Christmas is arriving early in Marysville as Amen Christian Bookstore, 318 State Ave., prepares to serve as a collection point for Operation Christmas Child. Soon, with the help of local volunteers, the site will be brimming with festively wrapped shoe boxes full of gifts.
U.S. Marines will be meeting the public Nov. 20 and Dec. 4 in support of the annual U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots Campaign.
MARYSVILLE – City of Marysville street crews are installing a walkway along the narrow 83rd Avenue NE where many students walk on their way to and from Marysville Getchell High School.
Marysville Mayor Jon Nehring is pleased to announce longtime Seeds of Grace Food Bank volunteer June Hanvold as the community’s Volunteer of the Month for October.
MARYSVILLE — At approximately 7 p.m. Nov. 10, Marysville Police responded to an armed robbery report at an apartment in the 8700 block of 67th Avenue NE.
For the Peralta family it was more than just an evening of information about community services.
“It must be a very important thing if the mayor is here,” Gabriel Peralta said of the Marysville School District’s Nov. 3 information night for Spanish-speaking parents and parents of English Language Learner students, which was attended by Marysville Mayor Jon Nehring and a number of other city officials.
Futurist farming took center stage at the seventh annual Snohomish County “Focus on Farming” conference, which returned to the Tulalip Resort’s conference center on Nov. 4 this year.
MARYSVILLE — Although the Marysville City Council voted unanimously Nov. 8 to increase utility rates, the issue of property taxes inspired some debate among its members.
The 6-0 vote approved a utility rate increase of 2 percent, the maximum allowed by Marysville city code, which city Finance Director Sandy Langdon deemed a standard increase in the yearly budget.
The Council also voted 4-2 not to increase property taxes, but the disagreement among its members was on whether to forgo banking the 1 percent rate increase allowed this year for future use.
EVERETT — Marysville firefighter Ray Hancock will be getting some helping hands, and legs as well, on Nov. 19 from 7-9 p.m., when Club Broadway will be “Rockin’ It For Ray.”
TULALIP — The Tulalip Amphitheatre will serve as the site for a holiday food drive Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The goal of the event is to fill up two truckloads of food for the Marysville and Tulalip food banks in time for Thanksgiving and the other winter holidays.
It was a race that pitted one Arlington native against another, and by the final night of their campaigns, one of the few things that both candidates could agree on was that it was still too soon to say how it would turn out.
It was a race that pitted one Arlington native against another, and by the final night of their campaigns, one of the few things that both candidates could agree on was that it was still too soon to say how it would turn out.
Snohomish County Council member John Koster maintained a slight lead over U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen in the early returns of the Congressional District 2 race on the evening of Election Day. As of 11:15 p.m. Nov. 2, Republican challenger Koster had received 87,687 counted votes, or 50.41 percent of the counted vote, while Democratic incumbent Larsen had received 86,258 counted votes, or 49.59 percent of the counted vote, with 64 percent of the expected total votes counted.
MARYSVILLE – Preliminary results for the Nov. 2 General Election have been released.
The following results are from the Washington Secretary of State’s Office and were update at 8:14 p.m. on Nov. 2
