Tag: Mayor Cassie Franklin

  • The June 30 Sound Transit Vote and Everett’s Light Rail Future: A Complete 2026 Guide to What’s at Stake

    The June 30 Sound Transit Vote and Everett’s Light Rail Future: A Complete 2026 Guide to What’s at Stake

    Quick answer: Sound Transit’s board must vote by June 30, 2026 on a revised ST3 System Plan that will determine whether Everett gets full light rail to downtown Everett Station or a truncated line ending at SW Everett Industrial Center near Paine Field. Mayor Cassie Franklin sent a formal advocacy letter April 23. The public survey closes May 1, 2026.

    Ten years after voters approved Sound Transit 3, the promise of light rail from Lynnwood to Everett is approaching its most consequential decision point yet. By June 30, 2026, Sound Transit’s 18-member board must adopt a revised ST3 System Plan — and the outcome will determine whether downtown Everett gets the light rail connection voters were promised, a truncated connection ending miles short near Paine Field, or something in between.

    Why the Vote Is Happening

    When ST3 passed in November 2016, it committed to a regional light rail spine connecting Tacoma, Seattle, and Everett. The Everett Link Extension — the planned 16-mile segment from Lynnwood City Center north to downtown Everett Station — was one of the program’s anchor commitments.

    Since then, construction cost escalation, inflation, and rising labor costs have opened a projected $34.5 billion gap between what ST3 promised and what current funding can deliver. Roughly $30 billion of that gap is driven by cost growth in east-west extensions to West Seattle and Ballard — but the shortfall affects all projects, including the Everett extension, whose estimated cost now runs $6.8 billion to $7.7 billion for the full 16-mile build.

    State law requires the board to adopt a revised System Plan by June 30, 2026. That deadline is now less than 60 days away.

    The Three Approaches on the Table

    Approaches 1 and 2 fund full construction of the north-south spine, completing light rail all the way to downtown Everett Station. They achieve this by deferring or truncating east-west extensions — primarily West Seattle and South Kirkland–Issaquah. Everett gets a complete connection under both approaches, though opening timelines may shift from the original 2037–2041 window.

    Approach 3 phases all extensions. Rail would reach the SW Everett Industrial Center station — the stop serving the Paine Field/Boeing corridor — but would stop short of downtown Everett Station. The truncation is estimated to save $1.8 billion to $2.5 billion on the Everett segment. Downtown Everett, Everett Station, and the neighborhoods between SW Everett and the city’s core would not be connected in this phase.

    Sound Transit’s capital delivery team has also identified design changes — specifically at-grade or surface-level routing at Ash Way, West Alderwood, and the SR 526/Evergreen Way stations — that could reduce the full Everett extension cost to approximately $6.4 billion to $7.3 billion while preserving the downtown connection.

    Mayor Franklin’s April 23 Letter

    On April 23, 2026, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin sent a formal letter to the Sound Transit board making the case for keeping the full Everett spine in the revised plan. “We are ready to support a strong, regional transportation system that works in lockstep with Sound Transit’s network,” Franklin wrote.

    The letter connected light rail advocacy to the ongoing Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation: a merged feeder network feeding into a completed spine would drive significantly higher ridership and improve Sound Transit’s financial projections. Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers has joined the advocacy. Both have framed the Everett extension as foundational to decades of regional planning made in good faith.

    What “Finish the Spine” Actually Means for Everett

    Light rail drives development decisions. Businesses, housing developers, and employers make long-term location choices based on transit access. Without a firm commitment to complete the Everett extension to downtown, those decisions shift.

    The city’s ongoing study of annexing the Mariner neighborhood — which sits near a planned light rail station — depends partly on the assumption that the station will be built. A truncation at SW Everett would undercut the transit-oriented development assumptions baked into that study. Everett also faces a projected $14 million 2027 budget gap; regional infrastructure that catalyzes economic activity is part of the long-term revenue picture.

    See also: What Everett’s Mariner Annexation Study means for residents.

    The May 1 Survey Deadline — Today

    Sound Transit is accepting public input through a survey closing May 1, 2026 — the same day this article publishes. Residents, commuters, and businesses can submit preferences at soundtransit.org/system-expansion. This is the primary formal mechanism for Everett community input before the board vote.

    The Everett Transit Merger Connection

    Separately, Everett Transit is merging into Community Transit — a change Mayor Franklin explicitly cited in her Sound Transit letter. A consolidated feeder network serving the completed Link spine is more efficient and more ridership-productive than a fragmented system. The complete guide to the Everett Transit merger explains what changes for local riders.

    What Comes After June 30

    The June 30 vote adopts the revised ST3 System Plan — a policy document setting priorities, timelines, and funding frameworks. It does not immediately change construction schedules. If Approaches 1 or 2 pass with full Everett spine funding, next steps involve finalizing station designs and entering environmental review. If Approach 3 passes with the SW Everett truncation, Everett leaders have made clear they would continue advocating for completion in a future phase.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the June 30, 2026 Sound Transit vote?

    By June 30, 2026, Sound Transit’s 18-member board must adopt a revised ST3 System Plan resolving a projected $34.5 billion funding gap. The vote will determine which projects get built, in what order, and on what timeline — including whether the Everett Link Extension goes all the way to downtown Everett Station or stops at SW Everett Industrial Center near Paine Field.

    What is the Everett Link Extension?

    A planned 16-mile light rail segment from Lynnwood City Center north to downtown Everett Station, approved in the 2016 ST3 ballot measure. The extension would include stations at Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (near Paine Field), Airport Road, Evergreen Way, and downtown Everett Station.

    How much does the full Everett extension cost?

    Sound Transit’s 2025 estimate is $6.8 billion to $7.7 billion for the full 16-mile build. With at-grade routing changes at several stations, the capital delivery team estimates costs could fall to $6.4 billion to $7.3 billion while preserving the downtown connection.

    What does Approach 3 mean for Everett?

    Approach 3 truncates rail at SW Everett Industrial Center — serving Paine Field — rather than extending to downtown Everett Station. The savings are estimated at $1.8 billion to $2.5 billion, but downtown Everett and Everett Station would not be connected in this phase.

    When is the public survey deadline?

    May 1, 2026. Submit input at soundtransit.org/system-expansion before the board vote on June 30.

    How does the Mariner annexation connect to this vote?

    The Mariner annexation study — which Everett City Council approved funding for — is partly premised on a planned light rail station serving that neighborhood. If rail is truncated at SW Everett, the transit-oriented development case for annexation weakens.

    What did Mayor Franklin argue in her April 23 letter?

    Franklin argued that completing the spine to downtown Everett Station — not truncating at SW Everett — is essential to regional transit effectiveness, that the Everett/Community Transit merger makes the case stronger by concentrating ridership on the spine, and that decades of development decisions in Everett were made in good faith based on the full spine commitment.

