Today's front page for Clallam County. There's more inside that isn't online! ()

Today's front page for Clallam County. There's more inside that isn't online! ()

What’s happening on the North Olympic Peninsula? See today’s PDN front page

  • Thursday, February 19, 2015 12:01am
  • News

ANOTHER NEWSY DAY on the North Olympic Peninsula!

Our website, www.peninsuladailynews.com, has the highlights, but the print edition of the Peninsula Daily News has 40 percent more stories and photos.

And the print edition is easier to navigate. (Not as hip as an iPhone 6, but it’s always faster to read in print, and studies show you absorb more.)

There are two editions — one tailored to Port Townsend/Jefferson County readers, the other for Clallam County readers.

AND . . . you don’t run into our paywall.

Subscribers to the print PDN (Sunday through Friday OR Friday/Sunday only) enjoy free “all-digital access” (an $8.95-per-month value).

You can track breaking news via the website through the day, use our electronic archives for stories you might have missed or want to read again — and, when you’re out of town, read the eEdition, our electronic page-by-page replica of the print edition.

Take advantage of our lowest subscription price — and get the easy-to-navigate print edition delivered to your home or office, PLUS unrestricted access to our website PLUS the eEdition.

Phone our circulation department Monday through Friday at 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 and ask for our INTERNET SPECIAL.

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The section of state Highway 20 leading into downtown Port Townsend is aglow with autumn color from the early morning sunshine reflecting off the poplar trees that line the roadway. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fall colors

The section of state Highway 20 leading into downtown Port Townsend is… Continue reading

Clallam Transit to hire security agency for downtown Port Angeles location

Two-year contract aims to curb recurring unlawful activities

Jefferson County letter addresses funding obligation

Board says prosecuting attorneys will try fewer cases

Planning workshop to cover Port Townsend comprehensive plan

The Port Townsend City Council, Port Townsend Planning Commission… Continue reading

Access to Paradise Bay road to close for three weeks

Access from state Highway 104 to Paradise Bay Road… Continue reading

Clallam County commissioners to host budget presentations

The Clallam County commissioners will present the county’s proposed… Continue reading

Public comment open on proposed PNNL aquatic research

The U.S. Department of Energy will host public meetings at… Continue reading

‘Your voice’ program aims to increase civil engagement

Owl 360, Antioch University and the Jefferson County Clemente… Continue reading

Five rescued from tug off coast of La Push

Concrete barge waiting to be towed to shore

Lt. Cmdr. Lyndsay P. Evans.
Two Navy crew members who went missing after crash identified

Two U.S. Navy crew members who were missing after their aircraft crashed… Continue reading

Sales of fireworks will be prohibited in Sequim city limits effective late October 2025 after Sequim city council members voted to restrict the sale. The decision comes seven years after former city council members voted to ban the discharge of fireworks in city limits. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Sequim to ban fireworks sales

Ordinance to go into effect next fall

The West Sequim Bay Corridor Project, including a lift station at Forrest Road, is the largest project for the city of Sequim in 2025. Nick Dostie, Sequim’s city engineer and deputy director of public works, previously said the city plans to go to bid in the second or third quarter of 2025, with construction possibly starting in the first quarter of 2026, and pipeline and lift station construction complete in the third or fourth quarter of 2028. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim’s $58M budget largest in history

Utility rate increase continues three-year plan