Tag: Pacific Northwest

  • Everett’s VOAWW Pallet Shelter for Mothers and Children: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Sievers-Duecy Village, Who It Serves, and How to Access It

    Everett’s VOAWW Pallet Shelter for Mothers and Children: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Sievers-Duecy Village, Who It Serves, and How to Access It

    Quick facts: On April 27, 2026, the City of Everett and Volunteers of America Western Washington (VOAWW) opened a 20-unit Pallet Shelter Village for women experiencing homelessness with their children, on city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard in west Everett. Each unit houses one mother and up to three children. Residents can stay up to 12 months with wraparound recovery and job support. Funding: City of Everett ARPA dollars plus a $250,000 match from Snohomish County. Total capital and grant operational expenses: $2.7 million. This is Everett’s third Pallet shelter project and the first built specifically for families with children.

    On April 27, 2026, a ribbon was cut on a piece of city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard in west Everett, and 20 addresses came into existence. Not mailing addresses. Living addresses — places where a mother and her children now have a lockable door, a bed, a community kitchen a short walk away, and up to 12 months to work on what comes next.

    This is VOAWW’s third Pallet shelter project in Everett. It is the first one built specifically for women and their children. Here is what is on site, how a family qualifies, who paid for it, and what this means for Everett’s broader effort to address homelessness among the most vulnerable households in Snohomish County.

    What Is On Site at Sievers-Duecy

    Twenty Pallet structures are installed on the enclosed, managed site. Each unit is a modular shelter built by Pallet Shelter, the Everett-based company whose structures have been deployed in more than 70 cities. Each unit is designed for one mother and up to three children — a sleeping space with climate control, secure storage, and a lockable door. The lock matters more than it might seem: most emergency shelter beds available to families in Snohomish County prior to this opening were in congregate settings with no private door.

    • Detached restrooms and a separate shower facility — enclosed, year-round
    • A community kitchen and gathering space — hard-walled, where residents can cook and meet with case workers
    • A playground — the feature that signals most clearly who this village is for

    The site is enclosed and access-controlled. VOAWW manages the site and provides on-site services.

    Who It Serves and How Long Residents Can Stay

    The shelter is for women and their children. Residents can stay up to 12 months — transitional, not emergency. The distinction matters: emergency shelter is measured in days or weeks. Transitional shelter at 12 months gives VOAWW’s case managers enough time to work with a family on housing search, employment, recovery support, and the practical paperwork that reconnects people to stable housing.

    VOAWW provides wraparound services including recovery assistance and job support. Their 2026 service footprint includes more than 315,000 service requests annually across their full program portfolio. Referrals go through VOAWW directly or through the 211 system. For a broader look at VOAWW’s full Everett service map, see Where to Get Help in Everett in 2026.

    Who Paid For It

    Funded through City of Everett American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars, with a $250,000 match from Snohomish County. Total capital and grant operational expenses as of end of 2025: $2.7 million. The city provided the land — city-owned property off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard. The ribbon cutting was attended by Everett City Council President Don Schwab, VOAWW Executive Director of Housing Services Galina Volchkova, VOAWW CEO Brian Smith, and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin.

    Everett’s Third Pallet Shelter: The Full Picture

    Everett has now opened three Pallet shelter projects. The Sievers-Duecy village is the first built specifically for women and children. The Pallet company itself is an Everett story: founded here, with structures deployed in more than 70 cities nationally. The Pallet model — modular structures, enclosed sites, transitional time frames, wraparound services — has become a consistent component of Everett’s homelessness response strategy.

    The Sievers-Duecy location matters geographically. West Everett — the corridor around Casino Road, Sievers-Duecy Boulevard, and the neighborhoods running toward Merrill Creek — has a significant concentration of low-income households and historically has had the highest demand for human services access in the city.

    What This Means for Snohomish County’s Homelessness Response

    Single mothers with children are among the most difficult households to serve in the existing shelter system. Congregate shelters frequently can’t accommodate families. Hotel diversion programs are expensive. Rapid rehousing requires affordable rental vacancy — which Snohomish County’s market, with its $750,000 April 2026 median and tight supply, frequently doesn’t offer. A 20-unit transitional village gives 20 families a stable enough platform to work on the next step.

    For the broader network, the $30 million Everett Gospel Mission expansion underway adds 172 additional shelter beds. For NAVSTA Everett military families who may need these resources, see the Navy family housing resource guide. Also see the complete Everett Gospel Mission guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is the VOAWW Pallet Shelter in Everett?

    On city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard in west Everett. The site opened April 27, 2026.

    Who is eligible for the VOAWW Pallet Shelter?

    Women experiencing homelessness with their children. Each unit accommodates one mother and up to three children.

    How long can families stay?

    Up to 12 months, in a transitional model with wraparound recovery and employment support provided by VOAWW.

    How do families get referred to the shelter?

    Through VOAWW directly (voaww.org) or through the 211 system — dial 2-1-1 or text your zip code to 898-211.

    How was the shelter funded?

    City of Everett ARPA dollars plus a $250,000 match from Snohomish County, on city-owned land. Total capital and grant operational expenses: $2.7 million as of end of 2025.

    What is the Pallet Shelter company?

    An Everett-based company that manufactures modular shelter units deployed in more than 70 cities nationwide. The Sievers-Duecy units were built by Pallet Shelter and installed on the city-owned site.

    Is this Everett’s only shelter for families with children?

    It is the first Pallet shelter village in Everett built specifically for mothers and children. Other resources for families in Snohomish County include Everett Gospel Mission, Cocoon House (youth), and 211 for referrals to all available resources.

  • Everett-Delta 115kV Transmission Line: The Complete 2026 Guide to PUD’s Grid Backbone for Everett’s Waterfront Buildout

    Everett-Delta 115kV Transmission Line: The Complete 2026 Guide to PUD’s Grid Backbone for Everett’s Waterfront Buildout

    What is the Everett-Delta transmission line and why does it matter? It is a new 3.5-mile 115-kilovolt power line Snohomish County PUD is building to connect the Everett Substation (west of I-5 between McDougall and Smith) to the Delta Switching Station (north of the SR 529 / West Marine View Drive interchange). Construction begins spring 2027; in service by summer 2027. It is the electrical backbone that makes the entire Everett waterfront, downtown, and north-end building wave possible — the Millwright District, the downtown stadium, Mosaic Apartments, and every heat pump, EV charger, and commercial kitchen going into new buildings along the corridor all depend on this line having enough capacity.

    Most of the coverage of Everett’s development boom focuses on what’s being built: the Millwright District’s 300-plus waterfront apartments, Skotdal Real Estate’s seven-story Mosaic Apartments on Pacific Avenue, the downtown stadium breaking ground in September 2026, the Sage Investment Group converting the 9602 19th Street SE Econo Lodge into 124 studios, and the Port of Everett’s continuing Restaurant Row expansion. What rarely gets covered is what has to be true underground and overhead before any of those buildings can function at full electrical load.

    That’s what the Everett-Delta transmission line is about.

    Snohomish County PUD held two public open houses on May 7, 2026 — 4 to 5:30 p.m. and 6 to 7:30 p.m., both at PUD headquarters at 2320 California Street in Everett — to explain the project to residents. Here is what those open houses covered, and why this infrastructure decision matters for every household, business, and development project in the corridor.

    What the Line Actually Is

    The Everett-Delta project is a new 115-kilovolt transmission line, approximately 3.5 miles long, connecting two existing PUD assets at opposite ends of the city’s growth corridor. On the south end: the Everett Substation, located just west of Interstate 5 between McDougall Avenue and Smith Avenue, north of 36th Street. On the north end: the Delta Switching Station, sitting just north of the State Route 529 and West Marine View Drive interchange in north Everett.

    A 115-kV line is what the utility industry calls mid-tier transmission — not the bulk transmission highways that BPA operates at 230kV and 500kV, but the layer that connects the high-voltage backbone to the local distribution substations that actually serve neighborhoods. It’s the difference between having electricity available somewhere in the region and having it available at the right voltage, in the right quantity, at a specific address on Pacific Avenue or Marine View Drive.

    PUD’s stated reasons for building the line now: increasing electrical demand in the northern regions of the service territory; the need to keep voltage stable if local power is interrupted; delivering more electricity from south to north to ease strain on the current system during peak hours; and supporting at least one new substation in the Everett area tied to the City of Everett’s 2044 Comprehensive Plan growth projections.

