MARYSVILLE – Laura Koty and Steven Duong, seniors at Marysville-Pilchuck High School, are the September Marysville Kiwanis-Soroptimists Girl and Boy of the Month.
MARYSVILLE – The state won’t be able to fully fund education without raising taxes.
MARYSVILLE — The Marysville-Pilchuck and Getchell girls swim teams were out-pointed by Glacier Peak and Snohomish but had some strong individual performances Oct. 18.
SNOHOMISH — The Wesco 3A North divisional tennis tournament went underway Oct. 18-19 at Snohomish High School with local participants: Arlington, Marysville-Pilchuck and Marysville Getchell.
MARYSVILLE – Halloween is big at the thrift shops in Marysville.
ARLINGTON – There’s no GPS system to help cancer patients navigate their way through the maze of medical procedures they need.
MOUNT VERNON – At a recent Doc Talk at Skagit Valley Hospital, three doctors discussed, “Innovations in Breast Cancer Management.”
ARLINGTON — Arlington’s Devon Nutter caught the game-winning interception in the Eagles’ 22-20 Stilly Cup victory over Stanwood Oct. 14.
TULALIP – Brian H. Jones Sr. of Tulalip has been sentenced in U.S. District Court in Seattle to nine years in prison after being found guilty of seven charges of repeated assault of his ex-wife.
Snohomish County PUD is reporting scattered power outages in the Marysville foothills and along Highway 9 between Lake Stevens to south of Arlington, as wind conditions continue to get stronger. A wind advisory is in effect until 6 p.m. Friday, and customers are encouraged to be prepared for further outages. PUD official remind that if you see a downed power line, do not approach it. To report an outage, call PUD at 425-783-1001. If out on local roads, driver carefully. Branches and storm debris are being report on many local roads.
The Marysville Globe-Arlington Times came away with 23 awards at the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association convention in Wenatchee Oct. 14.
Praise to Arlington and Tulalip for hosting community forums on the opioid epidemic.
MARYSVILLE – A new Community Services Unit in the Marysville Police Department is just one of many projects the City Council will discuss the next few weeks regarding the 2017-18 budget.
