Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Kathy Mulady

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

All Stories

News >  Washington Voices

Work On New Sewer Lines Close Pacific Park Road

Pacific Park Road will be closed until July while two new streets, sewer lines and water mains are laid for proposed developments in the Indian Trail neighborhood. The new streets, Fotheringham and Parkway Drive, will serve lots eventually developed for Prince of Peace Church, an elementary school and houses. All will be located north of Pacific Park Drive. There are no plans to build the elementary school. No construction on the church or houses is scheduled this summer.
News >  Washington Voices

Leisure Care Makes Bid On 11-Acre Commercial Lot

The City Council is expected Monday to formally accept a bid of more than $1.75 million from Leisure Care of Seattle on 11-acres near Holland Road. The commercial lot, just north of the city's proposed NorthPointe Softball Complex, has about 1,200 feet of frontage on Holland, one of the city's fastest developing commercial areas. The same property was offered for auction last fall. The city rejected a high bid of $1 million.
News >  Washington Voices

Neighbors Express Concerns Over Proposed Baseball Field

Sloppy paperwork and inaccurate design plans could cost Pony League baseball four new diamonds next to Meadow Ridge Elementary School in the Mead area. Parents, angered by plans calling for adult-size diamonds, lighting and a concession stand, are fighting the proposal. Pony League supporters say they just made some mistakes. Representatives on both sides of the debate met with the Mead School District board Tuesday. The school district owns the 10-acre field and was planning to lease it to the baseball group for a token payment before the neighborhood uproar.
News >  Washington Voices

Tacoma Artist’s Work Chosen For New Shadle Park Library

Nine fused glass panels will reflect color and light, depicting Shadle places, people and activities when they are installed this fall at the new Shadle Branch Library. Tacoma artist Mike Juetten's proposal was selected from 16 projects. Nearly $20,000 is available to design, build and install the artwork under the city's policy of including art in new buildings. Juetten is a retired construction supervisor in Tacoma and a lifelong art lover.
News >  Washington Voices

County Approves Provisions To Help Storm Runoff Problem

Neighbors in flood-prone Eaglewood subdivision cheered last week when Spokane County commissioners unanimously approved emergency provisions to slow storm runoff in fast-growing areas. However, the North Side residents still want to know what commissioners plan to do about existing neighborhoods, such as theirs, that are regularly submerged. "The commissioners have been very good and very responsive about taking care of this problem in the future, we appreciate that," said Diane Blumel, who lives in the Eaglewood subdivision, near Colbert. "But we still need something done about the existing problem." Blumel, whose basement filled with 14 inches of murky water on New Year's Day, says she is speaking for herself, not her neighborhood. However, some of her neighbors also want to know what the county is planning to do about the community's existing flood problem. The neighborhood has banded together, forming work groups to research area geology, development history, monitor soil and water studies, and consider solutions. The county commissioners have banned grassy depressions or drywells to soak up storm water. New houses won't have basements, unless they are specifically built to keep out water. Besides Eaglewood, Moran Prairie, Glenrose Prairie, Central Park and other subdivisions are affected by the decision. All new developments must have lined evaporation ponds to handle rain and snowmelt. Commissioners had considered a moratorium on new building in the areas. In Eaglewood, only about 15 possible homesites will be affected by the commissioner's action. Another 32 have already been platted and will be exempt from the new restrictions. The county has suggested neighbors from Section 35, including Eaglewood, Peone Pines and Winfield Parks, will have to pay the bill to fix the current flooding problem. About 500 residents in that area signed a petition last spring opposing an assessment on individual homeowners, claiming it is a county problem. Unlike flooding from streams and rivers, storm water runoff stems from roads, driveways, roofs and other surfaces that can't absorb rain and melting snow. In Eaglewood, an underground clay bowl acts like a liner, preventing storm runoff from soaking deep into the ground. "I think it is great that we have brought this problem to their attention enough that they are making plans for future homes, but that isn't going to help our situation right now," said resident Nancy Bulmer.
News >  Washington Voices

Old Friends, New Neighbors As Farms Disappear, Five Mile Prairie Wrestles With Growth, Organizes Neighborhood Council

