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Category: Everett News

Breaking news, city hall, and major developments shaping Everett.

  • Silvertips Blow a 3-0 Lead in Game 4 But Still Lead 3-1: Game 5 Is at Home Friday Night

    Silvertips Blow a 3-0 Lead in Game 4 But Still Lead 3-1: Game 5 Is at Home Friday Night

    Did the Silvertips sweep Kelowna in Round 2? No. Everett held a 3-0 lead with 12 minutes left in Game 4 on April 15, 2026, but Kelowna rallied for three goals and Tij Iginla won it in overtime. The Rockets took Game 4 by a 4-3 final, cutting Everett’s series lead to 3-1. Game 5 is Friday, April 17 at 7:05 p.m. at Angel of the Winds Arena.

    Silvertips Were 12 Minutes From a Sweep. Then Kelowna Happened.

    This is the part where a fan gets honest. Wednesday night at Prospera Place in Kelowna was supposed to be the one: a clean four-game sweep of the Rockets, an extra week of rest before the Western Conference Final, and a quiet flight home. For 48 minutes of hockey, the Silvertips were absolutely pitching a sweep. Then 12 minutes happened, overtime happened, and now we are going back to Angel of the Winds Arena Friday night for Game 5 with a 3-1 series lead instead of our boots up.

    Let’s be very clear about what happened, because the final score does not tell the full story.

    What Actually Happened in Game 4

    The Silvertips came out of the gate like a team that smelled Round 3. Julius Miettinen opened the scoring just 1:04 into the first period. Matias Vanhanen buried a power-play goal at 8:47. Brek Liske made it 3-0 at 14:10. That is three goals in the first 14 minutes of a road playoff game against a desperate home team — exactly the way a top seed ends a series.

    Then the third period turned into the kind of hockey nightmare every fan base has seen before. Kelowna scored with about 12:07 left in regulation to make it 3-1. Then again. Then Shane Smith tied it 3-3 late. Overtime arrived, the Rockets kept coming, and Tij Iginla — yes, that Iginla — put the winner home at 2:30 of the extra period for his second goal of the night. Rockets 4, Silvertips 3.

    The Good News: The Silvertips Still Lead the Series 3-1

    Blown third-period leads sting for 48 hours. But look at the board: Everett is still up 3-1 in a best-of-seven, the Silvertips are still the Western Conference’s top seed, and Game 5 is back at home at Angel of the Winds Arena, where they won the first two games of this series. A playoff team only needs to win one of the next three. Kelowna has to run the table.

    Historically, losing a close-out game on the road is the kind of thing you laugh about after you hoist the trophy. The Silvertips can absolutely still control this series. They just need to do the one thing Game 4 showed they are more than capable of doing for 48 minutes: skate a full 60.

    Game 5: Friday, April 17 at Angel of the Winds Arena

    Here is the only schedule you need memorized for the rest of this week:

    • Game 5: Friday, April 17, 2026 — 7:05 p.m. — Angel of the Winds Arena, Everett
    • Game 6 (if needed): Sunday or Monday, April 19 or 20 — in Kelowna
    • Game 7 (if needed): Tuesday, April 21 — Angel of the Winds Arena, Everett

    If you have ever been on the fence about a Silvertips playoff ticket, this is the one. The barn is going to be loud. The stakes are a Western Conference Final. The opponent is a desperate team that just stole a win in their own building. This is exactly what playoff hockey in Everett is supposed to feel like.

    How to Get to Game 5

    Tickets are still available through the Silvertips’ official playoff ticket page and Ticketmaster. Angel of the Winds Arena is at 2000 Hewitt Avenue in downtown Everett, about five minutes off I-5 Exit 193. Parking is easiest in the Everest Station garage a block away, or on Hewitt if you are early. Puck drops at 7:05 p.m., so aim to be through the doors by 6:30 if you want a beer and a look at warmups.

    What to Watch in Game 5

    1. Julius Miettinen’s Legs

    Miettinen — Everett’s captain and one of the best two-way centers in the Western Hockey League — has been the motor of this series. Opening Game 4 with a 1:04 goal was the kind of tone-setter elite players deliver in the playoffs. Watch his first shift Friday. If he looks the same as he did in Game 4, the Rockets are in trouble.

    2. The Power Play

    Matias Vanhanen’s power-play goal was not a fluke — the Silvertips’ man-advantage has been one of the cleanest units in the WHL all year. If they can cash in early on a Kelowna penalty, the arena will do the rest.

    3. Tij Iginla

    We have to say his name, even if we do not like saying it. Iginla scored twice in Game 4, including the overtime winner. He is the most dangerous player Kelowna has, he has playoff-MVP bloodlines, and he will be on the ice when it matters. The Silvertips’ defensive pairings need to account for where his stick is at all times.

    4. The Third Period

    Every Silvertips fan is going to have one eye on the clock starting with 15 minutes left in the third period of Game 5. That is just how it is going to be until this series ends. The good news: the Silvertips can put that ghost to bed in a single night.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When is Game 5 of the Silvertips-Rockets series?

    Friday, April 17, 2026, at 7:05 p.m. at Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett.

    What is the current series score?

    Everett leads the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinal 3-1. The Silvertips need to win one of the next three games to advance.

    What happened in Game 4?

    Everett led 3-0 in the third period but gave up three unanswered goals in regulation. Kelowna’s Tij Iginla scored 2:30 into overtime for a 4-3 Rockets win. Miettinen, Vanhanen, and Liske scored for the Silvertips.

    Where are the remaining games being played?

    Game 5 is in Everett, Game 6 (if needed) is in Kelowna, and Game 7 (if needed) is back in Everett.

    Are tickets still available for Game 5?

    As of publication, tickets remain available through the Silvertips’ official playoff ticket portal and through Ticketmaster. Expect strong walk-up demand for a potential series-clincher.

    Who does the winner of this series play?

    The winner of Silvertips-Rockets advances to the WHL Western Conference Final against the winner of the Portland-Wenatchee series.

  • How NAVSTA Everett’s Fleet & Family Support Center Helps Navy Spouses Find Jobs

    How NAVSTA Everett’s Fleet & Family Support Center Helps Navy Spouses Find Jobs

    Q: How does NAVSTA Everett’s Fleet & Family Support Center help Navy spouses find jobs?
    A: The Fleet & Family Support Center (FFSC) at Naval Station Everett runs the Family Employment Readiness Program (FERP), which offers free career counseling, résumé reviews, interview coaching, workshops, and local job leads to Navy spouses and family members. Appointments are available by calling 425-304-3735 or emailing ffsp.cnrnw@navy.mil, and services are open to active duty, spouses, family members, retirees, and DoD civilians across the Pacific Northwest.

    Moving to Everett as a Navy spouse can feel like landing in a city that runs on shift work you don’t have yet. The pier is busy, the base has its own gravity, and the question that keeps coming up at every coffee shop on Colby Avenue is some version of the same thing: where do I find work here, and fast, before the next deployment, the next PCS, or the next tuition bill lands?

    The answer a lot of Navy families eventually stumble into is a building most of Everett drives past without a second look — the Fleet & Family Support Center on Naval Station Everett, and its satellite office up at Smokey Point. FFSC isn’t a single program. It’s a cluster of free services aimed squarely at the problems military life creates, and the employment side of it has become one of the most valuable resources a new arrival in Snohomish County can use.

    What the Fleet & Family Support Center actually is

    The Fleet & Family Support Center is the Navy’s installation-level readiness office for sailors and their families. At NAVSTA Everett it sits inside the installation’s Fleet and Family Readiness footprint and serves the full Pacific Northwest region, including Naval Station Everett and its Smokey Point satellite location up in Arlington. According to the Navy’s own program description, FFSC offers individual, marriage, and family counseling; class reservations; individual résumé assistance; financial counseling; relocation assistance; and deployment and mobilization support.

    Eligibility is broader than a lot of new arrivals assume. Services are open to active duty members, their spouses, other family members, retirees, and DoD civilians. That means a Navy spouse who just drove in from Norfolk, a retired chief who settled in Mill Creek a decade ago, and a contractor working on base all walk through the same door for help.

