Do you ever hear of the difficulties in people’s lives and wonder, “How in the world are they going to make it?”
A number of residents in our region labor under the misconception that Enumclaw is still the relatively self-sustaining, isolated, small town I described last week.
What would your life be like if you were not able to speak your belief?
Seemingly oblivious to those around him, the young man talked on his cell phone, spit on the ground, puffed away on a cigarette and cursed loud enough for all to hear.
Seemingly oblivious to those around him, the young man talked on his cell phone, spit on the ground, puffed away on a cigarette and cursed loud enough for all to hear.
Frustrated by rising workers’ compensation premiums and a political stalemate in Olympia, the people who provide the jobs in our state want change.
As some of you may have guessed, this will be the last column I write as director for the Sumner Downtown Association.
How could I have gotten it so wrong for so long?
From roughly 1920 to 1950, Enumclaw was an authentic, relatively isolated, provincial hamlet with a population around 3,000.
A big thank you to the Enumclaw community for saving the pool.
I’m sure I said it at the time, but now, as Sumner struggles with a similar situation, I see it as a stroke of genius.
A big thank you to the Enumclaw community for saving the pool.
I’m sure I said it at the time, but now, as Sumner struggles with a similar situation, I see it as a stroke of genius.
Each year, the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council (SBE Council) publishes a list of the best to worst state tax systems for entrepreneurship and small business.
The old saying goes, “A picture paints a thousand words.” The world of spiritual thought and exploration wades thought a sea of words in its attempt to convey Spiritual meaning to our thinking process.
