Executive control and privacy issues related to public exposure of task force applicants was the theme
Though you may not be familiar with Lindsay Roe quite yet, you may remember her window-washing friend Bo.
The $470 million bond that would have paid to replace six elementary schools, and make improvements to transportation and safety for schools, is failing to gain the supermajority needed to pass.
The erosion of the bank at Pilchuck Park has the attention of city staff, but it is not getting resolved anytime soon.
In Snohomish and Monroe, recycling pickup in the city will cost more if rate adjustment requests from Republic Services are granted.
A 22-year-old Everett man is in custody for child pornography crimes that were revealed after an investigation of an anonymous bomb threat at Glacier Peak High School that occurred in mid-November.
Local kids got the opportunity to meet and play tennis with professional players and members of the University of Washington team
Action has started toward a year of visionary activity toward a Midtown Planning District, for an area along Avenue D from Sixth Street north to Highway 9 to accommodate new development.
The City Council voted unanimously Jan. 29 to adopt the city’s first-ever Climate Action Plan, with the stated goal that Everett city operations become carbon-neutral by 2050.
Jeremy Tod Staeheli, suspected in the fatal shooting of a Snohomish homeless man, was extradited to Washington State and is in King County jail awaiting arraignment for second degree murder.
A leading woman of the city’s past will be recognized at last, city leaders said when naming Everett’s newest park.
The Everett City Council voted Jan. 29 to ban multi-family homeless housing in some neighborhoods.
That memory of wiggling and shifting positions on hard, cold wood is a thing of the past, but new memories will form from their cozy replacements.
Negotiations following the end to a three-day walkout are not yet scheduled between Swedish and its union workers, after both sides reached a halt in marathon talks during the holiday season.
Ethan Martez was looking forward to a finals-week with a therapy dog at his side, but a policy problem led to the dog being ousted.
Insiders say telecom company may seek bankruptcy
A fort, lighthouse, and spectacular shoreline
The city pulled back its plan to introduce a special assessment tax to fund improvements in the area around Everett Station in part after property owners challenged data suggesting the majority of owners favor the idea.
It is a big wish list for school construction and safety, and the district has prepared to ask its 30,000 residents if they share the wish to improve schools.
On Jan. 29, the City Council is expected to vote conclusively on whether or not supportive housing projects for homeless individuals should be allowed to locate in single-family neighborhoods.