Last Saturday, 50 youth got the chance to screen their short documentary films at the Seattle International Film Festival, something some professional filmmakers don’t get the chance to do.
In three years, Kitsap Transit needs to begin replacing its bus fleet, but does not have the projected budget to bear the expense.
UPDATE: The waterline serving Big Valley Road will be replaced with a larger pipe to replace the aging system in early June.
Six months ago, the Book Stop faced going out of business. On May 26, noon to 5:30 p.m., it celebrates its 30th anniversary.
By the time their films premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival June 1, 50 student filmmakers will have worked for 36 hours straight to produce their community-based documentaries on the Suquamish culture.
Poulsbo Elementary School was evacuated Wednesday for the second time in two days, after a student noticed a couch in the school’s library was on fire.
Brianna and Nick Strand are taking the annual Great Strides Walkathon for Cystic Fibrosis to the next level. This year’s walk is June 1 at 10 a.m., but the Strands have added even more activities for participants before the walk, so show up early.
or improving the busy intersection of State Route 305 and Suquamish Way will be whittled down in the coming months by the state Department of Transportation.
Two groups were crucial to the founding of Poulsbo — the Norwegian settlers who immigrated, and the ancestral people of the Suquamish Tribe, according to Viking Fest organizer Ron Krell.
M/V Lotus, one of the few yachts on the National Register of Historic Places, is visiting the Port of Poulsbo through May 31. The vessel arrived Wednesday.
Teens helping teens is the thought behind the upcoming Coffee Oasis benefit — the third annual National Dance Week Kitsap event — May 19 in North Kitsap Auditorium
City officials are glad the residents of the 6th Avenue neighborhood are onboard with the underground pipe improvement project, because the 80-year-old pipes are failing and need replacing.
Two nonagenarians share memories of growing up in 1930s Little Norway
The medical license of Dr. Narinder Duggal of Liberty Bay Internal Medicine was suspended by the state Medical Quality Assurance Commission Wednesday, after the commission filed an Amended Statement of Charges against him.
In the three years since the founding of the Kingston Giving Garden, its harvest and volunteer effort have doubled.
Last fall, while on a walk on the Carpenter Creek Trail behind Gordon Elementary, Bethany Lahaie’s third grade class noticed how overgrown the trail had become. They resolved to return in the spring, and clean it up for their Earth Day project.
Local Native artists will tell their ancestral stories through words and artwork at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, beginning April 26.
The City of Poulsbo will appraise the old City Hall property to get a better sense of how it can be developed in the future. The City Council and mayor have been interested in a hotel being developed on the site, at 19050 Jensen Way. The city hired a consulting firm to study the site for a potential hotel last year, and came back with “a very positive response.”
The clock is ticking on fundraising for the Kingston 4th of July celebration. Organizer Pete DeBoer said the committee still needs $30,000.
An effort among Poulsbo’s private and public sectors has landed quite the whale. American Cruise Lines, a small-ship cruise line, will be sailing into the Port of Poulsbo beginning next Friday, and their passengers have a lot to look forward to.