Since their arrival in October of 2019, Bill and Erin Webster have been dedicated to the close-knit and nurturing community that is Snohomish.
In this new age of virtual learning, students are not the only part of the classroom feeling disconnected.
The Snohomish Farmers Market is relocating this year to be along Union and Glen avenues.
Snohomish High’s theater club is time-traveling a Broadway classic to the beat of a different drum for its rendition of “Once Upon A Mattress,” which has two more weekends of performances.
From one to two. On July 19, the City Council will hold a public hearing and vote to implement HB 1337, which is in favor of changing the number of Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) on a property from one to two.
Algae makes Blackman Lake unsafe
The real estate contract between the city and Fire District 4 over three properties is canceled.
Some residents and the school district are in a conundrum: about a field, its use and just who has a say in what happens next on what’s currently an open space in midtown Monroe.
Sometime early next year, an ordinance to add three more marijuana retail stores will be put before the City Council.
The Everett School District has a school bond in the works for this spring.
The city is preparing to demolish part of the Carnegie building downtown, fulfilling a plan to restore the site to its original 1910 footprint.
Hundreds of new apartments may be under construction by June as part of the next step for the Riverfront Development.
The City Council welcomed five incoming youth council members at its Sept. 1 meeting.
SNOHOMISH — “I’ve seen a lot of people walk by here over the years but I haven’t seen this,” a neighbor said as he shut off his lawnmower to go get a better view: a lamb was strutting down the road.
The Imagine Children’s Museum’s just scored a big gift toward its plan to double its footprint early this decade.
Small businesses have been hurting financially since the beginning of the pandemic.
Barbecue season is here, and this summer Kelso’s Kustom Meats is celebrating its 50-year anniversary.
Fifty-three people, if not more, died in Snohomish County without shelter during the past 12 months.
The Midtown Planning District Task Force is nearing the end of its work with its next meeting 6 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
Nurse shortages at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett are in part because other area hospitals have better pay rates, frontline nurses told the Tribune.