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HomeMy WebLinkAboutSWP272171(11) ' Le 'acq1\11Aes (ems I Bigand uisition boosts Trillium Glacier Park Co. completes on the market. Kansas City, Mo.; Fargo, N.D.; Denver; The latest purchase, which completes Minneapolis/St. Paul; Chicago; and Van- large property liquidation Glacier Park's land liquidation here, couver, B.C. includes about three acres zoned for Trillium has offices in Billings, Mt., in deal with Bellingham firm industrial use south of the Kingdome in Anchorage and Denver, and primarily South Seattle; acreage on the north side develops commerial, recreational and by Polly Lane of the Ship Canal; several industrial sites residential properties. It is best known in Times business reporter in Kent; a commercial-retail tract on the the Northwest for its Bellis Fair Mall and East Valley Highway in Auburn; and a Cordata Business Park in Bellingham, The Trillium Corp. of Bellingham has 40-plus-acre business park in Renton, and the Resort Semiahmoo, nearby. It acquired about 75 properties and 25 rail- south of Longacres. also owns more than 100,000 acres of served industrial parks from the Glacier Wetlands issues on the Renton site timberlands. Park Co., the real-estate arm of Burling- are being settled and Trillium will offer ton Northern. Two of the properties are some of the parcels there for sale while Founded in 1974,Trillium is a private, in Canada, several are in this area. reserving some for development. family-owned corporation. The package was valued at about $72 million when negotiations began in No- "The acquisition met Glacier Park's Syre said his company is interested in vember, but several pieces were sold in goal of liquidating its real-estate assets long-range planning, and in being long- the interim, lowering the overall sales and matched our goal of diversifying our term owners and managers of resource. price by $15 million, to $20 million, said company and moving into different geo- lands and development projects. David Syre, Trillium president. graphical areas," Syre said today. Most of the newly acquired land is Last September, Trillium purchased No specific plans have been an- zoned with development or building about$50 million worth of other proper- nounced for the newly acquired sites but permits pending, utilities in place and in ties from Glacier Park, includin& 232 Ken Hertz, Trillium vice president, said some cases, developed, making the sites parcels in the mountain states. Trillium the company will begin evaluating and "excellent investments for us,"Syre said. already has sold 53 of the properties, preparing action plans for the Seattle- Many also are served by rail, a factor he mostly larger pieces, and others also are area sites, as well as some in or near believes further enhances their value. ,c wa In century. tii e n r Miller p Sion president Unique features put this Breakthrough CD lets you control funds to your account up to the e Z *on's econo- CD in a class by itself. the rate your money earns.In amount of your opening deposit— ;pride in the port. Are interest rates going up? other words,if rates go up,you and earn your original rate...or rst acts as execu- Or going down?With Great have a one-time option to switch your new higher rate. ill be to spend asking leaders of American's Breakthrough CD,it to the higher rate. Open a CD that's different the cities of doesn't make arty difference. 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Downtown Seattle.511 Pine Street.467-8990-Everett.1020S.E.Everett Mall Way.353-6595-Tacoma.4902 Tacoma Mall BIvd..475-8020-Kirklan lingthe t would Totem Lake Mall).921-6699-Issaquah.I I Front Street South,392-7553-Bellevue,10425 N.E.Eighth,454-9081-Bothell.10134 Main Street.485-7491 L day. South,839-3505-Silverdale,Kitsap Place(acro%s from Kitsap Mall),692-6111 1 W)2 t Z " keep me new medical 'oftice on 15,000 square`feet each- while the paffent'wingj o. vcvewp a 5nu,eu uui b...b ..,",.� � all too well the dark days of campus to increase physician/medi- fitness center would occupy 14,000 levels to the East Wing; 8. New Providence Inrtl�fitness center/ Anderson added. "This action cal cdnter ties and efficiencies. A square feet. A below-level parking parking/skybridge; 9. Develop daycare/play area. agricultural industry of the Pa relocation of ambulatory care ser- garage would provide 30 stalls. A f' ;d .. vices is being considered for the skybridge or tunnel across 18th is ing would total 3,500 square feet A public hearing regarding the Providence Professional Buildin g g g Timber Fair Trade and Forest g• also planned for convenience and and would stand 28 feet tall. An ex- master plan and draft cnvironmen- an to be lifted if Northwest log ❑Front entrance/laboratory safety. isting building would be renovated tal impact statement is scheduled H, renovations. Above-and below- ❑Daycare/play area. A daycare for the required space or it would for 7 p.m, on July 15 at the Provi- la, grade redevelopment near the front with play area is slated at the corner be demolished for new construe- dence Medical Center Auditorium ar. ompleted entrance would include: laboratory of 18th and East Cherry.The build- tion. (500 17th Ave.,Seattle). W lave finished the final 11/2-mile g bicyclists and pedestrians an to alls,Idaho. wetlands banking may help developers and wetlands D' completed Tuesday. Disputes re( :nt on how to build along the as A the section's completion for BY KATHRYN SMITH of wetland he fills rather,than creat- buys from the city's stock of wet- in advance of any development, tal Journal staff reporter ing new ones on his property. lands,said Mary Lynne Meyer, city many agree. Gc Recreation Department solved "It could possibly be cheaper planner. And second, the program would re( Wetlands mitigation banking and definitely more convenient," "We were luck Towner $68,825 for easements y because we had remove hassles faced by develop- the to be used for trail parking. may become an effective tool for said Ronald D. Kranz, vice presi- some of the old wetlands there," ers. Often, trying to create or to Post Falls cost about . developers wishing to build on wet- dent and director of natural resour- said Mary Lynne Meyer. About 20 protect wetlands can be a headache. we sally extending the path east to lands laden property, according to ces at David Evans& Associates. years ago, wetlands on the city's "While they (regulations) are ins -ie Nine Mile Falls area north- two wetlands experts. The bank can be created and property had been filled so it is just designed to protect the resources, mr Alison Moss, an attorney with operated by agencies, non-profit or- a matter of digging down 8 to 10 they are costing the property He Bogle & Gates, and Karen Lane, ganizations or private entities. feet to create a wetland. owners enormously with ques- cai vice president of development at Glacier Park Co.,a large property It can cost up to$300,000 an acre tionable results," Lane said. Ba Glacier Park Co.,were among other owner, will be doing its wetlands to create a valid wetland in some Wetland mitigation for the Koll Cc speakers at a series of land use banking with the city of Renton, areas,she said. Cordata Retail Centre in Whatcom ing up workshops held recently throughout Lane said. The wetland mitigation bank County ended up costing the devel- sta the state. The workshops were The city recently concluded a should be nearby the property being oper about $2 million and 18 so] lion spending rose 0.2 percent sponsored by Bogle&Gates. deal with Glacier Park to establish developed — whether sharing the months of construction time, said pIL ance, boosting spending to the Wetlands delineation can be a a wetland mitigation banking same drainage basin or within the Moss, a specialist in critical area de; ment said yesterday, confusing and costly process for program — the first in the area. same jurisdiction. and wetland regulation. no nding on residential, non-resi- many developers. But some say The company owned an 83-acre "There are no hard and fast rules The wetlands consisted of 5.3 pre ed $423.2 billion at a season- that a fairly new method of protect- parcel in the Green River Valley to follow here but there are gener- acres of a 31-acre parcel. Following SN 2.4 billion in April. ing wetlands could prove to be the which had numerous wetlands, ally political and biological param- mitigation,about 14 acres had been ighest since it reached $425.6 best compromise between develop- making it unattractive to develop- eters to follow," Kranz said. reserved for protection of wetlands ab, ment and the environment. ers. There are two main advantages on the site in the form of buffers, be( it than initially estimated. The Mitigation banking involves A program was set up whereby with the banking program, sup- additional wetlands and enhance- 75� ng 0.3 percent as it originally creating a large supply of wetlands the company gave 45 acres of the porters say. ments. near a future development site in land to the city for a wetlands bank. First, the wetlands are bigger and rease of about 0.3 percent in order to compensate for negative The remaining 38 acres is more of a higher quality than the smaller, — — — above the same month a year impacts to wetlands on site. usable now because a developer sporadic wetlands developers create A developer can buy credits from does not have to worry about work- on site. It is also advantageous to as off 0.3 percent, to a $177.0 the "wetland bank" for every acre ing around wetlands — he merely have successful wetlands in place !�� FR AMING April. nstruction rose 1.5 percent, to dvance. But spending on mul- I �$13.2billion. Luxurydevelopmentor to continue growing slowly 51e family homes. J _- -- _ _ A-1— _ e- -T - 11 .1 r. Dal ews 250 kialley South King County since 1889. Volume I t W. o I i Imits he has AID& I am not sick' e one of many diseases that attack people Ashe said he is on medication, including Champion of causes: whose immune systems are weakened by AZT,which is commonly used to treat AIDS ur Ashe Picking Battles, leas Were"impor AIDS. patients,and is tolerating it well. .ionally tant,�Arthur Ashe has become'moref, Subsequent blood tests revealed the human In November,former Los Angeles Lakers �clared, ,,than a tennis champion.Page 81 ? ' Immunodeficiency virus,Ashe said. basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson sell." "We are 100 percent sure that the cause of announced he is carrying the AIDS virus. 3ritain's my HIV infection was a blood transfusion," Johnson, who said he contracted the virus he con- now,at this time. he said. "We are 95 percent sure it was the from heterosexual sex,has not developed the sfusion, "Sadly,there is really no good reason for '83 operation." disease itself. on,and this to happen now.But it has happened,and Ashe said he got two units of blood"sev- In a statement,Johnson extended his sup- he was I will adjust and go forward,"he said. eral days after the surgery when I wasn't port and prayers to Ashe and his family. Nspaper Ashe,48,said his right hand went dead in feeling good. "It takes great courage and strength to 1988 and surgery showed he had toxoplas- ' "I told.the doctors, `I feel awful,' " he make such an announcement,"Johnson said. ry that I mosis;a parasitic infection of the brain that is" said."They said,`You can wait it out or we` '` See ASHE,A5 Ashe:`I will adjust.' ✓elation considered a sign of AIDS.Toxoplasmosis is can give you a couple of units.' " firing break prank Cityaims ,r for deal on wetlands Glacier Park land maybe key AUCtIOn Valley Daily News RENT ON-The cit is racin to //1'� ��++ beat the auctioneer's gavel to com- land tracts plete an unusual deal that could pre- } i serve acres of Valley floor wetlands. in Val I ey As part of the liquidation of its tJ , Glacier Park real estate holdings, By T.M.SELL li Burn ton Resources is selling g g 13Valley Daily News d, w k+,yam parcels totaling 174 acres south of Longacres in the Orillia Business Twenty-four Valley floor par- Park. eels of land will be part of a$90 Most of the land has been filled, million nationwide real estate and one site is paved and is being auction of Glacier Park Co.land leased by The Boeing Co.as a park- later this month. ing lot.But even the filled sites have The local parcels,-mostly developed minor wetlands that zoned for industrial uses,range ';- include vegetation and waterfowl in size from 1.4 to 115 acres, habitat. and range in price from The parcels range from 3.75 acres $100,000 to$2.7 million. teen on helicopter for trip to Harborview Wednesday morning. Valley Daly News photo by MARCUS R.DONNER to more than 77 acres. Two of the Those are published reserves vel tracts,one east and one west of Oak- the minimum price Burlington ■ esdale Avenue Southwest near Resources hopes to get as it liq- blows 'n een s face Southwest 34th Street, have not e s its former real estate been completely filled and include development development company. Prices significant wetlands that approxi- could go lower or higher mate the Valley's original, pristine depending on what happens at videotape the explosion,but Quackenbush said state,city planners say. the auction. : r Local.land for sale includes It W8S their(teens)first effort they didn't get that far before the bomb went Glacier Park wants to swap Ren- )okin for . off. ton the major wetlands for the right two commercial sites in g . . They were just "It was their first effort. They were just to fill the minor wetlands. Filling Auburn, including a 50-acre `got more experimenting. I don't think experimenting"to see if the device would really those properties would make them parcel;'near the Fred Meyer tomemace work;Quackenbush said. more marketable,and the city would store; two Auburn industrial u[h's face they anticipated what was _ sites;eight Kent industrial sites; � "I don't think they,anticipated what was be able to establish a"wetlands mit- g going to happen. going to happen.There was no initial reaction, i ation bank"to help reserve natu- and 14 parcels in the Orillia rid second- s PP g p p Business Park in Renton. ace, throat so they started manhandling" the bottle, he ral habitat in the rapidly growing Kent Police Sgt.John Quackenbush reportedly ouths rene o said.Of the s Karen Lane,vice president of ide a home y p y squeezed and area. development for Glacier Park in et,accord- shook the container,but still nothing happened. Both sides claim credit for the p ,e artment Then Faddis took the bottle,and it exploded in idea.The auction takes place May 2 Seattle, said potential buyers p injured but were shaken by the accident,which occurred at the youngest boys home,said Ken[ his hands,Quackenbush said. in Bellevue.The Renton City Coun- See AUCTION,A5 rious. Police Sgt.John Quackenbush. Fire spokesman DeHart warned that mixing cil is expected to approve the swap ttory prob- The teens were making the bomb in a two-li- household chemicals can be very dangerous. . at its Monday meeting. Faddis'was ter p!a:tic bottle, using a recipe cf household "We have. . .people hi the house who mix. In the mz:time, everyone the next few weeks. Depending on ter in Seat- chemicals supplied by a fellow Kent-Meridian household cleaners together, hoping to get a involved is waiting to hear if the that decision, the permits could be is initially High School student,Quackenbush said. better cleaner," he said. "They end up being U.S.Army Corps of Engineers will granted quickly or slowly. s upgraded The sergeant said this was the first time he poisoned,"because combining different chemi- sign off on the deal. City Planner Mary Lynne Myer sday after- had heard of the device,which the boys called a cals can create toxic gases."They're not meant A Corps Engineers spokes- said she hopes approval comes "dry ice bomb." to be mixed.They're meant to be used accord- woman in Seattle said a decision on before the land is sold.Glacier Park 7, weren't The youths told officers they were planning to '-ing to their directions." how to process Glacier Park's many similar applications is expected in See WETLANDS,A5 a ends as ,. 1 `Two shots not twopills' INDEX berg dies Business A9 Doctors debunk antihistamines used for colds T ;it: 'Classified Ads B6-810 t truly great citizens of the state of COMICS '17'' By RICHARD L.VERNACI potential to cause harmful effects, People with allergies get runny Washington and set an example for A -1 —4— 47 Associated Press the risks associated with their use noses and watery eyes when the]in- Valley Daily News Thursday,April 9, 1992■A5 AUCTION■ "If you're.the seller, the draw- WETLANDS■ it holes back is that you may not get it sold, ■ Most parcels period," said Kirk Johnson, a prin- Plan would preserve F� cipal with Trammell Crow in Seat- include wetlands tle. "Or it'll bring in such a low almost pristine land IO�� � price that you'll have left a lot of r Continued from page Al money on the table. Continued from page Al "If you're a buyer, the auction have shown interest in all of Glacier format does not give adequate time officials say there's considerable lip unless it was intentionally Park's Valley holdings, and bids to review the property and all of its interest in the flat, industrially d• already have come in on some of the associated risks," he said. zoned land scattered up and down ng the Saturday re-enact- properties. "To have somebody go in and buy Valley, despite the presence of wet- the raft didn't flip until the Some local Realtors say the mar- apiece of property at auction, with lands. ss of the speedboat. ket for industrial property is as flat the wetlands impact on these proper- "If we lose this opportunity then ley,also told jurors that she as the Valley floor, however. What ties, is not a real safe thing to do," the parcels go up for auction," er participants practiced their the land will bring is anybody's agreed Jim Torina, associate broker Myer said. "I'm not sure we could e in a pool. uess. with Kidder, Mathews and Segner. afford them." :he process,you were learn- g Tim Reinertsen, senior vice presi- Glacier Park's Lane said although The Oakesdale Avenue sites, ere to position your weight, dent of Realty Marketing/Northwest all the Valley sites have wetlands on together about 50 acres, include Storey said. in Bellevue, said the auction format them; they also have developable native vegetation and support a vari- Wrigley answered. has been successful in selling resi- uplands as well. A possible deal ety of waterfowl and wildlife, rday's re-enactment was dential properties. with Renton, subject to U.S. Army including deer,she said. ated by hail, snow, thunder "We have kind of pioneered the Corp of Engineers approval, could Karen Lane, Glacier Park vice htning and Wrigley admitted process with commercial proper- give buyers the right to fill minor president for development, said the s tired and uncomfortable at ties," he said. The firm has been in wetlands on some of the Orillia company would profit on the deal if particularly because she had business six years, with $32 million Business Park.property. it can fill wetlands on the other a wet suit that made the re- in sales last year. .Realtors say non-residential land tracts. ent that much more difficult. values have stayed even or declined `Filling those low spots will sub- u were cold,tired and wanted Reinertsen said the auction pro- in the last 12 months in South King stantially improve the utility of those over and your goal was to cess,because of the company's full- County. Depressed real estate and parcels," and thereby the price, she raft?" Storey asked. , color booklet listing all the proper- financial markets elsewhere in the said. Wrigley replied. ties, exposes the land to thousands nation make it harder to borrow Once the city got the land, it could ;r questioning by defense of potential buyers. He said the firm money to develop projects, and charge developers to fill wetlands on ;y John Muenster, Wrigley typically sells 60 percent to 65 per- industrial rents haven't followed their sites and use the money to e was surprised when the raft cent of the properties it auctions at their residential cousins in the Seat- expand wetlands on the Oakesdale I the first time'and said that one time. . tle area. property. Creating a sizable wet- ihen it went over on,top of "We really feel like we do come "I don't know how many people lands reserve would create usable Ives in the air pocket created very close to delivering what the are going to be lined up" to buy, park space and also limit flooding in he flipped raft hit her. property is worth in today's mar- Torina said. the area, Myer said. Smith, who played the part ket," Reinertsen said. He predicted that the auction pric- "It's been a very productive rela- dy Roth in the re-enactment, "An auction serves a purpose es will be "significantly lower" tionship with Glacier Park and too was told the goal of the when you're in a liquidation mode," than the published reserves. we've really appreciated it," Myer :tment was to flip the raft. said Jerry Mathews, co-chairman of "you're not going to get top dollar said. rring to Jones, Smith said: Kidder, Mathews and Segner, Inc., today." iid he was working on a court in Seattle. It assumes that either a The auction will run April 21 ASHE■ which they said it was impos- good buy is available or that several through May 2. Sealed bids are ■ o flip the raft over and he parties are interested in the property required for many of the properties. t was possible, he said. and will bid the price up, he said. Local properties will be auctioned at Star hoped to keep 2:30 p.m. May 2 at the Bellevue news private Athletic Club. �G�s •ai CH ERBERG■ Continued from page Al "I'm sure Arthur will meet this chal- CHANCE H He served under lenge head on and become a leading HABITS ' voice in the fight to educate, raise WITH five governors funds and increase awareness to all, Continued from page Al especially our youth." Ashe said he had wanted to have applies to • • ' ,'.CHANGE, Cherberg Building, known as the privacy because he was not running Lroqram fee ALLIED "JAC buildin After he stepped 0 for office or heading a company �0 g pp whose stockholders depended on 0aA� down, Gardner appointed him an him. He spoke with emotion, and at • •• ambassador of goodwill for the state. one point his wife, Jeanne, had to In addition to take over reading his statement. Gardner, Cher- N� Despite the toxoplasmosis, he berg served as said: "I am not sick. I can function lieutenant for ~; very well. And I plan to continue former Govs. doing those things that I have done John Spellman, all along, if the public will let me. Dixy Lee Ray, My wife and daughter are in excel- Dan Evans and io ,,o,,,,,., -A k,tk uTV nPaa_ , Renton ' seeks' Wetlands balance Of environmental, economic interests By DEAN A.RADFORD Valley Daily News RENTON-Glacier Park Co.owns 550 acres °yilk, of industrial land in the Green River Valley it says is practically worthless because of wet f a;+f lands. f ,* Of that 550 acres,400 havewelands, leaving about 150 acres of usable land, Marty Sevier, zx the company's senior director of development, said Friday. In 1990,King County said the land was worth $68 million. Glacier Park appealed,and the val- ue was lowered to$34 million, after the comps- ny showed how wetlands "had devalued the land," Sevier said. i I I Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA The company plans'to appeal the 1991 prop Wetlands area west of East Valley Road, north of S.W. 27th Street in Renton. erty value, possibly lowering it by $25 million, Sevier said. In Renton alone, the company owns shout NeW Ordinance not easy to write 220 acres and "out of those, we have 60 acres Y that we consider to be usable at the moment," Sevier said. By DEAN A.RADFORD Whether the ordinance achieves that bal- Companies like Glacier Park, a subsidiary of Valley Daily News ante won't be known until the ordinance' Burlington Northern Resources Inc., say Ren- RENTON - The city's planning staff has goes before the City,Council, which must ton's proposed wetlands ordinance constitutes a tried six times to write a wetlands ordinance adopt at least interim regulations by March. "taking" of their property value. that achieves some lofty goals. ' Mary Lynne Myer, the city's principal "No one talks about paying the landowner for City policy, the ordinance says,is"to bat- long-range planner,has directed work_ on the taking,his property. If you're going to declare ance community desires for economic devel- ordinance since she joined the city's staff in 'my land unusable, then pay me for it," Sevier opment and affordable'`housing with the April. She is responsible for the update of the said. responsibility to retain the city's remaining See BALANCE,A5 wetlands." See ORDINANCE,A5 '��/ i i ''•ti�i t ' ' ' K "t' . ,���`t ip h : �''i�?{.�Q�+�Fj4 r Valley Daily News Monday,December 16, 1991 ■A5 BALANCE: dation to the City Council, which protecting mud puddles and over- not to pay any more money on LIDS has final say on the ordinance. protection is what I object to," he because there is no benefit,absolute- "The balance we have tried to said. ,• ly none," said Sevier, whose com- Public hearing strike - but we're leaving it up to Mayor Earl Clymer said he thinks pany is paying $1 million for street Slated Wednesday public comment - is to allow for the business community's philoso- and utility improvements. properties to be developed and still phy is being expressed on the com- Glacier Park is trying to sell its Continued from page Al ensure the wetland values and func- mission. "This is a change and it's land holdings in South King County. The payments, he said, "would tions can be replaced," said Mary causing consternation among some The Planning Commission, in probably ease the pain." Lynne Myer, the city's long-range and happiness for others," he said. removing wetland buffers from the Sevier said local governments also planner responsible for the wetlands "We're trying to strike a balance. Policy-setting Comprehensive Plan lose money. His company will pay ordinance and the Comprehensive Let's keep this within the law and earlier this fall, set off a debate over about$400,000 less in property tax- Plan update. have a win-win situation for every- the value of buffers and the size of es, "of which a major share was She stressed the ordinance would one involved." wetlands and the relationship of the Renton's," he said. not render land undevelopable. Sin- Whether a wetlands ordinance ordinance to the land-use plan. Since April, Renton has worked gle-family housing is exempt,as are constitutes a "taking" of property Buffers, Myer said, "are an inte- on an ordinance to protect its dwin- wetlands less than 2,200 square feet. was decided by the state Supreme gral part of the functioning of any wetland" that remove pollutants, dling wetlands, which arc crucial to Joan Walker, a planning commis- Court in hearing a 1990 challenge to P flood and stormwater control and sioner, said she "needs to listen to King County's sensitive areas ordi- slow runoff and offer a transition provide habitat for many species of the public hearing and have the peo- nance. I between man's activities and plants and wildlife. An initial analy- ple who own the property tell me Larry Warren, Renton's city nature's. sis shows the city has roughly 32 how that would affect them." She attorney, wrote in a letter to Myer Without buffers, Myer doesn't wetlands covering about 367 acres. wants to hear from people who live the court said such ordinances"sub- think the city can meet its policy goal Opposite property owners such as on the city's hillsides and plateaus stantially advance the public interest of Clintnet loss of wetlandshe Glacier Park are environmental who might have wetlands on their in safety,health,welfare or the envi- lin Lank, manager of the Couenvnty's groups and wetland advocates who property. ronment. As such, they were not ronmental division of King County's warn development is destroying Bill Taylor, a planning commis- challengable as 'takings' but rather Parks, Planning and Resources nature's plumbing system, which sioner and former Longacres execu- had to be challenged on due process Division, agrees. can control floods more efficiently five,said, "I think there is a balance grounds." "King County believes that pro- and cheaper than any of man's that needs to be achieved between The due-process provision rankles tecting wetlands without protecting attempts. the needs of the environment and the Sevier,who has talked to his compa- adequate buffers will not preserve Somewhere is a middle ground, a rights of the property owners and the ny's attorney's about the issue. the integrity of wetlands,since many balance that will keep business and economic realities of the city of Ren- "They have restricted the land by of the functions and values of wet the economy healthy and protect the ton." the delays in processing the per- lands depend upon the condition of environment, officials say. But Taylor-fears the ordinance mit," Sevier said. adjacent vegetated buffer," Lank The city's Planning Commission "goes far beyond what is required in Sevier also wonders why property wrote in a letter. will take public testimony on the growth management legislation and owners should pay for local Without buffers, he said the cif conflict ict ordinance's sixth draft at a public is clearly a major infringement on improvement districts when they Comprehensive Plan may con hearing at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the rights of property owners. receive no benefits. with King County's,which is incon- the City Council chambers at City "I absolutely believe we need to "I,don't know if my company sistent with the state's goal of coor- Hall. It will then ernd itc reron,n,i-n- protect our significant wetlands. But would, but my recommendation is dinated land-use plans. .... .. _._..,.. - i,•1 y',r tti � 'l 'Yti ` ;.� r t r'. 5' .r jt 6 .. .J�t V. 10 13 Ill .:Ii) S I ii111ning t-onlll11:,11ull L,""', I.0 I.')....,U .,u.,, —...11,11— — ,)L.i,l .ttok, ..vUULII ,.Al) will take public testimony on the growth management legislation and owners should pay for local Without buffers, he said the city's ordinance's sixth draft at a public is clearly a major infringement on improvement districts when they Comprehensive Plan may conflict ' hearing at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the rights of property owners. receive no benefits. with King County's,which is incon- the City Council chambers at City "I absolutely believe we need to "I ,don't know if my company sistent with the state's goal of coor- Hall It will then,�rnd itc rrrommrn- protect our significant wetlands. But would, but my recommendation is dinated land-use plans. They've accepted a fair amount she said. benefits. ORDINANCE: of input,"said Del Rowan,manager Rowan said he doesn't care which Some of the ordinance's key pro- of government affairs for the Boeing manual is used, although "the 1987 visions are: City showing Co. in Renton. "The city is showing rules are less restrictive and less def- ■ Three wetland categories, an excellent openness of mind." inite as to what constitutes a wet- ranging from large wetlands with openness of mind But Sevier and Rowan say the city land." He wants everyone to agree open water to wetlands that "are still has a ways to go. They want the on one set of standards. severely disturbed" because of fill- Continued from page Al city to use wetland definitions con- Everyone agrees the idea of a wet- ing, the presence of toxic elements tained in a 1987 U.S.Army Corps of lands bank, a controversial idea to or isolation from other wetlands. city's Comprehensive Plan and oth- Engineers manual. The city is using fill marginal wetlands and then cre- ■ Buffer zones ranging from 25 er land-use documents. definitions in a 1989 corps manual. ate or enhance similar or more sig- feet to 300 feet, depending on the Myer and the city's planning staff Rowan said the business commu- nificant wetlands elsewhere, and wetland's classification and its have researched environmental nity would have to make two appli- buffer averaging will give the ordi- . shoreline designation. issues, conducted focus groups, cations, one using the 1987 regula- nance flexibility. ■ Larger buffers to protect talked with state officials and tions and one for 1989's,if the city's The ordinance also has provisions' unique wetlands. reviewed the ordinance with other wetlands ordinance is enacted. for appeals if a landowner thinks the ■ Minimum wetland size of jurisdictions. "That is a larger burden than we ordinance denies him "reasonable 2,200 square feet and exemption of Even its critics and other observ- should have to bear," Rowan said. use" of his property: single-family properties. ers say the city has done a thorough Myer said "we still have Dan Early in the process, the city ■ Average wetland replacement job. Quayle's mandate to use the 1987 inventoried wetlands in the city and or restoration of 1.5 times, 2 times, "The city has tried hard to get a definition."But the city is bound not within its sphere of influence. It 3 times or 6 times the area altered, good ordinance," said Marty L. by federal mandate,.but by King found wetlands in the Green River depending on the wetland category Sevier, senior director for develop- County's decision to use the 1989 Valley "were lower quality,provid- and vegetation. ment for Glacier Park Co., which corps manual. ing flood storage and storm drain- ■ No net loss of wetlands func- owns hundreds of acres of land in the "At this point the 1989 manual age," Myer said,but were still wor- tions and acreage and if possible,an Green River Valley. best protects everyone's interests," thy of protecting because of their increase in wetlands. Alf ;� I r f': ;.hired a cooru fo ina[or r ition program', which public education,distri- ;ak detection kits, and ing." ty water in 1987. summer.We don't want that to hap- ;ycling of water, said Yet, Auburn's Currie chuckles pen again." i of the city's water util- when he remembers back to 1987, "Seattle and Tacoma were asking when Auburn residents took to heart for a 10 percent cut in water use,but This year, Currie said, "We want and is holding steady or calls for conservation in greater they didn't save that much," Currie to encourage people to conserve Hornsby said. "Our numbers than Seattle or Tacoma res- said. In Auburn "we collected 25 water. But don't feel guilty about a measures are work- idents. Like 1992,Auburn had plen- percent less in revenues during the having a green lawn." Auction coui8,4 benefit wetlands u By T.M.SELL S`iP`9z projects in exchange for creating Valley Daily News V DN new wetlands in the city's banked An auction of Glacier Park real lands. estate holdings is likely to result in "If everything works correctly we new public wetlands as well as new should be able to offer banking ser- business developments in South vices to other developers-in the King County. area," Myer said. Renton apparently has succeeded Some of the land in the Orillia in trading the right to fill some mar- tracts already has been filled, ginal wetlands in exchange for pre- though some portions contain wet- serving,significant wetlands else- lands that approximate the Valley's where. original 19th century, pre-develop- The "wetlands mitigation bank" ment condition. will help preserve the upper Val- The 30-acre section on the corner ley's delicate balance between wet of Lind Avenue Southwest and and dry, Renton city planner Mary Southwest 27th Street"is very valu- Lynne Myer said. able to us in its present condition"' The crux of the deal was getting Myer said. "It provides good flood City Council and U.S. Army Corps storage and does a lot of water quali- of Engineers approval before an ear- ty purification and has some good ly May auction of Glacier Park's stands of cottonwood." remaining holdings, being sold as The area is a thriving waterfowl parent company Burlington habitat and deer tracks have been Valley Daily News Photo by DUANE HAMAMURA Resources gets out of the real estate seen there. Nith child development assistant Bobbii Bateman. business. The auction itself was successful, The council has told city staff to resulting in 77 percent of 94 proper - nd the state,including incoming and outgoing students, go ahead. The corps moved surpris- ties being sold at or before the auc- lay and,Highlinie, that adding that the school has room for ingly quickly to_approve the deal,in tion, said Tim Reinertsen, senior rogram. ; 722 students and has a core group which by trade and purchase the city vice president of Realty Market- for the program is regu of 350 students. . acquires about 60 acres of land in ing/Northwest in Bellevue. ie state Department of`.. , Because 75 percent of Kent's the Orillia Business Park. In South King County, 24 parcels I Health Services, and housing is apartments,she believes "It's all been approved and we are were for sale. loesn't plan to allocate the students' parents may move executing the documents right One site, 115 acres just south of inal money to expand it. from complex to complex taking now," said Karen Lane, vice press- South 180th-Southwest 43rd Street ;elors'hours at East Hill advantage of low rental rates.. dent of,development for Glacier on the Kent-Renton border, was cut, and students have Rowe said the program's budget Park Co. in Seattle. purchased by Trammell Crow Co. d on a waiting list while was cut by $12,000, leaving only A buyer for the remaining Orillia along with two partners, Heartland, f ems are going unattend- $21,800 in the_budget this year. property has been lined up, though a land advisory. company, and Win- 1 n said. The money came from a $53,000 Lane said that deal hasn't been mar,a division of Safeco Properties. gram must constantly grant from 0.the state in 199 closed. Trammell Crow principal Kirk sibility of being cut out State Rep. Elmira Fortier, 47th Under the wetlands mitigation Johnson said the firm will use the ,s�s ib Kent, recently said at a bank program, developers will be site to build Kent North Corporate the state legislative District, a which.puts pressure on Parents Advisory Board meeting able to fill minor wetlands on their Park. district to find a way to that both she and Sen. Sylvia Skra- ■ rogram. g tek,state D-Kent, wrote letters to asking Campto mix disabled' tendent George Daniel state -budget committee askin .ent School District is members not to cut the program. utting in $20,000 "in- Skratek said she supports the n on-d�sabled:children )ay for the room at East program but I get the impression the kids meet, and for that each year we're going to have id utilities. to scramble for dollars.,-Here we By JEAN PARIETTI at either school between 7 a.m. and Find it almost impossible have an outstanding program, but Valley.Daily News 9 a.in. and pick them up by 6 p.m. on, because we would the school has to go out begging KENT — Making children more Parents can sign their children up ut it in every school," for dollars." aware of other kids with disabilities, for as little as a week or up to the full id, adding that every Bobbii Bateman, a volunteer while having summertime fun, is eight weeks. :he district has kids who counselor at East Hill, said the one of the goals of this year's city In addition, participants can take ;ind of help., program isn't restricted to the stu- day camp program. weekly field trips for an additional 1's Elementary Principal dents in the Rainbow Room,:but For the first time, some partici- admission charge, which ranges le said the school has a they also give presentations on nants in the nonular eight-week from$2.50 to$10 per child depend- AoFi�o sece on mvId an balances envAro=ent, bus- ,iws B EARL CLYMER �Q'2' Y � � Growth Management Act,the new regu- ot too long ago,I thought wetlands Guest opinion lations will be a critical tool for imple- were "swamps", and not much menting the city's updated comprehen- good for anything. Filling them to sive plan, Ad for bringing more provide land for Water. In addition to providing a nutri- certainty to thhevelopment process. businesses and ent-rich environment for plants and am- Can we have new houses and busi- homes seemed like a mals,they protect water quality by trap- nesses and still preserve wetlands?Yes! :. good idea. In fact, ping sediments and retaining pollutants The Wetlands Management Ordinance until the 1970's,fed- before they enter streams or groundwa- will allow development, but also main ter.policy encour- ter. tain wetlands.'My staff at City Hall has aged filling swamps Wetlands are valuable to an urban worked closely with citizens and the and marshes for community for many reasons.They help business community to draft the ordi- agricultural and eco- prevent flooding and reduce soil erosion nance, and many changes were made as nomic development. which are serious problems when areas a result of these meetings and conversa- Fortunately, in the become urbanized. Wetlands also pro- tions. People have told us over and over last few years we vide open space and habitat for birds and again how important it is to have a regu- have learned that wetlands are important animals. As the city grows, wetlands lation that balanced economic and envi- and provide a variety of benefits. Now can provide visual relief from buildings, ronmental objectives. we realize that the loss of swamps and streets and parking lots. Within urban Citizens and property owners will marshes could have consequences for neighborhoods and business districts, have the opportunity to let us know how many generations to come. Now we wetlands remain as quiet, green spaces they feel about protecting wetlands on know that wetlands occupy an important where people can have daily contact Monday night when the Renton City role in maintaining the health and natu- with the natural environment. Council will be holding a public hearing ral beauty of our local surroundings. My administration, the City Council on the Wetlands Management Ordi- Scientists tell us that wetlands are and the Planning Commission have been nance. We believe this is an oppoAnity places that contain three conditions;they working for the past year to prepare a to make a difference for our community. are wet,they have soils that are associat- draft ordinance to to regulate and man- I invite you to come and participate in ed with wet conditions,and they support age the impacts of growth and develop- the hearing. plants that tolerate soils saturated with ment on wetlands. Required by the Earl Clymer is mayor of Renton. �L< . x Two-For-The-Price-Of-One Save 30% S Open Stock Sale Francisan "Apple" or "Desert Rose" Misses Blouses and Haggar° Jul Two five-pc. place settings for 50.00, two Adagio Pants and er basket dinner plates for 17.00, two salad plates for Reg. selection o sale career blouses. Choose Reg from a selection of career blouses. Sizes sign 11.00, two cups and saucers for 15.50, two 8-16. 