West Valley View - West 08-26-2020

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THE NEWSPAPER OF AVONDALE, BUCKEYE, GOODYEAR, LITCHFIELD PARK & TOLLESON

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This Week

NEWS .............. 4 Tolleson native’s death blamed on politics

NEWS ........... 10 Avondale park named Facility of the Year

BUSINESS...... 16 Business news that will put you to sleep

OPINION ...............12 BUSINESS.............. 16 FEATURES ..............17 YOUTH ..................20 OBITUARIES ...........22 CLASSIFIEDS ..........23 WEST

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The Voice of the West Valley for 35 years

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August 26, 2020

Amazon delivering jobs to West Valley BY TOM SCANLON

West Valley View Managing Editor

In the West Valley, Amazon is delivering—and not just hats, mouse traps, electronics, books (which is how the company started) and thousands of other items ordered during the pandemic. Amazon is about to deliver jobs, by the hundreds. Last week, Amazon said it was creating 11 new sites across the Valley—including two major facilities in Goodyear and a “Merch by Amazon” store in Avondale. The new sites are expected to create more than 3,000 jobs with a minimum $15-per-hour wage “and comprehensive benefits starting on day one.” Near Yuma Road and South Bullard Avenue, construction workers are finishing Amazon’s 855,000-square-foot warehouse. There, Amazon said, “employees will work alongside Amazon robotics to pick, pack and ship small items to customers such as books, electronics and toys.” In 2021, Amazon plans a cross-dock

Amazon...continued on page 2

At an Amazon Robotics fulfillment center being built on Yuma Road and South Bullard Avenue in Goodyear, 1,000 humans will work alongside robots. Also in Goodyear, Amazon is building a cross-dock facility at Indian School Road and Cotton Lane on 90 acres it purchased for $20 million. (Photos courtesy Amazon)

Homes hot as hundreds of houses head here BY TOM SCANLON

West Valley View Managing Editor

The COVID-19 pandemic is not slowing down a housing market as hot as summer. As a story in the Aug. 5 West Valley View showed, sales taxes in the area have increased,

despite business slowdowns and shutdowns related to the coronavirus spread. Based on plans in Buckeye, Goodyear and southwest Glendale/Litchfield Park, thousands of new residents will be shopping at local stores and eating at restaurants.

On Aug. 14, according to commercial real estate site Vizzda.com, First Industrial Realty Trust bought 840 acres formerly known as Allen Ranches for $70 million.

Houses...continued on page 3

www.westvalleyview.com The latest breaking news and top local stories in the West Valley!


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NEWS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Amazon...continued from page 1 facility in Goodyear and a delivery station in Surprise, creating hundreds more full-time jobs in the West Valley. Less than a month after striking out with Nike, which backed out of a plan for a facility here, Goodyear hit a home run with the world’s largest online retailer. “We just can’t get enough Amazon in Goodyear,” gushed Mayor Georgia Lord. Local resident Amber Kinion, for one, is less thrilled. “Litchfield (Road) used to be so peaceful! Now if you’re out in the morning you get caught in a wave of Amazon vans and if you’re out in the evening you’ll be waiting for a gas pump because they’re all there,” she commented on the West Valley View’s Facebook post about Amazon’s plans. Those looking for jobs—especially in the pandemic economy that has tossed thousands out of work—will side with Lord. Though robots will be doing some of the work, the Amazon Goodyear robotics center will create more than 1,000 human jobs. Hundreds more jobs are expected at

Amazon will hire hundreds of warehouse workers in Goodyear. (Photos courtesy Amazon)

the cross-dock transportation hub. It will be at Indian School Road and Cotton Lane, said Matthew High, regional director of Amazon fulfillment. Last month, Amazon bought the 90acre site for $20 million. Amazon is building another crossdock facility on Sweetwater Avenue and Litchfield Road in Surprise, near northwest Glendale and Peoria, so trucks will be rumbling up and down Loop 303. Though Amazon has been doing great business since shutdowns and stayhome orders during the COVID-19 pandemic, Amazon’s West Valley ex-

pansion “isn’t necessarily tied to the pandemic,” High said. “We planned out several years in advance and put a process into where we wanted to locate our facilities. We look at the workforce and community partners—and Phoenix has an abundance of talented workforce. We aim to be as close to our customers as possible,” High said. He said Amazon plans to have the robotic fulfillment center up and running in Goodyear by the end of the year. In it, High said vacuum-cleaner-sized robots will help sort and pick inventory. “It will increase efficiency for our associates and cut down on shipping cycle time,” he said.

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This will be Amazon’s second robotics facility in the state and the only Amazon Robotics facility in the Valley. More than 1,000 full-time associates will work alongside Amazon Robotics automated machines to pick, pack and ship smaller customer items such as books, toys and kitchenware. The new four-story facility is the largest building ever built in the city— the fulfillment center’s footprint is 855,000 square feet. With four levels, the building spans more than 2.3 million square feet. Avondale is also part of Amazon’s plan, though on a smaller scale. Near 103rd Avenue and Roosevelt Street will be the site of Arizona’s first Merch by Amazon store, for “print on demand service that enables content creators to upload and sell custom content printed on apparel and electronics products to customers in Amazon’s stores,” according to a press release. But Goodyear continues to be the hub of Amazon’s West Valley operations.

