Union was under attack Nazism and Hitler were on

the move. My own family, though not Jewish, were helping Jewish families. My grandma’s sis-ter and her brother were both taken into con-centration camps in Germany. If it wasn’t for men like Jack Van Eaton, I don’t know where I would be tonight, the whole area where I lived was under attack. It was because of the bravery of men and women like Jack Van Eaton, that areas like where I lived were set free.”

“And we’re so grateful. � ere’s about 100,000 Russian/Ukranian, many of them are Rus-sian or Ukrainian Jewish. For all of them, we want to say thank you,” Korets said. “As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, ‘Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,’ and you took it to heart and our family, and many generations, will be grateful to you and your service.”

And it was for Van Eaton, too. He was honored and humbled to receive the title of Chevalier and the medal that comes with the dignity thereof. However, he received it not for himself, but for the thousands of men who couldn’t make it back. � ose men who rest on foreign soils to this day.

I felt an instant kinship in this, truly, gentle man. � e kinship all military members feel for each other, regardless of age or time of service. I felt kinship to Jack and the men like him who fought for freedom during WWII.

Mostly, I felt a kinship to know that people from all across the nation would risk their lives for strangers overseas. All because they knew it was the right thing to do.

To Jack Van Eaton: � ank you for your ser-vice. � ank you for the honor of your company and the gi� of hearing your war stories. � ank you for being part of the Kenmore and Bothell communities and continuing your service to the nation in many di� erent ways.

Your story will be one I never forget, nor will I let others soon forget, either. You are a great inspiration to the community.

Deanna Isaacs is a reporter for the Bothell/Kenmore Reporter.

March 20, 2015[4] www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com

R E P O R T E R N O T E S

?Question of the week:“Do you think city council members should be allowed to have any personal � nancial interest with issues that come before the council?”

Vote online:www.kirklandreporter.com

Last issue’s poll results:“Would you pay $10 to use the HOT lanes when driving from Lynnwood to Bellevue on I-405 during rush hour?”

Yes: 6% No: 94%

You said it!

OPI

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Renée Walden Publisher: [email protected]

425.822.9166, ext. 3050

Matt Phelps Regional Editor: [email protected]

425.483.3732, ext. 5050

Deanna Isaacs Reporter:[email protected]

425.483.3732, ext. 5052

Advertising 425.483.3732Classi� ed Marketplace 800.388.2527

Circulation 888.838.3000Letters [email protected]

11630 Slater Ave. N.E. Suite 8/9Kirkland, Washington 98034

Phone 425.483.3732Fax 425.822.0141

www.bothell-reporter.com

REPORTER .com

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REPORTER .com

K E N M O R E ˜

● L E T T E R S . . . Y O U R O P I N I O N C O U N T S : To submit an item or photo: e-mail [email protected]; mail attn Letters, Bothell-Kenmore Reporter, 11630 Slater Ave. N.E., Suite 8-9, Kirkland, Washington, 98034; fax 425.822.0141. Letters may be edited for style, clarity and length.

Freed did not disclose his � nancial interest in Wayne Golf Course

To Bothell Mayor Joshua Freed - I am so disappointed to hear that you have “� nancial

interest” meaning purchase of the Back 9 of the Wayne Golf Course and that you did not tell the other Council members when they repeatedly asked who might have made an o� er.

I do not know if you broke any laws with this contact, but the perception of wrong doing re-mains. You owe the council an apology and full

cooperation in this matter. You owe One Bothell an apology. You owe the citizens of Bothell an apology.

� e question seems to be - can you be an e� ective mayor now. Only time and your future actions will tell.Sharron Dimmitt, Bothell

Looking back at World War II and thanking those who fought

REPO

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eann

a Is

aacs

Page 5: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [5]March 20, 2015

NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS

Northwest Association of Independent Schools Accredited and Candidate member schools and Subscriber and Affiliate schools admit students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. They do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of their educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs.

List of Schools:

Academy for Precision LearningSeattle

Academy SchoolsTukwila

Annie Wright SchoolsTacoma

The Bear Creek SchoolRedmond

Bertschi SchoolSeattle

Billings Middle SchoolSeattle

Bright Water SchoolSeattle

The Bush SchoolSeattle

Charles Wright AcademyTacoma

Community SchoolSun Valley, Idaho

Eastside Catholic SchoolSammamish

Eastside Preparatory SchoolKirkland

Epiphany SchoolSeattle

Eton SchoolBellevue

The Evergreen SchoolShoreline

Explorer West Middle SchoolSeattle

Forest Ridge School of the Sacred Heart

BellevueFrench American School

of Puget SoundMercer Island

French Immersion School of Washington

BellevueGiddens School

SeattleGig Harbor Academy

Gig HarborHamlin Robinson School

SeattleThe Harbor School

Vashon IslandHoly Names Academy

SeattleThe Jewish Day School of Metropolitan Seattle

BellevueKapka Cooperative School

SeattleThe Lake and Park School

Seattle

Lake Washington Girls Middle School

SeattleLakeside School

SeattleThe Little School

BellevueThe Living Wisdom School

ShorelineThe Meridian School

SeattleThe Northwest School

SeattleOpen Window School

BellevueThe Overlake School

RedmondThe Perkins School

SeattleRainier Scholars

SeattleSeabury School

TacomaSeattle Academy of Arts and Sciences

SeattleSeattle Country Day School

SeattleSeattle Girls’ School

SeattleSeattle Hebrew Academy

SeattleSeattle Jewish Community School

SeattleSeattle Waldorf School

SeattleSoundview School

LynnwoodSpruce Street School

SeattleSt. Thomas School

MedinaThree Cedars Waldorf School

BellevueTorah Day School of Seattle

SeattleUniversity Child

Development SchoolSeattle

University PrepSeattle

The Valley SchoolSeattle

Villa AcademySeattle

Westside SchoolSeattle

Woodinville Montessori SchoolBothell

This ad placement is to satisfy tax code section 501(c)(3) requiring a Notice of Nondiscriminatory Policy as to Students. NWAIS member schools have adopted nondiscrimination policies which may be broader than this requirement.

