Local artist Max Hayslette turns his focus to Northwest sights.
The Village Green Foundation board voted unanimously to approve former King County Boys & Girls Clubs CEO Daniel Johnson as the foundation’s new executive director on March 18.
This month, David Moseley will be leaving Washington State Ferries. I’ve seen three directors in 12 years, so David’s six years is a long run in this frying pan of a job.
Join us April 19 at our open house from 1-3 p.m. to celebrate National Library Week.
What’s that smell in the air? I think it is people mowing their lawns.
Since February’s announcement by Gov. Jay Inslee of his moratorium on capital punishment, there has been refreshed interest in the pros-and-cons conversation.
City plans to move Public Works away from Dogfish Creek. Port can auction boat and boathouse to recoup fees. A Poulsbo chaplain assists in Oso. Those are the top stories in the April 4 North Kitsap Herald, available at newsstands and in stores.
The Western Washington Center for the Arts’ production of the hit comedy “Run For Your Wife” hits the stage for its final weekend.
It was almost midday at the Port Gamble S’Klallam skatepark, and Louie Gong and Josh Wisniewski were preparing to put some final touches on the art sprayed onto the cement. The two were discussing the collaboration that resulted in a skatepark that was more than a place for people to skateboard. Then, the sound of wings overhead as an eagle flew above, almost directly over a Coast Salish painting of an eagle.
Lance Nation Averett made an Alford plea in his trial for rape, while another trial for the same incident is scheduled for next month.
A new, 600-foot gravel trail will be constructed between Nelson Park and Fish Park, along the northwest shore of Liberty Bay.
Businesses no longer must pay a $50 fee for registering sandwich board signs, but still must adhere to regulations.
The Kitsap Public Utility District is asking for help from private contractors to improve free Wi-Fi service in Poulsbo and Winslow.
It might not look like it at first glance, but Poulsbo’s public works facility is on waterfront property. “Waterfront” in that the site — located a half-mile uphill from the Liberty Bay shoreline — becomes a branch of Dogfish Creek during heavier rains.
Great Northwest Wine: A wine grape famous in France and Spain long has been grown in Washington but has caught on as an important variety in only the past several years.
Violet Idona Martin passed away from this world peacefully on the morning of April 3. Idona was born on June…
A killing in Edmonds on March 28 appears to be a drug deal gone bad, according to police reports. Codie Allen, 21, of Poulsbo, and Loresa Pilon, 28, of Everett, were being held in connection with the death.
A Kitsap County Superior Court judge has ruled that the Port of Poulsbo can auction a boat owner’s boat and boathouse moored at the marina to recoup unpaid moorage fees. The case is significant because it was the first legal challenge to how the port deals with boat owners who are delinquent on their moorage payments.
A trial to keep a man convicted of three sexually violent offenses in Washington’s Special Commitment Center began March 31 in Kitsap County Superior Court. The state Attorney General’s Office is working to keep Elmer Todd Gillis, 49, confined. Gillis is asking the court for unconditional release into the community, as allowed under law.
Someone heard what they thought might be gunshots early March 31 in the vicinity of Naval Base Kitsap — Bangor. The Navy didn’t take any chances and locked down the base. Turns out, the sound was backfire from a truck.