  • Everett’s Light Rail Future Comes to a Head: What the June 30 Sound Transit Vote Means

    Everett’s Light Rail Future Comes to a Head: What the June 30 Sound Transit Vote Means

    What is happening with the Everett Link Extension in 2026? Sound Transit’s board must vote no later than June 30, 2026 on a revised ST3 System Plan — a decision that will determine whether Everett gets light rail, and when. Mayor Cassie Franklin sent the board a formal letter on April 23 making Everett’s case. Here’s what the June vote means for residents.

    What Is the ST3 System Plan Vote?

    Sound Transit’s ST3 ballot measure passed in 2016, promising light rail from Lynnwood to Everett as part of a regional spine connecting Everett, Seattle, and Tacoma. Ten years later, construction cost escalation, inflation, and rising labor costs have opened a projected $34.5 billion gap between what was promised and what current funding can deliver.

    To resolve that gap, Sound Transit’s 18-member board is required to adopt a revised ST3 System Plan no later than June 30, 2026. The revised plan will set new priorities, timelines, and cost targets — and will determine which projects get built on what schedule. For Everett, the stakes are direct: the Everett Link Extension is one of the projects whose cost, timeline, and design details are under active review.

    The April 14 town hall at Everett Station established that costs for the Everett extension had ballooned to a range of $6.6 billion to $7.7 billion — and that one scenario under consideration by the board did not reach Everett at all.

    What Mayor Franklin Told the Board

    In an April 23, 2026 letter to the Sound Transit board, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin made a formal, multi-pronged case for keeping a fully funded Everett Link Extension in the revised plan.

    “We are ready to support a strong, regional transportation system that works in lockstep with Sound Transit’s network,” Franklin wrote.

    The mayor also connected the light rail advocacy to the ongoing Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation discussions — arguing that a merged transit network feeding into the Link spine would increase ridership and make the Everett extension more cost-effective for Sound Transit’s projections. “With a consolidated transit network, riders travelling both from and to Everett will benefit from more frequent service and fewer transfers which will make choosing transit more convenient,” Franklin wrote.

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers has joined the advocacy effort. Both county and city leaders have argued that cutting back or delaying the Everett extension would undercut decades of regional planning and transit-oriented development decisions made in good faith.

    What “Finish the Spine” Means

    Everett officials have repeatedly invoked the phrase “finish the spine” — a reference to Sound Transit’s original vision of connecting Everett, Seattle, and Tacoma as the backbone of a regional light rail network.

    The concern is practical: without a firm commitment to complete the Everett segment, investment decisions made by the city lose their transit-oriented foundation. Light rail drives specific development patterns. Businesses, housing developers, and employers make location decisions based on transit access. If Everett’s connection to the network is uncertain or delayed beyond 2041, those decisions shift.

    The city’s current push to study annexing the Mariner neighborhood — which sits near a planned light rail station — depends partly on the assumption that the station will be built. The projected $14 million 2027 budget gap makes it even more important that regional infrastructure like light rail provides long-term economic return, not just capital cost.

    What the Cost Options Look Like

    Sound Transit’s capital delivery team has been evaluating design changes that could reduce the Everett Link Extension’s cost significantly without eliminating the Everett connection.

    The key option under evaluation: shifting to surface-level or at-grade routing at several stations — specifically Ash Way, West Alderwood, and the SW Everett Industrial Center. At-grade construction is less expensive than elevated tracks and could bring the Everett extension’s total cost down to a range of $6.4 to $7.3 billion, compared to the higher end of current estimates. Additional design changes are being studied at the SR 526/Evergreen Way interchange.

    The board is weighing three broad approaches to closing the system-wide $34.5 billion gap:

    Cost savings through design changes and value engineering. The at-grade routing proposals are the primary example — building the same basic network with less expensive construction methods where the ridership math supports it.

    Project delays or deferrals. Some ST3 projects could be pushed out in time, freeing up near-term budget. For Everett, even the current schedule already runs to 2037-2041.

    New or enhanced revenue tools. The board could seek additional funding sources — potentially requiring a separate voter approval — to close the gap without cutting projects.

    The June 30 vote sets the direction. A final project list, timeline, and funding plan follows from that framework decision.

    How the Transit Merger Connects to This

    One thread running through Mayor Franklin’s advocacy is the Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation — ongoing discussions about merging Everett’s municipally owned bus system into the regional Community Transit network.

    The logic: a consolidated transit system would create a larger, more integrated network that funnels riders toward the light rail spine. That increases the ridership projections for the Everett Link Extension — making it a stronger investment case for the Sound Transit board. It also potentially simplifies operations once light rail arrives, reducing the number of agencies a rider has to navigate to get from a Snohomish County suburb to downtown Seattle.

    Franklin’s April 23 letter makes this connection explicit, tying the transit consolidation talks directly to the Sound Transit advocacy effort. The two decisions — who builds and runs Snohomish County’s buses, and whether light rail reaches Everett on schedule — are not separate issues.

    What the 2037-2041 Timeline Actually Means

    A completion window of 2037 to 2041 means Everett residents are looking at a decade or more before light rail service begins. Every year of delay pushes back the development patterns, ridership, and regional connectivity that the extension enables.

    For context: Lynnwood Link, which connects Lynnwood to the Seattle light rail network, opened in 2024. The Everett extension adds the next major segment north. The gap between Lynnwood and Everett — roughly 16 miles — is the remaining piece of the “spine” that Everett advocates are fighting to protect.

    The June 30 board vote will not determine a final construction date. But it will determine whether Everett is in the funded plan at all, and whether the design options that could bring costs down to $6.4-7.3 billion are adopted or rejected.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What exactly is the June 30 vote? It is a required Sound Transit board decision to adopt a revised ST3 System Plan — a document that sets the new priorities, timelines, and cost targets for the entire ST3 light rail expansion. The board must vote no later than June 30, 2026.

    Will Everett definitely get light rail? The June 30 vote will clarify that. One scenario evaluated by the board would not extend rail to Everett. Mayor Franklin’s April 23 letter and local advocacy are directed at ensuring Everett remains in the funded plan.

    What does “at-grade” routing mean? Instead of elevated tracks (more expensive), at-grade rail runs at street level with dedicated right-of-way. It typically costs less to construct, with trade-offs for speed and grade crossings depending on design.

    What year would Everett get light rail? Current estimates put the window at 2037-2041. Design decisions in the June 30 vote could affect where in that range the final opening falls.

    What does the transit merger have to do with Sound Transit? A merged Everett Transit / Community Transit system would create a larger rider base feeding into the light rail network — strengthening the ridership case for the Everett extension in the Sound Transit board’s analysis.