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BY DEANNA ISAACS

[email protected]

Around 30 people packed into an Everett courtroom on March 5 to hear the sentencing of Alan Smith who was convicted of killing his estranged wife, Susann Smith, in Feb. 2013. Ultimately, Smith was sen-tenced to 28.6 years, minus time served, and 36 months of community custody after release from prison by Snohomish County Superior Court Judge Linda Krees. It was an intense and emotional hearing for all involved and Smith spoke to the courtroom for only the second time during the past month.

The same court con-victed Smith on Feb. 4 of premeditated murder in the first degree with a deadly weapon.

Craig Matheson, prosecutor, requested the 344-month sentence with 36 months of commu-nity custody, along with no contact with any of the witnesses who testified in the case and limited contact to his and Susann’s two children.

Before the sentencing took place, the court heard from family members and took into account victim impact statements from family and friends who could not be in court. A call was even placed to Susann’s

family in Germany, to en-sure they had nothing more to impart to the court.

Alan Smith spoke on his own behalf, waiving the counsel he had been appointed. He questioned some of the fees being as-sessed, many required by statute, and the no contact with his children.

“I have not been in any way pushy with (Susann’s sister) in regards to her guardianship of the chil-dren,” Smith said. “If she believes I have been pushy or may become pushy in the future, she can request a no contact order. In this state it’s much easier to get one than get rid of one.”

He also requested that two phone calls between him and his family in Texas be played for the court. The first was not the one he had been looking for and then asked the court to disre-gard the call it just heard; it contained a conversation with a sister the day after the verdict.

“I’ve had a really dif-ficult 24 hours, wanted to speak for a little,” Smith said of the verdict during the phone conversation. “Things are weird. Truth is stranger than fiction.”

The second phone call contained contact between him and a sister, then his father.

Smith’s father gave him

the advice of “God is in control of everything” and asked if he wanted the family to come speak on his behalf during the sentenc-ing.

He replied with a simple, “thank you” during the phone conversation.

“Pray over it, think on it. We’ll make it happen if you want it to happen,” his father said during the conversation. “God be with you. I’m sorry you’re goin’ through this, but God be with you.”

He concluded by speak-ing about his estranged wife he was convicted of killing.

“Susann was a beauti-ful person… I’m deeply ashamed I was not able to provide [help] for her,” he said. “I’m deeply ashamed at my behavior even though she had issues. It was a

moment of deep pain and turmoil in my life, during which I, as someone said, badmouthed Susann.”

“She didn’t deserve any of what happened to her,” Smith said.

Krees rendered her state-ment by echoing Smith’s statements moments before.

“Certainly, she did not deserve any of what hap-pened to her,” Krees said.

“Children growing up without either parent. Mrs. Smith’s parents have lost their child, the sister’s family lost their sibling, and Mr. Smith’s family, too. There’s many friends and family that are now without a person they care about,” said Krees. “The biggest tragedy is that Mrs. Smith lost her life.”

Smith has already served 20 months since his arrest

on June 27, 2013. The court imposed the required fees, around $600.

Krees sided with Smith in that she allowed custody and guardianship hearings, and Susann’s sister who cur-rently cares for the children, determine what level of contact he will have with his children.

It is currently unknown where Smith will spend the majority of his sentence. Tuesdays are the usual day that inmates are trans-ferred from county jail to a transfer correctional facility in Shelton, where Smith’s final prison will be decided based on his danger to oth-ers and criminal record.

Alan Smith receives maximum sentence for murder of estranged wife

NSD seeks applicants for Start Time Task Force

The Northshore School District seeks applicants for a newly created committee, the Start Time Task Force, that will be responsible for facilitating and implement-ing a later high school start time of no earlier than 8 a.m. for high school students by the 2017-18 school year. Task force representation will in-clude parents, staff members and a community member.

Applications are avail-able online at www.nsd.org and must be received by the district Communications Of-fice, [email protected], 3330 Monte Villa Pkwy, Bothell, WA 98021 by 5 p.m. on April 17.

These voluntary positions are appointed by the Board of Directors and will last through the 2017-18 school year. The task force will meet regularly, up to two times monthly or more, during the school year.

Adherence to start/dis-

missal time, program/service levels and fiscal parameters established by and/or accept-able to the Board.

More information and the application form are available at www.nsd.org or by calling 425-408-7670.

Page 6: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[6] March 20, 2015

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EducationBRIEFSBothell student advances to monologue regional finals

Bothell junior Kristen Dessin has advanced to the Seattle August Wilson Monologue competition regional finals. Dessin is one of 12 chosen out of a field of 82 high school students. The top three Seattle finalists will win scholarship money and an

all-expense paid trip to compete against finalists from Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Pittsburgh, New York, Los Angeles and Portland at the National August Wilson Mono-logue competition, May 4, at the August Wilson Theatre in New York City.

Students deliver a monologue from play-wright August Wilson’s Century Cycle, a collec-tion of 10 plays represent-ing 100 years of the Afri-can American experience. Students prepare a one- to three-minute monologue, receive coaching from theatre professionals and are judged on story, voice, movement, connection and accuracy.

Eight students participating in Aerospace Scholars program

Eight Northshore

School District students are among 156 high school juniors taking part in phase one of the 2014-15 Washington Aerospace Scholars (WAS) program.

