Arlington (Washington)

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Arlington
Olympic Avenue in downtown Arlington
Olympic Avenue in downtown Arlington
Location in Washington
Arlington (Washington)
Arlington
Arlington
Basic data
Foundation : May 20, 1903 ( incorporated , i.e. recognized as a local authority )
State : United States
State : Washington
County : Snohomish County
Coordinates : 48 ° 11 ′  N , 122 ° 8 ′  W Coordinates: 48 ° 11 ′  N , 122 ° 8 ′  W
Time zone : Pacific ( UTC − 8 / −7 )
Inhabitants :
Metropolitan Area :
19,112 (as of 2016)
Metropolitan Area Seattle
Population density : 797.7 inhabitants per km 2
Area : 23.98 km 2  (approx. Err mi 2 ) of
which 23.96 km 2  (approx. 9 mi 2 ) are land
Height : 35 m
Postal code : 98223
Area code : +1 360
FIPS : 53-02585
GNIS ID : 1515947
Website : arlingtonwa.gov
Mayor : Barbara Tolbert
Snohomish County Washington Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Arlington Highlighted.svg
Location of Arlington in Snohomish County

Arlington is a city ( City ) in northern Snohomish County in the State of Washington ; it is part of the Seattle metropolitan area . The city is located on the Stillaguamish River in the western foothills of the Cascade Range in the neighborhood of Marysville , about 10 miles north of Everett , the County Seat , and 40 miles north of Seattle , the largest city in the region. According to the United States Census 2010 , Arlington had 17,926 residents.

Arlington was founded by settlers in the 1880s; the area was parceled out for two cities , Arlington and Haller City. Haller City was incorporated into larger Arlington when it was recognized as a local authority in 1903 . During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Arlington was targeted by federal relief projects; this is how the Arlington Municipal Airport was built, which was to serve as a naval aviation base during World War II . In the 1980s, Arlington began to feel the effects of suburbanization as it grew by more than 450 percent by 2000 and incorporated the unparalleled area of Smokey Point in the southwest.

The economy in Arlington is historically based on forestry and agriculture , but has since developed into a location for the service industry with some jobs in the aviation industry around the Flupplatz. Arlington is ruled by a mayor with a Mayor-Council Government . The city council consists of seven members. The city maintains the municipal park system and drinking water and sewage pipes . Other services such as a public utility , public transport and schools are outsourced to companies in the region or county.

history

Exploration and settlement establishment

Before it was settled by white Americans in the 19th century, the Puget Sound region was inhabited by the indigenous coastal Salish . The confluence of the two headwaters of the Stillaguamish River , the location of today's downtown Arlington, was a popular settlement of the Stillaguamish and the Sauk , who followed the migratory fish ; the Stillaguamish called the place Skabalko , and maintained a main village on Chuck-Kol-Che , upstream near present-day Trafton .

The white exploration began in 1851 when prospector Samuel Hancock was being led up the Stillaguamish River in a canoe by Indian guides . The area was opened for logging after the Treaty of Point Elliott of 1855 between the US federal government and the Stillaguamish, who were driven into the in Off-reservation trust land and the reservation of the Tulalip . The US Army built a military road connecting Fort Steilacoom to Fort Bellingham and crossing the Stillaguamish River near the confluence. In the 1880s covered wagon roads were built into the area from Marysville to the south and Silvana to the west, bringing entrepreneurs to the logging camps, informally known as "The Forks." The region's first store was opened in 1888 by Nels K. Tvete and Nils C. Johnson. It was followed by a hotel to accommodate and feed the loggers.

Map of today's downtown Arlington with highlighted areas of Arlington and Haller City.
Original land map of Arlington (green) and Haller City (blue), with later additions of Arlington (yellow) overlaid with what is now downtown Arlington

Two settlements were established south of the confluence in the expectation that the Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railroad would build a railroad through the area. G. Morris Haller, the son of Colonel Granville O. Haller , founded a settlement on the banks of the Stillaguamish River in 1883 and named it "Haller City". The Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railroad decided to build a train station on the higher ground south of Haller City, prompting contractors Earl & McLeod to found a new town at the train station on March 15, 1890. The new city was named "Arlington" after Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington , who was a member of the cabinet of King Charles II of England. Arlington and Haller City were each parceled out within a month in 1890 and quickly developed a rivalry that would last for several years.