    What to Do Next

    • Follow Sound Transit board meetings: Meeting schedule, agendas, and public comment sign-up at soundtransit.org/board. The next board sessions before the June 30 deadline are the primary opportunity to weigh in publicly.
    • Track the Everett Link Extension: Project updates at soundtransit.org/system-expansion/everett-link-extension.
    • Submit written comment: Sound Transit accepts written public comments through its website. Comments submitted before the June 30 vote become part of the public record.
    • Contact Mayor Franklin’s office: The mayor sits on the Sound Transit board and represents Everett’s interests directly. Contact via everettwa.gov/citycouncil.
    • Contact Snohomish County: County Executive Somers also represents Snohomish County interests on regional transit matters at snohomishcountywa.gov.
  • Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    Q: What did Everett and Community Transit announce on April 22, 2026?
    A: Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin and Community Transit CEO Ric Ilgenfritz announced the resumption of joint efforts to consolidate Everett Transit into Community Transit. The two agencies plan to draft an interlocal agreement this summer, aim for a final vote before the end of 2026, and phase in service changes over about a year. Under a 2025 state law amended in 2026, the merger can be approved by the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board after a public hearing — no ballot measure required.

    Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    We knew this conversation was coming back. On Wednesday, April 22, 2026, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin and Community Transit CEO Ric Ilgenfritz stood together and restarted one of the biggest quiet-but-consequential conversations in Snohomish County: folding Everett Transit into Community Transit as a single, countywide system.

    If you ride the 7, the 8, or any of the routes that loop between downtown Everett, Casino Road, and Silver Lake, this is your future. And if you care about how Everett connects to Link light rail when it finally shows up, this is arguably the most important local story of the week — bigger than the stadium vote, bigger than the next Port of Everett press release.

    Here is what we actually know, what is still being drafted, and what neighbors are already asking.

    What Was Actually Announced on April 22

    The formal announcement came as a joint statement from the City of Everett and Community Transit. The headline: the two agencies will draft an interlocal agreement for the City of Everett to annex into Community Transit’s service district. That draft will move through the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board of Directors this fall, with the hope of having a final version ready to vote on before the end of 2026.

    If both bodies approve, service changes would phase in over about a year. In the transition, the existing bus networks of both agencies would largely continue to run the way they do today. The point is not to yank routes on day one. The point is a slow merge where riders see better frequency, fewer transfers, and a single system map where Everett isn’t a walled-off island inside the county.

    Why This Is Suddenly Possible After Years of False Starts

    Everett and Community Transit have looked at this merger before. It has failed before. What’s different in 2026 is a state law, originally passed in 2025 and amended this year, that allows a public transportation benefit area like Community Transit to annex a municipal transit agency through an interlocal agreement — approved by the boards of both governing bodies after a public hearing. No countywide ballot measure. No citywide ballot measure. No two-year petition campaign.

    That is the mechanism. The politics have also shifted. With Sound Transit facing a reported $34.5 billion system-wide deficit and the Everett Link extension timeline already pushed from 2036 into the 2037–2041 window, both the city and the county have a strong interest in making sure that when light rail does land at Everett Station, the local bus network feeding it is unified and legible, not two separate agencies handing off riders at the boundary.

    Mayor Franklin framed it pretty bluntly. Through annexation, Everett can offer residents more connections, more destinations, more frequent buses, shorter waits, and evening service that actually exists.

    The Sales Tax Question Is the One Everybody’s Asking

    This is the part that will show up on a lot of kitchen tables. Everett Transit is funded by a local transit sales tax of roughly 0.6 percent. Community Transit’s rate is roughly 1.2 percent. If the annexation goes through, Community Transit’s rate applies in Everett.

    That math is real. The city and county are already acknowledging it in their communications. The pitch they are making to riders and to taxpayers is that the service delivered in exchange — more frequency, better span of service, integration with the rest of the county, and a cleaner handoff to Link light rail — is worth the step up. Some riders will agree. Some won’t. And the “Keep Everett Transit” organizing we’ve seen over the last couple of years has not disappeared; expect a real public hearing to feel like a real public hearing.

    There’s also a letter already running in the Daily Herald arguing the merger should go to a public vote, not just a council and board vote. Whether that argument picks up momentum over the next few months is one of the things to watch.

    How This Fits Into Everything Else Happening on the Waterfront

    Zoom out. Everett is building out the Millwright District and Waterfront Place at the same time. The AquaSox and USL stadium is heading for a pivotal design-funding vote on April 29. Eclipse Mill Park on the Riverfront is on a two-phase build that runs through 2028. The Sound Transit Everett Link extension is somewhere on the horizon, delayed but not dead.

    All of that assumes a transit network that can actually move people between the new places. Right now, the bus ride between the waterfront and Silver Lake isn’t the same agency as the bus ride between Silver Lake and Lynnwood — which means transfers, separate ORCA card logic for passes, and a system that feels fragmented by geography instead of by trip. A merger does not fix frequency overnight. It does set the table for the next capital plan to fix frequency as one network instead of two.

    Timeline, If Everything Holds

    Here is the rough calendar as Franklin and Ilgenfritz described it:

    • Summer 2026: Staff from Everett and Community Transit draft the interlocal agreement. Public outreach runs alongside it.
    • Fall 2026: Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board take up the draft. Public hearings in both bodies.
    • End of 2026: Target for final approval of the interlocal agreement.
    • 2027 into 2028: Service integration phased in over roughly a year. Route numbers, pass products, and scheduling gradually consolidate.

    That timeline can slip. Interlocal agreements are messy documents — they have to resolve labor representation, asset transfers, paratransit service coverage, and debt. Everett Transit has buses, a fleet yard, maintenance staff, and a paratransit operation that have to land somewhere in the final structure.

    What We’re Watching Over the Next Six Months

    A few things will tell us whether this merger is actually going to land. First: how detailed and transparent the interlocal agreement draft is when it goes public in late summer. Second: whether the fall public hearings surface any major structural objection that the two boards didn’t anticipate. Third: whether Everett Transit operators and maintenance workers — who are represented labor — end up with a clear path into Community Transit’s workforce. Fourth: whether the city finds a clean way to handle the sales tax transition so it doesn’t show up as a surprise on one month’s receipts.

    If all four land cleanly, Everett heads into 2027 as part of one countywide system. If any of them stumbles, this conversation rolls into 2027 and the next council session. Either way, yesterday was the moment the merger went from “studying it” to “drafting the agreement.” That’s real movement.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Will this go to a public vote?
    Under the 2025–2026 state law that makes the annexation possible, the merger can be approved by the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board after a public hearing, without a citywide or countywide ballot measure. At least one letter to the Daily Herald has argued it should still go on a ballot. The formal process, as described by the two agencies on April 22, does not require a public vote.

    When would the merger actually take effect?
    The two agencies are aiming for a final vote on an interlocal agreement by the end of 2026. Service integration would then phase in over roughly a year — so many visible changes would roll through 2027 and into 2028.

    What happens to the Everett Transit sales tax?
    Everett’s current transit sales tax is about 0.6 percent. Community Transit’s is about 1.2 percent. If the annexation goes through, Community Transit’s rate applies inside Everett.

    Do my current routes disappear?
    Not on day one. The two agencies have said the existing networks will largely be preserved during the transition and integrated over about a year. Expect route numbers and some coverage patterns to change as the single-network map is drawn, but not a hard cutover.