    Two numbers are worth putting in a phone right away. The main appointment line is 425-304-3735. The regional email for the Pacific Northwest Fleet & Family Support Program is ffsp.cnrnw@navy.mil. Those are the same contacts whether you’re calling about a résumé review, a budgeting class, or a deployment support group.

    FERP: the spouse employment engine

    The piece of FFSC most relevant to job hunting is the Family Employment Readiness Program, usually written as FERP. FERP is the Navy’s in-house career services shop for military families, and at Everett it’s built around a Career Resource Center that functions a bit like a combined university career office and workforce board — with the important difference that every counselor inside understands the rhythm of Navy life.

    FERP services include one-on-one career counseling, résumé and cover letter reviews, interview coaching, workshops on job search strategy, access to local employment information, and guidance on education, scholarships, and career exploration. The program’s reach covers the classic questions a newly arrived Navy spouse tends to bring in: how do I translate my last duty station’s experience to a Pacific Northwest employer? How do I explain a résumé gap created by three moves in four years? What industries in Snohomish County actually hire around deployment schedules?

    What FERP isn’t is a staffing agency. Counselors don’t place anyone into a specific job. What they do is shrink the distance between a qualified spouse and the employers most likely to hire one — which, in a county with Boeing, Naval Station Everett itself, Providence Regional Medical Center, the Port of Everett, and a growing small-business ecosystem, is a meaningful shortcut.

    MySTeP: planning for the life after uniform

    Running in parallel to FERP is the Military Spouse Transition Program, branded as MySTeP. MySTeP is designed to help spouses plan, prepare, and be ready for the life the family actually wants after the service member transitions out of the military. It’s structured around the idea that a Navy family’s biggest career decisions don’t happen at discharge — they happen years earlier, when a spouse is choosing whether to pursue a credential, take a remote role, or stay portable for the next set of orders.

    Practically, MySTeP connects spouses to resources at the right stage of military life: early-career, mid-career, approaching transition, and post-transition. For an Everett-based family thinking about whether to put down roots in Snohomish County after the sailor’s next EAOS, MySTeP is the structured conversation the Navy offers to help walk through that decision.

    SECO: the DoD-wide spouse career safety net

    The third leg of the spouse employment stool is the Spouse Education and Career Opportunities program, known as SECO. SECO is a Department of Defense program rather than a Navy-specific one, and it extends career guidance and education support to military spouses worldwide. For NAVSTA Everett families, SECO layers on top of FERP and MySTeP by providing free career coaching by phone and online, education and licensing guidance, and resources for every stage of a spouse’s career.

    A typical intake at FFSC Everett can end up braided across all three programs. A local appointment with a FERP counselor handles the Snohomish County-specific job search. MySTeP frames the long-term plan. SECO supplies the remote coaching calls and the national-scale resource library. The spouse doesn’t have to figure out which program owns which question — FFSC routes that internally.

    Smokey Point: the FFSC satellite most people miss

    A quiet detail worth knowing: NAVSTA Everett’s Fleet & Family Support Program also operates a Smokey Point location, up near Arlington, which makes the service materially easier to reach for families who live north of the base. For a Navy spouse with a toddler in a car seat, a 20-minute drive to Smokey Point is a very different logistics problem than a drive all the way down to the pier. Both offices run under the same FFSC umbrella and offer overlapping programs.

    What to bring to the first appointment

    FFSC doesn’t publish a hard intake checklist, but Navy spouses who’ve worked with FERP counselors tend to bring the same basic materials: a military ID, a current résumé (even a rough one), any professional licenses or certifications, a short list of industries of interest, and — maybe most importantly — honest visibility into how much time is available around a deployment cycle or a spouse’s current shift schedule. The sharper that picture is on arrival, the faster a counselor can aim the next conversation.

    Why this matters for Everett

    Naval Station Everett remains one of the largest single concentrations of federal employment in Snohomish County, and the civilian workforce around it — spouses, veterans, retirees, DoD civilians, and contractors — is a quiet but significant part of the local economy. Every Navy family that finds stable employment in Everett instead of leaving the region adds to the tax base, to school rosters, and to the pool of skilled workers local employers are already competing for.

    That’s the under-reported story of FFSC. It isn’t just a welfare office for the base. It’s one of the mechanisms that keeps Navy families rooted in the community rather than cycling through it. For a spouse trying to figure out what a new life in Everett is going to look like, the Fleet & Family Support Center is often the first door that makes it feel possible.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Fleet & Family Support Center Everett only for active duty?

    No. FFSC services at Naval Station Everett are open to active duty, spouses, family members, retirees, and DoD civilians. A Navy spouse can access FERP, counseling, and relocation support whether or not the sailor is currently deployed.

    How do I make an appointment at FFSC Everett?

    Call 425-304-3735 or email ffsp.cnrnw@navy.mil. That same contact handles appointments across the Pacific Northwest region, including both the NAVSTA Everett location and the Smokey Point satellite.

    What does FERP cost?

    FERP services, along with the rest of FFSC’s programs, are free to eligible users. There’s no fee for résumé help, workshops, or career counseling.

    What’s the difference between FERP, MySTeP, and SECO?

    FERP is Navy-run and locally delivered at Everett, focused on current job search and career counseling. MySTeP is a Navy program focused on longer-term transition planning. SECO is a DoD-wide program providing coaching, education, and licensing resources to military spouses worldwide. Most Navy spouses end up touching more than one of them, and FFSC helps sequence them.

    Can retired sailors and their families still use FFSC Everett?

    Yes. The Navy lists retirees among the eligible populations for FFSC programs, which is particularly relevant in Snohomish County given the size of the retired Navy community in the Everett and Marysville areas.

    Is Smokey Point worth using instead of the main NAVSTA Everett office?

    For families living north of Everett, the Smokey Point Fleet & Family Support location can be a much shorter drive and offers overlapping programming. The main appointment line at 425-304-3735 can steer you to whichever location fits your schedule and program.

    Does FFSC Everett help with jobs off-base?

    Yes. FERP is explicitly geared toward the civilian labor market. Counselors help spouses connect to employers across Snohomish County, including healthcare, aerospace, the public sector, and small-business employers — not just on-base positions.

  • What the Constellation Cancellation Means for Military Families at Naval Station Everett

    What the Constellation Cancellation Means for Military Families at Naval Station Everett

    If you’re a military family stationed at Naval Station Everett — or planning a PCS move there — the Navy’s cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program has direct implications for your day-to-day planning and the community you’re moving into.

    The short version: base operations are unchanged, your current assignment is unaffected, but the growth trajectory the community expected — more housing, more services, more military-family resources — is deferred indefinitely.

    What the Cancellation Actually Does (and Doesn’t Do)

    The Navy canceled four of the six Constellation-class frigates already under contract in November 2025. Two ships — USS Constellation and USS Congress — continue construction in Wisconsin, with delivery projected no earlier than 2029. No homeporting commitment for those two ships has been made.

    What this means practically: the 2,900 additional sailors and civilian personnel projected by the Navy’s own environmental study are not coming — at least not on the timeline that was anticipated. NAVSTA Everett continues with its current operational footprint. Ships deploy and return. The base runs normally.

    Housing: What Changes

    Military housing in and around NAVSTA Everett — both on-base and off-base in the surrounding Mukilteo, Everett, and Lynnwood areas — had been expected to face increased demand as 2,900 new personnel arrived. That pressure is now reduced. For families currently looking for off-base housing, this is arguably good news: competition for rental properties and starter homes near the base will not spike the way it might have under the expansion scenario.

    On-base housing managed by Lincoln Military Housing serves NAVSTA Everett. Availability varies by rank and family size — the wait list situation that a 2,900-person influx would have created is now less likely. Families expecting a long wait for on-base housing may find the situation slightly less constrained.

    Schools: Everett School District and Military Families

    Everett School District (ESD) schools serving areas near NAVSTA Everett — including schools in Mukilteo and north Everett — had been expecting enrollment growth tied to the frigate homeporting. That enrollment growth projection is now removed. For families PCS-ing to the area, this means school availability should be less pressured than it might have been in a 2,900-person growth scenario.