Arlington and Haller City grew rapidly in the first few years and in 1893 had a combined population of 500, who lived primarily from agriculture, dairy farming and the manufacture of wooden shingles . Both cities established their own schools, post offices, saloons, shops, churches, clubs, and hotels. Both cities were separated by a 16 hectare (40 ac) piece of land belonging to two settlers to prevent the other from taking over one city. During the late 1890s the land dispute was settled and traders began to migrate to the more prosperous Arlington, signaling the end of Haller City. Today Haller City is remembered by a park named after the city in downtown Arlington; in addition, a middle school in the Arlington School District is named after her.

Incorporation and early years

A small two story building with an "Arlington Hardware & Lumber" sign on the street front, bordered by similar buildings with other shops.
The fronts of the shops on Olympic Avenue in downtown Arlington were designed in the city's early years and have been preserved by the city ever since.

Arlington was recognized on May 20, 1903 as a city ​​4th class (according to the then classification with a population between 300 and 1,500) as a local authority , with the remnants of Haller City (north of today's Division Street ) were included. The incorporation followed a referendum, in which on May 5, 134 out of 173 voters approved it. The new town elected clapboard factory owner John M. Smith as its first mayor. In subsequent years, Arlington founded a local bank , a dairy - Cooperative , a city park, a library, a power plant and a telephone service.

Sawmills and clapboard plants remained Arlington's largest employers during the early 20th century. Other industries such as milk processing, metal processing, warehouses and factories gained importance during a period of growth in the city after the First World War . The Great Depression of the 1930s forced all but one woodworking plant to close, causing unemployment to rise in Arlington and neighboring towns. The federal government established a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp near Darrington to provide temporary work; the young men built infrastructure and carried out firefighting operations in Mount Baker National Forest . The Works Progress Administration and Civil Works Administration funded the construction of the sidewalks, a high school, and the Arlington Municipal Airport , which opened in 1934.

When the Second World War broke out , the US Navy relocated units to Arlington after the airfield was declared a naval aviation base in 1943 . The Navy built new runways and hangars; In 1946 the community was allowed to offer civil and business services at the airfield. In 1959, ownership of the airfield was formally transferred from the federal government to the Arlington Township.

On October 19, 1959, a Boeing 707-227 crashed during a test flight on the banks of the North Fork Stillaguamish River , killing eight crew members. The aircraft, flown by Boeing test pilots instructed by Braniff International Airways employees, lost three engines; after a " Dutch Roll " when the limit values ​​were exceeded, fire broke out in the fourth. An emergency landing attempt was made in the river bed after a nearby open field could not be reached.

Suburbanization and the present

The completion of Interstate 5 in Washington and Washington State Route 9 in the late 1960s created rapid population growth in Arlington, creating a dormitory town for people who began commuting to Everett and Seattle. The development as a suburb began in the 1980s and 1990s, when Arlington grew by 450 percent to around 15,000 inhabitants by 2007. After a long legal battle, Smokey Point was incorporated, located along Interstate 5 southwest of town. In the dispute, Marysville was defeated, which incorporated North Lakewood in the west instead of Smokey Point . The city developed a large industrial park around the airfield in the 1990s, so that the number of jobs rose to 11,000 by 2003.

The city of Arlington celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2003 with a parade, a festival honoring the city's history, sporting events, and musical and theatrical performances. The celebrations culminated with the inauguration of the $ 44 million Arlington High School campus , which allowed all classes of the old school to come together. City Renovated in 2007, six blocks of the Olympic Avenue in downtown for $ 4.4 million US, while simultaneously widening the sidewalks, roadside greenery created and the street lights were installed. The project also made use of the revitalization of the inner city and the conversion of Olympic Avenue into a shopping mile and a venue for festivals.