    How does this connect to Sound Transit Link light rail in Everett?
    The stated rationale for merging includes making sure the local bus network is unified when the Everett Link extension eventually opens. A single agency running the last-mile bus service to and from Everett Station is easier to plan around than two separate agencies handing riders off at the city line.

    Who pushed this forward now?
    Mayor Cassie Franklin on the Everett side and CEO Ric Ilgenfritz on the Community Transit side made the April 22 joint announcement. The state law that makes the mechanism possible was sponsored by Sen. Marko Liias of Edmonds.

    What happens to Everett Transit employees?
    That is one of the main issues the interlocal agreement has to resolve. The details — labor representation, wages, benefits, seniority — will be in the public draft when it is released later this year.

    Deeper Coverage in the Exploring Everett Series

    For a more comprehensive treatment of the issues raised in this article, see:

  • Mayor Franklin’s 2026 State of the City: Five Priorities Now Shaping Everett

    Mayor Franklin’s 2026 State of the City: Five Priorities Now Shaping Everett

    When Mayor Cassie Franklin took the stage at Angel of the Winds Arena on March 5, 2026, for her ninth annual State of the City address, she framed the year ahead around a single idea: “One Everett.” Seattle Seahawks tackle and Archbishop Murphy alumnus Abe Lucas opened the speech. What followed was a mix of economic confidence, candid acknowledgment of the budget pressure the city is navigating, and a concrete list of initiatives residents can expect to see on the ground in 2026.

    Seven weeks later, several of those initiatives are already moving through City Hall — some toward the council for a vote, others into the permitting pipeline or grant applications. Here is a plain-language breakdown of the five priorities Mayor Franklin laid out, what has happened since, and what each one means for Everett residents.

    Quick answer: Mayor Franklin’s 2026 State of the City address laid out five priorities: long-term sustainable revenue to protect core services, public safety investments in policing and fire response, housing actions including pre-approved backyard cottage plans, a park-upgrade wave at Edgewater, Garfield, and Eclipse Mill, and district-by-district community engagement. The Outdoor Event Center and FIFA World Cup watch parties at Boxcar Park were framed as anchor economic drivers for the year.

    Priority 1: Long-Term Sustainable Revenue

    The revenue priority is the one doing the most work behind the scenes. Franklin told the audience the city needs to “pursue continued economic growth and new pathways to long-term, sustainable revenue to protect core services.” That sentence sounds like standard political language, but it maps directly to the $14 million projected 2027 budget deficit the Finance Department has been discussing publicly since earlier this spring.

    What it means in practice: the city is actively evaluating four levers — forming a regional fire authority, regionalizing library services through a partnership with Sno-Isle, running another levy lid lift past voters, and continuing the annexation evaluation for Mariner. Three of the four require a public vote. The Mayor’s Office has not endorsed a specific path yet; the April 8 council vote that approved $200,000 for a Mariner annexation study and $50,000 for a Casino Road subarea plan was the first real money the city has put behind any of these options.

    For residents, this priority matters because it is the frame every other budget decision will sit inside for the next 18 months. Core services — police, fire, parks, libraries — are what the revenue conversation is designed to protect. How Everett decides to pay for them is the open question.

    Priority 2: Strategic, Community-Focused Public Safety

    Public safety had three sub-priorities in the address: strategic, community-focused policing, fire response capacity investments, and alternative crisis response programs. Each one is tied to staff the city has already hired or programs already running.

    On policing, Chief Robert Goetz — sworn in on January 7, 2026 — has been public about his goal of closing the EPD vacancy gap. Goetz told reporters in January the department was “down to 14, maybe 13 vacancies at this point” and said he hopes to push that number into single digits in 2026. The department promoted eight officers to sergeant, lieutenant, captain, and deputy chief in the two weeks before he was sworn in. Goetz’s stated approach — “I want our officers to get out of the car and visit with our community members because they’re the ones who are providing us with the feedback that we need to be the best police department that we can be” — is what the Mayor’s “strategic, community-focused” language points to.

    On fire response, the city is simultaneously evaluating whether to join a regional fire authority, which would restructure how fire service is funded and delivered. That decision is part of the revenue conversation above.

    On alternative crisis response, the Mayor’s Office has pointed to existing programs pairing behavioral health responders with police, though the address did not announce a new program. The expansion language was more about protecting what already exists through the budget cycle.

    Public safety also intersects with Mayoral Directive 2026-01, signed by Franklin on February 25, 2026. The directive restricts federal immigration agents from accessing non-public areas of city buildings without a judicial warrant, requires Everett police to record interactions at the scene of any immigration enforcement activity they are called to, and reaffirms compliance with the Keep Washington Working Act. The directive was not new policy announced at the State of the City; it is already in effect. But it establishes the guardrails the city will operate inside during 2026.

    Priority 3: Housing — Backyard Cottages and a New Boys and Girls Club

    The most concrete housing announcement was pre-approved backyard cottage plans designed to streamline the permitting process for accessory dwelling units. Pre-approved plans mean that homeowners who use one of the city’s templates can move through permitting faster than if they brought in custom drawings — reducing design costs and review time. The goal is to make ADUs a realistic option for more Everett households.

    Franklin also announced a new Boys and Girls Club at Walter E. Hall Park in Council District 4. That project is a partnership rather than a city-led build, but the site selection and the framing matter: Walter E. Hall Park sits south of the airport in an area the city has identified for family-focused investment.

    Neither the backyard cottage plans nor the Boys and Girls Club is solving housing affordability on their own. They are part of what the administration describes as a supply-side strategy — add more units, reduce friction in the permit process, add more third-place community infrastructure — while the broader Puget Sound housing market works itself out.

    Priority 4: Park Upgrades at Edgewater, Garfield, and Eclipse Mill

    Three parks are getting meaningful work in 2026.

    Edgewater Park sits next to the Edgewater Bridge, which reopens April 28 after an 18-month closure and $34.9 million replacement. The park work is the natural companion to the bridge: new access, improved landings, and waterfront enhancements that make the reopened crossing feel connected to something on the west side.

    Garfield Park in the Riverside neighborhood is getting a major makeover that has been in public-engagement phase with neighbors for months. Exact scope depends on the final design package, but residents have already weighed in on the direction.

    Eclipse Mill Park on the riverfront is the long-timeline project. City staff confirmed earlier this spring that Eclipse Mill is now targeting a spring 2028 opening — later than initial hopes but reflecting both design complexity and funding sequencing. Eclipse Mill is designed to be Everett’s signature riverfront park when it eventually opens.

    Parks are also a quiet revenue story: well-maintained, high-quality parks are one of the more reliable drivers of residential property values, which in turn affect the city’s assessed value and long-term property tax base.

    Priority 5: District-by-District Community Engagement

    The final priority was the least flashy but the most interesting from a civic-engagement standpoint. Franklin announced that community meetings would be scheduled in each City Council district, following the success of the District 2 town hall. For residents, that means the Mayor’s Office is committing to show up in neighborhoods rather than only hosting conversations at City Hall.