    The Mukilteo School District (which serves much of the area immediately surrounding the base) has strong academic programming. Everett School District serves students living in Everett proper. Both districts have experience serving military families with PCS timelines, mid-year enrollments, and frequent school transitions.

    The Community Services Question

    Military family services — childcare, Fleet and Family Support Center programs, commissary, NEX — at NAVSTA Everett are sized to the current population. The planned frigate expansion had created expectations of increased investment in base services to serve a larger population. Those service expansions are now on hold.

    The off-base community has also been investing in anticipation of growth — the city’s Outdoor Event Center (400,000 projected annual visitors), the waterfront redevelopment, new restaurants and retail in the downtown Broadway District. These investments continue, driven by the broader Everett growth story rather than military expansion specifically.

    Long-Term Base Stability: The Honest Assessment

    Military families understandably want to know: Is NAVSTA Everett stable? The honest answer is yes — with a caveat. The base survived the 2005 BRAC process, when it came close to being recommended for closure, only through sustained advocacy by Rep. Larsen, state leaders, and local business groups. The frigate cancellation weakens the strategic expansion argument, but doesn’t remove Everett’s geographic and infrastructure advantages for Pacific Fleet operations.

    Rep. Larsen has already begun advocating for Everett as the homeport for replacement vessels under whatever program follows the Constellation. The Navy’s stated replacement concept (based on the Coast Guard’s Legend-class cutter design) is not yet in active procurement, but Larsen’s early engagement suggests Everett will be positioned as a candidate when homeporting decisions are made.

    Frequently Asked Questions — For Military Families

    Is NAVSTA Everett safe from closure?

    No BRAC process is currently active, and NAVSTA Everett is not on any closure list. The base survived the last major BRAC round (2005) and remains strategically important for Pacific Fleet operations. The Constellation cancellation reduces planned expansion but doesn’t threaten current operations. Congressional advocates — primarily Rep. Rick Larsen — remain active in supporting the base’s strategic case.

    Are PCS moves to NAVSTA Everett still happening normally?

    Yes. PCS orders to NAVSTA Everett continue normally. The cancellation doesn’t affect current ship assignments, deployment schedules, or personnel management at the base. If you have orders to Everett, nothing about the Constellation cancellation changes your reporting situation.

    What is the off-base housing market like near NAVSTA Everett in 2026?

    The Mukilteo and north Everett rental and housing market near the base is moderately tight but significantly more affordable than Seattle or Bellevue. Average monthly rents for a 3-bedroom in the Mukilteo/Everett area run in the $2,200-$2,800 range. The cancellation of the 2,900-sailor expansion reduces anticipated demand pressure on this market. BAH rates for E-5 and above with dependents in the Seattle/Everett area cover most of the market effectively.

    What schools serve families near NAVSTA Everett?

    The Mukilteo School District serves most of the area immediately surrounding the base — highly rated schools with strong STEM programs. Everett School District serves Everett city proper. Both have military-family liaison resources and experience with mid-year enrollment from PCS transfers. Contact the specific district for School Liaison Officer information before your arrival.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage: Navy Cancels Constellation Frigate Program — Full Story

  • Navy Cancels Constellation Frigate Program — What It Means for Naval Station Everett

    Navy Cancels Constellation Frigate Program — What It Means for Naval Station Everett

    Navy Cancels Constellation Frigate Program — What It Means for Naval Station Everett

    In June 2021, the U.S. Navy announced that Naval Station Everett would become the homeport for 12 Constellation-class guided-missile frigates — the Navy’s next-generation surface combatant, designed to replace the aging Freedom and Independence-class Littoral Combat Ships. For Everett, it was a major strategic win: thousands of new sailors, significant base investment, and a clear signal of NAVSTA Everett’s long-term importance to the Pacific Fleet.

    That plan is now largely gone.

    Navy Secretary John Phelan announced in November 2025 that the Navy is ending its commitment to the Constellation program, canceling four of the six frigates already under contract. Only two ships — USS Constellation (FFG-62) and USS Congress (FFG-63), currently under construction at Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Wisconsin — will be completed. Even those two ships’ homeporting is unresolved: Navy officials stated that “homeporting decisions are not made until much closer to a ship’s commissioning date,” and the first ship isn’t expected until 2029 at the earliest.

    What Went Wrong with the Constellation Program

    The Constellation class was conceived as a return to a capable, mid-size surface combatant — based on the Franco-Italian FREMM frigate design, adapted for U.S. Navy requirements. The adaptation proved far more complex and costly than anticipated. Major design changes from the FREMM parent ship caused cascading delays. By late 2025, USS Constellation was only approximately 10% complete despite construction beginning in August 2022 — years behind schedule. The cost per ship had risen from the original $1 billion target to approximately $1.4 billion. The first delivery, originally projected for April 2026, slipped to 2029 — a three-year delay.

    Phelan characterized the cancellation as a straightforward prioritization decision: “I won’t spend a dollar if it doesn’t strengthen readiness or our ability to win.” The replacement concept draws on the Coast Guard’s Legend-class cutter design, with a target delivery as early as 2028 — faster than the troubled Constellation program could achieve.

    The Everett Impact

    A Navy environmental study from 2024 projected that 12 Constellation-class frigates homeporting at Everett would bring 2,900 new sailors and civilian personnel to Snohomish County. That projection assumed seven existing guided-missile ships would relocate away from Everett to make room — meaning the 2,900 figure was net new, above current staffing levels.

    With the program canceled, that workforce expansion is off the table. NAVSTA Everett continues to operate with its current complement of ships and personnel, but the growth trajectory that military families, Everett businesses, and local housing developers had been anticipating is gone — at least in its original form.

    Ray Stephanson, president of the Economic Alliance Snohomish County, flagged a deeper concern: “Military leadership constantly evaluates base necessity.” Everett narrowly avoided closure in the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process, surviving through intensive lobbying and advocacy. The loss of the frigate homeport assignment reduces the strategic argument for Everett’s expansion — though it doesn’t immediately threaten the base’s existence.

    Rep. Rick Larsen’s Response

    Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Everett), whose district includes Naval Station Everett and who has been one of the base’s most consistent congressional advocates, expressed disappointment but pivoted quickly to advocating for Everett’s role in whatever comes next. He emphasized the base’s geographic asset: “It’s one of the closest locations to the Pacific Ocean,” making it logically compelling for Pacific Fleet homeporting regardless of which ship class is assigned.

    Larsen has pushed the Navy to commit to Everett as the homeport for the replacement vessel program, whatever form that takes. No such commitment has been made publicly as of April 2026.

    NAVSTA Everett Today

    Naval Station Everett remains an active, strategically significant installation. The base currently homeports a mix of surface combatants, and its deep-water port, proximity to the Pacific, and existing infrastructure make it one of the most capable homeports on the West Coast. The Constellation cancellation removes a planned expansion — it doesn’t reduce current capability.

    For military families currently stationed at NAVSTA Everett, daily base operations are unchanged. The impact of the cancellation is on planning horizons: anticipated growth in services, housing, and community resources tied to 2,900 new personnel is deferred indefinitely.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Naval Station Everett closing?

    No. The Constellation frigate cancellation does not close NAVSTA Everett. The base remains operational and actively homeports Navy surface ships. The cancellation eliminates a planned expansion — the homeporting of 12 new frigates — but the existing base mission continues.

    Will USS Constellation homeport in Everett?

    Unknown. The Navy has not made a homeporting decision for USS Constellation (FFG-62) or USS Congress (FFG-63), the two ships still under construction. Navy policy is that homeporting decisions are made closer to a ship’s commissioning date — and the first ship isn’t expected until 2029. Everett remains a candidate but has no committed assignment.

    How many sailors are stationed at NAVSTA Everett?

    Naval Station Everett supports approximately 10,000 military personnel, civilian employees, and family members in Snohomish County. The 2024 environmental study projected adding 2,900 more with the Constellation homeporting — that expansion is now on hold.

    What ships are currently at Naval Station Everett?

    NAVSTA Everett homeports guided-missile destroyers (DDGs) and other surface combatants. The base has historically homeported between 10-14 ships. The Constellation cancellation had planned to increase that number, potentially to 14, by adding the new frigates. Current ship assignments are managed by the Navy and subject to deployment schedules.

