Tag: Everett

  • Everett Mall’s Hub Vision Just Got Smaller: Brixton Capital Files for Self-Storage and Office Where Topgolf Was Going

    Everett Mall’s Hub Vision Just Got Smaller: Brixton Capital Files for Self-Storage and Office Where Topgolf Was Going

    What just changed at Everett Mall? Brixton Capital — the mall’s owner — has scheduled a May 19, 2026 pre-application meeting with the City of Everett to convert a portion of the existing enclosed mall into a self-storage facility, with a 60,000-square-foot proposed office sitting where Topgolf’s hitting bays were going to go. Topgolf was supposed to be the Hub @ Everett’s anchor tenant. Now it may not happen at all.

    For two years the story we got told about Everett Mall was the Hub. Brixton Capital — the San Diego-based real estate group that bought the property — and the City of Everett came out together in 2024 with renderings of an outdoor walkable destination, retail recolored from the inside out, and a 68,000-square-foot, three-level Topgolf as the anchor pulling everyone in. The permits were filed. The 11-acre site was mapped. The narrative held.

    That narrative is now bending.

    On the City of Everett’s permitting portal this week, Brixton Capital has scheduled a May 19, 2026 pre-application meeting for a project described as “the interior demolition of the existing enclosed mall structure and the conversion of a portion of the building into a self-storage facility. The scope also includes subdivision actions to place the proposed storage use on a separate legal parcel.”

    That alone would just be news that the demolition we’ve all been waiting for is finally getting paperwork moving. But the latest site plan that came in with the application tells a different story.

    What the new site plan shows

    Two things sit on the new Brixton site plan that were not on the Hub renderings.

    The first is a single-story building labeled “Everett Mall Self Storage.” It sits where a parking lot was going to be in the Hub vision — so it is not directly displacing Topgolf. But it is also not what anyone signed up for when this redevelopment started. There are already a dozen self-storage facilities within five miles of the mall. None of them are destinations. None of them generate the foot traffic that a mall reinvention needs to work.

    The second is more telling: a 60,000-square-foot building labeled “Proposed Office” that sits squarely on the footprint where the Topgolf hitting bays and outfield were going to go. The old LA Fitness building, which was supposed to come down to make room for Topgolf, now appears in the plan as something that will either be salvaged or replaced to provide that office space.

    Topgolf needs the area marked for the office. The office is in the area Topgolf needed.

    The two plans cannot both be true.

    Why this might be happening

    Topgolf’s parent company has been in restructuring mode since the same window the Everett permits were getting approved. Topgolf Callaway Brands announced a corporate split, then Topgolf CEO Artie Starrs left for Harley-Davidson in 2025. On January 1, 2026, private equity firm Leonard Green & Partners completed an acquisition of a 60 percent stake in Topgolf from Topgolf Callaway Brands for approximately $1.1 billion. Industry coverage has framed the entertainment chain’s recent decline as a problem of over-expansion — too many venues opened too fast, with the new ones cannibalizing the older ones.

    In other words: Topgolf is in pullback mode, not expansion mode. New venues that were promised but never officially confirmed by Topgolf corporate — like Everett — are exactly the kind of project that quietly disappears in a private-equity restructuring.

    Neither Brixton Capital nor Topgolf has officially said the Everett venue is dead. The City of Everett has not announced a change. But the new site plan does the talking.

    What we covered before — and what’s different now

    We wrote about The Hub @ Everett a week ago, on April 25, when the story was that Topgolf was stuck — permitted in January 2025, but on hold pending corporate restructuring. The construction never started. The 11-acre footprint sat untouched. At that point the question was whether Topgolf would eventually break ground or whether Brixton would have to find a new anchor.

    The May 19 pre-application meeting is the answer to that question. Brixton is not waiting on Topgolf anymore. Brixton is moving forward with a different building program for that footprint. Even if Brixton hopes Topgolf eventually shows up, the site plan being submitted to the City does not assume Topgolf shows up. That is the meaningful change.

    It is also a quiet downgrade of what The Hub was supposed to be. A self-storage building and a 60,000-square-foot office building are not the kind of tenants that bring people to a mall on a Saturday. Alderwood Mall down in Lynnwood is full on Saturdays. People circle the parking lot waiting for spots. That is what a working mall in 2026 looks like. A storage facility and a cubicle building is not in that category.

    What this means for the larger Everett Mall picture

    The Hub @ Everett sits on 11 acres in the Twin Creeks neighborhood and is the largest single retail-redevelopment project in South Everett. The mall as a whole is roughly 800,000 square feet of building on a much larger campus. Brixton’s original sales pitch for The Hub assumed Topgolf would draw the foot traffic, which would justify upgrades to the rest of the campus — Ulta Beauty and At Home are already moving into the former Sears box, and the relocated Mall Station opened in December 2025. The walkable outdoor reorientation only works if the anchor pulls.

    If the anchor turns out to be a storage building and an office, the rest of the upgrade math gets harder. Tenants pay rent based on the foot traffic they expect. Foot traffic projections that assumed a Topgolf are not the projections you get with self-storage.

    There is still room for another pivot. Brixton could find another entertainment anchor — a movie theater, a family entertainment center, a fitness destination — and the storage and office plans become the backup. The May 19 meeting is a pre-application discussion, not a building permit. Things can still change between now and the actual permit filing.

    But for right now, what the City of Everett’s permitting portal shows is a mall that planned to be a destination and is being re-planned around uses that nobody drives across town to visit.

    The May 19 pre-application meeting: what it is and what it isn’t

    A pre-application meeting in Everett is the very first formal step a developer takes with the city before submitting actual building permits. It’s a planning-staff conversation — the developer brings their concept, the city tells them what regulations will apply, what studies they’ll need, what review process the project will go through. It is not a public hearing. There is no vote. There is no decision.

    But it does signal seriousness. Pre-application meetings cost money to schedule and prepare for. Developers don’t book them for ideas they’re not pursuing. When a project shows up on the pre-app calendar, it means the developer has internal alignment to keep moving forward with that specific concept.

    So the May 19 meeting is the equivalent of Brixton telling the city: this is what we’re actually planning to build now. The Hub @ Everett brochure is no longer the operative document. The new site plan is.

    What we’ll be watching

    A few things to track in the coming weeks:

    • The actual building permit application. A pre-application meeting usually produces a building permit application within three to nine months. Whatever Brixton submits formally will tell us whether the storage-and-office concept holds or whether they pivot again.
    • Any official Topgolf statement. Leonard Green & Partners has been making public moves since taking control on January 1. A formal cancellation of Pacific Northwest expansion would clarify a lot.
    • Brixton’s leasing posture for the rest of The Hub. If self-storage and office are now in the program, the retail pitch to other tenants changes. Watch for tenant announcements that downshift from the original Hub vision.
    • City of Everett response. The original Hub deal involved zoning and permitting cooperation from the city. A meaningful program change at the site may trigger new city review — especially if the storage building requires the subdivision Brixton is also proposing.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Topgolf coming to Everett Mall?

    As of May 2026, no construction has started, no Topgolf representative has confirmed the Everett location publicly, and Brixton Capital — the mall owner — has filed a pre-application with the City of Everett showing a 60,000-square-foot office building in the exact footprint Topgolf was going to occupy. The official permits from January 2025 are still on the books, but the new site plan does not assume Topgolf is happening.

    Who owns Everett Mall?

    Brixton Capital, a San Diego-based real estate firm, owns Everett Mall. Brixton acquired the property and announced The Hub @ Everett redevelopment plan in 2024.

    What is the Hub @ Everett?

    The Hub @ Everett is the marketing name Brixton Capital and the City of Everett gave to the planned redevelopment of the existing enclosed Everett Mall into a more walkable, outdoor-oriented retail and entertainment destination. The original anchor was supposed to be a 68,000-square-foot Topgolf venue.

    When is the Brixton pre-application meeting?

    May 19, 2026, with the City of Everett’s planning staff. This is a pre-application discussion, not a public hearing — there is no public comment period and no vote.

    What did Brixton apply to build?

    According to the City of Everett’s permitting portal, the May 19 application covers the interior demolition of the existing enclosed mall, conversion of a portion of the building into a self-storage facility, and subdivision of the storage use onto its own legal parcel. The accompanying site plan shows a 60,000-square-foot proposed office building in the area where Topgolf was going to be built.

    Is the rest of The Hub redevelopment still happening?

    Yes — Ulta Beauty and At Home are still moving into the former Sears box, the relocated Mall Station opened in December 2025, and other tenant work continues. The pre-application change appears specific to the Topgolf footprint and the previously-planned parking lot area where the storage facility would now sit.

    When would construction actually start?

    A pre-application meeting is the first step. A formal building permit application typically follows three to nine months later, and construction starts after the permit is issued. So even if the storage-and-office concept holds, ground-breaking is at minimum late 2026 and more likely 2027.

    Deeper coverage in the Hub @ Everett Pivot Cluster:

  • For Everett Community College Students: What the Baker Hall Redesign Means for Cosmetology, Theater, and Your 2026-2028 Plans

    For Everett Community College Students: What the Baker Hall Redesign Means for Cosmetology, Theater, and Your 2026-2028 Plans

    For Everett Community College Students: What the Baker Hall Redesign Means for Cosmetology, Theater, and Your 2026-2028 Plans

    If you are at EvCC right now, or thinking about enrolling for fall 2026, or about to apply to the cosmetology or theater programs, the Baker Hall news matters in a specific way for you. The replacement building got smaller. The 2028 opening is still on. Your programs still get the spaces they were promised. But the way the campus looks between now and winter 2028 — and the building you eventually move into — has changed.

