Condo tower gets go-ahead
A Spokane County Superior Court judge on Tuesday ruled against an attempt by former Spokane City Councilman Steve Eugster to block the city’s sale of riverfront property for construction of a high-rise condomium tower.
Judge Jerome Leveque said in a written decision that he will dismiss Eugster’s lawsuit on a motion for summary judgment brought by the city and an attorney for the developer. Leveque said that the two parcels in question, totaling 10,000 square feet of land, were not restricted from sale last year to the adjacent landowner.
Don Barbieri of Upper Falls LLC is building a seven-story tower with 32 condominiums just west of the Flour Mill overlooking the Upper Spokane Falls.
Eugster argued that the property had been converted to landscaped park use and a trail and could not be sold by the city without putting the sale up to a public vote as required by the City Charter. He said he will appeal Leveque’s ruling to the state Court of Appeals.
– Mike Prager
Movie shoot may stay put
Don’t say goodbye to that Samuel L. Jackson movie “Home of the Brave” quite yet.
Negotiations to bring the movie back to Spokane resumed Tuesday. A spokesman for North by Northwest, the Spokane production company, said no agreement had been reached as of Tuesday evening.
However, an official with the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees said there was a “strong possibility” the movie would come back to Spokane.
An IATSE strike shut down the production on Friday. The producers announced Monday that the shoot was moving to Vancouver, B.C.
– Jim Kershner
Gift cards, checks seized
Hundreds of checks and new equipment were seized during an investigation of a gift card scam, Spokane Police said Tuesday.
Investigators think stolen ID and checks were used to obtain gift cards, spokesman Cpl. Tom Lee said. Kelly R. Parr, 44, and Scott W. Allison, 32, both of Spokane, were booked into jail on suspicion of second-degree theft, Lee said. Shelly A. Wilkerson, 41, of Coeur d’Alene, was arrested on suspicion of first-degree possession of stolen property.
The investigation began Friday after the traffic stop of a truck reported stolen out of Idaho, Lee said. Evidence found in that vehicle led to subsequent searches of Parr’s truck and his home at 3511 E. Queen. Police said they found gift cards from Home Depot and Wal-Mart, along with a stolen credit card, new tools and a footlocker full of hundreds of checks. Officers also seized a photocopier and computer believed to be used to make fake IDs.
– Jody Lawrence-Turner
Boundary County, Idaho
Illness rate closes school
With a quarter of the students at Evergreen Elementary School under the weather this week, Boundary County School District officials told the rest to just stay home.
Spring break isn’t set to begin until next week in the North Idaho district. But 21 of the school’s 84 students called in sick Tuesday, and a few more were fading fast, taking teachers with them, Superintendent Don Bartling said.
“We have a problem even having enough teachers to teach,” Bartling said.
District officials hope that by the time students return from spring break, they will have recovered enough to break the infection cycle that passes germs from one child to another.
– JoNel Aleccia