The Police Department doubled its team of community service officers from one to two earlier this month.
The city’s looking for local artists and artist teams to paint designs on the temporary planters along First Street.
The PUD is proposing to re-adjust its electricity rates higher than initially announced.
Residents of Snohomish are proud of their town; they can balance the feeling of history in downtown, and festivals help continue its small-town feel.
For a few years now, City Hall has been talking about asking voters to annex the city library system into Sno-Isle Libraries, to ask voters to spin off the Everett Fire Department to be part of a regional fire authority and to ask voters to increase property taxes above the state’s 1% annual limit.
A program directing people to the most efficient and appropriate level of care when calling 911 launched earlier this month.
GroundFrog Day lives, as the organizers of Kla Ha Ya Days will be continuing the annual January event starting next year.
Residents displaced from a freak flood in the River’s Edge Apartments are taking it day by day after having their belongings ruined, their food spoiled and their sense of home interrupted.
Remember When Antiques Mall, one of Snohomish’s five oldest antique shops, is closing in the coming weeks due to circumstances beyond its control.
The 2023 inductees into the Snohomish High School Hall of Fame were honored during the halftime of the Jan. 30 Snohomish boys basketball game.
Veterans, community leaders and members of the community gathered on Saturday to welcome and celebrate the opening of a downtown art gallery.
Combining the city’s Everett Transit bus system into the region’s Community Transit system would yield more routes in Everett, later service hours and shorter bus wait times, leaders from both systems presented last week.
The 103-year-old gazebo at Clark Park will be removed because of safety concerns at the park, Mayor Cassie Franklin made public late last month.
A comment on the formerly proposed sixth-grade switch in Snohomish Schools to go K-5 / 6-8 versus K-6 / 7-8.