Marysville families had an assortment of activities for all ages on Halloween, starting with the annual afternoon of trick-or-treating on Third Street.
The school staff, parents and community members who attended the Marysville School District’s Oct. 29 public forum on proposed changes to school start and stop times and transportation schedules, spoke out overwhelmingly against one of the two remaining options for doing so.
The Marysville, Arlington and Lakewood school districts once again received support from the Marysville Rotary’s “Pumpkins for Literacy” program, which presented representatives of those schools with checks at the Smokey Point Plant Farm Oct. 31.
The last week in October and the first week in November of this year mark a first for the Greater Marysville Tulalip Chamber of Commerce, since it’s the first time in 24 years that Chamber President and CEO Caldie Rogers can remember conducting two Business After Hours meetings in two consecutive weeks.
The Marysville Library will host author Suzanne Selfors Nov. 14, at 3 p.m., when she’s set to speak about writing for teen audiences.
Dr. Jason Bourne’s orthodontic practice was only a year old when he started buying back Halloween candy, and he was impressed at receiving 120 pounds of candy from the community.
Marysville Police Officer Bronwyn Kieland has been named the city of Marysville’s Employee of the Month for October of this year, for her service as a School Resource Officer and her role in combating graffiti in the community.
The second of two scheduled public hearings on the Central Marysville Annexation area will take place at the Nov. 2 Marysville City Council meeting at 7 p.m., after the first public hearing was met with silence at the Sept. 28 City Council meeting.
Marysville-Getchell High School is on schedule to open one year early and under budget, according to Marysville School District officials during a recent tour of the construction site.
Marysville School District students and faculty spoke with the school district’s community partners and business owners Oct. 7 at an open house in the district’s Board room.
City and community members in Marysville are quick to credit the work of the community as a whole with combatting graffiti.
When the USS Ford pulled into port at Naval Station Everett Oct. 20, among those who welcomed its return were nearly half a dozen retired sailors commemorating the ship’s namesake.
The faculty of Liberty Elementary joined Marysville School District officials in making their case to replace, rather than renovate, their current school building, during an Oct. 19 tour of the facilities.