    The Development Connection

    The geographic overlap between this line and the Everett development map is not a coincidence. The line runs through or adjacent to the same West Marine View Drive corridor where the $113 million Port of Everett waterfront pipeline project, the Edgewater Bridge reconstruction, and the Port’s terminal investments have all been stacking up. The Millwright District Phase 2’s 300-plus apartments are in this zone. The downtown stadium site — with a September 2026 groundbreaking target — is within the service territory of the substations this line feeds.

    Every new building in this corridor carries electrical load. A 300-unit apartment building with heat pumps, EV charging stations in the garage, and full commercial kitchen and amenity spaces runs roughly 1 to 1.5 megawatts of peak demand. A commercial development with restaurant tenants adds more. Multiply that across the Millwright District, Mosaic Apartments, the stadium, and the pipeline of projects in the Imagine Everett comprehensive plan, and the aggregate load growth is significant — exactly the kind of growth that forces a utility to invest in transmission before the buildings open, not after.

    PUD’s 2044 Comprehensive Plan projection shows Everett absorbing a significant share of Snohomish County’s population growth over the next two decades. The Everett-Delta line is the infrastructure that makes that projection electrically possible, not just politically aspirational. For more on the waterfront development pipeline this line serves, see What 15 Years and $350 Million Built: The Port of Everett Story and Everett’s Downtown Stadium in 2026: The Complete Guide.

    Timeline: When This Gets Built

    • May 7, 2026: Public open houses at PUD headquarters, 2320 California Street, Everett
    • Environmental review and permitting: Ongoing through 2026
    • Spring 2027: Construction begins
    • Summer 2027: Line in service — approximately six months of construction

    What It Means for Existing Everett Customers

    The most direct benefit for existing residential and commercial customers is grid reliability. The Everett-Delta line adds a second transmission path into the north Everett grid, which means that if the existing line fails during a storm or equipment outage, the system can reroute power without causing a widespread outage. PUD’s language — “prevent the electric system from experiencing low voltage should local power be interrupted” — is describing what engineers call N-1 contingency planning: designing the system so it continues to work even if one element fails.

    For neighborhoods in the 36th Street to Marine View Drive corridor — including Bayside, the north waterfront, and the areas near PUD headquarters — this is a direct reduction in outage risk during major weather events. Also see the broader development context in Skotdal’s Mosaic Apartments: 102 Art-Infused Homes on Pacific Avenue.

    What It Means for Businesses and Developers

    If you are developing or planning to develop in the Everett waterfront, downtown, or north-end corridor, the Everett-Delta line affects your project in two practical ways.

    First, PUD’s ability to grant electrical service connections to new large-load customers depends on transmission capacity upstream. The Everett-Delta line adds that upstream capacity. Second, the summer 2027 in-service date matters for your construction and opening timeline. Buildings opening in fall 2027 or later are in good shape. Projects with 2026 or early 2027 openings should confirm with PUD directly whether interim capacity arrangements are needed.

    PUD’s project contact information is available at snopud.com under System Improvements.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the Everett-Delta 115kV transmission line?

    A new 3.5-mile power line Snohomish County PUD is building to connect the Everett Substation (near 36th Street and I-5) to the Delta Switching Station (near SR 529 and Marine View Drive). Scheduled to go in service by summer 2027.

    Why is PUD building this line now?

    To support growing electrical demand in the Everett area, prevent low-voltage conditions during local power outages, deliver more electricity from south to north during peak hours, and support at least one new substation tied to Everett’s 2044 Comprehensive Plan growth projections.

    When does construction start and when will the line be in service?

    Construction begins spring 2027. The line is targeted to be in service by summer 2027, with construction taking approximately six months.

    How does this affect the Everett waterfront development projects?

    Every new building in the waterfront and downtown corridor adds electrical load. The Everett-Delta line adds the upstream transmission capacity PUD needs to connect new developments at full load without imposing service restrictions or connection queues.

    Does this reduce the risk of power outages for existing Everett customers?

    Yes. The line adds a second transmission path into the north Everett grid, enabling rerouting around a failed line segment rather than causing widespread outage. This is N-1 contingency coverage.

    Will there be construction disruption near Marine View Drive?

    Some work in the corridor is expected in spring-summer 2027 as the line connects near SR 529 and Marine View Drive. PUD will provide specific construction routing details as the project advances through permitting.

    Where can I get more information about the project?

    Snohomish County PUD maintains a project page at snopud.com under Community & Environment → Our Energy Future → Reliability → System Improvements → Everett-Delta Transmission Line.

  • The HUB Turns 25: Belfair’s Community Senior Center and What It Actually Does for North Mason

    The HUB Center for Seniors at 111 NE Old Belfair Highway is celebrating 25 years of service to North Mason County in 2026 — and if you haven’t been inside lately, the calendar it’s running would surprise you.

    The organization was incorporated as a 501(c)(3) in 2001 under a mission that has never changed: support independent living for seniors and people with disabilities in North Mason. For the first 15 years, that mission ran entirely on volunteers. No building, no commercial kitchen, no thrift store — just neighbors driving neighbors to appointments, stocking a free medical lending library, and running a senior food commodities program out of whatever space was available.

    In 2016, The HUB got its building. Belfair residents Les and Betty Krueger offered matching funds to help purchase the land on Old Belfair Highway, and the community raised the rest to fund Phase 1 of a purpose-built senior center. The name — Hospitality, Unity, and Belonging — was already in use, but the building made it real. There was now an actual hub.

    Twenty-five years in, the organization employs 32 people and reported 54,222 in total revenues in 2024, with ,492,181 in assets — a reflection of what community fundraising, grant support, and the HUB SHOP thrift store have built since those volunteer-only days.

    What’s Actually Happening Inside

    The week-in, week-out calendar at The HUB is what sets it apart from a social-services office. Monday and Tuesday mornings bring free live music, open to everyone in the community — not just seniors. Family BINGO runs on the first Friday of every month. Fitness classes, painting workshops, writing groups, cooking classes, and health education events fill out the rest of the week. The Great Room and commercial kitchen are available for community rentals and private fundraisers.

    The HUB SHOP — S.H.O.P. stands for Sales Helping Other People — operates its own schedule, Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., six days a week. Proceeds cycle back into HUB programs. It’s one of the more reliable ways to both furnish a house and support a Belfair institution at the same time.

    The center itself is open Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    The Backbone: Neighbors Helping Neighbors

    Underneath the visible programming is the service that started it all. The Neighbors Helping Neighbors program doesn’t get the attention the live music mornings get, but it is the reason The HUB exists. It has served more than 900 people with needs that range from rides to medical appointments and help with grocery runs to connecting people with caregivers, utility bill assistance, and wood for heating homes through the winter.

    The free medical lending library — wheelchairs, walkers, shower chairs, crutches — is open to anyone, of any age, anywhere in the area. You don’t have to be a senior. You don’t have to be a HUB member. You walk in, you borrow what you need.

    For a community where the nearest major medical center is across the water in Bremerton or down US-101 toward Shelton, that kind of infrastructure matters in ways that don’t make the news. The economic and workforce stability of North Mason depends in part on the support systems that let people age in place here rather than move away — and The HUB is a core piece of that ecosystem.

    Why 25 Years in Belfair Is Significant

    Mason County has one of the older median age profiles in Washington state — and the Belfair area anchors the northern end of the county’s service gap. There is no large hospital in North Mason. The nearest assisted living cluster is primarily in Shelton. The SR-3 corridor into Bremerton is the lifeline for most medical travel.

    The HUB has filled that gap from the community side for a quarter century. Its .49 million asset base and 32-person staff aren’t just organizational metrics — they’re the physical and human infrastructure behind hundreds of North Mason families’ ability to have an aging parent stay in their home rather than leave the community entirely.

    New residents to the area often ask what North Mason’s support infrastructure looks like for older adults. The answer starts here: getting oriented to North Mason means knowing where the quiet infrastructure is, and The HUB is one of its most durable pieces. If you want to get involved — as a volunteer, a donor, or someone who uses the services — start at 111 NE Old Belfair Highway or call (360) 275-0535.

    Frequently Asked Questions About The HUB in Belfair

    What is The HUB Center for Seniors in Belfair?
    The HUB is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit senior and community center at 111 NE Old Belfair Highway in Belfair. Founded in 2001, it supports independent living for seniors and people with disabilities through free services, programming, and its Neighbors Helping Neighbors volunteer network.