    This is the student-and-prospective-student guide to what the redesign means and what to plan around.

    Your Programs Are Safe

    The redesign cut roughly 10,000 square feet from the original 32,000-square-foot Baker Hall plan. What got preserved through the cuts:

    The cosmetology wing. A working salon with the plumbing, ventilation, and station layout cosmetology training requires. Classrooms. Meeting spaces. Department offices. None of that came out of the design.

    The 250-seat theater. A real performance space with dressing rooms, a set-construction shop, costume storage, and the support classrooms a theater program needs. The 250-seat figure stayed.

    What was cut was slack — the circulation space, the future-flex rooms, the breathing room around the core program functions. As a student, you will probably not notice that on day one in 2028. You will notice it five or ten years later if the program grows beyond what the smaller building can hold. That is a future-EvCC problem, not a current-student problem.

    What’s Happening Until Winter 2028

    The 1962 Baker Hall has not housed students in roughly two years. That means whatever interim arrangement your program is in right now is the arrangement that continues through 2026 and most of 2027. If you are in cosmetology, you are using the current cosmetology training facilities EvCC arranged when the old Baker Hall was vacated. If you are in theater, the same applies.

    The redesign does not change those interim arrangements. It just delays demolition of the old building so the construction window aligns with the revised drawings. Demolition is now timed against the new construction schedule, not happening on the original 2025 calendar.

    What Winter 2028 Looks Like

    If you are a current EvCC cosmetology or theater student on a two-year track, winter 2028 may be after your graduation. If you are on a longer track or you transfer in for fall 2026 or fall 2027, you may be the first cohort to take classes in the new Baker Hall. That cohort gets:

    • A modern cosmetology salon with proper plumbing, ventilation, and station infrastructure
    • A 250-seat theater with proper backstage, fly space, dressing rooms, and set-construction support
    • Classrooms designed around current teaching models, not 1962 teaching models
    • A building meeting current seismic, accessibility, and mechanical standards

    Those are real upgrades over what either program could ever deliver inside a 64-year-old building.

    What the Redesign Means If You’re Choosing EvCC

    If you are deciding whether to enroll at EvCC for cosmetology or theater specifically because of Baker Hall:

    The 2028 opening is on the table but not guaranteed. Public construction projects can slip. A six-month or one-year slip would not be unusual; a multi-year slip would be unusual but not impossible. Plan around winter 2028 with the understanding that fall 2028 is also possible.

    The program quality does not depend on the building. EvCC’s cosmetology and theater programs have been running through the entire Baker Hall transition. The quality of instruction is not waiting for 2028. If you start in fall 2026, you will get the program — just not in the new building.

    The smaller redesign is still a real upgrade. A 22,000-square-foot purpose-built building with a working salon and a 250-seat theater is meaningfully better than what the 1962 Baker Hall could have offered even after a renovation. The cuts removed slack, not core function.

    What to Watch For

    If you want to track the project’s progress as a student, the milestones to look for:

    • Construction documents revised and re-permitted (2026)
    • Cornerstone Construction trade-package rebids (2026)
    • Demolition of the 1962 Baker Hall
    • Foundation and shell work (2027)
    • Interior fit-out and inspections (late 2027)
    • Move-in and program opening (winter quarter 2028)

    EvCC’s facilities communications and the school’s board minutes are the most reliable sources for milestone updates as they happen.

    The Practical Takeaway

    If you are a cosmetology or theater student, the redesign is, on balance, a good outcome. The alternative — a project killed for budget — would have meant no new Baker Hall at all. The alternative — a supplemental appropriation request — would have meant a 12-18 month delay while Olympia worked through the request, with no certainty of approval. Cutting scope to keep the 2028 opening preserves the deliverable.

    The deliverable is what you actually need: a working salon for cosmetology training, a real theater for theater performance and production training, and modern classrooms for the support coursework. That is what arrives in winter 2028. Just slightly smaller than the original drawings showed.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does the Baker Hall redesign change EvCC’s cosmetology program?

    No. The cosmetology wing, including the working salon, was preserved through the redesign. The program continues as currently arranged through 2027 and moves into the new building in winter quarter 2028.

    Is EvCC’s theater program still getting a 250-seat theater?

    Yes. The 250-seat theater, dressing rooms, set-construction shop, and costume storage all survived the redesign.

    When does the new Baker Hall open for classes?

    Winter quarter 2028 is the current target. Demolition of the 1962 Baker Hall has been aligned with the revised construction window.

    What is happening to my program until winter 2028?

    The 1962 Baker Hall has not housed students for roughly two years, so program arrangements that have been in place since the building was vacated continue through the construction window. The redesign does not change those interim arrangements.

    Is the new Baker Hall smaller because EvCC is shrinking the program?

    No. The 10,000-square-foot reduction came from circulation space, flex space, and support functions — not from program-critical spaces. The cosmetology salon, the 250-seat theater, and the supporting classrooms were preserved at full scope.

    Could the 2028 opening still slip?

    Yes. Public construction projects can hit permit, supply, or labor delays. A short slip is not unusual; a multi-year slip would be unusual. Students should plan around winter 2028 with awareness that fall 2028 is possible.

    Will the new building be more accessible than the 1962 Baker Hall?

    Yes. New campus construction in Washington must meet current ADA and accessibility standards. The 1962 building was designed before those standards existed and would have required near-complete reconstruction to comply.


    Related Exploring Everett coverage:


  • Everett Community College’s $38 Million Baker Hall Replacement: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Redesign, the Programs, and the Winter 2028 Opening

    Everett Community College’s $38 Million Baker Hall Replacement: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Redesign, the Programs, and the Winter 2028 Opening

    Everett Community College’s $38 Million Baker Hall Replacement: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Redesign, the Programs, and the Winter 2028 Opening

    Most college construction stories that hit a budget wall get smaller, slower, or quieter. Everett Community College’s Baker Hall replacement just hit the wall — and the result is a campus project that got smaller, kept its core programs, kept its 2028 opening, and is more useful as a case study for state-funded capital construction in 2026 than a typical campus building update would be.

    Here is the complete 2026 guide to what is happening at Baker Hall: the $37.9 million project, what got cut, what survived, why the schedule still works, and what the building means for EvCC students, the cosmetology program, the theater program, and the surrounding waterfront-adjacent campus footprint.

    What Just Changed

    EvCC paused the Baker Hall rebuild and shrank the planned new building by about 10,000 square feet, citing rising construction costs. The original design called for 32,000 square feet. The revised version comes in at roughly 22,000 square feet — a third smaller.

    What did not get cut: the core program elements. The new Baker Hall still includes:

    • A dedicated cosmetology wing — including a working salon, classrooms, meeting spaces, and offices for the cosmetology department
    • A 250-seat theater with dressing rooms, a set-construction shop, and costume storage
    • Additional classroom space layered around those two anchors

    What got cut, in plain terms, is the slack. The square footage that allowed flex space, larger circulation areas, and room to grow programs into the building over the next decade — that is the part that gave way to the budget math. The bones of the program survive. The breathing room around them does not.

    The 2028 Target Is Still On

    Even with the redesign, EvCC is aiming for a winter quarter 2028 opening. That is the operational target the school is working toward right now. Demolition of the existing 1962 Baker Hall — which has not seen students in roughly two years — has been delayed to align with the revised construction window, but the timeline to having students in the new space has not slipped beyond winter 2028.

    A 2028 opening from a 2026 redesign is a real schedule. It requires:

    • Construction documents revised to the new scope
    • Permits refreshed against the revised drawings
    • Cornerstone Construction rebidding the trade packages with the smaller scope
    • Mobilization and site work in 2026
    • Foundation and shell in 2027
    • Interior fit-out and inspection in late 2027
    • Occupancy and program move-in for winter 2028 quarter

    Each of those steps has float built in, but not a lot of it. A 2028 opening is achievable; a slip to fall 2028 or beyond is not unimaginable if any of those phases hits a snag.

    The Players

    The professionals on the project:

    • Architect: McGranahan PBK, selected in February 2025
    • Contractor: Cornerstone Construction, brought on in May 2025
    • Funder: Washington State, through the 2023–25 capital budget cycle, with the $37.9 million allocation
    • Owner: Everett Community College

    That team has been in place for over a year. Keeping the architect and contractor through the redesign — instead of restarting procurement — is the move that protects the 2028 schedule. Restarting would have meant another 12-18 months easily.

    What Got Cut: The Slack, Not the Bones

    It is worth being specific about which 10,000 square feet came out of the design, because that is what determines how the building actually feels in 2028:

    Circulation space. Wider hallways, larger lobbies, more generous gathering spaces — these are the first things that get value-engineered when costs rise.

    Flex and growth space. The original design likely included shell space — built but unfinished rooms ready to be assigned to whatever program needed them in 2030 or 2032. That is one of the easier cuts because the impact is in the future, not at opening.

    Some support functions. Storage, mechanical clearance, prep areas around the theater and salon — all candidates for tightening.

    The cosmetology working salon and the 250-seat theater stayed because they are the reasons the building exists. EvCC’s cosmetology program needs salon-grade plumbing, ventilation, and station layouts that you cannot retrofit into a generic classroom. The theater program needs a real stage, a real fly system, and real backstage. Cutting those would have meant rebuilding the program around a different teaching model. The school chose to cut the slack instead.

