by mvchamber | May 5, 2025 | City of Mill Valley, County of Marin, Diversity & Equity, Downtown Mill Valley, Emergency Preparedness, Health & Wellness, Housing, Mill Valley History, Mill Valley Library, Parks & Recreation, Tam Junction, Tam Valley, Volunteerism
If you want to support this Enjoy Mill Valley Blog, including all of the News You Can Use below, you can make a tax-deductible donation of $75 or more to the Enjoy Mill Valley Fund, which supports shovel-ready beautification and infrastructure improvements throughout...
by mvchamber | May 5, 2025 | Arts & Entertainment, City of Mill Valley, County of Marin, Downtown Mill Valley, Emergency Preparedness, Health & Wellness, Mount Tamalpais, Parks & Recreation
In 2024, the Mill Valley Music Festival became the first-ever U.S. festival to operate entirely on mobile zero-emission batteries, thanks to a groundbreaking partnership with Moxion Power, a Bay Area-based leader in mobile battery energy storage system technology....
by mvchamber | May 2, 2025 | City Council, City of Mill Valley, Climate, Emergency Preparedness, Health & Wellness, Mill Valley History
PG&E is hosting an Open House for Mill Valley customers at the Mill Valley Community Center on Thursday, May 15, from 6 – 8:00 p.m. to share more about what we are doing to reduce wildfire risk and make our system safer. During the event, we will share the latest...
by mvchamber | Apr 28, 2025 | City of Mill Valley, County of Marin, Diversity & Equity, Downtown Mill Valley, Emergency Preparedness, Health & Wellness, Housing, Mill Valley History, Mill Valley Library, Parks & Recreation, Tam Junction, Tam Valley, Volunteerism
If you want to support this Enjoy Mill Valley Blog, including all of the News You Can Use below, you can make a tax-deductible donation of $75 or more to the Enjoy Mill Valley Fund, which supports shovel-ready beautification and infrastructure improvements throughout...
by mvchamber | Apr 21, 2025 | Marin City, Uncategorized
Oshalla Diana Marcus stepped into the bus shelter on Marin City’s busiest street and stared at the new mural of dignified Black shipyard workers in heavy welding clothes and Sunday finery. One of the women portrayed was Annie Small, who left Louisiana with $8 in her...