The 2,500 teens that come into the Kirkland Boys & Girls Club Teen Center each year understand the need for…
Kirkland Cub Scout Troop No. 595 recently visited the Kirkland Reporter office to learn what it takes to produce a…
Since the start of summer, Scott Pierce has noticed people standing at the Juanita Beach Park re-reading the “closed” signs…
Since the start of summer, Scott Pierce has noticed people standing at the Juanita Beach Park re-reading the “closed” signs every time he strolls by.
“You can tell by the look on their faces that they are not happy campers,” said Pierce, who lives in the neighborhood and has frequented the park for nearly 20 years.
Kirkland Firefighters are investigating what caused a kitchen fire at Raga Cuisine of India on Central Way Tuesday afternoon.
Kirkland Cub Scout Troop No. 595 recently visited the Kirkland Reporter office to learn what it takes to produce a newspaper.
Pedestrians stroll the beach front and look out at the boats that line Marina Park dock. As kayakers glide over the pristine water of Lake Washington, Serret Salles s
We are three weeks away from Kirkland’s grand 4th of July celebration and the folks who have put on the show for the past 11 years still need funding.
It only took the City of Seattle three days to save its fireworks, with $500,000 of donations that poured in. Can the Kirkland community do it in three weeks?
But on a recent evening, Mar and a group of other Lake Washington School District students got to see a real Pierce Arrow, and several other vintage cars on display at Club Auto in Kirkland.
A Kirkland convict who used the identity information of a fellow prison inmate to avoid sex offender registration was sentenced to four years in prison Friday.
Parent Jennifer Dearden takes issue with Lake Washington School District Superintendent Chip Kimball’s statement that he is stuck between a rock and a hard place with his recent decision to change school feeder patterns.
Developed by the State of Washington’s Emergency Management Public Education Department, MYN is a program designed to bring neighborhoods together after a disaster to save lives and homes.
During the meeting, participants will learn the nine steps to take immediately following a disaster; develop a neighborhood skills and equipment inventory; verify which neighbors need extra help in a disaster such as the elderly, those with disabilities or children who may be home alone.
A group of Lake Washington School District parents concerned about the district’s recent decision to change school feeder patterns plan to rally against the redistricting during a public meeting May 20 at Bell Elementary.
Effective with the 2012-13 school year, the district will make more efficient use of building space by changing the grade configurations and also shifting some schools’
Just quit.
It’s an odd strategy to employ when life gets tough, but actor and comedian Michael McDonald stands by it.
The first time he gave up was soon after he obtained his business degree. Working as a loan officer at a bank, his friend he attended business school with said she was going to become an actress. She took him to see an improv comedy show at Groundling Theater.
A Kirkland man and Iraqi citizen was recently removed to his native country for ties to an Al Qaeda leader after a federal immigration judge deemed him a national security risk, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced Thursday.
A small group of Kirkland residents envisioned an arts center for the community in 1962 and rallied to purchase an old building with their own money.
That building – now the Kirkland Arts Center – represents a realization of 11 Kirkland citizens to share the gift of art with the community.
Feeling safe in the Holmes Point neighborhood for 15 years, Stacey Castleberry didn’t think twice about opening her front door when she heard a noise.
From park restoration to school ground maintenance, Kirklanders had their ways of showing how to celebrate Earth Day over the weekend.
It was a day that forever changed the Kirkland Police Department, and Chief Eric Olsen will never forget it.