    What are The HUB’s hours in Belfair?
    The center is open Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The HUB SHOP thrift store is open Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

    What is the Neighbors Helping Neighbors program?
    It’s The HUB’s free volunteer-driven service program that provides rides to appointments, grocery help, caregiver referrals, utility bill assistance, and connection to resources for seniors and people with disabilities in North Mason. The program has served more than 900 people.

    Does The HUB’s medical lending library cost anything?
    No. The medical lending library — wheelchairs, walkers, shower chairs, crutches, and similar items — is completely free and open to anyone of any age, not just seniors or HUB members.

    Can the public attend The HUB’s live music mornings?
    Yes. Monday and Tuesday morning live music events at The HUB are open to the entire community, not limited to seniors or members.

    How do I contact The HUB in Belfair?
    Call (360) 275-0535 or visit in person at 111 NE Old Belfair Highway, Belfair, WA 98528. The website is hubhappenings.org.

  • WDFW’s Early Closure Authority Is Now a Policy Tool — What It Means for Mason County Shellfish Management

    WDFW’s Early Closure Authority Is Now a Policy Tool — What It Means for Mason County Shellfish Management

    When WDFW closed Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property on May 3, 2026, the agency didn’t frame it as a one-time enforcement response. It framed it as a policy tool.

    The distinction matters for anyone tracking Hood Canal’s long-term shellfish management trajectory. WDFW’s post-closure statement said the agency intends to use early-season closure authority “whenever harvest pressure outruns sustainability.” That’s a shift from a reactive model — act after a population collapses — to a proactive one: close before the damage is done, even mid-season, even when the season was already shortened.

    How the 2026 season got to this point

    The closures at Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property didn’t come from nowhere. WDFW entered 2026 having already implemented a statewide rule package targeting ten Puget Sound beaches showing harvest stress. At Shine and Wolfe, that meant cutting the season from New Year’s Day–May 15 to January 15–April 15 — removing six weeks of harvest opportunity before the season even opened. The May 3 action added an enforcement closure on top of an already-shortened season.

    The compliance failures WDFW documented weren’t obscure technicalities. Harvesters exceeded daily limits. They left open dig holes — damaging habitat for subsequent harvests. They parked illegally and in ways that endangered other visitors. They misidentified species, harvesting protected or over-limit shellfish. WDFW’s Fish and Wildlife Police attributed the compliance collapse partly to social-media-organized gathering groups that drew hundreds of harvesters simultaneously to single beaches — a coordination mechanism that recreational management frameworks weren’t built to handle.

    The dual-authority structure of Hood Canal shellfish oversight

    Hood Canal shellfish management operates under two state agencies with independent authority. WDFW sets seasons, daily limits, and species rules. The Washington State Department of Health controls biotoxin and pollution closures through the Shellfish Safety Map and Biotoxin Hotline (1-800-562-5632). A beach can be open under WDFW and closed under DOH simultaneously — neither agency’s determination overrides the other.

    Layered on top is tribal co-management. The Skokomish Tribe holds treaty-reserved shellfish harvest rights on Hood Canal under the U.S. v. Washington Boldt Decision framework. Tribal harvest occurs on state and private tidelands throughout the canal under a co-management arrangement with the state. WDFW’s conservation decisions — including season lengths and early closure authority — are made with tribal co-managers at the table. Decisions that contract the harvest available to recreational harvesters also carry implications for tribal harvest rights, which adds a legal and political dimension to the regulatory picture that extends beyond simple recreational management.

    What Twanoh’s 2026 situation illustrates

    Twanoh State Park’s 2026 configuration is a case study in stacked pressures. WDFW’s season shift moved the clam harvest window to May 15–June 15 — a six-week window instead of a longer one. Washington State Parks then scheduled a shoreline restoration project that will close beach access after the clam season ends, running through spring 2027. The campsite closure runs from June 1.

    The restoration at Twanoh isn’t just a construction inconvenience. Shoreline restoration projects on Hood Canal typically target removing legacy fill, rip-rap, and channelization that degraded the nearshore habitat — the same kinds of projects that have been underway at the Mary E. Theler Wetlands at Belfair’s Union River estuary and at other points on the Great Bend. These restorations are intended to improve long-term habitat quality for shellfish and salmon. The short-term cost is access.

    For the civic dimension: Twanoh’s restoration is a Washington State Parks capital project. Its timeline, scope, and funding aren’t widely covered in Mason County media. The Belfair Bugle will track the Twanoh restoration project’s milestones, the post-restoration shellfish habitat assessment when it’s available, and any further WDFW season adjustments on the Mason County stretch of Hood Canal.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is WDFW’s stated policy on mid-season shellfish closures after May 2026?

    WDFW stated after the May 3 closures at Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property that it intends to use early closure authority as a conservation tool whenever harvest pressure outruns sustainability. This is a proactive posture — the agency is signaling willingness to close beaches mid-season, not just at the end of a preset season window, if compliance and harvest rates indicate a problem.

    How does tribal co-management affect WDFW’s Hood Canal shellfish decisions?

    The Skokomish Tribe holds treaty-reserved shellfish harvest rights on Hood Canal under the Boldt Decision framework. WDFW makes season-length and conservation decisions in co-management with tribal fisheries managers. Changes that constrain recreational harvest also carry implications for tribal harvest allocations, giving these regulatory decisions a legal and intergovernmental dimension beyond simple recreational management.

    What is the Twanoh State Park shoreline restoration project?

    Washington State Parks is conducting a shoreline restoration project at Twanoh that will close beach access after the 2026 clam season ends on June 15. Campsite reservations are closed from June 1, 2026 through spring 2027. The restoration is intended to improve nearshore shellfish and salmon habitat by removing or remediating legacy shoreline alterations — a pattern seen at other Hood Canal restoration sites including the Theler Wetlands at Belfair.

    What is the role of Washington DOH in Hood Canal shellfish management?

    The Washington State Department of Health independently controls shellfish safety closures for biotoxins and pollution. DOH closures are separate from and independent of WDFW season decisions — a beach can be open under WDFW and closed under DOH simultaneously. DOH uses the Biotoxin Hotline (1-800-562-5632) and the DOH Shellfish Safety Map to communicate current closure status. Both must be checked before any harvest day.

  • Mason County Shellfish Harvest 2026: Twanoh Is Open May 15–June 15 — Here’s How to Plan Your Season

    Mason County Shellfish Harvest 2026: Twanoh Is Open May 15–June 15 — Here’s How to Plan Your Season

    If you’ve been planning your Hood Canal shellfish harvest for this spring, there are two things you need to know before you load the truck: the north end of the canal is closed, and Twanoh has a six-week window before construction shuts the beach.

    WDFW closed Shine Tidelands State Park and Wolfe Property State Park in Jefferson County on May 3, 2026, for the remainder of the 2026 season. Both sites saw harvest violations at scale — crowded beaches, exceeded daily limits, abandoned dig holes, parking violations, and species misidentification — and WDFW ended the season early. That closure affects harvesters from across the Puget Sound region, many of whom will drive south to Mason County’s beaches instead.

    The Twanoh window: May 15 through June 15

    Twanoh State Park on SR-106 between Belfair and Union is the main Mason County shellfish destination. In 2026, the clam season runs May 15 through June 15 only. That’s a one-month window. Miss it and the clam season is over.

    After June 15, Washington State Parks begins a shoreline restoration project at Twanoh. Beach access closes for construction. Campsite reservations are already closed from June 1, 2026 through spring 2027. Oysters are open through September 30, but the beach access restrictions for the restoration will affect when and how you can reach them — check Washington State Parks alerts at parks.wa.gov before heading out after June 15.

    On harvest day: bring your Discover Pass ($10 day-use, $30 annual). Oyster shells stay on the beach — this is both state law and essential habitat practice. Fill every dig hole before you leave. WDFW’s enforcement notes on the May 3 north canal closures called out hole-filling as a documented statewide compliance problem. Rangers will be watching this season.

    After June 15: your alternatives

    Potlatch State Park, further south on Hood Canal near Hoodsport, has its own season dates that differ from Twanoh — check the WDFW beach page at wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches for current status. Our Potlatch beginner guide covers the layout, rules, and what to bring.

