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

Pat Sciuchetti

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News >  Washington Voices

Valley Burglary Suspects Tracked Down By A Pay Phone

Some burglars are just too romantic. One, who broke into Ichabod's East at about 3:30 a.m. Saturday, stopped long enough to call his girlfriend from a pay phone inside the tavern. The woman returned the call about an hour later, using *69 because she didn't know where he was.
News >  Washington Voices

Woman Punched By Thief

An 18-year-old Spokane Valley woman was robbed and hit in the head with brass knuckles after she stopped for a man who jumped in front of her car. The victim told police she had seen her attacker minutes earlier in the passenger seat of a pickup truck parked at a convenience store near Pines and 32nd Avenue. She had stopped at the store just after midnight Thursday to buy cigarettes on her way home, sheriff's deputies said. A few blocks from the store, the man jumped in front of her car, forcing her to slow down, sheriff's deputies said. When she rolled down her window to speak to him, he reached in and put her car in park.
News >  Washington Voices

Youth Arrested For Burglary

Sheriff's deputies arrested a 16-year-old West Valley High School student for burglary of an unoccupied mobile home after the teen's laundry, clothes, books and student ID card were found inside. The owner of the mobile home also found beer cans and bedding inside the structure, indicating the suspect might have been living there, sheriff's deputies said. The teen apparently opened the mobile home's door and was about to step inside, police said, while the owner was inside checking on the property. The mobile home is located in the 400 block of N. Ella.
News >  Washington Voices

Caring For The Dead Edgecliff Residents Work To Restore ‘Forgotten’ Englewood Cemetery

1. The name on a weathered headstone is traced by the hand of Solvejg Anderson. Photo by Steve Thompson/The Spokesman-Review 2. At left, Josie Zeller, Anderson and Wendie Kiourkas confer as they try to trace the history of Englewood cemetery at the corner of Eighth Avenue and Thierman Street. 3. Solvejg Anderson, left, Josie Zeller, center and Wendie Kiourkas have teamed up to renovate the old Englewood Cemetery. Photo by Steve Thompson/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Washington Voices

Archery Range Owner Plans To Open Soon

With another legal hurdle cleared, Mark Jones now says his public archery range in Greenacres could be open for business within weeks. Jones, who owns the Outdoor Sportsman sports shop in Spokane, stirred up controversy late last year with his proposal to build a 28-acre indoor/outdoor archery facility along Linke Road south of Barker Road and 32nd Avenue. Neighbors fought his attempt to get the necessary conditional use permit from the county. After the permit was granted, neighbors Floyd Schmedding and Curt Berklund appealed the decision in Superior Court.
News >  Washington Voices

Burglar Takes Nothing In Break-In

A burglar broke into the Radio Shack electronics store at 13516 E. Sprague Friday morning, dropping in through a hole cut in the roof, sheriff's deputies said. The building recently had roof repairs done, said the store manager, who got a call from the business' alarm company around 1:30 a.m.
News >  Washington Voices

Cash, Equipment Taken In Break-In

Burglars stole an estimated $2,000 in cash and sports equipment early Sunday from Sports Creel, 12505 E. Sprague. The thief may have used his own ski boot to break the store's window and get into the building, sheriff's deputies said. Store employees found one unfamiliar boot inside the store after the 3:30 a.m. break-in. They found several pairs of new ski boots missing, along with several wake boards and the store's cash register, sheriff's deputies said. No arrests have been made.
News >  Washington Voices

Combined Dispatch Center Handles All County Fire Calls Officials Expect Savings And Faster Responses

More than two years after planning began, Spokane County fire districts have merged their four dispatch centers into one facility downtown. Now a month old, the new combined communication center at 508 N. Wall handles all fire and emergency medical service dispatching for the county. Fire chiefs from District 8, District 9, Valley Fire and the Spokane Fire Department believe the change will improve response times and save money. The consolidation also has allowed the districts to afford upgraded technology and new digital pagers for all firefighters.
News >  Washington Voices

Restaurant Robbed Of Cash, Tape

A man with a McDonald's patch on his coveralls robbed the Jack in the Box restaurant on North Pines Road early Saturday, escaping with cash and leaving three employees locked in a break room. The suspect also swiped the video tape from the restaurant's surveillance system, sheriff's deputies said. The man wore a nylon and a black ski mask on his head and was armed with a large, dark gun with a tapered barrel, employees told police.
News >  Washington Voices

Liberty Lake Sewer District Seeks Funds Up To $400,000 Needed To Unclog Drainage Ditch

Wetlands and dried up funds are hampering efforts to clean out Liberty Lake's silt-clogged drainage ditch. The 1.5-mile Liberty Lake drain, which regulates the lake's water level, must be cleaned out to prevent flooding and water pollution, said William Funk, director of the Water Research Center at Washington State University. Unfortunately, Funk said, the once-abundant state and federal grants used for such projects have dried up.
News >  Washington Voices

Swimming Pool Renovations In County Should Be Completed By June Opening

County commissioners have awarded Carroll Construction of Spokane a contract to complete $460,000 in repairs and renovations to two Valley pools and a north Spokane pool. The work at Terrace View and Park Road pools in the Valley and Holmberg pool in north Spokane will be finished by June, when the facilities open for the season, said Wyn Birkenthal, county Parks and Recreation Department director. Improvements will include patching all cracks in the pool tanks and covering them with a new shell.
News >  Washington Voices

