Marysville responded to record-high temperatures the week of July 27-31 by opening locations as “cooling stations” during many or all of those days.
Ballots have already been mailed out and voters in Marysville have their primary candidates to choose from in the races for Marysville School District Director District 1 and Snohomish County Council District 1.
The Quil Ceda Village Wal-Mart celebrated its grand re-opening with considerable ceremony July 22, including a parading of the colors by the Mount Baker Council of the Boy Scouts of America, an invocation by Pastor Mike Villamor of Turning Point Community Church, a performance by the Tulalip Tribes singing and drumming group, and a ribbon-cutting by Marysville Mayor Dennis Kendall.
Marysville has three air-conditioned locations open to all ages to help them beat the heat.
North Snohomish County has three air-conditioned locations that will be open to all ages to help them beat the heat.
The Marysville City Council and the Snohomish County Council voted July 13 to authorize the inter-local agreement between the city and the county, providing for the annexation to the city of the unincorporated urban growth area in roughly the center of Marysville.
Pat and Kathy Regan, who have run the Cedar Crest Family Restaurant and Grill at the Cedarcrest Golf Course for more than six years, have agreed to leave the premises by Nov. 6, but they’ll be doing so with two checks from the city of Marysville, one for $30,000 to cover the Regans’ legal fees, and another for $25,000 to the Regans themselves. Until then, the Regans will be allowed to stay and run the restaurant rent-free, from June through October.
Ethan Iverson turned 8 years old in April, and passed away June 30, after a more than year-long battle with cancer.
Marysville resident Roy Nestle has been passionate about filmmaking since he was a middle school student 26 years ago, and he hopes that his night of on-location filming in Marysville July 26 will bring him one step closer to making his own full-length film.
The BookWorks on Third Street hosted a special guest July 22, as Puget Sound region writer and professional speaker Mary Lou Sanelli read from her new book, “Among Friends,” for an audience of roughly a dozen women from 5-7 p.m.
The city of Marysville Parks and Recreation Department recently completed its first round of summer “rock band camp,” but program coordinators reminded the public that another round of the program is coming up in August.
Nate Adams is only 3 years old, but he’s already become a celebrity, if only for a moment.
The July 31 Business Before Hours meeting at the Tulalip Resort Casino will focus on the possible impact to businesses of the health care legislation that’s currently being proposed in Congress.