“We’ve had a Goodyear facility for just over 10 years,” High said. “We have a long-standing history in Goodyear, and it’s been a pretty solid cornerstone of Amazon’s fulfillment.” In 2008, Amazon opened its first Goodyear fulfillment center, where more than 600 full-time employees pick, pack and ship large items to customers such as oversized boxes of diapers, dog food and paper towels. Goodyear is also home to a delivery station and office team. Currently, more than 900 full-time employees support Amazon operations in Goodyear. High said Amazon will hire for a variety of positions, from associates who pick and pack merchandise to IT staff and engineers. The other Goodyear location will be Amazon’s first cross-dock facility in the state. It is also scheduled to open by year’s end with 1,000 full-time positions. The 600,000-square-foot building will support customer fulfillment by receiving large orders of inventory and redistributing products to fulfillment centers across the company’s operations network. “Amazon recognizes Goodyear as a top choice among cities in which to do business,” Lord said. “Despite the pandemic, development in our city is thriving. The future is very bright in the city of Goodyear, and we are thrilled that Amazon will contribute to our continued growth.” As Amazon announced its wide-ranging plans, it joined politicians and job seekers in celebrating. “It’s a great day for Amazon,” High said. For information about Amazon job openings, visit amazon.com/phoenixjobs.


WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

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NEWS

Houses...continued from page 1 Glendale recently annexed the land, which stretches from West Bethany Road to the north and West Camelback Road to the south, with Cotton Lane and Citrus Road as east and west borders. Litchfield Park and Waddell neighbors howled in protest over the plans to develop the sprawling farmland into hundreds of homes and a large industrial project. The protests fell on deaf ears, as Glendale City Council approved the annexation and tentative development plan for about 200 acres of home development and 600 acres of industrial development. Allen Ranches plans a staggering 9 million square feet of warehouse and manufacturing space, with construction costs of more than $50 million, according to a presentation. The Allen Ranches development is across Camelback Road from parts of Goodyear and Litchfield Park. Six miles south on Cotton Lane, Goodyear ponders another phase of a massive residential development in the southwest portion of the city. At its Aug. 24 meeting, Goodyear City Council was expected to approve plans for El Cidro Parcels 4 and 5. The two parts of the El Cidro development are bordered by Cotton Lane and 169th Avenue to the west and east and West Lower Buckeye Road and West Elwood Street to the north and south. A preliminary plan for developing 328 acres of El Cidro into 1,260 single-family homes was approved in 2014. The first three parcels were later approved “and are currently under development,” according to the Aug. 24 agenda packet. Asked how many El Cidro houses have been built, Corinne Holliday, a city spokeswoman, responded, “We don’t have the numbers on the amount of individual homes.” Also at its Aug. 24 meeting, Goodyear City Council was expected to approve plans for Sparrow Goodyear (145th Avenue south of McDowell Road), Canyon Trails (West Yuma Road and 173rd Avenue) and two Estrella development projects (South Estrella Parkway between South San Miguel Drive and West Westar Drive). Just south of Goodyear, one of the country’s fastest-growing cities is keeping up the hot home pace. At its Aug. 18 meeting, Buckeye

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Developments were recently approved at the sprawling Allen Ranches in southwest Glendale, near Goodyear and Litchfield Park, and the massive El Cidro project in south Goodyear near Buckeye. (West Valley View file image)

City Council approved plans for more than 700 homes to be built. Buckeye gave the green light to two Canyon Views developments—totaling around 150 homes—near Bethany

Home Road and Jackrabbit Trail. And the Mayfield development on 150 acres at Apache Road and Southern Avenue was approved—with 572 homes headed to Buckeye.

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Kristin Urquiza at his father’s grave with the headline that carried his story, and her advocacy, nationwide. Maryvale resident Mark Anthony Urquiza died June 20 of COVID-19, a death his daughter blames on a lack of leadership by elected officials. (Photo courtesy Kristin Urquiza)

West Valley native’s daughter speaks at Democratic convention BY CHASE HUNTER AND TYLER MANION Cronkite News

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When Arizona native Kristin Urquiza wrote her dad’s obituary after his June 30 death from COVID-19, the Democratic National Convention was probably the furthest thing from her mind. But that’s where Urquiza found herself last week, telling a national audience that her dad’s “only pre-existing condition was trusting Donald Trump, and for that, he paid with his life.” Mark Anthony Urquiza was a West Valley native and 1981 Tolleson Union High School graduate who met his wife, Brenda, there. Their daughter remembered her late father and his struggles with health care under the Trump administration at the convention. Urquiza, a former Maryvale resident, said she did not set out to become an advocate after the death of her father, Mark, but she has embraced the role. “I did not at all expect it to gain as much attention as it did,” she said before her brief virtual address to the DNC. “For me, it was not a controversial obituary. It was just me sharing the truth.” That obituary, featured in a New York Times story, blamed a failure of

leadership by Trump and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey for her father’s death. “From the moment my dad became ill with coronavirus, I could trace back to the exact policy decisions and media communications that both Gov. Ducey and President Trump had taken,” Urquiza said. Urquiza said in the weeks since her father’s death, she has learned of tens of thousands of people like her who related to her story. Many have even reached out to her. Urquiza said she remains filled with grief over her father’s death, but she’s decided to channel that energy into activism. She said she wants people to know that tragedies like her father’s death were preventable. She has worked with people from Texas to New York, from Iowa to Arizona to “stand in solidarity of this call for a coordinated response to this pandemic” by the nation’s leaders. “It just demonstrates that I’m not alone and that literally tens of thousands of people across the country are yearning for some sort of direction and leadership to show them how to be able to not only raise their voice but to keep themselves and their communities safe,” she said.


