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County to purchase flood-prone trailer park
News Media By News on 5/21/2009
Michael Rowe - SnoValley Star
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King County land protection seems unneeded
News Media By News on 5/20/2009
SnoValley Star - Editorial
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Expansion of landfill not acceptable
News Media By News on 5/5/2009
Issaquah Press Editorial
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Council moves swiftly to fund protection of Raging River open space
News Media By News on 5/5/2009
Conservation easements help preserve 7,000 acres in the largest remaining block of open space in the Mountains to Sound Greenway The Metropolitan King County Council today closed a gap in the region’s “curtain of green” with its unanimous adoption of legislation to keep approximately 4,000 acres along the Raging River in unincorporated King County free from development, as part of a 7,000 acre acquisition by the State.
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May 2009 E-News from King County Councilmember Kathy Lambert
District 3 Newsletters By District3 Newsletter on 5/1/2009 12:00 AM
In this newsletter:
• Help for building permits
• Permit fee amnesty extended through June 30
• Green Globe Awards
• Pet license discount for seniors
• Energy saving tip
• New postal rates
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King County budget shortfall now $40 million to $50 million
News Media By News on 3/18/2009
King County's budget director Tuesday was the bearer of what now passes for good news. Bob Cowan told Metropolitan King County Council members that the budget shortage for next year, in the general fund that supports police, courts, health and social services, has gotten only $10 million worse than forecast last fall. ... Councilmember Kathy Lambert, R-Redmond, praised Cowan for being fairly accurate in such a volatile economy. She and Councilmember Larry Gossett, D-Seattle, were the only ones who stayed for the whole discussion in budget committee.
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King County reaches deal with feds on improving jail
News Media By News on 1/6/2009
King County corrections officers, trained to restrain inmates by grabbing their hair, must learn more humane techniques under a tentative agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice. And inmates, who recently received new mattresses as a disease-control measure, will get clean underwear every day — up from the already improved three pairs a week — if the Metropolitan King County Council approves the agreement. ... Councilmember Kathy Lambert, R-Redmond, said she thought the Justice Department's original letter alleging civil-rights violations exaggerated problems in the jail, but she said of the agreement, "I think we came to some good compromises."
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King County's about-face on treehouses
News Media By News on 12/17/2008
Coming soon to the Raging River: a bed-and-breakfast establishment where guests can sleep among the trees. Eight months after King County ordered Pete Nelson to tear down a high-end treehouse overlooking the river, officials are now offering him a chance to obtain permits for the structure and make it part of a back-to-nature retreat. ... The order to demolish the structure drew critical news coverage and prompted Metropolitan King County Councilmember Kathy Lambert to propose an ordinance that would have let Nelson build more treehouses as a demonstration project.
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State lawmakers: Give counties revenue options
News Media By News on 12/4/2008
AFTER six weeks of intensive deliberation, the Metropolitan King County Council averted a public-safety crisis with unanimous adoption of the 2009 King County Budget — but that is just the first of two steps needed to truly protect the highest priorities of public safety, health and quality of life. The structure for providing revenues for Washington counties is broken and must be fixed in the next session of the state Legislature. Without any action, we will be back here next year staring at a $41 million shortfall in 2010 and a $62 million shortfall in 2011, and the cuts to public safety and health will be truly devastating.
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Metropolitan King County Council rescinds plan to trim jail funding
News Media By News on 11/14/2008
Metropolitan King County Council members tentatively decided to reduce jail funding by more than $1 million in order to save programs for mentally ill and drug-addicted offenders — but rescinded the decision amid protests from the county executive and a combative labor union. ... On Thursday, Councilmember Kathy Lambert said budget leaders withdrew that decision for further study after Budget Director Bob Cowan told them it might not leave the jail enough money to pay overtime for corrections officers. "We went, 'Oops, we didn't know that.' That was new information to us," Lambert said. The programs the council wants to save screen out dangerous offenders, she said: "If they're not dangerous, if they're just drunk and disorderly, do we need them to be in jail?"
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