    What is the Navy’s replacement for the Constellation frigate?

    Navy Secretary Phelan announced the replacement concept will be based on the Coast Guard’s proven Legend-class cutter design, potentially capable of delivery by 2028 — faster than the troubled Constellation program could achieve. No formal homeporting plans for replacement vessels have been announced.

    Why does Everett matter strategically to the Navy?

    NAVSTA Everett offers direct deep-water Pacific Ocean access, existing pier infrastructure, and geographic proximity to the Pacific Fleet’s operating area. Rep. Rick Larsen has repeatedly cited these factors in advocating for Everett’s role in Navy force planning. The base’s 2005 BRAC survival was based on similar strategic arguments.

  • NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Collapse: What the Base Fights For Next

    NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Collapse: What the Base Fights For Next

    Q: What does Naval Station Everett do now that the frigates are cancelled?
    A: NAVSTA Everett remains home to seven guided-missile destroyers and continues operating as one of the Pacific Fleet’s most important surface combatant homeports. Local congressional leaders, base advocates, and city officials are now working to secure additional ship homeporting, new mission assignments, and infrastructure investment to replace what the frigate program would have brought.

    NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Collapse: What the Base Fights For Next

    The November 2025 cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program removed the clearest pathway Naval Station Everett had to long-term expansion. For four years, the base’s future had been defined by a single, concrete vision: become the Pacific homeport for 12 brand-new FFG-62 frigates. That vision is now gone. What replaces it is less certain — and more contested — than most people in Snohomish County realize.

    Understanding what is actually happening at NAVSTA Everett in 2026 requires separating three things: what the base has today, what the cancellation actually cost, and what local leaders are doing about it.

    What NAVSTA Everett Has Today

    Naval Station Everett is not a struggling installation. It is, by most measures, one of the most strategically positioned Navy bases on the West Coast. The base currently homeports seven Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers (DDGs), a USCG Keeper-class cutter (USCGC Henry Blake), and a USCG Marine Protector-class patrol boat (USCGC Blue Shark). Its deep-water pier access on Port Gardner Bay, proximity to Paine Field’s industrial infrastructure, and position along the I-5 corridor between Seattle and the Canadian border make it a natural hub for Pacific Fleet operations.

    The base employs approximately 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian workers — making it one of Snohomish County’s largest employers. Its economic footprint includes roughly $1.2 billion in annual regional economic impact through direct payroll, housing spending, local business patronage, and contractor employment. Military families in the Everett area occupy housing across multiple ZIP codes, from the base itself to Marysville, Mukilteo, and Mill Creek.

    What the Frigate Cancellation Actually Cost Everett

    The Constellation-class program was cancelled by Navy Secretary John Phelan on November 25, 2025, after the program fell approximately three years behind its original delivery schedule and the lead ship, USS Constellation (FFG-62), accumulated nearly 759 tons of additional weight beyond original specifications. Phelan’s assessment was blunt: the ship had become “80 percent of the cost of a destroyer and 60 percent of the capability.”

    What Everett lost is best understood in concrete terms. The frigate homeporting plan would have brought 12 new ships, each with a crew of approximately 200 sailors plus associated support personnel. Twelve ships at roughly 200 sailors each represents 2,400 additional military billets — plus their families, their housing, their school-age children, and their consumer spending. The Navy had already secured $19 million in Congressional funding to build 88 new family housing units at the Navy Support Complex in Smokey Point, in Marysville, in direct anticipation of that influx. That infrastructure investment is now frozen pending new mission decisions.

    The two lead ships — USS Constellation (FFG-62) and a second hull — will be completed at Fincantieri Marinette Marine’s Wisconsin shipyard. But the Navy has not announced where they will be homeported, and those decisions may be years away.

    The Advocacy Response: Rebooting the Community Committee

    The local response to the cancellation has been swift and organized. Snohomish County’s Joint Base Lewis-McChord/Naval Station Everett Community Committee — which had gone dormant in recent years — is being reconstituted specifically to advocate for the base’s interests in the post-frigate environment. The committee’s mandate includes pushing for new ship homeporting assignments, supporting base infrastructure investment, and maintaining the congressional relationships that matter when the Navy makes basing decisions.

    Representative Rick Larsen, whose district includes NAVSTA Everett, has publicly stated that the Navy’s commitment to the Everett homeport “remains ironclad” — meaning the base itself is not at risk of closure or consolidation. What is at risk is the growth trajectory that the frigate program represented.

    What Could Come Next

    The Navy is not standing still on the frigate question nationally. A next-generation frigate development program is in early stages, though no public announcements have been made about production timelines, shipyard selection, or homeporting plans. If a successor program eventually produces ships, Everett’s existing infrastructure, deep-water pier access, and congressional support put it in a strong position to compete for homeporting assignments.

    In the near term, NAVSTA Everett’s advocacy focus is on maximizing the use of the base’s existing capacity — potentially by rotating additional ships through the installation, taking on new administrative or training functions, or positioning the base for any Pacific Fleet restructuring driven by evolving threat assessments in the Western Pacific.

    The Everett waterfront, meanwhile, is a factor in the base’s strategic positioning. The $1B+ Port of Everett redevelopment underway at Waterfront Place is expanding commercial and maritime infrastructure adjacent to Navy assets — a dynamic that could support future base expansion if the Navy’s mission priorities align.

    What This Means for Snohomish County

    For a county that has historically treated NAVSTA Everett as a stable, permanent economic anchor, the frigate cancellation is a reminder that federal defense commitments are subject to change. The base is not going anywhere. But the path to growth is now less defined than it was 18 months ago.

    The Boeing North Line’s midsummer 2026 launch at Paine Field provides some economic counterweight — a parallel defense-adjacent jobs engine building momentum at exactly the moment the Navy’s expansion plans stalled. Everett’s economic resilience has always depended on holding multiple large-employer relationships simultaneously. That dynamic is being tested and, so far, holding.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Naval Station Everett in 2026

    Q: Is Naval Station Everett at risk of closure after the frigate cancellation?
    A: No. Representative Rick Larsen and Navy officials have stated that the base itself is not subject to closure or consolidation review. The cancellation affects planned expansion, not existing operations.

    Q: How many ships are currently homeported at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: Seven Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers, a USCG Keeper-class cutter (USCGC Henry Blake), and a USCG Marine Protector-class patrol boat (USCGC Blue Shark).

    Q: What was the Constellation-class frigate (FFG-62)?
    A: The Constellation-class was designed as a mid-tier surface combatant — smaller and less expensive than an Arleigh Burke destroyer, but capable of anti-surface, anti-air, and anti-submarine warfare. The lead ship, USS Constellation (FFG-62), was being built at Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Wisconsin before the program was cancelled.

    Q: What happens to the two frigates already being built?
    A: Construction on the first two hulls will continue to completion. Their homeport assignments have not been announced and may not be for several years.

    Q: What is the economic impact of NAVSTA Everett on Snohomish County?
    A: The base generates approximately $1.2 billion in annual regional economic impact, employs 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian workers, and supports thousands of indirect jobs through housing, retail, and contractor spending.

    Q: Will Everett still get new Navy ships in the future?
    A: Possibly. The Navy is developing next-generation frigate concepts, and NAVSTA Everett’s infrastructure, deep-water pier access, and congressional representation position it competitively for future homeporting assignments — but no timeline or commitment exists as of April 2026.

    Related: Naval Station Everett’s Fight for Its Future After the Frigate Program Collapse | Boeing’s North Line Is Coming to Everett | Exploring Everett

  • What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    Q: Does the frigate cancellation affect my orders to Naval Station Everett?
    A: No. NAVSTA Everett remains a fully operational installation homeporting seven DDGs. Orders to the base are unaffected. What changed is the long-term growth plan — the planned 2,400 new billets tied to 12 frigates will not materialize on the original timeline.

    What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    If you are a military family assigned to Naval Station Everett, or you are PCSing to Everett and trying to make sense of the November 2025 frigate program cancellation, here is what actually matters for your day-to-day life — and what does not.

