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All Sno-Isle branches were closed in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but reopened with curbside pick-up service three months later. [18] In-person services resumed at some branches in early 2021. [19] In 2024, the city government of Everett proposed a consolidation of their city libraries with Sno-Isle to address a budget deficit. [20]
The Kitsap Regional Library is a public library system in Kitsap County, Washington, United States. It has nine locations that serve over 280,000 residents in Kitsap County; its collection includes over 300,000 items that have an annual circulation of 2.4 million.
Snohomish's public library is operated by Sno-Isle Libraries, a regional system that annexed the city-run library. Located near downtown, the 23,000-square-foot (2,100 m 2) building is the third-largest in the Sno-Isle system and serves over 5,000 weekly patrons
The Sno-Isle Libraries join more than 1,000 libraries across the country that now offer the 3M Cloud Library. With this system, these libraries have access to a growing catalog of titles from more ...
Granite Falls has a public library that is operated by the regional Sno-Isle Libraries system, which annexed the city in 1995. [74] The 6,500-square-foot (600 m 2) library building is located east of downtown Granite Falls and was initially owned by the city government until it was transferred to Sno-Isle in 2012. [75] [76]
The Sno-Isle Regional Library System has a library in Clinton, supported by the "Friends of the Clinton Library". There are two grocery stores in Clinton, one in the downtown area and another a few miles west.
The city's public library was constructed in 1987 and expanded several times by Sno-Isle Libraries, its operator. [113] Due to overcrowding at the current building, the city government considered a proposal to build a new library atop a Target store in the East Gateway urban village, but the plan fell through.
A permanent city library opened in November 1974 at the former city hall and replaced a bookmobile service. [9] [27] Brier residents approved a 20-year bond issue in 1995 to finance construction of a new library with twice as many books and more computers. The new library building opened on May 3, 1996, and has 2,980 square feet (277 m 2) of space.