On March 22, 2014, a large landslide occurred near Oso , which covered around 2.6 km² and dammed the North Fork Stillaguamish River with masses of earth and debris. 43 people were killed and around 50 objects were destroyed. The landslide blocked Washington State Route 530 to Darrington and cut that city off from the outside world; Arlington became the aid coordination center . Arlington received much recognition for its role in helping the victims and hosted President Barack Obama during his visit to the disaster area in April.

geography

A small town surrounded by land used for agriculture and forestry, crossed by rivers and roads.
Aerial view of downtown Arlington and the floodplain of the Stillaguamish River

According to the United States Census Bureau , the city of Arlington has a total area of ​​23.98 km², of which 23.96 km² is land and 0.02 km² is water. The city is located in the northwestern part of Snohomish County in West Washington and is considered part of the Seattle metropolitan area . Arlington is about 41 miles north of Seattle and 10 miles north of Everett. Arlington's city ​​limits are generally defined by Washington State Route 531 (172nd Street NE) and roughly 165th Street NE to the south, Interstate 5 in Washington to the west, the Stillaguamish River Valley to the north, and the foothills of the Cascade Range to the east. The expansion limits to contain the urban sprawl were set on an area of ​​27 km².

The city is located on a terrace formed in the Pleistocene when the inland ice of the Cordilleras retreated . Arlington covers a series of hills at altitudes between 30 and 60 meters above sea level. The inner city is on a steep bank at the confluence of the North and South Fork to the Stillaguamish River. Most of Arlington lies on the watershed between the Stillaguamish River with Portage Creek and the Snohomish River with Quilceda Creek . From various points in the city, the Olympic Mountains , Mount Pilchuck, and Mount Rainier can be seen on the horizon.

The valley and floodplain of the Stillaguamish River, including Arlington, are located in a lahar hazard zone about 97 km (60 mi) below Glacier Peak , an active stratovolcano in the eastern part of the county. During an eruption 13,000 years ago, several eruption-triggered lahars deposited more than 2 m thick sediments in what is now Arlington.

Sub-areas and adjacent areas

Bryant Stillaguamish River Trafton
Silvana Neighboring communities Arlington Heights
Smokey Point Marysville Granite Falls

The city of Arlington publishes a 10-year master plan which divides the urban development area into ten sub-areas, which in turn contain their own sub-areas and neighborhoods.

  • The old town consists of the inner city and adjacent residential areas, which were built in the early 20th century. The northern sections contain business districts developed during the post-war boom that are different from the older buildings on Olympic Avenue.
  • Arlington Bluff is a residential area between the Stillaguamish River and the industrial center at Arlington Municipal Airport .
  • Kent Prairie , a residential area south of the old town, was developed in the early post-war period. The area contains shops with a small center at the intersection of State Route 9 and 204th Street NE. The area was once home to a Stillaguamish village , as was Arlington's first school building, built in 1884.
  • The area designated as the Manufacturing Industrial Center is an industrial district southwest of Old Town that encloses Arlington Municipal Airport and the city's only active train station.
  • Hilltop is made up of Arlington's largest planned residential neighborhoods including Gleneagle , Crown Ridge and the Magnolias . It is located south of Kent Prairie on a large geological terrace on the west side of State Route 9 . Gleneagle is Arlington's largest single district with over 1,000 homes and a private golf course .
  • The Brekhus / Beach area , also known as Burn Hill , is a residential area southeast of the old town and has its center along Burn Road .

The West Arlington Subarea , designated 2011, brings together several residential neighborhoods that were incorporated into Arlington in the 1990s and 2000s, including Smokey Point and Island Crossing .

  • Smokey Point, incorporated by Arlington in 1999, is a major residential and business district at the intersection of Interstate 5 and State Route 531, southwest of Arlington. Portions of Smokey Point extend west and south into the city of Marysville, which incorporated the area in the 2000s.
  • Island Crossing, at the junction of State Route 530 and Interstate 5 , is a rural community with a number of adjacent businesses. It was incorporated into Arlington in 2008 and designated for economic development.
  • The proposed King-Thompson Subarea is northwest of Smokey Point and outside the city limits and extension of Arlington. It has been identified as a potential area for intensive residential development. The city government proposed the area as part of the city in 2013, but withdrew that proposal in 2016.

climate

Arlington has a general climate similar to most of the lowlands on Puget Sound, with dry summers and mild, rainy winters resulting from the influence of the Pacific . Most of the rainfall occurs in winter and early spring; Arlington has an average of 181 days of rainfall per year. Compared to the surrounding communities, Arlington's location in the foothills of the Cascade Range means that rainfall is higher; compared to Everett (approx. 840 mm) falls about 1,200 mm per year. In Arlington there is seldom a noteworthy amount of snow , an average of 18 cm per year since 1922.

