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  • Reducing home electrical use reduces costs

    Greg Whiting|Jun 14, 2023

    An earlier column emphasized understanding the numbers on your electric bill. Understanding what the bill means, however, doesn’t help much in understanding why you’ve used that much energy, nor does it help you reduce your energy costs. For that, you need to understand how much each of your electric devices contributes to the meter reading. Electric devices have wattage ratings. Multiply the wattage by the amount of time the device is used to determine how much energy that device is using. For...

  • Center Street project, flood issues heard by planning commission

    Bill Reynolds|Jun 14, 2023

    With the completion of an on-site soil analysis, applicants Kate and Brandon Atkinson stand on firm enough ground to seek county building permits for their proposed condo project on Center Street, Town of La Conner Planning Commissioners were told last week. “The applicants have expressed a desire to apply for building permits before the end of June,” Planning Director Michael Davolio said as part of a regular status report on the 306 Center Street proposal during a one-hour June 7 hybrid session at Maple Hall. Davolio said two soil boring tes...

  • Busy summer wildfire season anticipated statewide

    Bill Reynolds|Jun 14, 2023

    Summer vacation likely will be an oxymoron for area firefighters. Forecasts place Washington state at the epicenter of regional wildfires from July to September. “The outlook for Washington state is not all that great,” Skagit County Fire District 13 Assistant Chief Jamie Jurdi conceded last Thursday. “Washington is in the red throughout the whole wildfire season. Not just eastern Washington, but also western Washington.” Fire District 13, serving Swinomish Reservation and the rural La Conner area, regularly mobilizes personnel and equipme...

  • Cascadian Farm now owned by Rodale Institute Pacific Northwest Organic Center

    Jun 14, 2023

    SKAGIT VALLEY — The Rodale Institute Pacific Northwest Organic Center at Cascadian Farm, the historic property formerly known as Cascadian Home Farm, has opened its fields to the public for u-pick strawberries. A beloved destination for tourists and local residents traveling along Highway 20, the idyllic 90 acre farm is nestled between the Cascade Mountains and the Skagit River. Founded in 1972, the site is the birthplace of the Cascadian Farm brand of grocery products. While the Cascadian Farm brand quickly outgrew the Home Farm, it r...

  • Local fire departments burn house down on purpose

    Ken Stern|Jun 14, 2023

    Burning the Hedlund house to the ground Saturday was only the last straw and the least important fire of the day for the La Conner and Fire Districts 2, 13 and 17 fire departments. By the time the last of the piles of wood pallets were brought into the house and the last of the interior fires were started with a propane tank and torch at 1:15 p.m., the various firefighting crews had spent hours in every room of the two story structure, examining, fighting, putting out and being tested on a varie...

  • Smoke Ready Week is now through June 16

    Jun 14, 2023

    OLYMPIA – As our climate changes, the threat of wildfires looms larger. The Washington state Department of Health is urging the public to prepare for smoke that can make air unhealthy to breathe. Smoke Ready Week, June 12-16, is an opportunity to take proactive steps to protect yourself and your family. “We are expecting to have above normal fire activity in Washington by July,” said Kaitlyn Kelly, MPH, air quality policy specialist, DOH. “We have an outlook for below normal precipitation and that’s going to last into fall, so condition...

  • Renew Town business licenses

    Jun 14, 2023

    The deadline for businesses to renew their Town of La Conner licenses is June 30. The state of Washington requires processing licenses through the Washington Department of Revenue’s website. Get licenses at the DOR website: dor.wa.gov. Click on “Get or renew a license” and log in or create an account. Follow the steps to completion. General business license renewals are through June 30, 2024. The annual fee starts at $25 for home occupation licenses and booth/desk fees. There are three general license fees, from $108 to $238 based on annua...

  • Best Road construction finishes

    Jun 14, 2023

    The Skagit County Public Works phase-one construction on Best Road from McLean Road to the Fir Island/Moore intersection will finish Thursday, June 15. Phase-two, the upcoming chip seal program in July and August does not yet have a start date. Everyone will need to expect delays during this time of construction. Source: Skagit County Public Works...