    The significance is partly operational — getting seven districts worth of face-to-face feedback in one year is a real lift — and partly political. Three of the four budget levers on the table for 2027 require a public vote. An administration that has already sat down with voters in their neighborhoods has a better shot at explaining those ballot questions when they come up.

    The Economic Anchors: Outdoor Event Center and FIFA 2026

    Woven through the speech were two economic anchors. The Outdoor Event Center — the downtown stadium project that hosts Everett AquaSox baseball, United Soccer League men’s and women’s teams, and community events — is projected to draw 400,000 regional visitors annually once it opens in late 2027. Property acquisition is in negotiation, and a $10.6 million design funding request goes to council on April 29.

    The FIFA World Cup watch parties at Boxcar Park on June 11, 12, 18, and 19 are the shorter-term bet: a free, public fan zone in the waterfront district designed to bring people into Everett during the biggest sporting event of the summer.

    How to Track Progress on These Priorities

    Every initiative Franklin announced has a paper trail. City Council agendas and minutes are posted at everettwa.gov/AgendaCenter/City-Council-10, and the council meets on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m. except fourth and fifth Wednesdays, which meet at 12:30 p.m. Mayoral directives are archived at everettwa.gov/1789/Mayoral-Directives. Budget documents and the 2027 budget discussion will run through the Finance Department in the fall.

    The shortest answer to “what is Everett working on in 2026?” is: revenue, public safety, housing, parks, and community engagement — with the stadium and World Cup as economic accelerators. The Mayor’s framing — “Everett’s progress is best measured by how people experience our city every day” — is the test the administration has set for itself.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When was Mayor Franklin’s 2026 State of the City address?

    Mayor Cassie Franklin delivered her ninth annual State of the City address on March 5, 2026. Seattle Seahawks tackle and Archbishop Murphy alumnus Abe Lucas opened the speech.

    What are Mayor Franklin’s five priorities for 2026?

    The address outlined five priorities: pursuing long-term sustainable revenue to protect core services, strategic and community-focused public safety, housing actions including pre-approved backyard cottage plans, park upgrades at Edgewater, Garfield, and Eclipse Mill, and district-by-district community engagement through town halls.

    What is Everett doing about the $14 million 2027 budget gap?

    Four levers are being evaluated: forming a regional fire authority, regionalizing library services with Sno-Isle Libraries, running another levy lid lift past voters, and continuing the annexation evaluation for Mariner. Three of the four require a public vote. The administration has not endorsed a single path.

    How many police vacancies does EPD have?

    Chief Robert Goetz said in January 2026 that the department was down to 13 or 14 vacancies and he hopes to push the number into single digits during 2026. Eight officers were promoted to supervisory roles in the two weeks before Goetz was sworn in on January 7, 2026.

    What is Mayoral Directive 2026-01?

    Signed by Mayor Franklin on February 25, 2026, the directive restricts federal immigration agents from accessing non-public areas of city buildings without a judicial warrant, requires Everett police to record interactions at the scene of immigration enforcement activity, and reaffirms compliance with Washington’s Keep Washington Working Act.

    When do the Edgewater, Garfield, and Eclipse Mill park projects open?

    The Edgewater Bridge adjacent to Edgewater Park reopens April 28, 2026. Garfield Park is in the design/public-engagement phase. Eclipse Mill Park is targeting a spring 2028 opening.

    What are the FIFA World Cup watch parties at Boxcar Park?

    Free, public fan zones hosted at Boxcar Park on the Everett waterfront on June 11, 12, 18, and 19, 2026, during the FIFA World Cup group stage and knockout matches.

    How can I attend a City Council district town hall?

    The Mayor’s Office will schedule community meetings in each City Council district throughout 2026. Details are posted to everettwa.gov and announced through the City’s news flash page at everettwa.gov/m/newsflash.

  • Everett’s $14 Million 2027 Budget Decision: A Complete Guide to the Four Levers on the Table

    Everett’s $14 Million 2027 Budget Decision: A Complete Guide to the Four Levers on the Table

    Q: What is Everett, Washington’s plan to close its $14 million 2027 budget deficit?

    A: Everett finance staff project a $14 million general fund shortfall for 2027 — larger than the $12.6 million 2024 gap that forced 31 layoffs. Mayor Cassie Franklin has named four levers under active consideration: regionalizing fire services through a Regional Fire Authority, regionalizing libraries by joining Sno-Isle Libraries, a property tax levy lid lift, and annexing parts of the urban growth area starting with the Mariner neighborhood (about 21,000 residents). Three of the four require voter approval. Decisions will sequence through fall 2026 budget hearings and the November 2026 ballot.

    Everett’s $14 Million 2027 Budget Decision: A Complete Guide to the Four Levers on the Table

    Everett, Washington is staring down a $14 million general fund deficit for the 2027 budget — and for the first time in more than a decade, every major lever the city has to close it is publicly on the table at once. Regional fire authority. Regional libraries through Sno-Isle. A new property tax levy lid lift. Annexation of unincorporated south Everett, starting with the 21,000-person Mariner neighborhood. Three of those four require a vote of the people. The fourth almost certainly does too.

    This is the structural moment Mayor Cassie Franklin warned about during her March 6, 2026 keynote address. “We cannot cut our way to a sustainable future,” Franklin said, citing the need for “economic growth and new pathways to long-term, sustainable revenue.” This guide explains how Everett got here, what each of the four levers would actually do, what residents would see on their tax bills, and what to watch between now and the November 2026 election.

    How Everett Built a Structural Deficit

    The root cause is a state law most Everett residents have never heard of. Under Initiative 747, approved by Washington voters in 2001, cities can raise their regular property tax levy by only 1 percent per year without going back to the ballot. The cost of running a city — police, fire, parks, libraries, streets, public works — rises faster than that. In most years, public-sector costs grow with wages and inflation, in the 3 to 5 percent range. The gap compounds.

    Everett’s 2026 budget, approved unanimously by the City Council on November 19, 2025 at $613 million, papered over the gap by pausing some pension contributions and using one-time funds to avoid layoffs. The 2024 budget was harder: a $12.6 million deficit forced 31 layoffs. Now the 2027 projection has reached $14 million, and the one-time tools have already been used.

    Lever One: A Regional Fire Authority

    “Regional fire” is shorthand for a Regional Fire Authority, or RFA — a separate Washington government entity authorized under Chapter 52.26 RCW that provides fire and emergency medical services across multiple jurisdictions and is funded by its own voter-approved property tax and benefit charges. Cities across Washington have moved to RFAs over the past decade because the structure shifts fire costs off general-fund budgets that are squeezed by the 1 percent cap.

    For Everett, an RFA would likely mean joining or forming a multi-jurisdictional authority covering parts of south Snohomish County. Residents would still get fire service from what would functionally look like the same department. They would see a separate line on their property tax bill for the RFA. The city’s general fund would no longer carry the fire department’s cost.