    The Short Answer: Your Assignment Is Unchanged

    Naval Station Everett is not closing. It is not being consolidated. Representative Rick Larsen’s office has explicitly stated that the Navy’s commitment to the Everett homeport is “ironclad.” The base currently homeports seven Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers and continues full operations. If you have orders to NAVSTA Everett, those orders reflect real billets on real ships doing real Pacific Fleet missions.

    What the cancellation affects is expansion — specifically, the plans to bring 12 Constellation-class frigates here, which would have added roughly 2,400 billets and their associated families. That expansion is not happening on the original timeline. But the base you are coming to, or already live near, is operating normally.

    Housing: Tight But Stable

    The Everett-area housing market in April 2026 shows a median home price of $635,000, with homes selling in a median of 11 days. Rents for 3-bedroom units in Marysville, Mukilteo, and South Everett — the most common zip codes for NAVSTA families — range from approximately $2,200 to $2,900 per month depending on condition and proximity to base.

    The good news: the frigate cancellation means the housing crunch that locals feared — 2,400 additional billets flooding an already tight market — will not happen on that timeline. The Snohomish County housing market is still competitive, but it is not about to be overwhelmed by a surge of new military families the way it would have been.

    The Navy had already secured $19 million in Congressional funding to build 88 new family housing units at the Navy Support Complex in Smokey Point, in Marysville. That project is currently on hold pending new mission decisions. Existing on-base housing at NAVSTA Everett itself remains available and should not see additional wait-list pressure from the cancellation.

    Schools: MIAD and District Relationships

    Military families at NAVSTA Everett primarily interact with three school districts: Everett Public Schools, Marysville School District, and Mukilteo School District, depending on where they live. The Everett area does not have a dedicated Department of Defense school (DODEA); all military children attend public schools alongside civilian students.

    All three districts have established relationships with base leadership and are familiar with the mobility patterns of military families — mid-year enrollments, flexible records transfer, and family readiness programs are standard. The cancellation does not change any of this. School capacity planning for the frigate influx was a future-state concern; current capacity is adequate for the existing military population.

    Fleet and Family Support Center

    Naval Station Everett’s Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC) provides the standard suite of services: deployment readiness, financial counseling, transition assistance, relocation support, and crisis response. The FFSC serves both active duty and their families across all ships homeported at the base. Deployment cycles for the seven DDGs currently homeported at NAVSTA Everett follow standard Pacific Fleet rotation patterns — typically 7-9 month deployments with 12-18 months between deployments.

    The Broader Everett Community for Military Families

    Everett and Snohomish County have a long history with the Navy presence — the base has been here since 1994. The Silvertips and AquaSox regularly offer military appreciation events and discounted tickets. Businesses along Everett Avenue, in south Marysville, and along Pacific Avenue near the base cater to the military community. The VFW Post 1641 and American Legion Post 1 both maintain active presences in the area.

    The waterfront at Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place — with Tapped Public House, The Net Shed, and Anthony’s HomePort — is a 10-minute drive from the main gate and has become one of the best Friday night options for families across Snohomish County.

    Frequently Asked Questions for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    Q: Will the frigate cancellation cause NAVSTA Everett to reduce personnel?
    A: No reduction in current personnel is expected. The cancellation eliminates planned future growth, not existing billets.

    Q: Is the BAH rate for Everett affected by the cancellation?
    A: BAH rates are determined by housing market surveys in each geographic area, not by base mission changes. Everett’s BAH will continue to reflect actual rental costs in Snohomish County.

    Q: Are there good neighborhoods near the base for military families?
    A: Marysville, Mukilteo, south Everett (near Everett Station), and Mill Creek are all popular with NAVSTA families. Marysville offers the most affordable single-family housing; Mukilteo offers Puget Sound views and strong schools.

    Q: What ships are currently at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: Seven Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers, USCGC Henry Blake (Keeper-class cutter), and USCGC Blue Shark (Marine Protector-class patrol boat).

    Q: How far is Naval Station Everett from Seattle?
    A: Approximately 25 miles south on I-5, typically a 35-50 minute drive depending on traffic. The Sounder commuter train runs from Everett Station to King Street Station in Seattle — a 65-minute ride that some sailors use on non-duty days.

    Related: NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Collapse | Naval Station Everett’s Fight for Its Future After the Frigate Program Collapse | Exploring Everett

  • NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Cancellation: A Complete Guide to What’s at Stake

    NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Cancellation: A Complete Guide to What’s at Stake

    Q: What happened to the frigates that were supposed to come to Naval Station Everett?
    A: The U.S. Navy cancelled the Constellation-class guided-missile frigate (FFG-62) program in November 2025, eliminating plans to homeport 12 new ships at NAVSTA Everett. The cancellation removed a transformative commitment to the base and the Snohomish County economy. Local leaders have since rebooted the Snohomish County Military Affairs Committee to advocate for the base’s continued relevance in the Pacific Fleet.

    NAVSTA Everett After the Frigate Cancellation: A Complete Guide to What’s at Stake

    Naval Station Everett sits on the waterfront at the northern edge of downtown — a base that most people in Snohomish County pass without much thought, but that touches the local economy, the housing market, the schools, and the community in ways that most residents never fully appreciate until something threatens to change it.

    That something arrived in November 2025, when the U.S. Navy officially cancelled the Constellation-class frigate program, ending a plan that would have transformed NAVSTA Everett into one of the most strategically significant homeports in the Pacific Fleet. Here is everything you need to know about what was lost, what remains, and what local leaders are doing about it.

    The Promise: 12 Frigates, a Generation of Growth

    In June 2021, the Navy made one of the most consequential announcements in Everett’s modern history: NAVSTA Everett would become the homeport for the first 12 Constellation-class guided-missile frigates (FFG-62). These were not small ships — the Constellation class was designed as the Navy’s answer to a capability gap in surface warfare, intended to project power across the Pacific and operate alongside carrier strike groups.

    For Everett, the commitment meant 12 new vessels, hundreds of additional sailors and their families, pier infrastructure upgrades, and a decades-long anchor of federal investment. The economic multiplier effect alone — housing demand, school enrollment, retail spending, support contractors — would have reshaped Snohomish County’s economic landscape for a generation.

    The Cancellation: What Happened and Why

    On November 25, 2025, Secretary of the Navy John Phelan announced the cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program beyond its first two ships. His reasoning was precise: the program was delivering approximately 60 percent of a destroyer’s capability at roughly 80 percent of the cost, while running years behind schedule and hundreds of millions over budget.

    The first ship — USS Constellation (FFG-62), built by Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Wisconsin — was only approximately 12 percent complete as of the November 2025 report to Congress, and its projected delivery had already slipped from 2026 to an estimated 2029. The Navy made the calculation that the math no longer worked.

    For Everett, the numbers were painfully concrete. The 12 frigates that were never coming represented 12 crews, 12 sets of families, and 12 ships’ worth of homeport infrastructure that will now never be built.

    What NAVSTA Everett Actually Means to Snohomish County

    Naval Station Everett is currently home to approximately 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian employees, making it one of the ten largest employers in Snohomish County. The Navy’s own regional estimates put the total annual economic impact of military operations in Snohomish County at roughly $340 million — and that figure accounts for the base’s current footprint, not the expanded one the frigates would have created.

    That $340 million flows through the county in layered ways: military housing allowances that sustain rental markets from Marysville to Mukilteo; commissary and PX spending; healthcare utilization at civilian providers; car purchases, restaurant visits, and retail patronage. When you add the support contractors who maintain the base’s ships, facilities, and equipment, the economic web extends across the entire region.

    NAVSTA Everett is currently home to a carrier strike group and associated surface combatants. The base’s deep-water piers can accommodate destroyers, cruisers, and — if the frigates had materialized — the new FFG-62 class. It is a strategically important installation, but one that needs sustained advocacy to maintain its assignment levels as the Navy reconfigures its force structure.

    Everett Fights Back: The Rebooted Military Affairs Committee

    Within weeks of the cancellation, Snohomish County leaders began organizing a response. The Economic Alliance of Snohomish County, led by President and CEO Ray Stephanson, moved to reboot the county’s Military Affairs Committee — a group that had previously advocated for the base but had gone dormant as the frigate program appeared on track.