    Belfair State Park’s shellfish access is tied to the Union River estuary and Great Bend seasons — smaller harvest opportunity than Twanoh but worth checking if you’re already at Belfair. See our full WDFW enforcement and 2026 season overview for the complete picture.

    Two checks you must make every harvest morning

    The WDFW beach page tells you the season. The Washington State Department of Health tells you whether the beach is safe that specific day. A beach that’s open under WDFW can be simultaneously closed under DOH for paralytic shellfish poison (PSP) or vibrio contamination. Neither check replaces the other.

    DOH Biotoxin Hotline: 1-800-562-5632. Check it on the morning of harvest. Also check the DOH Shellfish Safety Map online for real-time closure status on your specific beach.

    2026 rule changes to know

    The geoduck daily limit has dropped from three per person per day to one in 2026. WDFW also made season date shifts at multiple Hood Canal beaches as part of a statewide conservation package targeting beaches showing harvest stress. The 2026 annual beach seasons bar chart PDF at wdfw.wa.gov has the full comparison — look up your planned beach before you go, every year, because dates shift.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When is Twanoh State Park open for shellfish in 2026?

    Twanoh’s clam season runs May 15 through June 15, 2026. Oysters are open through September 30. After the clam season closes on June 15, Washington State Parks begins a shoreline restoration project and beach access closes for construction through spring 2027. Campsite reservations are already closed starting June 1, 2026.

    What do I need to bring to Twanoh for shellfish harvest?

    Bring a valid Discover Pass for parking ($10 day-use or $30 annual), containers for your shellfish, and a shovel for filling dig holes. Oyster shells must stay on the beach — removing them is illegal. Know your daily limits before you go: clams are typically 40 littlenecks or 40 butter clams per person per day (verify current limits on WDFW’s beach page). Geoduck limit dropped to 1 per person per day in 2026.

    Are the north Hood Canal beaches still open in May 2026?

    No. WDFW closed Shine Tidelands State Park and Wolfe Property State Park in Jefferson County on May 3, 2026, for the remainder of the season. The 2026 season at both sites was already shortened from January 15–April 15 (down from January 1–May 15). The May 3 action was an additional enforcement closure due to harvest violations at scale.

    What happens if I harvest shellfish on a DOH-closed beach?

    Harvesting shellfish from a DOH-closed beach is illegal and a public health risk. Paralytic shellfish poison (PSP) is a neurotoxin that cannot be detected by taste, smell, or appearance. It is not destroyed by cooking. Symptoms range from tingling to paralysis and can be fatal at high doses. The DOH Biotoxin Hotline (1-800-562-5632) and DOH Shellfish Safety Map provide current closure status — check both on the morning of every harvest day.

  • Hood Canal Tidelands Owner’s Alert: What the WDFW Enforcement Closures Mean for Your Beach in 2026

    Hood Canal Tidelands Owner’s Alert: What the WDFW Enforcement Closures Mean for Your Beach in 2026

    If you own tidelands on Mason County’s stretch of Hood Canal, the WDFW enforcement closures at Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property on May 3, 2026 aren’t just news about beaches in Jefferson County. They’re a displacement notice aimed at your shoreline.

    When public recreational shellfish beaches close — whether from enforcement action, season compression, or restoration construction — harvesters don’t stop harvesting. They move. The most common direction is south along SR-101 and SR-3, toward Mason County’s Hood Canal coastline. And in 2026, the public options in Mason County are themselves narrower than usual.

    What public options are left — and why they’re compressed

    Twanoh State Park, the primary public shellfish beach for Mason County, is operating on a six-week clam window this year: May 15 through June 15. After that, Washington State Parks begins shoreline restoration construction and beach access closes through spring 2027. Oysters remain open through September 30, but the clam harvest — the primary draw for most visiting harvesters — ends June 15.

    Potlatch State Park and Belfair State Park are the other public options. Both have season dates and limits set by WDFW that can differ from Twanoh’s — check the current beach pages at wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches before assuming they’re open. Our Potlatch beginner guide and tidelands property owner guide have the current baseline.

    Private tidelands: your rights and your responsibilities

    Washington tidelands law is not intuitive. In most of Mason County’s Hood Canal shoreline, tidelands are privately owned — meaning the land below the ordinary high water mark may belong to you, not the state. That private ownership gives you the right to harvest shellfish on your own tidelands, but it does not exempt you from WDFW season rules or DOH biotoxin closures. Both apply equally to private and public tidelands.

    What private ownership does mean: you can post your tidelands to prevent public access. Washington law does not grant the public a right to cross private tidelands even to reach navigable water, unless a public access easement exists. If you have displacement pressure from overcrowded public beaches pushing visitors onto your shoreline, you have legal standing to exclude them — and posting your tidelands with signage is the practical mechanism.

    If you’re uncertain whether your tidelands are privately owned, the Mason County Assessor’s parcel records and your deed description (which typically references the “ordinary high water mark” or “mean high tide line”) are the starting point. The Hood Canal Property Owner’s Guide to Shellfish Access, Tribal Boundaries, and the 2026 Season at Potlatch covers the tribal co-management dimension as well — Skokomish Tribal shellfish harvest rights on Hood Canal are a separate regulatory layer that affects what happens at the water’s edge.

    The two checks every harvest day requires

    Whether you’re harvesting on your own tidelands or at a public beach, the check protocol is the same. WDFW controls season dates and daily limits. The Washington State Department of Health controls biotoxin closures independently — a beach that’s open under WDFW can be closed under DOH for paralytic shellfish poison. The DOH Biotoxin Hotline is 1-800-562-5632. Check both on the morning of harvest, not the day before.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can visiting harvesters legally access my private tidelands on Hood Canal?

    Generally no. Washington state law does not grant the public a right to cross privately owned tidelands. If your tidelands are posted with no-trespassing signage, visiting harvesters are not permitted on them. Check your deed and Mason County Assessor records to confirm your tidelands ownership boundary. If you have an existing public access easement, that would be noted in your title documents.

    Do WDFW season rules apply to shellfish I harvest on my own tidelands?

    Yes. WDFW season dates, daily limits, and species rules apply to all recreational shellfish harvest in Washington, including on private tidelands. DOH biotoxin closures also apply. Private ownership determines access rights — it does not create an exemption from harvest regulations.

    Why are Mason County beaches likely to see more harvester pressure in 2026?

    WDFW closed Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property in Jefferson County on May 3, 2026, for the remainder of the season. Twanoh State Park’s clam window is only May 15–June 15 before restoration construction closes the beach. Both conditions displace harvesters southward toward Mason County’s remaining public and private tidelands during the peak spring harvest period.

    How does tribal co-management affect Hood Canal shellfish on Mason County tidelands?

    The Skokomish Tribe holds treaty-reserved shellfish harvest rights on Hood Canal under the U.S. v. Washington (Boldt Decision) framework. Tribal harvest occurs on state and private tidelands throughout the canal. This does not affect your recreational harvest rights, but it is part of the regulatory context for why WDFW manages Mason County’s Hood Canal stocks conservatively. See our full guide for details on how tribal boundaries and co-management work in the Mason County context.

  • Twanoh’s Window Is Closing: What the WDFW Hood Canal Shellfish Enforcement Action Means for Mason County Harvesters

    Twanoh’s Window Is Closing: What the WDFW Hood Canal Shellfish Enforcement Action Means for Mason County Harvesters

    When the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife closed Shine Tidelands State Park and Wolfe Property State Park on May 3, 2026, the action was directed at two beaches an hour north of Mason County — but the consequence lands squarely on Hood Canal’s Great Bend.

    WDFW cited unsustainable harvest pressure and widespread rule violations: harvesters exceeding daily limits, abandoning open dig holes, parking illegally, and misidentifying clam species. The closures ended recreational clam, mussel, and oyster gathering at both Jefferson County sites for the remainder of 2026. Combined with a season already shortened from January 1–May 15 down to January 15–April 15, the north end of the canal is now effectively closed to recreational shellfish harvest for the season.

    Displaced harvesters don’t disappear. They drive south on SR-101 and SR-3 to Mason County’s beaches — and they’re arriving in a year when Twanoh State Park, the most heavily-used Hood Canal shellfish site in Mason County, is already operating under a compressed window and a scheduled restoration closure.