    Why the 1962 Baker Hall Has to Go

    The existing Baker Hall opened in 1962. By 2026, that is a 64-year-old building. It has not housed students in approximately two years. Mid-twentieth-century campus buildings on the West Coast share a familiar problem set: seismic standards have moved several times since the original construction, mechanical systems are at or past end-of-useful-life, accessibility retrofits would require near-complete reconstruction, and the floor plans were designed for teaching models that no longer match how the programs operate.

    For a cosmetology program that needs salon-grade infrastructure and a theater program that needs proper stage and backstage, the 1962 building was no longer a workable home. That is why the replacement strategy got chosen over renovation in the first place.

    The Larger Construction-Cost Story

    The Baker Hall pause is one data point in a regional pattern. Construction costs across the Puget Sound have been outrunning state capital budget allocations for several budget cycles. Public-sector projects budgeted in 2023 dollars and bid in 2025 or 2026 dollars are routinely landing 15-30% over their allocations. The choices in those moments are: cut scope, get more money, or kill the project.

    EvCC chose to cut scope while preserving program. That preserves the public investment and keeps the 2028 opening on the table without going back to Olympia for a supplemental appropriation. For state-funded campus projects across Washington’s community college system, this is a useful template.

    What 2028 Looks Like for EvCC Students

    When students walk into the new Baker Hall in winter 2028, they will find a smaller building than the original plan, but a working cosmetology salon, a real 250-seat theater, and the classroom support those programs need. That is the deliverable.

    The building also fits into a larger EvCC campus context that includes the existing arts and humanities footprint, the Northshore-area campus connections, and the broader Everett Station and waterfront corridor. Baker Hall’s replacement sits in that fabric.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is happening with Everett Community College’s Baker Hall?

    EvCC paused and redesigned the $37.9 million Baker Hall replacement project, cutting roughly 10,000 square feet from the original 32,000-square-foot design due to rising construction costs. The cosmetology wing, 250-seat theater, and winter 2028 opening target all survived the redesign.

    Who designed and is building the new Baker Hall?

    McGranahan PBK is the architect, selected in February 2025. Cornerstone Construction is the contractor, brought on in May 2025. Both stay on the project through the redesign.

    When does the new Baker Hall open?

    Winter quarter 2028 is the current operational target. Demolition of the 1962 Baker Hall is being aligned with the revised construction window.

    Why was Baker Hall redesigned?

    Construction costs across the Puget Sound region rose between the project’s 2023 budget allocation and the 2025-26 bid environment, pushing the original design over the $37.9 million capital budget. EvCC chose to redesign at smaller scope rather than seek a supplemental appropriation or kill the project.

    What programs will the new Baker Hall house?

    The cosmetology program (with a working salon) and the theater program (with a 250-seat performance space, dressing rooms, set-construction shop, and costume storage) are the anchor tenants, plus additional classrooms.

    How big is the new Baker Hall?

    Approximately 22,000 square feet in the redesign, down from the original 32,000-square-foot plan.

    How is the project funded?

    Through Washington State’s capital budget. The $37.9 million allocation has been on the books since the 2023–25 budget cycle.

    What was wrong with the 1962 Baker Hall?

    The 64-year-old building has aging mechanical systems, outdated seismic standards, and floor plans that no longer match how the cosmetology and theater programs operate. It has not housed students in approximately two years. Replacement was chosen over renovation.


    Related Exploring Everett coverage:


  • Housing Hope: The Complete 2026 Guide to Everett’s Largest Affordable-Housing Nonprofit and the New Tomorrow’s Hope at 4526 Federal Avenue

    Housing Hope: The Complete 2026 Guide to Everett’s Largest Affordable-Housing Nonprofit and the New Tomorrow’s Hope at 4526 Federal Avenue

    Housing Hope: The Complete 2026 Guide to Everett’s Largest Affordable-Housing Nonprofit and the New Tomorrow’s Hope at 4526 Federal Avenue

    Drive past 4526 Federal Avenue right now and you will see survey stakes, fresh fencing, and site-prep equipment on the northeast corner of the Compass Health campus. That is a 26,700-square-foot child development center under construction. It belongs to Housing Hope — and most Everett residents have never heard of the organization that is building it.

    That is unusual. Housing Hope manages more than 650 affordable rental units across 24 sites in Snohomish County. It runs a sweat-equity homeownership program that has produced 328 first-time homeowners. It operates a child development center that has served Everett families for more than thirty years. It is the largest affordable-housing nonprofit in the city. And it is in the middle of its biggest year in a long time.

    This is the complete 2026 guide to Housing Hope: what it does, where it operates, the new Tomorrow’s Hope project at 4526 Federal Avenue, the new CEO at the top, and the 1,000-unit goal driving the next four years.

    What Housing Hope Actually Does

    Housing Hope’s mission is to promote and provide affordable housing and tailored services that reduce homelessness and poverty across Snohomish County and Camano Island. In practice, the organization operates five integrated programs:

    1. Affordable rental housing. More than 650 units across 24 sites. Rents are set on a sliding scale based on household income and family size — not market rate. The portfolio runs from single-room transitional units to family-sized apartments specifically designed for households exiting homelessness.

    2. Team HomeBuilding. A sweat-equity homeownership program where working families help build their own and each other’s homes. The program has produced 328 first-time homeowner households. Participants commit hundreds of hours of construction labor in exchange for a deeply discounted mortgage on a home they helped frame, side, and finish.

    3. Tomorrow’s Hope Child Development Center. Quality childcare for kids aged four weeks through twelve years, with a sliding-scale fee structure that prioritizes families currently living in Housing Hope properties or recently exited from homelessness. The current facility has operated for more than 30 years and is being replaced by a much larger purpose-built building at 4526 Federal Avenue.

    4. Workforce and family services. Career counseling, financial coaching, and family stability supports embedded inside the housing portfolio. The integration is the point — residents do not have to leave the property to access services.

    5. Development and acquisition. Housing Hope’s real estate development arm acquires sites, secures funding stacks (federal LIHTC, state Housing Trust Fund, county and city contributions), designs new housing, and operates the resulting buildings. The organization has been one of the most consistent affordable-housing developers in Snohomish County for thirty years.

    The New Tomorrow’s Hope at 4526 Federal Avenue

    The signature 2026 project is a new 26,700-square-foot Tomorrow’s Hope Child Development Center on the Compass Health campus at 4526 Federal Avenue. Several things matter about that project:

    Capacity triples. The current Tomorrow’s Hope serves a fraction of the demand the program receives. The new building expands enrollment dramatically, with classroom space designed for kids from infancy through age twelve.

    The Compass Health partnership is real. Compass is the dominant behavioral-health provider in Snohomish County. Co-locating childcare on the Compass Health campus puts behavioral-health services and childcare in the same place — which matters for families navigating both at once.

    Funding is layered. Affordable-housing-and-services projects of this scale do not get built with one funding source. The financing typically combines state, county, and city contributions with private philanthropy and tax-credit equity. The fact that the project has reached site-prep means that capital stack is closed.

    The 30-year handoff. The existing Tomorrow’s Hope facility has been operating for more than three decades. Replacing it with a purpose-built modern center is the kind of generational handoff few nonprofits successfully execute. Housing Hope is doing it.

    The Leadership Change

    Housing Hope has a new CEO: Kathryn Opina. Leadership transitions at long-running nonprofits are inflection points — they reset strategy, relationships with funders, and operational culture. For an organization the size of Housing Hope at the moment of an active capital project and a 1,000-unit growth target, the timing is significant. Local civic watchers should be paying attention to how the new CEO frames the next four years.

    The 1,000-Unit Goal

    Housing Hope is publicly chasing a 1,000-unit goal by 2030. From the current 650+ portfolio, that is roughly 350 additional units across the remaining four years. At Snohomish County construction costs, that is a multi-hundred-million-dollar development pipeline. The organizations that move that kind of pipeline through approvals, financing, and construction usually sit at the table when local housing policy is debated. Housing Hope sits at that table for Snohomish County.

    Where Housing Hope Operates in Everett

    The 24 sites are spread across Snohomish County and Camano Island, with concentrations in Everett’s lower-income neighborhoods, on Casino Road in South Everett, near downtown, and along the corridors where transit access supports car-light households. Specific properties include transitional housing for families exiting homelessness, permanent supportive housing, family workforce housing, and senior housing — Housing Hope’s portfolio is intentionally diverse so that residents can move within the system as their circumstances change without leaving the network of services.

    Why Housing Hope Matters in 2026

    Three pieces of context make Housing Hope particularly relevant this year:

    Snohomish County’s housing-and-behavioral-health funding wave. The County Council recently approved $23 million for housing and behavioral health programs. Housing Hope is structurally positioned to absorb funding allocations from those streams.

    Everett’s CDBG / HOME / AHTF priority-setting. The city’s Community Development Advisory Committee is holding a May 5 public hearing on 2027 federal housing fund priorities. Housing Hope is both a funder applicant and a major operator of the kind of housing those funds target.

    The 51.8% inventory jump. Snohomish County’s housing inventory rose 51.8% in March 2026. That is a market-rate signal. The affordable-housing tier — which is what Housing Hope operates in — is structurally separate from market-rate inventory, and its tightness is not relieved by a market shift. The need does not move with the inventory chart.

    How Everett Residents Can Engage

    For a household needing housing or services: contact Housing Hope directly to inquire about waitlist availability, eligibility, and program intake. The organization serves residents of Snohomish County and Camano Island.

    For a household wanting to support the work: Housing Hope accepts financial contributions, in-kind donations, and volunteer hours, particularly for the Team HomeBuilding sweat-equity program where construction-skilled volunteers can directly accelerate move-in dates for participating families.

