Marysville Globe, March 28, 2015

Page 1

GLOBE THE MARYSVILLE

Easter: Some

churches plan fun plays, egg hunts for holiday. Page 7.

WEEKEND EDITION MARCH 29, 2015  WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM  75¢ WEEKEND EDITION  JUNE 8TH, 2014  WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM  75¢

Herald THE SUNDAY

An Edition of

Ex-mayor’s memorial Monday BY STEVE POWELL spowell@marysvilleglobe.com

Oso: Some

try to focus on the positive at anniversary event. Page 3.

Steve Powell/Staff Photo

Mayor Jon Nehring holds a picture he has of ex-Mayor Dennis Kendall.

perform on M-PHS. stage Page 14.

INDEX

ACLU fix too much

CLASSIFIED ADS 16-18

BY KIRK BOXLEITNER

LEGALS

9

OPINION

4

SPORTS

12

WORSHIP

15

Vol. 121, No. 38

LHS gets school emergency button BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com

kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com

ARLINGTON — An apparent miscommunication between the city and the American Civil Liberties Union could have resulted in recently passed anti-solicitation laws being revised in ways that no one wanted, including the allowance of exploitation of children. After the city adopted the regulations last July to give police the tools to deal with

SEE MAYOR, PAGE 2

Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo

City attorney Steve Peiffle aggressive solicitation, the ACLU contacted the city in December to object to some of those measures. “We looked at case law for other cities and found SEE ACLU, PAGE 2

LAKEWOOD — The high school here will be using an emergency system this spring that many other schools wished they had. And all the Lakewood School District had to do was ask for it. Priscilla Brady, director of human resources and learning and support services for Lakewood schools, showed attendees of the district’s March 17 community information night how just a few taps of her phone’s screen will call up the Rave Mobile Safety System app. The app then places a call to 9-1-1 dispatchers and also sends a text to all school district administrative personnel, letting

Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo

Priscilla Brady shows how the system works. them know who called 9-1-1, and from what location. That all happens before the dispatcher even answers the phone. “The phone you call from identifies who you are, and the GPS tells them where you are,” Brady said. “The first text message is SEE APP, PAGE 8

1256359

Sing: Six choirs

MARYSVILLE – “Mr. Marysville” Dennis Kendall, former mayor and longtime cheerleader for the city with his ever-present smile and positivity, died Monday at the age of 72. A memorial service is scheduled for Monday, March 30, at 11 a.m. at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, 4200 88th St. NE in Marysville. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Marysville Boys & Girls Club. He was eulogized by Mayor Jon Nehring, the City Council and city staff at the council meeting. A moment of silence was observed. When he died, doctors determined that he most likely had ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), a neurodegenerative disease. Many said they were shocked because they had visited Kendall within the previous week in the hospital, and he was in good spirits. “I saw him about a week ago. He talked about his accomplishments as mayor. He was sharp as can be. I’m shocked he’s gone,” council president Jeff Vaughan said. Vaughan said Kendall’s idea to bring his favorite restaurant,

Applebee’s, to town because of their ribs turned the city in a new direction. He said Kendall and the council were criticized for “thinking big. We were a bedroom community and trying to shake that” image. “He was one of the greatest economic pushers Marysville has ever seen,” he said. Nehring said even last fall he was playing golf with Kendall. “It was a constant joke-fest,” he said. The mayor said up until Kendall’s health started to go bad five months ago, the former mayor would come up and dig around his office each week for an update of what’s going on and to give advice. “I greatly miss those now,” Nehring said. “We appreciate people more when they’re not around.” He added that Kendall transformed the office, with the mayor now getting out of the office and into the community. “He was the chief salesperson for Marysville,” Nehring said. “God bless Dennis.” Parks director Jim Ballew said Kendall was a great soccer player


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