The City Council agreed on Oct. 1 to explore constructing a new municipal building for the city’s campus
State Attorney General Bob Ferguson visited the Monroe Rotary Club’s meeting last week to explain the office’s role and speak to some of its work.
It’s a night where the best-kept houses in each of Everett’s 19 neighborhoods shine. The annual Monte Cristo Awards start at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 10 at the Historic Everett Theater, 2911 Colby Ave. An opening reception is at 6:30 p.m. that night.
The East County Parks District is asking voters for new funding for the first time in a decade.
Customers nearing the Sky River Bakery can hear Andrew Abt before they see him.
Next meeting is Oct. 15 public hearing at the commission
The city is preparing to demolish part of the Carnegie building downtown, fulfilling a plan to restore the site to its original 1910 footprint.
A Bickford Avenue paving project will begin sometime this month, so expect traffic delays.
It all started with a needle.
The real estate contract between the city and Fire District 4 over three properties is canceled.
The messaging in a grocer’s campaign to fight hunger is frustrating the directors of several area food banks.
Predatory merlins have frightened away the Vaux’s swifts from their popular roosting spot in Frank Wagner Elementary’s chimney.
The burned building at the former Seattle-Snohomish Mill did not carry insurance, two sources confirmed.
It starts with the feet, but circles around the flow.
Renee Jensen was terminated from her dual roles as chief administrative officer for EvergreenHealth Monroe and Senior Vice President for EvergreenHealth at a July joint board meeting.
Skurrchh.
What can be done to improve housing affordability in Everett?
The city’s Planning Commission last month analyzed the City Council’s moratorium that halts new supportive housing projects in single-family zoned neighborhoods, and may be providing some recommendations back to council later this fall.
Stay safe out there: show up Sept. 10, and a group of local safety officials will show you how.
When 125 Everett Junior Wildcats players kicked off the youth football season recently, most wore the safest helmets money can buy. Literally.