The five Northshore students from Inglemoor are Elaine Xiong, Abhinav Agnani, Lawrence Luo, Kate Poon and Anand Sekar.

WAS is a two-part program focused on top-ics in science, technology, engineering and math-ematics (STEM). Phase One is a five-month distance learning course designed in partner-ship with NASA and the University of Washington, which provides students the opportunity to earn five college credits while learning about the his-tory of NASA, the space environment around Earth and the future of human space explora-tion. The top 120 scor-ing Phase One students receive an invitation to participate in a six-day Summer Residency held at The Museum of Flight in Seattle. In each sum-mer session, four student teams cooperate to plan a human mission to Mars with support from profes-sional engineers/scien-tists, university students and certificated educa-

tors. Participants also receive briefings from aerospace professionals, tour engineering facilities and compete in hands-on engineering challenges.

BHS’s first mock trial team to state

Bothell High School students Maddi Snowden, Dawson Honey, Scott Platz, Emilie McCormick, Kaitlin Fernandez, Kate Moyer and Kobi Robin-son took second place in the regional 2015 YMCA Mock Trial competi-tion and advance to the state competition, March 27-29, at the Thurston County Courthouse in Olympia, Wash.

Coached by team advisor John Messner, special attorney coach Brett Nagle and Bothell Municipal Court Judge, Hon. Michelle Gehlsen, the first ever Bothell team read and prepared the provided case “Ce-dar Confidential” to try as both the defense and prosecution.

Mock Trial teams from high schools throughout the state work with a teacher-advisor and an attorney-coach to present a hypothetical legal case before a real judge in an

actual courtroom. Stu-dents prepare as law-yers—learning the rules of courtroom procedure and how to examine a witness to build a strong case—and as witnesses. In each round of competi-tion, a team takes the role of the defense and/or the prosecution. Washington state attorneys and judges evaluated the teams on their case presentation, simulating real court-room procedures and their ability to question witnesses. Top district and state supreme court judges will evaluate the state competition.

Kenmore student awarded top PLU scholarship

Incoming Pacific Lu-theran University student Alexandria Rutherford of Inglemoor High School has been awarded one of PLU’s top academic and leadership scholarships, the Harstad Founder’s Scholarship, worth $29,000 per year.

Rutherford was one of only ten named Harstad Founder’s Scholars, se-lected from 140 President Scholars after an inter-view with PLU faculty.

PLU offers these scholarships to recognize significant academic achievement, leadership and service, as well as the promise of continued success in these areas as a PLU student. The Harstad Founder’s Scholarships are renewable for three additional years of under-graduate study.

Concert to benefit music students at IHS

The Inglemoor High School Instrumental Music Boosters will hold a music event called Out Loud! from 6:30-9 p.m. on March 27 at Cascadia Community College’s Mobius Hall. The evening will raise funds for the booster club and mu-sic students at the high school.

The event will include a silent auction and music by various members of the groups.

Wine, beer and hors d’oeuvres will be served.

Tickets are $15 in ad-vance and $20 at the door. Ages 6 and under are free.

Parking is right next to the hall for $3 and car-pooling is encouraged.

KRISTEN DESSIN

Page 7: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [7]March 20, 2015

Race for the Cookies andWaterfront Activities Center Open House

Saturday, March 21Kenmore Waterfront Activities Center @ Squire’s Landing Park

7353 NE 175th Ave St

Races: 10am-noon • BBQ: Noon • Open House: 1-4pm

Learn about canoe/kayak opportunities for youth • Explore our canoe and kayak programs Watch our junior, adult and paracanoe athletes compete with the best in the NWNavigate the water with our team for an introductory paddle, and have lots of fun!

Save the Date: Waterfront Activites Fair & Demonstration Day • May 14 • 4-7 p.m.

www.kenmorewac.org

Kenmore Hydroplane Cup

Saturday, April 11 • 12 - 4 p.m.Kenmore Boat Launch

Exhibition Races featuring

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Vintage Boat Show @ Log Boom Park

For details:www.kenmorewa.gov

For more information on City events: www.kenmorewa.gov/events

Contact Katie Boyes for more information at [email protected]

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Page 8: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[8] March 20, 2015

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BY TJ MARTINELL

[email protected]

An open forum on diversity at the University of Washington Bothell on March 10 sought to get prac-tical solutions from students for a new diversity center on campus a� er they staged a walk-out from classes on Feb. 25.

� e protesters stated they’re looking for a place where students can come together to overcome and learn about diversity issues, while also feeling included in the campus community.

Director of Diversity Terryl

Ross stated at the open forum that students were invited to help brainstorm ideas for the new center. At the same time, he assured them of the university’s commitment to diversity. He told the crowd of approximately 60 people who were conducting a com-prehensive study on diversity, including a survey of faculty and sta� , and they have a student survey planned as well. � ey also have a diver-sity week scheduled for April 6-11.

During the student walkout, Ross said he sup-ported the creation of a space, whether in a temporary or

permanent location, but has to � t within the priorities for academic buildings.

“� e biggest challenge is the campus is growing faster than we can accommodate,” Ross said at the Feb. 25 walk-out. “� e number one prior-ity is instruction, labs, etc.”

For Chancellor Bjong Wolf Yeigh, the forum was the � rst opportunity to address students since the walkout, as he was not on campus at the time. Since then, he said he was bombarded with messages from students on numerous social media outlets about the matter. Having gone through them

and watching the videos sent to him, he said their demands are not necessarily related and that separate issues have been “thrown into a pool of things” that makes it hard for him to address.

“Sometimes the sig-ni� cance of each of these gets drowned out,” he said.

