On Thursday evening at approximately 5:05 p.m. Marysville Police responded to investigate an armed robbery of the Union Bank located in the 1000 block of State Avenue. The bank was robbed by an unshaven white male approximately 30-45 years in age.
The city of Marysville is looking to get area residents outside and active for the second annual Healthy Communities Challenge Day.
CrossFit recently opened at 5603 47th Ave. NE in Marysville, and its trainers are inviting everyone join in for beginner, intermediate or advanced “sweat session” workouts.
The Snohomish County Housing Authority recently moved its Housing Rehabilitation Loan Program offices from Everett to Marysville. The program offers help to modest and low income homeowners, by providing no interest to 3 percent interest loans to address a range of issues common to homes in the area. Health and safety concerns are the main thrust of the program.
Merrill Gardens at Marysville will celebrate “Support Our Troops” Week by hosting two pasta meals June 16 to raise funds for the United Service Organizations.
Mary Elizabeth Vandaveer, a family and consumer science teacher at Marysville-Pilchuck High School with more than 36 years of classroom experience, recently received the Excellence in Education Award from the Washington State Alpha Delta Kappa Organization.
The Marysville Community Food Bank honored its volunteers during its April 29 dinner at the Pacific Rim Supper Club and Ballroom.
The Marysville-Pilchuck Choirs’ last concert of the school year is set for June 3 in the M-PHS auditorium, but it needs some community support for the show to go on.
The Marysville Kiwanis Club is inviting the community to a special concert showcasing the area’s hottest young performers and musicians, while raising funds for student scholarships.
The Marysville Kiwanis Club hopes to turn its Kenneth J. Ploeger Kiwanis Memorial Scholarship Concert into an annual event.
With Democrats very much in control in Olympia, and Republicans on the sidelines, one would expect the legislature to close this year’s looming $2.8 billion budget gap with orderly dispatch. Instead Washingtonians were treated to a dizzying round of closed-door meetings, surprise hearings, do-overs, missed deadlines and bills with no text.
More than 160 motorcycle officers from an estimated 70 law enforcement agencies in Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Canada turned the southeast parking lot of the Tulalip Resort Hotel and Casino into their training grounds May 13-15.
The Marysville Post Office thanked the area community for giving so generously to the May 8 “Stamp Out Hunger” letter carriers’ food drive. Marysville residents donated 32,300 pounds of food, which will provide an estimated 24,846 meals to support the needy and the hungry.
