“Big Brother” will soon be watching when drivers speed or run red lights in Issaquah.
The city council approved a measure Tuesday night that would allow the Issaquah Police Department to install automated traffic cameras on two Issaquah Streets.
The High Streets shopping village in the Issaquah Highlands will be the home to a $20 million, 50,000-square-foot Central Market store, officials announced Wednesday. The store will be a major anchor tenant in the development, something Port Blakely Communities has been working toward for years.
“Whiskey Seven Bravo India, Whiskey Seven Bravo India.”
Eastlake senior given Cory O’Brien award; Western students receive scholarships; Skyline grad earns honors
School Board member Mike Winkler announced on Wednesday that he is resigning from the Issaquah School Board effective Sept. 10, 2008.
The Issaquah School District chose three new pieces of student artwork last week to add to its collection.
Rotary announces award and new leaders; Grand opening proceeds will go to charity; Healthy Start Program seeking volunteers
Fight; drunken driving; domestic violence; assault arrest; fight; theft; vehicle prowl
Issaquah to conduct phone survey; Buy ice cream for kids
Vehicular homicide suspece pleads innocent; No fireworks in city limits today; Indian culture day scheduled for Sammamish Farmers Market
One black bear who had gotten a bit too used to humans has a new home in the Cascade Mountains after state Fish and Wildlife officers caught and relocated her last week.
Issaquah City planners are making progress on a new tree preservation code, but public opinion of the plan remains lukewarm.
Investigators said the fire that destroyed the Ames Lake home of Eighth Congressional District candidate Darcy Burner was caused by a malfunctioning electrical device, according to Sgt. John Urquhart of the King County Sheriff’s Office.
School Board member Mike Winkler announced on Wednesday that he is resigning from the Issaquah School Board effective Sept. 10, 2008.
Winkler said in a press release that he wants to spend more time with his family.
Drivers should plan for delays this weekend on State Route 900 – Sunset Highway – east of Interstate 405 in Renton.
Crews working for Washington state Department of Transportation will close lanes on the highway to hook up new drainage pipes to a catch basin.
For Tiger Mountain Community High School student Victoria Krantz, graduation was history in the making.
Krantz was the first in her family to ever graduate high school.
“It feels pretty good,” Krantz said. “My parents are really proud of me.”
Krantz began attending Tiger Mountain during her freshman year, after falling behind in her classes at Liberty High School.
The blustering winds and swirling snow may have forced the small group to turn back from the summit, but nothing will stop them from reaching their goal of raising money for kids.
“It got a little bit brisk,” climb leader and Issaquah resident Tom Varga said. “Brisk” meant winds of up to 40-50 miles per hour. “We decided to play it safe,” he added.
Varga and his group of five other climbers were forced to turn back at 12,600 feet up on Mount Rainier after the weather got too bad on June 19.
The group of climbers were raising money for a charity group called CFOS Foundation, a grant giving organization created by company Varga works at, CFO Selections financial consulting group based out of Bellevue.
Chris Bohner, a 2002 graduate of Eastlake High School, received his Air Force Pilot wings April 11 as a graduate of the Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program at Sheppard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls, Texas.