July is Arlington's warmest month on average, with highs of 23.1 ° C, while January is the coldest month with highs of 6.9 ° C. The highest temperature ever recorded was 37 ° C on October 1, 1923, while the lowest temperature was recorded on January 1, 1979 at −14 ° C.

According to the Köppen & Geiger climate classification , Arlington has a warm summer Mediterranean climate (Csb).

Arlington, Washington
Climate diagram
J F. M. A. M. J J A. S. O N D.
 
 
147
 
15th
-14
 
 
108
 
21st
-9
 
 
113
 
24
-5
 
 
95
 
26th
-2
 
 
84
 
28
-1
 
 
69
 
32
2
 
 
36
 
34
4th
 
 
41
 
34
6th
 
 
67
 
30th
3
 
 
113
 
37
-4
 
 
154
 
19th
-9
 
 
156
 
16
-13
Temperature in ° Cprecipitation in mm
Source: Western Regional Climate Center (1922–2012)
Monthly average temperatures and rainfall for Arlington, Washington
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Max. Temperature ( ° C ) 15.00 21.11 23.89 26.11 28.33 31.67 33.89 34.44 30.00 36.67 18.89 15.56 O 26.3
Min. Temperature (° C) -13.89 -8.89 -5.00 -2.22 -0.56 1.67 4.44 6.11 2.78 -4.44 -9.44 -12.78 O −3.5
Temperature (° C) 2.72 5.17 6.25 9.06 11.33 14.14 16.64 16.81 12.33 12.11 5.86 3.53 O 9.7
Precipitation ( mm ) 147.32 107.70 113.03 95.00 83.82 68.83 35.56 41.40 67.06 113.28 154.43 156.21 Σ 1,183.64
Rainy days ( d ) 20th 16 18th 16 13 12 6th 7th 10 15th 19th 20th Σ 172
T
e
m
p
e
r
a
t
u
r
15.00
-13.89
21.11
-8.89
23.89
-5.00
26.11
-2.22
28.33
-0.56
31.67
1.67
33.89
4.44
34.44
6.11
30.00
2.78
36.67
-4.44
18.89
-9.44
15.56
-12.78
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
N
i
e
d
e
r
s
c
h
l
a
g
147.32
107.70
113.03
95.00
83.82
68.83
35.56
41.40
67.06
113.28
154.43
156.21
  Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Source: Western Regional Climate Center (1922–2012)

Demographics

year Residents¹
1910 1,476
1920 1,418
1930 1,439
1940 1,460
1950 1,635
1960 2,025
1970 2,261
1980 3,282
1990 4.037
2000 11,713
2010 17,926
2016 19,112

¹ 1910-2010: US Decennial Census
2016: estimate of the United States Census Bureau

To 2010 United States Census , the city of Arlington had 17,926 inhabitants and was thus the ninth largest of 17 cities ( City's ) in Snohomish County. From 1980 to 2010, Arlington's population grew by 450 percent through the construction of suburban residential areas and incorporation . The United States Census Bureau estimated the population at 19,112 in 2016. The city council estimated in 2005 that Arlington's population would double from 15,000 to 30,528 in 2025.

2010 Census

As of the 2010 census , Arlington had 17,926 residents, 6,563 households and 4,520 families. The population density was 748.2 per km ². There were 6,929 housing units at an average density of 289.2 per km².

The population was 85.6% white , 1.2% African-American , 1.4% Indian , 3.3% Asian , 0.3% Pacific islanders , 3.9% from other "races" and 4.2% from two or more "races" . Hispanics or Latinos of "any race" made up 9.5% of the population.

Of the 6,563 households, 40.3% had children under the age of 18, 50.7% were run by married couples living together , 12.6% by single mothers and 5.6% by single fathers; 31.1% were non-families. 24% of the households were singles and 10.2% were single people over 65 years of age. The average household size was 2.7 and the average family size was 3.21.