Like Ross, he rea� rmed his commitment to diversity campus. Since 2010, he said, the student body has grown by more than 50 percent, and the percentage of students of color is now around 45 per-cent. He said he shares their desire for more spaces for things, such as childcare and

a veterans’ center, but they also have to operate within realistic limitations.

“We have made a lot of progress, but some think we are too slow,” he said.

Among the problems for building a new diversity center, he said, is that with 5,000 students the university is not large enough to charge a fee per student that is � nancially feasible. � ey also can’t expect to get any state funding for it, as the state will not fund non-academic buildings. Students already pay more than $500 for building fees, which covers maintenance costs for current buildings.

Inviting the students to generate ideas, Yeigh said they had to be ones which the administration can act on. Both he and Terrel also encouraged students to get more involved with the diver-sity council.

“I need more of you to par-ticipate,” he said. “We need to � nd out how to get from where we are now to where we want to go.”

During the open discus-sion, the response from students and faculty ranged from articulating the reasons for a new center to criticism of the open forum itself, which one student said was done at an inconvenient time and without proper notice.

Yet, the students also seemed con� icted as to what they wanted precisely. � e � rst one to speak said it was not about space, per se, but

access, while another said student services were more important. Some of the pro-testers, along with their chil-dren, brought self-made signs reading “right to childcare,” saying they needed these ser-vices if they were to continue attending the university.

“We have to miss so many opportunities because we have children,” one mother said.

One faculty member who spoke said the student walk-out re� ected a clear dissat-isfaction with the situation and that the administration should take heed.

“Students are angry,” she said. “� ey have petitioned. We are doing a disservice if we don’t make a change.”

As for the protest itself, Yeigh expressed his dis-pleasure at having students come to occupy his o� ce while he was gone.

“I would rather have these issues handled in a civil way,” he said.

In response, a woman said that the protest was the most e� ective way of getting the administration’s attention.

“� e students were very clear what their opinion was,” she said. “You clog hallways, you disrupt things or you won’t be heard.”

One female student who helped organize the Feb. 25 walkout and skipped class to attend the open forum, said their main objective is to simply be able to com-municate with the adminis-tration.

“We know what we want,” she said.

UW Bothell chancellor addresses diversity concerns during forum

Page 9: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [9]March 20, 2015

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KC health joins call for increasing age limit on tobacco

The King County Board of Health gave its unanimous approval to a resolution, sponsored by Boardmember Rod Dembowski, calling on the Washington State Legislature to pass legislation proposed by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson to increase the legal purchase age for tobacco and vapor products from 18 years to 21 years old.

“The facts are evident – smoking is the leading cause of preventable death in the US, it costs Washington State billions of dollars in health-care, and 95 percent of adult smokers begin before the age of 21,” said Dembowski. “That’s why it makes sense to reduce access to tobacco and vapor products to our youth while their brains are still developing and they are especially susceptible to addictive substances. This is good public health policy, it is fiscally responsible, and it

supports parents who try to keep tobacco products from their kids.”

“I am especially proud of the motion passed by the Board of Health support-ing the state legislature’s bill to increase the legal age for purchasing tobacco products from 18 to 21 years old,” said Board of Health member Dr. Benjamin S. Danielson of Seattle Children’s Hospital. “This is a sensible measure we should all support. As

a pediatrician I see all too often what health research keeps reporting: that people who start using tobacco earlier are more likely to be lifelong users. Research also tells us that younger kids are six times more likely to become smokers if they see older siblings use tobacco. In addition, we know that this change in the legal purchasing age will help reduce secondary smoke exposure. So tobacco use,

especially in younger people, has detrimental effects on the people around them, es-pecially the youngest people around them. I see this bill as a way to protect the health of young children as well as those in the 18 to 20 age

group.”Currently the Washington

State House of Representa-tives has passed the legisla-tion out of the House Com-mittee on Health Care & Wellness by a 12-3 bipartisan vote, while the bill is await-

ing its first hearing in the Senate Commerce & Labor Committee.

The Board was an early leader nationally on efforts to keep e-cigarettes from youth under the age of 18.

Page 10: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[10] March 20, 2015

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BY MATT PHELPS

[email protected]

The Inglemoor High School girls basket-ball team fell just

short of one of the biggest comebacks in state � nals history, losing 57-52 to Gonzaga Prep in double overtime to � nish second in state on March 7 at the Tacoma Dome.

“We were just one shot shy,” said Inglemoor girls basketball head coach John Augustavo. “I am really

proud of these girls. � is is a great team.”

� e Vikings entered the fourth quarter trailing 43-33. However, it was a de� cit that the team had been trying to whittle away at since the � rst quarter. � e Inglemoor girls never gave up during the � nal eight minutes of regulation, dom-inating the defensive end of the � oor. � eir zone defense disrupted the Bullpups scor-ing long enough for senior Alex Hagen to catch � re on o� ense.

“She is a big-game player. She loves the bright lights,” Augustavo said.

Hagen scored the � rst seven points of the fourth quarter, including two three-pointers that brought the Viking faithful to their feet. Kennedy Nicholas then took the reins, scoring on a fast break and hitting a jump shot to give Inglemoor the lead for the � rst time during the game, 45-43.

“It was just patience, maturity, getting stops and making baskets,” Augustavo said. “Our defense was good but [Gonzaga] also got tired. Our 2-3 zone really helped.”

Despite the monumen-tal e� ort on defense to completely shutdown the Bullpups, Gonzaga � nally broke through, scoring its only basket of the fourth quarter with 34 seconds remaining in the game and forcing overtime.

“� ere were times that we could have taken it,” Hagen said. “Deja [Strother] was awesome during the fourth quarter and really stepped it up.”

Strother � nished with a team high eight rebounds

and two blocked shots, but dominated the paint during the fourth.

