ARLINGTON – The City Council will look to approve a budget with almost $42 million in expenditures and $41.7 million in revenue at its meeting tonight at 7:15 at City Hall.
MARYSVILLE – The Marysville-Tulalip Chamber of Commerce annual report is one of the items on the City Council’s agenda for Dec. 1 at 7 p.m. at City Hall.
ARLINGTON — The historic Olympic Theatre and the vacant Best Cafe and Steakhouse next door are getting new life thanks to a local church that plans to reopen the theater and repurpose the restaurant as a not-for-profit coffeehouse.
EVERETT — The trial for a Marysville man accused of killing 15-year-old Molly Conley last year is now set to begin in early March.
EVERETT — A top administrator in Snohomish County’s Public Works Department was placed on paid leave recently after higher-ups learned she had two felony theft convictions — from more than a year earlier.
ARLINGTON – The annual Santa Parade kicks off the fun at noon Saturday, Dec. 6.
The Recreation Department is seeking participants for the parade, which includes floats, sports teams, drill teams, businesses, youth organizations, canine clubs, a holiday train, fire trucks and more, followed by Santa on a draft horse-drawn wagon.
ARLINGTON — The Arlington Community Food Bank marked its first Thanksgiving meal distribution at its new location Nov. 21, and thanks to an efficient new signup program, holiday basket coordinator Sara Katanik expects them to serve close to 450 families through Nov. 24.
ARLINGTON — Haller Park became the site of a dual memorial to the March 22 Oso slide’s victims and those who responded to it, as the Tulalip Cabela’s dedicated two granite benches Nov. 15.
The burn ban is being lifted in Snohomish County effective Nov. 19 at noon.
Arlington, Lakewood and Marysville schools started practice this week for the upcoming winter sports seasons.
The Puget Sound Clean Air Agency imposed a stricter Stage 2 burn ban for Snohomish County effective at noon Sunday because of worsening air quality.
ARLINGTON — A student is facing a felony charge after allegedly threatening to blow up Arlington High School in September.
ARLINGTON — “Fewer than ten percent of Americans can claim the title of ‘veteran,’ because ‘bad-ass American’ is not a job title,” American Legion Post 76 Cmdr. Chris Raboin said, as he addressed attendees of the Legion’s Veterans Day ceremony Nov. 11. “Less than one percent are currently defending us in the global war on terror. That debt can never be repaid, but the gratitude of our response must last forever.”
