To the editor: Well, they did it. I was waiting for it and now it has happened.
To the editor: I am among the shoreline property owners who strongly support improved shoreline and near-shore habitat protection.
To the editor: The Bainbridge Island Garden Club would like to thank everyone who contributed to the successful completion of Waypoint Park. In addition to the many financial contributors, there were many volunteers – too many to mention — who worked hard to make the park a reality.
To the editor: Here’s something on the subject of abortion that is, well, not from the Pope, not in the Catholic vein, not religious at all. But it is something that every politician ought to be made to face up to.
To the editor: Bainbridge Island, where we love trees so much the removal of a half-broken limb is about to become a crime.
To the editor: What is missing from the Shoreline Management Program discussion is the human element, the aspect most overlooked by the city council which has successfully divided the community as if shoreline owners are not members of the community.
To the editor: We wanted to say a huge thank you to the Bainbridge Kiwanis club for saving the “All Comers Track Meets.”
To the editor: I am so grateful for, and heartened by, the attitude and words of Chiara D’Angelo-Patricio at the March 13 city council meeting regarding the Shoreline Master Program update.
To the editor: The photo on the front page of the March 15 Review of shoreline homeowners protesting made me think of the Charles Barkley Saturday Night Live skit, “White People’s Problems.”
To the editor: I was appalled by Tom and Connie Golon’s long and rambling letter yesterday. I suspect that it did not conform to your guidelines for length of letters to the editor.
To the editor: Will the new Shoreline Master Program rules actually help clean up Puget Sound? If not, why are we doing this?
To the editor: Several of those speaking against the Shoreline Master Program at the recent city council meeting stated that everyone in the room was an environmentalist, which came as a surprise to some of us in the audience.
To the editor: TB is dangerous because usually the lungs will cause coughing with or without blood or sputum, chest pain or pain “breathing or coughing.” The kidneys, spine and brain are susceptible too.