The median age in the city was 34.3 years. 28.3% of the population were under 18, 8.7% between 18 and 24, 29.2% between 25 and 44, 22.4% between 45 and 64 and 11.3 65 years or older. 48.6% of the population were men and 51.4% women.

Census 2000

As of the 2000 census , Arlington had 11,713 residents, 4,281 households, and 3,097 families. The population density was 598.2 per km ². There were 4,516 housing units at a mean density of 230.6 per km².

The population was 90.01% White , 1.13% African American , 1.04% Native American , 2.2% Asian , 0.32% Pacific Islander , 2.47% from other "races" and 2.83% from two or more "races" . Hispanics or Latinos of "any race" made up 5.83% of the population.

Of the 4,281 households, 42.6% had children under the age of 18, 56.7% were run by married couples living together and 11.5% by single mothers; 27.7% were non-families. 22.7% of the households were singles and 9.3% were single people over 65 years of age. The average household size was 2.72 and the average family size was 3.19.

The median age in the city was 32 years. 31.5% of the population were under 18, 8% between 18 and 24, 32.6% between 25 and 44, 18.4% between 45 and 64 and 9.6 65 years or older. There were 93.3 men for every 100 women, and 91.2 men for every 100 women over the age of 18.

All information on median income relates to the median. The median household income was US $ 40,000 and that of families was US $ 51,941. Men had a median income of US $ 41,517 compared to US $ 26,912 for women. The per capita income was US $ 19,146. About 5.8% of families and 7.2% of the total population lived below the poverty line ; this affected 9.2% of those under 18 and 10.4% of those over 65.

economy

Arlington had an estimated working population ( employed or unemployed) of 9,481 residents in 2015 . The average commute for workers in Arlington was around 30 minutes in 2015; 85 percent of employees drove to work alone, seven percent carpooled and two percent used public transport . In 2015, only twelve percent of the workforce in Arlington worked within the city limits, while about 17 percent commuted to Everett, nine percent to Seattle, eight percent to Marysville, three percent to Bellevue , two percent to Renton and 49 percent to other cities, of which however less than two percent provided evidence. The top employers for the Arlington workforce are education and health care (19%), manufacturing (18%), commerce (11%) and hospitality (10%).

Arlington's early economy was mainly based on logging and processing the wood, namely the production of shingles from the giant tree of life called red cedar in factories that had to close during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Regionally, Arlington was known as the clapboard capital of the world , although the Everett and Ballard factories in Seattle were producing large quantities of clapboard at the time. Agriculture and dairy were important industries in Arlington in the early 20th century; in particular, the meadows of the Stillaguamish River were farmed by dairy farms. A major cooperative dairy (with a condensed milk production line ) was established in Arlington in the 1910s, but moved to Mount Vernon after World War II .

The transformation of Arlington into a dormitory city for Everett and Seattle during the 1980s and 1990s was accompanied by a reorientation towards services as an economic factor. Boeing's Everett facility and Naval Station Everett are among the largest employers for Arlington residents . The expansion of the aerospace industry in the Seattle area allowed Arlington to develop the community airfield into an aerospace center with a high concentration of suppliers for Boeing . In 2012, 130 companies with a total of 590 employees were located on the airfield site, with added value of US $ 94.5 million per year.

The city of Arlington plans to increase the number of jobs to over 20,000 by 2035, aided by the proposed designation of the Arlington-Marysville Manufacturing Industrial Center by the Puget Sound Regional Council , a local planning organization. The industrial center, located between the two cities near Smokey Point, already houses an important logistics center and light industry operations.

Executive and Politics

A two-story white building with large windows on the corner of two streets.
Arlington's City Hall on Olympic Avenue in downtown

Arlington is a Non-Charter Code City (in Washington State, a city with maximum local control under the constitution and state laws, but with no statutes). It is governed by an elected board of directors with an elected mayor ( Mayor-council Government ). The mayor is elected for four years and governs without any restrictions on his official duties ( no term limits ). The current Mayor of Arlington is Barbara Tolbert, who was first elected in 2011 and again in 2015. Tolbert's predecessors were u. a. John and Margaret Larson, who served from 1980 to 1990 and 2003 to 2011, respectively.

