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Lower Columbia College, Longview; Moody Aviation, Spokane; North Seattle College, Seattle [8] Olympic College, Bremerton [9] Pierce College, Lakewood; Seattle Central College, Seattle [10] Skagit Valley College, Mount Vernon; South Seattle College, Seattle [11] Spokane Falls Community College, Spokane; Tacoma Community College, Tacoma
Carrington College is a network of for-profit private colleges with its headquarters in Sacramento, California, and 17 locations throughout the Western United States. Established in 1967, it has a student enrollment of over 5,200 and 132,000 alumni.
The state has five classifications for its 281 municipalities: 197 are code cities, 10 are first-class cities, 5 are second-class cities, 69 are towns, and 1 is an unclassified city. [3] All municipalities have an elected city or town council and an executive—either a mayor or manager —to oversee administration of the government.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cities in Washington (state) See also Washington (state) and categories Towns in Washington (state), Census-designated places in Washington (state), Unincorporated communities in Washington (state)
The following is a complete list of the 345 populated places in the U.S. state of Washington delineated as census-designated places (CDPs) by the United States Census. These include unincorporated villages, groups of villages, commercial developments, and Air Force Bases. Population data are included in the list.
King County, home to the state's largest city, Seattle, holds almost 30 percent of Washington's population (2,271,380 residents of 7,812,880 in 2023), and has the highest population density, with more than 1,000 people per square mile (400/km 2). Garfield County is both the least populated (2,363) and least densely populated (3.3/sq mi [1.3/km 2]).
Incorporated municipalities in the state are listed separately in a list of cities and list of towns. Due to unreliability of the source data in the Geographic Names Information System , items in this list may be historical places that no longer exist, places that are part of an incorporated city or town or a CDP, or never a community in the ...
The Spokane–Spokane Valley Metropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the United States Census Bureau, is an area consisting of Spokane and Stevens counties in Washington state, anchored by the city of Spokane and its largest suburb, Spokane Valley. [2] As of July 1, 2021, the MSA had an estimated population of 593,466. [3]