“We just wanted to give it our all and � nish strong,” said Strother, a senior. “Our coaches always say, ‘If you can do anything, step it up in the fourth quarter’ and we did. I am just really proud of everyone on this team.”

Prep started the game with a 11-2 run that was only interrupted when Strother grabbed a rebound, put it back up and through the net. However, foul trouble forced Strother to the bench and Gonzaga pushed a four-point lead to a 15-4 advantage by the end of the quarter.

Strother returned to score nine of her game high 22 points during the second quarter and keep Inglemoor alive.

� e Vikings showed signs of a comeback during the third quarter beginning with a 9-0 run, cutting the lead to 33-28. Gonzaga pushed the lead back to 10 points by the start of the fourth quarter.

� e � rst overtime was a defensive battle with both

teams scoring just four points each. Strother drove to the basket, scoring and taking a very hard foul to give the Vikings a two-point lead with 30.2 seconds remaining but Gonzaga scored the last points of the period, forcing a second overtime. � e Bullpups scored the � nal four points of the game to win the state title.

� e contest was only the second loss of the entire season for Inglemoor a� er claiming the 4A KingCo regular season title, KingCo tournament title and district title.

“� is is a great team,” Augustavo said. “� ey have 70 wins in three years and three state tournament ap-

pearances.”During that time the

Vikings � nished second, fourth and sixth in state.

Many of the seniors will move on to play in college, including Strother, who will play at the University of Washington.

“She is a great kid, all the seniors are,” Augustavo.

� e 2014-2015 Ingle-moor High School girls basketball team is com-prised of players Mackenzie Gardner, Hannah Shimek, Talea Culp, Alex Hagen, Sydney Clanton, Sammi Williams, Jordana Price, Hannah Mccausland, Mela-nie Schakohl, Kennedy Nicholas, Amanda Luckett, Deja Strother and Nicole Rauch.

Comeback falls short in double overtime, Inglemoor finishes secondInglemoor High School girls basketball players cheer on their teammates during the state championship game at the Tacoma Dome. MATT PHELPS, Kenmore Reporter

Page 11: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [11]March 20, 2015

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BY DEANNA ISAACS

[email protected]

With the city of Bothell having put in an o� cial o� er for the front-nine course of the Wayne Golf Course, there are many questions about what it will be in the end.

While the back-nine of the Wayne Golf Course is currently in a purchase and sale agreement with an investment group, the future of the front-nine is not so clear.

OneBothell wants Sammamish-safe park

� e option put forth by OneBothell, a non-pro� t or-ganization created to address the future of Wayne Golf Course, wants to restore the properties as a recreational and natural corridor.

As a salmon spawning river, the Sammamish plays an important part in Bothell, and surrounding communi-ties’ health and safety - both for the public and for the wildlife the river supports.

“OneBothell has never taken a stance on what the land should turn into. Our number one goal has been to have the city purchase the land in perpetuity for the citizens of Bothell,” said Jesse Sears, founding member of OneBothell. “We have a great opportunity here to be able to do the environmen-tal restorations that could bene� t the land as a whole, but - the most valuable thing we have as a city - the river that � ows through this and to start cleaning that up a little bit.”

For OneBothell propo-nents, it’s not a matter of sav-ing Wayne as a golf course, but saving the property in perpetuity for the citizens of Bothell and creating a safe and clean waterway for the inhabitants of the Sam-mamish River.

“If they pass their budget and we get the money, we have $5 million to start the negotiations to buy the properties,” Sears said. From there, he said that organiza-tions would then come in to help restore and conserve. “I don’t want to see any of it go, I think that if we lose the � atland on the back-nine we lose opportunity, the last � at recreational area anywhere in South Bothell.”

To that end, OneBothell has been down in Olympia weekly in order to present their cause to legislators,

getting several letters of ap-proval of the park plan and even getting the funding to purchase the Wayne inserted into the upcoming budget.

OneBothell has also received letters of support from King County Council member Rod Dembowski and State Sen. Rosemary McAullife.

While it is unknown if the budget will pass with the money intended to purchase the Wayne Golf Course, there are many other orga-nizations, such as WRIA 8 Salmon Recovery Council and locally-based conserva-tion, stewardship and com-munity building non-pro� t Forterra, that have lent their support to the cause and are willing to help � nd funding to create a salmon-safe park for citizens.

Keeping Wayne as a golf course

Since it is unknown whether or not the Richards family will accept the o� er from the city of Bothell for the front-nine, it is still of importance to note what the city plans to do a� er they have the property.

� ere are those within the city who would like to see the Wayne Golf Course continue into the future as a golf course.

� e city, however, does not have the income to pay for the maintenance, upkeep or management of the golf course.

“� e state doesn’t have that money, the city doesn’t have that money, and I imagine a fundraising cam-paign wouldn’t get there,” said Bothell Mayor Joshua Freed.

� ere are options to have people, such as the McMenamin’s, come in and manage the golf course in place of the city. While the McMenamins have been ap-proached about this matter, they have yet to give a re-sponse to the city of Bothell.

In the event that the city does win the bid for the front-nine at the Wayne Golf Course, it is unclear what they will do with the property from there.

Development of the back-nine

While the front-nine has yet to have a purchase and sale agreement between the city and the Richards family, there is already an agreement on the table for the back-nine between the Richards and the unnamed investment group.

According to Freed, the housing development proposed for the back-nine would not cover the entirety of the 36 acre parcel. � e plan, though uncon� rmed, would be to develop only 16 acres of the course.

“We can develop the slopes that are there, but I’m trying to do a green PUD [planned unit development] that would pull the develop-

ment to be down below,” Freed said. “We were suc-cessful because we explained to them that we did the � rst green PUD in Bothell and we are, naturally, the right group to work with in Both-ell - I’m local.”