    Stephanson was direct about the stakes: “The demise of the frigate program is very disappointing,” he said. “The assignment of the frigates would have cemented the base’s role as a key asset for the U.S. Navy.”

    Snohomish County Council member Nate Nehring (R-Arlington) accepted an invitation to join the rebooted committee, signaling that the advocacy effort would span both the public and private sectors. The committee’s goal is proactive — not to mourn what was lost, but to identify what missions, ships, or assets could be directed to NAVSTA Everett as the Navy reconfigures its Pacific Fleet strategy.

    U.S. Representative Rick Larsen, whose district includes NAVSTA Everett, has stated that the Navy’s commitment to Everett as a homeport remains strong despite the frigate cancellation. Larsen has been a consistent advocate for the base in Congress, and his office has communicated directly with Navy leadership about maintaining Everett’s force assignment levels.

    What Comes Next for the Base

    The Navy has not announced any plans to reduce NAVSTA Everett’s current force assignment — the carrier strike group elements and surface combatants currently homeported here are not affected by the frigate cancellation. The base’s infrastructure remains intact and capable.

    The open question is what replaces the growth that the frigates would have generated. The Military Affairs Committee is actively exploring whether other ship classes — next-generation surface combatants or additional destroyers — could be directed to Everett as the Navy builds out its Pacific-oriented force posture. The base’s location, deep-water access, and proximity to Puget Sound industrial infrastructure make it a logical candidate for expanded assignments.

    The answer will likely come from Washington, D.C., shaped by how effectively local leaders and advocates make the case for Everett’s strategic value. That advocacy — quiet, consistent, and backed by a community that understands what is at stake — is now underway.

    Frequently Asked Questions About NAVSTA Everett and the Frigate Cancellation

    Q: Is Naval Station Everett at risk of closure?
    A: The Navy has not announced or suggested any plans to close NAVSTA Everett. The base remains operational with its current ship assignments intact. The frigate cancellation removed a planned expansion, not existing assets.

    Q: How many sailors are currently stationed at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: Approximately 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian employees are currently assigned to or working at Naval Station Everett, making it one of the largest employers in Snohomish County.

    Q: What was the Constellation-class frigate, and why was it cancelled?
    A: The FFG-62 Constellation class was designed as a next-generation guided-missile frigate to restore U.S. Navy frigate capability. It was cancelled in November 2025 after the program fell significantly behind schedule, exceeded its budget, and delivered roughly 60% of a destroyer’s capability at 80% of the cost.

    Q: What is the Snohomish County Military Affairs Committee?
    A: The Military Affairs Committee is a public-private advocacy group organized through the Economic Alliance of Snohomish County. It advocates at the federal level for maintaining and expanding Naval Station Everett’s role in the Pacific Fleet. It was rebooted in early 2026 in response to the frigate cancellation.

    Q: What is the economic impact of NAVSTA Everett on the local economy?
    A: The Navy estimates military operations in Snohomish County generate approximately $340 million in annual economic impact. This includes direct spending by military personnel and their families, contractor and support employment, and the housing market effects of military housing allowances.

    Q: What ships are currently homeported at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: NAVSTA Everett hosts elements of a carrier strike group and associated surface combatants. Specific ship assignments change as vessels deploy and return. The base’s pier infrastructure is capable of accommodating a wide range of Navy surface combatants.

    Q: Who represents NAVSTA Everett in Congress?
    A: U.S. Representative Rick Larsen represents the district that includes Naval Station Everett. Larsen has been a consistent advocate for the base and has communicated with Navy leadership about maintaining Everett’s force assignments following the frigate cancellation.

    Related: Naval Station Everett’s Fight for Its Future After the Frigate Program Collapse | Everett Fights Back: Inside the Community Push to Secure NAVSTA Everett’s Future | Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: Where the Project Stands in 2026

  • What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    Q: How does the Navy frigate cancellation affect military families at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: The cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program means that the hundreds of new sailors and their families who would have been assigned to Everett will not be coming. For families already at NAVSTA Everett, the base remains open and operational — but some uncertainty about long-term force assignments makes planning for the future more complicated.

    What the Frigate Cancellation Means for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    If you’re a military family at Naval Station Everett — or considering a PCS move here — the November 2025 cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program raised an immediate and practical question: what does this mean for us?

    The short answer is that the base is not closing. The ships currently homeported here are still here. The community around NAVSTA Everett — the schools, the housing, the support networks — remains intact. But the frigate cancellation changed some things that military families should understand as they plan their time in Everett.

    What Was Lost for the NAVSTA Everett Community

    The 12 Constellation-class frigates that were promised to NAVSTA Everett would have brought hundreds of new sailors and their families to Snohomish County. That growth would have meant expanded housing demand, more enrollment at base-adjacent schools, a larger military community at YMCA programs and faith communities and youth sports leagues, and more demand for the off-base businesses that serve military families.

    For families already stationed here, the frigates would have meant a more robust community infrastructure — more families going through the same transitions at the same time, more established support networks, more familiarity in the local community with military life and its rhythms. That anticipated growth is not coming, and the community that was expected to expand will remain closer to its current size.

    The Base Is Stable — Here’s What That Actually Means

    NAVSTA Everett currently hosts approximately 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian employees. The carrier strike group elements and surface combatants homeported here have not been affected by the frigate cancellation. The base’s operational status, its infrastructure, and its day-to-day function remain unchanged.

    For a military family weighing a PCS to Everett, “stable” translates into practical terms: the base is funded, staffed, and operating. Schools in the Everett School District and Mukilteo School District that serve military families are enrolled at typical levels. On-base housing continues to operate through the standard process. The commissary, Navy Exchange, and base support services are all functioning normally.

    The Snohomish County Military Affairs Committee — rebooted in early 2026 in response to the cancellation — is actively working with the Economic Alliance of Snohomish County, County Council member Nate Nehring, and U.S. Representative Rick Larsen to ensure NAVSTA Everett retains its current force assignments and potentially receives new ship assignments as the Navy restructures its Pacific Fleet posture.

    Housing: What the Military Market Looks Like Around NAVSTA Everett

    The Everett-area housing market in spring 2026 is tight for renters, particularly in the neighborhoods closest to the base. On-base housing is managed through the standard Navy process; off-base, BAH rates for E-5 and above in the Everett-Seattle MSA have kept pace with local market conditions better than in some other PCS destinations.

    Key neighborhoods for military families include South Everett (close to the base, strong school access), Mukilteo (excellent schools, slightly longer commute to the gate), and Marysville (more affordable, 20-25 minute drive to NAVSTA). The Everett housing market’s median sale price sits near $547,000 as of April 2026, with townhomes moving in roughly six days on average under $750,000 — a competitive but not impossible market for families using VA loans.

    The projected influx of frigate families would have added significant upward pressure to an already tight rental and ownership market. The cancellation means that pressure is eased — counterintuitively, military families arriving now face a somewhat less competitive housing environment than they would have if the frigates had materialized.

    Schools and Family Resources

    Military families at NAVSTA Everett are typically served by either the Everett School District or the Mukilteo School District, depending on where they live. Both districts have experience working with military families navigating mid-year enrollment, records transfers, and the social adjustment that comes with a PCS move.

    Everett Community College offers several programs relevant to military families, including veteran support services and workforce training pathways for spouses seeking employment in the Snohomish County job market. The county’s Boeing economy — including the 737 North Line launching at Paine Field this summer — means manufacturing and aerospace jobs are actively hiring, which matters enormously for military spouses whose career continuity gets disrupted by PCS cycles.

    Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC) services remain available at NAVSTA Everett, providing counseling, deployment support, financial management assistance, and transition assistance programs. These services are unaffected by the frigate cancellation.

    Deployment Rhythms and Community Planning

    One of the most practical concerns for military families is how base operational tempo affects deployment schedules and community planning. Without the frigate expansion, NAVSTA Everett’s operational rhythm is likely to remain more predictable in the near term — the current ship assignments have established deployment patterns that are broadly understood by the base community.