The city council consists of seven residents who are elected for four years in a non-party block vote. The council also appoints a city administrator to manage day-to-day business. The city council meets twice a month in the town hall in the city center. According to the Washington State Auditor , Arlington's city council employs 128 full-time staff and has an annual budget of $ 50 million. The city administration moved to a two-year budget in 2017 after the council approved a corresponding decree in 2016. The city administration operates emergency services, water supply and sanitation, street maintenance, parks and recreational facilities, an airfield and a cemetery.

At the federal level, Arlington belongs to the 2nd constituency of the US House of Representatives , which has been represented by the Democrat Rick Larsen since 2001 . At the state level, the city is part of the 39th constituency, represented by Senator Kirk Pearson and Deputies Dan Kristiansen and Elizabeth Scott. Arlington belongs entirely to the 1st constituency of Snohomish County Council , which has been represented by Nate Nehring, son of the Mayor of Marysville, Jon Nehring, since 2017.

In the 2016 US presidential election , 50.6% of the electorate in Arlington voted for Republican Donald Trump , while 39.5% voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton . In the Washington gubernatorial election held that year , 42.9% of Arlington voters voted for Democratic incumbent Jay Inslee , while 56.8% voted for Republican Bill Bryant. In the 2012 presidential election , Democrat Barack Obama won almost 50.6% of the vote in Arlington.

Culture

art

Public art has been mandatory for public construction projects in Arlington since 2007, when a requirement stipulated that one percent of the investment must be spent on art in construction . The Arlington Arts Council , founded in 2004, has acquired 30 sculptures and murals that make up the Sculpture Walk in downtown Arlington, as well as the Centennial Trail . On the campus of Arlington High School there is the Byrnes Performing Arts Center, an object for the performances of the performing arts , which opened in 2007.

Parks and recreation

Arlington has 17 city-maintained parks with more than 104 acres of public space within the city limits and extension lines. The parking areas consist of nature reserves, residential parks, sports areas, playgrounds, gondola ponds and gardens. The Arlington School District also has 24 acres of athletic fields and playgrounds that are open to the public after school hours.

Arlington's largest park is the County Charm Park and Conservation Area east of downtown along the South Fork Stillaguamish River . The 61 hectare park was bought by the Graafstra family in 2010 and is planned with sports areas, hiking trails, campsites and a beach as well as a 16 hectare riparian forest reserve. On the opposite bank is Twin Rivers Park , Arlington's second largest, a 20-acre park with sports grounds that belongs to Snohomish County but is maintained by the City of Arlington. The third largest park in the city is Bill Quake Memorial Park , a 5-acre facility consisting of soccer and baseball fields near Arlington Municipal Airport .

The county also owns the Portage Creek Wildlife Area , a nearly 65-acre reserve outside the city limits near downtown Arlington. The area was originally a dairy farm that was renatured to wetland in the 1990s and 2000s .

Arlington is at the crossroads of two of the county's main routes for cyclists, hikers and horse riders : the Snohomish County Centennial Trail , which runs 29 miles from Bryant to Snohomish , and the Whitehorse Trail , which runs 27 miles east of Arlington to Darrington. Both ways use a right of way which Snohomish County acquired after its abandonment by the Burlington Northern Railroad at the end of the 20th century. The city of Arlington also maintains a nearly 6 mi (10 km) long unpaved walking path around Arlington Municipal Airport .

Festivals and events

The Arlington Municipal Airport directs the annual Arlington Fly-in , an air show , the weekend after Independence from. The fly-in has been held annually since 1969; it is the third largest event of its kind in the United States with more than 50,000 visitors and 1,600 aircraft.

The Downtown Arlington Business Association hosts several annual events in downtown Arlington, including an auto show in June, a street fair on Olympic Avenue in July, and a Viking festival in October. The Stillaguamish hold an annual powwow and river festival in River Meadows County Park on the South Fork of the Stillaguamish River.

media

A two-story building with a brightly colored marquise and a vertical sign that reads “Olympic Theater”.
The Olympic Theater in downtown Arlington, which operated as the city's only cinema from 1939 to 2014.