    What closed, and what the 2026 regulation picture looks like

    The 2026 clam, mussel, and oyster season on Hood Canal entered the year with WDFW already having tightened rules across ten Puget Sound beaches showing harvest stress. At Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property, the season was shortened by six weeks — opening January 15 instead of January 1, closing April 15 instead of May 15. The May 3 enforcement action was an additional layer: WDFW Fish and Wildlife Police observed compliance breakdowns at scale, with social-media-organized gathering groups drawing hundreds of harvesters simultaneously and rules failing at volume.

    WDFW’s post-closure statement was pointed: the agency said early-season closure authority is a conservation tool it intends to use whenever harvest pressure outruns sustainability. That’s a policy signal, not just a one-time enforcement moment.

    Other 2026 rule changes affecting Hood Canal harvesters: the geoduck daily limit has dropped from three per person per day to one. WDFW’s 2026 public beach season guide, available at wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches, is the authoritative current reference — season dates and limits can shift mid-year, and the bar chart PDF linked there shows the full picture by beach.

    Twanoh’s compressed window: May 15–June 15, then restoration closes the beach

    Twanoh State Park on SR-106 between Belfair and Union is the default Mason County shellfish beach for most North Mason households — easy SR-3 access, reliable stocks, and a well-known layout. In 2026, that familiarity requires an update.

    WDFW’s 2026 season shift moved Twanoh’s clam harvest dates to May 15 through June 15. Oysters are open through September 30. Harvesters who show up outside those windows — or who rely on memory of prior years’ dates — will find the beach legally closed.

    After the clam season closes June 15, Washington State Parks begins a shoreline restoration project at Twanoh that will shut beach access for construction. Campsite reservations are already closed from June 1, 2026 through spring 2027. The restoration timeline means Twanoh’s clam season and public beach access are effectively done for 2026 once June 15 passes.

    Stack the two developments: north Hood Canal closures driving displaced harvesters south, and Twanoh operating on a narrow six-week window before construction closes the beach. Belfair State Park, Potlatch State Park, and private tidelands on Mason County’s stretch of the canal will absorb what Twanoh cannot hold after June 15.

    The check you have to make every time

    Two state agencies share authority over Hood Canal shellfish, and both have to be checked on the day of harvest — not the night before.

    WDFW controls season dates, daily limits, and species rules. A beach can be within season and still have specific restrictions you’d only catch by checking the beach’s page directly at wdfw.wa.gov.

    Washington State Department of Health (WA DOH) controls biotoxin and pollution closures independently of WDFW. A beach that is open under WDFW can be simultaneously closed under DOH for paralytic shellfish poison (PSP) or vibrio risk. The DOH Biotoxin Hotline is 1-800-562-5632. The DOH Shellfish Safety Map at fortress.wa.gov/doh/biotoxin shows current closure status in real time.

    Both checks are required. Neither substitutes for the other.

    What Mason County harvesters should do now

    If Twanoh is your regular destination, May 15–June 15 is your window. Arrive prepared: Discover Pass for parking ($10 day-use, $30 annual), a container for shells (oyster shells stay on the beach — do not remove them), and equipment for filling dig holes. WDFW’s enforcement note on the Shine/Wolfe closures was explicit that hole-filling failures are a documented compliance problem statewide — it’s both a regulation and a courtesy to harvesters who come after you.

    After June 15, the realistic Mason County alternatives are Potlatch State Park (check current WDFW season dates — see our Hood Canal property owner shellfish guide and Potlatch beginner guide) and private tidelands where you have access rights. Belfair State Park’s shellfish access is tied to the Union River estuary seasons — check the WDFW beach page for current status before driving.

    For the full 2026 shellfish and crab calendar for Hood Canal property owners, see our earlier guide: Hood Canal Property Owners: What the 2026 Shellfish and Crab Calendar Means for Your Beach.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why did WDFW close Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property in May 2026?

    WDFW cited unsustainable harvest pressure and widespread rule violations: harvesters exceeding daily limits, abandoning open dig holes, parking illegally, and misidentifying species. Social-media-organized gathering groups drew hundreds of harvesters simultaneously, and compliance collapsed at that volume. WDFW stated it will use early closure authority as a conservation tool going forward whenever harvest pressure exceeds sustainability.

    What are Twanoh State Park’s shellfish season dates in 2026?

    Twanoh’s 2026 clam season runs May 15 through June 15. Oysters are open through September 30. After the clam season closes, Washington State Parks begins a shoreline restoration project that will shut beach access through spring 2027. Campsite reservations are already closed from June 1, 2026 onward for the restoration.

    Do I need to check both WDFW and DOH before harvesting shellfish on Hood Canal?

    Yes, both are required. WDFW controls season dates and daily limits. The Washington State Department of Health controls biotoxin and pollution closures independently — a beach can be open under WDFW and simultaneously closed under DOH for paralytic shellfish poison or vibrio risk. Call the DOH Biotoxin Hotline at 1-800-562-5632 or check the DOH Shellfish Safety Map on the morning of harvest.

    How does the north Hood Canal closure affect Mason County beaches?

    Hood Canal harvesters are mobile. Closures at Shine Tidelands and Wolfe Property displace effort southward toward Mason County’s beaches — Twanoh, Potlatch, Belfair State Park, and private tidelands. In 2026, Twanoh is already operating under a compressed window (May 15–June 15) before restoration construction closes beach access. The combination increases pressure on the remaining open Mason County beaches during the peak spring harvest period.

    What changed about the geoduck daily limit in 2026?

    WDFW reduced the geoduck daily limit from three per person per day to one per person per day in 2026. The change was made to support shellfish conservation, as geoduck beds are slow to recover, particularly in vulnerable intertidal zone populations.

    Where can I find current Hood Canal shellfish season information?

    The authoritative source is WDFW’s shellfish beaches page at wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches. Each beach has its own page with current season dates and rules. The 2026 annual beach seasons bar chart PDF (linked from the WDFW page) shows all beaches side by side. For biotoxin status, use the DOH Shellfish Safety Map or call 1-800-562-5632.

  • How a 2001 Property Tax Cap Keeps Everett’s EMS on the Ballot — Initiative 747 Explained

    Why does Everett keep putting EMS funding on the ballot? Because of a 2001 voter-approved law called Initiative 747, which caps how much property tax cities can collect from existing properties each year at 1%. Costs rise faster than 1% almost every year, so cities periodically ask voters to “lift the lid” and restore the rate. Everett’s EMS levy on the August 4, 2026 primary is the third such lid lift for emergency services since the original 2000 EMS levy passed. Voters’ Pamphlet statements are locked tonight (May 11) at 11:59 PM. The full pamphlet drops to Snohomish County mailboxes in mid-July.

    How a 2001 Property Tax Cap Keeps Everett’s EMS on the Ballot — Initiative 747 Explained

    If you live in Everett and you’ve been wondering why the City Council keeps sending things to the ballot — a library levy, a fire services question, and now this August’s EMS levy — there is one law that explains almost all of it. It’s called Initiative 747, voters approved it in 2001, and it has shaped how every city in Washington raises money ever since.

    Here’s what this means for you, the resident, in plain language. Initiative 747 caps how much of your property tax bill the city can grow each year — to just 1% on existing properties. Costs for everything cities buy (firefighter wages, ambulance equipment, fuel, health insurance, pension contributions) typically grow 3-7% per year. That gap, multiplied across 24 years, is the reason Everett is sending the EMS lid lift to the August 4 ballot. If you vote yes in August, the city’s EMS property tax rate restores from about $0.36 per $1,000 of assessed value back up to $0.50 — roughly $80 per year for a typical Everett homeowner — and funds approximately 78 firefighter-paramedic positions at the Everett Fire Department. If you vote no, the rate stays where it is and the gap keeps widening.

    That’s the immediate decision. But the structural story behind it is worth understanding, because the same lever keeps coming back. So let’s walk through it.

    What Initiative 747 actually says

    In November 2001, Washington voters approved I-747 by a wide margin. The text was simple: cities, counties, fire districts, library districts, and other taxing districts could no longer raise their property tax revenue from existing properties (called “the regular levy”) by more than 1% per year without going back to the voters. Before I-747, the cap had been the lesser of 6% or inflation — set by a 1971 law (I-72) and tightened by I-695 in 1999 and I-722 in 2000.

    The 1% cap was struck down by the Washington Supreme Court in 2007 (Washington Citizens Action of Washington v. State), but the state legislature reinstated it the same year in a special session. It’s been the law of the land ever since. RCW 84.55.010 is where you’ll find it in the state code.

