A paperwork foul-up has cost the director of Visser Funeral Home her job and has led to the mass resignation of the staff at the Langley business.
The offices of the Record and the Whidbey News-Times took on an international flavor this week with the visit of two South Korean media representatives.
A major Tibetan Buddhist symbol of peace, tranquility and posterity will be blessed this week at Earth Sanctuary east of Freeland.
Island County Fire District 3 officials are rethinking their long-considered plan for a new headquarters and training facility at Bayview.
A proposal to build a tram on city property to connect the Langley Marina with Cascade Avenue has thrown some on the city council for a loop.
The South Whidbey School Board will meet in a closed-door session on Monday, April 25 to screen the applicants for job of district superintendent.
HOPE Therapeutic Riding Center is planning for its annual “Mother of All Garage Sales” at the American Legion in May, and is looking for donations from the community for the sale, one of the nonprofit’s major fundraisers.
The city may enforce “designated parking areas” for people working or volunteering downtown, and then target those drivers who shuffle their cars around spaces on Second and First streets during the day for more costly parking tickets.
The South Whidbey Historical Society Board will honor the docents of the South Whidbey Island History Museum and also review the nominations for officers at their next meeting in May.
The Langley Planning Advisory Board needs to back up and try again, according to the city’s new planning chief, because its efforts to write new development regulations have resulted in rules that are “too complex for a small town such as Langley” and “legally questionable.”
The South Whidbey School Board will hold a workshop tonight on next year’s budget.
Parks officials will meet this week to get an update on the district’s comprehensive plan and talk about a camping variance that has been requested for Amateur Radio Field Day.
LANGLEY — The city council won’t rethink its decision to approve the controversial Langley Passage housing project.