Arlington has a weekly newspaper, The Arlington Times , which has been published in the Arlington area since 1890. It was publicly owned since 1964 along with the Marysville Globe ; both were acquired in 2007 by Sound Publishing , a subsidiary of Black Press . The Herald in Everett provides a daily newspaper for the entire county, including Arlington. Arlington is also part of the Seattle – Tacoma media market and is served by Seattle-based media such as the Seattle Times ; there are also various television ( KOMO-TV , KING-TV , KIRO-TV and KCPQ-TV ) and radio stations.

Arlington has been part of the Sno-Isle Libraries network of Countys Island and Snohomish since it was founded in 1962 . An almost 470 m² library was built near the city center in 1981 and offers more than 54,000 items to borrow, but replacement and renovation became apparent as early as the 2000s. Sno-Isle named Arlington Library a top priority for renovation and expansion in 2016 , while recognizing the need to supply Smokey Point. A branch office for Smokey Point opened in January 2018 using a leased sales room. Arlington had a one-auditorium, 381-seat cinema , the downtown Olympic Theater , which was open from 1939 to 2014.

Historical legacy

The volunteer-run Stillaguamish Valley Pioneer Museum , located southwest of downtown Arlington, opened in 1997. The museum covers the Stillaguamish River and exhibits historic household items and vehicles, lumberjack tools, and historic newspapers and pictures of the Arlington area, as well as a model railroad .

Two properties in the Arlington area are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). The Trafton School in Trafton was built in 1888 and rebuilt in 1912 after a fire. It was listed as a Historic Site in 2006 just before it was closed by the Arlington School District . The Arlington Naval Auxiliary Air Station (part of what is now Arlington Municipal Airport ) was listed as a Historic Site in 1995.

Personalities

  • Kenneth Boulton (* 1962), pianist
  • Bob Drewel, former County Executive (comparable to a German district administrator )
  • Celia M. Hunter, environmental and nature conservationist
  • John Koster, former Washington State MP and member of the county council
  • Rick Larsen (born 1965), Congressman
  • Erik Norgard, American football player

education

A three-story brown-beige building on the roadside.
The former Arlington High School building was abandoned in 1999

Public schools in Arlington are operated by the Arlington School District , which operates not only in much of the city, but also in remote areas such as Arlington Heights, Bryant, Getchell, and Sisco Heights. The district served approximately 5,528 students in nine schools (one high school, two middle schools, four elementary schools, and two other educational institutions) in 2014. In the early 2000s, the school district opened four new school buildings as replacements after Arlington voters approved a $ 54 million municipal loan for them. The residential area of ​​Smokey Point is looked after by the Lakewood School District , which is based in unincorporated North Lakewood and controlled the area before it was incorporated by Arlington.

Arlington is 15 miles from Everett Community College in northern Everett, the closest higher education institution. The college has offered basic skills and job training courses at Weston High School in Arlington since 2016 ; A branch of the Advanced Manufacturing Training & Education Center is also maintained there by the college.

The Smokey Point area was proposed as the site of a four year public college in 1966, with the city of Arlington offering 261 hectares to the state government. However, the Washington State Legislature decided to build the College at Olympia , which became the Evergreen State College . The Smokey Point area in question was re-offered by Arlington and Marysville as an off-campus site for a University of Washington in the 2000s , but the project was put on hold by the State Legislature and eventually moved to an off-campus Washington DC Abandoned State University at Everett.

Infrastructure

traffic

An airfield with three angled runways, surrounded by hangars, warehouses and open grasslands.  Mountains and forests can be seen in the background.
Aerial view of Arlington Municipal Airport

Downtown Arlington is located at the confluence of State Route 530 and State Route 9 , which act as the main highways into the city. From Arlington, State Route 9 runs north into Skagit County and south to Snohomish; the State Route 530 leads west to a junction with Interstate 5 , the main north-south connection between Seattle and Vancouver ( British Columbia ), as well as east of Darrington. There is another highway within the city, State Route 531 , which connects Smokey Point, the local airport and Gleneagle with Interstate 5 and State Route 9 in the southern part of the city. Other major entry and exit roads are Smokey Point Boulevard and 67th Avenue NE , which serve as north-south thoroughfares within Arlington.