100%polyester Adagio pants reg. 29.99, Cho 14" platters for 43.00, two fruits for 10.75, sale 20.99. Misses Sportswear. (Pants not dres two mugs for 19.00, two vegetable bowls for available in Downtown Boise, Bozeman and 37.00, two beverage sets for 20.00, two Pocatello.) Misses Sportswear. double old-fashioned sets for 20.00. 7he BON AF ( HI SEATTLE,NORTHGATE,SOUTHCENTER,BELLEVUE SQUARE, ALDERWOOD MALL,EVERETT MALL,SEATAC MALL,TACOMA,KITSAP MALL �do city ' aims for deal on wetland S* . Glacier Park ' � �— �� • :Auction land may be keyA , , By T.M.SELL set if ,24 Valley Daily News RENTON — The city is racing to beat the auctioneer's gavel to com- plete an unusual deal that could pre- serve acres of Valley floor wetlands. V." As part of the liquidation of its I I�+ y Glacier Park real estate holdings, ByT:M.SELL' ' Burlington Resources is selling 13 -.Valley Daily News parcels totaling 174 acres south of k Longacres in the Orillia Business T,',Twenty-four Valley floor par , Park. eels of land will be part of a$90.ti:. Most of the land has been filled, million-'nationwide real estate auction of Glacier Park Coi land and one site is paved and is being later this month leased by The Boeing Co. as a park The local parcels, mostly ing lot. But even the filled sites have developed minor wetlands that zoned for industrial uses;range include vegetation and waterfowl in size 4 to 115 acres,A-' habitat. and'. range in .'`price from t. The parcels range from 3.75 acres $100,000 to$2.7 million - ` t to more than 77 acres. Two of the .:Those are published reserves—the eserves—the minimum price Burlington tracts,one east and one west of Oak- , esdale Avenue Southwest near ; Resources hopes to get as it liq Southwest 34th Street, have not uidates its former xeal,.,estate been completely filled and include development,company,:.Prices significant wetlands that approxi- could -go lower or higher mate the Valley's original, p depending op what:happens ristine state,city planners say. the auction , Glacier Park wants to swap Ren- Local land for sale includes +, ton the major wetlands for die right two commercial sites in to fill the minor wetlands. Filling Auburn, including 'a .50-acre those properties would make them parcel near. the Fred Meyer r more marketable,and the city would store; two Auburn, industrial be able to establish a"wetlands mit- sites; eight Kent industrial sites; igation bank" to help preserve natu- and 14 parcels in the Orillia ral habitat in the rapidly growing Business Park in Renton. Karen Lane, vice president of area. Both sides claim credit for the development for Glacier Park in idea. The auction takes place May 2 Seattle, said potential buyers;,, in Bellevue. The Renton City Coun- See AUCTION;A5 cil is expected to approve the swap at its Monday niceting. In the meantime, everyone the next few weeks. Depending on involved is waiting to hear if the that decision, die permits could be i U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will granted quickly or slowly. sign off on the deal. City Planner Mary Lynne Myer A Corps of Engineers spokes- said she hopes approval comes woman in Seattle said a decision on before the land is sold. Glacier Park how to process Glacier Park's many See WETLANDS,A5 similar applications is expected in Valley Daily News Thursday,April 9, 1992■A5 AUCTION. "If you're the seller, the draw- WETLANDS: back is that you may not get it sold, Most parcels Period," said Kirk Johnson, a prin- Plan would preserve c Seat- tie. "Or it'll bring ►n such a low almost pristine land i al with Trammell Crow in Seat- inCludewetlands price that you'll have left a lot of Continued from page At money on the table. Continued from page Al "If you're a buyer, the auction have shown interest in all of Glacier format does not give adequate time officials say there's considerable Park's Valley holdings, and bids to review the property and all of its interest in the flat, industrially already have come in on some of the associated risks," he said. zoned land scattered up and down properties. '`To have somebody go in and buy Valley, despite the presence of wet- Some local Realtors say the mar- a piece of property at auction, with lands. ket for industrial property is as flat the wetlands impact on these proper- "If we lose this opportunity then as the Valley floor, however. What ties, is not a real safe thing to do," the parcels go up for auction," the land will bring is anybody's agreed Jim Torina, associate broker Myer said. I m not sure we could guess. with Kidder, Mathews and Segner. afford them." Tim Reinertsen, senior vice presi- Glacier Park's Lane said although The Oakesdale Avenue sites, . dent of Realty Marketing/Northwest all the Valley sites have wetlands on together about 50 acres, include in Bellevue, said the auction format them, they also have developable native vegetation and support a vari- has been successful in selling resi- uplands as well. A possible deal ety of waterfowl and wildlife, dential properties. with Renton, subject to U.S. Army including deer,she Glacier Park vice "We have kind of pioneered the Corp of Engineers approval, could Karen Lane, process with commercial proper- give buyers the right to fill minor president for development, said the pro tiesce he said. The firm has been in wetlands on some of the Orillia company would profit on the deal if Business Park property. it can fill wetlands on the other business six years, with $32 million in sales last year. Realtors say non-residential land tracts. values have stayed even or declined "Filling those low spots will sub- Reinertsen said the auction pro- in the last 12 months in South King stantially improve the utility of those cess, because of the company's full- County. Depressed real estate and parcels," and thereby the price, she color booklet listing all the proper- financial markets elsewhere in the said. tics, exposes the land to thousands nation make it harder to borrow Once the city got the land, it could .of potential buyers. He said the firm money to develop projects, and charge developers to fill wetlands on typically sells 60 percent to 65 per- industrial rents haven't followed their sites and use the money to cent of the properties it auctions at their residential cousins in the Seat- expand wetlands on the Oakesdale one time. . tle area. property. Creating a sizable wet- "We really feel like we do come "I don't know how many people lands reserve would create usable very close to delivering what the are going to be lined up" to buy, park space and also limit flooding in property is worth in today's mar- Torina said. the area, Myer said. ket," Reinertsen said. He,predicted that the auction pric- "It's been a very productive rela- "An auction serves a purpose es will be "significantly lower" tionship with Glacier Park and when you're in a liquidation mode," than the published reserves. we've really appreciated it," Myer said Jerry Mathews, co-chairman of `you're not going to get top dollar said. Kidder, Mathews and Segner, Inc., today." in Seattle. It assumes that either a The auction will run April 21 good buy is available or that several through May 2. Sealed bids are • proposed,entwetIan s rulestrynthe In the other public hearing slated Monday, By JEAN PARIETTI within a wetland or wetland buffer.These include board will gather comments on the staff proposal re effec- valley Daily News construction, draining or disturbing the level of wetlands regulations that the water table and destrdemonstr wetland that locat- t°make enforcement of zoning uch lat onsdes ocriminal eta- KENT - Proposedlicant mu are more stringent than state or federal rules will tion. The app matters,, which requires much staff time and go before the Planning Commission today. ing the activity in the wetland or buffer is Kent now designates s The board also will consider a change to the unavoidable. ense to rove in court, beyond a reasonable city zoning code that would make violations civil, ■ Allowed activities, not requiring a permit, l x and willfully." criminal offenses. include ongoing agricultural activities, drainage doubt,that a violation was committed"knowing- rather than cr Adopting civil penalties for most cases would a Comments on both proposals will be accepted ditch maintenance and certain recreational activr increase the effectiveness of enforcement, at public hearings slated during the 7 p.m. com- ties. because it must be shown through only a prepon- mission in in the council chambers at City feet,Buffer based on the ass gned from rating Hall. e which Only certain uses are permitted in the buffers; derance of the evidence that the violation an Main provisions of the ordinance limits, city attorney. he city limits, are h building setbacks of e feet from the edge of the occurred,according to Carol Morris,penalty $75 stant applies to all wetlands m t Y buffer and the building are required. The draft ordinance specifies a pen y follows: per day after the date set for compliance.The fine ■ All wetlands now designated unique and ■ When regulated activities occur on a wet- p anew wetland, restoring a former can be collected administratively by the Planning fragile under the zoning code, except the Kent land, the proponent must compensate for that use p sewage lagoon, would be designated wetlands of by g be altered, 1.5 acres must be the zoning code or pay the fins,the case further couldm si nificance." No development wetland or enhancing a degraded wetland. For Department. If the violator doesn't comply with outstanding g g could occur on these wetlands unless extraordi- every acre of wetland action. nary hardship is shown. created or restored; that figure increases to three referred to the city atto y ■ A permit is required for regulated activities acres for enhancement. TRAPPER: Aii quit his job as a bread salesman in of dollars. Instantly they needed California and moved into Carrie's more than $200,000. They could the effort . . , has laundry room in Auburn so he could think of no way to come up with that been worth it' take care of Trapper.Jim and Carrie kind of money, Carrie said. `Hendu' Speak set aside their differences and settled They didn't anticipate that stu- on a plan they thought best for their dents from Trapper's high school Continued from page Al son. She kept her fabrication job at would mobilize the city of Auburn Boeing, believing her health insur- and their friends in surrounding . bals. The next morning he felt fine. ance would cover anything Trapper communities to take up collections, That weekend, while visitinghis required. auctions and father in San Jose, Calif.,the e ru- For two years, the cancer per uadeebu businesses, to contribute ciating headaches returned. On the appeared to be in remission.Jim was toward his medical costs. As it grew following Monday,they scheduled a so impressed by the teamwork and closer to the time they needed the CAT scan of his head and neck. dedication of the people caring for money to schedule the bone marrow "I knew something was wrong," his son,he entered school to become procedure,the"Trapper Troopers" recalled his mother, Carrie Nichol- a radiology technician. became more frantic and more suc- son. "I was back there when the But last September it all unraveled sful images came through. Everybody when Trapper began to lose feeling Yet,they were far from the raising started walking around real fast." in his feet and lower legs. A scan the money needed.In the meantime, Even when the doctor operated showed a sheath of cancerous cells officials at the Fred Hutchinson cen- two days later to remove a tumor had grown around a section of his ter urged Carrie Nicholson to apply from Trapper's brain,she still didn't spinal cord. Only a few cells thick, for state medical aid. A couple of realize the danger it posed. the cancer nonetheless had filled the weeks ago, center officials said the "The doctor told us he got 99.9 space between the nerve and bones, state would cover most of the proce- percent of it," she said. "I figured plugging the canal that carries fluid dure and the cancer center would in 21/z weeks, he'd be fine." to nourish the brain and spinal cord. absorb the rest. _That was only the beginning of The worst news was that the can- Although not a religious person, $140 per year or S 12 per month. plummeted in all three counties. the system will begin and move outward to The three tax options are: Carin Weiss, Metro market researcher, the other counties during the next 20 years 'LM—to Planners unhappy :asy world with proposed /I?-�a,3 901 wetlands ordinance ' A A ,. By DEAN A.RADFORD "heavy-handed." r"q ,.+ Valley Daily News The commission exempted a W ' �' � RENTON - Planning commis- destroyed home from the non-con- ,., sioners,unhappy with the sixth draft forming use portion of the ordi- +• � of a staff-proposed wetlands protec- nance. / tion ordinance, recommended Because of that, the ordinance changes that planners questioned would conflict with the city's code �� and said might even be illegal. for non-conforming uses, Myer The ordinance, which would set said, and "the city attorney will Cu _....__......___...__.:..._._........ standards for protecting and enhanc- probably find that motion to be ille- s',. ing wetlands and for nearby devel- gal." opment, was the topic of a lengthy The planning commission is an hearing last week. advisory body in drafting the new T, Commissioner Bill Taylor called ordinance, so its concerns can be the ordinance "the grossest incorporated, altered, or omitted - '' infringement on the rights of proper- altogether when the plan is present- "'�"�'�` ty owners that I have seen in my years on the Planning Commis- sion." The proposed "I am concerned that the ordi- wetlands ordinance Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA nance exceeds dramatically the need from left, James Hayes and Lisa Stevens. to satisfy the Growth Management Is "the grossest Act," Taylor said, "and is so ?ames don't have social and intellectual appeal," restrictive that it will stifle reason- infringement on the es. Today's selec- Adkison said. "Role-playing able development of a large portion ranges from fantasy games are very valuable for self- of the undeveloped land in Renton:" rights of property nd from comic book exploration." At Taylor's instigation, the com- Trek, Stevens said. "It greatly stimulates creativi- mission: owners that I have games don't use a ty," said James Hays Jr., vice ■ Increased from 2,200 square seen in m ears nstead, books with president of design and develop- feet to 10,000 square feet the size of Y Y out and drawings of ment. "It also teaches you that wetlands that would be exempt from on the Planning and era involved - being different isn't wrong." the law's provisions. n� )r imaginary - are Wizards of the Coast will pub- ■ Set a minimum buffer size of Commission. ng point. lish game books. but corporate 25 feet and a maximum of 75 per- is completely free- goals include expanding with the cent of the total wetland area. Commissioner Bill Taylor n said. "You create hope of eventually breaking into Mary Lynne.Myer, the city plan- the mainstream board game mar- ner responsible for the wetlands ed to the City Council for adoption. with a director and ket. ordinance, warned those limits A seventh draft of the ordinance is lying games have a The company already has licens- would eliminate buffer averaging, planned, but Myer said it would not ' who sets the scene ing rights for one fantasy game line one of the key provisions which include major changes. The com- to make the charac- and is working on additional prod- gives the ordinance flexibility. mission was told it is not their role to alive, Stevens ucts for it, in addition to develop- But Taylor said, "It becomes write ordinances. ing its mythology line. ridiculous when a buffer can exceed The mayor is expected to send the e,anything can hap- Wizards of the Coast has three the size of a wetland by up to 26 ordinance to the City Council in full-time employees and contracts percent. It becomes a taking of February for additional public hear- e main market for with 20 to 30 other people, includ- extreme proportion." ings and a vote. The ordinance s is teenagers and ing nationally known writers and ■ Permitted the rebuilding of must, by state mandate, be adopted here's a certain per- artists, for services. They are homes located in wetlands that are by March. ,lay well into adult- interested in finding local artists, destroyed by fire or other calamity. Commissioner Glenn Garrett writers and printing firms, howev- Commissioner Don Jacobson said expressed frustration that"we were "can have a lot of er. the provision that would prohibit told buffers would go in no matter rebuilding in a wetland seemed what we do." budget cutbacks Look what I got! aff knows, the public from the contingency and capital •;, ,t we know what the improvement funds. _h be" if the economy Finance Director Tony McCarthy sh. said it appears the city will end the .,. e `� Kelleher said even if year with S1 million more than pro- x"' :111 cxaulple of the City s inter- cr), White said. Although plans stauious six years ego'during the lit st manor ial est in pedestrian issues,Mann noted aren't full developed,the Include Challenger space shuttle disaster in 1986. assembly. - >' I I p Y P Y a woman's recent letter to the editor pedestrian crossing signals at 100th of Valley Daily News triggered a Avenue Southeast. Lawsuit: Sewer official is `outsider' Family propels Roach By IRENE SVETE residence-or the lack of it-has ure in office. sham," said Joe Wishcamper, the into run for Congress Valley Daily News become a court issue. William Murphy, Nelsen's attor- district's atiornoy. SEATTLE-Rainier Vista Sewer Three years ago, Superior Court ney,says overnight visits in another Private investigators hired by the gy DANNY WESTNEAT District's newest commissioner is Judge John Darrah declared Nel- area does not mean someone has district staked out the motel for a Va1leyDailyNews the ultimate outsider - so far out sen's election as a commissioner in changed his residence. week in November, videotaping PamOLYMPIA - State Sen. Pam Roach officials claim he doesn't even live King County Fire District 24 null "The statutes do not clearly Nelsen's comings and goings.Wish- Roach, R-Auburn, gathered her in the district. and void. At that time, Nelsen's define what residence means," camper alleges Nelsen himself told family around last Thanksgiving and Will run on a maintains But the does rtical eside s dfly R in thesew-sen rented at ottelsroom in the ence ldistrict,med Murphy said. at the investigators that he had been living asked them to vote on her political conservative For example, he notes that mill- platform that er district. He just spends tare now art of the city of SeaTac, to career. �- y J P 8 P Y tary personnel stationed in Saudi Seattle police Lt.Owen Burt testi- includes amounts of time at his girlfriend's qualify as a resident. "How many of you think Mom g q Y Arabia do not claim residence there, Pied Tuesday that Nelsen told him he should run for Congress?" she a€, anti abortion home outside its borders. According to court records, Nel- but in their home towns. had been living at the motel more asked. g and to "I lay it all to sour grapes," the sen rented a room at the Comfort Inn new taxes than a year. Unanimously,the said es. Auburn Sour rattve said er or not, Count tnone1but disappeared aped afterrior to honl e a Neleennllsted his address election as an aprds art- ' He said he lived there a year and Today,Roach will take her fami- Superior Court Judge Ann Schindler few days, leaving motel manage- ment at 11404 Des Moines Memori- a half and had called repeatedly ly's advice by announcing a bid for She said she can play well to tradi- will rule later this week on whether ment some campaign literature and al Dr.S.when he declared candida- about problems with drug traffick- the 8th District seat being left vacant tionallybiue-collar,even Democrat- willing at the motel,"Burt said. b U.S. Re Rod Chandler, isgroups, Nelsen's election as sewer commis- an outstanding bill for$883. cy in July. In public disclosure Y P• such as unions and te:icll- sioner will stand. A former commissioner with the forms three months later, his earn- Seattle police were called to the R-Bellevue, who is running for the ers. She said she isn't worried her Nelsen, 62, was elected to the Des Moines Sewer District, Nelsen paign headquarters was listed as an motel after the manager reportedly U.S.Senate. staunch anti-abortion stance or Mor- three-person board last November, also came up missing in 1986 during apartment at 1830 S. 120th St.Both yanked a videotape from equipment I've been thinking about this mon background will turn'people defeating incumbent William his run for a legislative seat in the addresses are within the sewer dis- hidden in a room across from Nel- since last May," Roach said in her off,because"they know I'm always Brownfield by a vote of 1,061 to 33rd District. However, he was trict. sen's unit,falsely believing the tape Senate office in Olympia, going to support what's best for the 982. defeated in the general election and During the same time, King was going to be used in civil abate- "I think people out there want community." Brownfield and the sewer district his place of residence never became County court documents in a civil ment proceedings against the motel, someone young who has a new Roach said she thinks she can filed suit after a private investigator an issue. suit against his former landlord list said private investigator William agenda." overcome the deep philosophical rift allegedly traced Nelsen's residence Under law,a sewer commissioner his address as the Munson Motel at Ruddell. At age 43,Roach's political agen- that exists between voters in the to the Munson Motel in South Seat- must reside within the district for 30 7060 E.Marginal Way S.in Seattle. The term of sewer commissioner da reflects her life - conservative, south and north parts of the 8th Dis- tle. ' days prior to the election and remain "Any contention by Mr. Nelsen is six years and carries no annual focused on family values and the trict. In the November elections, This isn't the first time Nelsen's a resident throughout his or her ten- that he resides within the district is a salary. rights of the individual. Bellevue heavily supported an abor- An avowed teetotaler and Mor- tion rights measure, while more mon, Roach will run in part on a conservative voters south of Inter- Kent wetlands law won't meet March 1 deadline traditional conservative platform: statneEastnediandida Anti-abortion, no new taxes, and One Eastside candidate,Rep.Roy returning government accountabili- Ferguson, R-Bellevue, has already By JEAN PARIETTI Kent is well on its way to adopting Commissioners probably won't development and protect property ty to the people. announced his campaign with a Valley Daily News local regulations. be ready to forward the proposal to rights. Her strategy in the Republican strong pro-abortion rights theme. KENT- Two dozen people pre- "I think a lot of cities are going to the City Council by March 9, how- 'In Kent we've done tremendous primary race is simple. Other potential Republican candi- sented a mixed bag of opinions on come up against this time line"and ever,he said.Discussion of the reg- (amounts of) development. We're With at least four Republican dates include media pundit John the city's proposed wetlands regula- other deadlines drafted in connec- ulations is slated to continue at the down to our last few hundred or Eastsiders likely to run for the seat, Carlson, state Republican chair- tions this week. lion with growth management, he Planning Commission's March 23 thousand acres"of available land in Roach hopes to dominate suburban woman Jennifer Dunn and Issaquah said. meeting. the valley,but the city already has a South King County and Pierce businessman Michael Campbell. The Kent Planning Commission Some additional testimony will be Some of those testifying at Mon- substantial tax base,Harris said. County while her counterparts Roach added she would crusade heard testimony for 3''A hours Mon- taken at the March 9 hearing,Harris day's hearing said the proposed reg- preserving wetland areas may divide Eastside votes. for children and family issues if day night,then continued the public said, but planning commissioners ulations are too strict.A few were in negatively affect individual property "But I'm not just a South King elected,because those are the areas hearing to March 9,said Jim Harris, apparently don't intend to have favor of them, Harris said, while owners, but affect is not going to do County candidate," said Roach, "the President is weakest on." city planning director. another lengthy hearing. others took positions in between. Kent in,"he said. adding she will soon open a earn- Roach has been active in local pol- Although March l is the scale's "The commission does need to He said it's difficult in establish- paign office in Bellevue to go with itics for years, but first entered deadline for cities to adopt wetlands get into the deliberations" and ask ing wetlands rules to balance the "I think we here at City Hall and one in Auburn. "I represent I the office in 1990.She narrowly defeat- ordinances,Harris believes the state staff members questions about the state's intent to preserve wetlands the citizens are stewards of the average person,wherever they may ed Democrat Mike Todd in a race will take into consideration that proposed ordinance.Harris said. with its intent to foster economic land,"Harris added. live " for state Senate in the 31st District. I$-.SOUTH NEWS 31620 23rd Ave. S., Suite 312, Federal Way, WA 98003. 946-3970 Editor: Lee Moriwaki FAX — 946-3982 Wetlands plan for Kent viewed as too restrictive ■KENT to ec ns dered osed wetlands may draw fire from some Kent business people who fear it is too restrictive and will create a bureaucratic tangle for developers. Ted Knapp of Bircher Proper- ties,who served last year on a citizens task force that helped develop the regulations,said he is unhappy with some aspects of the city's plan. The city proposes delineating wetlands according to federal rules adopted in 1989,rules that some say are more restrictive toward development. The Army Corps of Engineers, which is responsible for issuing Ming and grading permits,uses an earlier,more lenient set of rules to determine which land qualifies as a wetland. "It's very confusing.That's why we are looking for some consisten- cy,"Knapp said. Kent planning manager Fred Satterstrom said the proposed or- dinance is designed to be consis- tent with the regulations used by the state Department of Ecology, which reviews environmental find- ings. Kent drafted the proposal to preserve the city's remaining wet- lands,and eventually to increase the acreage of high-quality wet- lands in the city. The Kent Planning Commission will consider the wetlands ordi- nance at 7 tonight in Kent City Hall,220 Fourth Ave.S. arents hope , ostage on's death of in vain ssociated Press PORTLAND — The parents of a 2-year-old boy who was during a ally killed by policeg hostage situation say they don't blame anyone for their son's death but hope such tragedies can be avoided in the future. "We would give anything to have our son back," Dr. Greg Thomas and Martha McMurry said in a statement issued Saturday. "But since that is not possible,we hope that this tragedy will serve as a catalyst for change that will improve our community. "We hope that the police and the community will search for more effective ways to manage hostage situations. Rather than assigning blame,we urge everyone to look for ways to reduce anger within their own lives and within their families." Bryan French, 20, broke into a home in the Laurelhurst section of Portland early Jan. 16 and took Nathan Thomas hostage,holding a knife to the boy's throat. Three Portland police officers opened fire on French when it appeared he was about to cut the boy. French was hit by 14 bullets. Two others struck the boy in the head. Both were killed. A Multnomah County grand jury cleared police of criminal wrongdoing. Thomas and McMurry said they agreed with the grand jury deci- sion. The bereaved parents have no intention of filing a lawsuit over the shooting, said Tom Cary of Eugene, a friend and spokesman for the Thomas family. `They are handling this with a great deal of courage and dignity," he said. Police agree they should search for better ways to handle confron- tations, but there is no single answer, police spokesman Officer Henry Groepper said. Groepper said it was the first time he had seen a burglar take someone hostage in 21 years with the Portland Police Bureau. "Every child lost through drugs, poverty or violence is a loss for our whole community," the parents wrote. "We need to take better care of our children, to recognize children in need and make sure they get the assis-t-_ the Egyptian registered Salem See FERRY,A5 Demand highi s yuppl Renton iovv at local f seeks ;wetlands balance ood bank j By MARYSW1Fr :of environmental, ` "The big thing is the increase in cli- Valley Daily News ents. I bet we're close to a 50 per- / KENT After 12 years at the cent increase in need." n m t Kent Food Bank,Ma Lou Becvar e( lol 1 id interests ; Mary Food banks typically depend on doesn't have to be told times are heavy giving in the,holida months, BY DEAN A.RADFORD . . hard. y to'help them Carry through in the' Valley Daily News l to r She sees it in the numbers of o- holidays: '- Ir a` iW 'se d Pe months after the when RENTON-Glacier Park Co:owns SSO acres i 6 le coming through the food bank y p d g g donations usually even, off. of industrial land in the Green.River,Valley it a Al doors - and in the faces of those That's`wti'y; even-,with enough - says is practically worthless because of;wet- '� ,` <°' showing up to get help: food on the shelf to meet immediate lands. II *. a..4. ',. We're ettin eo le thr g g P p ough as need,:food bank staff members are Of that 350 acres,400 have wetlands leavin clients who used to be donors;" worried about;what-happens once about 150 acres of usable;Iand, Maity Sevieg'Becvar said: `I've been here 12 :the holidays are past:`: the'company's''Senior director of development,'years and never seen the food bank 'It's really getting tight and I said Friday: this low at this time of year. The can't' understand why, Becvar In 1990,King County said the land was worth' 4 Vr �; „`` donations:are coming in but we're said. "The thing is all food banks $68 million.Glacier Park appealed;and the val running out of somethings-peanut count on the majority of their dona- ue was lowered to$34 million,after the compa butter,canned fruit." [ions in November and Decertiber.If; l showed how wetlands "hid devalued the Donations are`'about the same or e land,"Sevier said. valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA maybe a little lower," Becvar said. See FOOD,A5 The company-plans to appeal the 199] prop- Wetlands area west of East Valley Road,north of S.W.27th Street in Renton. erty,value,possibly lowering it by$25 million, Sevier said: INDEX In Renton alone, the company-owns about n I^w,O��i���A� �O� ��� �� ��I�� Local AS 220 acres and "out of those, we have 60 acres ' y G Lottery A2 that we consider to be usable at the moment," Sevier said V DEAN A.F?ADFORD Whether the ordinance achieves that bal- Bndge' B7 News of Record A4 Companies]ike'Glacier Park a subsidiar of valley Daily News y ance won't be known until the ordinance Classified Ads B5.810 Opinion As Burlington Northern Resources'Inc.,say Ren' RENTON The city's planning staff has goes before the City Council,which must Comics ton s proposed wetlands ordinance constitutes a "tried six tunes to write a wetlands ordinance adopt at least interim regulations by March. 64 Television B4 taking!.'of their:property value. that achieves some lofty,goals Mary Lynne Myer, the city's principal Crossword B8 Weather Aq No one talks,about paying the landowner for City policy;the ordinance says,is"to bal long-range planner,has directed work on the H oroscope B4 Peggy Ziebarth A2`. taking his properfy. If you're going to declare ance community desires for economic dev�el- ordinance since she joined the city's staff in my]and unusable, then pay me for it,' :Sevier Key Scores Bt NEWS TIPS? 872-8721 said: opment and affordable housing with the April She is responsible for the update of the , - tespousibility'to retain the city's remaining DME DEL _ Ann Landers A2 HIVERY 872-8810 See BALANCE,A5 L `Wetlands", See ORDINANCE,A5 ounty's surprise cost-hid n $130,000 Property classified as wetlands, but nobody told him by Bob Lane Times staff reporter. Jim Baum finds it hard to speak politely when he talks , about his Mapple Valley farm.In Rt fact,he ggets"bleepingg' mad. In 1988,he paid$134,000 for the farm. Last month,he tried to sell it. A buyer was ready to pay $275,000—until he checked the records of the county's Building and Land Development Division and learned that much of the property had been reclassified as wetlands. That meant the land couldn't be developed.it also meant that Rod Mar Seattle runes Baum lost the deal. Almost as ,Jim Baum's Maple Valley farm has been partially classified as wetlands. bad: Baum had been paying full taxes on the wetlands for two years,because the county never feel like I've been(bleeped)." told him about the reclassifiea- "I literally have been finan- tiol. cially wiped out,"the remodeling 'I put everything had;in that "I wasn't told,and I was told contractor said. "I can't believe by BALD they don't have to tell the county can get away wiping a land, ,,, Now the gone and me (bleep)," he said. "I put guy out.' t everything I had in that land. I Before buying the 17.3-acre I've got nothing. thought it would accumulate val- ue," Baum said. "Now that's Please see WET on A 6 Jim Baum gone and I've got nothing. ... I at. — ..,,d Masb- tras,. us.t .. . . Jgs in its searc., I--- r $130,000 surprise: No one told him of•pro ert Change p Y g WET bleak as Baum fears. The law `Learn the rules and push them.The guarantees use'Prol'e a dwher'sad, continued From Page 1 determined on a case-by-case ba- staff will help. If you,can't get sis. remnant of an old dairy farm, through, call Me. Baum Could ask for reasonable- which included a small house and use consideration,or he could seek a big barn. Baum went to the Craig 13�Sen,COUn O�ICIdI a variance to allow some use of the BALD office to check for restrlc• county land, particularly the remaining bons."It was clear,"he said. four-plus acres not marked as Planning to board horses, he The county makes no effort to ing assessor's office records be• wel3audm Larsen believes the County began restoring old drainage tell owners when their lands are cause of the confusion. ditches that once kept the pasture flaggged on sensitive-area maps. Now,the office requires"con-. live inrlornnear major scities,give free of water.Later,already tiring 'We don't file alien, put a Crete documentation' such as little thought to the effect of laws re King County's maze of land-use cloud on the title,change records refusal of a building permit — like the sensitive-areas ordinance regulations,he decided to offer it or notify the assessor,"said Craig before. it will note things like on People living in rural areas. for sale. Larsen, deputy director of the wetlands designations on its re- These peo le are making laws County zoning requires a five• county's Department of Parks, cords,ginner said. p acre lot for each house on farm Planning and Resources which Bautn has'been advised to"ap- ents,'ahet said.b"Thisr is unfair dand;in that part of the valley,so w includes the BALD division the tract couldn't become a real However, lands identified as peelihrRhe county's Boatel of Tax government!These--guys want to dential subdivision. But despite wetlands are shown on county aassseessssor'sals the office will placeron the on the [heSeeoplehwho live in the ent for that restriction, the buyer ap maps available in public libraries farm next year.The appeals board p city." peered around Thanksgivingg and and at BALD offices in Bellevue. P� Yearning to be free ofwhat he was willing to pay the $275,000 Baum said the taxes he paid scol4ow geahas lost use of the land Couniief if he can dtye Baum Considered buy(rng price until he found out about the last year, and will pay fn 1992, because of the wetlands label. an alfalfa farm in Central Wash- wetlands designation,Baum said. were based on the ea that the The law,viewed as,.a strong and ington. "But now en equity is That killed .the sale real tend.could be used under existing progressive environmental mea- ,gone,so i can't do that." quick,"Baum said."He ran," zoning rules. sure,was based on the belief that The cI can't Larsen acknowi- Baum believes the county cost when Assessor Ruthe-Ridder wetlands help to prevent flooding edges that people often are frus- him about$130,000 in profit and took office eight years ago, she and reduce erosion by slowing the tretedby county regulations.Land- destroyed any chance of selling; decided such land-use'designa-" flow of water during storms. owners shouldn't give up early in A county survey mapped the bons and restrictions should be "Baum said he understands the challenging county bureaucrats,he farm as a wetland in 1990 after the noted on records as a guide to value of wetlands. "But why said. County Council adopted i sensi• valuation. But then,she said,her should an individual pay.for some- "Learn the rules and push opmereas ordinance to limit navel- office discovered BALD was grant_ thing that is for the common them,"Larsen advised."The staff opment on steep slopes,shorelines ing building permits on some good?"and wetlands. "flagged"land and gave up mark. But Larsen said all is not as all me." If you can't get through, INNIMMEWP I Inited States t^' -� ._ s PLANNING DIVISION CITY OF RENTON 1992 RECEIVED J New rules upValleywetlands Wetlands ... By DANNY WESTNEAT "The White House has launched a then and now Valley Daily News full-out assault on the nation's wet- t By DEBBIE CAFAZZO With each passing day, South lands," said David Ortman, head of I�IIr, Special to Vall®y Daily News ay. King County's land seems to be get- the environmental group Friends of In the past century, the fel- ting drier. the Earth. m w € 0101. to t t eral Swamplands Act subsi- Wetlands - those swamps, bogs, "We've got Vice President(Dan) 1 and marshy pastures that dominate Quayle and Chief of Staff (John) ` f n `' ) dined farmers and others who most low-lying areas around Puget Sununu cutting deals that have dras- y_ helped drain marshes and Sound-have started to disappear at tically changed wetlands laws," he x x, `w �, bogs. an unprecedented rate during the said. At that time, wetlands were past six months. "What do those two know aboute. "a i, �yl .a considered worthless swamps that bred nothing but disease- But not because they're being wetlands science?" NOO carrying mosquitoes. turned into parking lots. In fact, Quayle and Sununu have For many years, the U.S. It's because the federal govern- been cutting deals. In late August, Army Corps of Engineers ment has mixed politics and science the Washington Post quoted a gov- focused on "reclaiming" wet- into a witches' brew of relaxed ernment insider as saying the White lands - tilling them in so they guidelines that could turn man of House's work on wetlands was .+.+t g Y the Valley's less obvious wetlands "reaching new heights of political could be converted to dry ___ ___ into the legal equivalent of sand lots, Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA See WETLANDS,A5 critics say. See RULES,A5 Wetland between Auburn and Kent south of South 277th Street. _j r k A q v*4 -ja hs,W 1 four P.O. Box 130, Kent, WA 98035 0130 Reubens wouldn't appear as the ®® Magazine Formal Tor nerdy,bow-tied Pee-wee Herman, Robert J.Weil, President said the spokesman,whom TV . A great fall business Dick Ransom,V.P.,Gen. Manager Jack Mayne, Editor Guide didn't identify. ;N Shirleyacobs Richard J. Rie le Dan Keefe Cathy Gorrell Batman Returns, now filming in ? Y 9 Y g Circulation Advertising Comm. Print Business London,stars Michael Keaton as ; CALL TOD Director Director Manager Manager Batman,Michell Pfeiffer as ;.} NEWS 872-6600 Catwoman and Danny Devito as the ,;^ - 5:30 A NEWS TIP; Call 9 a.m. 8 RATES:delivery daily; 50¢ Sunday; Penguin. r ADVERTISING D� Home deliver b carrier, $7.25 a 5:30 p.m. weekdays; call 872 6678, month, $21.75 3 months, $43.50 Six Director Tim Burton got his big '' 5:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. evenings, months, $87 a year. By mail, $96 a break when Reubens chose him to weekends. year inside King County, $102 a direct Pee-wee's Big Adventure, a Tuesday Septe CLASSIFIED 872-6620 year outside King County. surprise hit of 1985. - TO PLACE-AN AD: Call 7:30 a.m.to 5:30 p:m ,Mon.