The weather’s fine, but the waters are not.
Stigma surrounding medication-assisted treatment for opioid addiction took a backseat to life restoration for three hours.
MONROE — The City Council this week after press time reviewed two “what-if” map scenarios to fit 2,888 more housing units, or potentially 7,500 more residents, in the next 20 years.
MONROE — Giusiana Prosser is vociferous about rare diseases.
The incidents that took place on First Street the evening of May 31, and the days following, caused an uproar within the community of Snohomish.
The city says it cannot establish a buffer zone to move anti-abortion protestors away from Planned Parenthood’s premises
The man whose calm voice on 90.7 KSER-FM was matched with a do-it-all attitude instrumental to getting the independent station on the air died of cancer last week.
City Councilwoman Liz Vogeli has a challenger from businessowner Marian LaFountaine on the ballot.
City planners began undertaking a full rewrite of zoning and land use codes last year, and now their “Rethink Zoning” effort is on stage for the big show.
A duel for City Council Position 7 has incumbent Councilman Steve Dana up against former Councilwoman Karen Guzak.
First Street did not see a large-scale protest like what happened in Seattle and Bellevue
The Wesco athletic conference has proposed an updated schedule in hopes all high school sports will have the opportunity to compete in the 2020-2021 school year.
When asked about the snow earlier this year, Marlene Presser, sitting on five acres in Lake Stevens, said: “It’s overwhelming, beautiful and I don’t like it.”
The candidates for Snohomish County Council, as well as school board, port and sheriff’s office candidates, attended a forum held by the Cascade View and Twin Creeks neighborhoods Monday, July 15 at the Everett Police Department South Precinct.
How two people met their fathers
The council district system being introduced this year has two candidates running for District No. 2: Greg Lineberry and Paula Rhyne.
Unknown vandals have done more than $200,000 in damage to parks in the past few months
Most City Council members have said they support a proposal to reduce speed limits to 20 mph across the main core of the city, including some arterial roads.
A high-tech approach to vertical farming is happening in Everett’s backyard and is feeding Everett’s schoolchildren.
Community residents saw their road destroyed in a February landslide