Issaquah downs Eastlake girls in KingCo title game

February 28, 2009

NEW FEB. 28 11:40 A.M.

By Christopher Huber

The Eastlake girls basketball team lost 44-34 to the Issaquah Eagles Feb. 27 at Juanita High School. Senior forward Laura Bachman scored 10 points for the Lady Wolves, but the Issaquah defense was too much.

Despite losing the KingCo title, Eastlake will head to the state tournament as the No. 2 seed in 4A competition.

Check back later for the full game story.

Again with the snow?

February 26, 2009

New Feb. 26 7:53 a.m.

A small storm hit the Puget sound region last night, but tempretures should rise into the 40’s this afternoon.

There are no reports of major problems on the roadways, but there are some traffic back-ups.

Both the Issaquah and Lake Washington school districts are opening with a two-hour delay.

Eastlake to get new principal in fall

February 25, 2009

New Feb. 25 3:35 p.m.

Eastlake High School will have a new principal come September, Lake Washington School District officials announced Wednesday.

Greg Schellenberg, currently the principal of Gig Harbor High School, will replace Rondel Hardie, who is retiring at the end of this school year.

“It was a family decision,” Schellenberg said. “My wife and I always had our eye on the area. We know people in the district and have always had an affinity for what goes on in the district.” Read more

Police arrest man they say robbed three banks

February 24, 2009

UPDATED — 3:09 p.m. Feb. 23, 2008

With the help of employees at a Sammamish Bank of America, police arrested a man last night who they say has robbed three Eastside banks.

The 28-year-old Kirkland man stole an undisclosed amount of money from the Bank of America in the Sammamish Highlands shopping center at about 12:50 p.m. Monday, according to police.

Investigators said they believe the same man robbed banks in Issaquah on Feb. 17 and in Kirkland on Feb. 13.

“He had done all three in pretty quick succession and probably would have done another one if we hadn’t caught him,” said Robbie Burroughs, spokesperson for the FBI’s Seattle office.

robbery-bank-crime-20090224

The Sammamish Highlands Bank of America temporarily shut down its walk-in office Monday after falling victim to a bank robbery.

Read more

Brownies carry colors

February 23, 2009

 

gscout-flags-20090217

Third-grade brownie girl scouts (from left) Ava Giovanola, Katelyn Lewis, and Kimberly Heitkamp, all members of troop 41938, and Matisse McCoy, of troop 50614, helped conduct the flag ceremony at the Feb. 17 City Council meeting. Photo by J.B. Wogan

City to pave 248th Avenue

February 23, 2009

2 landowners still object

 Muddy potholes like this one will soon be a thing of the past. Photo by J.B. WoganMuddy potholes like this one will soon be a thing of the past. Photo by J.B. Wogan

The dirt road will become pavement. 

The City Council voted 7-0 to take over one-tenth of a mile of private road on 248th Avenue Southeast.

“The deeds are very clear. There’s certainly a need for people who live east of 248th,” Councilwoman Kathy Huckabay said. “I would really like to see this project move forward.”

The project will cost between $50,000-$70,000, with construction beginning in March, according to Public Works Director John Cunningham. 

The Public Works Department had been working with landowners to assume responsibility for the road. Some residents on and near 248th Avenue Southeast had asked the city to take over the road and pave it. Read more

Petition attempts to stop 244th

February 23, 2009

Residents cite environmental issues with plan

 

Ron Cornwall’s backyard offers a westward view of Allen Lake and the land that would one day become a bridge over a wetland.Photo by J.B. Wogan

Ron Cornwall’s backyard offers a westward view of Allen Lake and the land that would one day become a bridge over a wetland.Photo by J.B. Wogan

 

Water squished under Ron Cornwall’s shoes as he navigated his spongy backyard with his 10-year-old golden retriever Clyde. He cast his hand over Allen Lake and described a summer afternoon when he saw the bushes across the lake shimmying. He was fishing at the time with a friend. 

“This bear came cruising across, going after some geese. My buddy and I, our jaws dropped,” Cornwall said. 

His backyard is privy to other fauna as well: bald eagles, deer, bobcats, trout, bass and catfish, according to Cornwall. For him and his neighbors, the majesty of Allen Lake is worth fighting for, even if it means taking on a city and a road project planned for decades.

Cornwall, a resident about a block outside the city’s eastern boundary, is petitioning against the city’s construction project that would build a wetland bridge west of Allen Lake. His formal petition challenges the city’s logic and preparation for building the bridge. Cornwall is listed as one of 14 homeowners in the petition, two of which live in Sammamish. Most of the homeowners have properties adjacent to 244th Avenue, just outside city limits. 

The project could degrade water quality in the wetland, create flooding, and disrupt the roaming patterns of native wildlife, according to the residents’ petition.

The petitioners haven’t done a formal scientific analysis, but base their assertions on years of living with the animals and plants around the lake.

King County had planned to connect 244th Avenue from Northeast 8th Street to Southeast 8th Street since the early 1990s, if not before, according to City Project Engineer Jed Ireland. The road connection would create better traffic flow throughout the city and give drivers an alternate north-south route. 