NEWS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Hispanic Democrats identify Arizona as a battleground state BY CATHERINE FUSILLO Cronkite News

Arizona was recently identified by Democrats as one of six battleground states for this fall’s election, a status that state lawmakers said has been 10 years in the making. “We have about 10 years of Latino activism resistance that has been going on … and we have created this environment in Arizona,” that has primed the state for a fight, said Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Phoenix. Gallego lives in Glendale. His comments came during a virtual meeting of Hispanic state lawmakers that also named Texas, Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida and Pennsylvania as battlegrounds. The panel, organized by the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators, came on the first day of the Democratic National Convention. The Facebook Live event discussed strategies for mobilizing Latino voters in battleground states. A request for comment from the Arizona Republican Party was not immediately returned, but at least one political analyst agreed with Democrats that “Ar-

izona is unequivocally a battleground state this year.” Mike Noble, chief of research and managing partner at OH Predictive Insights, said the election outcome in Arizona will be a “coin flip” in November. “I not only think that Arizona will be incredibly close,” but it could be a tipping point state that ultimately decides who sits in the White House,” Noble said. He said former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, holds a slight edge in traditionally red state Arizona. A Real Clear Politics roundup of polls on Aug. 12 gave Biden 47% of the vote in Arizona, compared to 45% for President Donald Trump. Arizona Rep. Lorenzo Sierra, D-Avondale, agreed with Mejia and said turning the state blue in November is “just a matter of us continuing this work.” While Arizona has not voted for a Democrat for president since the 1996 re-election of President Bill Clinton in 1996, Gallego believes the “steady hand” of Biden and his presumptive running mate, California Sen. Kamala

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Harris, will be attractive to voters after four years of Trump tumult. “I think that’s going to be a calling card for them (voters) to support their ticket,” Gallego said. “These voters have been used to Trump,” Gallego said during the “Si Se Vota” event. “We’re so used to being used as an excuse for whatever failed agenda from the Republican Party. None of West Valley leaders Rep. Ruben Gallego, who lives in Glendale, and Arizona Rep. Lorenzo Sierra, of Avondale, believe the state will have those tactics work anymore.” The GOP still enjoys a numeri- a big impact in the presidential election. (West Valley View file photo) cal advantage in Arizona, with 34.8% of going to affect Republicans more than voters in the state registered as Repub- anything else.” lican in August, compared to 32.4% for “I think they’re going to avoid voteDemocrats and 31.9% listed as “other,” by-mail and Latinos are going to adapt according to the Arizona Secretary of by getting their ballots early and sending State’s Office. them out early or dropping them off at a But Gallego said Arizona is in a polling place,” he said, adding that he is unique position for the 2020 elections, seeing excitement among Latino voters. with changing demographics and the He said voters “have basically inocstate’s existing Permanent Early Voting ulated ourselves against the Trump adList making it an exciting state to watch. ministration and their attempts to divide Gallego noted that 70% of Latino vot- us. We’ve prepared ourselves over the ers are registered to vote by mail in this last 10 years for the day that we would election, which he believes “is really be able to do something like this.”


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NEWS

Teachers’ union sends letter to governor

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

On Aug. 21, the Arizona Education Association called on Gov. Doug Ducey “to implement a statewide COVID-19 school safety plan to ensure the health and safety of our children and their educators.” According to its website, the teachers’ union has more than 20,000 members and is “the largest professional association for public school employees in Arizona.” In a letter to Ducey, AEA President Joseph H. Thomas stressed a plan should include: • Mandate masks be worn statewide in schools and on buses until the end of the school year. • Require safety protocols for school districts regarding COVID-19 exposure notification plans for employees and students. • Cancel this year’s high-stakes standardized testing due to the disruptions related to COVID-19 rendering scores unreliable for the 2020-21 school year.

• Grant school districts flexibility toward meeting the requirement of 180 days of instruction due to impacts related to COVID-19. • Provide the additional funding necessary to ensure that when schools open to students, schools can continue to provide safe and healthy learning environments needed for students to excel. “The Aug. 17 deadline, a date you called aspirational, has passed, and our schools are still not safe to return to,” Thomas wrote. “It is time for you to act in the best interests of our children and their educators. “Arizona needs a statewide plan regarding school safety. The Arizona Education Association calls upon you to either initiate such a plan or pass the responsibility over to the Superintendent of Public Instruction to do so.” Ducey did not respond to the letter. He has not changed the “Arizona is Open for Learning” plan he unveiled July 23.