    For Everett residents wanting policy influence: the May 5 CDAC public hearing is one of the more direct levers for shaping how 2027 federal housing dollars get spent locally.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is Housing Hope and where is it based?

    Housing Hope is an Everett-headquartered nonprofit that builds and operates affordable rental housing, supports homeownership through sweat-equity construction, and runs childcare and family services across Snohomish County and Camano Island.

    How many units does Housing Hope manage?

    More than 650 affordable rental units across 24 sites in Snohomish County and Camano Island, with a publicly stated goal of 1,000 units by 2030.

    What is the new Tomorrow’s Hope at 4526 Federal Avenue?

    A new 26,700-square-foot child development center under construction on the Compass Health campus at 4526 Federal Avenue in Everett. It replaces the current Tomorrow’s Hope facility and triples childcare capacity.

    Who is the new CEO of Housing Hope?

    Kathryn Opina is the new CEO of Housing Hope, leading the organization through its current capital expansion and the 1,000-unit growth target.

    What is Team HomeBuilding?

    Team HomeBuilding is Housing Hope’s sweat-equity homeownership program. Participating families commit hundreds of hours of construction labor on each other’s homes in exchange for a deeply discounted mortgage on a finished home they helped build. The program has produced 328 first-time homeowner households.

    How does Housing Hope set rent?

    Rent is set on a sliding scale based on household income and family size, not market rate. That is the structural distinction between affordable housing and market-rate housing.

    How can Everett residents support Housing Hope?

    Through financial contributions, in-kind donations, and volunteer hours, including direct construction labor on Team HomeBuilding projects. Residents seeking housing or services can contact Housing Hope directly to inquire about eligibility.

    Is Housing Hope related to Compass Health?

    Housing Hope and Compass Health are independent organizations. The new Tomorrow’s Hope facility is being built on Compass Health’s campus at 4526 Federal Avenue as a partnership project, co-locating childcare with behavioral-health services.


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  • For Everett Residents: A 2026 Guide to Getting Housing, Childcare, or Homeownership Help From Housing Hope

    For Everett Residents: A 2026 Guide to Getting Housing, Childcare, or Homeownership Help From Housing Hope

    For Everett Residents: A 2026 Guide to Getting Housing, Childcare, or Homeownership Help From Housing Hope

    If you live in Everett and you have ever wondered whether there is a local nonprofit that can actually help with the three biggest household pressures in this city — rent, childcare, and homeownership — the answer is yes. It is called Housing Hope. It manages more than 650 affordable rental units across 24 sites in Snohomish County. It has helped 328 households become first-time homeowners. And it operates a child development center that is about to triple in size at 4526 Federal Avenue.

    This is the resident’s guide. What Housing Hope does, who it serves, how the eligibility works, and how to actually get help in 2026.

    Who Housing Hope Serves

    Housing Hope serves residents of Snohomish County and Camano Island. The programs are tailored — sliding-scale rents, sliding-scale childcare fees, sweat-equity homeownership — meaning eligibility depends on household income, family size, and current housing situation. Households exiting homelessness, working families struggling with rent burden, families needing childcare to stay employed, and first-time homebuyers who can commit construction hours all map to specific programs.

    The point of Housing Hope’s integrated structure is that residents do not have to leave the system as their circumstances change. A family that starts in transitional housing can move to permanent supportive housing, then to workforce housing, then potentially to Team HomeBuilding ownership — all within the same nonprofit’s portfolio.

    Affordable Rental Housing: The 650-Unit Portfolio

    Housing Hope’s largest program is its 650+ affordable rental units across 24 sites. Rent is set on a sliding scale based on household income and family size, not market rate. That is the structural difference from a regular Everett apartment search.

    The portfolio is intentionally diverse:

    • Transitional housing for households exiting homelessness
    • Permanent supportive housing with on-site case management for residents needing ongoing support
    • Family workforce housing for working households earning below market rates
    • Senior housing for older residents on fixed incomes

    What that means practically: if you are an Everett resident facing rent stress, the right next step is to contact Housing Hope directly to find out which program you would qualify for and what waitlist looks like. The organization does not advertise availability on Craigslist or Zillow because affordable units do not work that way — placement is income-verified and program-matched.

    Team HomeBuilding: The Sweat-Equity Path to Ownership

    Team HomeBuilding is the program that has produced 328 first-time homeowners. The structure is unusual and worth understanding carefully:

    Working families are accepted into the program based on income and ability to commit construction labor hours. Once accepted, they help build their own home and the homes of other participating families — framing, siding, finishing, the whole process. In exchange for hundreds of hours of construction labor, participants receive a deeply discounted mortgage on the home they helped build.

    The numbers behind this matter. A family that contributes hundreds of hours of construction labor effectively replaces tens of thousands of dollars of contractor cost. That cost reduction shows up as a lower mortgage. Families who would not qualify for a market-rate mortgage in Everett often do qualify for the Team HomeBuilding mortgage because the underlying loan is smaller.

    The 328-household track record means this is not a theoretical program. It is one of the more effective first-time-homeowner pipelines in Snohomish County for families that can commit the hours.

    Tomorrow’s Hope Childcare: The 4526 Federal Avenue Expansion

    Tomorrow’s Hope is Housing Hope’s child development center. It serves kids aged four weeks through twelve years. The fee structure is sliding-scale and prioritizes families currently living in Housing Hope properties or recently exited from homelessness.

    The current facility has operated for more than 30 years. It is being replaced by a new 26,700-square-foot purpose-built center at 4526 Federal Avenue on the Compass Health campus. That is a roughly threefold capacity increase. Site-prep is active in 2026; the new facility will significantly expand the number of Everett families who can access Tomorrow’s Hope childcare.

    For Everett families: childcare cost is one of the largest household expenses, and licensed-quality childcare slots in Snohomish County are routinely waitlisted. A Housing Hope-affiliated family with a Tomorrow’s Hope slot is paying a fraction of market rates for licensed care. That is meaningful household-budget math.

    How to Actually Apply

    Housing Hope is a single-point-of-entry organization for residents seeking help. The standard path is:

    1. Contact Housing Hope directly to describe your household situation
    2. An intake conversation determines which program(s) match your needs
    3. Income and household documentation is verified
    4. You are placed on the appropriate waitlist or matched directly with a current opening
    5. If services are time-sensitive (immediate housing need, active homelessness), the conversation prioritizes accordingly

    Waitlists are real. Affordable housing in Everett has demand that outruns supply. The 1,000-unit Housing Hope expansion goal by 2030 exists because the current 650 units do not meet the need. That said, getting on the right waitlist matters — many residents do not realize Housing Hope exists, which means the waitlists are shorter than they would be if every income-qualified Everett resident applied.

    What Else Housing Hope Connects To

    Housing Hope sits inside a larger Snohomish County safety net that includes Volunteers of America Western Washington, Cocoon House (youth homelessness), Compass Health (behavioral health, partnering on the new Tomorrow’s Hope), and the Snohomish County Council’s recently approved $23 million in housing-and-behavioral-health funding. Residents in crisis often need more than one of these organizations. Housing Hope’s case management is structured to make those handoffs work.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do I apply for Housing Hope rental housing in Everett?

    Contact Housing Hope directly. The organization’s intake process determines which of its 24 sites and program types you qualify for, then places you on the appropriate waitlist. Affordable housing is income-verified and program-matched, not advertised through standard rental listings.

    Who qualifies for Team HomeBuilding?

    Working families with incomes that meet program guidelines and the ability to commit hundreds of hours of construction labor on their own and other participants’ homes. The program has produced 328 first-time homeowner households across its history.

    How much does Tomorrow’s Hope childcare cost?

    Tomorrow’s Hope uses a sliding-scale fee structure based on household income and family size. Priority is given to families currently in Housing Hope properties or recently exited from homelessness. Residents should contact Housing Hope directly for current fee information and availability.

    Where is Housing Hope’s office in Everett?

    Housing Hope is headquartered in Everett. Specific office addresses, including the new 26,700-square-foot Tomorrow’s Hope facility at 4526 Federal Avenue, are listed on the organization’s official site.

    Can I volunteer with Housing Hope without being a program participant?

    Yes. Housing Hope accepts volunteer construction labor on Team HomeBuilding projects, financial contributions, in-kind donations, and other support roles. Construction-skilled volunteers can directly accelerate move-in dates for participating families.

    How is Housing Hope different from Volunteers of America Western Washington?

    Both are Snohomish County nonprofits, but Housing Hope is primarily a housing developer and operator, while VOAWW operates a broader portfolio that includes food banks, crisis services, and family services across Western Washington. Many residents end up working with both.

    Does Housing Hope only serve people experiencing homelessness?

    No. Housing Hope serves a wide spectrum: households exiting homelessness, working families needing affordable rent, families seeking childcare, and aspiring first-time homeowners. The program structure spans the full range from crisis to homeownership.


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  • For Snohomish County Aerospace Suppliers: How Aviation Technical Services Anchors the Aftermarket Side of Paine Field

    For Snohomish County Aerospace Suppliers: How Aviation Technical Services Anchors the Aftermarket Side of Paine Field

    For Snohomish County Aerospace Suppliers: How Aviation Technical Services Anchors the Aftermarket Side of Paine Field

    If you supply Boeing in Everett, you already know the new-aircraft side of the local aerospace economy. The 737 MAX 10 North Line is activating this summer. The 777-9 program is ramping into a delivery wave anchored by Lufthansa’s just-confirmed Q1 2027 first acceptance. The KC-46 program is delivering on a steady Air Force cadence. That is the side of the business that drives most of the supplier conversations in Snohomish County.