The city estimates the project will cost about $13 million, with construction beginning in April. That start date hinges on the residents’ petition being dismissed by a King County hearing examiner. 

The project would widen the road from two to three lanes, with the middle lane serving as a left-turn lane or as a median. 

Allen Lake and its surrounding area is a category 1 wetland, according the state Department of Ecology. That classification means it’s either highly sensitive, rare or has valuable flora and fauna. The classification states that there should not be any degradation to the wetland. 

The city’s environmental impact statement acknowledges that without mitigation, water quality and soil in Allen Lake and its surrounding area would be degraded. 

As such, the project requires the regulation and filtration of stormwater, and the regular maintenance of vegetation in the wetland area.

To reduce impacts, the plan calls for the removal of nearby gravel roads, power line poles and their conduits; the relocation of a sewer line; the repopulation of native plants; changing the terrain in spots along the wetland to allow for seasonal ponds; and conducting a five-year annual monitoring program to verify that the plan is working.

But Cornwall and his neighbors say the project would still have “devastating effects … on a vast network of wildlife, the wetlands and the greater Sammamish community,” according to the petition.

Land-dwelling animals may be discouraged from roaming the perimeter of the wetland after the bridge’s construction, according to the petition.

Future development, brought on by new traffic capacity on the bridge and the redesigned 244th Avenue, would also exacerbate a flooding problem on Allen Lake, according to the petition.

Pollution from runoff could also contaminate drinking water in a nearby private well, the petition states. 

The ultimate conclusion of the petition is that all construction plans around the wetland be halted, with a re-evaluation of the road connection to follow.

“It’s very unlikely that anything washing off the bridge would end up in anybody’s drinking water, quite frankly,” said Ron Little, general manager of the Sammamish Plateau Water and Sewer District. 

Because of the geology of the area, water can’t seep down beyond a layer of hard plane and clay in the wetland, and it would be difficult for pollutants to reach a private well, Little explained. 

“We don’t see contamination happening over there, even with future development,” Little said. 

Hypothetically, the residents’ concerns could be addressed without canceling the project, according to Steve West, a wetland biologist and professor of wildlife ecology at the University of Washington. 

“It is possible to build over a wetland with minimal ecological impact,” West said.

The fact that the road connection will be a bridge is encouraging, he said. With a bridge, fish can move around the bridge supports without a problem. New shading under the bridge could affect some of the wetland plant life, but not in a major way, he said.

The biggest negative impact to the wetland will be during the construction phase, West explained. 

“With a lot of people in there and a lot of machinery in there, animals will avoid that,” West said. 

In some cases, the risk of endangering the wetland might not be worth the project’s ascribed benefits, he added. 

“That’s a call that a community has to make. It comes down to a question of values,” he said. 

City engineers will need to keep an eye on pollutants flowing into the lake, as well as the introduction of aggressive foreign plants that would kill off native vegetation, according to Rob Harrison, professor of soils and the environment at the University of Washington. 

“Given past experience, there’s almost always a negative impact on the hydrology,” Harrison said.

Hydrology is the distribution and  circulation of water on and below the ground. 

Without the proper engineering, the project could create erosion, Harrison said. 

But he said he believed engineers could avoid those pitfalls.

Like West, Harrison said the city would have to make tough choices about construction and mitigation costs and the environmental benefits of those costs.

“There’s a balance between wasting money and doing what you need to do to protect the environment,” he said. 

City Attorney Bruce Disend has filed a motion to dismiss the residents’ petition, claiming that the petition is too vague and doesn’t meet the appropriate criteria to challenge the construction project. If the petition is upheld, a King County hearing examiner will conduct an official hearing on the petition March 17 in City Hall. 

“We fully intend on taking this as far as we can,” Cornwall said.

 

Read the reports

Environmental impact statement: www.ci.sammamish.wa.us/files/document/4662.pdf.

How the city would prevent environmental damage to the wetland (scroll down to the wetland mitigation plan): www.ci.sammamish.wa.us/files/document/4664.pdf.

 

Reporter J.B. Wogan can be reached at 392-6434, ext. 247, or jbwogan@isspress.com. To comment on this story, visit www.SammamishReview.com.

Council trudges through shoreline plan

February 23, 2009

 Jim Creevey, a Lake Sammamish homeowner for more than 40 years, tried to explain to the City Council exactly how much his dock meant to him. Read more

Sammamish Forum

February 23, 2009

Support sex education

We are living in a time where our limited funding needs to be put to the best use possible. 

Education is always a wise investment. 

By investing in a comprehensive and medically accurate sexual education program, young people will have the opportunity to guarantee they have the tools to make more healthy decisions about our future. Read more

Review editorial

February 23, 2009

Firefighter’s pay increase  out of line with reality

We certainly wouldn’t want to deny our firefighters their due, but a 7.55 percent pay increase couldn’t come at a worse time for Eastside Fire & Rescue. Read more

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