In the business world, it’s considered impressive to create an invention and found a company at any age. But two intrepid Issaquah kids have set the bar even higher.
The blotter consists of crimes and other incidents in the city of Issaquah. Persons arrested are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
Issaquah resident Stephen Murphy has worked in every field from television production to international banking to being a member of both Bush administrations, but he never set out to become an author.
As talks began this week between the Issaquah Valley Senior Center Board of Directors and the city of Issaquah, tensions boiled over at the board’s Oct. 11 meeting when senior center members explained why they have been so unhappy with the center’s service in recent years.
Chromatique Salon of Bellevue has opened up a second location in Issaquah just off of Northwest Gilman Boulevard.
Many small developers who said the current city-wide development moratorium has hurt their businesses and life savings asked the council for an exemption during the Oct. 17 Issaquah City Council meeting’s public hearing.
Since 1997, the number of businesses owned by women has gone up by 43 percent in Washington state. The Seattle urban area alone has seen an increase of 20,000 businesses with women at the helm since 2004.
13 candidates from the 1st, 41st, 45th and 48th legislative districts gathered at the North Bellevue Community Center on Oct. 10 to discuss a problem that all Washingtonians will have to face sooner or later — how the state can better support its aging population.
The blotter consists of crimes and other incidents in the city of Issaquah. Persons arrested are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
A host of citizens and police officers alike came out to bond over an All-American cup of java when the Issaquah Police Department hosted “Coffee with a Cop” on the morning of Oct. 7 at the Issaquah Highlands Grand Ridge Starbucks.
The blotter consists of officers’ accounts of crimes and other incidents in the city of Issaquah. Persons arrested are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
The Issaquah City Council voted 6-1 at the Oct. 3 meeting to change the Issaquah Municipal Code 10.36 to reroute truck traffic outside of town, despite pleas from residents of May Valley Road south of town at both that meeting and the Sept. 19 meeting not to send semi-trucks down their road.
During a public hearing at the Oct. 3 Issaquah City Council meeting, citizens had the chance to tell the council their opinions on the proposed 25-year, $50 million traffic bond on Issaquah ballots this November.
The blotter consists of officers’ accounts of crimes and other incidents in the city of Issaquah. Persons arrested are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
There was something for everyone at Salmon Days 2016.
The Grande Parade kicked off Salmon Days 2016 on Saturday morning.
At the Sept. 19 Issaquah City Council meeting, the council voted 5-1 to approve the project concept for the East Sunset Way improvements, one of the four projects included in the $50 million traffic bond on the ballots of Issaquah residents this November.
In a blink-and-you’ll-miss it town on Highway 57, deep in the heart of North Carolina, the five Pump Boys are ready to attend to your car’s needs, whether it’s a tank of gas or a new muffler.
The population of wolves in the wild in Washington state is less than the number of cents in a dollar.
It’s reel-ly time again for Issaquah’s most exciting weekend of the year — the 47th annual Salmon Days festival returns at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 1, with the carnival kicking off a little sooner at 3 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 30.