    The other side of Paine Field — and the second-largest aerospace employer in Everett — is Aviation Technical Services (ATS). About 800 workers. A 500,000-square-foot airframe Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) hangar at the south end of the airport. A 50,000-square-foot component repair facility next door. The largest single MRO operation on the U.S. West Coast.

    For Snohomish County aerospace suppliers, ATS is not a duplicate of Boeing. It is a different revenue channel — the aftermarket — that operates on a different cycle and rewards a different supplier posture. This is the supplier guide.

    The Aftermarket vs. New-Aircraft Distinction Suppliers Need to Make

    Boeing factory demand is driven by aircraft production rates. When Boeing announces a rate increase — Rate 47 on the 737 line is the public number for this summer — supplier demand follows on a multi-month lag. When Boeing slows or pauses, suppliers feel it on a similar lag in the other direction.

    MRO demand is driven by airline fleet utilization, scheduled maintenance intervals (A-checks, C-checks, D-checks), and unscheduled events (in-service damage, corrosion, modification programs). It moves on a different cycle. Notably, when new-aircraft deliveries slow, airlines extend the service lives of existing airplanes — which produces more MRO demand, not less. The aftermarket runs countercyclical to factory production.

    That countercyclical property is the strategic value of ATS for a Snohomish County supplier. Selling into both Boeing and ATS smooths your demand curve.

    What ATS Buys

    The work scope at the Everett ATS campus is heavy MRO on Boeing 737 NG and MAX, 757, 767, 777, and Airbus A320 family aircraft, plus component overhaul on rotable parts. The supplier categories that flow through that scope:

    • Consumables — fasteners, sealants, adhesives, paints, abrasives. Heavy MRO consumes consumables at industrial scale.
    • Sheet metal stock and skins — repair work generates demand for replacement structural materials in the same alloys factory work uses.
    • Composite materials — increasingly relevant on 777 and A320 family work as composite content rises.
    • Avionics components — line-replaceable units (LRUs), wire harnesses, connectors, and the test equipment that validates them.
    • Structural assemblies — bulkheads, frames, ribs that come off airplanes and need to be supplied as repair stock.
    • Rotables — actuators, valves, pumps, generators, APUs, components that go through the 50,000-square-foot component repair facility.
    • Tooling and fixtures — MRO tooling overlaps with factory tooling but with a heavier lean toward portable, airframe-specific fixtures.
    • PPE and safety — fall protection, respirators, hearing protection at hangar scale.
    • Industrial services — non-destructive testing (NDT), specialty cleaning, plating, surface treatment, hazardous materials handling.

    The Geographic Advantage Suppliers Should Be Pricing

    If your facility is in Snohomish County, you have a logistics advantage at ATS that suppliers in other regions cannot match. Most MRO inputs are time-sensitive — a hangar with an airplane in a check window cannot wait two weeks for a fastener. Same-day delivery from a Snohomish County supplier to the south end of Paine Field is achievable. Suppliers in Texas, Florida, and overseas cannot match that turn.

    That advantage is not theoretical. Many ATS purchase orders go to local distributors precisely because the campus is on the same airport, on the same Airport Road, in the same county as the supplier base that grew up around Boeing. If you are a Snohomish County aerospace supplier and you have not built a relationship with the ATS purchasing function, you are leaving same-day-delivery margin on the table.

    The Workforce Picture

    The 5,200-worker aerospace shortage in Snohomish County affects ATS the same way it affects Boeing. Suppliers who help solve workforce — apprenticeship programs, training partnerships, recruiting pipelines, contract labor for surge periods — have a relationship-building lever at ATS that strict component sales do not always offer. Workforce-adjacent suppliers should be in that conversation.

    How to Get Into the ATS Supply Chain

    ATS, like other large MRO operators, runs a procurement function with vetting requirements: quality system audits, AS9100 or AS9110 alignment for relevant categories (AS9110 specifically governs MRO suppliers), FAA-aligned documentation practices, and on-time delivery histories. A Snohomish County supplier already qualified to Boeing’s standards is positioned to qualify at ATS with relatively modest incremental work — but you have to actually run that incremental qualification process.

    Practical first steps:

    1. Map your current product lines against the ATS work scope (737/757/767/777/A320 airframe MRO, plus component repair).
    2. Identify which of your Boeing-qualified product lines have direct MRO equivalents.
    3. Confirm AS9110 if you serve MRO end-customers; AS9100 alone may not be sufficient for MRO supplier status.
    4. Build a same-day-delivery pitch around your Snohomish County address. That is your real edge.

    What 2026 Means for ATS Suppliers

    Two things put ATS in a particularly useful position for suppliers right now:

    Lufthansa just confirmed first 777-9 delivery slips to Q1 2027. Slips like that often correlate with airlines extending the in-service life of existing widebodies — which means more MRO demand on 777-200, 777-300, and 767 platforms. ATS sees that demand directly.

    The 737 MAX 10 North Line is activating this summer. New airplanes flow into airline service over the following years and become MRO inventory roughly five to seven years after delivery. That is a multi-decade tailwind, not a one-quarter event.

    For a Snohomish County supplier, the rational read is: build the ATS relationship now, while the strategic visibility is high and competitors elsewhere may be focused only on the Boeing factory side.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is ATS the same as Boeing?

    No. ATS is an independent commercial MRO operator at the south end of Paine Field. It does heavy maintenance on airplanes already in airline service. Boeing builds new airplanes at the north end of the same airport.

    What aircraft programs does ATS support?

    The Everett facility services Boeing 737 NG and MAX, 757, 767, 777, and Airbus A320 family aircraft, plus rotable component repair across those fleets.

    What quality certifications matter for ATS suppliers?

    AS9100 and AS9110 are the dominant quality system certifications across aerospace and MRO supply chains. AS9110 specifically governs MRO suppliers; AS9100 is the broader aerospace standard. Suppliers serving MRO end-customers should map their certifications against both.

    Why is MRO countercyclical to new-aircraft production?

    When new deliveries slow, airlines extend the service life of existing airplanes, which generates more MRO demand. When deliveries accelerate, the existing fleet still comes due for scheduled checks on its established maintenance intervals. The two cycles tend to offset.

    How big is ATS in the Snohomish County aerospace economy?

    ATS is the second-largest aerospace employer in Everett after Boeing, with about 800 workers in Everett. Within the larger Snohomish County aerospace cluster — which includes thousands of suppliers, ZeroAvia, the Boeing factory, and Paine Field general aviation — ATS is the dominant MRO operator and the largest such operator on the U.S. West Coast.

    Where do I start as a new supplier interested in selling to ATS?

    Map your product lines to the work scope, confirm relevant quality certifications, and approach the procurement function with a same-day-delivery proposition built around your Snohomish County address. Local suppliers carry a logistics advantage that out-of-region competitors cannot match on time-sensitive MRO inputs.


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  • For Boeing Line Workers in Everett: An Aerospace Worker’s Guide to Aviation Technical Services Down the Road at Paine Field

    For Boeing Line Workers in Everett: An Aerospace Worker’s Guide to Aviation Technical Services Down the Road at Paine Field

    For Boeing Line Workers in Everett: An Aerospace Worker’s Guide to Aviation Technical Services Down the Road at Paine Field

    If you have spent any time on a Boeing factory floor in Everett, you already know the second-largest aerospace employer in this city. You drive past it on the way home. The buildings at the south end of Paine Field, Airport Road side, hangar doors big enough to swallow a 777 — that is Aviation Technical Services. ATS. About 800 people in Everett. The largest MRO operation on the West Coast.

    This is the worker’s guide to ATS as it relates to a Boeing-line career: what the work looks like, how the skills transfer, how the trade-offs compare, and what to watch for as Everett’s aerospace economy heads into a 737 MAX 10 North Line activation, a 777-9 ramp, and a regional 5,200-worker aerospace shortage.

    What ATS Does That Boeing Doesn’t

    Boeing builds airplanes. ATS fixes them after they’re built. That is the core distinction.

    The work that happens inside the ATS Everett hangar is heavy maintenance — C-checks, D-checks, structural repair, cabin reconfigurations, modifications, avionics upgrades. Airlines fly their planes to Paine Field, ATS technicians take them apart, look at every inch of structure and system, fix what is worn or damaged, and put the airplane back together to fly another five to ten years. The 500,000-square-foot hangar fits up to 14 airliners simultaneously. The 50,000-square-foot component shop next door handles the parts that come off them.

    For a Boeing-line worker, that is a very different cadence. Factory work is repetitive at scale: same station, same job, same airplane type, in volume. MRO work is investigative: each airplane comes in with a different history, different fleet leader, different damage pattern. You spend more time troubleshooting and less time executing a fixed task.

    How Boeing-Line Skills Transfer to ATS

    The trade itself is the same. Aerospace mechanics use the same toolboxes, the same FAA airframe-and-powerplant fundamentals, the same sheet-metal and structures techniques whether they’re building a 737 MAX or repairing a 757 that has been flying for fifteen years. Specifically:

    • Sheet metal mechanics — riveting, drilling, structural repair, skin replacement. Direct transfer.
    • Structures specialists — composite repair, frame work, wing-box and empennage repair. Direct transfer, with the difference that MRO sees more in-service damage and corrosion than factory work does.
    • Hydraulics and pneumatics technicians — same systems on Boeing factory floor and on ATS hangar floor.
    • Avionics technicians — Boeing factory wiring and ATS in-service wiring share the same diagnostic toolkit.
    • Electrical mechanics — same wire bundles, same installation standards.
    • Inspectors and quality — Boeing’s quality system is FAA-aligned; ATS operates under FAA Part 145 repair-station rules. The discipline carries.