    The Navy has not announced any changes to current deployment schedules as a result of the frigate cancellation. For families in the middle of a deployment cycle, the immediate practical impact of the cancellation is minimal. The longer-term uncertainty — what new ships or missions might come to Everett in the years ahead — is something the Military Affairs Committee is actively working to shape.

    Frequently Asked Questions for Military Families at NAVSTA Everett

    Q: Is NAVSTA Everett at risk of a BRAC closure following the frigate cancellation?
    A: There is no current indication that NAVSTA Everett is being considered for closure. The base remains strategically important as a deep-water Pacific Fleet homeport, and local, state, and federal advocates are actively working to maintain and grow its force assignments.

    Q: Will BAH rates for NAVSTA Everett be affected by the frigate cancellation?
    A: BAH rates are determined by local housing market costs, not by base population levels. The cancellation’s effect on the housing market is modest — it removes anticipated demand growth, which may slightly ease housing cost pressure, but is unlikely to change BAH rates in a significant way.

    Q: What schools serve military families near NAVSTA Everett?
    A: Depending on where you live, military families are served by either the Everett School District or Mukilteo School District. Both have experience with military family enrollment and transfers. South Everett and Mukilteo neighborhoods are popular with families for their school quality and commute to the base gate.

    Q: Are there employment opportunities for military spouses near NAVSTA Everett?
    A: The Snohomish County economy is robust, anchored by Boeing’s Everett factory (which is hiring for the new 737 North Line this summer), aerospace suppliers at Paine Field, healthcare systems, and a growing retail and hospitality sector tied to the Port of Everett’s waterfront development. Everett Community College offers workforce training and veteran support services.

    Q: What support services are available for military families at NAVSTA Everett?
    A: The Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC) at NAVSTA Everett provides counseling, deployment readiness, financial management, transition assistance, and spouse employment support. These services are fully operational and unaffected by the frigate cancellation.

    Q: Where do most military families live near NAVSTA Everett?
    A: South Everett (close to the base gate, diverse housing stock), Mukilteo (highly rated schools, waterfront access), and Marysville (most affordable, 20-25 min commute) are the most common off-base choices. On-base housing is managed through the standard Navy process.

    Related: Everett Fights Back: Inside the Community Push to Secure NAVSTA’s Future | Everett Housing Market April 2026: What Buyers and Sellers Need to Know | Boeing’s North Line: Everett Prepares to Build Its First 737 MAX This Summer

  • Snohomish County’s $340M Fight: How Local Leaders Are Responding to the NAVSTA Frigate Loss

    Snohomish County’s $340M Fight: How Local Leaders Are Responding to the NAVSTA Frigate Loss

    Q: How is Snohomish County responding to the Naval Station Everett frigate cancellation?
    A: Snohomish County rebooted its Military Affairs Committee in early 2026 through the Economic Alliance of Snohomish County. The committee — which includes County Council member Nate Nehring and is supported by U.S. Representative Rick Larsen — is working proactively to advocate for new ship assignments and missions to replace the 12 Constellation-class frigates that were cancelled in November 2025.

    Snohomish County’s $340M Fight: How Local Leaders Are Responding to the NAVSTA Frigate Loss

    When Secretary of the Navy John Phelan announced the cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate program on November 25, 2025, the policy language was bureaucratic. The local impact was not. Snohomish County lost a promised economic commitment worth, by some estimates, hundreds of millions of dollars in long-term growth — and local leaders wasted little time organizing a response.

    Here’s how the county’s civic and political infrastructure is responding, what tools they have, and what it would actually take to replace what was lost.

    The Economic Alliance Takes the Lead

    The Economic Alliance of Snohomish County moved quickly to reboot the Snohomish County Military Affairs Committee, a public-private advocacy body that had previously gone somewhat dormant as the frigate program appeared to be on track. With the frigates gone, the committee’s mission became urgent.

    Ray Stephanson, the Economic Alliance’s president and CEO, framed the stakes plainly: “The assignment of the frigates would have cemented the base’s role as a key asset for the U.S. Navy. Their demise is very disappointing.” Stephanson’s organization has taken the lead on coordinating the county’s advocacy strategy, engaging with Navy Region Northwest leadership, the Washington State Congressional delegation, and economic development officials at both the county and state levels.

    Snohomish County Council member Nate Nehring (R-Arlington) has accepted an invitation to join the rebooted committee, adding an elected county voice to the advocacy effort and signaling that the response to the cancellation has bipartisan support at the local level.

    Congressional Advocacy: What Larsen Can Do

    U.S. Representative Rick Larsen, whose 2nd Congressional District includes NAVSTA Everett, has been a consistent advocate for the base throughout the frigate program’s troubled history. His office has communicated directly with Navy leadership about maintaining and growing Everett’s force assignments post-cancellation.

    Larsen’s position on the House Armed Services Committee gives him meaningful access to the Pentagon’s force structure planning process — not the ability to dictate ship assignments, but the ability to ask pointed questions, advocate for specific decisions, and ensure that NAVSTA Everett’s capabilities and strategic value are being considered when the Navy decides where to send future assets.

    The committee’s work — combined with Senator Patty Murray’s and Senator Maria Cantwell’s advocacy in the Senate — gives Washington State a reasonably strong congressional presence in the ongoing conversation about what comes next for the Pacific Fleet’s surface combatant homeporting strategy.

    The $340 Million Stakes

    The Navy’s own regional estimates put the total annual economic impact of military operations in Snohomish County at approximately $340 million. That number — which reflects the current base population of approximately 6,000 military personnel and 500 civilian employees — is the baseline that local leaders are working to protect and expand.

    The 12 frigates would have added to that baseline significantly. Each frigate crew typically numbers 130-150 sailors; multiply that by 12 ships, add family members, support contractors, and the housing and retail spending that military families generate, and the economic addition would have been substantial. The Military Affairs Committee’s immediate goal is to prevent erosion of the current $340 million baseline while pursuing opportunities to grow it through new assignments.

    What Replacing the Frigates Would Actually Require

    The Navy’s Pacific Fleet posture is undergoing significant reconfiguration in response to China’s maritime expansion and the strategic priorities outlined in successive National Defense Authorization Acts. That reconfiguration creates both risks and opportunities for NAVSTA Everett.

    The risks: the same force structure analysis that killed the Constellation program could lead the Navy to consolidate homeporting at fewer, larger bases with deeper industrial support infrastructure. NAVSTA Everett’s relative distance from the major Puget Sound shipyards in Bremerton is a factor in those calculations.

    The opportunities: the Navy is actively evaluating alternatives to the frigate program, including potential upgrades to existing destroyer assignments and next-generation surface combatant concepts. NAVSTA Everett’s deep-water piers, its proximity to Paine Field’s aerospace ecosystem, and its political support make it a credible candidate for expanded assignments if the county’s advocacy is sustained and well-coordinated.

    The Military Affairs Committee’s strategy — engaging proactively rather than reactively, building relationships before decisions are made rather than lobbying after — is the right approach. The outcome will depend on factors largely outside Snohomish County’s control, but the advocacy infrastructure is now in place.

    Frequently Asked Questions: Civic Dimensions of the NAVSTA Situation

    Q: What authority does the Snohomish County Military Affairs Committee actually have?
    A: The committee is an advisory and advocacy body, not a decision-making authority. Its influence comes from organizing community and economic arguments, engaging with the congressional delegation, and maintaining relationships with Navy Region Northwest leadership. It has no formal authority over ship assignments.

    Q: What does the City of Everett’s budget look like if NAVSTA Everett shrinks?
    A: The base itself is federal property and does not generate property tax revenue directly. The city’s economic interest in the base comes from the spending of military personnel and their families in Everett’s retail, housing, and service economy. Any reduction in base population would reduce that spending, but the connection is indirect.

    Q: Is there a BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure) process that could threaten NAVSTA Everett?
    A: BRAC rounds require Congressional authorization; Congress has not authorized a new BRAC round as of spring 2026. No current legislation or Pentagon communication suggests NAVSTA Everett is a BRAC candidate. Local advocates monitor this issue continuously.

    Q: How does Snohomish County’s advocacy compare to what other military communities do?
    A: The rebooted Military Affairs Committee model is consistent with best practices for military community advocacy — most communities with major installations maintain active civilian committees that coordinate between local government, economic development organizations, and the congressional delegation. NAVSTA Everett’s advocacy infrastructure had gone dormant and is now being rebuilt.