    Two important nuances. First, the 1% cap is on revenue, not on individual bills — your property tax bill can go up by more than 1% if your home’s assessed value rises faster than your neighbors’. Second, new construction is exempt — when a developer builds a new apartment building or a new home, the tax revenue from that brand-new construction comes in on top of the 1% cap. That’s why fast-growing cities have an easier time absorbing the cap than slow-growth ones.

    Why a 1% cap forces cities back to the ballot

    Here’s the math problem. Imagine your fire department’s budget in 2001 was $10 million. In 2002 the city could raise that by 1% to $10.1 million. In 2003, another 1% to $10.2 million. After 24 years of 1% growth, the budget is roughly $12.7 million.

    But the real cost of running a fire department over 24 years didn’t grow at 1%. Wages, health insurance, pension contributions, vehicles, equipment — most of those grew 3-5% per year, with some years (notably the 2021-2023 inflation surge) at 7-9%. After 24 years at even a modest 3% real cost growth, that same fire department actually needs about $20 million to do the same job. The gap between $12.7 million (what the cap allows) and $20 million (what it costs) is roughly $7.3 million per year.

    That gap is what forces cities to do one of three things: cut services, find new revenue sources (utility taxes, sales tax increases, transportation benefit district fees), or go back to the voters and ask to “lift the lid” on the property tax. A levy lid lift is a vote that resets the rate back up to a higher number — often the rate the levy was originally at — and starts the 1% clock again from the new, higher base.

    Everett’s EMS lid lift: what the August 4 ballot actually does

    The EMS levy on Everett’s August 4 primary ballot is the third lid lift since the original 2000 EMS levy was approved. Voters first approved a dedicated EMS property tax rate of $0.50 per $1,000 of assessed value in 2000. Each subsequent year, the 1% cap and faster-growing assessed values together drove the effective rate down. By 2026, the rate had compressed to roughly $0.36 per $1,000.

    The August 4 measure asks voters to restore the rate to $0.50 per $1,000. For a homeowner with a property assessed at $600,000, that’s the difference between paying about $216 per year for EMS today and about $300 per year after the lid lift — an increase of approximately $80 per year, or about $7 per month. The increase funds roughly 78 firefighter-paramedic positions at the Everett Fire Department, according to the city’s April 22 announcement, and continues the staffing that handles cardiac arrests, strokes, overdoses, and the medical calls that make up about 80% of fire department dispatch volume.

    The Pro/Con committee for the Voters’ Pamphlet was appointed by the City Council on April 29. Pro and Con statements were due May 7. Rebuttals — where each side gets to respond to the other side’s argument — are due tonight, May 11, by 11:59 PM. After tonight, the pamphlet content is locked. The full Voters’ Pamphlet will be mailed by the Snohomish County Auditor to registered voters in mid-July.

    The bigger picture — three Everett ballot questions, one shared cause

    The EMS levy is the most immediate ballot question, but it’s not the only Everett civic decision driven by Initiative 747. The city is also weighing two other paths to close its projected $14 million general-fund gap in 2027.

    The first is regionalizing fire services into a Regional Fire Authority (RFA). An RFA is a separate taxing district that runs fire and EMS for multiple cities, funded by its own property tax levy outside the city’s general fund. Voters would have to approve formation of an RFA on a future ballot. South King County cities have used this model for years.

    The second is regionalizing library services by joining the Sno-Isle Library system. Sno-Isle is funded by a separate property tax levy in the cities and counties it serves. Joining Sno-Isle would shift Everett library operations off the city’s general fund — but it would also require voter approval of the new levy and a transfer of city library assets.

    Either of these moves, or both, could close part of the 2027 gap. Both require voter approval. Both exist as options because Initiative 747’s 1% cap has compressed the general fund’s growth capacity over 24 years. The mayor’s office and the City Council have signaled that all three levers — EMS lid lift, RFA formation, and Sno-Isle regionalization — are on the table for the rest of 2026 and 2027.

    Why some voters support I-747 and why others want it changed

    The case for keeping I-747 in place, articulated by supporters like the Washington Policy Center and the late Tim Eyman (the initiative’s original sponsor), is that the 1% cap forces cities to prioritize spending and pushes them back to voters whenever they need more money. Supporters argue this is the right level of accountability — voters get to weigh in on every major revenue increase rather than seeing taxes rise automatically.

    The case for changing I-747, articulated by associations like the Association of Washington Cities and the Washington State Association of Counties, is that the 1% cap is below almost any reasonable measure of inflation. Even in low-inflation years, a 1% cap forces real cuts. The result, critics argue, is a constant cycle of lid lift elections, layered local taxes (utility taxes, sales tax increases, fees), and growing reliance on regional special-purpose districts that voters often don’t even know exist.

    Both views are represented in the Snohomish County Charter Review Commission’s current proposal slate. Proposal 13 (foundational government services budgeting), Proposal 14 (a budget stabilization fund with a 4-vote use threshold), and Proposal 21 (a 4-vote supermajority on the 5-member County Council to raise taxes) all touch the same structural question I-747 raises: how should local government handle the gap between a 1% cap and rising costs? The Charter Review Commission’s first public hearing on those proposals is Wednesday, May 13 in Arlington.

    What to do next

    If you live in Everett or anywhere in Snohomish County, here are the practical steps for the August 4 EMS levy and the wider structural conversation.

    First, read the Voters’ Pamphlet when it arrives in mid-July. The Pro statement, Con statement, and rebuttals being locked tonight are the official arguments voters will see in their mailbox. The committee statements are available after locking at the Snohomish County Auditor’s elections page: snohomishcountywa.gov/190/Elections.

    Second, check your voter registration before the August 4 primary at voter.votewa.gov. Ballots mail in mid-July, are due by 8:00 PM August 4, and you can return them by drop box anywhere in Snohomish County or by mail (postmarked by August 4).

    Third, if you want to weigh in on the structural lever rather than the specific levy, the Snohomish County Charter Review Commission’s three public hearings are May 13 (Arlington), May 20 (Monroe), and May 27 (Mountlake Terrace) — all at 5:30 PM. Written comments can be submitted to the commission through May 29 via the commission’s page on the county website.

    Fourth, for the Everett City Council’s own decisions on the 2027 budget — including any future ballot questions for an RFA or Sno-Isle regionalization — public comment is taken at every council meeting. Council meets the second and fourth Wednesday of each month at 6:30 PM in the council chambers at 3002 Wetmore Avenue. Comments can also be emailed any time to council@everettwa.gov.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Initiative 747 still law? Yes. The state Supreme Court struck down the original initiative in 2007 (Washington Citizens Action of Washington v. State), but the state legislature reinstated the 1% cap the same year in a special session. RCW 84.55.010 is the current statute.

    Does I-747 apply to my individual property tax bill or to total city revenue? It applies to total revenue from existing properties — not to individual bills. Your specific bill can rise faster than 1% if your home’s assessed value increases faster than other homes in your tax district. New construction is exempt from the cap.

    How much will the EMS levy lid lift cost a typical Everett homeowner? For a home assessed at $600,000, the increase is roughly $84 per year — about $7 per month — based on the rate restoring from $0.36 per $1,000 back to $0.50 per $1,000. The exact amount depends on your assessed value.

    What does the EMS levy fund? Approximately 78 firefighter-paramedic positions at the Everett Fire Department, according to the city’s April 22 announcement. These positions handle the medical calls that make up about 80% of fire department dispatch volume — cardiac arrests, strokes, overdoses, falls, and other emergencies.

    When is the EMS levy on the ballot? August 4, 2026, on the Washington State primary ballot. Ballots will mail to registered Snohomish County voters in mid-July.

    What happens if the EMS levy fails? The current rate of approximately $0.36 per $1,000 stays in place. The Everett Fire Department would have to find approximately $7-8 million per year in operating savings or alternative funding to maintain current staffing — likely through some combination of position reductions, regionalization (RFA), or general fund reallocation.

    What’s the difference between a lid lift and a new levy? A lid lift restores a previously-approved property tax to a higher rate the voters originally approved — it doesn’t create a new tax. A new levy would be a brand-new property tax district or measure that didn’t exist before. The EMS levy is a lid lift.

    When does the Voters’ Pamphlet arrive? The Snohomish County Auditor typically mails the Voters’ Pamphlet to registered voters about three weeks before the election. For the August 4 primary, that means mid-July 2026.