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Ducey’s plan includes: • Regardless of when regular in-person classroom learning begins, each school district and charter school needs to begin teacher-led distance learning by the first day of their traditional instructional calendar. • Schools will continue to be required to provide 180 days of instruction or equivalent hours, whether a family chooses to do so in person or via distance learning. • To qualify for enhanced funding, schools must begin offering free onsite learning and support services for students who need a place to go during the day. According to his website, “Gov. Ducey is providing maximum flexibility to local school leaders, recognizing they need the expertise of public health professionals and data to guide their decision-making.” Thomas stressed “students are best served with in-person instruction and with access to safe classrooms, qualified educators and healthy meals. This is most critical for students of color,

whose communities have been more susceptible to the virus and whose families are unable to be at home with the children because of professional obligations.” Staff urgently needs proper personal protective equipment, Thomas stressed. “Thousands of education support professionals have already reported to their school sites, bus barns and maintenance facilities. These public school employees are putting themselves and their families at risk while districts struggle to acquire the personal protective equipment and disinfecting supplies necessary to maintain a safe workforce,” Thomas wrote. That, combined with many teachers taking early retirement, has led to confusion and a lack of safety, Thomas wrote: “Parents are struggling with how best to support and protect their children. Educators, parents and students need a plan for a safe return to our schools without jeopardizing their health or the health of their family or community.”

Avondale looks for input at virtual community summit BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

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Avondale residents are invited to take part in a “community summit” at 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 27. The city of Avondale is seeking input as it updates its five-year strategic plan. The meeting will take place via the Zoom meeting platform. Residents interested in participating must register to receive a link that will enable them to join the summit. “Having a sound strategic plan is key. The plan will guide the city council and staff on the direction our growing city needs to take,” said Charles Montoya, Avondale city manager. “Resident input is essential in developing a

cohesive strategic plan that takes into account the needs of the community and their vision for Avondale’s future. We want everyone to be heard.” Due to public health concerns from the ongoing coronavirus situation, Avondale is offering the community summit as a virtual event. Although the city has been conducting its city council meetings virtually since March, this is the first time a town hall or community summit will take place virtually. To sign up to participate, visit avondaleaz.gov or call 623-333-1027.


NEWS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Landlord lawsuit challenges governor’s no-evictions order

BY HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services

Landlords and mobile home park owners from around the state are asking the Arizona Supreme Court to void an executive order by Gov. Doug Ducey blocking evictions of tenants who do not pay their rent. The lawsuit claims the governor lacks the constitutional authority to tell constables around the state not to process eviction orders, even those issued legally by judges. It also contends that the gubernatorial directive is violating both the property rights of landowners as well as their right to enter into contracts. In seeking review, the lawsuit acknowledges that the governor can exercise certain powers in a public health emergency. But attorney Kory Langhofer, who prepared the legal filing, said that Ducey, in unilaterally barring landlords from enforcing the terms of lawful lease agreements, created “an indefinite economic welfare and redistribution program, rather than a public health measure to contain the COVID-19 contagion.’’ Langhofer also warned the justices that if the governor’s order goes unchallenged, “then there is virtually no personal or commercial transaction or conduct that would lie outside his grasp.’’ The lawsuit asks the high court not just to rule that Ducey’s order exceeds his constitutional authority but to specifically direct constables and justices of the peace to carry out their duties to evict tenants once there is a finding they are not paying their rent. In previously defending the order, the governor’s office has argued that nothing in it eliminates the legal right of tenants to make up the missed rent once the emergency ends. But Langhofer said that eviction generally is a landlord’s only effective remedy when someone doesn’t pay. And he called the end-of-emergency obligation to pay little more than “parchment promises’’ by tenants, who probably can’t pay anyway, making the requirement to come current on

rent “an illusory means of redress’’ for landlords. Courtney Gilstrap LeVinus, president of the Arizona Multihousing Association, one of the groups that sued, said when the governor issued the original order in March there was a promise that the state would be providing financial assistance to renters. So she said her members decided not to challenge the move. But to date she said less than $2 million has gone out. “Had those funds been deployed we may not have needed to file,’’ Gilstap LeVinus said. “There are plenty of resources out there,’’ she continued. “No one should be evicted.’’ Complicating matters, Ducey extended the no-eviction order last month through the end of October. He did add a provision that requires tenants to certify to landlords by Aug. 22 they have applied for rental assistance from one of the state, county, city or private organizations that provide it. But there is no requirement they actually have received the money by then. Ducey also set aside $5 million in grants for landlords, though aides to the governor said these were designed mainly to help those with one or just a few properties and not for owners of apartment complexes. Gilstrap LeVinus said that will hardly be enough to compensate landlords for lost revenues. Legal issues aside, she said it’s not fair to put the burden of the financial problems caused by the outbreak largely on the backs of landlords. “When the pandemic hit, the state didn’t mandate that grocery stores and restaurants give away free food or that gas stations give away free fuel,’’ Gilstrap LeVinus said. “Yet in this case, they’re asking rental housing owners to provide free housing.’’ And she pointed out that, by the end of October, landlords could have been without rent—and without ability to evict non-paying tenants—for

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NEWS

Buckeye Library receives $22,000 in grants

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BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Buckeye’s public library system recently received two grants totaling $22,000 to develop a collection of children’s audio books and to assist local businesses. The funding came from the