    An RFA does not usually raise total household taxes on day one because the new RFA levy is offset by a reduction in the city’s portion. Over time, however, RFAs have flexibility to raise their own levies that cities under the 1 percent cap don’t have. Creating or joining an RFA requires voter approval in each participating jurisdiction.

    Lever Two: Joining Sno-Isle Libraries

    Everett currently runs the Everett Public Library as a city department, with branches downtown and in Evergreen. Most of the surrounding area — including the Mariner neighborhood Everett is studying for annexation — is served by Sno-Isle Libraries, a regional library district covering most of Snohomish and Island counties and funded by its own voter-approved property tax.

    Regionalizing would mean dissolving the city’s library operation and annexing Everett into the Sno-Isle district. Residents would still have libraries. The city would no longer budget for them. The cost would shift to a separate Sno-Isle levy, which is also subject to the 1 percent cap but sits on a cleaner structural footing because it isn’t competing with police, fire, streets, and parks for the same pool of money.

    Like the RFA path, a Sno-Isle annexation would require voter approval and would typically produce a roughly neutral total tax change on day one — the city’s portion drops as the Sno-Isle portion is added.

    Lever Three: Another Levy Lid Lift

    Under state law, cities can ask voters to temporarily or permanently raise the property tax levy above the 1 percent cap. Everett tried this in April 2024, asking voters to raise the city’s regular property tax levy from $1.52 per $1,000 of assessed value to $2.19 per $1,000 — about $336 per year more for the average homeowner. Voters rejected it decisively.

    Any 2026 or 2027 attempt has to contend with that result. Smaller ask. Shorter duration. A package that pairs a lift with specific spending commitments residents can see — a public safety levy, for example, instead of a general-purpose ask. Other Washington cities have passed targeted levies after stand-alone general lifts failed.

    Lever Four: Annexation, Starting With Mariner

    On April 8, 2026, the Everett City Council approved a $250,000 budget amendment — $200,000 to fund a consulting study of potential annexation, with the Mariner neighborhood as Mayor Franklin’s stated top priority, and $50,000 for a Casino Road subarea plan. City spokesperson Simone Tarver called the vote “just a first step in the process.”

    Mariner sits mostly west of Interstate 5, south of the current city limits. About 21,000 people live there today. It includes Mariner High School, a Sno-Isle Libraries branch, several busy bus routes, and a planned Sound Transit light rail station on the Everett Link Extension. Everett’s full urban growth area — the land the state already considers part of the city’s future footprint — contains roughly 47,690 people. Annexing all of it would push Everett’s population from about 111,000 to about 159,000, a 43 percent increase.

    Annexation grows the property tax base, brings in state-issued sales tax credits available to cities annexing more than 10,000 residents at once, and expands the denominator the city can spread fixed costs across. It is not free revenue — annexed residents need services that cost money to provide. The $200,000 study is designed to model whether the math works in 2026 in a way it did not work when Everett walked away from a much larger annexation in 2008.

    What Residents Would and Would Not See on a Tax Bill

    Three of the four levers — RFA, Sno-Isle library annexation, levy lift — would require voter approval. The fourth, annexation of Mariner or other UGA areas, would very likely require a vote too, depending on the legal method chosen. The dollar impact differs by lever:

    • RFA — usually neutral on the total bill day one; the city portion drops as the RFA portion is added. Long-term, RFAs have more flexibility to raise rates.
    • Sno-Isle library annexation — same structural pattern as the RFA. Neutral day one; new revenue stream over time.
    • Levy lid lift — directly raises the total bill. The 2024 attempt would have added about $336 per year for the average homeowner.
    • Annexation — raises bills for newly annexed residents (who switch from county to city tax rates) but not for existing city residents.

    The Decision Calendar

    Mayor Franklin is expected to deliver her 2027 preliminary budget proposal to the City Council in the early fall, on Everett’s standard budget calendar. Between now and then, the city will refine cost projections, receive interim findings from the Mariner annexation study, and engage with the local fire district and Sno-Isle Libraries on regionalization conversations. Any ballot measure intended for the November 3, 2026 general election would need to be finalized by early August 2026.

    The decisions to watch, in order: the annexation study findings (expected late 2026 or early 2027), the fall 2026 preliminary budget, whether the city places a regional fire or library question on the November ballot, and whether a new levy lid lift returns to voters in 2026 or 2027. Each decision narrows the set of options that remain.

    What Is Already Being Done

    The 2026 budget uses one-time funds and pension pauses to hold staffing flat through this year. That buys time but not a solution. The Council has approved both the annexation study and the Casino Road subarea plan, both on April 8. Beyond that, the city has pointed to broader economic momentum — continued housing construction, new business licenses, the Boeing 737 North Line opening at Paine Field, and the Millwright District and Waterfront Place developments — as long-term revenue drivers. None of those arrive in time to close the 2027 gap on their own.

    Everett’s structural revenue challenge is not unique among Washington cities, but the simultaneity of the four levers Franklin has named is unusual. Most cities pick one tool and run it. Everett may end up running several at once. That is what a $14 million gap with the easy moves already used looks like in practice.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How big is Everett’s projected 2027 budget deficit?

    Everett finance staff project a $14 million general fund shortfall for the 2027 budget. That is larger than the $12.6 million deficit in 2024, which forced 31 layoffs.

    What are the four levers Mayor Franklin has named?

    Regionalizing fire services through a Regional Fire Authority, regionalizing libraries by joining the Sno-Isle Libraries district, asking voters for a property tax levy lid lift, and annexing parts of the urban growth area starting with the Mariner neighborhood.

    How many of those levers require voter approval?

    Three of the four — the RFA, the Sno-Isle library annexation, and the levy lid lift — require voter approval. Annexation also typically requires a vote, depending on the legal method chosen.

    Will regionalizing fire or libraries raise my property taxes?

    Not usually on day one. The new RFA or Sno-Isle levy is typically offset by a reduction in the city’s portion of the property tax. Over time, both districts have more flexibility to raise rates than cities under the 1 percent cap have.

    Why did the 2024 Everett levy lid lift fail at the ballot?

    Voters rejected it. The proposal would have raised Everett’s regular property tax levy from $1.52 per $1,000 of assessed value to $2.19 per $1,000 — about $336 per year more for the average homeowner.

    How does the 1 percent property tax cap work?

    Under Initiative 747, approved by Washington voters in 2001, most cities can only raise their regular property tax levy by 1 percent per year without going to voters. Public-sector costs typically grow at 3 to 5 percent annually, which is the structural source of Everett’s gap.

    When will Everett decide which levers to use?

    Mayor Franklin is expected to present a preliminary 2027 budget to the City Council in the fall of 2026. Any ballot measures for the November 3, 2026 general election must be finalized by early August. The Mariner annexation study is expected to conclude in late 2026 or early 2027.

    Could Everett use more than one lever at once?