1. The Five Mile Prairie Homemakers Club wants the old-schoolhouse to be restored as a community center. Members greet Kathryn Click as she arrives for a portrait. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 2. A small, stone farm building crumbles before a brand new home with a million-dollar view. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 3. (Photo of wild flowers) Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 4. Jack Butters, who lives in one of the newer homes on Five Mile Prairie, mows the back of his lot where it butts up against land still in crop. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 5. "I used to know everybody up here - now I don't know anybody," says Willie Forsgreen, above, who still farms 80 acres. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 6. Left, Rossmoor Ridge subdivision neighbors get together to hold a garage sale. Photo by Kristy MacDonald/The Spokesman-Review 7. This drawing shows the Five Mile Prairie in 1908, looking south toward downtown. Drawing courtesy of the Five Mile Homemakers Club 8. Kathyrn Click, 87, and Elmer Dunham, 75, have been active in Five Mile activities for decades. /Spokesman-Review
News >  Washington Voices

Hands-On Program Gets Families Into Own Homes

Joe and Marcia Melton dreamed of owning their own home. But with one small child and another on the way, saving $10,000 for a down-payment seemed impossible. Then they heard about HomeStarts, a housing program that helps families build their own home to earn the down payment.
News >  Washington Voices

Lawyers Go Head-To-Head Over New Alton’s Store

A neighborhood battle to keep Alton's Tires from moving in escalated to a lawyer-versus-lawyer gambit before Spokane County Commissioners Tuesday. Last January, the county hearing examiner denied Duane Alton's request to rezone an eight-acre triangle of land along the Newport Highway for a tire store.
News >  Washington Voices

Short Ceremony Marks New Library Beginning

Groundbreaking for the Indian Trail Library - the last branch to be built with money from a 1990 city bond issue - was held Tuesday. Dignitaries, library officials and neighbors mingled during the brief ceremony in the dusty field near Farmdale and Barnes Road.
News >  Washington Voices

County Changes Zoning Code To Allow Sale Of Non-Ag Goods

They've been doing it for years, but last week, Green Bluff growers were given an official nod to sell knick-knacks and food not grown on their farms during festival times - if they have a permit. A change to the county zoning code specifies only home and landowners in agriculture areas are allowed the special permit.
News >  Spokane

Ideas Inscribed For Better County

Be they dreamers, visionaries or closet graffiti artists, Spokane County residents will have a chance to express their ideas for a better county when the "vision wall" goes on tour this summer. The red paper brick wall was unveiled Wednesday, the next step in developing the county's comprehensive plan. A clutch of county officials and employees gathered in the Public Works Building. They took turns wielding a black marker, writing their hopes on the wall.
News >  Washington Voices

Meeting Will Address Softball Park Concerns

Neighborhood concerns about the proposed NorthPointe Softball Complex, including plans for the sale of wine and beer, will be discussed at a community hearing next Wednesday. The complex is proposed near Colton and Howard roads on the North Side. The community meeting will be held at 7 p.m. May 14 in the Shiloh Hills Elementary School library.
News >  Washington Voices

Alton’s Appealing Zone Decision

(From For the Record, May 2, 1997:) Wrong date: A hearing before Spokane County commissioners over Alton's Tire's request for a rezone on the Newport Highway is scheduled for 5 p.m. May 13 in the Spokane County Public Works Building. A story in Thursday's North Voice gave the wrong date.
News >  Washington Voices

Area Residents Want Neighbor Evicted From Pacific Park Home

A group of Pacific Park residents is trying to get rid of a neighboring family, claiming excessive noise, cars coming and going at all hours, foul language and a Christmas Eve fight have cost them their peace of mind. "We have lived here for nine years and now, since they moved in, we just don't feel safe here," said Craig Van Velzer, one of 18 neighbors working with Safe Streets Now to have the family evicted.
News >  Washington Voices

Ceremony Marks Start Of Indian Trail Library

Work is scheduled to begin soon on the Indian Trail branch library. A groundbreaking ceremony is set for 3:30 p.m., May 13, with local dignitaries and community representatives. After the ceremony, a reception will be held at Indian Trail Community Church. The 10,600-square-foot branch library will be built on 1.5 acres near Indian Trail and Barnes roads, next to the community church. It was designed by Tan-Heyamoto Architects and features high ceilings, cozy reading areas and a cupola. There will also be a 40-car parking lot.