-Thur. 7`.30-5:0o Reubens'career has been in doubt MAIN OFFICE 872-6600 since he was arrested in July in , . 872=60 ADVERTISING 872-6600 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRI- Sarasota,Fla.,on charges of FOR ASSISTANCE: Call 8:30 a.m. DAY, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 600 S. exposing himself in an adult theater. - to 5:30 p.m. weekdays Washington St., Kent CBS canceled reruns of his ; CIRCULATION 872-6610 children's show,Pee-wee's CIRCULATION CUSTOMER SERVICE: RENTON OFFICE 872-6600 Playhouse. Call weekdays 5:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRI- E Astronaut Neil Armstrong is Sundays 5:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. DAY, 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. 212 Holidays 5:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Wells Ave. S., Renton among five fliers added to the aerospace"Walk of Honor"in the VALLEY DAILY NEWS(ISSN 0894ve. E., B evue, ) is published daily except Saturday by ht Antelope Valle wheres ace ValleyDallyNews Northwest Media Inc., 1705 132nd Ave. N.E., Bellevue,Wa.,98005. All rights reserved, Copyright P Y P 1991. Northwest Media Inc.Second Class postage paid at Kent,WA.POSTMASTER:Send address shuttles land and the first sonic boom changes to Valley Daily News c/o the Valley Newspapers P.O. Box 130, Kent,WA.98035-0130. cracked. WETLANDS: Thinking of wetlands only as duck chance, biologists say. Rather, they ponds with cattails is a mistake,said are formed by special oxygen-defi- The 'kidneys of the Erik Stockdale, a King County cient conditions that occur only in. Y resource planner. the presence of standing water. ecos stem But it's a common mistake that is "Wetlands are products of histo- Y currently undermining the nation's ry," said Klaus Richter, a King Continued from page Al wetland policies, biologists say. County biologist. Some can take Even Vice-President Dan Quayle, thousands of years to form, such as grasping for a catch-all wetland def- Queen's Bog, north of Issaquah, land. inition, wants to see water on his which took root some 10,000 years That was before the public under- wetlands. ago. stood the word ecology. During a scientific review of fed- Today,ecologists look admiringly eral wetland standards last summer, Wetlands are important for their at wetlands, the most productive Quayle reportedly asked, "How ability to filter surface water that systems in nature. As with most about if we say when it's wet, it's runs across lawns and farm fields, flood plains,the Green River Valley wet?" down roofs and across parking lots is dominated by the watery resourc- But water is apparently only one and highways - soaking up earth,, es. of three elements used to identify a oil,bacteria,metals,fertilizers,pes- Open marshes, bogs, swamps and typical wetland.The others are types ticides and other stuff that nobody, ponds are obvious examples of wet- of soil and plants,both of which can wants to drink or swim in. lands,but wetlands also can occur in indicate a wetland habitat when no This filtering ability often prompts low-lying grassy meadows and in water is present. biologists to call wetlands the "kid- forests, biologists say. Wetlands don't just happen by neys of the ecosystem." areas, groups are allocated a four- transportation department crews mile stretch - two miles on each spent 7,000 hours picking up trash , side, Bremner said. along highways.The Adopt-a-High- It costs about $800 to outfit each way volunteers contributed 1,900, volunteer group with orange safety hours, Bremner said. vests,yellow hard hats,orange trash bags, a roadside safety sign and a The volunteer program was neces- yellow rooftop safety flasher for one sary to keep up with the growing of the group's vehicles. litter problem because "we could ; see we weren't going to get any Volunteers leave their full trash more maintenance people," Brem- bags alongside the road for state ner said. maintenance crews to pick up later. If transportation crews were used, After a group has become active, it would have meant delaying other transportation workers will erect a maintenance projects, such as land- sign - costing about $100 - which scaping,ditch clearing and guardrail- designates the group's stretch of repair, he said. highway. Instead, the maintenance workers There are other costs involved in decided to model a volunteer litter the program, such as staff time pickup program after successful required for orientation and making ones in Texas and Oklahoma. Texas sure medical forms are properly has 3,500 volunteer groups and completed. Oklahoma has more than 1,000, The volunteer groups have made Bremner said. an impact already. Although Washington has only "Our dump fees have just become 400 volunteer groups now, "I think astronomical," Bremner added. we're going to do as good as the During Earth Week in April, other states," he said. best postponed;a lot is going on at the work- amp rinas ner parents (rtumpnrey Bogart)to nype a simple n�yrn ru place. have separated. he mob. With Jan Sterling. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21):Tend to insurance and tax matters promptly.The help Primal Man The Killer MOVIE:The Hound of the Baskervilles(T of an old friend can make a big difference in A&E Instinct (Jeremy Brett, Edward Hard wicke business. Count your cash before jumping Primenews Q Larry King Llvel World News A into a new financial venture. Weigh the odds. CNN A CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The emphasis is on seeing people as they really ESPN NFL Schaap Talk Horse Racing Super Derby Jump Rope are.Wishful thinking could land you in a peck Matchup I X11(Tape) of trouble. Keep promises made to children. MOVIE: Poor Little Rich Supermkt. Shop 'Til Tracey C AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A profes- LIFE sional or personal problem can be easily Glrl (4:00) (Part 1) ('87) Sweep You Drop Ullman Q resolved if you are tactful. Visit over the Yogi Bear Yogi Bear Yogi Bear Yogi Bear Yogi Bear Y phone instead of taking a long trip. NICK PISCES(Feb.19-March 20):The key word MOVIE:The Executioner's Song('82)*** (Tommy Lee Jones, Rosan today is "cooperation." Teamwork will help TBS improve the bottom line. The power of posi- tive thinking comes to your rescue in an MOVIE:The Prize ('63)*** (Paul Newman, Edward G. Robinson) embarrassing situation. TNT © 1991,UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE Just the Ten My Two Cartoon Express MacGyver 9:00 PM © DOLLY PARTON in USA of Us Dads World Premiere Movie Wildlife Wild Side Imagination Machines Journal: Seco 'Wild Texas Wind'! TDC Chronicles Revolution (Paid Advertisement) GARFIELD by Jim Davis C4 _ a ..: .....::....:::.:::.:: 0 .. .. :.:..:.....:. ........ .....:....:.......... . ,I i:. FRANK AND ERNEST THEIN4 Gc�r�c Waitit'll SP&IALIz►NG IN (NOTE: TH VE- OBSESS v� `h CLof T E A p vfT IeA uNDER T :.; . ,.N.Aj .,jery acaa --iiutday iW i M. 0 SOOS CREEK M_ Developers of a golf cours `,' !✓� above the Green River fish h� ery may appeal a King Count decision requiring an environ E tal-impact statement for the F v jest because preparing such z n- statement could delay plans f S, months. J 1- z That's the word from RobEti lima City Council — 5 p.m. p bound the Sound Dispute still simmering over wetlands - by Jerry Bergsman But another member of the county's land-use comprehensive Snohomish County bureau committee, Jim Miller, who repre- plans, thus applying to all land-use sents the building industry, con- permits, rather than only grading EVERETT — A new Snohomish tended the new plan was written and drainage permits. County proposal to preserve wet- without the guidance of the com- Unlike the policy of 1990 that lands and streams has done little mittee. "I don't support this docu- required ordinances for implemen- k to resolve the bitter differences ment at all," he said. tation, this policy would specify between developers and preserva- Miller said the development how to identify and classify wet- G tionists that led to a 1990 referen- community will write its own pro- lands and the extent of buffers dum vote overturning protective posal within 30 days. "We want to required. laws. keep it short and simple and In Snohomish County, about 30 A 12-member citizen's commit- minimize the role of the staff and percent of the wetlands have been tee, appointed in January to help hearing examiner," he said. inventoried. There are an estimat- i develop a new proposal, appears Seeking what he called "win- ed 63,000 acres of wetlands and generally split over the plan that win solutions,"Lynnwood attorney streams in unincorporated Snoho- will be unveiled at three public Ed Hanson, who was on the mish County, about 9.5 percent of meetings this week. And the Sno- Governor's Growth Management the land outside of cities. homish County Property Rights Commission before serving on the The proposal is an early step in Alliance, spawned by last year's citizen's committee, said, "My dis- the process, said Marilyn Freeman, unsuccessful attempt to control appointment was that I thought of the county's planning depart development on wetlands, already there were areas of compromise ment, although the hope 1s to have has begun laying the groundwork we hammered out that are not a law on the books by March 1. to challenge the new plan in court. reflected in the staff-written re- i "We have employed the North- port." west Legal Foundation to write a Wetlands should be protected strong letter to the county de- without penalizing the property manding it cease and desist all owner, he said. If the government action on the aquatic resource takes property, it should come up protection program," said Jim with methods to make it fair for Klauser, executive director of the the roe he said. Some property�' owner, alliance. "The people spoke in the options would include-transfer of • a. referendum and the people threw density rights, off-site mitigation it out." or density bonuses. The 1990 referendum election Instead of being an ordinance, • + involved seven ordinances to im- the proposed plan will be in policy i plement a wetlands preservation form. It would become part of the policy. It failed when 56 percent of those voting voters repealed the i measures. After a referendum, Snohomish LEGAL NOTICEJ County is barred by county charter r from adopting a measure that is Notice is hereby given that the Lake l Forest Park Planning Commission • CURIO E _. substantially the same, said will hold o public hearing on Wedn'o ' i Klauser. He said the new plan day evening, October 9, 1991 at 7:30 "looks the same to us, if not worse, Chambers, Lake Forest Park City Council COLLECTOR'S CABINET Chambers, 17711 Ballinger Way N.E. `V it is a total repudiation of the This hearing is to receive citizen com- people's will." ments on o variance request, filed by Largest Selection Tom LaBelle, member of a Miriam Peterson, 17849 Ballinger Way in Washington N.E., to allow for a fence in a front l committee representing a group Yard exceeding the four-foot height re- State that supported the 1990 measure, quirement. Also,an incredible supply I /disagrees. He called the new plan a Legal description of the property is as good compromise. "We've gone to follows: ojcollectibrcandgiftsto great lengths to allow people's use Lot 14,Block 8,Lake Forest Park fill your cabinet! of their own land, consistent with All interested parties are invited to Curio Etc. the (state) growth-management attend. l683l Southcenter Pkwv. 575-8268 act," he said. R T H.MULKER • Bush playm* g pofitks' with v D)our wetlands 9_4�.9, etlands once were considered stinking bogs, forlorn marshes or mosquito-infest- ed swamps where man dared not tread. They were drained and rendered into "usable" land for farms or cities. Now, scientists have convinced lawmakers that wetlands deserve better treatment. Life begins in wetlands, which support species ranging from microscopic phytoplankton to deer and bears, and,ultimately, man. They also prevent flooding and purify our water. The Clean Water Act of 1972 required a federal permit for filling a wetland. But it wasn't until 1989 that government scientists agreed on a defi- nition for wetlands, which included certain soil and plant types, and saturation for at least seven consecutive days a year. After intense lobbying by developers, oil com- panies and farmers, the Bush administration recently decided to change that definition to allow development of millions of acres of wet- lands. The scientific community is outraged,and EPA Administrator William Reilley opposes it. The new definition, 21 days of saturation, has no scientific basis, experts say. It's important that politics not be allowed to overshadow scientific knowledge. Scientists know that destroying wetlands is biologically and economically dangerous. Destruction of wetlands is linked to the decline of aquatic life. Destruction of coastal marshes and lagoons on the West Coast is linked to the decline of halibut. On the East Coast, destruction of eel grass beds by upstream wetland develop- ment has led to the decline of shrimp and crab. Politics and science always are uncomfortable bedfellows. But in this case, political expediency has completely undermined a scientific decision. Wetlands are too important to allow that. An unbiased scientific definition of wetlands must be made, and the government should stick to it. itty tumors, sign,harmless ying)growths lipose ,tissue are painless. nection? ,n ar in areas of Dear Reader:To my knowledge, belt lines or the conditions are unrelated. ey can be irri- Macular degeneration is the spotty -nder. Then, shrinkage of apart of the retina, the ter surgery to film at the back of the eye which my standard enables us to see. Patients with this t alone unless condition often complain of dark spots in the visual field and loss of ecome more vision - particularly, an inability to veight patients focus on objects. e the growths The condition is untreatable, ore, in assess- except in select cases that may be rgement, it's helped by laser surgery.An ophthal- the possibili- mologist can make that determina- und them is tion. The cause is unknown. e illusion of On the other hand, labyrinthitis is a malfunction of the balance portion so many fatty of the inner ear, leading to vertigo consultation and loss of equilibrium.The cause is o confirm that unknown, but the affliction may be present. Per- associated with virus infections or have a similar tumors of the ear. Treatment usually ion, such as consists of drugs (such as Antivert) rich resemble or, in rare instances, surgery. Sometimes, in the elderly, circu- lation disturbances can affect both lease provide the eyes and the ears,causing retinal filar degenera- degeneration and inner-ear prob- Is there a con- lems. x Enjoy a Beautiful Smile! Dentures • Extractions Partial Dentures • Implants Relining • Repairs DR. TOM WILLIAMS D.M.D.,P.C. Plus GENERAL DENTISTRY awns • Bridges • Fillings • Extractions • Cosmetic Bonding [s •All Insurance Honored • Specials for Seniors Public Assistance LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE .-t J.Weil,President Dick Ransom V.P./General Managers Jack Mayne,Editor Robert Jones,Editorial Page Editor OPINION 'bv. l .1 (game. ! ` U O VALLEY LIVING care NOUN&_ Ws 4S PMW inoffering ung sters fine thing that's a real factor is ' ;ing sure we can accommodate Foster children we take in,"Rick "We're looking to provide lity. This is not a warehouse." )meday, he hopes to move the ily to a farm, somewhere kids _' be exposed to farm animals and re simple, down-to-earth values -asier to find when a family isn't ibarded with what he calls "the le and bustle of city life. 'hen a foster child comes into a q ie,there's no certainty how long child will be there. It was one of factors they had to consider n Charlie joined the family. We have a real strong faith in ," Betsy said. "I'd decided be here as long as he needed to Rick and Betsv Alford are seasoned veterans in coping with needs of foster children — ere, and if he needed to go,God Id help us deal with it. But from Jay I saw him I thought he was or some of these kids, being in foster little girl who was in foster care care is the first real structure they've had. Ree `meventually a mo returned to her i her, e that as both They may not have even had three fying and emotionally-wrench- he couple Said. squares a day. It may not always be this S of N �.'+ y �I �J If \�/W►I r .i 1/ `rib Y Y J `i>•• Y `r�Y �►'' \�,I A Y Y Y ��' r SLIM "+YY� W L r .t✓ vw.. ...J .. United for B JEAN PARIETTI Valley Daily News t4 �+ reported missing by friends, rela- KENT — News of Pay N Pak's bankruptcy tives or employers, he emphasized. filing was greeted with relief and optimism— but "That gives us some hope," Bai- not much surprise—by employees of the 30-year- !4h', t' ley said. old home improvement retailer. a0, Some residents may have been out "We kind of view it as the birth of the new of town or elsewhere in the city company," Dan Aulwurm, director of merchan r . when the fire started, he explained. dising and marketing, said Sunday. "We've had x .� �► + The fire was reported at 9:37 p.m. to go through this agony, but we're going to be a �', r `` 44 *4 PDT Saturday and went from one to better company for it." five alarms in less than 45 minutes. Aulwurm and other employees of the compa It took more than 100 firefighters ny's headquarters office in Kent had their annual using 20 engines from the city and picnic as scheduled Sunday!at Lake Wilderness King County until 3:51 a.m. to Park in Maple Valley. Some of them took time extinguish the flames. away from the festivities to talk about the reorga- � .. } ' a G i For the second time in six days, nization move. South King County firefighters were "I think it'll allow us to refocus," said Mich- called on to assist the Seattle Fire elle Beck of Kent, who has worked in the compa- � � Department. A week ago, frrefigh- ny's personnel department just over a year. I + •� "��� S­ tern were dispatclted to stand by really believe in what Pay 'N Pak's doing." t �"t. ' "�, 5 ,t while Seattle firefighters fought a Beck and other personnel employees said they fire on a fish processing ship docked spent Saturday afternoon telephoning managers near Pier 91. of the company's 78 stores aid telling them the 1 �, , Two task force teams of 12 to 15 news. The reaction was geperally favorable. Photo by GARY f See FIRE,A5 See WORKERS,A5 Pay 'N Pak officials Douglas Hoskins, left, and John Markley in tug of war at picnic. ..�. r New rules dry up Valley wetlands Wetlands ... then and nova By DANNY WESTNEAT "The White House has launched a Valley Daily News f s " ull-out assault on the nations wet- By DEBBIE CAFAZZO ++ 3 a' Special to Valle Dail News With each passing day, South lands, said David Ortman, head of x. ,;�,- t p Y Y King County's land seems to be get- the environmental group Friends of In the past century, the fcc ting drier. the Earth. it" �` �" �, I 1. eral Swamplands Act subs Wetlands "We've g— those swamps, bogs, et 'of Vice President(Dan) n ` t. ! j dized faners and others wl and marshy pastures that dominate Quayle and Chief of Staff (John) 1 't ^.,r helped drain marshes at, most low-lying areas around Puget Sununu cutting deals that have dras- ., � bogs, mix vlt ` Sound — have started to disappear at tically changed wetlands laws," he At that time, wetlands wei an unprecedented rate during the said. =' '°" " g `# n r' considered worthless swanil past six months. "What do those two know about ' `r that bred nothing but disais But not because they're being wetlands science?" ,OY carrying mosquitoes. turned into parking lots. In fact, Quayle and Sununu have For many years, the U.' It's because the federal govern- been cutting deals. In late August, Army Corps of Enginec ment has mixed�olitics and science the Washington Post quoted a gov- :a�° focused on"reclaiming" wt into a witches brew of relaxed ernment insider as saying the White , lands -- filling them in so the guidelines that could turn many of House's work on wetlands was could he converted to d, the Valley's less obvious wetlands "reaching new heights of political, into the legal equivalent of sand lots, Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA See WETLANDS,A critics say. See RULES,A5 Wetland between Auburn and Kent south of South 277th Street. Valley Daily News Monday, September 23, 1991 ■A5 plans and had devastating conse- Bush's proposed changes to wet- RULES: Critics quences for businesses and schools. lands rules could ease protection on '.'s k`.• The environment is important, another 10 percent of what are now say politics is but the economy of the United States considered wet pastures and forests. . : dominating science should also be of some concern." Incredulous that politics can so 9 The president of the Washington dominate science, some members of. Continued from page Al State Farm Bureau went even fur- the local environmental community ther, saying environmentalists were doubt whether these changes can r` intervention." "social engineers" who had gone ever take hold. ' A summertime scientific review much too far in their zeal to protect "It seems to me the government of what constitutes a wetland was every patch of ground with a puddle will have to abandon this position, essentially commandeered by White on it. Ortman said. "The Vatican tried to House officials who had so little "True environmentalists would ignore Galileo and say the earth was direct knowledge of the issue that be more understanding than these standing still, but you don't get very they had to be given a special wet- people," said Darrell Turner. far when you completely deny sci- q "They've got a clear agenda— to ence. lands glossary, the Post reported. " From those meetings came Presi- change the way we live." For developers, the wetland issue dent Bush's proposed changes to But biologists say the wetlands is more than science. It's all about Photo by+GARY PAYNE wetlands rules, which have been guidelines were the result of years of striking a balance between the envi- �loyees at picnic. attacked by environmentalists and research and study by experts from ronment and economic develop- wetlands biologists as having no five federal agencies. Although they ment. s changing its mar- relation to science. may not mesh with economic devel- "Everyone's saying this is poli- to become more For beleaguered property owners, opment plans, the rules do reflect a tics winning out over science, however, the political hijinks may "scientific reality," they say. Flynn said. "It's common sense and 'N Pak unveiled its provide a welcome relief from what "It took a lot of information and a a lot of other values winning out icept in Puyallup-a they describe as "overkill" wet- lot of years to figure out what a wet- over off-the-edge environmental- that also features a lands laws. land is," said Michael Rylko, an ists." design center. . The current guidelines, they say, aquatic biologist with the local But the science in question, actual have created wetlands out of moun- office of the Environmental Protec- biological criteria for the changes 4arkley said, eight tainsides, farms, and places so dry tion Agency. that occur to soil and plants in stand- the Seattle-Tacoma "you have to avoid using the word Now the rules are changing quick- ing water, was so important to sev- todeled like the Puy- 'dust' in every sentence." ly, which may end up relaxing pro- eral federal biologists that they vhich is doing phe- Earlier this summer, the Ameri- tection on hundreds of acres of resigned this summer rather than can Farm Bureau Federation and undeveloped land in the Green River have their names on the new, the beginning of other groups submitted a list of 400 Valley's industrial corridor. relaxed standards. to take the compa- such wetland "horror stories" to In one fell swoop in August, for Locally, scientists are now testing said. "We'll create Congress. They detailed, for exam- example, a temporary rules change Bush's new guidelines in the field to iche" in the market. ple, an Oregon couple whose farm "dried up" as much as a third of the see whether they will work to identi r updating 24 other was classified as a wetland even Valley's remaining wetlands, local fy known wetlands. Interstate 5 corridor though the farmers spent$30,000 to planners say. That study will be done in early : and Portland. The irrigate it. Auburn has almost 1,500 acres of October,only days before the end , •e rural stores, such "Current wetlands rules are wetlands, Kent nearly 1.000 acres, a public comment period on Bush's astern Washington, absurd," said Dan Flynn, director and Renton more than 200 acres, in proposed rule changes. be updated but won't of the Master Builders, a King the valley floor region near Pro P gn center, Aulwurm County development group. "They Longacres. Debbie Cafazzo contributed to have played havoc with land-use By 1992. biologists estimate that this story. iin, sites only in Thinking of wetlands only as duck chance, biologists say. Rather, they 'ounty is anyone's WETLANDS ponds with cattails is a mistake,said are formed by special oxygen-defi- )int, he said. Begin- Erik Stockdale. a King County cient conditions that occur only in the committee will The kidneys of the resource planner. the presence of standing water. ng sites to five rec- But it's a common mistake that is "Wetlands are products of histo- for each facility. A ecosystem currently undermining the nation's ry," said Klaus Richter, a King :)lic meetings are wetland policies, biologists say. County biologist. Some can take text few weeks to get Continued from page Al Even Vice-President an Quayle, thousands of years to form. such as it on the sites. grasping for a catch-all wetland def- Queen's Bog, north of Issaquah, said that if the objec- land. inition, wants to see water on his which took root some 10,000 years ,ere comprehensive That was before the public under- wetlands. ago. immittee's final rec- stood the word ecology. During a scientific review of fed- Wetlands are important for their should come from Today,ecologists look admiringly eral wetland standards last summer, ability to filter surface water that sites. at wetlands, the most productive Quayle reportedly asked, "How runs across lawns and farm fields, committee has spent systems in nature. As with most about if we say when it's wet, it's down roofs and across parking lots nonths reviewing 92 flood plains,the Green River Valley wet?" and highways - soaking up earth, i variety of technical is dominated by the watery resourc- But water is apparently only one oil,bacteria,metals. fertilizers.pes- criteria approved by es. of three elements used to identify a ticides and other stuff that nobody y Council. The crite- Open marshes, bogs, swamps and typical wetland.The others are types wants to drink or swim in. i whether a site has ponds are obvious examples of wet- of soil and plants, both of which can ,ers available to its lands,but wetlands also can occur in indicate a wetland habitat when no This filtering ability often prompts tomes and environ- low-lying grassy meadows and in water is present. biologists to call wetlands the "kid- is. forests, biologists say. Wetlands don't just happen by Heys of the ecosystem. nrniect ie the nlnct - ---- l joa t lyNews FMAY ValleSer - 250ving South King Countysince 1889. �`� i t:-�I, i.. �- - � 1 y`�.;� �.. ,�„P+.'�. _ #��� _ `_'`-_ i I�l I i!1� I••i" i- �.�I i��. - - �.•�,} t: �;y '�•, .I �1;i � 4 , s I I- ers to III ! eti o e ` i By DANNY WESTNEAT shouldn't have qualified as wetlands in the i Valley Daily News Relaxed rules could -affect 2,500 acres in Valley first place because it's scarcely wet. As much as a third of the Green River But biologists say at least some of those Valley's remaining wetlands may be open to The guidelines, in place since 1989, were ly political decision,could open hundreds of definitions have slowed or completely halt- lands are important for flood control and development because the federal govern- replaced for the time being with an older, wetland acres to developers in Kent. ed Valley floor development. filtering pollution from water, regardless of ment has gone back in time on wetlands more lenient standard, according to wet- Auburn, and Renton. Once seen as worthless swamps and boas, whether water is visible on the surface. ; protection. lands experts. In Auburn, for example, nearly 90 per- wetlands have become a flash point nation- "This is terrible," said Anne Watanabe. 1 In a surprise move two weeks ago, the "Because of this change,about 30 percent cent of the undeveloped land in the industri- wide in the battle between environmental a Kent wetlands planner. "The 1989 stan- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discarded of our wetlands are now no longer consid- al corridor is currently classified as wet,but protection and economic development. dard wasn't always popular with landown- the current federal standards that define and ered wetland," said Lois Stark, Auburn's the change could relax protection on as Most of the local land affected by the lat- ers, but everyone agreed it was the most protect an estimated 2,500 acres of wetlands environmental planner. much as 400 acres, Stark said. est rule-change is "wet pasture," predomi- in the Valley. The flip-flop, which some labeled a pure- For the past three years. strict wetland nantly scrub land that many critics say See WETLANDS,Al Abortion The bigJ et smaller rnan s rights billE � Yr approved a , i by Senate Iminked_ f By ALAN FRAM "> 3 Associated Press «� `U-5- $ in �� ; ' _ �.. n WASHINGTON The Senate :- - to koller approved legislation Thursday revoking a ban on abortion counsel- ing by federally financed clinics, By IRENE SVETE and allowing taxpayer-paid abor- - -� Valley Daily News Fes,.•,•nm..., „•{,n .,.., ,•:..rime nF ,...,. - a _ -- - _. a ' _..-�-_ .'-_ - .. "Pretending that controversial 0.0 percent aoove 1991 amounts. behavior does not exist, or lecturing ■ Older Americans: Provides $400 million for employment of people not to engage in risky behav- senior citizens, about the same as this year. nor, does not work," said Sen. M Handicapped education: $5.8 billion, nearly $200 million Brock Adams, D-Wash. above 1991 levels. A second planned survey of teen- Job training:$4.2 billion,$124 million more than this year. age sexual behavior was canceled by Health and Human Services Secre- Bush's position on the counseling to notify their parents before receiv- tary Louis Sullivan in July after con- prohibition is unclear. ing an abortion from a federally 1 servatives objected to it. The Senate measure also allows financed clinic or organization, t The bill would also nullify the federal funds to pay for abortions unless a doctor or counselor decides 1 Supreme Court's decision last May for women who have been raped or such a step could be dangerous. { upholding a three-year-old ban on are victims of incest. The president ■ Makes it mandatory that doc- federally financed family-planning has flatly promised to veto the legis- tors, dentists and other medical clinics from giving abortion advice lation unless the provision is workers who may be exposed to to clients. The House's version, of removed. body fluids wear masks, gloves,and the legislation also overturns the The bill also: take other precautions against the ban. ■ Requires girls less than age 18 spread of AIDS and other diseases. WETLANDS-■ an undetermined "interim" period. Renton, and unincorporated King They will use a manual adopted in County have said they will probably Debate over worth 1987 instead, corps officials said. continue to use the stricter guide- This "back to the future" lines,while Auburn will side with the of guidelines approach to wetlands regulation was Corps of Engineers. demanded by political interests who But planners worry developers Continued from page Al felt the current rules put development will now have more ammunition to in too much of a pinch, observers attack local jurisdictions that try to scientific way for determining wet- say. impose stricter wetlands standards lands." "The changes were made at a very than those used by the Corps of Engi- In fact, the guidelines the Corps of high political level," said Bill Riley, neers. Engineers just threw out were "the wetlands program manager for the "If nothing else, the change will E culmination of 40 years of debate Environmental Protection Agency put a lot of (development) pressure • about how to technically define wet- office in Seattle. on those areas that aren't visibly wet lands," a biologist for the Environ- In fact,an amendment to the Corps _ which can be very valuable wet- mental Protection Agency said last of Engineers' budget would have lands," said Kent's Watanabe. month. shut down the regulatory branch of In any event, the change has creat- But the chief of the Corps of Engi- the agency completely unless it ed considerable confusion, planners neers in Washington, D.C., said agreed to discard the stricter wet- say. Nobody is sure how to define a those guidelines were not working lands guidelines,corps officials said. wetland now, let alone determine its after all. The rules were too strict, At the corps' Seattle office, wet- functions and value, they say. and actually led to dry upland prop- lands scientists were described as erty being labeled wetland in error, "brushing the dust off manuals in the In the Valley, planners said devel- > he said Thursday. historical files" in order to comply opers involved in unfinished projects "We had biologists telling us the with the rules change. could be required to perform new guidelines forced them to label some- It is not clear yet which standard wetlands surveys using the 1987 thing a wetland, even when they will take hold in King County. Kent, guidelines. knew it wasn't," said John Studt, head of the corps'national regulatory branch. The Bush administration had long BIG: Auburn will guage?We have a fourth-year Span- argued that wetlands regulations ish class this year because there were • should be relaxed to ensure that get new high enough kids interested," McCallum • "every little mud puddle" was not says. protected as if it were a wildlife pre- school in 1994 On the flip side,there are the sheer serve. numbers of students. Environmentalists reply by argu- Continued from page Al "You really have to work to make ing that the laws have not been tough sure some kids don't fall through the enough to prevent a steady loss of unavailable at many high schools. cracks,"McCallum said. "The staff watery resources throughout the Auburn boasts a wide-ranging has to be sure every student knows country, with the recent pace of con- vocational education program, with there's someone here that cares version estimated at 300,000 acres a what McCallum terms a "full-scale about them." year. automotive center," and advanced McCallum is familiar with both Earlier in August, President Bush classes in metals technology, elec- big and little schools. He graduated had proposed revisions to the 1989 tronics and other fields. There's a in 1950 from Montesano High wetlands standard. Currently under- diverse honors program with School in Grays Harbor County in a going public comment and testing, advanced-placement classes where class of 46 students. those changes are expected to students can obtain college credits . C become law in some form in about a by completing college-level course "At a school like that," McCal- • �, year. work. lum recalls, "you play on the bas- But now, the Corps of Engineers "And how many high schools can ketball team, and then you come out DA_' has abandoned that 1989 standard for offer a fourth year in foreign Ian- at half-time and play in the band." rAa() IAJVJ-� ay. September 611991 LOCAL/REGION op e rules e aye Nvit re t New according to records of forest-conversion By Kathy George Forest and farm protection required permits.To comply with the Growth Mana all ge- wil P-I Reporter commercial forests and draft regulations to Pierce counties — received said the tough-o g the ehqurrementsative created commenmercial Act, the countyra l planner Deb Deb In burgeoning Snohomish County, s Snohomish and uncertainty counties developer proposes to convert 1,100 acres extensions. The state Community Develo of Mp- ost Flynn. and southeast ment Department granted extensions s160 that they aret�nearly finished identifying pro She said thetect them, y 1,100-acre forest sesn pro-, of prime commercial forest 1 one to six months to moreFalls, where S.K. of Granite Falls into a 213 lot housing counties and cities, said planner Steve lands and drafting regulations P poses the 213-lot subdivision, is not in the subdivision. Wells of the department's Growth Manage- the Wells said.t need more time for public Granites forest zone although it'siotround- Across the border in King County s Fall review, King County had the required regula- "We don't have the authority to enforce coup y City area, another developer seeks to build ment Division. a golf course and 128-lot housing subdivi- " he added. The law doesn't ed by commercial send the In Mason timberland.cal forests g 0 acres of land now used for tions long before the deadline. Even so, the deadline, 5 development of forest,farm and other even require of regulations requits red under cover at least 6 percent Management Actathere + Sion on 6 some deve p despite the Growth farming and grazing. These are-among theesr,te a state law sensitive forestnwere converteFor d lto the act,he said. :.40a develo meat d p s last year, according to the Snohomish County received the maxi- is no land-use zoning at all, let alone. a%�j be lost to P other use mum six-month extension. That gives de- for st zone. It. I ike Snohomish, Mason County got an" designed to protect them. velopers more time to propose develop- The state Growth Management Act to coin am annual heads King for all counties and cities to new restrictive regulations But records indicate commercial forestry is�y m rehensive planning, said the ments in forest, farm and other sensitive extension of the forest-protection deadline 1990 called fairly stable. identify all commercial forest, farm and county is in substantial compliance" with lands before pierce County drafted regulations im. mineral-resource lands and critical ar- the Growth Management Act but is consid- are pcounty has a forest zone designeted. d j eas" such as wetlands, flood plains and ering additional regulations and refine- i to protect commercial foArnesdt each uyear filed a last-min, appeal under the coup- wildlife habitat. ments. lan- doesn't cover all of them. The act also required fast-growing Wells said many county and city psaid cities to adopt regulations 5 acres in 1990, 2,794 request an extension,-range hlanne Orden, d cat d complying with the act be- the county has lost vastforested areas to ty's review process, forcing the county to counties an ners delayed P protecting the newly identified lands. The cause of state Initiative 547, a ballot development deadline for both tasks was last Sunday. n roposal rejected by voters last fall. He acres in 1989 and 1,267 acres in 1988, the county's chief Ong But most governments — including ! SECTION ---- Friday September 6, 1991 Seattle Post-IntelligencerLoca Re gio Thequit?y . Three womearterywonenindiscoveU By Tom Paulson rock Rotary P-I Reporter Re-clogging after balloon use targeted bodRatsd Four years ago University of Washington researchers angioplasty, in which a tiny balloon is the growth of smooth muscle cells — the arteries j women had to have found that inhibiting a protein first inserted into a clogged arterypercent make a federal found in blood may reduce the dangerous ed to open the blocked vessel. ves `i re clogging that often follows the most But an estimated 30 40 and �nflat cells that line the walls of the arteries, receive t case of it to join among other things — in lab cell cultures. "Thi; ' common treatment for blocked heart these arteries clog up again,prequiring might play an unwelcome role in upwardly noble Ross and his team guessed that PDGF animal's groups like the Ro- arteries. repeated angioplasties, b tary Club. Now it's "We're very excited about it,"said Dr. some bypass surgery or in promot- this abr other treatment. g atherosclerosis, the excessive build- said. a federal case Russell Hoss, UW chairman of pathology Ross and his colleagues focused their inside the arterof fats and ies that To test that idea, they when they want to and senior author of a report a He s, P appearing attention on a protein called platelet- developed an antibody to the protein. Y plays to quit. in today's Science magazine. derived growth factor, or PDGF, that had Goats were injected with human Sally Narodick, Many of the millions of Americans been discovered in Ross' lab in 1974. PDGF and the o Plays ar chairwoman of the with coronary artery disease are treated The PDGF protein had been observed but the; Susan today using a technique called balloon to play some unknown role in sti goats' immune system indirec Seattle Chamber of produced the antibodies, he said. Then Commerce, Terry Paynter mulating rats were injected with the PDGF anti- See A Axelrod of Axelrod - CO., housing construction, and Dr. Pepper Schwartz of the University of Seven cities miss wetlands deadline Seven South King County cities have missed a state deadline for drafting new rules to protect wetlands, forests, steep slopes and other environmentally sensitive areas. Kent, Auburn, Renton, Algona, Pacific, Black Diamond, and Enumclaw all requested extensions past the Sept. I deadline. Each city is required to compile a detailed inventory of all its wetlands and sensitive areas, then draft ordinances to protect them. The requirement is part of the state Growth Management Act, passed in 1990 and strengthened this spring. None of the cities will incur penalties for failing to meet the © deadline. All the cities have received money, ranging from$35,000 to 'z $60,000, to hire additional planners and consultants. Meanwhile, Tukwila, Federal Way, and Des Moines all met the --9 state due date, drafting ordinances this year. It is not known whether the plans submitted by these cities will pass state muster, however. King County's controversial sensitive areas ordinance,passed a year ago, is expected to fulfill the county's obligations under state law. -ntirety carnivorous, eating mings - such as cabbage worms, beetles and { slugs, as well as your barbecued hamburger. ! M Although yellow jackets are eco- , 'ogically important, they should be iestroyed in certain cases, Akre Bob Wagner displays some See YELLOW,A7 western yellow jackets. Palestinians flock to troubled Jordan y MARTIN MARRIS en-month Iraqi occupation. ,sociated Press Jordan and the PLO were among AMMAN,Jordan- Hundreds of Saddam Hussein's staunchest sup- usands of Palestinians expelled porters after he invaded Kuwait in FRIDAY ValleyDaij[yNews 25vin South Kin County 1889. September 13, 99Volumei i © 1991 Valley Daily News Weti . nd may op n to ii rs By DANNY WESTNEAT Relaxed rules could affect 2,500 acres in Valley shouldn't have qualified as wetlands in the Valley Daily News first place because it's scarcely wet. As much as a third of the Green River But biologists say at least some of those Valley's remaining wetlands may be open to The guidelines, in place since 1989, were ly political decision,could open hundreds of definitions have slowed or completely halt- lands are important for flood control and development because the federal govern- replaced for the time being with an older, wetland acres to developers in Kent, ed Valley floor development. filtering pollution from water, regardless of ment has gone back in time on wetlands more lenient standard, according to wet- Auburn, and Renton. Once seen as worthless swamps and bogs, whether water is visible on the surface. protection. lands experts. In Auburn, for example, nearly 90 per- wetlands have become a flash point nation- "This is terrible," said Anne Watanabe, In a surprise move two weeks ago, the "Because of this change,about 30 percent cent of the undeveloped land in the industri- wide in the battle between environmental a Kent wetlands planner. "The 1989 stan- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discarded of our wetlands are now no longer consid- al corridor is currently classified as wet,but protection and economic development. dard wasn't always popular with landown- _the current federal standards that define and ered wetland," said Lois Stark, Auburn's the change could relax protection on as Most of thelocal land affected by the lat- ers, but everyone agreed it was the most protect an estimated 2,500 acres of wetlands environmental planner. much as 400 acres, Stark said. est rule-change is "wet pasture," predomi- See WETLANDS,A18 in the Valley. The flip-flop, which some labeled a pure- For the past three years, strict wetland nantly scrub land that many critics say n,Oea,ac rta- Seattle,Tacoma, Everett and vicinity:Scattered showers TITOWEffs-e-nding early morning, turning partly sunny by today with afternoon clearing. Highs mid 60s.Wind variable to s•:: „a,Scu 1aS(weeK witn attempted first- egree mur e e On noon. Partly sunny and breezy this afternoon. Highs mid and 10 mph. Rain chance 50 percent. Partly cloudy tonight. Lows Portland 70° $500,000 bail each were Johnnie Ray Thomas, 25, and Casey Marc upper 60s. Partly cloudy skies tonight. Lows lower 50s. upper 40s. Sunny Saturday after patchy morning fog or low Barela, 24, both of Selma, Calif. Kent,Auburn,Federal Way,Countyline:Showers ending clouds. Highs mid and upper 60s. oae. early morning, turning partly sunny. Partly sunny and breezy Bellingham to Everett: Scattered showers today with .... Accordingto prosecutors,Thomas n B r l i this afternoon. p and a e a did the shooting while t sate noon. Highs mid 60s. Partly cloudy to clear skies clearing at times. Highs mid 60s. Wind west 10 t0 20 mph. overnight. Lows upper 40s to near 50. Partly cloud tonight. Lows upper 40s. Sunny Saturday after Singh directed the ambush. v v g PP v v Southeast King County, Black Diamond, Enumclaw: patchy morning fog or low clouds. Highs mid 60s. Singh is a cousin of Kalkat's girlfriend, Rauinder San ha. Still snowers endin finis mornln turnip Sher-storms Rem Flurries Snow ke Surny Pf.Cloudy Cloudy g g J g 9 g g partly sunny. Partly Olympia to Vancouver: Scattered showers today with under investigation in connection with the shooting is Sangha's sunny this afternoon, with a chance of late afternoon and clearing at times. Highs mid 60s. Wind west 10 to 15 mph. via Asseclared Press GraphicsNer 01991 Amu Wealher.4m. evening showers.Breezy southwest winds. Highs lower to mid Partly cloudy tonight. Lows mid 40s. Sunny Saturday after estranged husband, a Vancouver, B.C. businessman. 