COMING FRIDAY: Your ballot companion ... North Olympic Peninsula Voter Guide

COMING FRIDAY: Your ballot companion … North Olympic Peninsula Voter Guide

  • Sunday, October 12, 2014 12:01am
  • News

JUST IN TIME as ballots in the all-mail general election arrive in voters’ mailboxes, the Peninsula Daily News will publish a guide to help with voters’ important decision-making.

The county Auditor’s Office will mail out ballots Wednesday, and the North Olympic Peninsula Voter Guide will appear with Friday morning’s PDN editions.

The 28-page, magazine-style Voter Guide will provide information on local, regional and state Supreme Court candidates as well as local and statewide ballot measures in the election that ends Nov. 4 at 8 p.m.

After Friday, complimentary copies will be available at the PDN’s Port Angeles and Sequim offices during business hours and online 24/7 at www.peninsuladailynews.com.

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Grant Fairchild, 9, of Port Angeles plays Pictionary as Feiro Marine Life Center executive director Melissa Williams holds the drawing board outside the center on Saturday. Feiro hosted “Day of Play” with a variety of children’s activities geared toward conservation and the marine environment. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Day of Play

Grant Fairchild, 9, of Port Angeles plays Pictionary as Feiro Marine Life… Continue reading

Some local and state leaders said $30.5 million to construct the U.S. Highway 101 East Sequim Road Project — including completion of the Simdars Road interchange — could be moved to in-progress larger projects if Initiative 2117 passes as state transportation funds may be reduced to compensate for reduced funding for efforts to reduce the state’s carbon footprint. The Sequim project is near the top of the state’s Move Ahead Washington grant program and funded by the Climate Commitment Act (CCA), which would be repealed if I-2117 is passed in the Nov. 5 general election. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
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Officials: Bypass could be shelved if I-2117 passes

Sequim, first responders considering Naloxone distribution spots

Effort could provide medicine to help reverse opioid overdose

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Weekly flight operations scheduled

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Anderson to address Forks chamber

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Helen Haller Elementary third-graders Annyah Beck, 9, left, and Accasia Andertson, 8, examine a water quality display using an oyster for demonstration at a booth staffed by Rob Banes and Liz Maier, both health advisers for the state Department of Health, during the Dungeness River Festival on Friday at the Dungeness River Nature Center in Sequim. The event brought a variety of environmental and educational agencies in a celebration of the outdoors and conservation. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
River fest

Helen Haller Elementary third-graders Annyah Beck, 9, left, and Accasia Andertson, 8,… Continue reading

State preps for takeover

Parks will manage area if PDA dissolves

Grants to fund two clean energy projects in Clallam County

One focuses on wood byproducts while the other includes a microgrid

Contractor plans to hire local suppliers for Stevens Middle School

Informational webinar draws 40 participants

Speed limit increased for section of road under construction

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