    Yes. The four levers address different parts of the structural problem — regionalization shifts costs off the general fund, annexation grows the base, a levy lift raises the rate. Policymakers often combine these tools rather than picking one. Everett may run two or three in parallel through the November 2026 election.

  • Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    What is the Everett Link Extension? The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail line connecting Snohomish County communities — including Lynnwood, Mariner, Paine Field, and Everett Station — to the regional Sound Transit light rail network. It was included in the ST3 ballot measure approved by Puget Sound voters in 2016, with an original 2021 cost estimate of $6.6 billion.

    On the evening of April 14, a standing-room-only crowd packed Everett Station to hear Sound Transit explain what is happening with the light rail extension their communities voted for — and to press officials on whether it will be built on anything close to the original terms.

    The short answer: Sound Transit faces costs that have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the original 2021 estimate for the Everett extension alone, as part of a system-wide budget challenge the agency describes as a $34.5 billion gap. The timeline has already slipped. And one of the scenarios the agency is weighing would not complete the connection to Everett at all.

    Why Costs Have Climbed

    Sound Transit attributes the cost increases to a combination of forces that have hit infrastructure projects broadly in recent years: inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions, and escalating right-of-way acquisition costs. Together, these factors have driven costs up 20 to 25 percent above what the agency’s 2021 financial plan assumed.

    For the Everett Link Extension specifically, the increase ranges from $200 million on the low end to $1.1 billion on the high end — on top of the original $6.6 billion estimate. That would put the project’s total cost at up to approximately $7.7 billion, depending on which scenario the Sound Transit Board pursues.

    The Timeline Has Already Slipped — Significantly

    When Snohomish County voters approved ST3 in 2016, the Everett Link Extension was projected to open in 2036. That target has already moved. Sound Transit now says the first phase — reaching as far north as Paine Field — may open by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station potentially not arriving until somewhere between 2037 and 2041.

    A five-year window of uncertainty for a project’s completion date is itself a signal of how unsettled this extension’s future is. For residents who counted on light rail as a long-term alternative to the I-5 and Highway 2 commute into King County, that uncertainty is not abstract.

    Three Scenarios — Including One That Stops Short of Everett

    The most consequential piece of information for Everett residents at Tuesday’s town hall: Sound Transit is weighing three different approaches to closing its budget gap, and at least one of those scenarios would not complete the connection to Everett Station.

    The agency has not publicly labeled all three options by name, but previous Sound Transit documents have described approaches ranging from phasing the extension to terminate before reaching downtown Everett, to pursuing new financing mechanisms, to restructuring which ST3 projects get built first and on what timeline.

    For a city that anchored a significant portion of its long-term transit vision around being the northern terminus of Puget Sound light rail, the prospect of a scenario that bypasses Everett Station drew pointed and sustained questions from the crowd.

    Mayor Franklin and County Executive Somers Were in the Room

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin attended the April 14 town hall and were available to take questions alongside Sound Transit staff. Both officials have consistently advocated for the full Everett extension as a critical piece of the region’s transportation and economic development future.

    The day before the town hall, the Everett Herald’s editorial board published a call for Sound Transit to “exhaust every option to keep light rail on track” — a signal of the urgency local leaders and media are placing on this decision.

    What Happens Next

    Sound Transit’s board is expected to evaluate updated approaches to the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. That decision will determine whether the Everett Link Extension proceeds on a modified but still-complete schedule, gets phased to stop short of Everett Station, or faces some other restructuring.

    Residents who want to weigh in before that decision can:

    • Attend Sound Transit Board meetings, which are open to public comment
    • Submit written comments through soundtransit.org
    • Contact Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives directly
    • Reach out to Mayor Franklin’s office or the Snohomish County Executive’s office

    What This Means for Everyday Commuters

    Light rail was a central promise of the ST3 campaign: a reliable, car-free connection linking Everett to Seattle and the broader regional network. Lynnwood Link opened in 2024, giving riders a northern terminus — with buses bridging the gap into Snohomish County. That arrangement was always intended to be temporary, until the Everett extension was complete.

    If the extension is scaled back or further delayed, Everett-area commuters would remain dependent on transfers and bus connections for years — or decades — beyond what voters were told in 2016. For a region that has some of the country’s most congested commutes, the stakes of this summer’s board decision are substantial.

    Frequently Asked Questions About the Everett Link Extension

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?

    Sound Transit currently projects the first phase to Paine Field opening by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station arriving between 2037 and 2041. Both timelines are subject to further change pending the board’s summer 2026 decisions.

    How much will the Everett Link Extension cost?

    The original 2021 estimate was $6.6 billion. Costs have increased between $200 million and $1.1 billion above that figure, meaning the project could cost as much as approximately $7.7 billion depending on the scenario Sound Transit pursues.

    Could the light rail extension stop short of Everett?

    Yes, this is one of at least three scenarios Sound Transit is considering to address its $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap. No final decision has been made — the board is expected to act in summer 2026.

    When will Sound Transit decide on the Everett extension’s future?

    The Sound Transit Board is expected to take up ST3 System Plan updates in summer 2026.

    Who attended the April 14 Everett transit town hall?

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin, and Sound Transit representatives attended and took questions from a standing-room-only crowd at Everett Station.

    What is ST3?

    ST3 is the third Sound Transit ballot measure, approved by voters in the greater Puget Sound region in November 2016. It authorized funding for multiple light rail expansions, including the Everett Link Extension connecting Snohomish County to the regional network.

    How can Everett residents give input on the Everett Link Extension?

    Residents can attend Sound Transit Board meetings, submit comments at soundtransit.org, or contact their elected Sound Transit Board representatives and local officials including Mayor Franklin’s office or Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’ office.


    → For the complete knowledge hub on the Everett Link Extension, see: Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future

  • Everett’s New Edgewater Bridge Opens April 28: What Commuters and Neighbors Need to Know

    Everett’s New Edgewater Bridge Opens April 28: What Commuters and Neighbors Need to Know

    What is the Edgewater Bridge? The Edgewater Bridge spans the Mukilteo ravine on the border between Everett and Mukilteo, connecting the two cities along Mukilteo Boulevard. The 366-foot-long bridge is a primary commute corridor for residents of both cities and was built in 1946 — making the original structure nearly 80 years old when it closed for replacement.

    After 18 months of construction and a $34.9 million investment, Everett’s new Edgewater Bridge will open to vehicle traffic on Tuesday, April 28, 2026. The community is invited to walk across the bridge the day before at a free celebration event on Sunday, April 27 at 3:30 p.m.

    Why the Bridge Had to Be Replaced

    The original Edgewater Bridge was built in 1946. By the time the City of Everett closed it in October 2024, the structure had reached the end of its rated useful life and had known seismic vulnerabilities. Rather than patch an aging span, the city moved forward with full replacement.

    Replacing the bridge was not a straightforward project. Construction crews encountered significant underground obstacles — old timber and concrete debris from a previous, earlier bridge structure were embedded deep in the soil, complicating the installation of the steel piling needed to support the new span. Then, in December 2025, an atmospheric river weather event caused damage to portions of the project and pushed the completion date back further, into April 2026.