60s. Partly cloudy overnight. Lows mid and upper 40s. patchy morning fog or low clouds. Highs upper 60s. Eastern Washington: Sunny days and fair nights Sunday Thomas was also charged Thursday with second-degree assault in East Kent Ridge,Covington,Maple Valley:Showers end- Coastal: Scattered showers today with clearing at times. through Tuesday. Highs mid 70s to mid 80s. Lows 40s to mid connection with arifle-waving episode on Pacific Highway South ing this morning, turning partly sunny and breezy. Shower Highs mid 60s. Wind northwest 10 to 15 mph. Partly cloudy 50s. chance late afternoon and evening. Partly cloudy overnight. tonight.Lows mid and upper 40s.Sunny Saturday after patchy Aug. 26. According to prosecutors,after a near-collision with another Highs lower to mid 60s. Lows upper 40s. morning fog or low clouds. Highs mid 60s. Today,s tides vehicle,Thomas grabbed a rifle and pointed it at the driver of the other Olympics and Washington Cascades: Rain turning to 1st low 2:44 a.m. 0.2'ft. car,saying he was going to kill him.Thomas then put the gun away and Tomorrow showers today, mainly north part. Snow level near 7000 eat. 1st high 9:47 a.m. 9.9'ft. Y g g g P g Y Afternoon pass temperatures near 50. Wind west 10 to 20 end low 2:59 left. South King County: Morning clouds,afternoon sun. Highs mph. Decreasing chance of showers tonight. Snow level near p•m. 0.1 ft. Thomas, who has previous convictions for robbery and battery,had around 70. 2nd high 8:27 p.m. 1 . ft. 6000 feet. Partly sunny Saturday. Freezing level near 7000 feet. Saturday's tides been out of prison for three weeks prior to the shooting, according to Central Basin and Tri-Cities: Partly cloudy today with y ' prosecutors. Yesterday gusty winds at times. Cooler with highs In the mid 70s. Wind 1st low 3:33 a.m. 0.4ft. High 62, Low 53, no pcp., year's total is 24.78 inches. southwest 15 to 25 mph. Fair tonight. Cool. Lows 40 to 45. 1st high 10:56 a.m. 9.7 ft. (Provided by the Kent Fire Department). Sunny Saturday. Highs lower to mid 70s. 2nd low 3:55 p.m. 6.6 ft. 111 �Ii�/7CD 1F1 111 2nd high 9:09 P.M. 9.5 ft. Inquest scheduledin •� V 1 shooting Extended Tides are for South Puget Sound. Air pollution index Western Washington: Sunny days and fair nights Sunday An inquest will be held next month into the death of Steven Smith, Good - 49, particulates. For recorded update on burning through Tuesday except patchy morning fog. Temperatures Sun times who was shot by a state patrol trooper last month after attacking the restrictions, call 296-5100. For air pollution index information above normal. Highs 70s to lower 80s. Lows in the lower 40s Sunset today 7:28 m r only, call toll-free 1-800-433-2215. to lower 50s. Sunrise Saturday a. officer. v, v 6:45 a.m. The county executive formally requested the inquest Thursday, about three weeks after Smith, an unemployed truck driver who had Asheville e5 63 cdy Burlington,V1. 66 39 cdy Dallas-Ft Worth 92 73 city NATION Atlanta 93 71 cdy Casper 78 52 .02 cdy Dayton 79 59 .09 cdy been staying with friends in Renton, was stopped by trooper Lane Atlantic City 77 57 in Charleston,S.C. 94 77 clr Denver 77 53 .12 cdy Jackstadt. U.S. temperatures Austin 91 72 cdy Charleston,W.Va. 82 61 cdy Des Moines 91 72 cdy Baltimore 80 63 cdy Charlotte,N.C. 90 71 cdy Detroit 70 59 rn Jackstadt told his superiors that he was "afraid for his life" at the Temperatures indicate previous day's high and Billings 76 49 .01 cdy Cheyenne 72 48 .14 cdy Duluth 69 55 .09 rn overnight low to 5 p.m.PDT. Birmingham 94 69 cdy Chicago 80 62 .66 cdy El Paso 89 62 .28 cdy time of the shooting. A formal inquest is always held when a police HI Lo Prc otlk Bismarck 79 57 cdy Cincinnati 85 64 cdy Evansville 96 69 cdy officer is 1nVO1Ved in a shooting. Albany,N.Y. 73 45 cdy Boise 81 53 cdy Cleveland 76 58 rn Fairbanks 47 43 .52 cdy g Albuquerque 80 58 .05 cdy Boston 71 52 cdy Columbia,S.C. 93 69 clr National Temperature Extremes for Thursday: Higr The incident began when Jackstadt tried to pull over a westbound car Amarillo 84 63 cdy Brownsville 90 75 .05 cdy Columbus,Ohio 75 59 .06 cdy 103 at Borrego Springs, Calif. Low 25 at Truckee g P Anchorage 57 48 .01 cdy Buffalo 74 49 cdy Concord,N.H. 69 36 cdy Calif. driving erratically Aug. 29 on Interstate 90 on Mercer Island. The driver refused to stop, until police finally pulled him over in Seattle. The driver then got out of the car and attacked the police officer. After library and special activities planned for chil- The previews feature information Register to attend by callin( At the a warning, Jackstadt finally fired two shots at Smith, 32, who was dren and families. For information call about the composer and the history of 824-6066, or sign up at the library pronounced dead at Harborview Medical Center later that night. 825-suss. the time the opera war written. Musical 21620 iith Ave. S. p g ■ Des Moines Library, 21520 11th selections will be performed by SeattleJackstadt works works ■ Maple Valley Library, 23730 nnar. r.nnn,­, -- WETLANDS: an undetermined "interim" period. Renton, and unincorporated King They will use a manual adopted in County have said they will probably Debate over worth 1987 instead, corps officials said. continue to use the stricter guide- This "back to the future" lines,while Auburn will side with the of guidelines approach to wetlands regulation was Corps of Engineers. demanded by political interests who But planners worry developers Continued from page Al felt the current rules put development will now have more ammunition to in too much of a pinch, observers attack local jurisdictions that try to scientific way for determining wet- say. impose stricter wetlands standards lands." "The changes were made at a very than those used by the Corps of Engi- In fact, the guidelines the Corps of high political level," said Bill Riley, neers. Engineers just threw out were "the wetlands program manager for the "If nothing else, the change will culmination of 40 years of debate Environmental Protection Agency put a lot of(development) pressure about how to technically define wet- office in Seattle. on those areas that aren't visibly wet lands," a biologist for the Environ- In fact,an amendment to the Corps _ which can be very valuable wet- mental Protection Agency said last of Engineers' budget would have lands," said Kent's Watanabe. month. shut down the regulatory branch of In any event,the change has creat- s But the chief of the Corps of Engi- the agency completely unless it ed considerable confusion, planner neers in Washington, D.C., said agreed to discard the stricter wet- say. Nobody is sure how to define those guidelines were not working lands guidelines,corps officials said. wetland now, let alone determine its after all. The rules were too strict, At the corps' Seattle office, wet. functions and value, they say. and actually led to dry upland prop- lands scientists were described as erty being labeled wetland in error, "brushing the dust off manuals in the In the Valley, planners said devel- he said Thursday. historical files" in order to comply opers involved in unfinished projects "We had biologists telling us the with the rules change. could be required to perform new guidelines forced them to label some- It is not clear yet which standard wetlands surveys using the 1987 thing a wetland, even when they will take hold in King County. Kent, guidelines. knew it wasn't," said John Studt, head of the corps'national regulatory branch. The Bush administration had long BIG: Auburn will guage?We have a fourth-year Span- argued that wetlands regulations ish class this year because there were should be relaxed to ensure that get new high enough kids interested," McCallum "every little mud puddle" was not says. �� protected as if it were a wildlife pre- school in 1 97`^^+ On the flip side,there are the sheer serve. numbers of students. Environmentalists reply by argu- Continued from page Al "You really have to work to make ing that the laws have not been tough sure some kids don't fall through the enough to prevent a steady loss of unavailable at many high schools. cracks,"McCallum said. "The staff watery resources throughout the Auburn boasts a wide-ranging has to be sure every student knows country, with the recent pace of con- vocational education program, with there's someone here that cares version estimated at 300,000 acres a what McCallum terms a "full-scale about them." year. automotive center," and advanced McCallum is familiar with both Earlier in August, President Bush classes in metals technology, l g and elec- big schools. He graduated had proposed revisions to the 1989 tronics and other fields. There's a bi and from Montesano High wetlands standard. Currently under- diverse honors program with School 0 Grays Harbor County in a going public comment and testing, advanced-placement classes where class of 46 students. those changes are expected to students can obtain college credits become law in some form in about a by completing college-level course "At a school like that," McCal- year. work. lum recalls, "you play on the bas- But now, the Corps of Engineers "And how many high schools can ketball team, and then you come out has abandoned that 1989 standard for offer a fourth year in foreign Ian- at half-time and play in the band." r � ised to build homes, roads, hospi- ruling,which crushed Alamo's multimillion-dollar religious and cloth- uls and schools to help Israel absorb ing empire, was made last year in the same courtroom where Alamo ip to 1 million refugees. The loans stood trial this week. would be paid back over 30 years. Bush said a congressional debate Teacher convicted of student's rape at this point"could well destroy our ability to bring one or more of the CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - A teacher was convicted Thursday of parties to the peace table." raping a 15-year-old student after luring him to her home and seducing him. "I didn't do it! I didn't do it!" sobbed Karen Cross, 33, who was sentenced to three to five years in prison. She was carried from the courthouse on a stretcher. Middlesex Superior Court Judge Robert Barton said Cross must rHOMAS �serve at least one year in prison. The jury deliberated 16 hours before finding her guilty on one count of rape of child. 5; S > r s AT y R&K PHOTO a We Have ALL Your Class Supplies • CAMERAS • LENSES • Photo Paper • Film Darkroom Supplies i Y COUNCIL ® °Pr°cess;n9 e Ph°0 Frain 1 O N#4 � st°r yes ' tp ,f° v ality o�`SvPp` 01 P �a�Kro omas Campaign Committee. , SEP-23-1991 00:00 FROM KENT BAKKE 206 7049592 TO 2352541 P.02 p1�L��3 I�C�dII:Q�G FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (Do not use after September 26, 1991) Contact: Barbara Douma David E. Oriman Seattle Audubon Society Friends of the Earth (206) 784,2610 (206) 633-1661 MORE NET LOSS WETLANDS TOUR Seattle - A news conference will be held by environmental, conservation and fishing organizations on Thursday. September 26 at 10:00 AM to examine President Bush's new wetlands policy and proposed changes to the Federal Wetlands Manual. A walking tour of Foster Island wetlands will follow the news conference. Press packet including press release, background information and file footage on wetlands will be available at the news conference. When: September 26, 1991 10:00 AM Where: University of Washington Arboretum Visitors Center followed by a walk through Foster Island wetlands With: Gerry Adams, Seattle Aubudon Society Darlene Madenwald, Washington Environmental Council Sarah Cooke: Native Plant Society David E. Ortman, Friends of. the Earth Don Schulter, Trout Unlimited WHY SHOULD WE CARE ABOUT WETLANDS? Flooding in the Skagit Valley and in Chehalis was due, in part, to the destruction of wetlands for development and agriculture and have cost the taxpayers millions of dollars. Half the fish and seafood harvested off the Pacific Coast use wetlands as nurseries. Our wetlands are nature's flood control devices, water purifiers, irrigation mechanisms and wildlife and fisheries nurseries. Changes in President Bush's 'No Net Loss' Policy and proposed new Federal wetland regulations will effect growth management, preservation of fisheries, loss of public resources and the future of our Pacific Northwest Lifestyle. COME WALK THE CHERISHED WETLANDS OF FOSTER ISLAND AND SEE WHAT OUR 'ENVIRONMENTAL' PRESIDENT HAS PROPOSED! �#ttttasta� Citizens WatCh wet and abuse 3 y = for county BARBARA CLEMENTS BY Mill Creek reinforces the notion County Bureau <<B Chief that everyone lives downstream," When someone dumps grass clip- Gillmore said. pings in your favorite wetland, who Tips gleaned from the class will ya gonna call? be passed on to Gillmore's fifth-and Conceding that many frustrated sixth-grade students, who are plant- homeowners can't answer that ques- ing salmon in streams and stenciling tion,King County started a program storm water openings with warnings this summer to train wannabe envi- that say "Drains to Stream." "It's like a block watch. You're ronmental watchdogs. The large response caught county not passive anymore. The class officials off guard. teaches you to be proactive," Gill- "We set the original limit at about more said. 20 people per workshop,"said Deb- Students in the class learn about bie Cornell, the county's communi- natural wetland plants, as well as ty stewardship coordinator. "An what plants don't belong in wet average of 35 to 40 people show environments. up." For example, wetland watchers Started as a pilot project with a who identify loosestrife properly .$126,000 state grant, the county's can make or break a healthy wet- surface water division has held sev- land, said Auburn resident Len .' eral workshops on preserving Elliott, a steward for King County's streams and wetlands in the Soos cooperative extension service. Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA Creek basin. "You don't want people yanking is book store in Renton Center The free classes have taught 200 out everything with purple flow- residents how to tell a healthy ers," he said. stream or wetland from a sick one. The final two classes this year will For example, participants learn to be held Oct.5 and 19.Residents will like e the wind recognize purple loosestrife, a nox- learn how to grow and transplant ious weed that crowds out wetland native species, Cornell said. -'-Zits used as food and cover by More classes will be held next �r the book in the American south, such as New Orleans wildlife. year as well. Legacy and On Leaving Charleston. "We're trying to teach people to Meanwhile, other King County e received Allen and Williams said they were selling be our eyes and ears so they can alert divisions are trying to help citizen high were more than the usual number of copies of Gone us if they see problems," Cornell activists preserve their local wet- .ing list. With The Wind, adding the new book is spark- said. "People are seeing how quick- lands or streams. The county's envi- tt it," said ing interest in the old one. Only the Bible has ly the environment is changing and ronmental division proposed a plan tg to get in sold more copies than Gone With The Wind. want to protect it. this week that tries to strengthen the week •• In Atlanta, bookstores put the books on "They become alarmed at some county's use of easements, buying shelves at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday morning, and problems they see and don't know land with a citizens groups and pro- books on employees dressed in period costumes sold cop- what to do," she said. , moting wetlands education. ich 15 had ies to people who had waited in line for hours. That was one reason Auburn Metro is also accepting applica- ling to the Williams said the hype for Scarlett will proba- teacher Paula Gillmore signed up tions from community groups that i order but bly only last "a couple of weeks, because then for the classes. About two years want to monitor or clean up a local ; e in, the people who have it will tell others about it ago, she remembers watching an bog,river or beach.Under the annu- ie original and many will decide to wait until it comes out apartment complex slowly creep al program, Metro can award up to her death in paperback." over an area she thought was a wet- $4,000 to a community group for andra Rip- "Everyone who wants it will get it right land. monitoring or restoration projects. ;e to write away,but some will wait until Christmas,"said "Some of that wetland was great- Deadline for applications is Nov. novels set Allen. ly disturbed,"Gillmore said. 29. For more information, call Living on Kent's Scenic Hill near 684-1229. v will make all residents minorities business executives and Jordan said demographers predict than answers on how cities can deal best thing we have right now,"Jor- iunity leaders need to that by the 21 st century, all of us with cultural diversity. dan said. gage in cultural aware- will belong to some kind of minority Jordan does believe affirmative He said those who benefit from an a so cities of the future group. action will be one of THE hot issues unjust society should bear some job dealing with racial The statistical change will result for the future. responsibility toward correcting the ie emphasizes that such from increased growth rates among He said he has personally strug- injustice. luld have healing as its what have traditionally been racial Rled with having to tell the nergr,n at "Wben lvp hr,n. nPnnl. �,�nti fey `zGur� al. 1351991 Valley Daily County r called <<yy ?N lake 's Maienemy By DANNY WESTNEAT Valley Daily News i If you make enough noise, King County will listen. That's what Lake Desire residents learned Tuesday night, when a -° who's-who roster of county envi- ronmental staff paid a visit to the 117 community to hear how the lake's basin has deteriorated over the years. . y t `I To hear the residents tell it, King County government has been the �a lake's enemy, not its friend. ,I "The county has made so many ` screw-ups and bad decisions," said r Gary Dagan, a resident. "It just goes on and on, and we taxpayers 4 7 � end up paying many times over for each bad decision." Poorly designed housing develop- ments, drained or filled wetlands, �r unsafe roads, and some of the worst water quality in the county now plague the small drainage basin east ofMuch of this damage occurre d ed with the county's blessing, residents said. And despite years of almost constant pestering from homeown- ers around Lake Desire,King Coun- ty has made no effort to correct its mistakes, the residents said. But after resident Kathy Shertz generated a non-stop barrage of let- ters and phone calls, the county " finally responded. s • r %; Seven top county managers, from the building division, surface water management division, environmen- tal division, grading section, and sensitive areas group, all crammed into a tiny meeting hall Tuesday Valley Daily News photo by GARY KISSEL night[O face the community. Mathena, 16, stands in front of family's gutted home with niece Felicia Mathena. "Frankly we got so many letters -- '-- -- — from you that we felt we'd better come out here in person," said Lois ns., 1 � �ifflon Schwennesen, director of the Parks, Planning and Resources depart- ment, responsible for mo st ost environ- mental functions in King County. nd up paying more Another 14,069 Lotto players than 600,000 of the $1 tickets were What these officials encountered tuse of higher than matched four numbers for tickets sold, the highest one-hour sales in were residents completely fed up lottery spokesman worth$27. game history, the Washington.State with the county "black box," in in said..The exact Wednesday Lotto sales were Lottery said. Late in the day, sales Which every phone call into the prize will not be $3,937,423. Total sales for the peaked at 187 per,second, another bureaucracy hits a forked path that state buys the annu, drawing hit $7,459,342, the fifth record,- refers problems to "somewhere the winner_—,.,.__ highest for a single drawing, lottery else." of a Targer jetliner jumbo jet; which can carwg ,j2*p�& +`g�r ' bited`is to rece'►ve the first Developing such a p ai4C far bigger sengers 8,000 miles,and an entire1 777 in May 1995 Cole note Boeing require an expenditure of$4 I Continued from page Al new and even larger placie NNENOW I 1 ,��,, ,. tea as"a lhige amouiltrof man- according to Airbus. Cole said no decision hay been pbWer committed to the 777":and Developing a new com, Dean Thornton has long said he made tthatUnited "isaUr largest mentsubstantial andproposed superson commit- c and cost lane billions of dollacan take four �s.i� he likes the idea of a larger aircraft,and noted [ LAKE: County tshoo t esmidents seek ' memos don the snake,' one says h al Continued from page Al approy,., switc �a Ultimately, nothing gets done, By DANNY WESTNEAT key-1988 ordinance governing the and nobody seems accountable, the VaileyDally News development, he replied he had residents said. Honestly made mis- repeated until inevitable Shying the King County Coun=` no idea because he'd never read takes are p cil has forfeited the public trust,a the ordinance. . environmental damage occurs. group of residents have asked that "The council just accepted "y "When a snake enters a room,the l , first person who sees it should shoot last week's approval of a contro- that,rather than have him read the it," said Marcia Hansen, a resident versial housing development near ordinance, which is only a page \ , and professional management con- Lake Desire be reconsidered. long," said Marcia Hansen, who "We believe the Council was has repeatedly appealed the coun- sultant. unprepared to make an informed ty's rulings. , "You don't write a memo saying . there's a snake in the room that decision regarding the Lake "It was a most remarkable \ Desire Estates application," the thing.' needs to be dealt with," she said. re uest states. The residents' letter also asks "Nobody at the county ever actually 9 The subdivision, approved by a that Councilman Paul Barden be shoots the snake." 5-1 vote, would put 112 homes i❑ barred from further consideration For Hansen, the prime snake is a wooded area north of Petrovit- of the matter. Barden acted unin- i Lake Desire Estates, a 112-home sky Park. Developers first pro- terested throughout the hearing subdivision approved last week Y despite lingering environmental posed the homes in 1986, but and harassed a Redmond resident environmental concerns and six for testifying about a South King --- � questions about whether the homes appeals have delayed it. County development. — \ should be built at all. n made with Lake Desire Estates is now Only technical errors or a "Decisions have been �h r inadequate knowledge, at every lev- owned by a partnership between motion by a council member from Seattle Seahawks' owner Ken the prevailing side can bring an a,. el, from the technicians at BALD Behring and Port Blakely Tree issue back before the council, —� right up to the County Council," Farms, Inc., which bought the according to Bill nnis, an aide lone just keep land last summer. to Brian Derdowski, Hansen said. "They j P repeating themselves." `y The residents' request argues council member who vote Other residents talked about Lake "~ that the entire council was given against Lake Desire Estates. Desire itself, which Metro has inaccurate legal advice during last It's unlikely that the council ranked as one of the three most pol- week's hearing. will address the issue again, Den- luted lakes in the county. Evidence In fact, when deputy prosecut- nis said, especially because the was also offered that the building in attorney Chuck Maduell was votes don't seem to be there to $ division occasionally bows to lobby- asked for an interpretation on a justify it. ing pressure from developers. A list of problems, including flooding from development, over- division and Jim Kramer of surface crowded schools, and failing septic middle; water, gave specific examples of ■ Cleaning up Lake Desire; tanks, were in part blamed on the ■ Developing a specific surface how the county is working out the :\ r county. water lan for the Lake Desire kinks in its system. Schwennesen asked residents to P "I'm cautiously encouraged, channel their frustration into more. drainage basin. positive thinking. She also proposed Building division manager Greg Hansen said after the three-hour Kipp said the count is extremely meeting. "But nothing I heard forming an alliance to examine three PP Y �. committed to environmental protec- tonight makes me think that rest- issues: tion,but is limited by state and local dents can rest easy while develop- ■ Restoring 40-acre Wetland laws. Other officials, including ment proposals move through the No. 14, which was drained recently Clint Lank of the environmental county." St when a trench was dug down the C e y of rewarding teachers with pay to TEACHERS: Devin Gruver, president of the encourage their literary tendencies. Union says $30 Highline teachers union,said he had "I think it is out of the ordinary never heard of the policy and didn't because I have never heard of it. But ;{.+ rewards extra effort want the word to spread or his teach- I don't think h would cast aspersions ers might ask for the same bonus. sa the worth of the letters," she Continued from page Al "For writing letters, we give our said. c don't think it would affect ence to whether the letters are writ- members the same reward they get the sincerity added those letters." ten or not. for teaching,lots of praise and noth- ershaveut est ong feelingsat uabout the "Admittedly teachers are poorly ing more," Gruver said. paid, but do you really think that Theresa Moore, spokeswoman issue that $30 is noletter or the Washingtont going to make teachers would sit down and write ciation said she also had t oion f heard wouldn't ordinarily write.that they letters for this little amount of mon- C-.-ice-P 10*s�s ncwcGP4� mal250 ,ing South King County since 1889. .tETNAM n reb to f said the jetliner exploded 16 minutes er 88 boarded in Bangkok. },\; Suphanburl �� _tQ�� passenger list $i�ss 1� a�i after takeoff from Bangkok's Don According to a p g province Muang International Airport. made available by the airline, those 3 seen hanging from "We don't know what caused the who joined the flight in Bangkok ` Bangkok -ports said the wreck- crash. We're•setting up a team of included 38 Thais, 34 Austrians, :iag 767-300 was still investigation with That authori- seven Swiss, four Germans, two ' CAMBODA Yugoslays and one person each a the first rescue teams ties," Prakob said. g • ' The passenger list showed 213 from Creat Britain, Hungary and r.s � � ,.•. orted recovering more passengers and 10 crew members. Australia. area of three- The flight originated in Hong A list of those who embarked in s over an where Prakob said 125 peo- Hong Kong did not list nationalities. uare mile: •-=. Kong, of the Air Lauda office ple, mostly German, Austrian and See CRASH,A5 AP ,.Prakob na Songkhla, Chinese nationals, boarded. Anoth- ■ her o valley residents es try t,o grapple ■ mth w1 looding s-ap-91 By DANNY WESTNEAT _ storm in early April caused only Valley Daily News about a five-year flood event," he a MAY VALLEY — King County said. "People living in May Valley _ officials have some words of advice should be very,, very concerned _ for residents beleaguered by about the future.' extreme flooding in this fragile val- May Valley residents are getting the message. More than 100 of them ley east of Renton. Buy flood insurance re water came a Mo to meeting last week to hear _ is on the Way.ay. why May Creek and its tributaries "Flooding problems in May Val- keep overflowing with such fre- s4 ley are so severe that we can'[come quency. up with a quick fix," said Jim Kra- "I've been flooded out three times county's Surface since Jan., 1990, said Ron mer, head of the Sand- ers, who owns Keppler Feed Store Water Management division. - "Unfortunately, it will be another on the Renton-Issaquah Road and three or four years before we have organized the meeting. "We've any solid answers." been here since 1959,and we'd nev- King County is er flooded once before last year. During that time, " scheduled to conduct an intensive In the first flood, water jumped study of the 8,000-acre basin that the banks of May Creek and ravaged drains water into May Valley. Sanders' barn, ruining five tons of Also during that time,Valley resi- hay and washing 29 cords of wood dents will suffer through several downstream. more rainy seasons. Severe flooding His bill: $40,000. and erosion problems such as those He was flooded again at Thanks- - encountered this past winter are a giving, and the alleged five-year ` virtual certainty, Kramer said. "People may not realize it,but the See FLOOD,A5 Coalition demands M f change for better .� . .: .. r f e' Continued from page At • - I' flood this April destroyed three tons a `` ..,. of hay after waters from the swollen a i' creek again swamped Sanders'barn. "" S. "It doesn't even seem to take that j much water anymore," he said. M' .x .< �.. a�` ,.. "There's so much silt in May Creek .. ��* d the water just stands there - it has it nowhere to go." : ti ,It's completely unacceptable - ti k what's happening in May Valley," S Kramer said. "People can't contin- it zt;y ue to live with that kind of dam- q age „ „t v r t, a. -Mal I 01 The problems are caused mostly W, 4 , by increased drainage from poorly- designed housing developments, according to both residents and county engineers. Those develop- merits were approved by King County. it More than 1,000 homes have been built in the May Creek basin during the last seven years," said Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA Ed Horne, a May Valley resident f' and Boeing engineer. "Water that Horses graze along the banks of May Creek in May Valley, where County officials say that more flooding is on the way. The County I, used to absorb into the soil now runs flooding and erosion problems have besieged the area recently. King plans to conduct an Intensive study of the area. i off each home and down the Val- c ley's steep hillsides. the waterway so more water can May Valley flooding is so extreme opment can only occur in conjunc- He said a study of the Issaquah "Given inadequate systems to pass through. it appears to have galvanized two tion with a revision of the local land- Creek basin should be completed detain that water, all those homes County officials say they would usually incompatible groups into use plan. this year, which may help residents it together can cause a tremendous study the dredging solution, but did demanding restrictive controls on Such controls were adopted on the in the eastern part of the Valley. s problem for this basin." not sound hopeful. new development. Soos Creek Plateau east of Kent two For Sanders and other soggy resi- i Water coursing off unstable hill- "There are some extremely bad Many longtime rural landowners years ago,despite heated opposition dents, only the prospect of a warm, sides has deposited tons of silt in areas where dredging might help," joined with slow-growth environ from property-rights activists. dry season is currently providing t May Creek. Horne said Barbee Kramer said. mentalists at last week's meeting to Kramer said other short-term much hope. I Mill, a lumber company located at "But it may be a bad precedent for demand a complete building mora- solutions could include forcing "We,;re not expecting miracles s the mouth of the creek, is being the county to commit to dredging as torium. That would at ,east keep developers of new homes to adhere from King County," Sanders said. I inundated by five or six times more a solution,"he said. "The real solu- drainage problems from getting to more stringent drainage controls, "They just need to get out here and I silt per year than in the 1940s. tion is to stop erosion and control the worse,they say. although he noted that would not show us they are going to do some- I. Many residents have asked the water, not just dig out every time it County Councilman Bruce Laing help decrease current water vol- thing, anything, to give us some I county to dredge the creek,opening floods." said a temporary stop in new devel- umes. relief." wing of the aircraft fell to the CRASH■ ground about 12 mites from the Worlds worst aviation ,disasters main crash site. Authorities seeking Charan said rescue teams included 1.March 27,1977:582 killed in a collision of two Airbus was shot down by USS Vincennes over the more than 100 policemen. Boeing 747s operated by Pan American and KLM Persian Gulf. , cause of disaster Niki Lauda,the former champion at the airport on Tenerife in Spain's Canary 7: May 25, 1979: 273 killed when an American rce car driver who founded the air- a Islands. Airlines DC-10 crashed on takeoff in Chicago. l f Continued from page At line, told CNN the plane had 2• Aug. 12, 1985: 520 killed when a Japan Air B. Dec. 21, 1988: 270 killed when a Pan Am t The pilot was identified as Thom- reached told altitude" when Lines Boeing 747 crashed into a mountain on a Boeing 747 crashed in Lockerbfe,Scotland. p domestic flight. 9. Sept. 1, 1983: 269 killed when a Korean Air t as Welsh, an American based in the explosion occurred, but did not 3.March 3, 1974:346 killed when a Turkish DC- Lines 747 was shot down by a Soviet fighter. 9 Vienna. specify the exact altitude. 10 crashed 26 miles northeast of Paris. 10. Nov. 28, 1979: 257 killed when an Air New Charan said the aircraft was flying Lauda said he had no information 4. June.23, .1985:.329 killed when an Air-India Zealand DC-10 taking tourists to the South Pole t i ! toward the Thai border with Burma, about the cause of the crash and that Boeing 747 crashed off the coast of Ireland. struck a mountain in Antarctica. t' River. -+ -• - �— x - - a. _ dson.-­- 7��a _ _ ri The'eruption sent a gray ava- ow lanche r deadly ash and molten � reas 'a - g'--tiensr.r rock down the slopes:The billowm _ ; rT f F - _ _ cloud and pumice the sue of hail- _ ,,, '� , __, - ,- M -- �, T r ti .-.• - �.. .:- h :� �� Tom'3 �.a.3�.e+•.at C �..•4,� -"!4 :_ - stones turned day to dusk. -= - --=_ •• - For exam le,the ordinance never for$1 million to hire 20 new staff to Angry Coun Council members Debris from the eruption covered By BARBARACLEMENTS .`review in a pile of 1,000 permit ' P ty county - applications at_the Building and "defined what.a lake is, or what review,.interpret and enforce the ' only approved a sixzmonth budget roads,and huge boulders,some the Bureau Chief exempts,certain'projects from the environmental laws passed last Year. , for the agency. >, .. size of cars,littered gullies and nv- Debra Grijalva is all for protect Land Development division's sensi- new laws p-J . Without the new staff,Kipp add Council members are expected to: erbeds. in streams and wetlands. live areas section._ -six 'This isn't the best example of ed, the backlog will continue to review the second half of the agio Associated"Press reporter Claro g cy's budget and Kipp s$1 million po But lately she's been wondering It could take the county up to, ` Cones, who was 10 miles west of what the county's tough new envi- months to approve her permit.If she ordinance writ sand. grl said f` e crater when :.the eruption nmental laws have to do with lived'a mile east in the city of Isla- In"addition;•the .council never "It's things I►ke this that p saidtri request in about a week J . `.-the ved Grile a`i in t it would take approved extra staff to enforce the ute to-the chaos '':'Kipp �ouncil members are also ex ro occurred,said residents fled on foot enclosing the deck of her Issa uah q J new law, relying instead on the 10 -"We're given something to do,like 9. in panic, some clutching chickens - - �;three weeks to approve the same d g PP t to review a new report on BALD holding handkerchiefs over home. �� �< - s geologists an .wetlands biologists the sensitive areas ordinance, and -,mat charges the'agency:is-still in and ho g "My building this thing has'no protect ",," -not given adequate staff and time to chaos. The draft.report; released their faces. - impact on the county at all,"-said • This means we'don't"build for n Lack'employed staff BALD with a prepare for it4 earlier this month,also states BALD About 40 reporters and photogra ::Grijalva, who has been trying to -another year, she said. staff.often;are inconsistent when. pliers ran for their cars,taking in as enclose her 200-square-foot deck Meanwhile; BALD environmen- - flood of Permits means the backlog': BALD is the agency responsible i r� swelled to almost 600 permits in the for issuing building permits m Kin the interpret land use laws. _ many residents as they could since April. '" tal staff have their own problems, But Kipp said interpretation of the Geologists predicted more violent Grijalva and her husband,howev- ,not the least of which.is answering" sensitive`areas division a month : County and enforcing its environ activity from the volcano,which had "er,live in a seismic hazard area on phone calls from angry residents after the ordinance was passed last mental laws. We've often calls from people :year•The backlog grew to 800 per- last fall, the agency came under sensitive areas ordinance will notbe been silent for six centuries before the tip of Lake Sammamish._-_y J s`x g Y ,. That means her permit has to pass, blaming`us for divorces,or develop- : mots in'April and passed the 1,000 siege as county staff discovered d :haphazard reviewed Rulings will p docur beginning to spew on Sunda We are still expecting it to reach a peak :;staff estimate: -y _had a $6 million backlog of unfin management until the new law is; p g muster under the 's new sans" 'ers losing all financing because -mark this month Colby and other was-about to run out of money and merited and reviewed by top BA again," said Jesse Daligdig of the sitive areas ordinance. * __ of.the delay," said Ralph Colby, seismology-ins "- controversial law_._•manager of the sensitize areas ordt In an attempt tortrim{the b lans°o mits had beeitsn stalled at.Some building agency-codes `bom:formalized -into, a a Colb + ` volcanology ands gY The goal of the BALD man er G g PPP P Nance review team at BALD: '' g - f stressed. tute.;:_:_ `. a `` -'is to protect`streams, "wetlan Looters took advantage of the lakes,-and earthquake-prone areas j'It gets tough to take this-day ask the County Counctl next week for a year. �� 7 .