Five Oak Harbor High School students won the grand prize in the Island County Economic Development Foundation’s first annual Student Entrepreneur Challenge, awarded last month.
For 14 years, Cara Walter and Tracie Gorham traveled to different parts of the country to perform a variety show intended to inspire audiences and lift spirits.
Thomas Clatterbuck is hoping to build on his six seconds of fame.
Clatterbuck, 32, of Oak Harbor, recently won an online contest that sent him to Los Angeles to star in a six-second video directed by a famous Hollywood director.
Many thanks to the people behind the Coupeville Festival Association, who made it possible to provide nearly $30,000 in support to various organizations around Central Whidbey.
A not-so-funny thing happened on the long march to save Washington from the damaging undulations of climate change.
Wines that taste the same year after year? That’s not what the foursome who own Rain Shadow Cellars are all about.
Ben Franklin is paying a visit to Oak Harbor. Yes, technically, he’d be rather elderly today at 310 years old. But his humor, wit and wisdom is carried on by a modern man who appreciates Franklin’s legacy.
A Clinton couple filed a lawsuit against neighbors whose pit bull killed their small dog last June.
Whidbey Island has three new mayors starting their terms this year: Tim Callison of Langley; Molly Hughes of Coupeville; and Bob Severns of Oak Harbor.
After getting political pushback from at least two lawmakers, Navy officials reversed a decision that would have ended WIC service at Whidbey Island Naval Air Station.
Hearings in Island County Superior Court Monday foreshadowed the likely complications with trying four defendants together for murder.
Officials are upping the ante, offering a reward of $10,000 for tips that lead to the arrest and conviction of the arsonist setting fires to Navy homes in Oak Harbor.
“We take any threat to our families and loved ones very seriously,” said Capt. Michael Nortier, Whidbey Island Naval Air Station commanding officer.
Richard Linsenmayer, one of only four Washington high school Hall of Fame coaches from Oak Harbor, died Saturday, Dec. 26, in Mill Creek. He was 78.