  • Everett’s New 20-Unit Pallet Shelter for Mothers and Children Opens at Sievers-Duecy — VOAWW Ribbon Cutting April 2026

    Quick answer: On Monday, April 27, 2026, the City of Everett and Volunteers of America Western Washington (VOAWW) opened a 20-unit Pallet Shelter Village for women experiencing homelessness with their children. The village is built on city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard, includes a community kitchen, playground, showers, and detached restrooms, and offers up to 12 months of transitional stays with wraparound recovery and job support — funded by City of Everett American Rescue Plan Act dollars and a $250,000 match from Snohomish County.

    There is a quiet, specific moment at a ribbon cutting that does not show up in the photo op. It is the moment a city council member, a CEO, and a mayor walk away from the cameras and the contractors start moving keys to a coordinator’s office. After that moment, the building is no longer a project. It is somebody’s address.

    That moment happened in Everett on April 27, 2026, on a parcel of city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard in the west end of town. The City of Everett and Volunteers of America Western Washington — the organization most longtime Everett residents know simply as VOAWW — cut the ribbon on a 20-unit Pallet Shelter Village. It is the city’s third Pallet shelter project. It is the first one in Everett built specifically for women and their children. And it is, by far, the cleanest answer the city has produced to a question Casino Road and Pinehurst-Beverly Park families have been asking for years: where can a mother go with her kids when she does not have anywhere to go?

    Here is what is on site, how to qualify, who paid for it, and why this matters for Everett’s broader homelessness response in 2026.

    What’s Actually On The Site

    Twenty pallet structures sit on the lot. Each unit is designed to house one mother and up to three children — a sleeping space plus secure storage, climate control, and a lockable door. That is a different physical reality than the bunkhouse and emergency-shelter setups that most homeless families in Snohomish County had access to before this opening.

    Around the units, the village has the infrastructure that makes a temporary home livable for a family with kids. There are detached restrooms. There is a separate shower facility. There is a community kitchen and gathering place — a hard-walled, year-round space, not a tent — where residents can cook, eat, and meet with case workers without leaving the village. And there is a playground, the single feature that signals more about who this village is for than any other piece of the build.

    The Pallet structures themselves were built by Pallet Shelter, the Everett-based company whose modular units have been deployed across more than 70 cities. The site is enclosed and managed; access is controlled.

    Who It’s For And How Long Residents Can Stay

    The shelter is for women and their children, full stop. Residents can stay for up to 12 months while they work toward permanent housing.

    That 12-month window is the critical difference between an emergency shelter and what VOAWW is operating here. Emergency shelters typically run on 30-, 60-, or 90-day stays — barely enough time to stabilize, let alone rebuild a life. A 12-month transitional stay is long enough for a mother to get into substance use treatment if she needs it, hold a job for long enough to build a rental history, save a damage deposit, get her kids into a stable school routine, and apply for the permanent housing programs whose waiting lists run six months and longer.

    That is the math behind transitional housing as a model, and it is the math that the new village was built around.

    Wraparound Services — The Part That Actually Determines Outcomes

    VOAWW will be providing the wraparound services at the village. That word — wraparound — is one that gets used loosely in nonprofit-speak, but in this case it means something specific.

    Recovery assistance is on the list. So is job assistance. VOAWW already operates a portfolio of programs across Snohomish County that touch substance use disorder services, behavioral health, employment readiness, and family-stabilization case management. That is the same machinery that gets connected to a Pallet shelter resident from the day she moves in. It is the part of the model that determines whether 20 units become a revolving door or become 20 successful exits to permanent housing every 12 months.

    Brian Smith, the CEO of Volunteers of America Western Washington, said at the ribbon cutting on April 27 that “It’s about dignity. It’s about stability.” That language is plain on purpose. The model is not built around innovation theater. It is built around the boring, durable work of giving a mother a stable address long enough that she can put a kid in the same school for a full year.

    Where The Money Came From

    The City of Everett allocated American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars to the project. ARPA is the federal pandemic-recovery funding stream that gave municipalities one-time capital to spend on community resilience — and Everett’s allocation of it toward a Pallet shelter for mothers is one of the clearer uses of ARPA dollars in Snohomish County to date.

    Snohomish County contributed $250,000 to the project, which the City of Everett matched. The combined county-city contribution closed the funding gap that had kept the project moving through planning and into construction over roughly two years.

    The site itself is on city-owned land. That detail matters because it shortcuts one of the costliest line items in any shelter project — the land acquisition — and it gives the city long-term control over how the parcel is used.

    Why This Site, Why Now

    This is Everett’s third Pallet shelter project. The first two are well-known in the community — the Phil Johnson Ballfields site, which broke ground in 2023, and the South Everett site that opened earlier in the timeline. Each shelter targets a slightly different population because that is how Pallet’s modular shelter model works in practice: same structural footprint, different operator, different intake criteria.

    The Sievers-Duecy site fills the gap in Everett’s shelter portfolio that had been there since the first two opened. There was emergency shelter capacity for single adults. There was capacity for families through other agencies. There was no Everett-operated Pallet shelter that was set up specifically for the configuration that had become the fastest-growing slice of Snohomish County’s homelessness data — a mother with children, fleeing or recovering from something specific (a domestic situation, a substance use crisis, a sudden housing loss), and needing both privacy and structure.

    The 20-unit village answers that gap, in that geography, with that model. It is the answer to a question that residents on Casino Road, in Pinehurst-Beverly Park, and in the South Forest Park area had been raising at neighborhood meetings for the last 18 months.

    Who Showed Up On April 27

    The ribbon cutting was attended by Everett City Council President Don Schwab, VOAWW Executive Director of Housing Services Galina Volchkova, VOAWW CEO Brian Smith, and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin. Each spoke in their public role; each represents a part of the partnership chain that produced the village.

    The mayor’s office has been signaling pallet-shelter expansion as a multi-year priority since 2022, when the third site at Glenwood and Sievers-Duecy was first proposed in a public neighborhood meeting. The city council allocated the ARPA dollars. VOAWW is operating it. The county made the match. That kind of layered partnership is not a typical accomplishment, and it is worth naming the structure that produced it.

    What Comes Next

    Two things, mainly.

    First, intake. VOAWW will be working through its case management pipeline to identify the first cohort of residents — women with children who are currently sheltered in less stable arrangements (couch-surfing, vehicles, emergency shelter, fleeing domestic violence) and who meet the program’s transitional-housing eligibility. The first wave of move-ins will follow the ribbon cutting by a matter of weeks.

    Second, outcomes tracking. A 20-unit village with a 12-month maximum stay should be producing roughly 20 successful exits to permanent housing per year if the model works. That is the metric that determines whether Everett gets a fourth and a fifth Pallet shelter, or whether the program plateaus. Both the city and VOAWW have been clear that the data on transitional success is part of how they will be evaluating the model.

    How To Help

    VOAWW’s main support channels are listed at voaww.org, including the donation page that funds the wraparound services side of the operation (recovery support, job assistance, family case management). Snohomish County donors who want to support the Sievers-Duecy site specifically can contact VOAWW’s development office through the same site.

    For volunteer involvement, VOAWW operates an extensive volunteer program across its housing, food, and family services lines. The volunteer page on voaww.org is the central intake.

    For neighborhood residents in the immediate vicinity who want to be part of welcoming the new community in — donations of children’s books, school supplies, kitchen basics, and bedding are routinely needed when a transitional shelter opens. Contact VOAWW for the current list and drop-off instructions.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Who is eligible to stay at the new Pallet shelter village? Women who are experiencing homelessness with their children, working toward permanent housing. Each unit houses one mother and up to three children. Intake is managed by VOAWW.

    How long can a resident stay? Up to 12 months. The site is designed as transitional housing — a stabilizing stop, not an indefinite shelter.

    Where exactly is the village located? On city-owned land off Sievers-Duecy Boulevard in west Everett. The site was originally proposed at Glenwood and Sievers-Duecy in 2022.

    Who funded the project? The City of Everett allocated American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars. Snohomish County contributed $250,000, which the City of Everett matched.

    Is this the only Pallet shelter in Everett? No. This is Everett’s third Pallet shelter project. The first sites at Phil Johnson Ballfields and South Everett serve different populations.