•sz I t^ t �;. after day,'.'.he sard• j - confusion to ransack offices of the from development. . r " ; r�. U.S. military's Crow Valley aerial Yet me reality of trying to enforce ';In frustration,Colby finally red .• •Areconditioned y; gunnery "range,;according to the "the 103-page document has proven a an_extra person to do nothing but governor'o f Tarlac province,Man-,--headache for both planners and citi answer phone,calls otr the ordi- • ready • • • • ano'Un Ocam ✓ « r. �`'r ::; . _.: ' Hance - P� zens_ r 4,irii ti .t-,a t Crow Valley is on the northwest- For planners, the new ordinance Colby also ordered his staff to _ > i'� RECONDITIONED` LIn ern end of CIark:Air Base,about 10 has meant working song hours trying separately.,review"simple permits - ' ::to interpret an ordinance that is often like GnJaiva's to get them out of the HOOVERS !" EUREKAS k 4 ='RAIN -.�:•h miles east of Mount Pinatubo..Near BQw i .Power.Nozzle MORES P `va a or confusing.It may take until system faster., i KENMO ly 15,000 American troops and their gu Y r°'" 'r'- ;ELECTROLUX with Power Nozi►e, ' families fled Clark on Monday for 1993 to smooth"out all the legal Aside from the phone calls.staff <W "` zY- q � r x Subic'Bay naval base have stru gled to make sense out.of -� L K�RBY Y kinks in the ordinance Q behind 1,500 service personnel to ;For Grijalva, it means her deck the 103 pages of new environmental u * �_ P ar - , Pe may have to wait its turn for laws ,.,, ri,� $ K °Pn ' guard the 130,000 acre installation.- " •w' - On Thursday,a Philippine televi _ --prices Q J _-lion network;:IBC;broadcast film ; ._ ..; �; c n}._ i'i: -. y� low .: = showing doors to buildings at the t Of romo�ldeosti -` ' r1,11'1s OU ;as .All wfih'Warraniy - s }} _ range'forced open,offices sacked-LOtte d c and papers,ammunition and equip i.__:•..__ AP ,:.fie Washing- : Lottery"officials from New'Jer- •_ >< rk • ,k::_� merit stolen .1Zu v` TACOMA( ) u Q Arr •� _ ton how-lon ton State Lottery has"tun out of.vid- sey, Colorado, have asked about i `wPA'�_(.w UM`�� �lwn� Sewln� Canto -,There is no indicat 8 _ ace.. __ - Clark's operations will be suspend-: eos for a scratch ticket game proular the three he said: =- `'" t - „d�„ >h Ems. " F= 8541480 ed or what will happen to its military non that was one of the most pop P �' ,� ItAfi East Hill -personnel if the volcano continues to to date,officials said. 'Initially,"the state ordered 40,000 ?- ." .:�,23623 10 t •S• •�. _ -More than 5.million of the $1 . videocassette tapes from Media _erupt-.-.., t :: -alh -t _. Rear Adm.Thomas Mercer,the . Double:Feature tickets have been. Drop-In Productions Inc:of Hart- g commander of U.S. forces_in the sold since May,10,leaving 3 million _ ford: Conn.:�for $400,000 'and a s + --second order"bf Philippines;`said TuesdayGhat a --tickets to sell over R hard Paulson $150 000 followed quc kly-rsae next two to id •- h - '- decision would be made in about a =three weeks - --company president Steve Safenn. week about whether to transfer the : of the lottery 61 titles rmons to Guam or the United States. _'Top cash prize yin the^game ss like "On Golden anPo Pond" nstruc- I _ , • • - • ,yr.-,.ti...�.a �:r yr ..,'^_" ..7-n. .4�+^r_.+c�..4% _�....r.�-. :. ,.. 'L 1,.-r.�o .tw.+-. ✓ .... _sn;::.. :Y"_ri?3rasa/..h ,_cs,..- _ -_�:' ^.� � �t..er��J .. - S v-.41!e4� : y: •. _ .. 4 ::.. .: �. .......:.;.'s.. y F-... ».t .`;:• ",A _ _ 3 L — „t-.. 1 N<at7C+litn3e"�. - x,.-•r. .....:.:... ...::-.:. ..:.:. ,;-'.__r,�.,.�... ...<.�_., .:.. .'. -�a,...�+. �:,�'�9* "?�wa kid � -�'� _ ':=�'4. v -.��c.-«•�-=,�"';±,�,`.'��x -.w el ...�-•-�. _ _.+, r wAk�f_a-'�*a a-.�'s3-':..t.ti..,r..., _ '`��-�5 -s _�-:mot�'�.o.r .;;,tr5;'arc-;'i't f ,7�'��!?s '�+�"Sf«a'`• ., i •�'� _S �- � .. '• ' S'.�P 4i � rP}.�i 4 1.fir• � e;1.. TIa F1i/ Aubum Black Diamond Covington m Enumclaw■Fanwood■Kent■Maple Valley■Renton■Tukwila z ,Y, :,Wednesday; May,29, 1991 itlra s 1' F ! { 1.+i.Feii 7(t tl: l,r,•I z:'r:'J I I:. vr..l:;, 7:':iJ 'r. ;� �P q "A .',4° P , � .AM cut;f ' iwriters , 41A ' park - , 1 � (. �, 1.1:{'..,f+i; Y4i:1i 4(rl 1 `•, ,, or,t,.I .,. If �` r ai t v. .a„ . . , O I,.t ;. ":Pad , "i? •«+ �+�I • l.'!' oliod'wants.to'see the herons leave: birds rivacy..Fur'ther;'office building!' is needs of this group,she said.. ►, :king vol By TINA HILDIN t: J , N y P is Seattle Valley Daily News r t.,�., r ,)1i 4", ';4!!ij j11,�d think they are a resource.to the coin,,: windows must be covered,�r,:, 1<,�' Don Erickson called the proposed in me Gen- Buildings in a proposed office park vyilis t'munity,'.;<.1 i :!:I r o.'' 4 'During construction, egtlipment must , sures"an educated ,guess.", y be restricted to five stories to protect near 6!,;The prop osed office;patk calls for six; ':'have sound-control devices, and atempo-, ,l,'`It's not absolute, he said. ."There' t receives by herons,'Renton zoning officials haves,buildings on 28 acres of the old Earling- rary noise barrier will be'erected to pro no magical formula anyone can pull out c 1 "•decided. 1.t {,_ "' "";'""'_"" 'ton Golf Course site.The developer,First tect the nests +' a book that':says this is what it takes t 'onsmer '. To.'minimize'the Blackriver,Corporate•. City Washington Inc;,initially applied for The monitoring >com•'mittee will be`., keep herons here:;There are a lot of var, d to help Parks effect on the heron colony'. ,mat least one of the bull. ; , s to be seven made u of a,Renton officialt.'a First Cit : ablest here we have absolutel no co e office's 't ings also will Piave to be 600 feet from the', l stones. ti ,,,,,l ; ,,;;�;I'; I , Washington representative and a member, lover, I main rookery„,construction will be , 'r The nearby heron colony was first not- of the public, Based on information the,, P. , Nobody;really'knows, so we re face n one `' allowed between Feb.il and July;l.within N'ied in the mid-1980s after the construction •,committee receives.from biologists, then; with trying':to balance certain economi g P t 800 feet of the colony and the herons will ;�of flood control measures in.the old Black ,'group will report on the herons twice a r development with';trying. to maintai consumer . be monitored."'." ;;;r' �'^+ rc <a;. 't.River channel, The colony later grew to' i year. t unique wildlife habitat.' .: r. ,n special > ,, The Environmental Review•Commit more than 30 nests in 1990., ;i , If there are changes in the birds activi- Dean Erickson, with First City Wasl rehensive , tee'(a group of city-staff)has spent anon 'J r,;: This spring, however, eagle attacks on ty; the group could recommend changes; 'ington Inc;; said company officials d p training siderable amount of time trying torwork;i the main colony:resulted in the loss of such as altering the construction schedule not want to comment on the requiremen out a reasonable set of mitigation•mea; young and the birds may be relocating to a or relocating buildings;..': !• , until they had a chance to review then and inves- sures, and we think that this package has t nearby forested area Susan Krom:with Renton Citizens foi' The protections`are part of a more thi olunteers. achieved that,',' said Don Erickson,°Ren ',� ,In addition to the:setbacks and size • 'Wildlands Preservation said she had con 50-page document: vn Seattle ton zoning administrator. ",I think;with ;restrictions,'measures to protect the her- cerns about adequacy of the protections: Hearings:on the project's site plan of r a period i the'monitoring'provisions,%we can see,,);ons. include, construction 'of a 10-foot "'Although city officials,looked at other 'environmental l review are tentative ' how successful ;we've been` I If 'we berm with;20-foot trees between the urban herop colonies to establish the mea- scheduled to start July 9 before the Rent( ;portation ' haven't',we'll Pav$to make changes,"' .1 ;,`development.and the nests' to give the surer,they didn't take a look at the specif- hearing examiner it for their Idra Wal'31t .tf,vr i ' � �f A p) fit!r t{�t1I lig, Y�"1''��C`•,, J",; Ii.ts.r��rrl;�,rf� '�'#t; i � , :,yfA,, 1.' ,L t re v Ari•l�r� ,. .;.. .Il 5ed„ Pit l ill ;.c � k� �:•y , ➢ � � , r: v , lain Streef fv � 1 ' �I N-a1t fr ,:�fii) if' 4 11%I 113nths while r7 , ;14 i tch of thea t ,�,.. :. n ..,■ +tr�xtw ;�r,l ;? F t4tzf(i: --n Auburn D!' d to vehi- , along East 4 '�' ,' I�:rq�}!I�+✓'-'`.<1 Jltt 3 l',1J')1 -� x �, �` �, rsi. s : zz,t;:; f( t , ,+•- ! 1 construe- ti'■ t`rt ,' s `3 Tl i specifies h r aztte4 ,. x 1 (ll 1 y businesses 1tf 1 a cS4ti ;I. 3 .e ` " ,t? x , I :• , r iPtr, ero .Cs in older 1t 1` ; _ i�; �. "rs: I�I Ili 11 M Oft and under s } 'w�'•r<g ul�l�y"�I��+� .V���Ji "•:II (worth and , �•t tist U tw bid of. �,• t� � 'o Includes r YP}..P,• ' i.�4rifT Ih"R By BRENDA DAY �i+t rt9t1��=at,���;,fit , t,•=�+5 t > , ,,: �: k s F x munities. port." $100,000 home would pay J» a year rou_ county it Proulx says the committee had its Previously,he says,a telephone survey more in property taxes in Des Moines. for t ton. this year. „\. not been said. still cancel _ We[ request. goin, e said. `If =' " ,� want there's not -,� 4 a '" are h. a � Th nents had :w,. s" =F ``"= be d, ing, Henry . ' cere: 102- ` dent sed of Jc airline gates time ends arriv- '° TI Airport. " jest ion officials , T land d at airports hom �-{ the Persian with- -�%` �3.� �d� ,, s� at Sea Tac ed t ,re allowed " reas tirport con `' � he t' seeing peo- not i;ers at theme=3. pros . � �. hon says Gary hoo tion for the _ > r K; ram. r ¢ a se and friends m Libt „'€ .t„p+>+ ""°. „�✓" �'""° b'z;z. ..�s ,"",�a'} !+ H: ture .S olicies - #I, tj,q.. .'.t-,bra t'p ^+r�E' ``�9.t, . rect f� T?��.... .�!�'fi - ti'W+$-` t "LS.�.. , Lull 11 conduct a ` Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA fe& at its Mon- then The pavement of Devil's Elbow Road shows a'slump' that broke a sewer line Thursday. in it ity to active- ■ " )ding areas. kne f the its city's Slide breaks sewage ine oive plan, abo ■ Uni n the Renton gral in Renton. HoneyCree a ain rTaboveg priquet rely By TINA HILDING S- /9-9/ slide that took out a 30-foot section of area. con was a mem- Valley Daily News the roadway and the underlying sewer Tom Malmoe said neighbors are con- Stu( )red today at ber Rimers ban RENTON—A second major slide in line. After the first incident, a sewer cerned about Honey Creek,which runs two months at Devil's Elbow Road pump station at the base of the canyon through the bottom of the canyon. The scrl still broke a sewer line Thursday, dumping was temporarily shut down and the line creek is a potential salmon spawning a I ll going for her sti raw sewage into nearby Honey Creek. was fixed within hours. stream, and children from Renton tu iquen The slide prompted Mayor Earl Cly- Fixing the latest damage is expected School District schools annually release sai( *raduates of mer to declare an emergency Friday to to take longer, Anderson said, because salmon into it, he said. "I ars 1904 to speed up repairs. of the larger area involved and the over- "With this sewage dumping in there, at I I960.Grad- Meanwhile, neighbors said the line all instability of the hillside. City offs- I don't know how much the poor old pas to the event should never have been installed in the cials hope to install a temporary sewer creek can stand,"he said. in I slide-prone area in east Renton. line on top of the roadway rather than Anderson said the current line was K Renton "It's not a stable place to put some- try to repair the line underneath. installed during a sewer moratorium in ject it the R rs are enton thing like that," said resident She Officials are also concerned about the order to add capacity to the system. It Malmoe, who discovered the broken roadway itself. The road, closed to the was built on the side of the canyon reli line during a noontime walk with her public since 1987 because of safety because, at the time, officials believed us. nton.During daughter. "We've been quite upset concerns, is the city's only access to a the hillside to be relatively stable. oP1 r of the first about it. You smell raw sewage, and sewer pump station at the bottom of the "Now we've seen a fair amount of Vic vtarines. She you know it's wrong. It's just not canyon. The pump station has been instability out there," Anderson said. an( ., where she right." closed because of the slides,but Ander- But Anderson didn't think construction viol larine Corps According to Dick Anderson,Renton son said a small amount of sewage will of the line made the hillside less stable. om my high utilities systems manager, city officials have to be pumped out of the station For a long term solution, city offi- W� tit," George learned of the break Thursday evening. with a septic tank truck. cials are trying to speed up work on two d shorthand I Anderson did not know what caused Some residents have said the city's sewer lines planned for the area, hot Met- the slide, but it pulled apart an 8-inch sewer line, installed in 1985, has including a proposed$1.7 million Met- sewer line that runs up a steep hillside. caused increased slides on the hillside ro line up May Valley to connect to the iss I it all these Last month, heavy rains caused a and should never have been built in the Honey Creek line. 9, trea after the ll She says she grow. t'peonetatI Kent mayor reluctant Chamber nu i people that I nail town an — to follow consultant hits plans ba PLANIVING DIVISION CITY OF RENTON CITY OF RENTON APR 1 7 19 91 MEMORANDUM DECEIVED DATE: April 12, 1991 TO: Department Administrators And Division Managers FROM: Lyzw ttmann STAFF CONTACT: Randall Parson Don Erickson SUBJECT: WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES OR WILDLIFE HYDRAULIC PROJECT APPROVALS (HPA) AND OTHER STATE AND/OR LOCAL REQUIREMENTS (ENCLOSED) Before performing work in or adjacent to Lake Washington, the Cedar River, the P-1 Channel and Forebay, creek, streams (including seasonal, and wetlands) first obtain a Hydraulic Project Approval (HPA) permit from either the Washington State Department of Fisheries, or in some cases, the Department of Wildlife. Enclosed is a copy of a letter dated September 18, 1989, from Millard Deusen, Manager, Habitat Management Division of the WSDOF, describing when HPXs are required and the process for review and issuance. It is especially important to note that notice of compliance with the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) process as well as possible Shoreline Management Act requirements (enclosed) must be received prior to issuance of the HPA and that these agencies have 45 days from receipt of this notice in which to issue the HPA. In some cases the proposed work (such as debris removal for routine maintenance) may be categorically exempt from a SEPA determination, however, there still must be official acknowledgment of this exemption. It is very important for the City that we follow this HPA process in order to build and maintain a good relationship with these, and other agencies, as most of our capital projects and plans require their review, approval or concurrence. In addition, they have the State regulatory authority to impose substantial fines for activities which disregard the HPA or shorelines management process. If you have questions as to whether your proposed activity may need an HPA or Substantial Shorelines Development Permit; or, if you would like assistance in completing the application form, you can contact Ron Straka, Storm Water Utility Civil Engineer at 277-5547. If you have questions regarding the City's SEPA process, or whether your project may require a shorelines permit, you can contact Don Erickson at 277-6182. 91-155:DE:RLP:ps CC: Jay Covington,Administrative Assistant to the Mayor Richard Anderson,P.E.,Utility Systems Division Manager Jim Hanson,Development Services Division Manager Enclosures 1.03 COMPLIANCE IN RENTON The Washington State Shoreline Management Act of 1971 directs all local governments to develop a Master Program for the management of all shorelines and associated wetlands lying within the corporate limits. This Master Program has been prepared to comply with the requirements of that Act and to formulate guidelines which will regulate the future utilization and development of the shorelines lying within the corporate limits of the city of Renton. Specifically, this Master Program affects the shorelines of Lake Washington, Cedar River, Green River, Black River, Springbrook Creek, and May Creek, and any other shoreline later coming under the jurisdiction of the Act. In compliance with the first requirement of the State Act, and as part of this Master Program, the City of Renton is establishing a permit system, under which a permit would have to be obtained for any substantial development proposed within aforementioned shorelines, within the city limits of Renton. Substantial development, according to the law, means any development on which the fair market value exceeds $1,000.00, or any development which would interfere with the normal public uses of the water or shorelines. As part of that permit system, the following are considered general exceptions to the permit requirement*: 1. Normal maintenance or repair of existing structures. 2. Construction of the normal protective bulkhead common to single family residences. 3. Emergency construction necessary to protect property from damage by the elements. 4. Construction of barns or similar agricultural buildings. 5. Construction or modification of navigational aids. 6. Construction on wetlands by an owner, lessee or contract purchaser of a single family residence for his own use or for the use of his family, which residence does not exceed a height of thirty-five (35) feet above average grade level. 7. Construction of a dock designed for pleasure craft only, for the non- commercial use of the owner of a single family residence, the cost of which does not exceed $2,500.00. * (Applications for Exceptions must still be submitted to and approved by the Building and Zoning Department.) However, any development which occurs within the city's shoreline, as defined by the Act, whether it requires a permit or not, must be consistent with the intent of the State law. Under the shoreline permit system herein established, administrative responsibility lies jointly with the Building and Zoning Department and the Policy Development Department, but the permits are reviewed in the event of dispute by the Land Use Hearing Examiner, who has the authority to approve or deny permit applications. Liberal provisions for appeal of permit decisions to the State of Washington Shorelines Hearings Board are also provided. -2- C ` 4 S OSEGH R. BLUM s 0 Dlrectcr �h1 lase STATE OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES 115 General Administration Building . Olympia Washington 98504 • (206) 753-6600 • (SCAN) 234-6600 September 18, 1989 Department of Community Development Environmental Review Committee ATTENTION: Don Erickson, Zoning Administrator 200 Mill Avenue South Renton, Washington 98055 SUBJECT: Hydraulic Project Approval Process Dear Mr. Erickson: Frequently, you and your staff are the first contacts an applicant has with the permitting process. This process, a confusing one at best, becomes even more complicated when other agency jurisdictions are involved. Questions regarding the relationship of the Washington Department of Fisheries (WDF) or Wildlife (WDW) Hydraulic Project an HPA Approval (HPA) to the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), when is required, and what constitutes a complete application for an HPA are sufficiently repetitive to warrant clarification. State law clearly states that no HPA may be issued prior to compliance with SEPA. 1. RCW 75.20.100 states ". . .The department of fisheries or the department of wildlife shall grant or deny approval within forty- five calendar days of the receipt of a complete application and notice of compliance with any applicable requirements of the state environmental policy act, made in the manner prescribed in this section. " 2. WAC 220-110-030 (4) states ". . .The appropriate department shall grant or deny approval within forty-five calendar days of the receipt of a complete application and notice of compliance with any applicable requirements of the State Environmental Policy Act (chapter 43.21C RCW) ." Permit approval from either the WDF or the WDW is necessary if "any person or government agency desires to construct any form of hydraulic project or perform other work that will use, divert, obstruct, or change the natural flow or bed of any of the salt or fresh waters of the state" (RCW 75.20.100) . Waters of the state are defined under TAAC 220-110-020 as all marine waters and fresh waters within ordinary high water lines and within the territorial boundaries of the state." Both agencies do not need to be contacted. Generally, if the waters are within the usage area of anadromous species, those that rear in the ocean but return to fresh water for spawning (e.g., chinook, sockeye, Don Erickson September 18, 1989 Page 2 coho, pink, and chum salmon), then WDF takes the lead. If the project occurs upstream of that anadromous usage area where resident fish species predominate, then wDW would take the lead. However, both agencies cooperate with each other to protect all species of fish life found at a project site. State law allows the WDF and the WDW 45 days to process a permit . application, but both agencies strive for a 30 day turn-around time. This, however, assumes that the application received is complete and that SEPA is final. A complete application includes: 1. A signed and dated HPA that includes the SEPA agency, determination, and date it was final (block 20 of application) . The date the checklist is suhanitted to an agency's SEPA coordinator is not the determination date required on the HPA. SEPA is not . final until after both the comment and appeal periods, which may or may not run concurrently. It is this final comment/appeal date, whichever is later, that is required on the application. Departments, divisions, etc., within a county or city makeing a determination, must be sure that another department, division, etc., is not also malting a determination. Recently an application was received indicating a project was exempt. Unfortunately, at the same time a SEPA coordinator for the same agency indicated that a checklist was required and commenced the determination process. There have been other recent occurrences where the SEPA determina- tion date given on the application was verbally confirmed as final. Unfortunately, after the HPA was issued, this date was found to be invalid and the actual determination date was not final until some time later. Both situations described above have resulted in some obvious confusion and have posed legal questions regarding the HPA. Consequently, a copy of that final determination, or some other verification, will be required prior to issuance of an HPA. 2. General plans for the overall project. 3. Complete plans and specifications of the proposed construction or work involving state waters. Plans should be final as the HPA is written for a g ific set of plans. Any changes should be brought to the attention of the Regional Habitat Manager as they may result in a needed modification to the HPA. Such changes should also be brought to the attention of all other permitting agencies involved in the project so that all parties are operating from the same set of plans. Don Erickson September 18, 1989 Page 3 A field review of the project is generally required prior to issuance of the HPA. This allows the Regional Habitat Manager, with the applicant, to better assess the project impacts to the habitat. It can take several weeks to set up a field review depending on time of year and work load for the Regional Habitat Manager. It is important to start the permitting process early, particularly if SEPA is required. The normal freshwater stream construction window is from 15 June to 15 September of a given calendar year. Time extensions on the lower end of this window are possible given that concerns for the protection of fish life can be met. This window is designed to provide maximum protection for eggs, larvae, and fry, particularly while still in stream gravels. Applicants must remember that their project is not the only project under review by the Regional Habitat Manager. Final HPAs are signed and issued from the main office in Olympia, not by the Regional Habitat Manager. Once the Regional Habitat Manager writes an approval, it is sent to Olympia for review and signature. This can take several weeks again depending on time of year and work load. Starting the process early cannot be stressed enough. Emergency situations can and do arise particularly during the winter storm season. If an emergency exists whereby approval for the removal of obstructions, repairing existing structures, restoring stream banks, or to protect property under an immediate threat by the stream, oral approval prior to such work can be provided by the Regional Habitat Manager. All conditions of that approval would then be placed in writing within 30 days. I trust some of the recent confusion regarding the HPA process has been clarified, and that you and your staff will share the above information with applicants proposing work in or near state waters. Only by cooperation and coordination can we protect and preserve our natural resources. If you have any questions regarding these comments, please contact either the Olympia office at (206) 753-6650, or the Regional Habitat Manager. Ms. Gayle Kreitman, (206) 545-6582, is the manager for the Cedar River drainage and Mr. Joe Robel in Olympia, (206) 753-2980, manages the Duwamish-Green River drainage. Sincerely, k-c�! s 0""' Millard S. Deusen Habitat Management Division MSD:GK:dnun cc: Robel - WDF Kreitman - WDF / Marc , 87 o City of Renton Policy Development Department Municipal Building, 200 Mill Ave. So. Renton, Wash. 98055 PLANNING DIVISION CITY OF RENTON To: Mr /`« ing r irector Policy Development Department APR 1 9 1991 DECEIVED Dear Sir: We wish it to be recorded and published that we are in complete opposition to your Policy Development Director's classifications for any buildable land in the Renton area as "Environmentally Sensitive" with a multitude of new and duplicate building restrictions in the recently proposed "Renton Environmentally Sensitive Areas Ordinance." These building restrictions and controls are already well documented in a host of ex."sting ordinances and building codes, just a few of which are: 3606 - Subdivisions 3977 - Roads, Bridges 3561 - Sidewalk Const. 3607 - Plat Improvements 3999 - Building Code 2915 - Electrical Code 3901 - Cul-de-Sacs 3055 - Sewers 3760 - Building Code 3592 - Yard Requirements 2548 - Land Use 3810 - Building Code 3904 - Side Yards 3105 - Short Subdivisions 3760 - Plumbing Code 3785 - Binding Sites 2823 - Reserve Strips 3998 - Fire Code 3483 - C,i Site Improvements 3832 - Drainage Plans 3991 - Underground Elec-. 28.38 - Gas Piping We have lived on, cared for, and have paid well over $40,000.00 in property taxes on our land in the past 40 years; it has been zoned, classified, and taxed'as "Buildable View Property". View property almost always requires fairly steep slopes to accomodate terraced "unobstructed view homes." p We firmly believe that with correct civil and hydraullic engineering and correct building techniques and correct implementation following existing ordinances and codes, that houses can be built on almost any land in this whole area. There are thousands of houses all around this property and in hundreds of other Western Washington areas that were successfully built to endure for. t.he life of the structure on worse slopes and with worse ground drainage problems. Sincerely Yqurs, Olga and Rowland Watson - Cc: Mayor Barbara Shinpoch -Ir, Ronald G. Nelson, Director Building and Zoning Dept. /-E'ditor, Renton Daily Record Chronicle ,/ / l_ oun n 4f � J. resmid e"' "" ts to n sin or. swim�" . By DANNY WESTNEAT ;.;�D"-3o-9/ Valley Daily News - .. BLACK DIAMOND='King County says the bizarre a r' flooding that swamped nine homes at tiny Horseshoe Lake.last winter is likely to happen again with startling - regularity-an average of once every five years. •, ! . Residents who live on the lakefront, still smarting Valley Daily News file photo from last year when the mysterious lake was a foot deep "'An unoccupied home from last spring. on the living room floor,are praying that this year is not somehow another one of those five. Luck-You're on your own this winter." "There's not much else we can do but hope," said The letter advises lakefront property owners to protect . Darla Bartkus, adding that the.water came within two themselves by building dirt levees, installing water inches of forcing her family from their home last spring. pumps, or elevating their homes - at a minimum esti- "People are worried,but nobody has the money to do mated cost of about$50,000 per home. much about it." That price tag may be enough to send residents near King County is mailing letters this week to homeown- ers around Horseshoe'Lake that essentially say `"Good See FLOODED,A6 t - ■ Zak said property owners will Creek and Lake Sawyer. At the FLOODED ; meet soon to talk about what to do time, the water had risen to more during the upcoming winter. He said than a foot deep on the first floor Raising homes of it's unlikely the lake will flood again several houses. 1 Y' would Cost $'50,000 this winter because the drought this King County drainage experts r ri 1 " " summer and fall has lowered the now say pumping should not be an - y r c, Continued from page Al water level considerably. option in the future because it may But if it does, the county says in harm downstream water quality and the tiny lake running for the hills. their latest report that it will have fish habitat. Elevating nine or 10 The letter goes on to say that any nothing to do with trying to contain homes about 5 feet onto dirt mounds lloodproofing may require a permit fickle Horseshoe Lake, unless the is the cheapest fix. from the county's building division, water approaches county property. Abandoning the homes would cost , an agency notoriously slow at pro- "Should flooding recur, the only nearly$3 million.Several of the new cessing permit requests. action planned by the county is to homes that had not sold yet are 7 , "I will be extremely angry if the . . . protect the roadway to ensure standing vacant-and probably nev- county stalls projects out here or vehicle passage," the letter con- er will be sold, residents predict. • i blocks them because of the Sensitive cludes. Pumping when the lake level rises - Areas Ordinance," said Bill Zak, Last spring, King County crews or building a dike to protect the . president of the Horseshoe Lake lowered the swollen lake nearly 6 homes will both cost around E Homeowner's Association. feet by pumping water into Rock $600,000, county officials estimate. ? i '�.' '1M. - lc'" iFW�'iKi"s. -="•w a ^.-:.a< ',a_kr�= Mike Ullmann City Editor A3 872-6600.872-6721 LOCAL 'IfalleyDailyNewa Algona■Auburn■Black Diamond■Covington■Fnutnclaw■Fanwood■Kent■Maple Valley■Pacific*Renton■Tukwila Sunday,January 19, 1992 Bil Is could spur wetlands' .dilevirlemlopment B DANNY WESTNFAT heard on the wetlands issue in more than a to the next. paper.They say the definitions adopted in roads and surface coal mining. vaneNews year. y Daily y islatlon"dangerous,"saying it would base "kicks up dust when you walk across it." ists said such provisions would"nickel and OLYMPIA-Two bills introduced in the The main bill,introduced by Sen.Cliff Washington's wetland policy on a manual "There are enough wetland horror stories dime away the state's resources." Also, state Legislature would force King County Bailey,.R-Snohomish,would require local drafted in Quayle's office that has been to fill this room,"said Darrell Turner of the they said the bills would ironically strip and local cities to comply with new federal governments to define wetlands according repeatedly dismissed by scientists. Washington State Farm Bureau,who pro- power away from local governments,the wetland laws,a set of manuals described by to whatever rule is currently being used by Last fall,scientists from the University of ceeded to show slides of seemingly dry land same power state residents have judged as scientists as"crockery"that could open a the federal government. Washington and state agencies estimated the that he said current rules would classify as paramount in recent elections. third of the Valley's wetlands to develop- As of last September,the U.S.govern- federal rules could ease protection on 60 to wet. "This bill pre-empts local control,"said ment. ment stopped using a rule adopted in 1989, 80 percent of the state's bogs,swamps,and Buckley's Gran told the committee one Jeff Parsons of the Audubon Society. Environmentalists blasted the bills Fri- and began defining wetlands according to an marsh lands. horror story.He said he bought 2 1h acres of "That's a 180-degree about face from the day,but cheers were heard from property older,looser, 1987 manual.Soon,a 1991 In the Valley,many wet pastures,scrub land on Highway 410 to build a house,then ideals of the Growth Management Act." owners lands and even year-round ponds could lose found the entire parcel is a wetland and can't Added Naki Stevens of People for Puget and farmers,who say the current, manual is expected,based on rules proposed protection,according to local planners.last be used. Sound: "We'd be handing to the federal stricter rules are driving them off their land. last spring by Vice President Dan Quayle's "My property was condemned by wet- Council on Competitiveness. summer,Auburn planners estimated that up Under Bailey's bill,only one-quarter acre government our state's ability to protect lands,but the taxes have still gone up,"said Bailey says the state should rely on one to a third of the city's 1,500 acres of wet- of Gran's land would be off-limns,he said. wetlands." David Gran of Buckley,testifying Friday federal wetland definition to bring consis- lands would open to developers. Bailey's bill'would also allow a series of The wetland bills will get another hearing before a Senate agriculture committee. tency to what is now a shifting,confusing . But property rights advocates argue that activities in wetlands,including grazing by at 8 a.m.Friday,Jan.24,in Senate Hearing 'This is the first breath of fresh air I've group of bad laws that differ from one town many of these wetlands are only wet on animals, farming, construction of farm Room No.2 at the capitol in Olympia. Planners to look Clairvoyant convinces • at nig htmare him sort of on 132nd street By JEFF BOND t. %MIKE ARCHBOLD left-turn lanes at the 192nd intersec- Valley Daily News �- Valley Daily News tion which causes the backup.He AUBURN-With a slight sense of apprehen- The Soos Creek community's estimated about one out of five cars lion,I put out my hand for L.orena Simon 'true central north-south highway is two wants to turn left there. psychic,"to hold. •;, lanes of blacktop that flows freely Just north of Kent-Kangley Road, Armed with family pictures and a reporter's A until a commute attack, the Pearson Nursery opens up onto skepticism,I had come to test Auburn's most t Then, the six-mile, rural road 132nd Avenue.Helen Pearson said famous clairvoyant,who is beginning to make tries hard to be urban but fails miser- traffic doesn't back up in front of quite a name for herself. ably.Congestion overtakes it;inter- her place but she does worry about The only psychic registered with the Better sections fail;tempers flare;bumpers the school children who have to Business Bureau,Simon is enjoying a growing ! crunch. walk alongside it. following with appearances on local television +" County road planners are finally "One of the worst things is a lack and radio shows.She also has appeared at the looking at some traffic design reme- of shoulders in front of our area," Northwest Women's Show and even the Kent ` dies for the corridor along 132nd she said,referring to the deep,open Chamber ofCoinmerce Trade Show onJan.14. and 140th avenues southeast ditches that run along both sides of Barry Beck,a disc jockey for radio station dW - •• between Kent-Kangley Road east of the road.A school bus drops off stu- KUBE,said he is a believer. ;r. + Kent and Petrovitsky Road east of dents along the road just north of the "She predicted my wife's pregnancy,the sex Renton. nursery. of the child,and the day the baby was deliv- Two public meetings in the area "We do have school children that ered,"Beck said."I will tell you I have been are planned this month.- have to walk single file and foot by .very skeptical of•these people;but she is as = Planners want to hear from such foot along the ditches,"she said. close a, c;d as you cnn eet." - -- - - _. .. Sons Creek residents as Jamie Net- "That to me is a most obvious prob- Planners -Unhappy with proposed �Va.-3)qu wetlands ordin n.� By DEAN A. RADFORD "heavy-handed. Valley Daily News The commission exempted a RENTON - Planning commis- destroyed home from the non-con- sioners,unhappy with the sixth draft forming use portion of the ordi- of a staff-proposed wetlands protec- nance. tion ordinance, recommended Because of that, the ordinance changes that planners questioned foruld conflict confor with the ing uses city shyer code and said might even be illegal. wil The ordinance, which would set said, and "the city i o ton to ttorneb 1 el. standards for protecting and enhanc- probably find ing wetlands and for nearby devel- galtanninnning commission is an opment, was the topic of a lengthy The advisory in drafting the new hearing last week. Commissioner Bill Taylor called ordinance, so its concerns can be the ordinance "the grossest incorporated, altered, or omitted infringement on the rights of proper- altogether when the plan is present- ty owners that I have seen m my years on the Planning Commis- The proposed sion. "I am concerned that the ordi- wetlands ordinance , nance exceeds dramatically the need to satisfy the Growth Management is::"the grossest Act," Taylor said, "and is so infrin ement on the restrictive that it will stifle reason- g able development of a large portion property rights of of the undeveloped land in Renton." r g r `J' At Taylor's.instigation, the com- owners that I have mission'` ■ Increased from 2,200 square Seen in my years feet to 10,000 square feet the size of f�anning wetlands that would be exempt from p on the the law's provisions. Commission. YX , ■ Set a minimum buffer size of 25 feet and a maximum of 75 per- cent of the total wetland area. Commissioner BIII Taylor Mary Lynne Myer, the city plan- ner responsible for the wetlands ed to the City Council for adoption. ordinance, warned those limits A seventh draft of the ordinance is would eliminate buffer averaging, planned, but Myer said it would not one of the key provisions which include major changes. The com- mission was told it is not their role to gives the ordinance flexibility But Taylor .said, "It becomes write ordinances. ridiculous when a buffer can exceed The mayor is expected to send the the size of a wetland by up to 26 ordinance to the City Council in percent. It becomes a taking of February for additional public hear extreme proportion." ings and a vote. The ordinance; ■ Permitted the rebuilding of must, by state mandate, be adoptecl homes located in'wetlands that are by March. 1 destroyed by fire or other calamity. Commissioner Glenn Garrett , Commissioner Don Jacobson said expressed frustration that "we were the provision that would prohibit told buffers would go in no matter, rebuilding in a wetland seemed what we do." Derdowski 3/9 doesWt deserve `Siberia' role rian Derdowski, the slow-growth advocate who doubles as a King County Council member, is down but let's not count him out. Derdowski, whose pro-environment stances have had a significant. impact on development policies in South King County, is losing his chair- manship of the important Growth Management and Communities committee. Since Democrats have regained a five-seat majority on the Council County, Republican Derdowski is out. So far,so good. Derdowski's staunch.pr07envi- ronment positions are ill-suited'in the boss of the county's most powerful legislative committee. But beyond the loss of his,chairmanship, Der- dowski may not be allowed i6serve'in any capac- ity on the committee. Council Chair Audrey Gruger'last week said committee assignments_are not final,,but indicat- ed Derdowski "is not going to be involved" in planning matters. Banishment to the "Siberia" of less important technical committees` would be''a blow to the ebullient Derdowski and,his;slow-growth sup- porters. Given Derdowsl i s.expertise in planning and environmental issues, such a banishment may not be fair or wise; either. Yes, Derdowski can'be a'pain in the side and make a listener's eyes',glaze over'from exhaus- tion. He has failed to mesh;with his fellow elected politicians and they are angry at him and untrust- ing of him. l But Derdowski represents one side of the envi- ronment vs. development issue that needs to be heard. The council and the council 'committees that formulate land use policies'need'.a balance of viewpoints. Derdowski also is technically expert on land- use issues, a knowledge that should be utilized, not shunned. The-counciT'should use a member's strengths, not ignore them 'The council probably wouldn't think of NOT.