Carbon Washington’s initiative I-732 would tax fossil fuel producers and use the revenues to help Washington residents get fossil fuel free and grow a resilient, renewable energy economy.
The Coupeville Farmers Market will once again host the Central Whidbey Nonprofit Fair Saturday, Sept. 19.
Sebastian Davis has been reaching for the stars his entire life.
The Coupeville High School senior may have been born and raised in a small town, but his mind has carried him far outside its limits, and will continue to do so going forward.
The Coupeville High School soccer and volleyball teams broke away from the routine of practice and received a taste of game action when they competed in jamborees hosted by Oak Harbor last week.
It was a “the glass is half full” game for Coupeville football coach Brett Smedley.
The Wolves dropped their season opener 27-14 at South Whidbey Friday, Sept. 4, in Smedley’s debut as a head coach.
The Coupeville High School football team has steadily improved in the win column in recent years and looks to continue that climb this fall.
The Coupeville volleyball team will send only two seniors out on the court, but the Wolves won’t lack for veterans.
Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange has lofty expectations for his squad this year.
The Coupeville High School soccer team is coming off its best season ever. To repeat that success, the Wolves will need to get a boost from a new crop of players.
The Coupeville High School cheer squad will have plenty of lung power this fall.
You describe Trish Rose as the highest ranking openly gay service member in the United States.
Why didn’t you describe Robert Born as an openly heterosexual candidate for hospital commissioner in Coupeville?
There are many qualities to admire about us Whidbey folk. One that I notice frequently is how fiercely we battle to keep things just the way they are. We fight tooth-and-nail against big development, environmental travesties or any sign of America creeping toward our pristine shores. We’d sooner jump off the Deception Pass Bridge than permit a billboard or neon sign, for instance.
The closing of Lind’s Pharmacy is a blow to Coupeville. The town, like Langley in 2009, appears to be too small to accommodate a standard pharmacy. Whidbey General, however, has a pharmacy, which currently serves only hospital inpatients.