  • Little rain in May

    Ken Stern|Jun 7, 2023

    Continued bad news on the moisture front for 2023. Yes, May was dry. There has not been significant rain since a half inch fell May 5. Four of the five rain days came May 1-6, 0.59 inches of 0.64 inches total rain. The May 5 storm was the only precipitation greater than one-tenth an inch. This May, rainfall was 2.2 inches below, 70%, the century average. This continues local water woes. Skagit County starts the dry season with a 6.2 inch water deficit, at 8.6 inches to date, six inches below normal for this century. In 2022 May’s 2.4 inches o...

  • State appeals court meets at Skagit Valley College

    Bill Reynolds|Jun 7, 2023

    Generations of Skagit Valley College students have been tutored in acting at the Phil Tarro Theatre on the school’s Mount Vernon campus. But Thursday morning it was a real-life drama that played out on the main stage there. That is when SVC hosted oral argument hearings conducted by the three-judge Washington State Division I Court of Appeals, based in Seattle and whose docket takes cases originating in King, Snohomish, Skagit, Whatcom, San Juan and Island counties. The panel heard attorneys present arguments in two civil and two criminal appel...

  • Natural gas stoves are bad for you and the environment

    Greg Whiting|Jun 7, 2023

    A few days ago, one of the people I was talking with at the coffee shop asked me whether a possible ban on gas stoves is real, or just another straw-man argument designed to rile up the public in search of television ratings. It’s a real issue. Several cities, starting with Berkeley, California in 2019, banned new natural gas connections to residential and commercial buildings. The primary purpose of these laws is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Eliminating natural gas as a fuel supply f...

  • Burn ban starts Friday

    Jun 7, 2023

    This summer’s burn ban begins 8 a.m. June 9. It is a modified burn ban for all residential and land clearing fires in unincorporated Skagit County and continue until further notice. County staff will no longer issue permits for these activities and existing permits are suspended. La Conner residents must check at Town Hall for local burning restrictions. Allowed are recreational and cooking fires, up to 3 feet in diameter and 2 feet high if using charcoal, seasoned firewood, or propane-fueled firepits, with safety requirements. Outdoor b...

  • Repairing McGlinn Island's rock jetty

    Bill Reynolds|May 31, 2023

    Emergency repair work on the rock jetty south of La Conner will continue through June 9 to protect out-migrating juvenile salmon. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is coordinating the project, which includes placement of thousands of cubic yards of cobble and sediment on the Skagit River side of the jetty. The repairs are designed to plug porous areas that have impacted outbound salmon this spring. Until work is completed, fishers and recreational boaters must remain at least 300 feet from the construction area. Only authorized access to McGlinn...

  • April Town sales tax revenues strong

    Ken Stern|May 31, 2023

    The $36,016 reported in sales tax revenues to the La Conner Town Council in April by the state’s Department of Revenue is the second highest ever for the month, only behind 2022’s record $44,210 and only the second April above $36,000. The Special Use Fire Tax Revenues had a matching dip. The $3,594 was $802 less than last year but again the second highest total for the month. February was cold, which influenced tourist visits. It is early in the year to find trends in the reduced revenue totals. Overnight stays remained high. The $10,592 in...

  • Council forwards adult business rules to state; refers tiny homes bid to town panel

    Bill Reynolds|May 31, 2023

    La Conner Town Council members were akin to traffic cops during their May 23 nearly 90-minute hybrid meeting at Maple Hall. The council forwarded proposed local restrictions on adult businesses to state officials in Olympia while remanding for review to the town planning commission a bid by developer Greg Ellis to site tiny homes on the lots behind Pioneer Market at Whatcom and Washington streets. Mayor Ramon Hayes echoed what planning staff have previously said for restricting such businesses. “If we don’t regulate them,” said Hayes, “we o...

  • La Conner's American Tugs sold

    Ken Stern|May 31, 2023

    La Conner based Tomco Marine Group, builders of American Tugs, was bought by the Kadey-Krogen Group of Stuart Florida May 18. The 36 employees at American Tugs' 28,000-square-foot facility on Pearle Jenson Way will continue to build boats there, said General Manager Troy Olason Friday. The company is still recruiting after hiring eight employees this year, he said. It builds five models ranging from 36 feet- to 48 feet that sell for $595,000 to $1.7 million and has delivered more than 250...