`using Councilman Kent Pullen's expertise on lawrand justice matters,but that apparently is how'the c`ouncil'plansto treat Derdowski for past sins .. Derdowski's voice needs to be heard and then weighed against the practicalities of ensuring that growth and d ilopment does;take`+place.' A2■Valley Daily News Monday, December 23, 1991 SOUTH .KING COUNTY Compiled by Valley Daily News staff writers State sued over wetland An area building association has filed suit against the Department of Ecology,claiming the state agency has exceeded its authority in trying to protect wetlands from development. The lawsuit, filed Friday, asks the court to declare invalid a restric- tive wetland ordinance designed to serve as a model for local cities, including Kent, Renton, and Auburn. The suit was filed by the Building Industry Association of Washing ton, with support from the Associated General Contractors and the state Farm Bureau. "We think the Department of Ecology has overstepped its authority and has been making its own laws," said Dick Rokes,president of the builder's group, adding the agency had no legislative authority to draft the law. But a spokesman for the ecology department said the model ordi- nance was created to give local governments something',fo imitate as they try to comply with recent state land-use planning legislation. "They are not required to adopt the model, and it has no force of law at the state level," Holcomb said. lal the fThe suit will be tried in Snohomish County;.and`iressvers rowth fallout resulting from new state laws requiring agg g management and planning. iday, May 13, 1991 i nCotoesn a r o acre Hi h hopes -pinned­-*10- h­"Boeingoffice-parkproposal , by Geordie Wilson busmess center, all the fancy new corporate buildings that Times South bureau 1Vlapy.in'Tukwila see.their city as the natural ''might follow Boeing. She expects some to settle benefactor of the new corporate development. in Renton and said the project could boost the Despite its Renton address, the new Boeing : The,.office,park will-,be just,across.the Green city's,efforts to revitalize its downtown. office park planned for Longacres"Park,may do Rivelnfroin the city's commercial'center,whose 'I.think that"big corporate facilities.of any..... more to change life in the neighboring city of focal point is`Southcenter Mall,and a couple of kind,particularly ones as prestigious as Boeing, Tukwila. miles away from Renton's downtown. do attract other corporate facilities," she said. Tukwila officials say they foresee upscale "It can't have anything but a positive effect Both cities will face a similar hurdle in development in their business district because on Tukwila,":said City Councilman Clarence attracting any-major corporate development, e s of the nearby Boeing project and are poised to •Moriwaki: warns Kay Johnson, Renton Chamber-of Com- s take advantage of it. Originally, a warehousing center, Tukwila merce manager. "They're running out of land, s Though Renton stands to gain'substantial has R become, a retailing powerhouse and in- we're,running out of land," he said. . tl property-tax revenues from the planned office`' creasirigly a desirable`site"for office buildings. Corporate facilities or no, Renton's city it complex, opinion is divided over how much it " Councilman Allan Ekberg and Moriwaki said government does stand to pocket a substantial P will,change the character of the city. they expect the Boeing development to encour- increase in property taxes from Boeing's Boeing last Thursday unveiled plans to build, -,age,more retail and office development. . ' development, said Iwen Wang,,Renton deputy n an office park that may in 12 years contain'15 TukwiIa''has an advantage over ,Renton' finance director. F buildings totaling 3 million square feet and• 'because it has better roads,Moriwaki said. In the short term, the city will lose money house 12,000 employees. The company denied "The , infrastr icture. .in Renton isn't as when the track closes. It currently gets about r rumors that the 212-acre. site was being convenient,";:he said. "You go back to your 1,$100,000 from attendance fees"at the track. But e considered for its corporate headquarters.` economics textbook,;and it-says the three keys in the longterm, as the assessed valuation of Renton Mayor Earl Clymer said-lie was to success'are location,location,location:" the property goes from its current $15 million Y ym to perhaps as much as $300`million,:the'city pleased with the.plan,`but said he didn't expect Former :Tukwila Councilwoman Wendy could see a 20-fold increase in its revenue from ` the development to dramatically alter the Morgan,' who remains- active in, community the site;from about$54,000 to$1.1 million personality of his city. "We are a manufactur- affairs;said the city will need to plan to take the Tukwila's tax take is a little harder to pin mg city,by and large; and we,are proud of the 'best,advantage of.the.opportunities offered by down.City finance director Alan Doerschel said t( fact that we are a manufacturing city," Clymer'-.Ahe,Boeing project."I'm excited by the possibil- "Tukwila should see some_increase in-sales-tax n %said. ity of" peddestrian corridors between that new revenues and property-tax-revenue increases if He said Boeing's plans would complement business area and the Southcenter(Mall) area." the Boeing project spawns new development in fc Renton's manufacturing base without necessar- Kay Shoudy, director of long-term planning Tukwila. But it will have to pay a steep bill to f ily" "up-scaling" it into: a more white-collar for.Renton, isn't ready to concedeto Tukwila make necessary traffic improverfients, he said. lServing South King County/since 1889. 1991May 15, t l I We' tiand dra ininc White House w Citizen, city seeks new r; .definition in Round 2 t .ByCFiARLESCAMPBELL Press wetland pips Associated ;; WASHINGTON - The Bush, administration is considering a revi ta' •.�3 r `; ,%DANNY WESTNEAT sion of the government's official - Vaney Daily News definition of"wetlands,"a:move KENT-The bell has rung for Round T that environmentalists say would bout between an East Hill man and the city of eliminate protection for millions of to build a major waterline through wetland acres of vulnerable wildlife habitat. headwaters of Olsen Creek. A draft of the new document, The city lost Round One;state and federal made available to The Associated ment agencies have been called upon to ref Press by an administration official second. Tuesday,says.the previous defrni- "Ijust want them to follow the rules,"said tion "grossly exaggerated" the Kiefer,who discovered last year that the city country's actual wetlands,mostly to drain a large pond and other wetlands near by not requiring that they be very yard to make way for a 30-inch undergrour ,tipipe- That w definition,contained in an year ago,Kiefer charged the city's wor interagency wetlands manual which be illegal without permits from the U.S.Arm took effect in March 1990,upset. of Engineers.He was right,and his concern landowners and developers-who the project just hoursbefore Kent intended i found they needed government per- multimillion-dollar contract with a company mits to build on land they did not the water line. - consider wet. It.has taken a year for Kent to recover,wet Some owners of apparently and .way.through the government's tortuous pen land have been confused if not out according to city.engineer Gary Gill. -. raged,,Vo.seid,';William K.'Reilly,g -•- Now,%iefer-and:the,city-are butting hea, administrator of the Environmental this time over the pipeline's route and ho Protection Agency. interact with two projects that may not be As much as half of the undevel- decades,-a.billion-gallon reservoir on Lea I oped land on the Valley floor may be I; the infamous Tacoma Pipeline 5. considered wetland under the cur- ='.a Kent has decided not to rebuild the existini rent definition. Kent, Renton, aging concrete duct that runs up Mill Creeks. Auburn,and King County are sur-. about Southeast 274th Street before headi veying local areas this spring and The pipe carries about half the city's.water summer in an attempt to map wet- all by gravity,from a spring near Lake Saws lands accurately.i Instead,the city wants to loop a new pipe What is and is not a wetland is the way to Southeast 288th Street before expected to affect further develop- north again to Kent-Kangley Road. ment of the Valley floor dramatical- In its way are as many as 11 wetlands.F ly, especially in'.Auburn,,where man-made ponds,while others form natural undeveloped land is more available. ters for Olsen Creek. Reilly said the uproar and confu- The city plans to drain the wetlands,dig sion about wetlands "created an for the pipe, and then repair the damag untenable problem"for administer- wooded areas would retain a permanen ing a program intended to protect ground swath where the pipeline lies underl precious swamps,bogs and marshes "The idea is that no wetlands will be fills that are vital for flood control and nently,"said Bob Martin of the Corps of E water fowl habitat:'` "Water,most vegetation,and wildlife sho Reilly said the EPA's draft for a back when they're done." new manual was sent to the.White Kiefer is doubtful,saying aquatic wildlil House on May 6 for review by the vanay Dany News Photo by MARCUS R DONNER Surveyor's stake shows projected path of pipeline through man-made wetland: See PIPELI See WETLANDS,A14 Policegirl ,say 1 4 told of sh o otir, . v B MIKE ARCHBOLD tine's Day. The testimony came during a pre., here She raued on me.I told them I station,also testified abc Vay ney Daily News Foote had been arrested a few trial hearing on whether statements. was going to kill him and they didn't statements from the you A King County Police officer tes- minutes earlier in connection with made by Foote to police after the, believe me.'.' He said Foote made tified Tuesday in King County Juve- the shooting of Jason Hood,15 of incident could be admitted as evi-. Foote is charged with first-degree call,to a friend,and[oL title Court that a 14-yearold SeaTac SeaTac. Hood, a classmate of dense. The trial before Superior attempted murder and is being tried that she had been arrest, Foote's at Mount Rainier High Court Judge Norman Quinn is , in juvenile court.If convicted,the ing Jason. girl accused of trying to kill a laughi schoolmate admitted to the shoot- School,was shot with a 9mm auto expected to begin today after his rug- standard sentencing range is 5 years `I recall some jng• -matic pistol but survived the assault ing on'the`statementsl Both Foote 10 months.to 8 years four months in 'nex said."She talked I heard her singing in the back "I asked her if she was singing,'' and Hood are expected'to testify. . confinement.' on film and if she went sea[," th Officer Nathan Elledge said Elledge said and said Foote told him Elledge also told the court that King .County Police Detective long time her friend of Naomi Ishakawa Foote,whom he yes, at she must be crazy.He said once they arrived at the.precinct sta-. Randy Mullinex,who interviewed many of her belonging was taking from her home to the she told him"she just shot some tion,Foote.saw a girlfriend there Foote both at her house and later ;3urien Precinct Station last Valen body and now she was singing." and said, "I can't believe she's with a tape recorder at the precinct See SHO Kent hopes lobbyist ANDEl� Tax bills in i Ann Landers B7 sells county on road State duns catalog firms t( Business AB By LYLE PRICE - Kelleher,who recommended that ' Classified Ads B8114 Valley Daily News the Renton-based consultant be '-,OLYMPIA(AP)-Washington begin collecting state Comics Be VENT City officials are hiring hired, played down the,lobbyist .residents avoid some b million a its customers in North lobb ist Martin Durkan Jr.to keep angle.He said Durkan's[ask is fo' year in sales taxes by buying Quiids treasurer, A "6 Horoscope Be tabs on Kin County s actions and find out what[hecoun[ is u to everything from clothing tojewel er,said the company Local A8 g nt y P through catalog companies and the decision to theU. attitudes about a controversial east-. about the highwayand to present the .`,'te g g. p Court within 30-days. Lottery 'A8 west highway. city's case-not to wine,dine and television shopping channels. ` In the meantime,th Although Kent is experiencing twist arms. The state Department of Reve News of Record A4 •nue.is trying to plug the hole.- ton Department of R financial difficulties and has instimt- "This lobbyist will not be using The issue has plagued state tax been busy trying to gat Recreation _ B8 ed a.hiring slowdown,Durkan will political::donations or.political sup- F,`collectors since 1967 when the ly compliance with a r Obituaries p4 receive$2,500 a month for his part- ,port for candidates as part of his time efforts under a six-month con- .tools for'us," said Kelleher. "It Supreme Court ruled that mail- ed in Under the 1989. Or sales companies could not Undef[he rule,t cat: Opinion Al Y tract,which can be renewed: might be better to refer to him as an nies are r uired to co Sports Bl•B5 Kent Mayor Dan Kelleher said information coordinator. His job compelled by a state to collect eq and rentit.sales taxes if the compa cent sales tax on all s: Television BB Durkan's salary will be money well will be to help people.in Kent Public. nies'did not have a physical pres amount,6.5 percent spent if he helps Kent City Hall Works get their message across to Fence in the state. into the state treasure Valley Living 87 achieve its No.1 goal,to construct a King County." half percent would h, bast week, the North Dakota in euun J­,). .16-1, —................... ........1........... An October county audit found Sims said. "People are not very directly by radio under the existing the county was not prepared for a concerned about this.It is a danger system. WETLANDS. Program,objected to the EPA draft, final wetlands in the continental complaining in a letter that it"clear.- United States have been destroyed in Activists fear whole ly does not identify all wetlands that the past 200 years. the service recognizes as wetlands." Swamps,marshes and bogs used groups will be lost Linda Winter, director of wet- to be considered nuisance land,and s lands programs for the Izaak Walton the government encouraged drain- Continued from page Al League,a conservation group, aid ing them for farming or develop- a scientifically sound definition a ment. Office of Management and Budget, wetland "is being thrown out and But under the 1974 Clean Water expected to last a few weeks. ignored for political reasons." ` Act,the owner of land classified as One of the key changes involves The result is likely to be that wetland needs a permit from the fed- the question:How wet is a wedand? "whole groups of wetlands will be eral government to build on it.The The current definition says water deleted,"she said."We need to say taw generated little controversy must come within 18 inches of the enough is enough.We can't afford until the 1990 manual was issued, surface for at least seven days of the to lose any more of these wetlands." covering a lot of property that peo- growing season.The proposed rule Reilly said he could not confirm le had not considered wetlands would be stricter,requiring that land estimates that 4 million to 10 million More be inundated or saturated all the way acres would no longer be considered "It's just a program that's out of to the surface for at least 14 consec- wetlands under the new definition. P g utive days in the growing season. "I don't think anyone involved in control,"said Bernard Goode,for- Preparation of the new definition the program could make an esti- for- mer official of the U.S. Corps has been controversial.One envi- mate,"he said."We did not intend of Engineers who helpeedd draft the r ronmental agency official resigned, to add or subtract from the genuine I990definition. alleging political pressure to rede- wetlands of the United States." "Had I known then what I know fine wetlands. Another scientist As many as 2,000 acres of wet- `now,I would have insisted that there involved in preparing an earlier lands are being lost to development be more surface water for there to be draft asked that his name be dropped in Washington each year,according a wetland," Goode said. "Areas from the credits. to the state Department of Ecology. that no one in their right mind would The Fish and Wildlife Service, The Fish and Wildlife Service has call a swamp,a bog,a marsh are which helps administer the wetlands estimated that about half of the orig- being called federal wetlands." Street.Designed as a receiver line winter months for use in the dry PIPELINE: Kent for either a reservoir or the Tacoma summer months. says project needed Pipeline,it won't be used at all for at "I think Kent has gone too far," least the next decade. Kiefer said. "There are just too for past seven years So why is the city intent on build- many unanswered questions they ing it now?Kiefer wants to know. need to study the whole picture,the Continued from page At Why not?the city has answered. pipe,the reservoir, the drainage, "Future wetland concerns may everything." _ destroyed.Olsen Canyon,already make building that extension impos- For the city,the delays amount to damaged by erosion problems, sible,"said Dean Falkner,a Kent little more than frustration and extra could suffer even more if wetlands project engineer."Plus,it will be expense on a project they say is vital natural water sponges-are ruined, cheaper to build the pipe now:" : to the future of Kent. he said. Pipeline 5 was proposed by the "We've known about the need for No permits have yet been issued, City of Tacoma years ago to meet its this line for seven ears, Gill said. and the Corps of Engineers may growing demand for water.It would ,.We're such a rapidly growing city, modify the project or deny it out- draw water from the Green River' P y 8 g right. Residents and officials from before passing through South King and we need a stable system of pipes other agencies can comment on the County where Kent,Auburn,Feder to carry our water. plan until Friday. at Way and local water districts ca�i "This is not a development pro- The Corps'decision will be made " tap into it.' ject that will permanently alter the sometime this summer.Kent hopes If Pipeline 5 is never built,Kent landscape," he said. ``It's just a A couple enjoys a sune to start construction by early fall. may put a billion gallon water reser- buried pipe." walk at Gene Coulon Pr The city's plan also calls for an voir in a wetland area near the top of Commenti can'be-sent to the weather is expected I additional pipe heading due-south: fragile Olsen Canyon.The reservoir Corps of Engineers, P.O. Box .Thursday,but return toi along 116th Avenue to about 294th: could store excess�water from the C-3755'Seattle;,98124-2255., C i `. ' x r, r; r �r k Don't miss this one. Everyo this keepsake t; This special edition will be delivered to over 38,650 subscribers througho ut the Green R Valley. It will have a full process color ct LUUNIL A3 1 Covington■Enw-nclaw■Fairwood■Kent■Maple Valley■Pacific Renton■Tukwila Wednesday, November 13, 1991 Colty wemighming buffer ues mion � 5 5" BYBkMINl� ' � n g � or e a s „ I By DEAN A.RADFORD it further reduces the amount of Valley Daily News property the owner can develop," RENTON - The city's updated Postlewait said. land-use plan won't limit develop- The fifth draft of the wetlands ment on the banks of wetlands if the ordinance sets buffers of from 25 Planning Commission's recommen- feet to 300 feet, depending on the e of wetland and the development i dations are adopted. type a On Oct. 30,the commission voted proposal, among other criteria. to remove all references to wetland Wetlands, according to Myer, buffers in updating the comprehen- aren't static. "When they fill up, sive plan, a decision which has been they migrate or enlarge, depending ': . criticized by wetland advocates. on certain conditions. A buffer Tonight, commissioners will try allows them to do that without =; to reconcile that decision with the undermining a building or roads or city's proposed wetlands ordinance, landscaping." which says buffers are essential to At the same time buffers protect I ¢ maintenance and protection of wet- wetlands from outside disturbances, lands. such as roads, buildings, polluted x "The buffering idea, if used cor- runoff and agriculture uses. rectly, makes sense. The underlying Dee Arntz, a member of Wash concern is that we don't want to go ington Wetlands Network, said land-grabbing," said Jeff Lukins, Tuesday "buffers are standard tech- �� = the commission's chairman. "There niques for protection of wetlands. is not one person who isn't sensi- To eliminate them doesn't make tive, but the concern is how it is sense. It's very archaic." applied." Commission members say they'll The commission's 4-3 vote was ask the city's planning staff for a part,of its review of the plan's envi- clear definition of a wetland, which ronmental policies. will aid in deciding which wetlands The comprehensive plan sets poli- to save. cies and the wetlands ordinance con- They'll also ask why a wetlands tains enforcement powers. They are ordinance was proposed before the separate, but growth management policy-setting comprehensive plan laws say the two "need to work was adopted. together," according to Mary Myer agreed the wetlands ordi- ,, ' Lynne Myer,the city's chief planner nance is "putting the cart before the ?= for both documents. horse. We did delay as long as we Final approval rests with the City could so we could get more public Valley Daily News photo by GARY KISSEL Council. input and do more research." ,addy carry lamppost along Auburn's East Main Street. Today's commission meeting is at However, the city faces a March 7 p.m. at the council chambers on 1, 1992 deadline,extended from the City Hall's second floor. Sept. 1 deadline originally mandated Auburn to light up Commissioners contacted Tues- by the slate's growth management day said they realize the importance laws, to prepare an ordinance. of wetlands,but most questioned the The commission can take several with a revamped look need to go beyond the defined limit actions tonight, including removing of a wetland and remove more land buffer references from the wetlands from development. ordinance or merely forwarding its Currie said the lampposts were delayed One commissioner said the com- concerns to the City'Council. )t . because they had to be specially built for mission has been lobbied by individ- Myer said the wetlands ordinance Auburn. uals concerned about their property is based on a model and has been alks Greg Vine, director of Auburn's Business rights. tailored to Renton. � Improvement Area, said the project is the "My concern is for private prop- p p The llth District Democrats are "amps beginning of Auburn's master plan to improve ert y owners. There has to be some challenging the commission's vote the citycore. way to compensate them for taking their development ri his for their on the buffers. 1Gy, "With Auburn growing, there is less aware- P , g ness among newer and younger residents about property," said Herb Postlewait, "A dangerous course is being tak- io get what the downtown has to offer," Vine said. who also says he has strong con- en regarding the integrity of Ren- "This is to make downtown businesses not just cerns for the environment. ton's water supply," the group's more accessible, but more inviting." "If a person has a piece of proper- chairman, Ellen Barnhil, wrote in a t and it has a wetland, obviously letter of Lukins. The Democrats Karl Sexton And that appears to be the feeling among local y> Y business owners. you can't build on the wetland. If want the commission to reconsider While some merchants grumbled about you put a buffer around the wetland, its vote. delays in getting the lights installed, which they over n designed to were told would be in place by August or Sep- Rants widens lead ove Simpson 1 _I at an early tember, they say the overall project is a great , 1`��77 widens 1 success. Sexton, who "The delay hurt some of the businesses that John "Wally" Rants has widened Jesse Tanner's lead over Jeff Lukins presso stand are open after 6 p.m. because there are no his lead to 75 votes over Charlie in their race for Tanner's City 'dewalks and lights," said Stacey Spivey, co-owner of Simpson in their race for Tukwila Council seat is now 220 votes. homey, but Anthony's Deli, Ristorante and Catering Co. on mayor, the latest tally of absentee Clymer's vote total shows the Main Street. "But now business should pick votes shows. P Rants Tuesday he' feeling one-term mayor has 5,241 votes, or At these nail up. saiduesaY s g 52.51 percent,to Newton's 4,740 or rammed his pretty comfortable.', After Tues- 4749 percent. Kurt Anthony, Spivey's partner, said the day's count . , Rants has 1,628 votes P vorks direc_ smooth road is also a big improvement. or 51.18 percent to 1,553 for 48.82 In another close Tukwila race, dirty-they "There used to be about an inch difference in for Simpson. Rants said he was told Dennis Robertson is now ahead of I, th--r..v..,a., ,.a.. -1-A, 4... Gary VanDusen 1.643 to 1.445 in Monday, April 27, 1992 The Seattle Times C 3 + VA0 coiner Auctions Last saes trfor I vaIle Ian. SOUTH While Center y Sea .Renton So far, Trillium has bought 231 Brien.;ao.Tukwila Wetlands bog down Glacierst marketing Glacier Park parcels in several BUSINESS' : .NoMaPeVale`y. of 500 undeveloped industrial acres western and mimes ern states. Wetlands restrictions �Des,A4o�nea. p But the presence of wetlands Kent has made some of the parcels, were not the only Aubum Black Federal Way Diamond• by John H. Stevens The company has developed especially in the Kent Valley, _ •Alg°na g problems Glacier Times South bureau shoppingmalls, homes, condo- tough to sell. PIEACEcourm Enumclaw miniums and the Semiahmoo "The auction is our last, mas- The Seattle Times: 31620 23rd Ave. S., Tacoma Glacier Park Co. next month resort in Blaine. It also owns sive marketing effort," said Ka- Park had in selling its Suite 312, Federal Way, WA 98003 Sumner John H. Stevens, l Way, W FAX: 3 3982 Puyallup Bonner Lai. will auction some of the last large 95,000 acres of timberlands in ren Lane, vice president of devel- parcels of undeveloped industrial the state. "We'll sell or develop it opment for Glacier Park. Kent Valley land. The land in the Kent Valley. as industrial land, but we do not The Kent Valley land has been Much of the 500 acres in Kent, have a specific industrial-park appraised at about $30 million. company also would s tional pharmacies. Auburn and Renton, once owned development in mind," said Jean Gorton said Trillium has paid by the Burlington Northern Rail- Gorton,Trillium vice president of "bargain prices" for Glacier Park not give some road, may be impossible to devel- planning. land, but neither company would potential buyers Here is how The Times index of South op because of wetlands restric- Wetlands considerations disclose dollar amounts. stocks has done over the past two Tuesday,April 28 tions, according to a study by could affect the use of the land.A Wetlands restrictions were not weeks.It closed at 1,608.51 Friday, enough time to ■Tanya Brewster,of the state Glacier Park, a subsidiary of Canadian company, IntraWest the only problems Glacier Park g down 34.21. It charts the average employment department,will Burlington Resources. Development Corp., had an op- had in selling its Kent Valley daily percent gain of the South stocks secure building set against a base of 1,000 on Jan. 1, speak at the Home Based Business The land is being put up for tion to buy the land last year but land. The company also would +�. eta Association of Washington State,6 auction sale, along with 7,000 killed the deal after the wetlands not give some potential buyers permits. 19 91. P.M.,I.B.E.W. Hall, 3049 S.36th acres in other states. Trillium study. enough time to secure building 1,608.51 close St.,Tacoma. Fee: $5 for members, Corp., a Bellingham-based devel- Glacier Park was formed two permits. The company wanted 1900 $10 for nonmembers. Information: oper, has agreed to buy whatever years ago to liquidate land once buyers to make final decisions on pp 18so..>..........a....................... .........< - is - option.9 tin the a deal,to 18 and months sales set fell 789 3898. not sold at auction owned b the Burlington North the land wi 0 days ■Beat the Recession with Quality Trillium officials will not say ern in Washington and other signin an o But delays 1a°° •• -e•••••......••••••••••••••••••••. +••••'• Service Building the Competitive what they plan to do with any states. It has sold 80 percent of winning building permits forced through when Glacier balked at i Edge class will cover how to build Kent Valley land they acquire. the land in its original portfolio. many buyers to ask Glacier Park the extra time. -. 1750.5... .....i..... ""'""''.... .. ........... de g customer loyalty and what the best 1700 i companies are doing to guarantee repeat business,6:30 to 9 p.m., 1s5a Highline Community College. 1600 dins 22 o6'F e: `Littleguy ' A & W Bottli n Ken 240th . Des Moines. ee: $30...... ..•............. ....: Information: 878-3710,ext.341. , Co.,• Data 10's sales i 1500 ¢..........t.......................... .......... in U.S. increase 6%, 10 13 14 15 16 20 21 22 23 24 Wednesday,April 29 bucks industry's - consolidation trend April ■Networking Through the 90s: reversing downturn How to serve and be served by networking organizations semi- by Karen Alexander proving successful. Christensen Coke's and Pepsi's marketing Domestic sales for Red- Stocks i-the index: Alaska Air G oup, nar resented b Tracy Schneider, Times business reporter says A & W is growing over 25 power means those brands et Gxpe�• -,In;..Flow Int.,uulx. p. Y �' . P Y g g P g mond-based Data I/O Corp. Pa c Nuclear systems,Puget Sound principal of TLS Marketing Con- percent a year in an industry in more shelf space and large, free- rose 6 percent in March and . l Banmrp,Sun Sportswear,Weyerhaeuser sultants,7:30 to 9 a.m., H.D. which most small bottlers are standing displays in grocery Aril, reversinga downturn - Hotspurs, 315 S.Washington St., ■KENT shrinking — or being bought by stores, leaving the small products that lasted throgh 1991 and' Kent. Sponsored by the Kent R.B."Gus" Christensen says he big competitors. with little opportunity for effective the first two months of 1992, Chamber of Commerce. Fee: $20 is in the tough and highly competi- display,Jabbonsky said. the company said. - for members,$30 for non- If I weren't so emotional] Pepsi and Coke distributors a "Should the March-April e members. tive bottling and distribution bust- involved, I don't think I would be P pay p w, ness because retirement does not millions for supermarket advertis- trend continue in the U.S. in Nursing-center sales part in this business, he said. agree with him. ing campaigns that help secure 1992, it will have an approxi• y of Hillhaven restructuring Christensen, president of A & Any small bottling company that shelf space, leaving smaller mate 3 percent positive impact Included below are some of the new- W Bottling Co., started in the still in business is bucking a trend competitors to vie for customers on year-over-year company"' ■TACOMA business licenses recently issued by the family bottling and distributing toward consolidation into very through free samples and less sales ggrowth for the remainder state.Listings,obtained from the state business in 1961. He sold the large companies, said La Jab- expensive advertising, Christensen of 1992," Data I/O said in an In line with a previously an- Department of Revenue,are published as g p � P g' nounced restructuring plan, Hill- p famil s Pepsi franchise, which bons editor of Beverage World, said. announcement, expanding on g P space allows.This list includes new Y' P �'' g its April 22 earnings state- haven Corp. has sold four nursing businesses,established businesses un- was the bulk of the business, in a Great Neck, N.Y.-based trade However, Christensen says A& ment. centers and has agreements to sell der new ownership, and new branches or 1982, expecting to retire. But six journal. The little guys are being W Bottling, with 59 employees, or sublease 44 more in several franchises of existing businesses. It also months later, he was back in the gobbled up," he said. will probably turn a profit this year U.S. revenues represent 51 states. includes planned or reopened business- bottling business — without a big- Behind the consolidation is the and continue to ow at about 25 percent of Data I/O's total Hillhaven,the nation's second- es.which Shown are the mailing addresses to g g sales, which were $16.3 mil- largest tax returns are sent. In most cases, name franchise like Pepsi. phenomenal market strength of percent per year. lion in the quarter ended largest nursing-home owner, is they are the actual business addresses, Coke and Pepsi. The key to the company's suc q selling 82 of its facilities together, but may be addresses of an accountant, A & W Bottling, with one P YMarch 27. That was down 4.6 d g a lawyer or other business representative. facility in Everett and another in The two giants control over 70 cess has been securing regional percent from a year earlier. to reduce operating costs. "�' Kent, has carved out a niche Percent of the entire industry, franchise rights for some highly p Y The four nursing homes it sold Shauna Brundage,33204 176th Place distributing smaller beverage Jobbonsky said. Another 10 per- successful niche products such as The company first-quarter are in Texas, and the others it has SE,Auburn. brands. cent to 15 percent is controlled by Clearly Canadian, he says. orders fell 27 percent in reces- agreements to sell are in Kansas, Broderick Construction,Craig Broder- other well-known brands such as That relatively new flavored sion-plagued Japan, where Missouri and six other states. Co,29805 Eighth Unli lacev r' Federal a waiiamy. - It has the regional franchise Dr. Pepper,Jabbonsky said. soda has been much more success- Data 1/0 did 16 percent of its Those deals are expected to close P.O Box 7451, Federal Way. rights for products such as A & W That means that bottling and ful than even Christensen expect business in 1991. this summer. Creative Response,Robert&Susan drinks, Sunkist products, Clearly distributing companies that don't ed. The product, which sells for The company makes elec- Terms of the sales were not Gendron,37621 26th Drive S.,Federal Canadian sodas, Husky Cola and have a Coke or Pepsi franchise are $2.49 a four-pack, is relatively tronic devices to test and pro- disclosed. Hillhaven owns 354 CreWaystwood Animal Hospital, Russell Big Red, a cinnamon-flavored stuck with a very small piece of the expensive but has developed a gram computer chips. nursing homes,25 retirement com- Ellison,28822 Pacific Highway S..Federal soda. industry and no marketing muscle, loyal following that is growing munities and 122 retail and institu- Way. The company's niche strategy is he said. steadily, he says. ... :. ., ..... .... :...........:.... n. ......................... .... , .: .A..:..:. v .,vuu•?..?:v?.v...4.:nIX,v:.ni ,...v..::}.,..... Y ;!$3,¢k'S:a,•.°wt»?;pYo,t#a<?.e<. <. :Y;>..._..,,.:>..fj..Yca.a:ur::.:<::.,.Y.,:...::i.:t:.+.>•aY,»`.vvO�a�YiY RJE�?acaY.<..YY.Y:, '.`w`."�ftst.'d,.,,..,:....f.:fi?.Y...,3.,: 4 i. ..:. _..,., nnn Focus on: Stocks Focus on: Competitiveness Ih v n' 'accumulate) rating - - H�laesacc I�t� anon. Japaneseoffrom a heafthyoutlook comes preparetent trials p forU.S.US STOCK TALK Executive trades by Leslie Helm Four weeks ago, Loral Fairchild Corp. sued 30 Los Angeles Times companies — most of them Japanese — charging Following are Stock trades by officers and directors of their own that they infringed on patents for making a Pacific Northwest companies, as reported recently to the federal sophisticated light sensor that is a key component Securities and Exchange Commission. The information comes from ■TOKYO in everything from photocopiers to fax machines to The Insiders' Chronicle, P.O. Box 272977, Boca Raton, FL 33427, The jury listens intently as a lawyer for video cameras. Loral did not seek specific damages w . 50 issues, $375. The Times carries these reports each Monday. consumer electronics giant N.V. Philips grills in its initial court filing, but industry observers ■Hillhaven Corp. — Richard Earner, chairman, March 9 sold Shunji Izumi, trying to prove that his Izumi Seiki expect it to seek at least a billion dollars for the use 44,000 shares at$2.675,total not reported. electric-razor manufacturing company knowingly of patents set to expire next year. Companies infringed on Philips' razor-blade patents. named in the suit are among Japan's elite: ■Metropolitan Federal Savings and Loan -- John Knight, U.S. District Judge W.C. Gonner from the Matsushita, NEC, Sony, Sharp, Canon and To- director, Feb. 19 bought 3,000 shares at$10 a share,for a total of Southern District of New York presides, but the shiba. 29,750 shares; Patrick Patrick, officer and director, Feb. 19 bought venue is a Tokyo auditorium filled with 300 Many Americans believe that the Japanese are GREG HEBERLEIN 2,325 at$10 a share, total not reported; Donald Wahlquist, officer businessmen. This is a re-enactment of a recent "an easy target because they are risk-averse and and director, Feb. 19 bought 2,500 shares at$10 a share,for a total Florida patent trial, and each businessman paid tend to want to settle," says Preston Moore, Times business reporter of 27,698. $500 to watch. attorney in the Tokyo office of Morrison & Japanese are flocking to such mock trials, Foerster, an international law firm that represents ■Nordstrom Inc. — Barbara Franklin, director, Nov. 26, 1991, featuring U.S. judges and lawyers who have such major Japanese companies as Fujitsu. bought 200 shares at$35.75 a share,for a total of 400 shares; participated in actual cases, to learn about a Some Japanese companies are becoming battle- ■Here are recent brokerage- Robert and Sylvia Baughn,Jan. 3 sold 13,000 shares, price not seemingly terrifying U.S. institution — the jury hardened. house and investment-advisory reported, leaving no shares remaining; John McMillan, officer and trial. opinions affecting Pacific North- director, March 17 sold 10,000 shares at$40.50,shares remaining Fear of U.S. litigation is not new here. For Fujitsu recently shocked many in the Japa- west stocks. The Seattle Times not reported. years, many of Japan's largest corporations have nese business community when it chose to sue neither advises against nor recom- been sending students to U.S. law schools and Texas Instruments rather than pay the high mends purchase of these stocks. minority interest or sell the shares it holds placing trainees in U.S. law firms to learn more royalties the U.S.company demanded for use of its Stock symbols and stock quota- by 1995. (4/17) about the U.S. system. As trade tensions between key semiconductor patents. Most other Japanese tions are listed in parentheses, the Japan and the United States mount,however,there chip-makers already have settled with Texas latter reflecting prices when re The demographic ■McCAW CELLULAR (MCAWA,$27). growing g P corporations Instruments. Analyst:Jerome Fischer,value Line. is owin worry that Japanese co orations will "We did a lot of research and we feel strongly ports were issued. Ratings defini Recommendation:Average. become the victims of litigation that exploits ill g Y tions vary, but most companies trend of a growing Comment: Company won't be profitable feelings toward Japan to win huge jury awards. that we don't infringe on their patents," says follow a 1-2-3-4-5 format, with 1 a until 1994.These shares"not for the faint Sadakazu Igeta, a patent lawyer with Fujitsu. If buy or highest; 2 a mild buy, also elderly population of heart." (4/17) Historically averse to confrontation, the Japa- we don't think it's right,we don't compromise." called outperform, attractive or Is MOMENTUM DISTRIBUTION nese have often sought to quietly settle disputes. But are Japanese companies really hapless above average; 3 a neutral or hold; bodes very favorably (MMDI,$16). But Japanese companies,believing opponents have victims of the U.S. legal system? 