The adoption of emergency rules that will temporarily restrict Mo’s Pub & Eatery in Langley from expanding has one owner threatening lawsuit.
Repairs at Dave Mackie Park on Maxwelton Road are nearly complete, according to Island County officials.
Langley may someday be home to a fish farm that rears species of freshwater coho salmon.
Property owners Bob Libolt and Ken Hertz, real estate developers from Whatcom County, are looking into the possibility of setting up a facility, about one to two acres, on a 40-acre tract of undeveloped land off Coles Road.
Island County’s annual budget process will begin in earnest next week with the first of a series of public meetings planned to run into October.
Compared to recent years, the county’s budget has stabilized, but public officials are steeling themselves for a difficult budget cycle, one that is expected to last at least six weeks.
Is it 20 years old or a thousand? Was it carved by Native Americans or white settlers? Perhaps it was made more recently by a local artisan?
Despite the surprisingly strong showing of her 26-year-old challenger, South Whidbey’s friendliest Republican, legislative District 10 incumbent Rep. Norma Smith, appears to be well on a her way to another term in Olympia, according to this week’s primary election results.
Skateboards, scooters, roller skates and any other human-powered devices could become a legal means of transportation in residential areas of Langley under an ordinance change being considered by the City Council.
Disagreement over a recent executive session has sparked an Island County commissioner to request a review by state sunshine law experts.
It appears voters in Island County Commissioner District 1 are quite satisfied with the status quo.
The first batch of primary election results were released Tuesday evening and incumbent Democrat Helen Price Johnson has pulled ahead with a commanding lead, securing 3,286 votes, or 57.18 percent.
Twice a day, Lila Haynes and her two Chihuahuas take a walk along the beach at Freeland park.
Standing ankle deep in a warming tide pool at Double Bluff, 6-year-old Langley resident Emmett Roy Layman eyes his runway carefully.
Parking changes coming down from Langley City Hall are once again causing a fuss on Second Street.
The sudden and catastrophic erosion that began claiming large chunks of high-bank property from a Langley couple in late July appears to have finally ceased, though the final toll is high and may not be over.