TULALIP — Jesica Stickles knows the good work that her volunteers are doing through the feedback they get.
ARLINGTON — As much as the San Juan Salsa Co. remains committed to serving nothing but handcrafted salsas, they’ve nonetheless outgrown their facilities and will be expanding into a new building by the end of the year.
ARLINGTON — Justin Brackett found out he no longer had a job when he woke up and checked Facebook on his phone.
LAKEWOOD — Residents of the still-rural Lakewood community or not too crazy about the city of Marysville’s plans for their future.
MARYSVILLE — While stream restoration projects are a common sight on city and county lands, Adopt-A-Stream planted trees and shrubs along the sides of streams running through private property in Marysville.
MARYSVILLE — Despite 42 years in the fire service, and 21 years as the fire chief of Marysville, Greg Corn has no real reason for retiring, other than just feeling like it’s time for a change.
LAKEWOOD — “It reminds me of Everett High School,” Elda Mercado said, as she looked at the plans for the new Lakewood High School. “There’s lots of daylight.”
MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Strawberry Festival crowned Senior Royalty princesses Marina Ciferri and Cassie Coate, before crowning Savannah Perkins as queen at the April Friesner Memorial Royalty Scholarship Pageant March 14.
SMOKEY POINT — “We’re the largest exporter by value,” Richard White, manager of state and local government relations for Boeing, told the Arlington-Smokey Point Chamber of Commerce March 10.
MARYSVILLE — “It only looks like a torture device,” Scott Ballenger laughed, as he chained the large wooden box to Quinton Morris’ wheelchair. “But it’s really training technology.”
ARLINGTON — Students from Marysville and Arlington received a hands-on lesson in real-life lawyering through the YMCA’s Mock Trial program.
TULALIP — “It’s a long, winding road, and we’re at the very beginning of trying to understand what to do about marijuana here in Indian County,” Tulalip Tribes Vice Chairman Les Parks said, following the Feb. 28 Tribal Marijuana Conference.
TULALIP — Gary Chandler represents the Association of Washington Businesses so naturally he wouldn’t want the state legislature to pass more taxes on them.
But a revolt?