4 a mild sell or unattractive, below t Analyst: Mary Fleckenstein, Ragen Mac- taken advantage of them, have become indignant. average or underperform; and 5 a for Hillhaven . . Kenzie. Now they are learning to put up a fierce fight in "Japan is greatly exaggerating the extent to Sell. Recommendation: None. court — often exploiting an armory of patents in which Japanese companies are being especially Mary Fleckenstein Comment: In a presentation, "manage- their defense. Last year, four Japanese corpora- targeted in lawsuits," says Robert Stern, a patent ment was cautiously optimistic" that the Y I? rP g Y turnaround in its graphics group will tions were among the five companies awarded the attorney from Northern California's Silicon Valley Hillhaven (HIL, $2.625) was continue. (4/3) most in the United States. who until recently was on the board of the selected for coverage by Ragen ■Analyst: (BA, l Rosen, y American Intellectual Property Association. When g g, Anal st: Michael Ro Smith Barney, EQUALITY FOOD CENTERS P �r MacKenzie's Mary Fleckenstein. Harris Upham. (QFCI,$44). "Patents are like bombs," says an actor Japanese do find themselves in court, he says, they She rated the stock, listed on the Recommendation: Buy. Analyst:John Rogers, Ragen MacKenzie playing the role of a patent manager in a slick hire the best patent litigators and frequently go on American Stock Exchange, "accu- Comment: Shares remain undervalued; Recommendation: Hold. Fujitsu video put together to educate employees. to win their cases. mulate" for investors with a long- 12-month target price is$so. (ails) Comment: o ae'' because lowered stock-p from accu rise; "If you have a good bomb you are safe, but if term horizon. ■COSTCO WHOLESALE (COST,$38). p Y g Y Y Japanese companies also aggressively lobby for Analyst: Patrick McCormack,Dean Witter extremely optimistic long term. (4/7) competitor has the bomb,you are in big trouble." their views on patent issues in Washington, D.C. Tacoma-based Hillhaven was Reynolds. ■WASHINGTON FEDERAL SAVINGS & The worst fears were confirmed, when a U.S. "They are actively involved in controlling public spun off two years ago by National Recommendation: Buy/hold. LOAN (WFSL,$24). jury, in February, ordered Minolta to pay Hon- policy on intellectual property issues. They know Medical Enterprises, which re- Comment: First-quarter profits of 27 Analyst: Scott McAdams, Ragen Mac- eywell $96 million for infringing on Honeywell's far more about our patent system than the U.S. tained 15 percent. Hillhaven is the cents a share exceeded analyst's 24 Recommendation: Hold. patents in developing a Minolta autofocus camera. does about Japan," Stern says. long-term nation's second-largestcents. Had expected lower margin be- g cause of lowered Northwest prices in Comment: Washington Federal remains Iwao Ogura, an engineering professor at Chiba Nevertheless, Japanese face distinct disadvan- health-care provider with, among anticipation of competition.Twelve-month the most profitable thrift known, but high University, saw something sinister in the way tages in U.S. courts where cultural differences can other things, 358 nursing homes price target: $43. (4/1) price leads one to wait until its out of g g 9 Honeywell waited to sue until almost a decade be misinterpreted, even by jurors struggling to be and 122 pharmacies. favor. (a/e) P ■JOHN FLUKE MFG. (FLK,$28.625). after Minolta had introduced its camera and built a fair and objective. Analyst: Peter Musser, Ragen MacKen- ■WESTMARK INTERNATIONAL hue new market. "It is like letting the i fatten The sharply different patent systems in the: "The demographic trend of a ve (WMRK,$57.50). g g pig rP Y P Y growing elderly population bodes Recommendation: Hold. Analyst: Rick Owens, Pacific Crest Secu- before sending it to slaughter," Ogura said. United States and Japan are also a disadvantage: very favorably for Hillhaven and Comment: Good second-quarter profits Recommendation: Buy. "If those patents are interpreted so widely,even for the Japanese. U.S. patents are harder to get-. other long term health-care pro- and stronger orders prompt fiscal 1992 Comment: Quarter profits of 59 cents a video cameras and industrial robots will be approved but often come with broader protections. other ," Fleckenstein wrote. "This estimate increase to $2.05 a share from snare were 5 cents above expectation. covered," Toshiro Yamashita, president of camera The Japanese patent office accepts patents even if vider $1.s5. t4/8) High-definition imaging sales going well. maker Olympus, an ril told the Asahi Shimbun the represent relatively minor improvements on a" industry, however, is highly regu- gangrily Y P Y P lated by state and federal govern- ■LIN BROADCASTING (LIMB,$,74). 1992 profits forecast upped 10 cents a shortly after the ruling. "After the 50-year anniver- product,but then tends to interpret them narrowly. merits, and because of this high Analyst:Thomas Au,value Line. share to$3. sary of Pearl Harbor . .. you can't say the anti- The U.S. grants the patent to the person who can degree of regulation and Hillha- Recommendation: No rating. Japanese feeling hasn't spilled over into the prove he invented something first. Japan works on ven's high level of debt,we believe Comment: High debt prompts lowest ■Stock Talk appears weekly in the courts." the basis of who filed the patent first. this issue is only appropriate for safety rating, but Lin could profit from Business Monday section of The Seattle yPhiladelphia cellular sale, and downside Times. risk-oriented accounts." (3/30) is limited by McCaw promise either to buy Q 4 The Seattle Times Monday, April 27, 1992 .N,YI.S.E , Stock market INDICATORS Friday's industrial close: 3,324.46 24.15 NEW YORK - Today's trading Sales Last Chg ___ Sales Last Chg Sales last Chg Sales Last Chg continues to Dow Jones on the New York Stock Exchange ------- - --. --- -- -.-_ - - --__-. .-_.. ----_ as of noon(EDT1. CSX 1.52 366 293/.- 14 Ezxon 2.68 4516 59 + '4 lnipbGp .Ba t2 S7s/e- +§ NwiM..gg 60 3a4 36%.- s/a show weakness CUC 412 29Y.+ 7h In1Jhn 11 61/8+ '4 NewscP .18e 132 263/4 Industrials _____ ___ -Sales_Last Chg CV REI .95e 2 5/5 -F-F-F- Intrtan 18 2P7.+ '/. N? 80 1392 18'h '• -A-A-A- CblWre .86e 88 30'i2-•'h FMC 1134 45Ye- Ya Ionics 44 54'h-1 NiogSh 1.57e 14 141h + '% Cobltrn 113 51',4-1 FPL Go 2.40 264 34Y, .. IowalIG 1.13 29 24//a ... Nicolet 67 121i- '4 1 2 noon 3,31 8.87 AAR .48 10 131/.- se Cabot 1.04b 439 45 -Ph FabriCtr 5 361/a- !/a Ippico 1.96 24 341/4 . NICOR 2.36 200 39Ya + % -5.59 ACMIn 96 360 10'h CbTOG .16 190 12'h FairCp 14 43/. ... Irishln .42e 1 Ph+ 1%. Nike B .60 4350 61'/4-3 Associated Press 1 P.m 3,313.28 - 11.18 ACM Do .80e 28 9U4 .. Cadence 42 2234- 'b Fairc f 3 60 7 383/. — Italy .57e 108 84i- '/e Nob1Af .16 192 15 ACM Sc .96 121 103/8+ it Caesar 224 34% ... viFairtpd 290 5/,6+ 'trt Itel 11 17'/e- '/e NordRs 19 5% ... Transportations ACMSP 79 x114 85h+ 4i Caldor n 181 14 . FamDlr s .26 304 1954- 1h NflkSo 1.80 841 623/. +1 ACM MI .95 40 9 CalFed 787 34+ Y4 Fonstel .40 5 7'h+ Ye -�-�-j- NS%of 2.60 10 37'h+ '/a NEW YORK - Stock rites 12 noon ACMMM 1.08 15 to,.-ib Califgon 16 633 171h- 'h Forah 49 6'h+ 'h JWP 1002 15 . Norsk .53e 521 2414+ '4 P 1,357.62 -2.62_ ADT wt 4410 Ive- '4 a1RE .25e 4 2',4 . Faylnc .20 86 97h- '/a Jackpot .32b 3 12 - •I/ Nortek 181 6 + 'A were lower earl this afternoon, 1 m. ADT n x394 75h+ '/, CalGolf n 39 26 -''�. Feders 47 IIN- 'h Jocobs s 50 27 . NEurO 1.58e 5 16'h Y P• 1,355.1 9 -5.0.5 AFLAC .40 382 261i+ '/z Calmat .64 I° 26'4 FedExp 1173 44'/4- Ye Jakarta .18e 25 636-tie NoFkBc 6 51/6- '% extending Friday's losses. Utllltles AL Lab .18 17 23 + '/. Calton 60 11/32 ... FdHML s .76 385 38s4 + '/a JRiver .60 485 215/e ... NEstFd 14 61i- '4 AM Intl a82 1'/<- Ye CompSP s .78 342 33'/4 ... FedMog 48 100 18'h+ 3A JRvr of 3.38 1 40114 .. Noes pf 5 16'/8+ '/e The Dow Jones industrial aver- AM In pf 8 53/, Cdn c 9 .64 204 143/a ... FedNM 1.36 2213 611'.- '/2 JRvr of 3.50 12 40 Ncestut 1.76 647 23'h- 1h 12 noon 206.87 - -0 82 AMEVSc 1.05 1 IT'h- 'ie COPCits 20 72 447 -4 Fec1PB 1.00 237 32'h- Y2 Jamswv 99 5'/e+ i% NoStPw 2.42 58 39'h age was down 1 1.18 t0 3,313.28 AMR' 1478 66 + 'h CaPHId 1.32 86 54 1. FPoP pf 2.87 1 59,Y.- 'h JpOTC 17e 137 91'.- 'h NorTel .32 1745 41 -2" 1 1 p.m. 207.25 -0.44 ARCOCh 2.50 55 43Ye CapRe n 160 20 + i4 FedRlty 1.52 24 21 h+ 'h JeffPl s 1.36 213 36/e+ 1i Nth9at g 14 n6+ ne after 3/2 hours. Stocks A 11 2 + i% Capstd 3.04 lag 29sb- 3/. FdSg9n s .a2 620 19'/e+ '/. JenCr n .50 1 215/e Nortrp 1.20 210 26se- '/. Analysts said there was nothing AS 2,00 144 dish- 1h CaPM pf 1.60 10 26'h- 'h FedDs n 678 113/i+ 'A JOhnJn 1.84 2436 935A+I'h Norwst 1.00 601 363/4- 3'. Abt ob 120 943 31/A + 3/, Carlisle 128 22 39% Ferro ba 108 45 Jhnst n 1.40 181 40ya-Ph Nova pfB 3.50 2 59!<-1 to prop up the market after the 12 noon 1,173.49 -2.40 AbiLb wi a3 31//a + 4e Carlsls n 28 9'/e . Ferro 388 181h-... Jhnsin s a0 1 1PAa+ '/a Nova g .50 225 6'h AcmeC .40 x10 83A- 'h CarnCr .56 129 28'h + ''% Filtrtk 20 x284 9s/e- 3/4 JonesA n 53 23'/e- 3A NovaCr s 174 193/.+ •'/s 1,1 72.01 -3.88 Acuson 845 19Y4- ',A CarolcP 103 11< + 1h Fin99ht .32e 40 303h+ 3/8 Jostens .84 484 26 + '/e NvoNdk .60e x20 823h- 1h weak close Friday. But they noted 1 P.m. AdoEx 1.63e 78 18'h- 'h CaroFt .60 6 164i+ 14 FstAm 1.28 39 32'/a- 14 Jundt n .12e 60 13'/4 ... Nucor .56 44 85Ya- 1i Adobe 5 5 CaroPw 3.16 227 5214 . FtBkSv .82 311 2714- Y. NuevEn 4 I1 - '/e that most of the declines centered Adob PfA 17 12'h+ 3'e CarTec 2.40 28 46'/e- Y4 FBkS of 2.63 3 27'/a -K-K-K- Nutmeg s 72 233A + 31b AMD 1874 15!i+ it arglnd .10 29 71/8- !h FBkS FfX 2 56%- i% KLM 14 19Ya NVCIQ 1.01 43 15'/4 ... On a narrow range of blue chip p AM Pf 3,00 51 3934 + '/4 viCartH 160 Ph ... FBOSIF 90 x98 Bsh+ 'h K mart 1.76 2334 49'Aa-3e NCMM 1.02 4 15'n revious session. Board issues, Compaq was down Advest 60 61i- '4 CartWl 1.00 66 82 FBosSt 1.20 x48 11 . K mrt of 3.41 98 47s/s- N NCA01 n .07e 25 13s/e-''� issues. The NYSE's coin osite index 21/8 at 241/4 after releasing disap- AetnLf 2.76 606 42 - '/2 CoscNG 1.40 11 22'4- '% FtBrnd .04 467 26 - 14 KN Eng 1.24 10 2254- 'h NvCSQ n .97 36 143/. ... P AfiIPb .24 437 10'h- ve CshAm s .05 114 127/e+ 3/8 FstChic 1.20 1143 323/4- '/a KU Engy 1.56 178 2534 NvFL .99 27 154 With nothing intervening over was U 0.10 at 225.22. At the ointin earnin s, General Motors A rMin n 2.42 50 22'7. CatMkt n 33 257h+ '4 FCh a f 3.74e 5 45s4+ 1h KaisAl 15e 162 13 + ib NFLQI n 91 10 14'/4- '/e the weekend,there was a tendenc p p g g Ahmans .88 602 17 + i%a Catelus 49 93/.+ '/s FCh PfB 6.00e 42 69 - 14 KonPip 2.20 15 195/e ... NvIMO n .94e 287 14114 Y American StOCk Exchan e, the Sh ed 3/s to 391/4, C1t1COrp W3S Off Ahman Pf 2.40 57 26'4 Caterrz .60 1200 557/.- 3/, FtChi pf 3.75 5 53 + '/, K44neb 9 4Y4 NvinQl 1.Odo 64 151'.- 14 10 sell this mornin said Lar g pp Aileen 105 12Y.- ih edrFFr 1.60 15 194+ 'h Fs1Ch pfD 2.50 1 2674 KCivPL 2.80 54 42 -... NvIn 1.14 78 16Y.- 'h g, TY market value index sli ed 1.15 to 3/8 at 183/8 and American Express A!rPrd s .80 250 46 - 3h Centel .90 257 411i FCtvBc 144 1 ... KCSou s .60 4 367/e- 1h NMIQI n .91 23 15 Wachtel, a first vice resident at pp ' AirFrt .30 495 191h-3% entEn 1,60 82 18'/e-''% FC1yB of 10 2'/a KansPL 1.90 364 257h- 'h NVM d I-I la 63 157h ... P 384.83. was down 3/8 at 221/a. Texaco was Air99as 9 24'h- '4 Centex .40 16 453h FtDoto n 870 231i- '% Koster s .10 49 10 + 'h NvM4I 85a 1 13 + ib Prudential Securities Inc. Airlease 1.68 27 107/e- '/e CenSoW s 1.54 487 26 -34 FFB 1.20 III 35 - 'h KatYln .25 3 17'h + 'h NvMO 1.13 32 1614 Among actively traded Big up 7/8 at 615/8. AIaP pfA 13 231', CenHud 1.92 23 261/8+ 1h FFB PfB 2.15 5 29%- '/s KaufBH .30 254 171h- Y4 NuvMu .710 193 r1 ... He noted that the upcoming AVA,r 20 64 17%-i% nLaEI 2.76 22 481/4- Y4 FFB ppfF 2.66 7 285/e Kellogg s 1.12 681 56'h+ 3/8 NNJQI n 89 5 141i A1=1n .35 16 18'h + in CeMPw 1.56 83 20Y4+ 'h FFinFal .12 1 101A + ib Kellwd .80 5 28Y.+ Y. NNYIQ 1.04a 9 16 - Si release of economic data later this AFberto .24 x14 25 CVtPS 2.08 2 29'h+ '/4 FtFnMg s 175 283/e- '4 Kemper .92 474 241i- '4 NNMM 1.08a 13 16 - 1/e AICulA .24 x62 21Y4-3b CentBk .61e 47 161/e- v, FIntste 1.20 1110 40'/4 ... KmPHI .96 56 9'/. NuvNY .68 16 11'h week has sent investors t0 the METALS GOLD Albisn .64 160 4V�e- 34 CntyTl .44 42 34Yi FIni51 pf 2.37 5 28 ... KmplGv .75 64 9 -ib NvNYP 1.OS 23 19/a+ •'i. Alton .60 1224 20're- 114 Chmpin .20 321 28'h- ih FIns1A 298 3ne-!,m KmpMl 1.08 130 101/a ... NvNYQ n .07e 34 1434 sidelines. "There IS a lineup Of AlcoStd .92 126 40 ChP ,I 20 x58 10'114- 'h Ftln PfB 3.44e 18 39'h- '114 KmpMu .87 20 121i .. NNYSQ n .95 81 15'h+ 'h data that could be construed as AlexBrn 40 x76 1654 '- Chor1C i0e 75 67/e- '/s Flnt pfF 2.47 77 25s/e ... KmpSir .90 24 12 '. NOHQI n .88 3 15'h- '/e NEW YORK (API - Spot nonferrous metal AlexAlx 1,00 88 191/4 + 3i Chase 1.20 3549 263/4+ Ye F}Miss 30 16 111'e . Kenmt 1.16 8 34'h-1% NvPA 1.00 41 lYh+ '/a South African Gold Stocks prices Monday. Alexdr 128 13 Chse pf� 5.25 5 523/e FtPhil life 131 9'/a-'N KentEl 26 19'/a+ 114 NPAQI n .92 4 15 - 'h uncertain," he Sald. Source:Gregg Rule AIgLud 88 26 31Ya-3i Chse pf 4.44e 14 48Ya-''�4 Fs1UC 1.24 931 37 - Y, KerrGl 33i 354 63h+ '4 NuvP 1.04 55 15 ... Aluminum-59.4 cents Per Ib London Metal Exch, Shearson Lehman Hutton,223.7206 AllgPw 3.20 127 423/8 Chse PfF 3.98e 7 457/e+ 'h F1UC pf 4.56e 8 52'h- '4 KerG Pf 1.70 7 17 + 14 NvPIM n .08e 14 1474 Weakness In the bond market Fri. Monday AIIenG .20b 1087 25','.-1h Chse pfG 2.62 10 28'4- 1/4 FUnR, .72 9 83A . KerrMc 1.52 470 38'h+ '/s NvPMI n 08e 5 1411, + 14 Bid Ask Aleen .36 70 21 Chse pfH 2.44 6 26%+ '4 FtVaBk 1.40 34 42%-s/e Kevcp s 1.04 778 32 - N NuvPt 1.14 124 161h- '/8 - where interest rates were risin Amgold 1625 5.42 AlnCap 212e 30 32 Chse pfJ 2.27 31 25'/. ... FsiFed s 5 22'h- 'h Kevcp pfB 2.50 4 27Y. + 'h Nuv01n n LOl 69 14'h- % g Copper-S1.n90 per pound,U.S.destinations. glyvoors 1.37 1.56 AIIGIE l8e 63 1014-''%< Chse Pfl 2.71 6 2814 Firstor 1.60 108 50'/.+ 5h KevCon 8 1015 + ve NgvSel n 1.02 67 1434 - also depressed stock prices. capper-s,.00,s per paand,NY Comex spot Thu. A!Ish Pf 2.97 24 25!%- '/4 haus 17 7'/,-ih Fisher n 77 3714- 'h Keylnt .68 329 233A- '/e NSTFI n 7 W/e+ 4 Lead-35 cents a Pound. Buffels 6.25 6.75 AIIdPtl 24 2'/a Chemed 2.00 2 28Y. FshSci n .08 160 25'4+ 'h KimbCI s ).64 1372 54s/e+ 1'4 NTXQI n .91 33 145/8- 'h Declining issues outnumbered Zinc-63-6637 cents a pound,delivered. Dreifntein 10.25 10.50 AldSgnl 1.00 1823 57 -1" Chm8nk 1.000 47AS 36'/4+ ''h FleetFnc .80 69 283A- 'h Kimco n 1.76 44 235/e+ 114 Nynex 4.64 829 75 - % Tin-$3.8840 Metals Week composite price per lb. Free Gold 7.68 7.87 Al,man .66e 76 9s4+ '4 hBk pfA 4.54e 2 49Ya- 'h FItFn pf 3.00 5 36'h ... KimEnv 1 3'/e advancing ones by about 8 to 7 in Gold - $335.70 Handy & Harman (only daily Kloof 7.00 7.13 AMID .72 40 9!i4- '/a ChBk PfB 3.97e 3 473A- 14 FItFn pfA 3.00 1 36'h KinggWd 26 25Ye-''A -D-O-O- quote). Offsil 16.87 17.50 AMI 2 78 37 9% ChBk pfC 86e 198 9Y,- 14 FIt Fn pfB 2.°7 5 27'h+ ib KBAust l.l7e 3 107h+ '4 EA s 108 25'h- 14 nationwide trading of New York Gold-$336.90 troy oz.,NY Comex spot month Fri. StHeleno 5.37 5.75 AMIS3 .72a 16 93h ChB do 2.69 24 27'h ... FItFn pfC 2.34 6 26'/a ... KnghtR 1.40 187 61'4- 1/4 8HM Cp 46 8!, ... Stock Exchange listed issues as of Silver - S3.970 Handy & Harman (only daily Vaal Reefs 4.87 5.00 AMIT .72a 62 105/e+ i% ChBk pfG 2.74 6 293A FleetEn .88 8 38 Knogo 10 6'h- lh QMI .14e 10 5'n quote). W.Deeplevel 26.25 27.00 AMIT2 .690 114 10'h+ '/e ChBk pfF 3.97e x15 46%-'14 Flew 1.20 483 30 + 'i% ViKoger 41 1A-'ne Oaklnd 1813 21t + ih noon EDT, With 660 u , 799 down Silver-$3.963Per troyoz.,NYComexspotmonth AMIT3 .66a 21 93/4- '/8 ChBk pfE 4.53e 6 491/.- '/8 FlghiSf .28 43 47'n- ie Kolmor 08 40 6'h + 'h kwdH .08 47 20 p Fri. AMP[ .72o 48 1014 ChWste .20 201 18'4+ 3h FlaEC .40 1 44 - ', Korea .40e 84 121t+ 1/8 cu Pet 1.00 3769 20Ya-i�a and 589 unehan ed. Mercury - S175.00-$185.00 per 76 Ib flask, New CLEARINGS ALTEL 1.48 202 384i+ 1,U hSPk .72 26 2334- 'h FloPrg 2.84 106 441i . Koreal n 21 10 + Ue ceoner 481 13'h+ '4 g York. Allwasie 913 Ssh+ Ya C'hevrn 3.30 1651 68 + 14 Flower .71 59 16 -�. Kroger 82 175h- % fCDPt 151 411h- sb Volume totaled 81.60 million Platinum-5343.5344'h iron oz.,N.v.(contract). Alcoa 1.60 x661 751h-1 Chi Nth n 95 2034- rh Fluor AO 385 41Y,- A Kuhlm 60 8 W18- /. gden 1.25 76 21 h- /e AmBas 499 '4,n+ I, Chile -3.16e 75 35'/e- Y4 Foodmk n 616 ITh+ 'h Kyocer .75e 8 69Y,- 114 SS5dPr 59 191/8- 'h shares, com ared with 88.23 mil- Platinum-S345.50 N.Y. Merc spot Per troy oz. FR[DAY AmoxG 08 7 9 - '4 ChileTel 1.7le 118 55'4+ 5/s FooteC 1.20 75 251/2+ 'A Kysor .40 141 101i +1 OhioEd L50 191 19Ya p F^ Clearing 4364,236,995.70 Amax .80a 787 19'h + '/4 Chiqquta 60 6875 197/a- 'h FihiIIG 35 8 ... OklaGE 2.66 168 3716-ih lion shares at that point in the ".q.-not quoted,n.a.-not available Balance S53,020,189.45 Ambac n .40 216 33'h+ 1h ChkFuIf .24t 96 63/4+ 1i FordM 1.60 x4104 42Y. -L-L-L' IdRep .14 6 39'h Amcast .48 77 195A ChrisCr .60t 15 27 . FordlM of 4.20 x720 75 -ih LA Gr 126 11Y. + 1/8 lin 2.20 26 525h-3i AmHes .60 1415 40'h+ It Christn 7 31 - 1/4 FtDeor 1.24 5 15Y4 LAC g .22 525 6'h- '/e mncre .14 59 19'4- 3/a AAdi 95 .77 57 Io'/.- 'h hrtslr .60 3086 181'e- it FostWh .54 606 27'h+ 112 LGE En 2.92 251 44 - '/4 mnicm 1.10 137 35'h- '/e AAdI 97 n .79 50 97t Chubb 1.60 740 651/e- '4 FounH s 536 26'/4+11/4 LLE Rv .Ole 37 27/a- '/a 8neido .48 39 16'/a- 'h AAdi 98 n 71 73 10 + 1%d ChrDwf .36 48 243/4- 1/4 Foxmvr n 28 222 137/e+ 1i LSI Lg 180 6'h NECK 1.00 68 15'h- '/� • • ABarck .13o 634 223/4- 34 Chyrn n 2 P4 France .24e 76 9'4+ 'h vILTV 1403 "n6+ 'ne OPnhCa 1.700 98 20'/.- 'h ABrntl 1.75 282 47 - % C!Icorp 2.46 11 31'4- '%a FrkPr 60 253 7% ... vILTV pfB 12 276 ... OPPMS 1.16 43 111/e ACapBtl 1.68 Id 19s4 ClnnBel .80 88 IN FrkRs s .26 63 241/, ... vILTV pfC 1 T4 OPMG .86 x10 9112+ to ACoPCv 1.30e 10 19'/e CinGE 2.48 212 36'e+ i FrkUnv 75 97 77/e vILTV pfD 30 sh ... OranRk 2.40 22 34'h AE Pw 2.40 826 7'/.-ib CirCty .10 20 34%- 3A FMCG .56e 745 38ye-ih LVI n 27 2'h .14 OriC .90 154 24'h- '4 J a a n resists G 7 res s u r ACyan 1.65 474 605A viCircK 225 I'm-ins FrpTMc L50o 132 40518- Y4 LQuint 1 171/2 Or!anC .92 48 29Si- '4 � _ e AmEx 2.00 126 31Y,+ i% Circus .10 267 341i- 1i FM RovT .40e 45 57h- YB LppuMi .60 184 31/4- 1�4 viOr pf 1.90 4 31V4+ 'h AmExp L00 8129 22'4-3i Circus s 267 421i- '/. FMRP 2.40e 454 22'h LaZ Boy 60 7 23'/4- '/. viOrinP 89 lY. AGnCp 2.08 110 44'h Citicorp 4513 18%- % FundAm .68c 1011 62'h-3i Lafarge .30 178 104- '/. rrvvx 1.20 1251 21 + ih AmGVI .77a 33 8Y4-''b C!CP of 6.00 22 65'h . Fuqua 36 18 131i LaidI'A .28 x109 934 . 8uibdM .40 236 211/a- '/. AGIP .96a 61 1P, Citcp pfA 7.00 5 77 + 1% FurB Of 3 1'4+ ib LaidlwB .28 x529 93A+ 1/8 vShiPp .60 18 16Y.- I/e AGTT .94 42 to'h+ •'ie Ci1CP pfD 7 25 ... Fu1Ger I" 121/4- I/. LkehdP n 2.36 83 21% ... 8wenPd s .21 1d 17'h- 4i D M ■ AHonne 2.69 012 291i + Y,, IzU pfC .128 4 25 ... LofAm 7 8N Oxfor n 1329 13 - ,h to increase u b i c s end n AHent s .84 10 263A+ '/z I- A 2.121 14 365/e ... -G-G-G- LandsE .20e 27 34'h-ih wenC 596 3534- '/. AHome 2.60 1012 77 + Y4 fzUt B 2.12T l4 36s/e GATX 7.30 327 26 ... LatAm n .07e 109 18Ye- 'h 8xford .60 29 26'h- 'h AmInc n 1 17Y4- 'h CityNC 23 123/4-i%, GATX pfA 3.87 7 45% ... Lot Am .83e 12 31'h + Ua AlntGr 50 1294 83Y.+ Y4 Clair5l .10 88 8 - 1i GEICO 3.00 8 229 ... Lawln s .40 166 14'h- '/a -P P-P' AmMuTr .65e 69 10 + '/a larcor s .60 5 IP4- 1h GEO 10 7�,6 . Learn, .48 6 14%- 14 PHH 1.20 62 3574 AOIF 1.000 4 11 - '/e IarkE 64 25'h+ 1/4 GFC n 580 18s/e- '/4 LeeEnt .76 12 28'4- Ya PHM .24 724 20'h+lbb APresd .60 33 36'h- 'h CIayH s 260 2Ph- Ya GRC Int 9 3'/4 + 'h Leg Plat .88 548 48 PNC 2.12 367 511/4- 5/a Reuters Alone among the G-7 - which anything they would become AREst 1.00 45 7'h+ 1h ClemGlb 35e 11 83/4- N GT Euro Ile 13 93A- '/a Lennor s .12 295 235/e+ 1/2 PPG 1.84 505 65 + 7h AmStr s .70 409 33'4- '/. CIvC,f 1.10 207 36%- 114 GTE 1.70 4098 32'h+ 3h LeslFaY 36 15%- 114 PS Grp IS11' 102 16%+ 'h AT&T 1.32 4315 43'/e- '/4 Clorox 1.68 x398 47'4- '/a GTE pf 2.48 17 315/e+ Ye LeucNtt 25 50 - % PSI 1.00 115 16 + 'A includes the United States, Ger- harmful," he said. Aaste 238 374 ClubMd .30 10 253/4- Gabeli 1.09e 128 101/e LbtyAS 1.04e 226 103A ... PocAS 1.40 6 153/. WASHINGTON - Top eco many, France, Britain, Canada and The result was communique AmWtr .92 24 21Ya+ i% Coachm .08 36 8 Goloob 30 4'h-ib LbtyCP s .50 81 231/4 ... PacEnT "i 545 19'/4- VA Amrscb 6 10Y. + 'h COOs1Sv 103 IT'h-tie Golob Pf 1.70 11 127h Lfetme 45 24 PacGE 1.16 982 30Y.- Ye Amrtch 3.52 710 62'h + '/a Coastal .40 468 26'h+ 3i GalHaa o2e 50 41A-''% Lit 2.20 2001 68%+ 1% PocSci .12 8 1214_ ,h nomic policy-makers have singled Italy - Japan enjoys �a healthy language that, while clearly ex- vlAmesO 8209 39e + v, COCacI 1.12 2542 8074- '4 Gannett 1.24 921 41'h-1 Limitcl 28 1862 2354+ Yn PacTel 2.18 1272 42sh Ametek .68 165 16Y4- 'i. CocaCE 05 2077 13 - 14 Gaps 32 1735 401i- 14 LnCNtc 96a 9 EPA+ 'h POCifCp 1.50 419 2154 ... out Japan for a special role In budget surplus. horting Japan to do more, Was Amoco 2.20 1301 45'/2 + !9 Coeur .15e 9 14'h Gy rdE n .20e 54 3OY. LincNtl 2,92 146 SON + 3h PainWb 5 .40 1530 19 + i1/; providing the boost to global With Japanese growth likely to weaker than first proposed: AMP 1.52 193 593/.+ '4 Colemn n a9 231/e-•'% Geml I C .22e 38 13 -1% Litton 156 90'4+ 34 PWLBD wt 119 4sh- y, Amoco .30 25 81/4 CaIgP s 1.06 1078 49% Geml I I 1.65e x112 13'h . LiveEnt 41 21h ... PonEC .80 590 14Ya- 'h growth needed to speed the former fall short of the overnment's Amphnl n 95 7sh + tie CO gP Pf 4.25 z5o0 63 -ih GenCrp .60 x54 1374+ 1A LvgBC� Tr n 35 13 ... ParTch 33 Ph- 1i g ` In those countries with lar e Amre .12 17 8'h ColHln .68 40 BY8 ... Genenic 41 26N- V, LizClab .40 926 337h ParCom .80 1976 4511h Soviet Union's painful switch from target for this year of 3.5 percent, g Amrep 3 6Y8 :.: Collntln 1.20 5 113A ... GAlnv 3.16e 60 2Ph- Y. Lockhd 2.00 77 46 - 3Ae PorkDrl 259 474-i% SUrpIUSCS and declining growth, Amsco 200 183/4-•,A CoIIHI .78 51 65A ... GCinm .52 112 22'h- '/a Loctite .76 133 45Ya+ 1i PorkHn .96 225 355A- 'h communism to capitalism. the G-7 felt Tokyo had an obliga- AmSth s 1.04 376 28'/e- 'h CollnvG .86 10 115/8 GnDoto 66 4 + 'h Loews 1.00 23 108 - 'h PathCm 20 2'4 policy-makers should be mindful Aral 126 411,- 1h COIMu .64 132 774- •S4 GnDyn 1.60 78 653A+ '4 Lagicn s .20 128 16Y.+ 'h Pa1Ptr 19 2-V4- 'i: Yesterday's meeting of finance tion to make more of an effort, a Anadrk .30 6" 23'h- 1i Coltec n 30 193ii- '4 Gen l 2.20 3708 757� viLnStr 3 3Y. POtrPr .80 70 95h of the possibilities of strengthening "Okp9 171 9'h- '/e vicolGs 914 143/4- Ya GnHost .36 41 8'/a- i'A LILCO 1.70 294 23 + Ue PotPrtl .90 x88 11 + '� ministers and central bank gover- French official said. demand through appropriate mea- Argelic .92 236 31 - % Comdis .28b 63 13 - 1h GnMill 1.48 470 627h- 14 LIL PfK 8.30 z370 95 Pa1Sel 1.65 55 163/4 ... Anhgus 1,12 1133 527h + 'h Comeric s 1.88 630 591i- 1h GnMotr 1.60 9398 39 - 5/8 LIL PfZ 2.35 12 27'/.-ib PenCn .80 21 211/. nors from the Group of Seven "Obviously the Japanese have AnnTay n 289 171h- 1i CmlTek .68 49 173N GM E s 917 27Y4- % LIL PfY 2.65 21 28 . Penney 2.64 1331 651/2-ik sures," the communique said. Anthem 128 437/.+ '4 Comdre 801 13'/8- 4i GM H .72 136 217h+ '4 LIL Pis 9.80 49 105 + 3/e PoPL 3.20 114 49'h ... Industrial nations had been pre- room on the fiscal side," Canadian Aon Cp 1.68 43 43'4- '/a CmwE 3.00 122A 31'h GMot pr 3.31 151 411/2- 'h LIL Pf0 2.47 2 27 + 1/8 PaPL wi 15 25 Other countries also of advice. Apache .28 556 163A- '4 CwE Pr 1.90 3 23'h+ i% GMot PfB 2.28 51 261/e . LongDr 1.08 35 34 - N Pennzol 3.00 3u 45'/.+ 17. ceded by criticism between the Finance Minister Donald Mazan- g Apex .88 39 111/, CwE Pr 2.00 21 24 - 1A GM E PrC 3.25 187 491/4- 1/8 LongvF .40 45 157/e- 114 PeopEn 1.76 46 1511,- IA �' German Was told to "fo11oW a APPIM9 48 63/,-% CwE Pr 2.87 1 32'/e ... GnPhys n 06e 158 10'/. ... Loral .96 4 35 PepBoy .14 187 207/8- +b United States and Germany Over kowski said. Those countries that Y Aquarn 1,62 28 21''A+ 14 COmES 2.92 5 3% GPu s 1.50 145 24Y. LOLand 1.00 559 331h-I'A PepsiC .48 2175 3d'h+ 'h Bonn's economic policy. have fiscal room certain, can use balanced policy approach" while Arcadn n 332 2Ph Comsat 1.40 229 38 -ih GenlRe 1.80 354 89Y8-1/4 LoPac 1.08 942 69Yz-1 PerkEl .68 33 32Y. y 2 Archon .lob 1461 24%+ ih CPsyc .36 273 123/4+ 'h GnSignl 1.80 83 631h-1 LOPL Pf 2.42 20 2Ph- '4 PerkF 1.30 10 IN-ib But German b all accounts, that room to r the United States, with a lar e ArcAlsk 45 6Y,- % Campo 14410 23Y.-31i Gensco 289 Sit ... LaPL Pf 3.16 18 283A+ '/4 PeryOr 51 8%- 1h Yz Y p oduee and strength- g ArgFd n 06e 68 14718 CmpCre 145 1Y, GnvS11 24 1S/e Lowes .56 28 387,E Pet• .18e 122 19v. deficit and weak Owth of late, ArkPL of 2.40 4 2754+ iie EMPAsc .10 2684 143/e-1/44 GnRad 10 23/4-1% Lubrzl 1.60 710 651/e+13i Petrie 20 38 203A+ ib got off scot-free. en growth." �' Arklo 1,08 3861 T%- 'h ampsc 107 681h- 34 GenuPt s 1.00 123 323A- 'h Lubvs .50 39 16v.- v4 PeTRs 2.15e 28 2sVe+ 'h "We did not feel ourselves But Ja an, which has been should keep its eye on the need for Arkla of 3.00 11 321A- 14 CmP sk .05 21 91/2+ 14 GaGulf 1208 243A- 14 Lukens 1.48 203 47Ya- Y. Pe1Rs Pf 1.57 4 19 P Armco 634 SY4- 'h ConAgr s .54 x1282 2614+ Ye GOPw pfA 1.90 21 2414+ 'h Luxotc .7t1e 53 60 + Y4 Pfizer 1.48 2081 691/4+ ih under attack or on the defensive," ainfull correctin the inflation in medium-term budget control. Armc of 2.10 1 201h ConnEn 1.25 6 201h GOPW pf 2.13 5 261h- 'h Lvdal s 12 293A- '4 Ptl 11 55h P Y g Armc pf 4.50 5 38'h+ i%e ConnNG 1.44 10 22Y4+ 1/4 GaPw pf 2.43 1 271/4 + 'A Lyondl 1.80 1397 23Y4-114 PheIPD 3.00 801 87'h+ '1A said German Finance Minister asset rites that was fueled b the On the monetary side, the G-7 ArmWI 1.20 479 34'4 +1 ConrPr 596 181i+ 'h GOPW of 2.50 3 281h+ '4 PhilaE, 1.30 5990 251A- '/a P Y ArowE 201 157/a- '/. Consec s .08 330 347/8-1 GoPw pf 1.95e 25 25 -M-M-M- PhE pfA 3.80 zl°0 51'h+ Ya Theo Wai el. eas mone of the late 19805, was content to prescribe satisfac- Artra 13 61A- 'h OnEd 1.90 1333 27sh+ 1i GaPoc 1.60 343 69 - '/e MACOM 12 63A ... PhE PfQ 14.63 6 1101/e+ % g Y Y Arvin .68 237 25tt + 'h CnsFrt 388 18 - 1i GrbPd 1." 225 63Ya MAISY 97 nn6 PhE pfM 15.25 z20 116 ... "Our discussions with the Ger- stood firm a ainst the ressure. to r0 ess on inflation, curbin Asarco .80 84 2634- 1i CnsFrt pf 5 173/.+ Y. GerbSc 20 1 12'h+ ib MBIA .68 169 51 + ib PhE PfK 9.50 z40 103'h . g P rY P g 2Coal .40 55 361h+ 4, ConsNG 1.90 1p8 38'4 . GerFd .25e 206 11!4+ '4 MBNA 1.76 463 367h- 'A PhilSub 1.04 40 14 - 'b mans were reasonably prompt," Tokyo introduced a fiscal pack- of excessive wage demands and Ashoil 1.00 91 315A- 1h Conrail 1.80 192 89 -•'i, G!Ontln 1 11 . MCN 1.64 30 223/4+ 'h PhilMr 2.10 3909 76 + 'h 4s�aPc 2.47e 21 1474 + 'h Cnstar 1680 127h- 'h Gillete s .72 x1917 47Ye+ 54 MDC 2 2% + 14 PhilGI 188 19Y.- 1ti U.S. Treasury Secretary Nicholas age just last month and cut its progress in reining in budget defi- Asetlnv 2.00 100 12'/e onstr .64 64 3834- Y4 Gitano 4 14'/4 MDU 1.44 14 23'h + 'h PhilPet 1.12 1091 23%+ 'h AsdNG .12 39 20'4+ ib CnP pfG 7.76 780 90'/4-1'/4 GIaxO s .71e 6685 26%+ 4t MEI 2 41h- '/a PhIVH s .15 50 22 - 1h Brady said. discount rate at the start of April. tits as the recipe for lower interest Athlne 1.00 75 15'/, + '/4 CntlBk 60 1182 17'h- 1i GleasC .40 6 1854- Ye MCR 1.20 752 105h Phlcorp 41 21'h-36 ATIGas 2.04 24 32 + 'h CntBk pf 3.84e 1 431h Glenfed 124 3Y4 ... MGF .88 245 8 - 'h PiedNG 1.84 15 31Y.+ '4 Instead, the main reason why Any further stimulus given the rates. *nrg 3.00 91 43'h- sh CntB pfA 2.42e 82 24Y.-ih IbGvt .70 319 7'h ... MIN .81 1196 8'h+ 14 Pier 1 .02r 115 91i ' AtlEn wi 4 22!i2 CntICP 2.60 307 251h- 'h GlbHlt n 76 12st MMT .92 718 Sit ... PilPrm n .7ae 121 9 -ie the talks dragged on for almost 11 tight labor market, could risk "Those countries that have had AIIRich 2.80 711 10614+13i CtlMe f 57 °,1h . Gl bM 93e 30 9Y,+ tie MFM 72 40 51/1 PilgRg .06 68 nth hours was that Tokyo refused for reawakening inflation, Japanese good success on the inflation side Atlas Pr 2.80 125%- I/, Conlin s 19 211h- 1/4 GlobM Sift 154 MFV 1.65a BS 15'/ PilgPr .06 3 Ss4-ib Atlas 109 SY.+ 14 Conlin 5 11'h + '4 GlobYl 540 9'h-''b MGI Prp 80 22 111i-''% Pineld 285 12 two hours to acce t blunt lan a e Finance Minister Tsutomu Hata obviously have room for a further ATMOS 1.24 1 20 + '4 CiData 110 11'h- 'h GlobYld .80 300 81%. ... MGIC n .14e ltl 331h- 'h PinWst 285 1Th+ ib P gU g Attwood .57e 64 i1s4 ConvHld 542 7'h- 'h G,dWF .22 199 383/. MGMG 24 11%+ 14 PionFS 6 714 AudVd 36 634- iia CvHd Pf 1.45e 35 12'/e Gdrich 2.20 558 54sh-''h MHI Go 73 IN- 'h PionF Pf 2.12 2 21 + 1%e in the group s communique urging said. monetary ease, but there was no Austr 3 111� Convex 97 974-... Gdreh pf 3.50 4 54'/2- v4 Mag 541 81'a + 'h PitnY s 18 253- '4 it t0 increase public spending to "Additional measures are not decision made in a comprehensive Austr .13e 33 8h + % CoopCo 14 3/e Goodyr .40 1685 73 - 1', MagC wi 26 4/a- 4 PitnvBw 1.56 202 654 AutoDta .40 3 4555-3h Cooper 1.24 199 57'h-''� Gotchk 16 13'h+ 1/e MagmC 61 1OY4+ % Pittstn .20 45 151h + ib s ur its fla n econom . necessa at this uncture, and if fashion," Mazankowski said. AutoZn s 33 3434- 'h Coop pf 1.60 102 331/8- 'h Grace 1.40 2421 WA-1 Magntk 37 145h+ 14 PlocerD .26 934 97h- '4 P ggi g Y rY ) AveryyD .80 39 261/2- 'h COOP r 28 44 51% . Graco .68 11 2414+ 'h Mo or 1 5i3z PloinsP .24 29 24 + '4 Avnet .60 259 25'h- Ye Coreln .24 116 7314- '4 Graingr s 62 335 50'/a-13/e Malaysa .07e 12 13'% + N PlavbvA 39 6Ye+ '4 Avon 1.40 620 495t+ '/a Comin s .60 991 36 - sh Grc1Mt n 1.06e 946 33'fi+ '4 Manrcr s 69 151h- '4 PlavbYB 54 6Ye+ '/a Aydin .50e 20 174'2 Cn1Crd .48 317 29 + Y4 GtAtPc .80 11 33Ya Manpwl n 4 15 PIuIn r 3.20 31 38%- '4 -' Crane .75 337 255A+ -% tLkCh s .30 316 60 -5b Monvl wt 4 274-ib Po aPd 369 574 + '/. -B-B-B- CrwfdB .40 13 233/4- 1i GtWFn .68 232 17Ya ... Monvile 64 874 . Polaroid .60 343 24%- 1h • 1 BCE 9 2.56 449 353/4- Yd CrwfdA .47 3 221/2- 1/a GtWFn of 4.38 1 5514 ... Manvl Pf 5 1874-i% PlcvMg 65 64 - 3/i BET I,50e 56 91h + 14 CroyRs 229 353/4+ v4 GMP 2.06 2 ?3p'Is MAPCO 1.00 464 5474+ 'h Polvyg, 133 257/e- 1i 8.15 297 11 + 'a CniCAm 168 4Yh+ Yi GrenTr .5e 31 3T4- 3% MargFn n .04e 196 137 + 1i PoceTal .76 163 19�- 'h _� o its aid a k f r R B BMC 296 9Ya+ $ CwnCpr 64 x 49 397/e+ h GrubEl 162 133h- . Mori pf 3.23e 5 38 PortGC .Ile 119 15'h- .. �� C a e o uss'a BP Pru 3.24e 97 29s4 CrasTm n .17e 1 103/a- 'h GthSpn .15e 68 974 + 1/a MarMD .92 814 351h-1Yt PorG of 2.60 1 2944- 1/4 8RE 2.40 1 30Yi+ ib CwnCrk 249 100 lh GrubEl 62 lsh Maritrn 1.15 38 3h ... Portugl .Ile 19 12/. Boirnco 20 53 7Y,+ '/e Crvs8d .08 23 11'/e Grumn 1.00 30 191h-''/a Mrk I V s .08 60 14'h .., Pot sh 9 .72 2 197/e- 'h BakrF 1.73e 59 18Ye CumEn .20 81 64Y.-% Grum pf 2.80 3 267/8+ '/e Marriot .28 473 153/4 Potittch 1.40 68 481/2- 'h BakrHu .46 6173 201/8+ 4b Cumn Pr 3,50 7 4814-* GrdPrd .50 6 111/8 ... MrshMc 2.60 81 753/4-ih Po1mEl 1.60 224 237h- 1h Boldor .48 4 263/4- 'h CvpSem 348 10'/e , .. Gulfrd s .60 24 27 Mrshln 3 33'h- '/a PrecCst 12 78 281h- 'h Boll 1.20 53 341i- '4 Cyprus .80 730 23'/e- '% GUIfRs 2 314- tie Mortch 55 83A- 1/, Pfdlnco 1.44a 21 l8'h+ '4 Associated Press SU ort continued toda with fund to back the ruble. BallyMf 137 53/4 ... CvpM Pf 3.75 7 53%+ '/4 GulfR Pf 1.30 1 10 + 'h MOrtM 1.50 179 53'h PflOF n 73 12sh- 14 PP Y datl8cp 5 SY. GIfSTUt 1105 ITh + '4 Marvel s 103 23'h- 3i Premrk .84 91 49Y,+ '4 BaIrGE 2.10 20, 31'h-1% -D-D-D- GSu PrM 2 525/e ... Masco .60 1077 28 Premrl .48 27 331� meetings with officials of the Inter- The commitments followed the SoIGE wi 4 21% DPL 1.62 51 24 . G U PfK 8.80 z6o 101 ... Mascp 2.80 83 267A+ 3t Pride 2.60 4 IS'h+ yi WASHINGTON - Officials of national Moneta Fund and the broad outlines of a ro osal un- BncFlo 12 8 •• OQE 1.52 42 28Ye-1% MasPft 88 12 lit . Primrk 21 101/2 ... P P 1 •H"H-H- • the world's seven richest industrial World Bank. veiled earlier this month by Presi- BncOne 1.16b 2061 483.-5� Da Sem 99 154- Ye Matsu 91e 16 105'/.+1'/, vlPrmeM 30 /. Bnc it 111 2'h+ 'h Donacp n 130 4T/.+ '/e HO HIt .96e ai 297ie ... Mattel S 5e 371 331h Primco 2° 83A nations have led ed to su ort a The IMF and the World Bank dent Bush. However, the aid pack- Bnc it pf 11 25bi DOmon 1.60 187 42Y4- '4 HCA n l41 20 ... Mattel .20 311 31/2- 'b Primca 80 720 38,6 .. Bnc trl 97e 4 1814+ •',§ Danher 26 231i ... Hodson 43 7n6 . Maxus 355 63/e ProcTG 2.20 3083 1031h +1 P g PP BcPHw s 1.29 18 451i- I/, Daniel .18 15 12'4 ... Haemon n 146 257/e- 5'a MayDS 1.66 450 55Y.-•it Pro9cp .56 76 52va+ '/a $24 billion aid package for Russia, ' were expected today to announce age had been put into some doubt Banda? 1.20b 22 1335/8- '/4 DtaDsg 20 Ph HallFB 27 37/8+ '/a Maytag .50 1153 193/4- 'A ProgCp of 2.34 30 26 SkBosf 4098 211',- 14 DataGn 639 816- 36 Halbin 1.00 4754 251h+ Y4 McCtof .20 1 2o!h Proler 10 75h-i% but warned that Western assis- a roval of the a lications of b events at the recent, concluded Bk8 pfB 3.14e 6 361h + 'h DovWtr 1 6'/, HancFb s .32 141 13 .. McOr ff 2.20 16 29'h+ 'b Promus 337 27 + 'A PP PP Y Y BkNY 1.52 796 41 - '/a DaYtHd 1.52 777 61'i.-3i Hants 1.40 19 16'4-'4e McDerl 1.00 106 231'e PrTAm .70 69 10U. ... tance Is contingent on progress Russia and the other former Soviet Russian Congress of People's Dep- BonkAm 1.30 3604 4574- '4 De Soto 38 6'/e ... Han.11 1.84a 16 22'/2- 14 McDonl .37 3148 44 ... ProsSt .36 18 31/a BkAm pfA 3.25e 6 435h DeanFd s .56 43 23Y. ... Handlm .40 19 13'h- '/s McDnD 1.40 503 577A- 114 PSvCOI 2.00 313 257/e-% toward free-market reforms. republics for full membership in uties. BkAm pfB 6.00 10 75 - •.% DWGI .78 61 9% ... HondH .20 189 11'/a- '/8 McGrH 2.24 356 64'/4+ Ye PSCot Pf 2.10 3 26 + 1h BkAm pfF 2.41 30 271% Deere 2.00 88 50 ... Hanna .65 189 243A- 'h McKes 1.60 300 325/e PSvNM 124 1154 Officials of the Group Of Seven the two multinational lending or- Russian President Boris Yeltsin BkAm pfG 3.25 2 5814-1h Delval 5 °n6+ 'ne Hanfrd s 30 43 24 Meod 1.00 146 38'h-ib PSEG 2.16 1278 257/8-3i BkAm PfH 2.25 4 261t DelmPL 1.54 57 21 + 1/s Hans wt 114 43i Mesrx .dd 26 22'h- 14 PSEG Pf 5.05 z3o0 62Y. +I - comprised of the United States, ganizations. was forced to modify his reform BkAm Pfl 2.75 3 287/e+ % DeltoAr 1.20 810 58%+ 14 Hanson 1.28e 1390 207/s + tie Meditr 2.45 60 263/4- 14 PSEG of 8.16 z200 9NY, + 'h BkAm PfJ 2.75 26 287/, DeltaW .40 502 177h- !h Harind .90 206 23 + 14 Medtrn 5 48 741 673h +I Publick I 1'h- 1h Japan, Germany, Britain, France, The aid package for Russia package in the face of serious BkAm PfK 2.09 24 25 :': Deltona 40 1 + ,,, Harley 390 55Y4- 1h Medusa 30e 36 18Ya PuggetP 1.80 104 24Y.- 'h BonkTr 2.80 755 57'h-1%e Deluxe 1.28 1056 423/.- 14 Hamish .40 24 213A Mellon 1.40 207 397/a -• PD e 1.80 a7 "/' ... Canada and Italy - made the received a significant boost last political unrest. BnkTr un 49 243/4 Destec 360 143/4- 54 Harris 1.04 )6 28'/4-1/4 Melon pfH 2.60 29 28Y, • PHYM .81 92 10 BanrAer 8 77h-ye DetEd 1.98 204 333A- 1/e Harsco 1.32 33 35 - 1i Melon pfJ 9 25'/. "� PIGIT .84 328 93A+ ib commitment yesterday after a per- night when the United States and But Gaidar, in explaining the Bari ff 17 9n6-1/16 DetE of 7.68 z600 94'/,- 1/4 HrifdST 2.00 13 501/4- 'h Melon pfi a 27'/4-ib PIGM .89 40 123A+ 'h Barg or 2.78 30 26'h DetE Pr 2.28 12 267/e+ 1/e Hartmx 109 6 Melvile 1.48 206 4874- 1/4 PMMI .76 130 10'/e sonal appeal from Russian Deputy its major economic allies agreed to modifications to leaders of the BarB Pf 2.72 2 26vo "' Dexter .88 17 23Y4- 1h HawEl 2.24 39 3716- '4 MercSt 1.02 146 3314 PMIT .93 539 87/e+ •4i Borg pfC 2.81 16 21Ya+ ig Diagnst 38 181h+ '/e He-Ron 25 14'/4- 1h Merck 2.76 3647 1401'.+ i% PMIIT .81 332 11+ 'h Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar, the provide $18 billion in assistance to seven industrial countries, Was Barclay 1.92e 3 2574+ 'h Dial 32 Io 271/, HltRhb 1.24 19 10'h MerFn s 32 511 22'4+ '4 PPr1T 87 333 ev.+ 'h chief architect of the reform pro- help Russia finance needed im- able to convince them that the Bard .48 347 257A- 1/4 D!olCp 1.40b 278 3a'/.- a HI1hCP 3.29e 88 43 -ih Merdth .64 4 25Y4 -O-Q-Q- BornGp 1 40 28 33 - 1/4 Dial RE 1.28 12 101/ HlthEQ .89e 81 8%- '/e MerLyn 1.00 1608 481/7 + ih am. OrtS th1S ear and another $6 Russian reform effort remained on Barnett 1.32 619 375/e- 3i DioShm 52 24 19Y4 + ih HCR n 28 181b- 114 MerryG .05 119 10Y. QuakrO 1.72 1417 513A-1i gr P Y Barnet pf 4.50 2 78l5- '/� Diaso .14e 10 27/8 HlthRh s 136 22 + 'A MeryLd .68 31 87/e ••• QuakSC 80 631 1374+ 14 Gaidar's cam ai n for Western billion to create a stabilization track des ite the modifications. Barnt pfC 13 58 DianoCp 1 IY. Hlihtrst n 243 1774+ V4 Metal n 339 2Y,- i% Quanex .52 14 251h ... P g P Boroid .20 212 55A- I% Diasnc s 102 1414- ''1/4 HeclaM 32 95A + 14 MesoOf 647 ve Quantm 32 1314 ... BotlMt .10 562 6 - 'h Diebold 1.68 42 50%- % Heilig s .36 149 33 + Y. Mesab .Ile 9 21/.-1; QstVl 1.20a 17 13'/. Bausch s .80 916 467/e . Dr911Cm 109 187h+ '/. Heinz 1.08 997 - '/. Mestek 10 IOY,- Ya QstVC 44 183/4+ ib Sales Last Chg __ Sales Last Chg ___ __ Sales Last Chg __ Sales_Last Chg _ Sales Last Chg Baxter 85 911 36'n+ 'h Diggital 1433 4474-1 HeleneC .24 228 3814- Y. MtE pfG 7.68 z1000 911h Questr s 1.02 1061 20 Schwiz 22 8Ya- 'h SunCo 1.80 220 2Ph- 'h TrCda g 72 13 144i- 'h Volosis n 581 18Y4 + sh WeinRl 2.04 97 30'h + Ya BavSGs 1.34 43 2Ph+ 1h D!Ilard .24 412 1201h+ '4 HeImP .46 268 24 - 'h Me1Fn s 46 2 20Y,+ 1� QkReily .32o 252 21 t- 1i Schwt 16 122 16 SunDist 1.10 x3d 10 + 'h Trnscap a 239 h- 1b Valero 36 22 28'h Weirt 7 5!. BeorSt h0a 922 16'h DimeNY 230 4'i+ '/e Herculs 2.24 323 53Y.- '4 MexEaG1 .97e 19 167/a- 'h -R-R-R- Scotmn 10 d 8V. + i%+ SunDisB x22 3Y.+ 'h Transm 2.00 85 45!tr- 'h VoING 2.50 261 91/e ... WeisMk .68 36 251i-''h Bcklns 28 40 20 -ib DisCCP .40 42 874 + 1h Hrshey .98 89 397h- 'h MexFtl l.11e 340 267h .. , s, , , , , _ ' ' Disney .84 2188 150'4-1'4 HewlPk .80 2180 T734-I1h Micklbv 06 26 3Y. RAC In 1.80 201 13b+ 4 scudNA .23e 324 15�,-ie SunEn9 1.Ole 20 71A- h TmotH pf 2.24 x20 30it h VolueCns 81 15/.- % WellsF 2.00 952 793A + e BeciDk 1.20 313 68h+ h 5 , , } 7 BellAtl 2.60 1836 431•h- 3h Disney wi 487 375h- Ye Hexcel .aa 61 12 - ik MicrTc .05e 202 131h- 'ie RJR Nob 1831 9vi ScdNE .72e 44 8'ro + ih Sunst 1.20 28 44-%+ ih Transco .60 x451 107b . ValMer 9 207h- '/a WeIF PfC 2.25 12 25Y.+ N Belllnd .a0 13 lOYe Drvrsln 49 134- Y. Hilo 301 15/.- h MAWst s 84 16Y.- '4 RJR of 2.87 9 35Y,-''b SeaCnt s .70 38 17 .. SunMn 207 7h Trnsc of 4.75 12 40 + i%a VonDrn .60 4 15 - '/a WeIF pfD 2.22 23 25 + '/e BellSo 2.76 1732 481/e-''/. Dole .40 120 32'/.- 1i HiShear 1&5 6 - 7/a MdwRs n 1.56 37 2014+ 14 RJR ppfA .94 x1026 l04t SeoC pfC 2.10 10 18 + N SunM pf 2 2 + i%e TranEx 218 sh ... VKMMT n 1.09 69 15'/8 + '/e Wendys .24 396 121h- 'h SeloAH 52 8 36'/e- 'h DOmRs s 2.38 203 361e Hibern 66 d3h- Ye Millipre .44 Sa 37Yi RLI C 48 5 18 - 1% SeoC pfE 4.00 1 45 SunTrst 1.00 304 357h- Y. Tronscn 10 's,32 . VKMCA n 94 3 145h- 'h West .40 17 19th + 'i Bemis s 32 23,- 14 Donold .56 6 433/4- I% Hilnco .60 128 Ssh- '/a MMM 3.20 824 93%+ Ya ROC Fd .75e 164 101/. + 'h Seagrm 2.00 86 1191/4-ih SuprFd .34 23 97h . Trav!er 1.60 979 20'h-1/4 VKMFL n 1.00 5 147h . WstcTE g .80 21 W/4 BenfCgp 2.60 131 59Y4- 14 Donllev 1.00 271 52Y,- 4 Hlncll 63 128 6h MinnPL 1.94 30 31'h .-- RPS .65e 68 5 Segul 279 264e + 3h SupVolu 72 327 25Y.- 1A Tredgar .24 214 161i- 1i VKMNY n 1.00 10 14Y.-1'/a WCNA 125 31i + Si BengtB 28 3n6 Dover .84 45 40 - 'h Hilnl I I .72a 19 614-ih MirRsrt 104 31 .•. RolsPU 1.20 666 48Y.+ % Seal Air 2 50 Supinds .28b 207 53 -IN Tremnt s 80 12 19 + Y4 VKMOH n .98 2 1554 + 'h WDi 11I 390 4 - '4 BerM z409000 -25" DowCh 2.60 777 61'A + '4 HiYld .90 53 83A ... Mitel 15 11i • RangrO .08 29 bit . Sears 2.00 4354 42Y,-13i SwftEn 12 7 ... TriCon 2.58e 37 263/4- 'h VKMPA n 1.01 11 153A- '4 WstnGR .05e 182 171/a+ 1h BrkRty n 1.50 x46 8 DowJns .76 xl2l 2Ph- 1h H1YdPl .84 5 754 Mobil 3.20 2048 62'/4+ ''i, Roycm .32 494 32 + 1% Sears Pf 2.22 127 26 + '4 SwHelvg .08e 47 13Y. . Tribune .96 144 45Y. . VKmpM .80 64 11'h- 'h WnWste 102 12N Berlitz .56 103 17'4-1. Downy 32 55 1454- '/a Hillnbd s .35 58 41 + 'h MolBio 31 223/.- '4 RJamF s .24 192 23 + 5/a Sears pfP 3.75 998 43 - 'h SybITC 85 187A- tie Trimas 85 20 + 1%4 VKML 96 3 814 WstgEl 72 1724 1816-1% Ber,YP .60 U 11 - '4 Dravo 207 9Y.+ '4 0110 47 Ph Monrch .20 20 127A- 'h Royonr 3.60 113 30'h+ 3A Seitel .lob 3 1Y,+ 1h Svnovs .48 18 20% ... Trinty .80 42 271/e ... VKmL of 2.37 18 2TA+ ''h Wstpc 1.04e 50 1454- 'h BestBy 374 183/.-1'4 Oressr .60 2435 211/4+ 'h �ilton 1.20 87 467/e-3'. Monson 2.24 456 67/h- 1i ViRa is 7 25/.- 'h 7 BetHld n 2 14Ya+ 'h DreyYfus 68 800 3814- Y. Hitachi .83e 16 63%+ I/e MonPw 1.54 183 241i RavT�n s 1.30 241 455h SelQl n 23e 4 13h+ h Syntex 92 1582 d4 1. Trinova 68 9 241. VKMT 84 120 7sa Wstpc pf 3.00e 5 17'/.r i4 Be1h511 222 145A DrvSiG 1,02 57 111b- 'h HomeD s .12 2398 62'h+ 7h Monied 38e a7 11Y. • Rayt9 1.30 241 45%-�b SI9Sel .84 5 124+ Sysco .40 261 50 + 4 TritEng 1201 1p/e- h VKMIM n '90 60 14h- h Wstvco 1.10 209 373h K /e BthSt pf 5.00 8 445t + '''A DryStrt .78 180 ION- % HomeSh 308 55h MonSt 1.72 23 W/1+ '4 RdrD6 n 29 421/2- Y4 Sensor .30 133 27/.- .. SvstCt 9 11 - 4 Turks 4e 69 91h- h V rco n 1.02 48 14�+ h Wevverh .02e x158 36K a A BthS pfB 2.50 6 221�e+ 1h Dr SM .71 216 97h+ 'h Hme Ix 1.45e 20 51i-''/e Moore 94 48 2034- '4 Rd Bie 209 1'h SequaA .60 33 38 ... Turksh .24e 71 6h- Ye Varco 140 Sh- Y. WhlTch s .02e I58 28h t �. y 2 , FF i , , 1 g Sequo Pf 5.00 8 72 •T•T-T- TucsEP 221 54 ... Vanon .36 394 354-13h Wirl 7 61A '/a Bevrly 168 8 - '4 DuPont 1.68 2891 SOh- h Hmsike 20 1444 ll h- /e MorgGr .97e 2 ll h- /e REIT 1.42 19 151i+ ib 1 '' i i _ i Biowht n 30 107/e DufPUt n is 203b+ 'h Honda .65 34 24 + i/a MorSE 5 4e 250 1814- i. RecnEq ,Ole 12 9'/4- 'N svMens 56 328 l4Ye- % TCF Fn 50 154 21'h+ '4 Tv oLbs :36 159 375h+ ih Varifv Pf 1.30 66 1355- % Wh ehl l'10 364 ,42%` 1a BirStl 50 90 2P/e-3§ DufPUtil 77e 368 9h + /e Honwel 1.65 146 72sh + h MorsEM n .04e 250 16/,- 'a Reebok .30 3202 30'h-1'/a Svcrost s 1.30 101 231h+ 'h TCW 84 249 87h TycoLb .36 151 37%+ '4 Vencor s 44 1354- Y. Whitmn 24 704 13'h= 'h BlackD 40 6352 24u.+ p4 DufP7F n .96 23 14h+ /4 HK Tel 1.36e d21 35Y.- /e MorggSt s .9a 184 473§+ 4 Rega! 70 'h-'/" Shaw s .30 592 27 - 14 TDK 37e 4 338/4+lib TycoTv wt 4 251h- '/a VentSt .54 101 2&Sb- '/a Whitk n 21 13Ye 1 BIkHCP s 1.24 7 28 DukeP 1.72 362 331/8- A HMOnn n .05e 46 204+ , Mrg5 pfB 2.22 xl6 25h i. RelGrp 32 6 4'h + 'h ShawNT 838 15Ya- 'h TECO 1.82 x76 367h + 1h TylrCbt 1.26 85 12'h VenSt of 3.25 1 48sh+ '4 WilcxG 35 9Ch♦ ih BIk1998 n .BO 252 10 -17, Duke of 8.70 z60 lOSh + 'h HnHlt 2 61i+ h MrgS pfC x203 254+ % Repsol .92e 247 2T/. , _ BlkAdv .93 26 1W/, . Duke of 8.28 z30 IOVA i. Horme! 