Array
The Kitsap Transit Board of Commissioners got it mostly right by bringing back paper transfer tickets, those paper passport slips that inevitably end up as knots in the laundry.
An endearing landmark is in a federal competition to get some serious cash. The Point No Point lighthouse, which draws…
I took a deep breath as a parent and enrolled my son in kindergarten in the Bremerton School District. That was in 2006. He is now in his last year at Naval Avenue Elementary (Go Dolphins!). Naval Avenue is the only school in the district that is pre-kindergarden through third grade.
North Kitsap is the perfect choice to host Babe Ruth World Series
The Puget Sound Regional Council last week unveiled its transportation vision for the next 30 years, and if the deep thinkers at the organization get their way, residents of Port Orchard may not be able to leave town without paying for the privilege.
The recession may be over already, but economic growth may not accelerate enough to make it obvious for quite a while.
The National Bureau of Economic Research is generally accepted as the authority in determining when a recession begins and ends — and they aren’t yet ready to say when or whether this recession has ended.
The other day as I was driving, I got behind a car with a bumper sticker that read, “This fall, fire them all. Re-elect nobody.”
As I continued to drive, I began to think about it. The more I thought, the more I had to agree with the bumper sticker.
What have lawmakers done lately for the common good?
When Idaho Gov. Butch Otter published his “Love Letter to Our Neighbors,” he touched off a political firestorm asserting his state is better for business.
Otter sensed a weakness in Oregon’s business climate after lawmakers raised taxes on businesses and the wealthy by $727 million. Nike founder Phil Knight called it “Oregon’s Assisted Suicide Law II.”
I do challenge this group to continue their momentum and expand beyond just the issue of urban chickens. Bremerton is currently facing some significant budget shortfalls and cut backs in the months ahead. Let us resolve the urban chicken issue once and for all.
s part of National Public Health Week, it’s a good time to talk about one of the most important, but often overlooked, roles of public health — advocating for social justice.
Today in the U.S., the single largest cause of poor health outcomes is chronic disease. This is frustrating, because it’s largely preventable.
This is National Public Health Week. And why should anyone care?
I want talk about why and share just a few of the things we do every day to make sure Kitsap County is a safe and healthy place.
So far, the Kitsap County Rural Library District board of trustees is approaching the idea of a property tax lid lift in a way that may make it practical for voters to decide rationally whether to approve or reject a tax increase.
Cheesy as it may sound, it’s true. Only you can make the Kingston passenger ferry effort a success. Aqua Express,…
Both federal and state operating budgets are being cut back in hopes of keeping us from falling over the brink…
Something’s amiss with Poulsbo’s new City Hall