� e other 20 acres wouldn’t be impacted by the development.

“I like to do it well because

I live here. I want to do a green PUD that would show increased bu� ers, protect the environment, and allow people to still live there, but enjoy the surroundings that are around them,” Freed said. “At the end of it, turn in 20 acres of 36 for free, so it wouldn’t cost the citizens anything to preserve it.”

Part of the idea in gi� ing part of the back-nine to the

city would also include a park-based corridor con-necting Blythe Park to other recreational areas in the city.

While none of the ideas for either the front- or the back-nine of the Wayne Golf Course have been � nalized, there are many options on the table for the 80 acres that makes up the Wayne Golf Course.

Ways to save the Wayne Golf Course for Bothell’s future

Page 12: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[12] March 20, 2015

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[ MAYOR from page 1]

more story online…bothell-reporter.com

standard. I call on the mayor to resign.”

While the motion request-ing a third party investiga-tion was posed out of order, and therefore null, City Man-ager Bob Stowe, with advice from the City Attorney Joe Beck and the city’s insurance pool, is moving forward with the investigation into poten-tial conflicts of interest.

The mayor released a statement recusing himself from any discussion, both public or privately, regarding either the front-nine course or the back-nine course properties of Wayne Golf Course due to his connec-tion with the investment group currently engaged in the purchase of the property.

The mayor states in his recusal letter: “At last night’s meeting [the council’s stance on the back-nine has] changed and (although this is a private transaction and not one I am obligated by law to discuss or disclose) it has become clear to me that the new position of the City Council compels me to disclose my minority interest and recuse myself from any further discussions relating to the back-nine or any potential purchase of the front-nine of the Wayne Golf Course to avoid any suggestion or appearance of a conflict.”

The mayor states that the group wrote a purchase and sale agreement on May 30, 2014, and his recusal letter is

dated March 4, 2015.Freed has declined to

name the investment group currently in contract with the Richards family, who owns Wayne Golf Course. He told the Reporter just prior to deadline that it is not Element Residential, as many have insisted. Councilman Mark Lamb, who has also been linked to the real estate deal, also told the Reporter prior to deadline that he is not part of the investment group already in contract with the Richards family.

According to Secretary of State business docu-mentation obtained by the Reporter, Freed is listed as president, secretary, treasurer and chairman of Element Residential, while Council-man Mark Lamb is listed as the sole registered agent of Element Residential. However, during the council meeting and during a previ-ous interview with the Re-porter, Freed and Lamb did not correct the record when others stated that the com-

pany they were with which is in contract for the property is Element Residential. Freed stated that he is refusing to name the company because of the public pressure being brought on the Wayne Golf Course issue.

Many at the meeting spoke about the request for a third-party investigation into whether or not state, county or city laws and ordinances were violated when the investment group associated with Freed entered into a purchase and sale agreement with the Richards family.

“Now I wonder about other city dealings, and other city properties, and other city decisions,” said Bothell resident Lynn Anderson, who lives near the back-nine. “I am now asking the council to have a formal investigation into the City Council members and city staff members involved in all property decisions made in the last four years. Do we have a bigger problem?”

Many are concerned that

the mayor used his posi-tion to influence council decisions on properties other than the Wayne Golf Course.

“Here are my concerns: The decision to make an offer for the back-nine was made in executive council, it is my understanding that it is the policy to not want to show the city’s hand involv-ing property deals. That makes sense to me,” An-derson said. “But a decision was made and that decision should have been shared with the public.”

While the council’s deci-sion was made public after the fact, it was not known that Freed would be submit-ting an offer on the Wayne Golf Course through the un-named investment group.

In a conversation with the Reporter, the mayor stated that he has done nothing il-legal in his dealings with the back-nine.

“We, as far as the city, found out [Nov. 27, 2013, about the sale of the golf course],” Freed said. “No-body from the city made the decision or suggestion to move forward. All seven council members... and then, city staff, nobody made the decision within our 45-day period to go make an offer. That property sat on the market until we actually wrote a purchase and sale agreement on May 30, 2014.”

According to Freed, he had even been approached by citizens interested in noti-fying him that the back-nine was up for sale.

However, it is unknown the actual date that Freed’s investment group submitted an offer on the back-nine, only the date that both par-ties entered into the purchase and sale agreement for the back-nine.

“Really it’s an issue of people’s perception,” Freed said. “When it comes down to a legal issue, there’s clearly nothing I’ve done wrong. When it comes down to an ethical issue, I believe there’s nothing I’ve done wrong. Where it comes from is when people don’t under-stand the whole story. They see the Wayne Golf Course as a holistic thing going on right now, as though the city had the option, today, for the front and back-nine, and I went and stole the back-nine before we could our purchase of it. The [option to buy] the back-nine left a year ago from the city.”

The council approved a motion to submit an offer on the back-nine if the current deal falls out of contract with Freed’s investment group, a motion approved of by Freed. When asked if it’s possible that the investment group would fall out of con-

tract for the back-nine, Freed said it was unlikely.

It isn’t just Freed caught up in the fracas about possible conflicts of interest concern-ing the Wayne Golf Course. During the same March 10 meeting, Councilwoman Tris Samberg filed a motion to have Lamb recuse himself from the conversations re-garding Wayne Golf Course due to the same possible conflicts of interest that the mayor had stated.

“I would like to ask you to recuse yourself from any proceedings relating to the Wayne Golf Course, my basis for that request is similar to the mayor recusing himself, as identifying as an interested party in the back-nine through Element Residential,” Samberg said. “I feel that you should also recuse yourself given that you are the registered agent for Element Residential and I feel the mayor’s reason for recusing also applies to you.”

