A woman whose body was found in her burned-out home on Sidney Avenue early Wednesday was stabbed before the fire, according to the Kitsap County Coroner’s Office.
Last night after hearing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow,” I remembered how my siblings and I, who had watched the “Wizard of Oz” at least a dozen times, were in our 20s before we realized that the entire Oz sequence was in color.
Athletes often start preparing for their sports career from the time they can pick up a ball.
As if it weren’t frustrating enough having to pay $45 to $60 every time we fill up our car’s gas tank, now we
The renewed interest in our environment is long overdue and is a healthy sign for the future. Conserving resources, reusing materials, and recycling what cannot be used again makes sense.
To Lisa Marshall, it’s all about the people.
The South Kitsap High School girls track-and-field team competed at the Shelton Invitational on Saturday.
Gold Mountain Golf Complex in Bremerton will host the NCAA West Regionals competition, scheduled for May 15-17.
Kitsap County property taxes are due, and must be delivered or postmarked by today.
A man whom local police believe recently moved into the area and began making his living by stealing from local businesses was arrested last week, the Port Orchard Police Department reported.
A large development planned just west of McCormick Woods may be closer to reality after those hoping to build close to 1,500 new houses proposed changes requested by local fire officials last month.
Winston Rader’s home on Sedgwick Road sounds like a bird conservatory on Friday afternoon, when the sun is out and spring is starting to push back the cold snow of a long winter.
Home builder, SK community volunteer wins unanimously.
Port Orchard Public Works Director Maher Abed announced his resignation on Friday, and by Monday he was already absent from City Council meetings.
A survey released by the Washington Association of Realtors on Oct. 4 indicates that Kitsap County residents have not yet reached general agreement about the central issues involved in growth management.
The Washington State Supreme Court is on quite a roll these days in terms of thumbing its nose at both the law and the will of the voters in order to protect the ability of the state’s governing class to keep the tax money flowing regardless of how most of us may feel about it.
OK, OK, I’m recycling.
As a disciple of the late Gov. Dixy Lee Ray, I’m not convinced of the value of it yet, but I’m willing to listen to those who are and do.
Was it my imagination or were there an inordinate number of police out and about Kitsap County hunting prey over this past holiday weekend?
Everywhere I went, there were Sheriff’s deputies, Port Orchard and Bremerton police, and Washington State Patrol officers hiding around corners and behind bushes with their radar guns, etc., looking for any infraction that could justify pulling folks over.
Seeing a story in the newspapers the other day about a world wide “toilet revolution” reminded me of one of the accomplishments of the late House Speaker John L. O’Brien of Seattle that I hadn’t included in his obituary when he died last spring at 95.
It caused big problems for holiday travelers, but Paula Hammond, Washington’s new Secretary of the Department of Transportation (DOT), did the right thing when she pulled the four Steel Electric class ferries out of service the day before Thanksgiving.
The problem: Cracks and corrosion in the hulls.