Eviction...continued from page 7 221 days. “There is no industry that can continue to provide goods and services for 221-odd days and be expected to survive,’’ Gilstrap LeVinus said. How much is owed is unclear. She said the only data comes from a national organization which says more than 20% had not paid their August rent as of the sixth of the month. And that looks solely at information from major landlords. Economist Elliott Pollack, in a study done for the Arizona Multihousing Association, figures that if just 1% of the more than 919,000 Arizona households

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records, a division of the secretary of state. One grant for $18,000 is to purchase VOX books, which are audio books designed for children. These devices

will read the book aloud to the child to enhance listening comprehension without having them rely on smartphones and tablets. Titles will be available in English and Spanish. An additional $4,000 in grant money is

dedicated to business development material and information to help Buckeye residents start or grow their own business. To learn more about all the programs at the Buckeye Library System, visit buckeyeaz.gov/library.

who rent did not make payments over a seven-month period that means a loss of more than $67.7 million. Take that figure to 15%, he said, and the foregone revenues top $1 billion. Pollack said there also is a ripple effect as landlords cannot pay their employees, contractors and suppliers. But the heart of the issue—and the only one for the Supreme Court to decide—is whether what Ducey is doing is legal. Langhofer told the justices that the statutory provisions the governor is using for all of his executive orders allow him to exercise police powers, specifically to “alleviate actual and threatened damage due to the emergency,’’ and to

facilitate the supply of equipment and services “to provide for the health and safety of the citizens of the affected area.’’ He acknowledged the law does allow the governor to “commandeer and utilize any property.’’ And that, Langhofer said, could be interpreted to include a moratorium on evictions as a means to ensure that people have housing. But he said that exists only in a “state of war emergency’’—and only if the governor makes provisions for compensating the owners of the property. Laghofer said that Ducey, in issuing his executive order, acknowledged that it had little to do with protecting public health but was “primarily an

economic relief measure.’’ He also pointed out that tenants seeking relief need not show they are infected with COVID-19 or even that they are in a high-risk category but only that they provide documentation of “ongoing financial hardship.’’ Beyond that, Langhofer pointed to the lack of any link between the order and the state’s coronavirus infection rate or any other public health metrics. “The expansive temporary scope of Executive Order 2020-49 implicitly confirms that it aspires to address long-lasting repercussions of the current economic recession, not contain the spread of the disease,’’ he wrote. Langhofer also raises the question of whether it was unconstitutional for the legislature to provide the governor with what could be considered unlimited emergency powers. He’s not the first to make that suggestion. In separate legal filings last month, attorney Ilan Wurman told the Supreme Court that the governor has no constitutional right to unilaterally close bars and not give them a chance to reopen, no matter what may or may not have been approved by lawmakers. No date has been set for the high court to hear that case.

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

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Ducey: Won’t interfere with district reopening decisions Capitol Media Services

Gov. Doug Ducey won’t intercede or criticize school districts that opt to reopen for in-class instruction even though their communities don’t meet the benchmarks set by his own health director. “We want people to follow the benchmarks,’’ the governor said at a press briefing Aug. 19. The benchmarks are based on what the health department has decided are three key indicators of the spread of COVID-19. Only two counties have reached that point: Apache and Yavapai. And there is no indication when conditions in the other 13 counties will get to the place where the health department says schools can begin “hybrid’’ teaching, meaning a combination of virtual and in-person learning. Newly released data from Maricopa County shows that about half the county—and almost all of the West Valley—is in a “red” zone, meaning that health officials advise against any reopening of campuses. Health department spokesman Ron Coleman said that while some districts may show improvement in one or two of the three benchmarks being used to advise school districts on reopening, the map of a district will show the color of the category showing a substantial deviation from the metrics. “So, if a district is meeting the benchmarks for minimal (green) on two metrics but substantial (red) on one, then it is considered to still be in the substantial category,” Coleman said. “That hypothetical district would still be recommended to offer virtual learning because at least one metric is still in substantial and has not been lower than that for at least two weeks. To move from substantial to moderate, or moderate to minimal, an area (whether district, ZIP, etc.) must have all metrics in at least that level or better for two weeks or longer,” he said. But Ducey said he sees these benchmarks as less clear cut. “They are guidelines,’’ the governor said. And he said there are other things that should be considered, like trends. He also said there’s the separate ques-

tion of dealing with those most directly involved. “There are some parents that want, as soon as it’s possible, to get their children back into a classroom,’’ Ducey said. “And there are parents that we all know are not putting their child back in the classroom.’’ The governor said the state is trying to “provide options’’ for both. That’s only part of the issue. “We also have some teachers that are in a vulnerable category or have an underlying health condition,’’ Ducey said. “And we will need online learning in this hybrid model.’’ All 15 counties meet the first of the three benchmarks: two weeks where hospital visits due to COVID-like illnesses fall below 10% of the total. And 11 counties are showing a twoweek decline in the total number of cases or, in the alternative, a case rate of less than 100 per 100,000 residents. Cochise, Greenee, Pima and Pinal do not. But only Apache, Cochise, Greenlee and Yavapai counties meet the third prong of having fewer than 7% of the tests for the virus come back positive. COVID-19 may be just one of the health problems schools face. “Arizona’s flu season goes about October to May, with our hardest months usually being January to March,’’ said state Health Director Cara Christ. She promised a public relations campaign in hopes of getting as many people to take the vaccine which is now available. “While it’s not 100% effective, it does significantly reduce hospitalization and complications and bad outcomes,’’ Christ said. Ducey hinted that he might use some federal coronavirus dollars to help provide vaccines to those who may not have health insurance. “I want to find a way that any Arizonan that wants to get a flu shot can get one,’’ he said. “Details to follow.’’ The governor also put in a plug of sorts for those businesses that have been allowed to stay open to keep as many workers as they can out of the office. The ultimate choice, Ducey said, is

