Editor,
On behalf of Coupeville Lions Club, we’d like to thank The Whidbey Examiner for their gracious coverage of our recent Lions Club Shopping Spree benefit event for Gifts From the Heart Foodbank.
Editor,
On behalf of Coupeville Lions Club, we’d like to thank The Whidbey Examiner for their gracious coverage of our recent Lions Club Shopping Spree benefit event for Gifts From the Heart Foodbank.
Camille Brighten, vice president of the American Association of University Women, delivered one of many bags of personal and household items to Annie Singletary of Citizens Against Domestic Abuse.
For the father of a young man who died in Island County jail, a three-county settlement for $4 million really wasn’t about the money. It was about what the money says, the acknowledgement of unconscionable negligence, Coupeville resident Fred Farris explained.
Leaders with the Sustainable Whidbey Coalition announced Monday that the eight-year program will be ending.
I don’t know about you, but when I was a child the one thing I could always count on finding on Christmas morning was an orange or tangerine in the toe of my Christmas stocking. I suppose this was a holdover from the days over a century ago when citrus fruits were considered exotic treasures during the cold depths of winter in these parts.
A respected Central Whidbey school teacher and tennis coach has bid adieu to a life of academia to become the proud new owner of Bailey’s Corner Store in Cultus Bay.
Phase 1 of the marine display at Coupeville Wharf is finished, but the project still needs donations in order to complete phase II.
The Board of Island County Commissioners appointed five volunteers to the county’s Marine Resources Committee. They are Barbara Bennett, Lois Farrington, Kestutis Tautvydas, David Thomson and Anthony Turpin.
Capping a five-year effort, the Island County commissioners yesterday approved the county’s reworked Shoreline Master Program.
The programming is all done ahead of time.
Once the robot is turned loose, it’s all about watching and hoping.
“It was a lot of pressure,” said Vivian Farris. “It was kind of nerve-racking.”
The transition of management at the Greenbank Farm continues as new port leadership works with the outgoing management group to tie up loose ends.
As volunteers organize and prepare this year’s Holiday House, they’ve noticed a few toys that Santa’s helpers forgot to bring.
With the gift-giving program for families in need already underway, volunteers say there’s still time to donate items that may be on some children’s Christmas lists.
A defense attorney and prosecutor offered vividly conflicting descriptions of a man accused of conspiring to murder an Oak Harbor teenager last month.
David Nunez Jr., 19, appeared in court Monday afternoon for a hearing on a motion — ultimately unsuccessful — to be released from jail on bail.