Common Questions
Straight answers to what residents actually ask — bridge and ferry, trash weeks, the mill smell, free buses, Fort Worden, and who to call for help.
Straight answers to the questions Port Townsend residents actually ask — each one checked against the official source named in it.
Is the bridge open? Is the ferry running?
The live answer is always WSDOT's: the Hood Canal Bridge status page (wsdot.com/travel/real-time/hoodcanalbridgestatus) shows openings and closures in real time, and the ferries bulletins page (wsdot.com/ferries/schedule/bulletin.aspx) lists today's Port Townsend–Coupeville cancellations.
This site's "Getting on and off the peninsula" page collects both links plus the facts that don't change daily — how reservations release, what closes the bridge, and what the detour really costs you.
Who picks up trash and recycling, and when is my pickup week?
Inside city limits, curbside garbage, recycling and yard waste are collected by Olympic Disposal on an every-other-week rotation. There's no public address-lookup map, so the reliable way to learn your week is to call Olympic Disposal at 360-385-6612 or check the schedule with them when you sign up.
For self-haul, the Jefferson County Transfer Station at 325 County Landfill Rd takes garbage, recycling and yard waste — Tuesday–Friday 8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m., Saturday 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. (360-385-9160). The Quilcene drop box at 295312 Highway 101 runs Thursday–Saturday with a half-hour midday closure, household garbage and recycling only, cash or check only.
The mill smell is bad today — where do I actually report it?
Air quality complaints about the paper mill go to ORCAA, the Olympic Region Clean Air Agency, which regulates the mill's air permits. File at orcaa.org under "File an Air Quality Complaint" — note the date, time, your location and what you smelled. Complaints are how the official record gets made; the Department of Ecology has fined the mill on the strength of that record before.
A smell on its own doesn't trigger action, but a pattern of dated reports from named locations does.
Are the buses really free?
Yes. Every Jefferson Transit route is zero fare — you just get on. Sunday service began May 3, 2026, so all routes now run seven days a week. Routes and timetables are at jeffersontransit.com, or call 360-385-4777. Dial-A-Ride paratransit is available through the same number.
I need help with rent, energy bills or housing — who do I call?
Start with OlyCAP, the community action agency for the peninsula: 360-385-2571, 2120 West Sims Way. They run energy assistance (LIHEAP), weatherization, rental assistance and housing services, plus Head Start and senior services.
For utility bills specifically, Jefferson County PUD has its own low-income assistance programs — jeffpud.org/assistance or 360-385-5800.
What's actually open at Fort Worden now?
Washington State Parks runs the fort campus directly again, after the Public Development Authority's collapse in 2024 and the hospitality operator's closure in January 2025. For 2026, lodging is back from April 1 through October 31 — Officers Row houses, Alexander's Castle, the NCO quarters, The Lofts and the dormitories — booked at (888) 226-7688 or through parks.wa.gov. The campgrounds never closed.
Centrum's festivals and workshops continue (see the events page), and the Marine Science Center keeps seasonal hours — check ptmsc.org or call 360-385-5582 before making the trip. The upper campus's longer-term future is still being planned, so what's open can change season to season; we re-check this answer quarterly.
Do I need approval to change the outside of my house?
If your building is in the historic overlay district — most of downtown and much of uptown — exterior changes and demolition generally need design review and a certificate of approval before the city issues permits, under Port Townsend Municipal Code chapter 17.30. Interior work generally doesn't trigger review.
This is a pointer, not legal advice: the district boundary and the exemptions have details that matter, so confirm with the city's Planning & Community Development staff (cityofpt.us) before starting work.
Is the water supply okay this summer?
The honest answer is a number, not a feeling — and this site keeps a page for it. "Water & snowpack" shows the Olympic snow stations against their published medians and the Big Quilcene River gauge below the city's intake, updated daily.
The winter of 2025–26 ran low (34% of median snowpack on February 1), so it's worth a look before you plan summer watering. The city posts any conservation stage on its water pages at cityofpt.us — that's the official word.