Newly released data from Maricopa County shows that about half the county—and almost all of the West Valley—is in a “red” zone. (Image courtesy Maricopa County Department of Health)

up to employers. But he suggested that they may find advantages in what has become the new normal of telecommuting. “Many employers have seen that their employees can be just as productive at home as they were inside the office,’’ he said. The governor said that, as a matter of policy, he continues to support the policy of “you’re safer at home, if you

don’t have anywhere else to go, if you can work at home.’’ And if companies believe they need people in the workplace? “We do ask this idea of socially and physically distancing, the wearing the mask, all those fundamentals,’’ Ducey said. He also said a lot of it depends on the nature of the work being done and the environment.

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10

NEWS

Avondale Festival Fields Park named Outstanding Facility of the Year BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

A major, expensive facelift pays off: Avondale’s Festival Fields Park was named Outstanding Facility of the Year by the Arizona Parks and Recreation Association. Festival Fields Park, which recently underwent a $19 million expansion and renovation, offers an array for amenities that offer both passive and After a $19 million upgrade, Avondale’s Festival Fields Park was active recreation, including a named Outstanding Facility of the Year by the Arizona Parks and Recreation Association. (Photo courtesy city of Avondale) skate park and bicycle pump track combination, multi-use sports both aesthetics and functionality to fields, Little League baseball fields, a create a state of the art facility for the splash pad, urban fishing lake, picnic entire community to enjoy.” ramadas, walking trails, and sports The award was announced on Aug. court areas for pickleball and basket- 11 during a virtual conference of stateball. wide parks and recreation profession“To be recognized as the Outstand- als hosted by the APRA. ing Facility of the Year is a tremenHughes acknowledged Avondale dous honor for Avondale,” said Bryan City Council “for supporting quality of Hughes, Avondale’s parks and recre- life programs at our city parks.” ation director. “The award recognizes For more information about Avondale how the enhancements have combined parks, visit avondaleaz.gov/parks.

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Stroke care nets recognition for Abrazo West BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Abrazo West Campus and Abrazo Arrowhead Campus received the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Quality Achievement and Target: Stroke awards. “Abrazo Health is dedicated to providing quality care for each of the communities we serve,” Abrazo CEO Brian Elisco said. “This recognition acknowledges our network’s commitment to ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence.” He added that signs of stroke and other emergencies shouldn’t be ignored. “Your health can’t wait. It’s important to seek care if you are experiencing a symptom that is affecting your ability to function. Don’t delay care, because it could lead to significant complications,” said Elisco. Stroke facts: • A stroke can cause lasting brain damage, long-term disability or even death,

according to the CDC. • Stroke is the fifth leading cause of death in the country. • A stroke occurs when blood supply to part of the brain is blocked or when a blood vessel in the brain bursts. In either case, parts of the brain become damaged or die. • Ischemic stroke occurs when blood clots or other particles block the blood vessels to the brain. Fatty deposits called plaque can also cause blockages by building up in the blood vessels. • Hemorrhagic stroke occurs when a blood vessel bursts in the brain. Blood builds up and damages surrounding brain tissue. Abrazo Health includes Abrazo Arizona Heart Hospital, Abrazo Arrowhead Campus, Abrazo Central Campus, Abrazo Mesa Hospital, Abrazo Scottsdale Campus and Abrazo West Campus—along with freestanding emergency centers, urgent care, primary care and specialty physician practices. Abrazo Surprise Hospital and Abrazo Cave Creek Hospital are under construction. For more information, visit abrazohealth.com.

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

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12

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

David Leibowitz will return next week WestValleyView.com

/WestValleyView

OUR READERS’ VIEWPOINTS LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Truth in ads needed Editor: Sen. Martha McSally’s campaign is attacking Mark Kelly for his involvement with World View Enterprises, claiming he “pocketed $15 million” and “ripped off taxpayers,” while “criticizing the PPP program” intended to bring relief to small businesses and “cutting jobs instead of creating jobs.” These attacks are lies. McSally should be ashamed that she approved these false messages. Mark Kelly was a co-founder of World View Enterprises, which provides mapping and sensing services using high-altitude balloons. In 2016, Pima County invested $15 million to build a facility, which they lease to World View, with the projection that World View would create hundreds of well-paying jobs. The company was growing until the pandemic this year brought a halt to nonessential businesses like them. World View, as did thousands of businesses, had to lay off many of its employees. They recently reported having 87 salaried employees. Taxpayers were not ripped off; COVID-19 happened. Kelly has not been an administrator or been involved in the running of the company for over a year. He had nothing to do with the application for PPP funds. He is just one of the investors. He criticized the way PPP was being run, not the existence of the program. Kelly feels the big banks favored the big clients, not the needy small businesses as intended. For example, hotel chains and charter schools applied for funds as if each facility was a separate small business, which is legal but unethical. A new series of ads claims Kelly “got rich” by being on the board of a “medical transportation” company as-

