The inflammatory cartoon in your February issue depicting Washington state ferry workers was insulting and irresponsible.
My name is Paula Piperata. My colleague, Patricia Bryan, and I are founders of Global Community Volunteers, a nonprofit volunteer organization to help international communities in need.
Many thanks to you and reporter Megan Stephenson for your very skilled and thorough reporting on negotiations between Kitsap Forest and Bay Coalition members and Olympic Property Group to preserve open space around Port Gamble Bay.
Regarding Poulsbo city officials’ intent to increase Stormwater Utility rates, I am somewhat confused on their justification for doing so.
I grew up in Port Gamble. My father and grandmother were born there. All together, our family worked for the mill company for a combined total of about 300 years.
Regardless of the view of legalizing the use of marijuana, most of us can understand the importance of promoting abstinence among our youth.
I wanted to thank you for your article in the March 8 edition encouraging your readers to be proactive in getting their colonoscopies done on schedule
We would like to thank you for the wonderful article and pictures in the Kitsap Week about our “Cinderella” production
To whomever took the yellow Playskool swing off the clothesline pole on Burns Place:
I am disappointed by your story on Breidablik in this week’s Herald (“Breidablik School: 1989-2013/Relationships, experiences will endure after school closes,” page A1, March 8 Herald).
I had a talk with a friend of mine a month ago that Breidablik School was going to be selected as the school that was going to be closed.
For the past 33 years, I spent my life on Front Street in downtown Poulsbo.
As co-race director of the Roots Rock Trail Running Series, I am writing to say “thank you” to Pope Resources.
SIPO thanks supporters, Legislators must take responsibility and reform is critical before new taxes
As secretary of the Poulsbo Sons of Norway, one of my jobs is filling out the annual Family Lodge of the Year and activity forms that go to our zone director and eventually to International in Minneapolis.
Unions do not care what lawmakers set class size at because it only increases the salary of teachers
Washington’s 63rd legislative 105-day session races along with bills penned, debated and discarded to the cutting-room floor.
February was President George Washington’s birthday month.
Fishline’s thrift store, Second Season, has had a successful few years in its location on the waterfront in downtown Poulsbo.
I read with interest Leslie Kelly’s online article, “Chronicling an uneasy road to equality,” dated Jan. 31, assuming that I would soon come to some reference to the work of the Black Historical Society of Kitsap County, the Bremerton chapter of NAACP, the African American churches in the area, the Sinclair Park Project (and the CD about it), the life of Lillian Walker and the book about her, and, most of all, to Dianne Robinson, former Bremerton City Council District 6 representative — the one person in Kitsap County who could be considered the primary authority on African American history in Kitsap County.