Joker’s Peace gets lost on the Gig Harbor Open Studio Tour.
Bainbridge Dance Center puts its instructors on stage for its annual fall faculty showcase, Sept. 13-14 at BPA.
Kingston-based USA Today tech writer/author Byron Acohido and fellow reporter Jon Swartz document rising tide of cyber crime.
The entire historic archive of the Port Orchard Independent will be made freely available online.
You’re right — global warming is nothing to worry about I want to thank Karl Duff for his excellent conspectus…
We’re approaching the point at which we may need to agree on the meaning of the words “left behind” in the federal law known as “No Child Left Behind” (NCLB).
Longtime local music store DJ’s Music is hosting a grand reopening in its new location today in South Park Village.
A local hair salon’s offer to rid anyone of a mullet free of charge is attracting plenty of attention lately, but has yet to reel in even one client willing to lose the distinctive ’do.
Have you ever wondered how things could get this bad?
Wolves open with resounding win over Stadium
South Kitsap Fire and Rescue crews were called to a possible water mudflats near the Harper boat launch at Southworth…
Sound Off is a public forum. Articles are selected from letters to the editor or may be written specifically for this feature. Today, state Rep. Christine Rolfes (D-23rd District) argues Washington lawmakers can do more to make the state’s health care more accessible and affordable.
Special Interests
t Three new starters hope
Pirates will take over Port Orchard today, as the third annual Mystery Weekend will create a fantasy environment that challenges participants to solve a crime and win prizes.
Not unlike the Allied forces moving into France during World War II, Port Orchard is currently involved in annexation-related skirmishes on two fronts.
New businesses, a population shift, and the high cost of driving to Seattle and Tacoma has changed the face of Port Orchard nightlife, with several new opportunities emerging over the last few months.
Memo to local jurisdictions that have adopted — or plan on adopting — a critical areas ordinance (CAO) similar to King County’s: You will be sued, and you will lose.
That’s because the Court of Appeals, Division 1 in July dealt King County and Executive Ron Sims a major blow when it ruled the county’s regulations restricting rural landowners from clearing up to 65 percent of their property violated state law.
Bits of Harper history buried in the sand for years are now proudly on display in Harper Park thanks to the Eagle Scout project of one local teen.
Austin Jackman, 15, said he got the idea to build a sign detailing some of Harper’s past from his grandfather, Frank Barker, whom he said has lived in the small community for six decades.