    The scale of the work was considerable: crews had to fully remove the 366-foot-long, 60-foot-tall original bridge and build two temporary work platforms on either side of the ravine from which the new structure was constructed piece by piece.

    What’s Different About the New Bridge

    The new Edgewater Bridge is not just a replacement — it’s a meaningful upgrade in several key ways.

    • Wider sidewalks and bike lanes on both sides of the roadway — a significant improvement for pedestrians and cyclists who previously had more limited options on the original structure.
    • Modern seismic engineering — the new bridge is designed to perform better in an earthquake, addressing the structural concerns that made replacement necessary.
    • Longer designed service life — built to current standards, the bridge is intended to serve Everett and Mukilteo for decades.

    The bridge straddles the city boundary, welcoming travelers into both Everett and Mukilteo. Once the final finishing work is complete, pedestrians and cyclists will have dedicated, protected lanes on each side of the roadway.

    How the $34.9 Million Project Was Paid For

    The total project cost is $34.9 million. Of that, $28 million — roughly 80 percent — came from federal grant funding. The remaining portion was covered by city transportation funds.

    Mayor Cassie Franklin said she was “excited to see the brand-new Edgewater Bridge open again and serving our community,” acknowledging the disruption the closure caused. “Construction brought real impacts — especially to the neighbors who live close to the bridge — but I’m proud to deliver a more structurally sound bridge that’s built to last and ready for the future.”

    What to Expect at the April 27 Celebration

    The City of Everett is hosting a community event on Sunday, April 27 at 3:30 p.m. where residents from both Everett and Mukilteo can walk across the new bridge, meet members of the project team, and hear remarks from city officials.

    Important note: the bridge will not be open to vehicle traffic at the time of the celebration. You can approach from either side but will not be able to drive across. Vehicles will begin crossing on Tuesday, April 28.

    What’s Still Being Finished After Opening

    Even after vehicles start using the bridge on April 28, some work will continue. According to the City of Everett, permanent roadway striping, barriers, lighting, paint, and other finishing tasks may still be in progress. The new sidewalks and bike lanes will remain closed to pedestrian and cyclist use until that final phase of work is complete — so pedestrian access will follow the vehicle opening by a short period.

    Why This Reopening Matters for Everett and Mukilteo

    Mukilteo Boulevard is a primary east-west connector used daily by commuters heading toward Interstate 5, Paine Field, and local destinations in both cities. The 18-month closure forced drivers to reroute through already-congested surface streets — an impact felt by neighborhoods on both sides of the ravine. The reopening directly relieves that pressure.

    The new bike lanes and wider sidewalks also represent a real win for non-motorized transportation in a corridor that previously had limited options. Both Everett and Mukilteo have been working to improve walkability and bikeability, and this crossing is now part of that network in a meaningful way.

    Frequently Asked Questions About the Edgewater Bridge Opening

    When does the Edgewater Bridge open to vehicles?

    The bridge opens to vehicle traffic at the end of the workday on Tuesday, April 28, 2026.

    When is the community celebration for the new Edgewater Bridge?

    The City of Everett is hosting a community walk-across event on Sunday, April 27 at 3:30 p.m. The bridge will not be open to vehicle traffic at that time. Residents can approach from either the Everett or Mukilteo side.

    How much did the new Edgewater Bridge cost?

    The total project cost is $34.9 million, with $28 million funded by federal grants — about 80 percent of the project cost covered by federal dollars.

    Is the new bridge safer in an earthquake?

    Yes. The new bridge was built to modern seismic engineering standards and is significantly more earthquake-resistant than the 1946 original, which had known structural vulnerabilities.

    Why did the bridge closure last 18 months?

    The original construction schedule was extended twice — first due to underground obstructions from an older bridge structure buried beneath the site, and again after an atmospheric river weather event in December 2025 caused damage to portions of the project.

    Will there be bike lanes and sidewalks on the new Edgewater Bridge?

    Yes. The new bridge includes bike lanes and wider sidewalks on both sides. They will open to use once final finishing work on the project is complete, which is expected to happen shortly after the vehicle opening.

    What cities does the Edgewater Bridge connect?

    The Edgewater Bridge straddles the boundary between Everett and Mukilteo, connecting both cities along Mukilteo Boulevard.

  • Everett Is Celebrating the New Edgewater Bridge on April 27 — Walk Across It First

    Everett Is Celebrating the New Edgewater Bridge on April 27 — Walk Across It First

    Edgewater Bridge Grand Opening: The City of Everett is celebrating the completion of the new Edgewater Bridge on Sunday, April 27 at 3:30 PM. The community is invited to walk across the bridge and learn about the project from the engineers and city leaders who built it.

    Everett Is Celebrating the New Edgewater Bridge on April 27 — You’re Invited

    The City of Everett has officially announced the grand opening celebration for the new Edgewater Bridge. The event takes place on Sunday, April 27 at 3:30 PM, and the entire community is welcome to attend.

    Attendees will get to walk across the new bridge, hear remarks from Mayor Cassie Franklin and city leaders, and speak directly with the project team about what went into building it. It’s the kind of local infrastructure moment Everett doesn’t get very often — a brand new bridge connecting neighborhoods, built from the ground up.

    What Is the Edgewater Bridge?

    The Edgewater Bridge is a new City of Everett infrastructure project connecting neighborhoods near the waterfront area. The project was a multi-year effort involving coordination between the City of Everett and the City of Mukilteo. The new structure replaces aging infrastructure and improves pedestrian and vehicle access in the area.

    The April 27 celebration gives Everett residents a chance to be the first to walk across it — and to get the full story of the project from the people who made it happen.

    Event Details

    • Date: Sunday, April 27, 2026
    • Time: 3:30 PM
    • What to expect: Community walk across the bridge, remarks from Mayor Franklin and city officials, project team available to answer questions
    • Cost: Free and open to the public

    Part of Everett’s Bigger Infrastructure Momentum

    The Edgewater Bridge opening comes as Everett is seeing significant infrastructure investment across the city. Mayor Franklin’s 2026 priorities include housing growth, youth safety, and major placemaking updates — and public infrastructure projects like this bridge are central to that vision.

    With the Sound Transit Link Extension moving forward, waterfront development accelerating, and now a brand-new bridge opening, this is an active stretch for Everett’s built environment.

    Frequently Asked Questions: Edgewater Bridge Opening

    When is the Edgewater Bridge opening celebration?

    Sunday, April 27, 2026 at 3:30 PM. The event is free and open to the public.

    What will happen at the Edgewater Bridge celebration?

    The community is invited to walk across the new bridge, hear remarks from Mayor Cassie Franklin and city officials, and talk with the project team about the construction process.

    Who built the Edgewater Bridge?

    The bridge was a City of Everett infrastructure project built in coordination with the City of Mukilteo. Details will be available from the project team at the April 27 event.