A recent evaluation conducted by North County Fire Authority may save some residents money on their homeowners insurance.
The department reported in April that it has received a new fire protection classification from the Washington Surveying and Rating Bureau.
Deric Dobesh remembers the first time he saw the damage.
Wading through 18 inches of water and a walking over pieces of collapsed roofing, the owner of Big Foot Music noticed that a couple of guitars still hung from a partially collapsed wall.
The city of Arlington is offering free disposal of residents’ electronic devices during its 2010 spring cleanup event.
Residents must bring and display a current city water/sewer billing statement, which will serve as admittance to the event, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., June 12, at the Arlington Municipal Airport.
The Arlington School Board will be holding a special work session to discuss the possible closure of Trafton Elementary School.
The meeting will take place at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 8, at the Administration Building (315 N. French Ave.).
Patricia C. Kincaid went home to be with the Lord on June 28, 2010. She is survived by her husband…
Shirley was a kind, giving and loving woman with a very big heart. Shirley was our sister, aunt, grandmother and…
On June 7, the City Council could approve a project at Arlington Municipal Airport that would seal small cracks on one of the its runways.
Aiden Branson Alvarado was born on December 23, 2009 with an extremely rare cancer called infantile fibrosarcoma. Although Aiden underwent…
Arlington Masonic Lodge No. 129 honored students and educators during its recent Junior Achievement scholarship evening.
Members of the Arlington High School’s 61st Eagle Squadron took some time to clean up Highway 9.
Trafton students rehearsing for their annual spring program at Arlington High School had to leave earlier than expected on Thursday, May 27.
Village Community Services’ annual Taste of Decadence fundraiser adopted a space exploration theme this year in the Stillaguamish Senior Center, but in the midst of an ongoing recession, its concerns remain rooted on the ground level.
“We need money now more than ever,” said Michelle Dietz-Date, resource development manager for VCS. “It takes $150,000 a year to meet the needs of our aging participants, so that they can continue to enjoy the same quality of life.”
The Marysville Lodge of the Order of the Sons of Italy is named “Mille Cugini,” or “Thousand Cousins,” to express how inviting and all-encompassing it strives to be, and on May 22, the Marysville Sons of Italy sought to live up to their name by welcoming the general public to their annual fundraising dinner at St. Mary’s Catholic Church.