    Q: What new ships or missions could realistically come to NAVSTA Everett?
    A: The Navy is evaluating its Pacific Fleet homeporting needs as it retires older cruisers and potentially accelerates DDG-51 destroyer production. NAVSTA Everett has the pier capacity to accommodate additional destroyers, and its location is well-suited to Pacific-oriented deployments. Specific ship assignments remain a Navy decision, subject to active advocacy.

    Related: Naval Station Everett’s Fight for Its Future After the Frigate Program Collapse | Everett Fights Back: Inside the Community Push to Secure NAVSTA’s Future | Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: Where the Project Stands in 2026

  • USS Gridley’s Southern Seas 2026 Deployment: The Complete Guide for Naval Station Everett Families

    USS Gridley’s Southern Seas 2026 Deployment: The Complete Guide for Naval Station Everett Families



    Q: Is USS Gridley from Naval Station Everett currently deployed?
    A: Yes. USS Gridley (DDG-101), homeported at Naval Station Everett since 2016, is deployed with Carrier Strike Group 11 alongside USS Nimitz (CVN-68) for the Southern Seas 2026 deployment — a circumnavigation of South America. The deployment was officially announced by U.S. Southern Command on March 23, 2026.

    USS Gridley’s Southern Seas 2026 Deployment: The Complete Guide for Naval Station Everett Families

    USS Gridley (DDG-101) has sailed south. On March 23, 2026, U.S. Southern Command officially announced that the guided-missile destroyer homeported at Naval Station Everett had deployed alongside USS Nimitz (CVN-68) for Southern Seas 2026 — a circumnavigation of South America that takes Everett sailors through waters spanning the Caribbean, the Atlantic coast of South America, Cape Horn, and the Pacific. For the families left behind at NAVSTA Everett, this is everything you need to know.

    What Is Southern Seas 2026?

    Southern Seas is the 11th iteration of a long-running U.S. 4th Fleet deployment series, running continuously since 2007. Designed to strengthen maritime partnerships across South America, Southern Seas deployments combine military-to-military training with diplomatic engagement along the continent’s coastlines — passing exercises, maritime operations, and subject matter expert exchanges with partner nation naval forces.

    This year’s deployment sends USS Nimitz and USS Gridley south as the core of Carrier Strike Group 11, accompanied by Carrier Air Wing 17 (CVW-17). The strike group will conduct exercises and operations with maritime forces from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Uruguay.

    Port visits are planned for Brazil, Chile, Panama, and Jamaica — brief windows for the crew to call home, recharge, and experience ports few Americans ever see. For families tracking the deployment, these port visits typically represent the best windows for communication and the highest crew morale.

    USS Gridley: Everett’s Ship

    USS Gridley (DDG-101) arrived at Naval Station Everett as her permanent homeport in July 2016. She’s an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer — Flight IIA configuration — displacing approximately 9,200 tons full load and stretching 509 feet from bow to stern. Her crew numbers approximately 280 officers and enlisted.

    Gridley is named for Captain Charles Gridley, the officer who received Admiral George Dewey’s famous command — “You may fire when you are ready, Gridley” — at the Battle of Manila Bay on May 1, 1898. She was commissioned in February 2003 and has operated across the Pacific and Middle East before finding her homeport in Everett.

    As part of Carrier Strike Group 11, USS Gridley operates as a close escort and anti-submarine warfare screen for USS Nimitz. The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer’s capabilities include Aegis Combat System, Tomahawk land-attack missiles, Standard Missiles for air defense, and Mark 46 and Mark 50 torpedoes for anti-submarine operations.

    Rear Admiral Sardiello on the Mission

    “The Southern Seas 2026 deployment provides a unique opportunity to enhance interoperability and increase proficiency with our partner-nation forces across the maritime domain,” said Rear Admiral Carlos Sardiello, Commander, U.S. 4th Fleet. The deployment’s geographic scope — a full circumnavigation of South America — gives Gridley’s crew experiences that few Navy deployments provide.

    USS Nimitz: The Oldest Supercarrier Still Serving

    USS Nimitz (CVN-68) is the oldest active U.S. Navy aircraft carrier — commissioned in May 1975 and still operating as a fully capable nuclear-powered supercarrier at 50 years of service. She’s homeported at Naval Station Kitsap in Bremerton — a neighbor to Everett across the Puget Sound. As the lead ship of the Nimitz-class carriers, the USS Nimitz’s Southern Seas deployment is notable for the ship’s operational longevity and historical significance.

    Support Resources for NAVSTA Everett Families

    If your sailor is aboard USS Gridley for Southern Seas 2026, Naval Station Everett’s Fleet and Family Support Center (FFSC) is your primary resource hub at the base. The FFSC provides deployment support including ombudsman services, individual counseling, financial readiness resources, and connection to community support organizations.

    Key contacts at NAVSTA Everett:

    • Fleet and Family Support Center: (425) 304-3680, located at 2103 W. Marine View Drive, Everett
    • NAVSTA Everett Command Information: (425) 304-3000
    • Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society Everett: (425) 304-3680 ext. 4
    • Naval Station Everett Facebook: @NSEverett — official updates and family notifications

    The USS Gridley Family Readiness Group (FRG) coordinates family events, communication updates, and community during deployments. If you haven’t connected with Gridley’s FRG yet, contact the ship’s ombudsman through NAVSTA’s FFSC — the ombudsman is the official communication link between ship leadership and families.

    Communication During Southern Seas 2026

    USS Gridley sailors have access to Navy morale, welfare, and recreation (MWR) internet connectivity at sea and enhanced communication during port visits. Port visits to Brazil, Chile, Panama, and Jamaica represent the highest-communication windows of the deployment — expect more frequent calls, video chats, and social media updates during port periods.

    During underway stretches, communication may be limited by operational requirements, bandwidth constraints, and mission tempo. The ombudsman receives official ship communication and will notify families of significant changes in port schedules or mission status.

    Previous NAVSTA Everett Coverage You Should Know

    For more on Naval Station Everett’s story in 2026, read our coverage of the original Gridley deployment story and our earlier knowledge hub on NAVSTA Everett after the frigate program cancellation, which covers the $340 million annual economic impact and what NAVSTA means to Everett’s economy and community.

    Frequently Asked Questions: USS Gridley and Southern Seas 2026

    Where is USS Gridley right now?

    USS Gridley (DDG-101) is deployed with Carrier Strike Group 11 alongside USS Nimitz for the Southern Seas 2026 mission circumnavigating South America. As of the deployment announcement on March 23, the ships are operating in the U.S. Southern Command area of responsibility.

    How long will the Southern Seas 2026 deployment last?

    Typical Southern Seas deployments run 4-6 months. The Navy hasn’t publicly disclosed USS Gridley’s scheduled return date for operational security reasons. The ship’s ombudsman is the authoritative source for family members regarding timeline updates.

    What ports will USS Gridley visit on Southern Seas 2026?

    Port visits are planned for Brazil, Chile, Panama, and Jamaica. Exact ports, dates, and durations are subject to change based on operational requirements and aren’t publicly disclosed in advance for security reasons.

    Who is USS Gridley’s crew?

    USS Gridley has approximately 280 officers and enlisted crew members. The ship’s commanding officer and executive officer information is available through official Navy public affairs.

    What is DESRON 9 and why does it matter for Naval Station Everett?

    Destroyer Squadron 9 (DESRON 9) is the command element that oversees several destroyers homeported at NAVSTA Everett, including USS Gridley. DESRON 9 is part of Carrier Strike Group 11 aboard USS Nimitz during the Southern Seas 2026 deployment.

    What support is available for Navy families during deployment at NAVSTA Everett?

    Fleet and Family Support Center at (425) 304-3680, Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society, the USS Gridley Family Readiness Group, and Navy MWR resources at Everett provide support during deployment. Contact the FFSC to connect with the Gridley FRG and ship ombudsman.

    When was USS Gridley homeported in Everett?

    USS Gridley arrived at Naval Station Everett as her permanent homeport in July 2016.