I know that the $y$-section $A_x$ of a $\mu_x\otimes \mu_y$-measurable set $A$, where $\mu_x\otimes \mu_y$ is the Lebesgue extension of the product measure $\mu_x\times \mu_y$ (both measures being $\sigma$-additive complete measures defined on $\sigma$-algebras of subsets of $X$ and $Y$, respectively)$^1$, defined by $$A_y=\{x\in X:(x,y)\in A\}$$ is $\mu_y$-measurable for almost all $y$. My textbook says that (I think that the reason is that $\forall x\notin\bigcup_{y\in Y} A_y\quad A_x=\emptyset$) the integral $\int_X \mu_y(A_x)d\mu_x$ is the same as $\int_{\bigcup_{y\in Y} A_y} \mu_y(A_x)d\mu_x$.
Therefore I think that it is implicit that $\bigcup_{y\in Y} A_y$ is measurable, but I cannot see why it is. Could anybody be so kind to explain why it is measurable, provided that it is?
$^1$I want to apologise in advance if my wording may not be rigourous or formal enough, I fear I am inheriting such a style from my book, which I often find hard to understand precisely because of such a lack of formality and rigour.