Superintendent Kent Kultgen restated last week the school district is listening to viewpoints on its proposal to shift sixth graders from elementary school to middle school starting in 2025, which continues to get mixed views.
Ashleigh Cruze is new to the Snohomish Community Food Bank, but not to Snohomish.
The phone call made Matt Campbell’s heart sink.
Clare’s Place is clear of drug residue contamination
The PUD intends to purchase First Air Field to eventually turn it into a central campus for quicker storm outage responses up the Sky Valley and to be the area’s sole customer service office.
A new art gallery opening downtown on Feb. 3 will feature a collection of pieces representative of Monroe from local artists and military veterans.
Monroe officials have been examining roads prone to speeding in neighborhoods and looking at ways to slow vehicles.
People can now visit the graves of loved ones at Snohomish’s Grand Army of the Republic Cemetery from anywhere there is internet access.
A rough outline of the combined properties the city bought for a future public space are marked in black.
Crime prevention emerges as a prominent concern for over 80% of city residents, a survey by the city’s Public Safety Board (PSB) revealed.
The city has two options for the future stadium of the AquaSox
Students from across Snohomish County wrote and drew of why Martin Luther King Jr. is meaningful for the 23rd annual Prodigies For Peace contest.
Changes are happening at the Snohomish Chamber of Commerce. Its membership is growing, and it has ideas for adding more workshops and eventually creating a permanent business development hub.
A response to a letter to the editor in the Jan. 10, 2024 Tribune.