Lamb said he had no problem recusing himself, citing his daughter’s play he missed the same night.

“If you believe there is a conflict in that, I consulted with the city attorney - which I don’t have to disclose but I will - he does not believe there is a conflict of inter-est, he does not believe I need to recuse myself from this matter. That was his advice to me,” Lamb replied. “If my colleagues on the council don’t wish for me to participate in the Wayne Golf Course matter, I was intending and have advo-cated for the purchase of the front-nine, then I’ll step away from that decision and have no further action, at all, to do with the front-nine if that is what the council requests of me.”

Lamb did not correct the record that he is not involved with the company that has a purchase and sale agreement with Wayne Golf Course. However, in an interview with The Reporter Lamb stated that Samberg’s accusal was incorrect, that he had no part in the Wayne purchase.

While Lamb was sad-dened at the timeframe of the request during the meeting, the other members of the council approved the vote requesting Lamb’s recusal.

“For transparency sake, I think you need to recuse yourself from this issue,” Councilman Tom Agnew said.

During the public com-ment portion of the meeting many people stated their lack of trust in the council given the information brought to light.

Page 13: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [13]March 20, 2015

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Notice to ContractorsWashin�ton State Law

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Place a paid obituary to honor those who have passed away,

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Paid obituaries include publication in the newspaper and online at

www.bothell-reporter.com www.kenmore-reporter.comAll notices are subject to veri� cation.

Donald Gould ThomasDonald Gould Thomas was born on

February 23, 1926, to Arthur C. and Ethel G. Thomas, in Walla Walla, Washington. Don was the youngest of four boys.

His family moved to Seattle during the Great Depression where he attended and later graduated from Roosevelt High School. He served in WWII as a radio operator in the Merchant Marines. After WWII, he attended the University of

Washington, where he joined the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. At the start of the Korean War Don was drafted a second time into the Army Air Force. After serving his country, Don returned to the University of Washington where he met Audrey Petersen, who at the time was � ying with United Airlines. They were married shortly thereafter in Tyler, Minnesota.

Don & Audrey settled in Bellevue where Don began his sales career with AirMac, a material handling equipment company. Don & Audrey later moved to Bothell to raise their four children. Don served Bothell First Lutheran Church and many other organizations.

Don soon started his own company, Material Handling Associates, enlisting many old friends as partners and co-workers. His subsequent business was his legacy, NorthWest Handling Systems which continues to operate today.

Don and Audrey moved to Tacoma where he eventually retired. Don continued to serve the Tacoma community at Saint Marks Lutheran Church, Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital Foundation and Pierce College Foundation

Don was an avid golfer and was a member of the Sand Point Country Club. He was also a member of Seattle Yacht Club where he enjoyed power boating. Don loved to � sh and organized a � shing trip each year to Sitka, Alaska. He also loved private airplanes and � ying and attended many EAA � y-ins. Don played the piano throughout his life, bringing an appreciation for many types of music to his household.

In 2004, Don was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma and fought the disease for 11 years.

He will be missed beyond measure. A member of the greatest generation, he will never be replaced, but his legacy lives on in the lives he touched and the fortunate people who knew him. The world is a better place because he was in it.

Don is survived by his son, Kevin Arthur Thomas (Frances), daughters Kathryn Thomas Walkley, Karen Thomas Scott (George “Scott”), Jane Thomas Bigelow (James), grandchildren Conner Thomas, Morgan Myers, Ethan Walkley, Anna Myers, Avery Thomas and James T. Bigelow.

A celebration of Don’s life will be held on Saturday, March 21, 2015. For details, contact Kevin Thomas at [email protected]. In lieu of � owers, the Thomas family would appreciate your donation to MultiCare Health Foundation in support of

Regional Cancer Center, PO Box 5296, Tacoma, WA 98415

000000

Cli� ord W. “Chip” DavidsonCli� ord W. “Chip” Davidson, age 83,

died peacefully on February 18, 2015 surrounded by his loving family, following a brief illness.

Chip was born on January 24, 1932 in Perrysburg, OH to Earl and Dorothy Davidson. Upon graduation from high school, he moved to Wyoming and worked on the family ranch. He served 4 years in the Air Force, then attended the University of Texas, Austin where he received his degree in accounting. It was while living in Texas that he met and married the love of his life, Joan Marie Delaney; they remained very happily married for the next 58 years.

After graduation, Chip and Joan moved to Dallas where Chip worked for a national accounting � rm. They later settled in the Kenmore, WA area in 1961 and Chip continued to work for the same � rm before owning his own CPA � rm.

During his lifetime, Chip was involved with many organizations: Davidson’s Marina; North Lake Marina; Davidson, Davidson & Hawkins CPA Firm; Kenmore and Skykomish Fire Departments; Studebaker Club; Antique Studebaker Club; Quiet Birdmen; AOPA; MMOPA; MMSTF; Stevens Pass Ski Resort; Northshore Rotary; Flying Heritage Museum; Sewer & Water Commissioner; Northshore Rotary, Northshore Scholarship Foundation; Northshore Schools Foundation; and Inglewood Golf Club.

Chip was a wonderful aviator, antique car enthusiast, husband, father, friend, and con� dant. He was a generous man, loved by many.

Chip is survived by his loving wife Joan; sons Bill (Lorri), Jim (Joni), and Tom (Anne); 7 grandchildren; two brothers Harold (Edith) and Edwin (Diana); and several nieces, nephews and cousins. Chip was preceded in death by his parents.

A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, March 21st, 2:00 pm at Bothell United Methodist Church, 18515 – 92nd Ave NE, Bothell, WA.