    What does not always transfer one-to-one is the work pace. A Boeing 737 line moves at production cadence — Rate 47 is coming this summer per Boeing’s own forecasts. ATS work is paced by airline turn time: how fast an airline wants the airplane back in revenue service. Some checks turn in two weeks, some in two months. The variance is wider than a factory line allows.

    The Commute Math From the Boeing Side of the Field

    ATS is on the other end of the same airport. From Boeing’s main entrance to the ATS hangars at the south end of Paine Field, you are looking at a few minutes of drive time inside the Paine Field campus. If you currently commute to Boeing from Mukilteo, Mill Creek, Lake Stevens, Marysville, Lynnwood, or anywhere else in the Paine Field catchment, the commute math is essentially identical at ATS.

    That has practical implications. If you are house-shopping in Everett — and given Snohomish County’s 51.8% housing inventory jump in March 2026 a lot of aerospace workers are — the same neighborhoods work for both employers. Silver Lake, Mukilteo, Harbour Pointe, Mill Creek, Lake Stevens. Same drive, same options.

    Why ATS Matters as a Career Anchor in Everett

    MRO demand runs countercyclical to new-aircraft production. When Boeing slows, airlines fly older airplanes longer; that is more MRO work. When Boeing accelerates, the older airplanes still come due for their checks. For a worker thinking about a 25-year career in Everett aerospace, that countercyclical relationship is a hedge most factory positions do not offer.

    The other anchor is the building itself. The Tramco-to-Goodrich-to-ATS hangar has been an MRO operation in Everett since the 1980s. That kind of footprint stability is rare in commercial aviation; programs come and go but the airframe hangars persist because the in-service fleet keeps coming back.

    What’s Different About the Day-to-Day

    Talk to anyone who has worked both sides — Boeing factory and ATS hangar — and a few patterns come up:

    You learn more airframes faster at ATS. The hangar sees 737 NG, 737 MAX, 757, 767, 777, A320 family. A Boeing line worker often spends years on one type. An ATS mechanic rotates across types as the work comes in.

    You troubleshoot more at ATS, execute more at Boeing. MRO is built around finding what is wrong with a specific airplane. Factory work is built around installing a specific component to a specific spec on every airplane that comes down the line.

    Quality systems are different but parallel. Boeing has its production quality apparatus; ATS has FAA Part 145 repair-station governance. Both are heavily documented and audited. The discipline carries.

    Shift structures vary. MRO often runs around customer turn times — heavier nights and weekend coverage when an airline needs the airplane back fast.

    The 2026 Window

    Three things make 2026 a good year to know what’s at the south end of Paine Field if you work for Boeing:

    The aerospace shortage is real. Snohomish County is short an estimated 5,200 aerospace workers across factory and MRO. That puts upward pressure on wages and competition for skilled labor at every employer in the cluster, including ATS.

    The 737 MAX 10 North Line activation is happening this summer. That brings new demand to Boeing — and over time, new airplanes that will eventually need MRO work. ATS sits two miles from where they’re being built.

    The 777-9 ramp into 2027 is real, even with Lufthansa’s first delivery slipping to Q1 2027. That fleet, when it deploys, will become MRO inventory across the next two decades.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is ATS hiring Boeing line workers?

    ATS regularly recruits airframe mechanics, structures specialists, sheet metal mechanics, avionics technicians, and quality inspectors — the same trades Boeing employs. The Snohomish County aerospace pipeline feeds both companies, and lateral moves are not unusual.

    Do my Boeing factory skills transfer to ATS?

    Most aerospace trade skills transfer cleanly: sheet metal, structures, composites, hydraulics, avionics, electrical. The major differences are work pace (more investigative at ATS, more repetitive at Boeing) and airframe variety (more types at ATS, often one type at Boeing).

    How far is ATS from the Boeing Everett factory?

    ATS operates at the south end of Paine Field, on Airport Road. From the Boeing Everett main entrance, the drive is short — both employers share the Paine Field campus.

    What aircraft does ATS work on?

    737 NG and MAX, 757, 767, 777, and A320 family aircraft are the primary fleet types serviced at the Everett MRO. The component shop supports rotable parts across those fleets.

    Is MRO work less stable than factory work?

    Industry data shows MRO demand running countercyclical to new-aircraft production. When new deliveries slow, airlines fly older airplanes longer, which is more MRO work. When deliveries accelerate, scheduled checks on the existing fleet continue. That countercyclical relationship is a structural feature of the sector.

    How big is the ATS Everett facility compared to a Boeing factory bay?

    The ATS airframe hangar is 500,000 square feet and fits up to 14 commercial airliners at a time. That is smaller than the Boeing Everett factory’s full footprint but is the largest single MRO building on the U.S. West Coast.

    What is the ATS Part 145 repair station designation?

    FAA Part 145 is the federal regulatory framework for certificated repair stations. ATS Everett operates under that designation, which governs work scope, quality systems, training, and recordkeeping.


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  • Aviation Technical Services in Everett: The Complete 2026 Guide to Paine Field’s MRO Anchor and Snohomish County’s #2 Aerospace Employer

    Aviation Technical Services in Everett: The Complete 2026 Guide to Paine Field’s MRO Anchor and Snohomish County’s #2 Aerospace Employer

    Aviation Technical Services in Everett: The Complete 2026 Guide to Paine Field’s MRO Anchor and Snohomish County’s #2 Aerospace Employer

    Everett has an aerospace identity problem. Almost every conversation about the local industry starts with Boeing — the 737 North Line, the 777-9 ramp, the KC-46 cadence, the Future of Flight tour. That isn’t wrong. It’s just incomplete. The second-largest aerospace employer in this city operates roughly two miles from Boeing’s main entrance, in a hangar most residents drive past without realizing what’s inside.

    That company is Aviation Technical Services — ATS. About 800 employees. A 500,000-square-foot airframe Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) hangar at the south end of Paine Field. A 50,000-square-foot component repair facility next door. And the title of the largest MRO on the U.S. West Coast.

    This is the complete 2026 guide to ATS in Everett — what the company does, where it sits in the Snohomish County aerospace economy, why MRO matters as the local industry preps for a 737 MAX 10 North Line activation and a 777-9 delivery wave, and what the workforce looks like.

    What ATS Does in Everett

    ATS is a heavy-maintenance MRO operator. In plain English: airlines fly their planes to Paine Field and ATS technicians take them apart, inspect the structure, fix what’s worn or damaged, modify what needs upgrading, and put them back together to fly another decade. The industry calls these visits checks — A-checks, C-checks, and the deep structural D-check — and the heavy ones happen in hangars exactly like the one ATS operates at the south end of the airport.

    The Everett campus runs two integrated facilities:

    • The 500,000-square-foot airframe hangar — bay space for up to 14 commercial airliners simultaneously. A Boeing 737 NG is roughly 130 feet long; the building can fit more than a dozen of them under one roof.
    • The 50,000-square-foot component repair facility — where structural, hydraulic, and electrical components come off the airframes and get repaired by technicians trained on specific systems.

    Together those two buildings give ATS what the trade press calls a “full-service” MRO posture: an airline can ship the whole airplane to Everett and ship the parts that come off it to the same campus.

    The Building’s History: Tramco, Goodrich, ATS

    The hangar is not new. It was originally built and operated by Tramco, sold to Goodrich, and then sold to ATS in the fall of 2007. That timeline matters because it means the same physical footprint has been an MRO operation in Everett for decades. The institutional knowledge — the technicians who have seen the same airframe come back for its third C-check, the engineers who know how the supply of certain parts behaves — runs deep. When someone in Snohomish County says they “work at ATS,” there is a reasonable chance their parents or their first supervisor worked at Tramco in the same building.

    Where ATS Sits in the Snohomish County Aerospace Economy

    Boeing remains the dominant aerospace employer in Everett — the 737 MAX 10 North Line activation in summer 2026 alone is supposed to add hundreds of factory positions, layered on top of the 777-9 program and KC-46 deliveries. ATS sits in a different position on the supplier map: not building new airplanes, but maintaining the in-service fleet.

    That position has structural value. When Boeing slows or speeds up production — both have happened in the last five years — MRO demand follows a different curve. Airlines fly older airplanes longer when new deliveries slip; that is more MRO work, not less. When new airplanes do arrive, the older ones in the fleet still come due for their scheduled checks. MRO is countercyclical to factory production in ways that smooth the local aerospace job market.

    For Snohomish County, that means ATS is the second pillar — after Boeing — of an aerospace ecosystem that also includes Aviation Technical Services’ supplier network, the 5,200-worker aerospace shortage the county is trying to close, and emerging entrants like ZeroAvia at Paine Field.

    What ATS Works On

    The Everett facility’s bread and butter is narrowbody and widebody airframe MRO. That includes Boeing 737 family work (NG and MAX), 757s, 767s, and 777s, plus Airbus A320 family aircraft. ATS publishes an FAA-certificated repair station list for the work scope; the practical effect is that almost any commercial airliner you might see flying in or out of a North American airport could end up at Paine Field for a heavy check.

    Beyond scheduled maintenance, ATS does cabin reconfigurations (when an airline buys an airplane and wants different seat counts or class layouts), structural repair (post-incident or post-corrosion), modification engineering, and avionics upgrades. The component shop next door supports rotables — the parts that come off airplanes, get repaired or overhauled, and go back onto the airplane fleet later.

