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Drew Simmons of Precision Tree Service in Chimacum saws through a poplar tree stump that was one of about a dozen old and rotting poplars cut down on Monday along Sims Way in Port Townsend. The trees were cut down because they posed a threat to vehicles and pedestrians who drive or walk by on a daily basis. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)

News

Poplar removal

Drew Simmons of Precision Tree Service in Chimacum saws through a poplar tree stump that was one of…

News

Hospital board hopefuls debate

Finances, transparency among discussed topics

Crime & Justice

Murder trial postponed to November

New charge of communicating with a minor added

Poll

When will this federal government shutdown end?

Daily poll

Olympic Medical Center interim CEO Mark Gregson welcomes the audience to the Harvest of Hope event on Saturday at the Guy Cole Event Center in Sequim. (Lexie Winters Photography)

News

Harvest of Hope raises $290K for cancer center

Attendees raise money for 3D imaging machine

Poll

Will the Seattle Mariners win the American League pennant?

Daily poll

Poll

Should the United States revitalize its mining and coal-burning operations?

Daily poll

News

Board names middle school

Hurricane Ridge to replace Stevens

Tom Swanson and his golden retriever, Tyler, during a Society of American Foresters replanting project at Lake Pleasant, five months after a 1985 fire that burned 550 acres on the West End and shut down U.S. Highway 101. (Courtesy photo)

News

Forty years later, residents remember West End blaze

East wind picked up embers from slash fire in Forks

Letters to the Editor

LETTER: Westbay proposal

After numerous claims from developers that they wanted to become an integral part of our community with careful…

Letters to the Editor

LETTER: Double standard

So let me get this straight, when Brian Kilmeade, a Fox & Friends host, says that “We should…

Letters to the Editor

LETTER: Insurrection Act

“Give a man rope enough and he will hang himself,” Thomas Fuller, The Holy War, 1639.

Letters to the Editor

LETTER: Trash cleaned up

I would like to send a shout-out to the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office and 4PA, as well as…

Carolyn Edge.

Opinion

Why Recompete matters for North Olympic Peninsula

IF YOU’VE HEARD that the North Olympic Peninsula is receiving funding through the Recompete grant and aren’t quite…

Life

A GROWING CONCERN: Don’t let frost leave you out in the cold

NOW THAT AUTUMN is here, cold weather will soon be upon us, and Jack Frost will come to…

News

Todd Ortloff Show guests this week

PORT ANGELES — Here is this week’s schedule for the 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Todd Ortloff Show…

Poll

Do you enjoy pumpkin-flavored food or drinks?

Daily poll

Fallen leaves cling to a fence as Chris White of Port Townsend sets up for a forehand volley during a tennis match at the Fort Worden tennis courts on Thursday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)

News

Fall is in the air

Fallen leaves cling to a fence as Chris White of Port Townsend sets up for a forehand volley…

News

Port of Port Townsend examines fee increases in draft budget

Cruise ship docking would see bump to $2,000 per day

Peninsula Daily News Editor Brian McLean and Publisher Eran Kennedy cut ceremonial ribbons on Thursday in front of the newspaper’s new building at 1102 E. First St. in Port Angeles. Newspaper employees and ambassadors from both the Port Angeles and Sequim-Dungeness chambers of commerce celebrated the event. (Peninsula Daily News)

News

Ribbon cutting

Peninsula Daily News Editor Brian McLean and Publisher Eran Kennedy cut ceremonial ribbons on Thursday in front of…