Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Health
  • Boeing
  • Aerospace
  • Daryl Guberman
  • Technology
  • Business
  • ANSI-ANAB
  • Lifestyle
Washingtoner

Tacoma: Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge Daytime Closure Scheduled June 25
Washingtoner/10175740

Trending...
  • Spokane: Coffee Connect With District 1 Council Members
  • Spokane: Child Injured in Basement Fire Reminds About Youth Fire Setting
  • XRPPower Continues Strengthening Its Global AI-Powered Blockchain Ecosystem
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 23, 2022

MEDIA CONTACTS

Tanisha Jumper, Media and Communications, tjumper@cityoftacoma.org, (253) 591-5152

Stacy Ellifritt, Media and Communications, stacy.ellifritt@cityoftacoma.org, (253) 591-2005

Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge Daytime Closure Scheduled June 25

The City of Tacoma's Public Works Engineering Division will perform maintenance on the Fishing Wars Memorial Bridge (located on Puyallup Avenue between Portland Avenue and Milwaukee Way) on Saturday, June 25, from 10 AM to 2 PM. During this time, all lanes will be closed to traffic except for emergency vehicles until work is completed.

More on Washingtoner
  • Joseph Nybyk aka Neibich of Gilbert, Arizona
  • Omnitronics Unveils 100% Software omniGateDMR and omniGateP25 RoIP Gateways
  • KRE PRIME Launches Adaptive Convertible Jumpsuit
  • USA Med Bed Helping Home Care Patients with Refurbished Hill Rom Hospital Beds
  • Sobreseimiento de Nicolás dos Santos y Jorge Méndez expone demandas millonarias a Paraguay y boicot a la Hidrovía

Detours will be in place, and notice boards will be on location to notify drivers of the project and will reflect any necessary changes. All repairs are weather-dependent, and rescheduling may be required.

Those with questions or concerns may contact Project Supervisor Steve Carstens at scarstens@cityoftacoma.org or (253) 591-5263.

Filed Under: Government, City

Show All News | Disclaimer | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • Love Must Be the Guide: Live Good Shares a Message of Humanity, Compassion and Hope
  • D.R. Crotzer Announces A New Science Fiction Book Series Exploring Life Energy, Dreams, and the Mystery of Existence
  • Spokane: SPD is Seeking Public's Assistance in Locating Dangerous Offender
  • Spokane: Flags to be Lowered for Memorial Day
  • Color Card Administrator Highlights Growing Enterprise Demand for Operational Infrastructure in Business Card Identity Governance
  • American Properties Celebrates Grand Opening and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony at Heritage at South
  • Crosswalk Ministries USA Announces 2026 Child and Family Well-Being Conference in Stockbridge, Georgia
  • Research reveals "The Borderless Pay Standard," a 48-point gap between multinational employers and workers on transparent pay expectations
  • Global.ai Appoints Freedomtech Solutions as Specialist Partner for Agentic AI
  • Spokane: SPD Involved in a Use of Deadly Force on North Cincinnati St
  • Spokane Police, Urban Native Organizations Sign MOU to Strengthen Relationships and Communication
  • Tacoma: Murder Arrest Made in Connection to April Missing Person Investigation
  • Lansdowne Photographer Steven Weisz Selected for Philadelphia City Hall Exhibition
  • HiLine Homes Named Gold Winner in Best of Southwest Washington Home & Garden Awards
  • Federal indictments bring new scrutiny to SPLC practices and highlight the real‑world impact of its designations on nonprofit groups, including NCFM
  • Shedrack Anderson Releases New Album
  • Could You Make a 2026 World Cup Squad? A New Free Tool Will Tell You Where You'd Sit on Any National Team's Bench in 90 Seconds
  • Snap Supplements Releases Results of 90-Day Prostate Health Open-Label Pilot Study
  • Sugar Land's Social Scene Gets a Boost: Pep's Backyard Set to Open Near Constellation Field
  • Joseph Nybyk (AKA Joseph Neibich) Guests On Octopus TV
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • Altruvest and Financial Executives International Canada Announce Strategic Partnership to Strengthen Nonprofit Boards Across Canada
  • Umbrella Becomes First FinOps Platform to Support AWS Billing Transfer Onboarding
  • Virginia Moving Company Nearly Doubles Customer Calls in Two Weeks After Switching to CARL — the Bold New Alternative to WordPress
  • RAS AP Consulting Advances to RFP Stage in Heidelberg Materials' SAP Vendor & Customer Master Data Modernization Initiative
  • Spokane AI Expert Adam Chronister to Discuss Authority Engineering at AI Roundtable Event
  • Five-star Review for Berklee School of Music Textbook
  • Applicants Sought for the Tacoma Creates Advisory Board
  • Outlier Pest Season Hits Willamette Valley as Mild Winter Drives Early Surge in Ant and Rodent Activity
  • Resident Inspect Joins Property Meld Nexus Network with API Integration
  • New plusOne Research Finds the Orgasm Gap Is a 30-Point Chasm — and Confirms It Isn't Biology

Similar on Washingtoner

  • CAPHRA warns Southeast Asia not to repeat Australia's nicotine policy failure
  • City of Tacoma Observes Memorial Day on May 25
  • Spokane: SPD is Seeking Public's Assistance in Locating Dangerous Offender
  • Spokane: Flags to be Lowered for Memorial Day
  • Spokane: SPD Involved in a Use of Deadly Force on North Cincinnati St
  • Spokane Police, Urban Native Organizations Sign MOU to Strengthen Relationships and Communication
  • Tacoma: Murder Arrest Made in Connection to April Missing Person Investigation
  • Spokane: Coffee Connect With District 1 Council Members
  • Spokane: Coffee With Council District 2 Council Members
  • Tacoma: Implementation of Transportation Impact Fees to Begin on June 1
Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute