City Councilman Hal Seligson wasn’t willing to let a little progress stop him now. Seligson had hoped to present his fellow council members with a resolution last week that would put the city squarely in support of a proposed state law that would legalize same-sex marriage.
MUKILTEO — A former Langley resident was arrested after threatening to set off a bomb on the ferry M/V Cathlamet after it left Clinton on Thursday morning.
MUKILTEO — A former Langley resident was arrested after threatening to set off a bomb on the ferry M/V Cathlamet after it left Clinton on Thursday morning.
LANGLEY — The winner of the Langley Middle School geography bee hasn’t been all over the world. Not yet, at least.
Keepers of Admiralty Head Lighthouse will hold their annual meeting from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Jan. 28 at the Coupeville Library.
Washington State Ferries officials will host a public meeting in Clinton next month to discuss upgrades and renovations to the Mukilteo Ferry Terminal.
The man arrested for making a bomb threat Thursday aboard the ferry M/V Cathlamet allegedly admitted to police he wanted to blow up the ferry on the Clinton-Mukilteo route.
At approximately 9 a.m. a man on the MV Cathlamet from Clinton left a backpack on the car deck of the 144-car ferry. Passengers overheard him making statements that left them fearful there was a bomb in the backpack.
Trooper Keith Leary said the suspect, a 32-year-old white, male from the Langley area, is being questioned by State Patrol at its Everett office in Silverlake. The man will be booked into the Snohomish County Jail following his interview with detectives.
The Washington State Patrol reported that everything is back to normal for the Clinton-Mukilteo ferry run after a bomb scare suspended service earlier today.
High winds caused power outages throughout Central and South Whidbey Island Thursday morning.
A man was arrested Thursday morning for making a bomb scare that suspended service on the Mukilteo-Clinton ferry route.
With three of her four children getting ready to retire over the next decade, Delores in Marysville wanted to chat about Social Security and Medicare. Walter in Mount Vernon wondered about insider trading in Congress. And Jack in Anacortes wanted to talk about the controversial Keystone XL pipeline project.
Tomorrow morning at South Whidbey Community Church Pastor Darrell Wenzek concludes the section of “Threats to Christian Community” with a sermon title of “A Warning About What’s Right”, based on 1st John 3:4-12.