For more opinion visit WestValleyView.com

sociated with “surprise billing.” That is misleading. It does cost a lot to have a helicopter or airplane transport a patient, as you would expect. Kelly was on the board of an air-ambulance company based in Scottsdale as a consultant and was paid $20,000 in 2019, not exactly a fortune. McSally should stop these false attack ads. They damaged her credibility when she used them against Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. Voters deserve the truth from their senators. John Flynn Goodyear

Food for thought

Editor: During the coming months preceding the nation’s elections in November, I would like to offer some “food for thought” from author Dean Koontz, a writer of varied sorts. There are many wonderful Koontz tales—most are in the genre of suspense. In one of his most-popular novels, entitled “Watchers,” he writes of heroism at its most basic essence. We can, each of us, be heroic by our choices and actions. Who we choose to elect and lead us on the November ballot is critical to the America and its freedoms we have always cherished, valued, respected and fought to maintain. Thinking about the upcoming elections and reflecting on what’s happening in major cities around the country wherein Democratic officials are in charge, seeing day after day of civil unrest, rioting and chaos in those streets, pillaging, looting, defacing and destroying, it seems to me important to consider Koontz’s words: “We have in us the ability to ... find dignity as individuals rather than drones in one mass movement or another. We have the ability to love, the need to be loved, and the willingness to put our own lives on

the line to protect those King Features we love, and it is in these aspects of ourselves that we can glimpse the face of God. ... I believe that we carry within us a divinely inspired moral imperative to love. ... (Fundamental issues Koontz writes about are) the healing power of love and friendship; the moral superiority of the individual over the workings of the state and large institutions; the relationship of mankind to God; and how we sustain hope in the face of our awareness that all things die.” Faith. Ask yourself: In what? In whom? And why? Then act threatening quality and access to care. To strengthen health care access, we upon that belief. Vote. Susan Hewitt need to continue to improve the system Goodyear we have now, not start over with a new government-controlled one. Rose Montano Phoenix

Health care needs improvement

Editor: Now that we are in the homestretch of the presidential campaigns, we are hearing more about Medicare for All and a government public option. But not enough people are made aware of the fact that a public option system would be one of the top three costliest government programs in our country, just after Medicare and Social Security. How would this government-controlled health insurance system get paid for? It would require a $2,300 payroll tax increase for the average American worker. In exchange, we wouldn’t see improved services, access or quality of care—in fact, quite the opposite. The massive cuts to doctor payments under a public option could lead to more hospital closures—particularly in rural communities where many facilities are already operating in the red—further

How to get a letter published 250 N. Litchfield Road, Ste. 130, Goodyear, AZ 85340 E-mail: editor@westvalleyview.com The West Valley View welcomes letters that express readers’ opinion on current topics. Letters must include the writer’s full name, address (including city) and telephone number. The West Valley View will print the writer’s name and city of residence only. Letters without the requisite identifying information will not be published. Letters are published in the order received, and they are subject to editing. The West Valley View will not publish consumer complaints, form letters, clippings from other publications or poetry. Letters’authors, not the View, are responsible for the “facts” presented in letters. We will not print personal attacks or hateful language. Lengthy letters will be edited for space and grammar. Please do not submit multiple letters on the same topic.


WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Trump will keep us safe Faith, Ledyard & Faith, PLC AT TO R N E Y S

BY REP. DEBBIE LESKO Guest Writer

There is a reason that the Arizona Police Association, the National Association of Police Organizations, the International Union of Police Associations and law enforcement from all over the nation have endorsed President Trump. The brave, hard-working officers who protect our communities know who has their back, and it sure is not Joe Biden and the radical people he has surrounded himself with who have taken over the Democrat Party. Just look at what the Democrat leaders, including Biden, say and believe. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, a main speaker at Biden’s Democrat National Convention said, “People are going to do what they’re going to do,” in response to being asked how she felt about the recent lootings, arson and violence taking place in our cities. The darling of the Progressive FarLeft, New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is serving as a Biden advisor and speaker at the Democrat National Convention, justified the abhorrent actions of the rioters and looters by saying they just needed to “shoplift some bread.” And lest you think that this new strain of dangerous ideology and its actions are reserved for only the likes of Pelosi and AOC, I would like to remind you that Joe Biden, the Democrat candidate for president of the United States, and his vice presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, have both called for cutting funding from the police. Harris even applauded the Los Angeles mayor when he cut $150 million from the police. Even Biden’s Unity Task Force with Bernie Sanders wants to make it easier to prosecute police officers and make it easier for police officers to be personally sued even if they are acting in good faith. The political pandering and cowering to these extremist vandals and rioters are more than just embarrassing—it is dangerous. The progressive left has gone off the deep end, and all we hear is silence from Biden, Harris, Pelosi and Schumer. Does anyone really believe most of these riots taking

