Mary Woodward looked out across the crowd that packed the Japanese American Exclusion Memorial, their many faces illuminated by the flickering flames of candles in the frigid night air, and was impressed.
Islanders may soon have the chance to fly through a forest of tall trees like a wide-eyed woodpecker. A Bainbridge Island couple who have been pioneers in the commercial zipline industry are planning on starting a zipline canopy tour business near Pleasant Beach Village.
A Kitsap Transit bus driver is to blame for the early November accident that left a 52-year-old bicyclist with serious injuries after he was hit while biking alongside Highway 305, according to Bainbridge Island police.
The Bainbridge Spartans will field a talented, but largely untested, group of gymnasts this season.
The city council got a look at the latest options for a new branding logo for Bainbridge Island at its meeting Tuesday, but enthusiasm for the new logos was in short supply from council members.
Kaycee Taylor, the athletic director for Bainbridge High and the coach of the boys swimming and diving team, has cancer.
Purchase price ranges from $2.4 million and $2.6 million.
Outstanding place to call home, a nearly unmatched quality of life and a right neighborly island. Quality, affordable housing? Not so much.
Gov. Jay Inslee visited Captain Johnston Blakely Elementary earlier this month to see first-hand the school’s instructional efforts on STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics).
Thousands of islanders spent the night without electricity after a powerful windstorm knocked down trees and power lines in Kitsap County Tuesday afternoon.
Talk about a sweet — and sensational — surprise. At the end of a dramatic 200-yard-medley relay race at last weekend’s 3A Girls State Swim & Dive Championships, the Bainbridge Spartans found themselves in familiar territory: first at the finish line and on their way to the top step of the winners’ platform.
If you can’t stand the heat, stay out of the kitchen, or so the old saying goes. It’s a bit more complicated at Bainbridge High: If you can’t stand the cheese, stay out of the voting booth.
The Bainbridge Island City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to abandon efforts to buy land north of city hall for a new public safety building.