36 61 184b + 'h Morgan 2.18 1027 54Y.- 'h RepGva 02e 38 6%+ 1h Shelrwin 2.44A 18948 2Ph + 1/4 TJX 1.46 334 15h ... Tyler 27 47/e + 1h VaEP pfi 7.72 z50 96'4 +I�h Willm pf 387 1 6 51'h r11% Blkstn 95 67 102A- 1%. DukeRt .40 4 3/e+ % Harsh 686 7h ... Morr pf 5.00e 4 70% RWNY s 1.00 170 39Y4 , s -ll-V-u- , 3 , BIkIMT n .OSe 61 9,/,+ 'A DunBrd 2.28 786 54Y.- 1h Hotllnv 3 ";ie ... MorKntl 1.60 34 49'h-1% RNY pfC 1.9a 450 2d -i� shonev 140 21�Ya+ 4 TNP 1.63 77 19h .. Vishay .97i 9 20% + WiIICor l.a9e 35 234+ h B1kMQT n 121 10'/e Duq of 2.00 z100 243/. . Hou9M .78 12 32 ... Morton .96 364 587/.+ 'h Rxene 327 ShoPKo n .44 14 14A ... TRW 1.80 665 51A- 1/4 UAL Co 769 123/4 +1 Vista Rs 14 15%a- h Windmr 126 6 - BIkMTT n .61 350 93-ib Duracl n 645 26it-i% HouFb s 127 16 .1 Motor!a .76 976 78Y4- Ye RevRev .88 28 40%-''b 5 B Pac l:Bd 81 22�.+ ib Tallevn 22 2 e+ ib UDC Pf i Zl 19h- 1fi Vivra n 84 285'%.+ %a Winobg 1.20 SO 83/e+ 'h BlkNA n 1.31 35 14�, + 1h Dyco s - 210 461t + 1i Hoint 2.38 615 254- h MunHi 13 191/4- % RhnP 1.80 631 591b- Y. s nlApl 39 18Y.- 'h Tambd 1.36 172 59%- '4 UGI 1.24 46 1P/s+ '4 Vodfne ),Ile 378 65'h + 'A WiscEn 1.95 167 38'h- 'h BlksStr .92 153 10.e + 4 Dvcom 10 6 a ... Holnt pfA 2.38 15 25Yi- /. MunHi .69 42 9/4 RhnP wt 6 134- Ye B SlksiT .90 126 1039 + 1h DynAm .20 12 13 ... Holn % .95 10 I03A- 14 MuniFd .91 48 12Y4- •'h RhP pfA .99e t 24 + it siggnet .80 601 3$'h- 'h Tandem 366 12'h- 1h UJB Fn 60 76 165h- 'h Vons 294 28 WiscPS 1.10 27 2Ph ... BIckHR s 88 329 31 + 1i Holnt dW 1.13 13 11 + '4 MunCA n 2 15 ... RPR s .56 159 52 - 1i s!IcnGr s 2040 157A- 'h Tandy .60 407 28Y.- 'h UJB of 3.27e 1 40114+ Y4 VulcM 1.20 43 381h+ ih Witco 1.84 25 467h . BlockE .02e 1752 1414- 114 'E-E-E- Houlnd 2.96 413 4354 ... Munivd n 1.06 11 1514 ... RiteAid s .55 455 21'4+ Y, s!ngap .60e 139 11Ya- '4 Tandy of 2.14 41 275A- 'h UNCInc 39 61h- !/e WolvrW .16 228 llsh-3'. BlueChp 78e 47 1Y. + 'h ECC .20 14 3 - '4 HubelA 1.56b 1 50!h ... Munlns n 40 15 ... RbtCec 17 V4+ 'h singer n O5e 444 24Y.+ 4i TouCA .88 10 13 + 'h LINUM s .66o 331 353A ... "W-W"W- WolWth 1.12 x1315 28Y.f.3i_ Boeing9 1.00 2005 454b+ Y, EGG L00 80 dTh- 74 HubelB 1.56b 10 53 ... MunNY n 3 15V. ... RochG 1.68 51 2Z'h+ 14 S!zelerP 1.00 21 11 ... TOuNY .90 27 12sh- 'h wUSHm 132 Iii WICOR 1.48 4 23'h- 'h WrldCP 20 10'•i- 1h BaiseC .60 342 221/4- 1i EMC 259 121i- 1h HudFd .12 8 73A Munsng n 5 9% RochTl 1.54 16 3074- y, lztler .16 23 12ye TchSvm 20 13Ye- '/. USShce .52 121 154b-•'fie WMS s 716 1574+ 1i WrldVt .21e 7 13Y.+ '/e Boisc Pf 1.79 10 22 + 1/a EQK G 1.37 23 11'/. Huffy s .30 89 167/s- 4 Murpo 1.20 98 35Y4+ •'%. RckCtr 1.92 59 16Y,+ 'h Skyline 48 45 17 - ih Tektrnx .60 99 18 - 'h UsWst 2.12 902 35 - 5/e WPL H 1.86 760 32'/. Wrigley 1.00a 85 W4-1'4 BoItBer 06 82 5 - !i E Svst 1.00 104 351i- 3i Human s .90 2385 24 . Music, n 650 133/. . Rockwl .92 263 24'/. SmrtFn n .O4e 8 213/4- 114 Telcom 10 1'h- '4 USFG .20 836 101/a . Waban 267 23'/.- •'h Wynns .60 40 19'h- 14 BordC Pr 2.04e 241 19'h ... ETown 2.00 1 257/a ... HunTMf 34 27 141h + i1/8 MutOm 1.16e 3 14'/4+ •''%a RodRen 50 4'4 "• SihCor .20 93 B1h + 'h Te1com n .73e 116 22%- Ya USFG Pf 4.10 1 4Vh+ i%. Wachovia 2.00 87 6P. ... -X-X-X- BordCh 1.04e 49 181i v EaggIP 51 214 ... Hntgln .31e 20 177h + '4 MyerL .18 3 19 - '. ROHaas 1.24 320 SP/.-... Smithln 323 8'/e- '114 Tel ivn 80 372 2Ph + 'h USFG Of C 5.00 8 60%- Y8 Wackht .60 10 27 - '1 Borden .04e 749 18%- ih va51E❑ 1.40 111 27 ... Hvprn 1200 41 IIY. + 'h MYlan .28 263 34'h + '/e Rohr 41 151h SmthBc 1.76e 170 741h+Ph Telef 1.53e 1107 291/e+ 16 USG 28 11i ... Wohlco 24 71h- 14 Xerox 3.00 483 77 - BCelts 2.25c 1 20% EaslUtl 1.36 x22 21'/. RollinE .09 254 11'h .•. SmiB eq 1.76e 1378 67Y.+1'/. TelMex n .17e 2564 58',4+ '/. USLICO 1.00 86 18Y4 . WOinoc 59 3'/. XTRA .80 a5 33'-i ... BosiEd 1.6d 49 23Y.-ib EKodak 2.00 2110 387h-'' -1-1-1- N-N-N- Rollins 60 46 28%-ih SmtFD .44 l6 35'/. Templl 96 135 533/4- 1h UST s 80 493 3014-V. Waimt .21 2769 52'4 + ih -Y-Y-Y- Bowatr 1.20 0�6 23 + Y. Eaton 2.20 334 771h- 1i IBP .20 966 17%- 'h NBB .84 21 19'/. . Rowan 1682 6'4- 'h SmckrA .42 114 26 + 3i TempplE 4.04e 193 22Ye- Ye USX ppf 4.44e 3 48 - v; Walg@rn .52 629 32Y,- 14 Brazil .28e 884 20'h-1'h Echlin 70 83 1774- Y4 ICN Ph 464 12s4- 'h NBD s 1.00 360 281h+ 1/. RBSct or 2.81 24 2634- 'h Smckr B .42 20 251/2 ... TPGGV .94 61 93A ... 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Schwb s .24 x11O 28 - 1h SturmR 1,20 13 261/5 + I,, viTWA pf 19 1'h+ "a VF Cp 1 08 A71 461/4-- 1i C I �, 1 . 1I Mike Ullmann City Editor 872-6600 . 872-6721 LOCAL A3 ValleyDaityNem Algona■Auburn■Black Diamond■Covington■Enumclaw■Fanwood■Kent■Maple Valley■Pacific■Renton■Tukwila Sunday, January 19, 1992 '111s . could spur wetland 's development By DANNY WESTNEAT heard on the wetlands issue in more than a to the next. paper. They say the definitions adopted in roads and surface coal mining. Valley Daily News year. But environmentalists called Bailey's leg- 1989 are overzealous and include land that During Friday's hearing, environmental- islation "dangerous," saying it would base "kicks up dust when you walk across it." ists said such provisions would "nickel and OLYMPIA- Two bills introduced in the The main bill, introduced by Sen. Cliff Washington's wetland policy on a manual "There are enough wetland horror stories dime away the state's resources." Also, state Legislature would force King County Bailey, R-Snohomish, would require local drafted in Quayle's office that has been to fill this room,"said Darrell Turner of the they said the bills would ironically strip and local cities to comply with new federal governments to define wetlands according repeatedly dismissed by scientists. Washington State Farm Bureau, who pro- power away from local governments, the wetland laws, a set of manuals described by to whatever rule is currently being used by Last fall, scientists from the University of ceeded to show slides of seemingly dry land same power state residents have judged as scientists as "crockery" that could open a the federal government. Washington and state agencies estimated the that he said current rules would classify as third of the Valley's wetlands to develop- g g fy paramount in recent elections. As of last September, the U.S. govern- federal rules could ease protection on 60 to wet. "This bill pre-empts local control," said ment. ment stopped using a rule adopted in 1989, 80 percent of the state's bogs, swamps, and Buckley's Gran told the committee one Jeff Parsons of the Audubon Society. Environmentalists blasted the bills Fri- and began defining wetlands according to an marsh lands. horror story. He said he bought 21/z acres of "That's a 180-degree about face from the day, but cheers were heard from property older, looser, 1987 manual. Soon, a 1991 In the Valley, many wet pastures, scrub land on Highway 410 to build a house, then ideals of the Growth Management Act." owners and farmers, who say the current, manual is expected,based on rules proposed lands and even year-round ponds could lose found the entire parcel is a wetland and can't Added Naki Stevens of People for Puget stricter rules are driving them off their land. last spring by Vice President Dan Quayle's protection,according to local planners. Last be used. Sound: "We'd be handing to the federal "My property was condemned by wet- Council on Competitiveness. summer, Auburn planners estimated that up Under Bailey's bill,only one-quarter acre government our state's ability to protect lands,but the taxes have still gone up,"said Bailey says the state should rely on one to a third of the city's 1,500 acres of wet- of Gran's land would be off-limits, he said. wetlands." David Gran of Buckley, testifying Friday federal wetland definition to bring consis- lands would open to developers. Bailey's bill would also allow a series of The wetland bills will get another hearing before a Senate agriculture committee. .tency to what is now a shifting, confusing But property rights advocates argue that activities in wetlands, including grazing by at 8 a.m. Friday,Jan. 24, in Senate Hearing " "This is the first breath of fresh air I've group of bad laws that differ from one town many of these wetlands are only wet on animals, farming, construction of farm Room No. 2 at the capitol in Olympia. ■ Planners to ClairvoYant at nightmare convinces him , sort ofNMI: ._.. . � , on 132nd street B JEFF BOND Valley Daily News ;: By MIKE ARCHBOLD left-turn lanes at the 192nd intersec- Valley Daily News tion which causes the backup. He AUBURN-With a slight sense of apprehen- The Soos Creek community's estimated about one out of five cars r. Sion,I put out my hand for Lorena Simon, "true : central north-south highway is two wants to turn left there. i psychic," to hold. lanes of blacktop that flows freely Just north of Kent-Kangley Road, Armed with family pictures and a reporter's skepticism, I had come to test Auburn's most until a commute attack. the Pearson Nursery opens up onto y y Then, the six-mile, rural road 132nd Avenue. Helen Pearson said famous clairvoyant, who is beginning to make t tries hard to be urban but fails miser- traffic doesn't back up in front of quite a name for herself. ably. Congestion overtakes it; inter- her place but she does worry about The only psychic registered with the Better sections fail;tempers flare;bumpers the school children who have to Business Bureau, Simon is enjoying a growing crunch. walk alongside it. following with appearances on local television County road planners are finally "One of the worst things is a lack and radio shows. She also has appeared at the looking at some traffic design reme- of shoulders in front of our area," Northwest Women's Show and even the Kent `" dies for the corridor along 132nd she said, referring to the deep, open Chamber of Commerce Trade Show on Jan. 14. and 140th avenues southeast ditches that run along both sides of Barry Beck, a disc jockey for radio station -°`- between Kent-Kangley Road east of the road. A school bus drops off stu- KU said is a believer.She Kent and Petrovitsky Road east of dents along the road just north of the She predicted my wife's pregnancy, the sex Renton. nursery. of the child, and the day the baby was deliv- Two public meetings in the area "We do have school children that ered," Beck said. "I will tell you I have been are planned this month. have to walk single file and foot by -very skeptical of these people, but she is as a Planners want to hear from such foot along the ditches," she said. close to real as you can get." Soos Creek residents as Jamie Nel- "That to me is a most obvious prob- Judging by other testimonials, Simon's spe- son. Nelson knows first-hand what lem." cialty should be pregnancy. she calls the "nightmarish" quality County road planners can expect "She told me I was going to have a boy and of commuter traffic on 132nd Ave- , an earful about improvements need- during labor I would have problems with the nue Southeast. ed on the road at the two public umbilical cord, but it will work out fine," said Nelson's house overlooks the meetings. Margo Wa kefield, ma nager er for h Northwest d m a west the ort r Women's Show in Seattle. "I did have a bo c'" arterial's intersection with Southeast The first meeting is next Wednes- y gay 208th Street. There is a traffic light day in the multipurpose room at and the cord was wrapped around his feet. The but no left-turn lanes. Congestion is Carriage Crest Elementary School, doctors were able to solve the problem. Yeah, a her neighbor morning and afternoon 18235 140th Ave. S.E. The second I'm a believer." ` � each weekday. And,hold onto your session is Tuesday, Jan. 28, in the But Simon isn't limited to the maternity ward. ,. " '"" hat when nearby Kentridge High multipurpose room at Meridian Ele- She is credited with predicting the fall of former School dismisses students in the mentary School, 25621 140th Ave. Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Seahawk afternoon. S.E. The open houses run from 4 coach Chuck Knox signing with the Los Ange- -Valley Daily News photo by MARCUS R. DONNER "For the last 10 years we have p.m. to 7 p.m. les Rams and Tom Flores taking his position Lorena Simon Says she is Auburn's 'true psychic.' been asking for a turn lane and that The King County Public Works here. Nothing earth shattering, but enough to hasn't happened,"said Nelson,who Department is considering possible add to her reputation. ' tions and hearing their thoughts also took a toll ■ President George Bush will lose a bid for a worked for four years on the just- improvements to the road but road Her list of talents include, among other on her. As a teenager, she thought of suicide as second term to a Democrat who has not yet completed Soos Creek Community engineers say they have no precon- things, spiritual medium, healer, spirit releaser a way to quiet the voices in her head. announced his candidacy. land-use plan. Transportation is a ceived ideas. (as in cleansing haunted houses) and telepathic During the past 10 years she has learned to' ■ Auburn Mayor Bob Roegner will win elec- major part of the plan. Alternatives range from minor receiver. understand, sharpen and focus her powers. She tion to a higher political office. "Throughout the community traffic revisions such as traffic sig- As I sat listening to her describe my person- dabbled with Tarot cards, but quickly grew ■ Kent Mayor Dan Kelleher will lose a re- planning process, a lot of the com- nals to the construction of up to five ality, a relatively correct appraisal of my beyond them. About five years ago, she began election bid. munity said they just wanted inter- lanes along its entire length. A bicy- strengths, weaknesses and quirks, I couldn't giving personal readings to friends and acquain- ■ The Seattle Mariners are leaving town. section improvements first and fore- cle lane, curbs and sidewalks, light- help feeling the unease of having one's privacy tances and building up her accuracy level. ■ The Washington Redskins will beat the most,"she said. "We have an awful ing and a new bridge across Big violated. Now, for $100 a half-hour session, she spir- Buffalo Bills in the Super Bowl. lot of traffic. The intersections,just Soos Creek are also possible Simon, 32, had her own privacy violated as a itually counsels people about their emotional ■ Irrefutable evidence of beings from anoth- drive people crazy. improvements. child when voices would uncontrollably fill her life, tells them what happened in their past,and -r planet will become public in the next 10 "I think people just want to get Whatever is eventually decided, head. what will happen in their future.She also acts as years. where they are going." construction won't bggin until 1997. "That was the scariest part," Simon said. "I a spiritual guide for those wanting to reach Asked why she hasn't used her powers to get The corridor's southern terminus The delay bothers Nelson. would be lying in bed and I was hearing people deceased loved ones. rich, Simon said the "spirits" want her to use is at 132nd Avenue Southeast and "It's not hard to feel a little bit and I could see shadows standing over me but Simon took the Christmas photograph of my her powers constructively and not for mere per- Kent-Kangley Road. From there, it jaundiced about the whole thing," no one was there." family and told me about each person. She said sonal gain. But she has seen her future and it rolls north past open culverts and she admitted. "The environmental She first realized she had powers to see the my mother has recurring lung problems, not includes wealth, a large home and her own subdivisions separated by open impact statement on widening of future at the age of 8 when she correctly pre- cancer, not pneumonia. It will get worse if she national radio talk show. fields and large residential lots to Southeast 208th was done six tc 10 dicted her mother was going to win $200 play- doesn't take care of herself. `With these powers comes an extreme sense about Southeast 200th Street, where years ago and that project hasn't tak- ing bingo. My mother has had emphysema for the past of responsibility, Simon said. "My guides it jogs east through a major wetland en place. "It is like having an acute sense of deja vu. I few years, but continues to smoke. She said my won't give me the lottery numbers because they area. It turns north again, becoming "The road projects take so much would see things that would come to pass.Being father, although healthy now, will have heart want me available to help others and not misuse 140th Avenue Southeast to Petrovit- time you wonder if the scoping pro- a clairvoyant,you are a sensor. It's like being in problems. my finances." sky Road. cess (getting public input) is still a movie." Simon successfully deciphered relatives I left her modest apartment feeling good about It crosses major east-west arterials adequate by the time they get to the But that can cause complications. Such as the heading for divorce and those with strong mar- her predictions, but remaining a skeptic. at Southeast 256th,240th,208th and project." time a wife wanted to know whether her hus- riages. Her description of the personalities o. Although she was correct about a number of 192nd. Both 256th and 240th have The meetings this month will help band was cheating on her. The wife brought my brothers and sister also were very accurate. things in my life and the lives of family mem- improved intersections with left- the county know what to study as Simon a pair of his underwear to analyze. As for me, 1993 will be my year. I will make bers, she did miss major family health issues I turn lanes. part of preparing the environmental "I told her he isn't having an affair,but wow, a career move and raise my income. A manage- expected her to detect. Ken Fisher has lived along the review for the improvements. There what a great lover!" she said, bursting into ment job looms in my future. I have thought, however, about giving Mom arterial between Petrovitsky Road will be more hearings once a draft of infectious laughter. "Sometimes you have to be This year, romance is on the agenda. and Dad a call just to see how they are feeling. and Southeast 192nd Street since the review is completed in the next careful because I feel what the wife feels. She Simon described to me a woman I am going to And I have found myself keeping an eye on 1985. With a traffic light and no 18 months. offered to give me the underwear as a memen- meet through work during the next few months the office front door for a woman meeting left-turn lanes at 192nd, southbound Written comments on the project to." who will knock me off my feet. Simon's description. traffic backs up past his house will be accepted through Feb. 21 But being so sensitive to other people's emo- As for other predictions of larger import: You know,just in case . . . almost to Petrovitsky Road each and should be sent to Ken Wiley, Psychic's evening. King County Department of Public role in murderprobe uncertain He can't leave his house and drive Works Roads Division, Bui King ' south after 5 p.m. most weekdays, County Administration Building, though he admits if he waits long 500 Fourth Ave., Seattle, 98104. B JEFF BOND enough, somebody will let him in. For more information about the y er the Snohomish County Sheriffs He was one of the investigating might be a clue. "I don't want a five-lane high- upcoming meetings, call Wiley at Valley Daily News Department. detectives in the case and the man To his amazement, she stopped AUBURN - Lorena Simon's pp way," Fisher said. All he wants is 296-8092. She says she gave the Snohomish who went on the "wild goose by the side of the road exactly at visions aren't limited to career County Sheriff's office,which was chase." the same three places the police moves, romance and birth. Some- handling the.investigation, various Hinds said he, like almost all team had searched earlier. Hinds Vietim's estate may sue drunken driver times they involve murder. details about the incident. After police, are skeptical of psychics said he didn't believe there was Not long ago, Simon was watch- holding a picture of the missing and prefer to base investigations any way she could have found The Kirkland man sentenced last dent, also was named. It was target- ing the evening news when a pic- man, she told sheriff's deputies on straight police work. He said he those three exact spots. week to 41 months in prison for a ed, according to Redmond attorney ture of Duvall real estate salesman that he was dead after a second doesn't remember all the specific As for her predictions, the only drunken driving accident that killed Gordon Anderson Jr., because it Richard Duncan was flashed on the shot to the back of his head. predictions made by Simon and ones that can be verified are that a highway flagger now faces a law- continued to serve alcohol to Pech- screen. Duncan, a pillar of the She described the position of the cannot attest to their validity. But the man's body was found in a suit by the flagger's estate. man, even though he was intoxicat- community, had been reported body and other details, including the day the two of them met in shallow grave on an uphill The suit filed on behalf of Jacque- ed. missing. that the numbers three and 10 Winthrop did surprise him. ' embankment. He had been shot line Williams' estate seeks unspeci- "With full knowledge that . . . Simon said the picture changed would be somehow involved in the Hinds and other police officers twice in the back of the head. fied damages from Scott Alan Pech- Pechman was an obviously intoxi- before her eyes. She saw his face murder. combed a 30-mile stretch of road And the numbers three and 10? man, 27, a former Boeing engineer. cated person, . . . Charlie Mac's covered in blood and a gunshot When contacted for verification, east of Winthrop for clues to the The body was found near Three- The lawsuit seeks compensation Sports Pub served him a large quan- wound to the back of his head. the sheriffs detectives scoffed at disappearance. The team stopped Fingers Mountain about 10 miles for Williams' emotional pain and tity of alcoholic beverages in utter "I could hear him say`I'm alive, the idea she assisted in the case and in three places along the road. outside Darrington. suffering, loss of life and funeral disregard for the foreseeable conse- I'm alive. You've got to find me. said all Simon did was send one of Later in the day, Hinds met with Simon said she will work on expenses and for losses to her five quences to the welfare of the pub- I'm alive' ", Simon said. their detectives on a wild goose Simon, who felt.the dead man murder cases for free and believes children because of her death. lic," Anderson asserts in the law- The image gave her nightmares chase. would be found near Winthrop. He there is another serial killer active Charlie Mac's Sports Pub on suit. and forced her to contact the But Detective John Hinds tells a told her to drive toward the high- in Snohomish County, but he will Pacific Highway South, the Sea-Tac Attempts to contact Charlie Mac's Duvall Police Department and lat- different story. way pass and stop where there be caught. bar in which Pechman had been management Friday were unsuc- drinking before the October acci- cessful. a A4■Valley Daily News Sunday,January 19, 1992 NEWS OF RECORD WEATHER Obituaries ch Hayes worked a diesel House fim mechanic Coastal Trailerr Repair. He National Weather Service recording,526-6087 was born Nov. 4, 1935, in Kiowa, Okla. He is survived by his wife, Mildred *�- Earle Oakley Thurston Gibson of Sumner; three sons, Darrell - Today Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Gibson of Kent, James Dawson of Bur- Earle Oakley Thurston, 73, of Kent ----" -- ten, and William E. Hayes; two dau h- ' � died Jan. 17, 1992 at Valley Medical Y 9 ters, Cindy Hayes of Seattle and Breezy Center in R Y Y Renton. H lived Y o e v d i e n the are a •• �•• since 1978. Dawson of Burien; his father, John Hayes; his mother, Bessie Haworth of Ha - • Mr. Thurston was born Nov. 19, 1918 Y in Columbus, Neb. He graduated from Dallas, Texas: a brother and a sister, Partly sunny Cloudy Partly sunny Partly sunny Partly sunny Westport High School in Kansas City, Greg Kelly and Cynthia Hayes, also of Dallas; and two grandchildren. I" High as High 49 High 51 High 47 High as Mo.; class of 1937. He worked for the 9 U.S. Government printing office in Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. r { Washington D.C. from Nov. until 1976, Monday at Edline-Yahn Funeral Chapel g SOUTH KING COUNTY retiring after 15 years of service. He in Kent. Burial will be at Hillcrest Ceme- served in the Army in WWII, was an tery. Today elected elder of the First Christian North Kent Valley, Renton, Tukwila, North Sea-Tac Plateau: Fog this morn- Church of Kent, and a member of Rio Otto Herman Janssen ing.Hazy sun and high clouds this afternoon Highs lower 40s valley, upper 40s ridge. Verde Golden K club in Auburn. He also Increasing clouds tonight. Lows lower to middle 30s. was a member of the Kent Kiwanis Otto Herman Janssen, 91, an Auburn Kent, Auburn, Federal Way, Countyline: Valley fog this morning, otherwise hazy area resident since 1946, died Jan. 16, Club, where he was named Kiwanian of sun and high clouds this afternoon. Highs mid and u g g g upper 40s. Increasing clouds and patchy fog tonight. Lows lower 30s. the year in 1984. 1992, at Canterbury House in Auburn. Southeast Kin County, Black Diamond, Enumclaw: Partly sunny and gusty winds Survivors include his wife, Emma He was born Sept. 5, 1900, in 9 Y Y Y 9 Y d . in places likely. Highs near 50. Increasing clouds and moderate winds tonight. Lows 35 Jane Thurston of Kent; a son, Earle Upland, Neb. Mr. Janssen lived in Cali- to 40. forma in the 1920s,then moved to Walla �� t Patrick Thurston of Clovis, Calif.; two °' East Kent Ridge, Covington, Maple Valley: Patchy early fog valley areas,otherwise Walla, where he graduated from the partly sunny. Breezy east winds ridge tops. Highs lower 40s valley areas, near 50 ridge daughters, Barbara Jean Howes Of Car- g areas. Increasing clouds and breezy winds tonight. Lows lower to upper 30s. michael Calif., and Jo Ella Lauber of Seventh-day Adventist Academy in Valley Daily News photo by DUANE HAMAMURA Boca Raton, Florida; a brother, Warren 1936. He moved to Auburn in 1946. Firefighters remove debris from a Renton home Saturday. Tomorrow Boca Janssen was employed as a car- 9 H. Thurston of Washington D.C.; eight near 50. King County: Mostly cloudy skies. chance of showers evening hours. Highs grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Penter for The Boeing Co., retiring in Memorial service will be 11 a.m. Mon- 1969. He was a member of the Seventh- Yesterday day at First Christian Church of Kent. Y Adventist Church in Auburn. He g p p y ( g provided by Memorials may be made to First Chris- enjoyed gardening. i•ire about 10 a.m. after seeing smoke High oci Low 28, c .none, ear's total is 2.06 inches. Sea-Tac reading He is survived two Sons, Richard R. The Associated Press.) tian Church Building Fund. Arrange- coming from the house in the ments by Marlatt Mortuary, Kent. Janssen of Sumner. and Pastor Robert Air pollution index E. Janssen of Neptune, N.J.; a daugh- 1100 block of Benson Road. The ter, Glenda Ruth Toews of Redlands, Fire damages home; residents were not home at the Good - 48, particulate matter. For recorded update on burning restrictions, call Martin W. Meckle � 296-5100. For air-pollution index information only, call toll-free 800-433-2215. Calif.; and nine grandchildren, 19 great- time and there were no injuries. Martin W. Meckle, 65, of Kent died grandchildren and one great-great- no injuries reported Firefighters took 45 minutes to Jan. 17, 1992 in Renton. He was a grandchild. RENTON - A fire at a Renton control the blaze. There was WASHINGTON resident of the Kent area for 40 years. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.m. Mr. Meckle was born Jan. 2, 1927 in today at Price-Helton Funeral Chapel in home caused about$30,000 dam- extensive damage to the base- Today Denhoff, N.D. He was a construction Auburn. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. age to the house and its contents ment, second floor and attic areas Seattle Tacoma Everett - Considerable high cloudiness today. Warmer. Highs worker, retiring in 1991. Mr. Meckle was until the service begins. Saturday morning. of the older house,Bergquist said. around 50. Wind southeast 10 to 15 with gusts near 25 mph near Cascades. Mostly a member of Local Union #242 Seattle, Private burial will be at Mountain Cat Gre Ber uist of the The fire a ears to have started in cloudy tonight with a chance'of rain.Lows lower 40s.Rain chance 30 percent.Rain likely p g g9 PP Monday. Highs upper 40s. Rain chance 70 percent. and was a WWII veteran, serving in the View Cemetery in Auburn. Memorials Renton Fire Department said the basement but the cause is still Bellingham to Everett-Considerable high cloudiness today.Warmer. Highs around U.S. Army. may be made to the American Heart neighbors reported the fire at under investigation, he said. 90.Wind southeast 10 to 15 with gusts near 25 mph near Cascades. Mostly cloudy with Survivors include his wife, Carmen Association or the Bob Hope Heart a chance of rain tonight. Lows upper 30s. Rain likely Monday. Highs upper 40s. Chance Meckle of Kent; three sons, Dale Drake Association.of measurable rain for Bellingham 40 percent today night and 80 percent Monday. Of Colville, Wash., RiCkie Meckle of Olympia to Vancouver-Increasing high cloudiness after patchy morning fog today. Highs near 50,Wind southeast 10 to 15 with gusts near 25 mph near Cascades. Mostly Auburn and Billy Meckle of Federal Nancy Bremmer Window forced o en to enter home; cloudy with a chance of rain tonight. Lows mid 30s to lower 40s. Rain likely Monday. Way; three daughters, Marge Yeager of �� i��� P Highs upper 40s. Spokane, Vickie Macabee and Theresa Longtime Auburn resident Nancy tools and other items taken; $500 loss. Coastal - Increasing chance of rain mainly north part today. Highs 50 to 55. Wind Curtdale of Auburn; his mother, Otilda Bremmer died Jan. 16. She was 90. — (Jan. 13) southeast 15 to 25 mph.Rain likely followed by showers tonight and Monday.Lows lower Born Dec. 19, 1901 in Rainier, Ore, ■ 22000 block 196th Ave. S.E., Kent 40s. Highs upper 40s. Chance of measurable rain for Hoquiam 20 percent today, 60 Meckle of Kent; two brothers, Ray percent tonight. Meckle of Kent and Harold Meckle of she moved to Auburn in 1940. The following home burglaries were - Home entered and woman's watch Olympics and Washington Cascades- Increasing cloudir*ss today. Chance of rain Snohomish; three sisters, Edna Wilcox She was owner and operator of Brem- recently reported to local city police stolen; $1,000 loss. (Jan. 13) Olympics. Multiple freezing levels to 9,000 feet.Afternoon pass temperatures lower 30s. of Sumner, Rose Wiemes of Kent and mer's Cafe in Algona and enjoyed read- departments and to King County Police: ■ 16600 block S.E. 257th St., Kent- Increasing chance of rain or snow and local freezing rain tonight and Monday. Snow Alma Blankenship; 32 grandchildren ing, visiting with her family, and taking Window broken to gain entry; jewelry, level 5000 feet. Afternoon pass temperatures mid 30s. Mostly cloudy with areas of fog trips to Reno. two watches, VCR and Other goods tak- tonight and Monday. Lows lower to mid 20s. Highs mid 30s. Mostly cloudy with areas of and five great-grandchildren. fog tonight and Monday. Lows lower to mid 20s. Highs mid 30s. Visitation will be 1 m. to 4 p.m. today A widow, Bremmer's survivors Unincorporated en; $1,300 loss. (Jan. 8) Central Basin and Tri-Cities-Mostly cloudy with areas of fog today through Monday. at Marlatt Mortuary, Kent. Graveside include a brother, Kenneth Girt of Kent; Kin Mt ■ 17200 block 134th Ave. S.E., Ren. Highs lower to mid 30s. Lows upper 20s. Light wind. services will be 1 p.m. Monday at Hill- three nieces, Lola Wilson of Lon 9view, County ton - Door kicked open; TV, leather crest Burial Park. Wa., Viola Evernan of Rainier, Or., and 24800 block 129th PI. S.E., Kent - jacket, boots, 10 silver dollars and other Extended Elvera •'Muggie" Mayeda of Rainier, Cat burglar apparently entered home valuables stolen: $2,400 loss. (Jan. 14) Western Washington - Tuesday through Thursday decreasing chance of showers Linda Romero Ore; and nephew, Delbert Burnham of while residents slept and took TV, VCR,Rainier, Ore. Tuesday and partial clearing. Areas of fog Wednesday and Thursday otherwise partly jewelry collection and watch; loss esti- cloud . Lows mid-30s to lower 40s. Highs 4os to lower 50s. Linda Romero. 71, died in Renton on Graveside services will be at Green AUBURN ELKS Y 9 mated at $7,860. (Jan. 14) Eastern Washington-Tuesday through Thursday, snow showers east part Tuesday Jan. 15, 1992. Mountain Cemetery in Rainier, Ore. at 1 11000 block S.E. 222nd St., Kent- otherwise partly cloudy and breezy. Areas of fog developing Wednesday and Thursday She was born May 12, 1920 in Ft. p.m. Monday. Pastor J.C. Sparks will otherwise fair. Lows 15 to 30. Highs 30 to 45. Washakie, Wyo. officiate. _—_ ___ _ 1314 Auburn Way North Survivors include her sons, John, Arrangements are through Price Hel- Call for Pass conditions g ton Funeral Cha ei in Auburn. Insurance Charlie Jefferies and Frank; a daughter, P Washington mountain ass conditions as reported Saturday b the state Department Cindy Heston; many brothers and sis- 9 P P Y Y P Valley Daily News publishes obituaries free Tim Gates of Transportation: ters; many grandchildren and great- Snoqualmie-24 degrees,overcast.Gusty winds.Bare and dry,ice in places. grandchildren. of charge as a service to families of the .'.. 852-1163 Thursdays 6:30 p.m. Stevens-20 degrees,fog.Bare and wet with ice in places.Traction tires advised. Graveside services will be 11:30 a.m. deceased. State Farm Fire and Casualty Open to the Public Swauk-Blewett - 20 degrees, scattered clouds. Bare with frost and ice in places. Monday at Riverton Crest Cemetery. State Farm Insurance Companies Snack Bar Traction tires advised. Memorials may be made to St. Jude Home Oflices Bloomington,Illinois Satus-24 degrees,overcast.Bare and drywith frost in laces. White-24 degrees,clear.Bare,frost and ice in places.P Shrine, 309 North Paca St., Baltimore, �1 � Sherman-17 degrees,broken clouds.Compact snow and ice.Traction tires advised. MD 21201. Mount Baker-36 degrees,clear.Bare and dry,ice in places.Traction tires advised North Cascades-Closed for winter. Roger D. Mauch CA PO p OPENING SOON Chinooayuse-Closed for winter. ,1 Chinook-closed for winter. Roger D. Mauch, 47, of Federal Way Dec. 27 �� Toda 's tides died Jan. 16, 1992 at his home. He was Enjoy quality family y 1st low 11:15 a.m. 6.4 ft. LITTLE, Carla and Robert, Tacoma, a son, a resident of Federal Way since 1980, tat high 5:15 a.m. 12.8 ft. 2nd high 4:17 p.m. 11.4 ft. St. Francis Community Hospital. coming from Roseberg, Ore. �' dining at El Caporal 1st low 10:26 a.m. 7.3 ft. end low 11:13 p.m. -2.3 n. LUTOVSKY, Sue and Greg, Federal Way, �� 8 l� 2nd high 3:15 p.m. 11.5 ft. Tides are for South Puget Sound. Mr. Mauch was born Aug. 16, 1944 in a daughter, St. Francis Community Hospital. 2nd low 10:28 p.m. -2.8 ft. Albany, Ore., and grew up in Newport, PAZ, Rita and Robert, Federal Way, a Mexican Restaurant Sun times Ore. He moved to Federal Way in 1980. daughter, St. Francis Community Hospital. l' located at 4 Corners Monday's tides Sunset today 4:51 p.m. Mr. Mauch married Cathie Walker on 1st high 5:50 a.m. 13.2 ft. Sunrise Monday 7:49a.m. Sept. 27, 1986. He served the U.S. Dec. 30 by the Safeway. Navy during Vietnam, was a member of Washington Trucking Association, and BOBERG, Cheryl and Richard, Federal g 26915 Maple Valley'BI, Diamond Rd. SE NATION Evansville 24 19 cdy was an avid offer. Way, a daughter, St. Francis Community Hos- '' Fairbanks 01 -02 cdy Survivors Include his wife, Cathie pital. 1�1 r 4 Corners — by Safeway ' U.S. temperatures Fargo -08 -23 cdy Mauch of Federal Way; a son, Randy BROWMAN,Linda and Peter,Federal Way, T`Rt tr 1t��'' p Flagstaff 37 15 cdy a daughter, St. Francis Community Hospital. _ Gra of Las Ve as, Nev.; a daughter, Temperatures indicate previous days nigh Flint 07 00 cdy Y 9 9 PHINNE,Marilyn and Darren, Federal Way, FAMILY MEXICAr1 RESTAURANTS , and overnight low to 5 p.m. PDT. Fort Smith 41 32 cir Jonni Gray of Federal Way; a SlSter, a son, St. Francis Community Hospital. HI Lo 45 cdy1tIk Fort Wayne 12 od cdy RosemaryHarn of Portland; and three STRECKER, Angela and Mark, Tacoma, a 8488 Abilene,Texas 31 28 45 cdy Fresno 41 37 cdy Akron Canton 14 10 sn Goodland 31 21 cir grandchildren. son, St. Francis Community Hospital. Albany,N.Y. 22 10 sn Grand Junction 32 01 cir Memorial service will be 3 .m. Mon- Albuquerque 36 19 cdy Grand Rapids 09 05 .01 cdy P Q ��� � � � � � Allentown 27 22 cdy Great Falls 35 21 cir day at Yahn & Son Funeral Home In Amarillo 38 24 cdyDec. S1 Green Bay 05 -07 cdy Auburn. Burial Will be at Oak Lawn i D O • Anchorage 34 32 cdy Greesburg ,N.C. 49 32 cdy Memorial Park, Corvallis, Ore. Memori- BLEGEN, Linda and Zane, Auburn, a I $400 Asheville 40 27 cdy Harrisburg 31 22 cdyAtlanta 43 31 .05 cdy Hartford 25 11 cdy als may be made to the Good Samaritan daughter, St. Francis Community Hospital.Atlantic City 33 27 cir Helena ,5 -03 cir Hospice of Puyallup. LARSON, Jodie and Erik, Federal Way, a Austin 43 39 .60 cdy Honolulu 80 64 cir dau hter, St. Francis Communit Hos itBaltimore g 34 26 cdy Houston 45 40 2.27 cd SEABOURNE-MILLER, Nancy Sebourne FF Baton Roue 41 39 3.07 cd Hunisville,Ala. 36 27 coyPreston W. Gross Bit 31 17 cir Indianapolis 14 07 cdy and Jack Miller, Tacoma, a son, St. Francis HAIRCUTS Birmingham 36 29 .20 cdy Jacksonville 38 34 .. cdy Community Hospital. 1 $1000 1 Bismarck 15 10 cdy Jacksonville 58 42 cir Preston W. GfCSS, 65, Of Kent died NIELSEN, Jennifer and Shawn, Federal Boise do 26 cir Juneau do 21 m rn Jan. 16, 1992 at Valle Medical Center Includes Shampoo& Style OFF 1 Boston 27 23 cdy Kansas City 36 21 cir Y Way,a daughter,St. Francis Community Hos- Bridgeport 28 20 cdy Knoxville 37 23 cir in Renton. He was a Kent resident for pital. 1 Brownsville 11 40 .01 cdy Lake Charles 43 41 2.87 cdy 24 years. WOODMANSEE, Paula and Ralph, Puyal- I U � �� FACIALS 1 Burfalo 11 11 .0, sn Lansing 09 od cdy Mr. Gross was born Set 17, 1926 in lu a son, St. Francis Community Hospital. Cari gton,Vt. 11 00 .02 sn Las Vegas 57 3s cdy Sept. P, Y °V 1�aa o Dermalogica Products Available Caribou 04 -07 .09 cdy Lexington 24 19 cdy Eugene, Ore. He married Joyce on April ° 0 I, 1 Casper 27 os cir Lincoln 26 13 cir 24, 1964. He loved photography and Jan, °° 1 R Cu�z SNAMA"S 1 Charleston,S.C. 54 44 cir Little Rock 37 31 .05 cir c °n c v 1\ Charieston,W.Va. 28 19 cdy Los Angeles 65 45 cdy cooking. I o Charlotte,N.C. 50 29 Or Louisville 25 21 cdy Survivors include his wife, Joyce ROBINSON, Melina and Greg, Seattle, a 1 Chattanooga 39 25 cir Lubbock 35 26 .07 cdy Gross of Kent; two sons, Martin P. son, Valle Medical Center. Y 1 Hair Fashions B Connie A ts. Available Mon.-Sat. Cheyenne 27 04 .02 cir Macon 49 36 .07 cdy Y PP 1 Chicago „ 02 cdy Madison ,0 03 cdy Gross of Texas and William F. Gross of pp 859 9033 859 9269 1 Cincinnati 23 14 cdy Medford 62 23 cdy 1 n Tues-Fri. Cleveland 14 11 .01 cdy Memphis 36 34 cir Kent; three daughters, Mindy Raymond Jan. 2 Colorado Spgs .31 18 cir Miami Beach 73 58 cdy of Renton, Leslie Etheredge of San 1 Call for A t. Cowmbia,sC. 55 36 cir Midland Odessa 32 30 .72 cdy Francisco and Lori E. Gross of Kent; BRADER, Karen and Michael, Buckley, a 1 1 Coiumbus,Ga. 42 38 .26 cdy Milwaukee 11 00 cdy Coiumbus,0hio 19 12 cdy Mpls-St Paul 01 -12 cdy and five grandchildren. daughter, Valley Medical Center. I C n Next to Ivars on Expires Concord,N.H. 19 07 .03 cdy Mobile 44 44 1.41 cdy A reception In his honor will be held 1 Gibson Co. Bldg, Kent's East Hill 2-29-92 Corpus Christi 49 47 1.77 cdy Montgomery 40 35 .52 cdy 1 Dallas-Ft Worth 36 34 .45 cdy Nashville 32 25 cir at the family home, Sunday at 2 p.m. Jan 3 I — — — — — — — — — — — Dayton 15 07 cdy New Orleans 43 40 1.40 cdy Memorials may be made to the Amerl- Daytona Beach 64 42 cdy New York City 24 29 sn can Lung Association. Arrangements by CLENDENING, Lisa and James, Auburn, a Denver 34 06 .01 Or Newark 30 28 sn son, Auburn General Hospital. Des Moines 15 Oa cdy Norfolk,Va. 50 36 clr Marlatt Mortuary. Detroit 10 05 cdy North Platte 37 16 cir DIERICK, Christine and Kevin, Kent, a Duluth -04 -18 cdy National temperature extremes for Saturday: daughter, Valley Medical Center. EI Paso 44 32 .08 cdy High 76 at Naples, Homestead and Fort Myers, Francis Eugene Hayes GUISE, Stephanie and Michael, Kent, a Elkins 17 17 sn Fla.; Low 26 below-zero at International Falls, daughter, Valle Medial Center. AND R A 5 Erie n r7 od an Minn. _Associated Press Francis Eugene Hayes, 56, died Jan. LE, R un and Woobin, Mountlake Terrace, Eugene 47 25 cdy y 1 13, 1992, at his home in Kent. a daughter, Auburn General Hospital. FASHION B0U1'1Q(JF Kent's Oldest Collision Repair Facility S P E N C O TRI-TECT" _ ' iRl-iEC • Heel Support • • CLEARANCE EVENT - N For use In Men's and Women s .f. S ru�'E,ve~ •"" with a savings of y Athletic and Dress Shoes. *Helps relieve arch pain. •Supports the arch. O 50 % - 80 % *Cushions the heel. designer merchandise! -Patented. • Friday, January 18 to TRAUMA CONTROL CENTER � amily Monday, February 3, 1992. harmaU '"" Monday-Saturday 10 am-6 pm Evenings by appointment O F A U B U R N THREE TECHNOLOGIES A 126 Auburn Ave. IN ONE PRODUCT! 201 Auburn Way No. 939-6663 Auburn 7 3 5-5171 757 N. Central 9 Kent • 854-3850 Next to Auburn General Hospital U.S.Patent#4674204