    Why MRO Matters in an Aerospace Town

    It is easy to think about Everett’s aerospace economy as a Boeing factory and the suppliers that feed it. That model misses the after-market. Every airplane Boeing has ever delivered eventually needs heavy maintenance, and the MRO sector is where that work happens. Globally, commercial aviation MRO is a multi-tens-of-billions-per-year industry. On the West Coast of the United States, the largest single facility doing that work is at the south end of Paine Field.

    That has implications for workforce. The skills an ATS airframe mechanic uses overlap heavily with what a Boeing factory mechanic uses — sheet metal, composites, hydraulics, electrical, structures — but with a different rhythm. Factory work is repetitive at scale. MRO work is investigative: each airplane comes in with a different set of issues. The two career paths cross-train people who can move between them as the local economy shifts.

    The 2026 Context: Why ATS Matters Right Now

    Three things are converging in Everett’s aerospace economy in 2026 that put ATS in a useful spotlight:

    1. The 737 MAX 10 North Line activation. Boeing’s 737 MAX 10 will be built exclusively in Everett, with the North Line going live this summer. New airplanes need eventual MRO. ATS sits two miles from where they will be built.

    2. The 777-9 ramp into 2027. Lufthansa just confirmed first 777-9 delivery slips to Q1 2027. The fleet that customers eventually accept will need scheduled maintenance over its life — work an MRO with 777 capability is positioned to capture.

    3. The 5,200-worker aerospace shortage. Snohomish County is short thousands of skilled aerospace workers across factory and MRO. The pipeline that fills Boeing also fills ATS. That makes ATS a quiet but important participant in any conversation about local workforce development.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is Aviation Technical Services located in Everett?

    ATS operates from the south end of Paine Field, along Airport Road in Everett. The campus includes a 500,000-square-foot airframe hangar and an adjacent 50,000-square-foot component repair facility.

    How many people does ATS employ in Everett?

    About 800 people work at the ATS Everett campus. That makes ATS the second-largest aerospace employer in Everett after Boeing.

    What is MRO, and why does it matter for Everett?

    MRO stands for Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul — the heavy-maintenance sector of commercial aviation that services airplanes already in service with airlines. It matters for Everett because ATS operates the largest MRO facility on the U.S. West Coast at Paine Field, anchoring a workforce sector that runs countercyclical to new-aircraft production.

    How many airplanes can fit in the ATS Everett hangar?

    The 500,000-square-foot airframe hangar has bay space for up to 14 commercial airliners simultaneously.

    Who used to own the ATS Everett hangar?

    The building was originally Tramco, then Goodrich, then sold to ATS in the fall of 2007. The footprint has been an MRO operation in Everett for decades.

    What aircraft types does ATS work on?

    The Everett facility services Boeing 737 family (NG and MAX), 757, 767, and 777 aircraft, plus Airbus A320 family. The component shop supports rotable parts across those fleets.

    Is ATS hiring in Everett in 2026?

    ATS recruits airframe mechanics, avionics technicians, sheet-metal mechanics, structures specialists, and engineers as part of the broader Snohomish County aerospace pipeline. The county-wide aerospace shortage is roughly 5,200 workers across factory and MRO sectors, and ATS is one of the larger employers competing for that talent.

    Is ATS related to Boeing?

    No. ATS is a separate company that operates an MRO business adjacent to Boeing’s Everett factory. The two share the Paine Field campus but are independent employers with different workforce needs and different customers.


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  • Everett Asks Residents What 2027 Federal Housing Dollars Should Pay For — Public Hearing Is Tuesday at 5

    Everett Asks Residents What 2027 Federal Housing Dollars Should Pay For — Public Hearing Is Tuesday at 5

    If you have ever wondered who decides how Everett spends its federal housing and community development money — and how a regular resident gets a vote in that conversation — Tuesday, May 5 is your answer.

    The Community Development Advisory Committee, the citizen body that recommends how the city spends Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), HOME Program, and 2060 Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF) dollars, is holding a public hearing at 5 p.m. on May 5 to set the priority needs for the 2027 program year. The hearing is hybrid — in person at the Everett Municipal Building (2930 Wetmore Avenue) or virtual — and written comments are accepted any time before then at communitygrants@everettwa.gov.

    For most Everett residents, this is the most direct line into how millions of federal pass-through dollars get aimed at the city’s biggest housing and neighborhood needs each year. The committee uses what it hears Tuesday to write the priorities that will determine which projects, programs, and nonprofits get funded twelve to eighteen months from now.

    What the CDAC Actually Does

    The Community Development Advisory Committee is a volunteer body of Everett residents appointed to recommend how the city distributes a specific group of housing and community-development funding sources. The dollars flow from three main pots:

    The Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) is a federal HUD formula grant that has funded local affordable housing, homeless services, neighborhood infrastructure, and small-business assistance since 1974. Cities the size of Everett receive CDBG annually as an entitlement community.

    The HOME Investment Partnerships Program is a separate HUD funding stream specifically for affordable housing — acquisition, rehab, new construction, and tenant-based rental assistance.

    The 2060 Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF) is a state-authorized local fund supported by document recording fees collected by Snohomish County. It pays for affordable housing projects inside Everett city limits and is one of the few flexible local sources for housing that serves people earning under 50% of area median income.

    Municipal funding may also be added to the mix in any given cycle, depending on the council’s budget decisions.

    CDAC does not write checks. It writes the priorities. City staff then issue requests for proposals to nonprofits, housing developers, and service providers, who apply for funding that lines up with whatever the committee identified as a priority. That is why the May 5 hearing matters: the priorities decided in this room shape who gets funded a year from now.

    What Tuesday’s Hearing Is For

    The agenda has two pieces. The first and bigger one is identifying the community priority needs for 2027. CDAC is asking residents to tell them what they see as the most pressing community-development issues in Everett right now — affordable housing, homelessness response, infrastructure in lower-income neighborhoods, services for seniors or people with disabilities, microenterprise development, anything that fits inside the federal CDBG eligibility framework.

    The second item is a review of updates to the Citizen Participation Plan (CPP), the document that governs how CDAC engages the public on these decisions. The CPP is technical, but it matters: it sets the rules for how hearings are publicized, how public comment is collected, and how the committee responds to feedback. Updates to the CPP every few years bring it in line with current HUD requirements and the city’s changing communications channels.

    Why This One Is Worth Showing Up For

    Federal CDBG and HOME funds have been under sustained pressure at the national level for years. Every cycle, the local conversation about what to prioritize gets a little harder because the formula allocations have not kept pace with cost inflation in housing, services, or infrastructure. That makes the priority-setting decision more consequential, not less. Fewer dollars chasing more needs means the priorities the committee writes down really do determine which neighborhoods, populations, and project types get served — and which get told to wait another year.

    This is also a moment when Everett is making bigger housing decisions on parallel tracks. The Snohomish County Council voted unanimously on April 24 to award $23 million in Housing & Behavioral Health Capital Fund money to six projects, three of them inside Everett — the EGM 172-bed shelter expansion at 3530 Smith Avenue, Helping Hands Broadway 33 at 2410 and 2412 Broadway, and the Everett Station District Alliance 58-unit transit-oriented building at 3102 Smith. Those were county dollars. The CDBG, HOME, and AHTF priorities the city sets May 5 are a different pipeline — and they fund a different layer of the housing system, often the smaller, more locally specific projects that do not pencil at the scale a $5 million county capital award requires.

    How to Participate

    There are four ways to weigh in:

    Attend in person. Arrive at the Everett Municipal Building, 2930 Wetmore Avenue, by 4:50 p.m. on Tuesday, May 5. City staff will escort attendees to the meeting room. Public comment is taken during the hearing portion of the agenda.

    Attend virtually. A virtual attendance option is available. Instructions for joining remotely are posted on the Community Development Advisory Committee page at everettwa.gov.

    Email written comments. Send to communitygrants@everettwa.gov any time before or after the hearing. Written comments become part of the official record.

    Mail written comments. Send to 2930 Wetmore Avenue, Suite 8A, Everett, WA 98201.

    If you need translation services, ASL interpretation, or any other accommodation to participate, contact communitygrants@everettwa.gov or call (425) 257-7185 in advance so the city can make arrangements. Spanish-language information about the hearing is published on the same news flash on the city’s website.

    What Comes After May 5

    Once CDAC adopts the 2027 priorities — typically at a meeting following the public input hearing — city staff translate those priorities into a request-for-proposals timeline. Nonprofits, housing developers, and service providers will apply against those priorities later in 2026. CDAC reviews the applications and recommends an allocation to the City Council. Council takes the final vote, usually as part of the broader 2027 budget adoption in late 2026.

    In other words, what happens Tuesday night is the front end of a process that ends with line items in next year’s budget. The closer to that front end residents weigh in, the more influence they have over what eventually gets funded.

    What to Do Next

    • Read the agenda and the Citizen Participation Plan update at the Community Development Advisory Committee page on everettwa.gov.
    • Submit written comments to communitygrants@everettwa.gov before or after the hearing.
    • Show up Tuesday, May 5 at 4:50 p.m. at the Everett Municipal Building, 2930 Wetmore Avenue, if you want to give in-person testimony.
    • Request accommodations at communitygrants@everettwa.gov or (425) 257-7185 if you need translation, interpretation, or accessibility help.
    • Track the funding cycle by following the Community Development Block Grant page on the city’s website to see what gets recommended after this hearing.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is CDAC and what does it decide? The Community Development Advisory Committee is a citizen body that recommends how Everett spends federal CDBG and HOME funds, the state’s 2060 Affordable Housing Trust Fund dollars, and any municipal funding added to the mix. It does not allocate dollars directly — it writes the priorities and reviews applications, then recommends to the City Council.