    Who is operating the shelter day-to-day? Volunteers of America Western Washington (VOAWW) is the operator. VOAWW provides wraparound services including recovery assistance and job assistance.

    Who built the pallet units? The structures were built by Pallet Shelter, the Everett-based company whose modular shelter units have been deployed across the country.

    How can I support the new shelter? Donate through voaww.org, volunteer through VOAWW’s volunteer program, or contact VOAWW for the in-kind donation list (children’s books, school supplies, bedding, kitchen basics) when the first cohort moves in.

    Related Reading From Exploring Everett

    For context on Everett’s homelessness response, the Everett Gospel Mission shelter expansion piece on Exploring Everett covers the parallel growth of the city’s largest shelter provider; the Volunteers of America Western Washington complete guide details every program in VOAWW’s Everett-area portfolio; the Stations Unidos profile covers the anti-displacement work happening on Casino Road; and the Cocoon House youth-homelessness profile covers the part of the population this Pallet village will not directly serve.

    The Sievers-Duecy village is one piece of a multi-organization response. The other pieces, taken together, are how Everett actually moves families out of homelessness — one address at a time.

  • LETI’s New Telehealth Hub in South Everett: 25 Free Computers for Snohomish County Latino Families

    Quick answer: The Latino Educational Training Institute (LETI) in Everett has launched a new telehealth space stocked with 25 Wi-Fi-enabled computers, blood pressure monitors, and infrared thermometers — all donated by UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Washington. The hub is free for anyone in Snohomish County who needs to take a doctor’s video visit but doesn’t have the device, the connection, or the private space to do it from home.

    If you have ever tried to take a video appointment from a kitchen table while two kids did homework on either side of you, you already know why this matters.

    Latino Educational Training Institute — most people just call it LETI — has spent twenty-seven years building the kind of community center that does more than fit one purpose. Computer classes. GED prep. Microentrepreneurship training for landscapers and house cleaners who want to formalize their businesses. Vocational coursework. A space where families could come, in Spanish, in English, and ask the question that had been worrying them all week. The roof above all of that, since 2026, now also covers a telehealth hub — and that hub is one of the cleanest pieces of community-organization infrastructure to land in south Everett in a long time.

    Here is what is inside, who built it, and why families in the Casino Road corridor and across Snohomish County should know it exists.

    What the Telehealth Hub Actually Is

    The space is exactly what the name suggests: a room at LETI’s Everett training center stocked with everything you need to take a telehealth appointment.

    UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Washington donated 25 Wi-Fi-enabled computers to the room. They also donated the kind of medical equipment that makes a video visit useful instead of theatrical — blood pressure monitors, infrared thermometers, and the basic tools a clinician on the other side of the screen can actually ask you to use during the appointment so they have a real reading to work with.

    The point is that residents can use the donated equipment for both physical and behavioral health telehealth appointments. The computers are free for everyone — not means-tested, not credentialed, not gated by membership.

    That last detail is the one that matters most. Free for everyone is a different rule than free for clients. It means a grandmother who walked over from her apartment can come in. It means a working mom on her lunch break can come in. It means a teenager who needs a behavioral health visit and doesn’t want to take it in the room they share with two siblings can come in.

    Why LETI Is the Right Place For This

    LETI was founded in 1998 to provide general educational enrichment, skills development, and community service to the growing Hispanic community of Snohomish County. Twenty-seven years later, that mission has stretched into roughly every direction a community center can stretch.

    Founder and CEO Rosario Reyes framed the telehealth space this way: “This new telehealth space helps remove barriers that too often stand between people and the care they need.” That is a CEO talking about her own organization, in her own public role, in a quote distributed to local press — and it lands cleaner than most institutional statements because the barrier she is describing is specific. It is not philosophical. It is the wall that goes up when your phone is old, your internet is unreliable, and the appointment your insurance offers you is by video.

    LETI has been a trusted community partner in Snohomish County for years. The organization runs vocational classes — office assistance, bookkeeping, professional licensing — that have helped families turn informal work into licensed independent businesses. A landscaper who has been taking cash work for a decade can use the classes to formalize, get an EIN, and put a real business name on the side of a truck. That is the same population for whom a free telehealth room is not a luxury but a missing piece of infrastructure.

    The New 15,000-Square-Foot Facility — Context for Why This Matters Right Now

    The telehealth hub didn’t appear in isolation. LETI received a $3.8 million state allocation in 2024 to build out a new 15,000-square-foot facility in south Everett — a project that has been progressing toward a fully operational building with a commercial kitchen, several classrooms, a child care center, and a large multipurpose space for events like quinceañeras.

    The 2026 facility plan reads like a long list of needs the Casino Road and Pinehurst-Beverly Park families had been telling the city for years. A commercial kitchen so the food-truck entrepreneurs in the area have a licensed prep space. Classrooms for adult education that runs in the evening when shifts end. A child care center for parents in those classes. An event space large enough for the celebrations that hold the community together — quinceañeras, weddings, graduations — without forcing families to rent at hotel-banquet prices.

    The telehealth room slotted into that build as one more piece of the puzzle. The 2026 State of the City address by Mayor Cassie Franklin specifically called out LETI as one of the immigrant-community-serving organizations the city plans to strengthen ties with over the next year. Read that one way, and it is standard mayoral-speech language. Read it another way, and it is the city signaling that LETI is now part of how south Everett delivers services that the city itself cannot run alone.

    What This Means For The Latino Community On Casino Road

    Casino Road is the spine of the most diverse part of Everett. Latino families, Cambodian families, Filipino families, families from across East Africa, and longtime English-speaking families share this corridor — and the health-equity gap that runs through it is the kind of gap that telehealth was specifically designed to close, if anybody actually made the technology accessible.

    The catch is that telehealth was sold to America as a 2020 innovation that would democratize care, and then it quietly stratified along the same lines as every other piece of digital infrastructure. If you had broadband, a recent laptop, and a quiet room, telehealth was a gift. If you didn’t have one of those three, telehealth was just another appointment your insurance had moved farther out of reach.

    LETI’s hub is the answer to that stratification. Twenty-five computers. Donated, working, available, free. Equipment to make the visit clinically meaningful. A space that already feels familiar to the families who would benefit most from it. The combination is what makes it real instead of symbolic.

    How To Use The Hub

    If you live in south Everett and want to use LETI’s telehealth space, here is what you need to know.

    LETI’s Everett training center is reachable at 425-775-2688. The organization’s website is letiwa.org, where the about page lays out the founding history, the program list, and current locations. Walk-in availability for the telehealth space is being managed at the center itself — call ahead if you want to confirm a specific computer slot for an appointment you already have scheduled, particularly if you need the blood pressure cuff or thermometer during your visit.

    If you do not yet have a telehealth appointment but want to set one up, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Washington members can call their plan’s member services line to get started; other insurance plans have their own telehealth scheduling rules.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is LETI’s telehealth hub only for UnitedHealthcare members?
    No. UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Washington donated the equipment, but the computers are free for everyone to use. The hub is not means-tested or restricted to specific insurance plans.

    Can I use the hub for behavioral health visits?
    Yes. The space is set up for both physical and behavioral health telehealth appointments. A private computer station can be used for therapy or counseling visits.

    Where is LETI located in Everett?
    LETI operates training programs in Everett with a connected presence in Lynnwood. The main Everett contact number is 425-775-2688. The 2026 new facility build-out in south Everett is the larger 15,000-square-foot space the organization is moving toward operating fully.

    Do I need to speak Spanish to use LETI’s services?
    No. LETI serves the Latino community as its founding mission, but services are open to anyone. Bilingual staff support is available.

    What other services does LETI offer beyond telehealth?
    Vocational training (office assistance, bookkeeping, microentrepreneurship), GED preparation, professional licensing pathways, and microloan information for small business owners.

    Is there a cost for using the computers or equipment?
    No. The 25 computers and the donated medical equipment are free to use.

    Related Reading From Exploring Everett

    LETI’s telehealth hub sits inside a much larger story about how south Everett’s institutions are being rebuilt around the families who actually live there. The Casino Road neighborhood guide on Exploring Everett lays out the full corridor; the Stations Unidos profile covers the anti-displacement community development corporation working in the same geography; and the Volunteers of America Western Washington guide covers the wraparound services many LETI clients also rely on.

    This is the part of Everett where the community organizations are the institutions. LETI is one of them, and the telehealth hub is one of the reasons why.