The Ohio-based development company that is building a new shopping center at High School Road and Highway 305 has offered to build the city’s new police station within the development, but a 20-year lease for the facility comes with a high price tag.
Bainbridge planners are currently reviewing a plan for a nearly 5-acre development in Lynwood Center that includes three three-story buildings that would feature a boutique hotel, a rooftop restaurant with views of the water, and an “art farm” for working artists.
Teach your children well. Kind of hard to do when your family is from Wisconsin and the city of Bainbridge Island bans cheese, however.
Talk about a wedge issue. Bainbridge Island City Manager Doug Schulze banned cheese from city hall Friday due to the upcoming Seattle Seahawks game against the Green Bay Packers Sunday in the NFC Championship. But outrage over the ban exploded faster than mozzarella sticks that had been left too long in the deep fryer at Applebee’s.
Michael R. Scott is the city of Bainbridge Island’s newest council member.
Greg Millerd has pulled out as a candidate for the vacant Bainbridge city council seat.
Offsides? A well-known Bainbridge attorney is blowing the whistle on Bainbridge Island City Manager Doug Schulze’s attempt to ban cheese from city hall on Friday.
The Bainbridge Island Fire Department has extended job offers to four new firefighters, including three who will eventually be used to bump up staffing at the department’s north end station on Phelps Road.
Bainbridge Island City Manager Doug Schulze issued an executive order Wednesday that should leave Seahawks fans everywhere smiling: Cheese will be banned from city hall on Friday, Jan. 16.
The Bainbridge Island City Council abruptly reversed its week-old decision to focus its limited funds on a new city dock — rather than a makeover of Waterfront Park — at its meeting Tuesday.
Greg Millerd won’t need to attend this week’s special city council meeting in the flesh to still be considered as a possible appointee to the vacant Central Ward council seat.
Bainbridge Island will need to tap three different parts of the budget — including the city council’s contingency fund — to pay the $488,000 in settlement costs to end a public records lawsuit against the city.
Bainbridge residents — including two candidates for the vacant city council seat — are split on what the city should do with the Suzuki property, a 13.83-acre parcel of undeveloped land that sits at the southeast corner of New Brooklyn and Sportsman Club roads.