    When and where is the public hearing? Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 5 p.m. The hearing is hybrid: in person at the Everett Municipal Building, 2930 Wetmore Avenue (arrive by 4:50 p.m.), or virtual. Virtual instructions are on the CDAC page at everettwa.gov.

    What funding sources are CDAC’s priorities for 2027 going to shape? Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), HOME Program, 2060 Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF), and any municipal funding added to the cycle.

    Can I submit comments without attending the hearing? Yes. Email communitygrants@everettwa.gov or mail to 2930 Wetmore Avenue, Suite 8A, Everett, WA 98201. Written comments are part of the official record.

    Is this related to the $23M county housing vote on April 24? No — those are separate pots. The April 24 vote was Snohomish County’s Housing & Behavioral Health Capital Fund, awarded to six projects (three inside Everett). The CDAC priorities being set May 5 govern a different funding stream — the city’s CDBG, HOME, and AHTF dollars — and typically fund a different layer of projects.

    Who can request accommodations? Anyone. Translation, ASL interpretation, accessibility help, and other accommodations can be arranged by contacting communitygrants@everettwa.gov or calling (425) 257-7185 in advance of the hearing.

    Is information available in Spanish? Yes. The official city news flash about the hearing includes a full Spanish-language version, and Spanish-language assistance can be requested through the same email and phone number.

  • Everett’s Bicycle Master Plan Is Getting Its First Major Update in 15 Years — Here’s What 41 Miles of Bike Infrastructure Has Bought So Far

    Everett’s Bicycle Master Plan Is Getting Its First Major Update in 15 Years — Here’s What 41 Miles of Bike Infrastructure Has Bought So Far

    Fifteen years into a thirty-year Bicycle Master Plan, Everett is somewhere near the halfway mark. The city has built about 41 miles of on-street bike infrastructure and 23 miles of off-street trails since the plan was adopted in 2011, and a 2026 update — funded by a federal Safe Streets for All grant — will redraw the priorities for the next half of the build-out and merge bicycle planning with pedestrian planning for the first time.

    May is the month the city is using to put a public face on it. Mayor Cassie Franklin has issued a National Bike Month proclamation, Everett Transit is hosting two events at Everett Station (a Wednesday-morning Bike to Work coffee on May 13 and the Bike Everett Festival on Friday, May 15 from 3 to 7 p.m.), and the League of American Bicyclists has again recognized Everett as a bronze-level Bicycle Friendly Community — the same designation the city first earned in 2021.

    Underneath the festival programming is a more consequential conversation: how the next decade of bike and pedestrian infrastructure investment gets prioritized, where it lands, and which neighborhoods see the next protected lanes, bicycle boulevards, and trail connections.

    What Has Actually Been Built

    The 2011 Bicycle Master Plan committed Everett to a specific build-out of bike lanes, sharrows, off-street trails, and bicycle boulevards over thirty years. As of an April 2026 review presented to the city’s transportation advisory committee, about 41 miles of on-street bike infrastructure are in place, plus roughly 23 miles of off-street projects like trails. That is on the order of half the work the original plan envisioned.

    What that has meant on the ground over the past few years includes the buffered bike lanes on Rucker Avenue, the bicycle boulevard work in residential neighborhoods, the city’s Bicycle Friendly Driver education program, and the widely-used Interurban Trail and Lowell Riverfront Trail connections. None of that happened by accident — each piece traces back to a specific line item in the master plan that staff and elected officials worked through over multiple budget cycles.

    That is the case the city makes for keeping the plan as a living document. A long-horizon plan that residents can read tells the next planning director and the next council which projects are next in line, and it makes the case to outside funders — like the federal Safe Streets for All program — that the city has done the homework to deserve the grant.

    What the 2026 Update Changes

    Two things make this update meaningfully different from a routine refresh.

    The first is the scope. The current plan covers bicycle infrastructure. The 2026 update will incorporate pedestrian infrastructure and what the city calls supportive facilities — the bike racks, repair stations, secure parking, signage, and crossings that determine whether a bike lane actually gets used. By 2027, when the updated plan is expected to be adopted, Everett will have a single integrated active-transportation plan covering people who walk, bike, and roll.

    The second is the funding source. The update is being paid for through a Safe Streets for All grant — a federal program created under the 2021 infrastructure law and run through the U.S. Department of Transportation. Safe Streets for All explicitly requires applicants to build a Vision Zero–style safety action plan that ties infrastructure decisions to fatality and serious-injury reduction targets. That requirement is already pulling Everett’s planning toward a more data-driven framework: which corridors have the most crashes, where the high-injury network is, and which interventions show the strongest evidence of reducing serious injuries.

    Cities that complete Safe Streets for All planning grants become eligible for substantially larger implementation grants in subsequent funding rounds. That is the strategic bet behind doing this update now: the planning work is the on-ramp to the construction money.

    What This Means for Residents

    For most Everett residents, the practical question is not how the master plan is structured — it is whether their street is going to get a bike lane, whether their kid’s walk to school is going to get a safer crossing, and whether the trail they use to commute is going to get connected to the next neighborhood over.

    Those decisions get made through the priority list inside the master plan. When the update comes back to the City Council for adoption, it will include a ranked project list. Projects high on the list get built sooner. Projects lower on the list get built when funding shows up. Public input during the planning process is the period when residents have real influence over where their neighborhood sits on that list.

    The city is also pointing residents toward existing tools. A map of Everett’s trails, bike lanes, and other infrastructure is posted online at everettwa.gov/bikes, and paper copies will be available at the May 15 festival. Following @EverettTransit on Facebook and Instagram is the city’s recommended channel for catching the smaller, quieter input opportunities — neighborhood-scale meetings, online surveys, and pop-ups — between now and the plan’s adoption.

    The May Events

    Two events anchor National Bike Month locally:

    Bike to Work Coffee — Wednesday, May 13, 6 to 8 a.m. at Everett Station (3201 Smith Avenue). Free coffee, Bike Everett t-shirts, and an e-bike raffle. Everett Transit is hosting.

    Bike Everett Festival — Friday, May 15, 3 to 7 p.m. at Everett Station (3201 Smith Avenue). Family-friendly. Free games, t-shirts, food trucks, entertainment, an e-bike raffle, and an Everett Transit bus staged for people to practice loading and unloading bikes from the front-mounted bike rack. The festival is the city’s biggest public-facing bike event of the year and the easiest entry point for residents who have not engaged with city transportation planning before.

    Where the Bicycle Friendly Community Designation Comes From

    The bronze-level Bicycle Friendly Community recognition comes from the League of American Bicyclists, a national advocacy organization that runs the BFC program as a benchmarking tool for cities. Communities apply, the League scores them across five categories — engineering, education, encouragement, enforcement, and evaluation — and assigns one of five ranks: bronze, silver, gold, platinum, or diamond.

    Everett first earned bronze in 2021. The 2026 renewal at the same level reflects the continued work on infrastructure, the Bicycle Friendly Driver program, and ongoing community programming. Moving up to silver — the next tier — typically requires a measurable jump in bike commute mode share, a more developed protected-lane network, and a deeper safety-data culture. The 2026 master plan update is the kind of work that, done well, can underwrite a future application at the next level.

    What to Do Next

    • Show up to the Bike Everett Festival Friday, May 15 from 3 to 7 p.m. at Everett Station, 3201 Smith Avenue. It is the easiest way to talk to city transportation staff face-to-face about where you ride and what is missing.
    • Catch the Wednesday coffee May 13 from 6 to 8 a.m. if you commute through downtown.
    • Read the existing bicycle map and master plan at everettwa.gov/bikes. The current map shows what is on the ground today; the plan shows what is supposed to come next.
    • Follow @EverettTransit on Facebook and Instagram for the smaller input opportunities between now and adoption — surveys, neighborhood meetings, and pop-ups.
    • Track the Safe Streets for All work at everettwa.gov/1802/Public-Safety-Safe-Streets-Program. The Safety Action Plan is the document that will shape which corridors the master plan update prioritizes.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When was Everett’s Bicycle Master Plan first adopted? 2011. The current update is the first major revision in that thirty-year planning horizon.

    How much bike infrastructure has been built so far? About 41 miles of on-street bike infrastructure and roughly 23 miles of off-street trails, as of an April 2026 review.

    What is changing in the 2026 update? Two things. The plan is expanding to cover pedestrian infrastructure and supportive facilities (bike parking, repair stations, signage, crossings) in addition to bike lanes. And the planning framework is being aligned with Vision Zero / Safe Streets for All requirements, which means safety data — crashes, fatalities, serious injuries — drives more of the prioritization.

    Who funded the master plan update? A federal Safe Streets for All grant administered by the U.S. Department of Transportation. The program was created under the 2021 infrastructure law.

    When will the updated plan be adopted? The city expects to bring an integrated bicycle and pedestrian plan forward by 2027.

    What is the bronze Bicycle Friendly Community designation? A recognition from the League of American Bicyclists. It is one of five tiers (bronze, silver, gold, platinum, diamond) and reflects evaluation across engineering, education, encouragement, enforcement, and evaluation. Everett first earned bronze in 2021 and has been re-recognized in 2026.

    When and where is the Bike Everett Festival? Friday, May 15, 3 to 7 p.m. at Everett Station, 3201 Smith Avenue. Free, family-friendly.

    Is there a Bike to Work Day event? Yes. Wednesday, May 13 from 6 to 8 a.m. at Everett Station. Coffee, t-shirts, and an e-bike raffle.