The new Kitsap Community Resources (KCR) Community Services Center stands tall — and green. The 22,000-square-foot building, completed in October…
A handful of the area’s youngest creative minds joined Tuesday for day two of Camp Invention, a week-long summer program designed to spark science interest in elementary students through hands-on activities.
Longtime Kitsap County resident Natalie Bryson will be honored by the Pride Foundation, in partnership with the Kitsap County HIV/AIDS Foundation, for her dedicated effort in advocating equality.
A washed-out section of Illahee road, closed since December 2007, is a little closer to reopening.
The plan to extend Waaga Way to connect Clear Creek and Old Frontier Roads north of Silverdale has come to fruition, becoming Central Kitsap’s first new road project since the construction of Myhre road in 1994.
The new Kitsap Community Resources (KCR) Community Services Center stands tall — and green.
The 22,000-square-foot building, completed in October 2007, recently earned a LEED Silver Certification from the U.S. Green Building Council Leadership in Energy and Environmental. LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Certificates are awarded to buildings that adhere to the highest sustainable living standards.
A handful of the area’s youngest creative minds joined Tuesday for day two of Camp Invention, a week-long summer program designed to spark science interest in elementary students through hands-on activities.
It’s prime boating season, meaning waterborne accidents, injuries and fatalities are on the rise around the state.
To combat those dangers, the state recently passed a new education requirement, which began Jan. 1, requiring any boat operator between 12 and 20 years old to carry a boater education card when operating a motorboat of 15 horsepower or greater on Washington waterways, according to the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office (KCSO).
A washed-out section of Illahee road, closed since December 2007, is a little closer to reopening.
The Bremerton school board, and a 13-member advisory panel interviewed two finalists Tuesday for the district’s vacant interim superintendent job, a position the board hopes to fill before the 2008-09 school year begins.
Next time you’re feeling creative — or stressed — consider calling health practitioner and 25-year Kitsap County resident Tami Close.
Next time you’re feeling creative — or stressed — consider calling health practitioner and 25-year Kitsap County resident Tami Close.
A war zone is what 18-year-old Thomas Iman Jr. compares his childhood to, more violent than most could imagine.
The second-oldest of four siblings — two brothers and a sister — Iman spent his younger years coping with drugs, abuse and the chaos of his then-Pierce County home.
Small-town gal Samantha Przybylek, crowned Miss Kitsap 2008 on March 29, is ready for the limelight.
And now the Seabeck native, a 2005 Klahowya Secondary School (KSS) grad, will hit the big stage: the 2008 Miss Washington pageant, scheduled for July 11-12 at the Pantages Theater in Tacoma.
Small-town gal Samantha Przybylek, crowned Miss Kitsap 2008 on March 29, is ready for the limelight.
And now the Seabeck native, a 2005 Klahowya Secondary School (KSS) grad, will hit the big stage: the 2008 Miss Washington Pageant, scheduled for July 11-12 at the Pantages Theater in Tacoma.
A war zone is what 18-year-old Thomas Iman Jr. compares his childhood to, more violent than most could imagine.
Soon after joining KMHS, Iman met Kathy Rongholt, a KMHS “case aid” and the woman who would take him under her wing.
Rongholt, who joined the KMHS team two-and-a-half years ago after a friend and fellow church-goer suggested she become a case aid, chose to give Iman a chance.
More than 400 volunteers piled into the President’s Hall at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds June 20 to gear up for the 15th annual United Way Day of Caring.
Nathan White, a student at Central Kitsap Junior High School, wanted to complete an Eagle Project that would meet more than basic requirements.
Neighbors for a Greater Seabeck Community Center gathered June 18 in the town’s vacant elementary gymnasium to discuss the direction and possibilities of building a community center.
A $4.2 million federal grant and about $880,000 in tax credit will help Kitsap Transit acquire two passenger-only ferries and make improvements on related facilities in Bremerton and Port Orchard.