Nova Services Plans Industrial Park Site

Nova Services, a non-profit job training and placement agency, is planning an $850,000 project that will give it a new home on 2.5 acres in the Spokane Industrial Park. Nova currently serves disabled and disadvantaged clients in a leased 12,000-square-foot building near the entrance of the industrial park. The building, with its uphill ramp and narrow doorways, hallways and bathrooms, has proven inconvenient to some of those clients, said Nova executive director Linda Brennan. The new facility, which Nova will own, will be designed to meet the access needs of the disabled. Nova's new building will be located on Marietta Avenue at the north end of the industrial park, Brennan said.
News >  Washington Voices

Four Arrested In Home Break-In

Sheriff's deputies arrested four men on charges of armed robbery and burglary after a break-in at a Valley home Friday afternoon. A 20-year-old man told deputies he was in his home in the 9000 block of East Montgomery when the intruders threatened him with a gun before taking his stereo equipment and money.
News >  Washington Voices

Trusting Her Heart Transplant Recipient Is Learning To Rely On New Organ

1. Karen Bray returned home on Jan. 18 after nearly dying from heart transplant difficulties. Photo by Steve Thompson/The Spokesman-Review 2. Karen and her husband Tab, are trying to rebuild the life they had before her heart problems. 3. Karen and Tab Bray go for a walk on the streets outside her parents' Valley home. Photo by Steve Thompson/The Spokesman-Review
News >  Washington Voices

Value Village Store Robbed

An unkempt man in his late 20s robbed the Value Village store at 13112 E. Sprague Monday afternoon. The man entered the store about 5 p.m. and handed the cashier a note demanding money, sheriff's deputies said.
News >  Washington Voices

Video Company Buys Former Greenacres Fire Station

The owner of a Spokane video production business plans to turn the former Greenacres fire station into a filming and editing studio. Gene Colburn, owner of Northwest Video Systems, said he chose the building at Appleway and Michigan because of its location and its large garage, which has high ceilings and good lighting control.
News >  Washington Voices

Health Problems Hinder Fairfield’s Mayor-Elect Robinson

Getting elected was the easy part. For Melford "Bud" Robinson, realizing his goal of becoming Fairfield's new mayor now hinges on his health. Robinson, who was elected mayor of the small farming town south of the Spokane Valley on Nov. 4 by a vote of 131-0, has never been sworn in. Just three weeks after winning the election, doctors told the 73-year-old ex-Marine he needed immediate heart surgery. During surgery, he suffered a minor stroke. He's since struggled to overcome lingering kidney infections.
News >  Washington Voices

‘58 Fanatic Valley Man’s Bevy Of Chevys Gives His Weekends Polish

1. Jim Corbett spends hours and elbow grease lovingly restoring his '58 Chevys. Few details escape his attention, including a crooked vanity plate on his Corvette. Photography by Dan Pelle/The Spokesman-Review 2. Jim Corbett, who turns 58 this month, has a collection of '58 items which includes his '58 Cameo pickup truck, car license plates from all 50 states and the District of Columbia from that year, and the car in the artwork on his jacket back. 3. Above, Corbett's '58 Impala is immortalized on his workshop wall. 4. Lynn Corbett, walking with Jim at right, claims his first '58 Chevy helped catch her eye.
News >  Washington Voices

Edgecliff Neighborhood Gets Its Own Prosecutor Prevention Of Crime Is Her Main Goal

Sharon Hedlund is a prosecutor, but you'll rarely see her in court. Her office is in the bedroom of a former drug house. Her main jurisdiction is a deteriorating Valley neighborhood. Her goal is prevention - not prosecution. Hedlund is a neighborhood oriented prosecutor, hired by the Sheriff's Department to help the Edgecliff neighborhood turn itself around. She began the task this week, setting up her office in the small gray house that serves as the SCOPE Edgecliff station at 7206 E. First. "Our main goal is to reduce crime (here)," said the 31-year-old Spokane native. "I can prosecute to my heart's content, but that won't do it." Hedlund's job is made possible by a $131,000 federal grant. She joins property crimes detective Steve Barbieri, who began working out of the SCOPE station last summer. She'll also share the small house with 23 SCOPE volunteers, community members who are being trained to fight crime and deterioration in the one-mile-square neighborhood bordered by Sprague on the north and Eastern and Park on the west and east.
News >  Washington Voices

Man Arrested For Assault On Deputy

A 45-year-old Spokane man was arrested Saturday after he tried to run over a sheriff's deputy at Valley Self Storage on 11302 E. Sprague. Nicholas T. Dyer, of 1029 W. First, was arrested for attempted second degree assault. The suspect had been renting a storage unit at the facility, sheriff's deputies said. He came into the office about 9:40 a.m. demanding the name and phone number of the person renting the unit next to his. Dyer believed the renter next to him had stolen some of his property, the manager said. When the manager refused to give him the information, he began threatening her, deputies said. The manager then called 911.