Public transportation in Arlington is provided by Community Transit , a public transportation company operating in most of Snohomish County. Community Transit operates a daily bus route from downtown Arlington to Smokey Point and other routes to Marysville, Everett, Lynnwood and Stanwood from a transport hub in Smokey Point. During rush hour , Community Transit also operates a local line to Darrington and the Boeing Everett Factory from a park-and-ride point in downtown Arlington.

Arlington is also served by railways; a 11.1 km long branch line of the BNSF Railway (the successor to the Burlington Northern ) leads from downtown Arlington to Marysville. As part of the development of the Arlington Airport Business Park , the BNSF Railway will build two more routes to the airfield in the near future. There is no rail passenger transport in Arlington ; the nearest Amtrak stations are in Everett and Stanwood.

Historically, Arlington developed on various railway lines, which have since been shut down or otherwise used. The Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway , which started the founding of Arlington in the 1880s, maintained a main line between Snohomish and the Canadian border that crossed Arlington from north to south. In 1892 it was taken over by the Northern Pacific Railway , which in turn was taken over by the Burlington Northern in 1970 . The Burlington Northern closed the line in 1972 because they preferred a line running further west through Marysville; this was followed by the Centennial Trail in the 1990s and 2000s . A branch of the Northern Pacific to Darrington, which follows today's State Route 530 , was built in 1901 and closed in 1990; the county government plans to use right of way on the Whitehorse Trail , a multi-purpose trail .

The city of Arlington owns Arlington Municipal Airport , three miles southwest of downtown. The airfield is primarily used for general aviation and small aircraft for business travel; 475 aircraft are stationed on it, including 10 helicopters, 20 gliders and 23 microlights . About 130 companies have settled on the airfield, a quarter of which are involved in aviation and have a direct influence on the airfield. In the 1990s, the airfield was included in an investigation to designate a regional airport to relieve the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport . The plan was finally abandoned in 1996 after the Puget Sound Regional Council decided to build a third runway at Seattle-Tacoma Airport instead.

Other technical infrastructure

The energy supply is in Arlington by the Snohomish County Public Utility District provided (PUD), a consumers belonging Public Utility , which the majority of the electrical energy from the federally owned Bonneville Power Administration refers (BPA). BPA operates the regional power grid including WECC Intertie Path 3 , a major national route east of Arlington that leads to British Columbia . Cascade Natural Gas , a subsidiary of MDU Resources Group, Inc. , and Puget Sound Energy operate the natural gas -supply of the residents and businesses of Arlington and the areas north and south of State Route 531 ; two main pipelines run north to south through Arlington and are operated by the Olympic Pipeline Company , a subsidiary of BP , and the Northwest Pipeline Company , a subsidiary of the Williams Companies . Arlington is served by three telephone companies and Internet service providers : Comcast (under the Xfinity brand), Frontier Communications (including Verizon FiOS ) and Wave Broadband .

The city of Arlington supplies treated tap water to approximately 5,548 customers in an area of ​​66 km² inside and outside the city limits . The water comes from groundwater reservoirs near Haller Park on the Stillaguamish River and near Arlington Municipal Airport , as well as water from Spada Lake provided by Snohomish County PUD . The Smokey Point residential area is served from Marysville.

Sewage and rainwater disposal will be carried out by the city before the water is returned to the Stillaguamish River basin. Arlington's household and packaging waste is collected and disposed of on behalf of the city by waste management companies ; the Snohomish County Government and Republic Services, Inc operate a garbage collection facility in Arlington.

Healthcare

Arlington is part of the Snohomish Public Hospital District No. 3 , which operates Cascade Valley Hospital , a 48-bed hospital . The hospital was founded in 1909 and was the last independent hospital in Snohomish County until it was acquired in 2016. The city is also served by community polyclinics operated by Cascade Valley (and Skagit Regional Health ) as well as The Everett Clinic , a subsidiary of DaVita , and the Community Health Center of Snohomish County .

Individual evidence

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