  • Marna Hannerman is next La Conner mayor

    Ken Stern|May 24, 2023

    Marna Hanneman will be La Conner 's next mayor, no contest. Hanneman, on the planning commission since 2015, was the only person filing to run for the office during the May 15-19 period. Council members Mary Wohleb, an incumbent elected in 2019, and Annie Taylor, filing for the position she was appointed to in 2021, will also be elected when they vote for themselves. No one filed to oppose them. The only locally contested race is between John Agen and Janie Beasley for La Conner School District Director Position 2, almost a repeat of the 2019...

  • High school student rescues two swimmers

    Bill Reynolds|May 24, 2023

    A La Conner High School senior is a true lifesaver. Not just once, but twice. Finn Hakenson on separate occasions earlier this month helped two men in distress in Whistle Lake at Mount Erie Park in Anacortes. Both survived thanks in great part to Hakenson's fast thinking and strong swimming skills. The first rescue, on May 12, was the most dramatic. Hakenson was in the lake waiting for his friends and track and field teammates Brenden Kitchen, Isaac Kitchen, Floyd Dent and Flint Huizenga to...

  • Flood mitigation options discussed

    Bill Reynolds|May 24, 2023

    There’s no escaping flood risks in La Conner, but there are temporary and permanent options that can improve the odds of successfully managing future high-water events like last December’s that caused nearly $2 million in damages. Those options are spelled out in a flood mitigation report from engineer Evan Henke and presented to the Town’s Emergency Management Commission at Maple Hall May 9 by Public Works Director Brian Lease. “This plan,” wrote Henke, of David Evans and Associates, “is intended to be a ‘living’ document that is frequently r...

  • Planning Commission refers proposed adult business regulations to Council

    Bill Reynolds|May 24, 2023

    Now it is the La Conner Town Council’s turn to decide how best to regulate adult businesses should one or more try to locate here. Fortunately, the panel has received some grown-up advice. The La Conner Planning Commission last week unanimously approved forwarding to the Council a detailed and highly restrictive framework developed with Planning Director Michael Davolio and Assistant Planner Ajah Eills based on court rulings issued in First Amendment and freedom of expression cases. The plan limits to industrial zones on the town’s north and...

  • Expect delays on Best Road

    May 24, 2023

    Skagit County Public Works is working on Best Road Mondays through Thursdays from 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. from McLean Road to the Fir Island/Moore intersection through June 15. Public Works is performing milling repair in preparation for the upcoming chip seal program in July and August, and everyone will need to expect delays during this time of construction. Source: Skagit County Public Works...

  • Turnout small at Saturday town hall

    Kylee Forygin|May 24, 2023

    It could have been the perfect weather or the Guitar Festival that steered residents away from the Citizen Engagement Opportunity in the La Conner Swinomish Library conference room last Saturday, May 20. About ten people came to it, including La Conner Town Councilmembers MaryLee Chamberlain and Rick Dole. The relaxed setting encouraged public discussion of pre-selected topics: sustainable businesses; open spaces, infrastructure needs; public safety; and density development and growth. The gathering was put on by the council’s communications c...

  • Shelter Bay board election results

    Ken Stern|May 24, 2023

    Shelter Bay residents reelected Joe Hurley to their board of directors Saturday, May 20 at the community’s annual meeting. New on the board are Rod Proctor, who was appointed and served briefly in 2022, and Rick Parnell. The winners were overwhelming selected. Their totals: Hurley, 308; Proctor, 278; Parnell, 249. They beat candidates Jan Paul, 190 votes; Julie Peddy, 138; Marianne Remme, 90; and Larry Tagala, 87. Also newly on the board is Lawson Earl, selected by board members May 17, replacing Judy Kontos, recalled by the community in A...

  • Hope Island fish pens removed

    May 17, 2023

  • Shelter Bay board candidates meet and greet before vote

    Bill Reynolds|May 17, 2023

    The 2023 Shelter Bay Board of Directors campaign trail crossed Rainbow Bridge into La Conner Monday evening. A scheduled three-hour community members-only meet-and-greet with board candidates in the canopied Santo Coyote Mexican Kitchen outdoor patio area gradually shifted from mix-and-mingle to question-and-answer to a free-wheeling and often spirited discussion on a wide range of topics among attendees. About 50 people participated on a come-and-go basis. Seven candidates are vying for three...

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