In lieu of � owers, donations can be made to the Chip Davidson Memorial Scholarship Fund through either Northshore Rotary

or any Banner Bank branch.1272586

“It’s a big project for our little company and as such it has symbol-ism to us in addition to its practical application. Kenmore Air started in 1946, three friends, a tiny Aeronca Model K and an idea. Today we average 150 employees, 22 aircraft, we have full service mainte-nance facility with a staff of 30 people, and this hangar really symbolizes that con-tinued growth,” said Eric Ellison, chief inspector of Kenmore Air. “It also sym-bolizes our commitment to our employees. Kenmore has always attracted loyal and gifted people…We have a tradi-tion of listening to our employees and giving them the tools they need to perform their craft. And this hangar is an example of that commitment.”

Not only will the hangar be used for maintenance of private aircraft at the Kenmore Air Harbor, but also perform maintenance of planes used in service of the Kenmore Air’s fleet.

During the ceremony, not only did Kenmore Mayor David Baker speak to the positive influence of Kenmore Air and the inclu-sion of the new hangar for the maintenance workers.

“I don’t know if Kenmore would be Kenmore without Kenmore Air because Kenmore Air is such an im-portant asset to this com-munity,” Baker said. “Now [maintenance workers] finally have a place they can work in the wintertime and stay dry so they are not subjected to the elements like they have been.”

“It’s fantastic, it’s just so nice to have over 200 people care about Kenmore and care about the compa-ny and actually plan a night out to be here to celebrate

the hangar and the future of the community,” said Anna Gullickson, pilot of Kenmore Air and the event’s coordinator. “It’s just really nice to have a profes-sional event for Kenmore to dedicate to their employees to show them we have a future, and to give them the best facilities they can have.”

Congresswoman Susan DelBene, representative of the first congressional district, was on hand to congratulate Kenmore Air on their hangar and their continued operation as one of the most highly regarded sea plane operations in the

world.“It’s an incred-

ibly unique and iconic business. People know about

Kenmore and a lot of times one of the

things they think about is Kenmore Air. This is just an incredible opportunity for Kenmore Air to continue to grow and thrive. The facility allows them to continue their business - which is end to end from maintenance and creating equipment to running a full fledged airline in our region,” DelBene said. “Its great that they have been able to make this invest-ment in our region and use that as an opportunity to continue to grow and build this business.”

For others at Kenmore Air, it’s just nice to know that the community of Kenmore appreciates they are in the city and there to stay.

“I’m a pilot and flight test engineer, so I’m passion-ate about airplanes. I love that [Kenmore Air’s] in our community and, I think, it’s part of Kenmore and our community,” said Stacey Denuski, Kenmore City Council member.

During the event, the

Federal Aviation Admin-istration also awarded Eric Ellison, chief inspector of Kenmore Air, by the Seattle district office for Aviation

Maintenance Technician of the Year.

“It’s quite an honor and I appreciate those FAA in-spectors who have worked

with us in the past just stay-ing in the air and safety is a priority for us, so it’s helpful when they help us be safe and efficient,” said Ellison

about being awarded.The construction of the

new hangar was completed by Talboy Construction, out of Boise, Idaho.

[ HANGAR from page 1]

KENMOREBIZ

Page 14: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

[14] Mar 20, 2015 www.soundclassifieds.comwww.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com

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LOST WHITE CAT*$1000 REWARD*

We are looking for our cat which we last saw around 5pm on Mar. 5 in our yard near the inter- section of 161st Avenue Nor theast and 108TH CT in the Education Hill area of Redmond. She is a beautiful white cat with dark markings on her face, paws and tail and is about 18 months old. She is chipped, tagged and spayed and he r n a m e i s ‘ I s a b e l l a ’ . Please let us know if you have any information, she is greatly missed. Also, the cat has a medi- cal condition so owner n e e d s t o f i n d h e r fast...thank you!

Jon (707) 266-6612

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$500 AKC English Mas- tiff/ Great Pyrenees pup- pies. Perfect for families, security and as gentle as can be! AKC Mastiff Dad & Mom is a beaut i fu l Great Pyrenese. All red or brown colored pups w/ some black markings. Pick you puppy, before their gone, call Francis now 360-535-9404 King- ston, WA. 9 AUSTRALIAN Shep- herd Pups. Pure Bred. Parents very docile and friendly! Mom on site. 6 males and 3 females. Tails & dew claws done. Shots & worming will be. Taking deposits now, will make good family pets! $ 4 2 5 fo r Tr i - C o l o r s ; $500 for Blue Merles. Call: 360-631-6089 for more info.

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Dogs

AKC German Shepherd Puppies. Black, black / tan, and Panda colors. $750 + tax . Pa ren ts OFA’d. Shots, wormed, ve t checked . Yak ima 509-965-1537.www.bahrsshepherds.com

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GOLDEN DOODLE pups Non shedding. Not just a pet, but one of the family! Wonderful with children. Parents & grand parents on site. Wormed & shots. High intelligence. $1,000. Call Chris 360-652-7148.

Garage/Moving SalesKing County

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Bazaars/Craft Fairs

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AutomobilesHonda

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Page 15: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com [15]March 20, 2015

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Page 16: Bothell/Kenmore Reporter, March 20, 2015

www.bothell-reporter.com • www.kenmore-reporter.com[16] March 20, 2015

Karal Cox, [email protected]

Kevin Scott, 206-412-1118 [email protected]

Chris SiegfriedNMLS ID# 963944

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WELL MAINTAINED TRI-LEVEL IN BOTHELL $385,000 Living room overlooking a greenbelt, kitchen with island & large eating area plus formal dining room on the main � oor. Large family room downstairs, utility room & half bath. Master suite with walk-in closet & two additional bedrooms upstairs. New carpet & siding. Park across the street. Northshore schools! MLS # 749159

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