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place are just peaceful protests? Will anyone in the Democrat Party stand up and simply say, “What you are doing is wrong!” Apparently not. I mean, what the heck is going on? Do not look to the liberal media to give you the true story. They just keep echoing Democrat talking points that all these riots, lootings and violence are nothing more than “peaceful protests.” That is a lie. In what world are these people living where they think having fewer police officers is going to keep any of us safe? This stuff used to be considered crazy and has now become mainstream in the Democrat Party! You cannot make this stuff up. No one would believe it. But it is real. And it is happening before our very eyes. Thankfully, we have President Donald J. Trump in the White House. President Trump has stood shoulder to shoulder with our law enforcement officers. President Trump is committed to restoring law and order in our country and fighting back against the defund-the-police movement. His commitments make communities like ours safe. We have a clear choice in November between law and order and anarchy. Between safety and fear. Between community and chaos. We must take action and protect our nation and neighborhoods. We must reelect Donald J. Trump. Debbie Lesko represents the 8th Congressional District. She lives in Peoria.

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

Arizona zip codes turn up silver for residents Sealed Vault Bags full of state silver bars are actually being handed over to the first Arizona residents who find their zip code listed in today’s publication and call before the 48 hour order deadline ends to claim the bags full of pure silver NATIONWIDE – Operators at the National Silver Hotline are struggling to keep up with all the calls. That’s because Silver Vault Bags loaded with pure .999 State Silver Bars are now being handed over to everyone who beats the 2-day order deadline. “That’s why Arizona residents will be hoarding all the silver bars they can get their hands on for the next 2 days. This comes as no surprise after the standard State Minimum set by the Federated Mint dropped to the lowest ever for everyone who gets the Silver Vault Bags making them a real steal,” said Mary Ellen Withrow, the emeritus 40th Treasurer of the United States of America. “As executive advisor to the private Federated Mint, I get paid to deliver breaking news. And here’s the best part. This is great news for Arizona residents because it’s the lowest ever State Minimum set by the Federated Mint,” said Withrow. The only thing residents need to do is find the first three digits of their zip code on the Distribution List printed in today’s publication. If their zip code is on the list, they just need to call the National Silver Hotline before the 2-day order deadline ends. And here’s the good news. Residents who do are getting the lowest ever State Minimum set by the Federated Mint of just $290 for each Arizona ■ ARIZONA RESIDENTS CASH IN: Calls are pouring in from state residents who are trying to get their hands on the Jumbo Silver Silver Vault Bag which is just Ballistic Bags pictured above before the deadline ends. That’s because residents who find their zip code printed in today’s publication $29 per bar as long as they call are cashing in on the lowest ever State Minimum price set for the next 2 days by the Federated Mint. the National Silver Hotline at; 1-800-280-2754 EXT. FMM4262 Who gets the Silver Vault Bags: Listed below are the U.S. zip codes that get the Silver Vault Bags. before the deadline ends. If you find the first three digits of your zip code call: 1-800-280-2754 EXT. FMM4262 Phone lines open at precisely 8:30 A.M. this morning and are expected to be flooded by 850 853 856 859 863 865 Arizona residents looking to cash in on the lowest ever State 855 857 860 864 852 Minimum set by the Federated (Continued on next page)


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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

(Continued from previous page)

Mint to date. That’s why area residents who find their zip code on the distribution list today are being urged to call. Since this special advertising announcement can’t stop anyone from buying up all the new 2020 Edition Arizona State Silver Bars they can get their hands on, the Federated Mint has not set a limit of how many Jumbo Silver Ballistic Bags residents can get – these are the bags pictured above that contain 10 individual Silver Vault Bags each. Everyone who gets these will be glad they did. “Residents who want to cash in on the lowest ever State Minimum set by the private Federated Mint better hurry. That’s because after the deadline ends, the State Minimum for these pristine half ounce Arizona State Silver Bars set by the Federated Mint will go up to $50 per bar no matter how many bars people get,” Withrow said. “We’re bracing for all the calls and we’re doing the best we can, but with just hours left before the deadline ends, residents who find the first three digits of their zip code listed in today’s publication need to call the National Silver Hotline,” Withrow said. ■

IMPORTANT INFORMATION: If you find your zip code on the distribution list printed in today’s publication read below then call: 1-800-280-2754 EXT. FMM4262

I keep calling and can’t get through: Keep trying. Right now everyone’s looking to cash in on the lowest State Minimum ever set by the Federated Mint. In fact, we won’t be surprised if thousands of residents order up as many Silver Vault Bags as they can get their hands on before the deadline ends. That’s because the State Minimum set by the Federated Mint has been slashed to the lowest ever at just $29 for each silver half ounce bar for the next 2 days for everyone who gets the vault bags. And since each Silver Vault Bag contains 10 pristine State Silver Bars for just $290 we’re guessing state residents will be claiming two or more bags while they’re up for grabs. But all those who really want to cash in are taking the Jumbo Silver Ballistic Bags containing 100 State Silver Bars before the deadline ends and the State Minimum set by the Federated Mint goes up to $500 per Vault Bag. In fact the State Minimum set by the Federated Mint is reduced even further for those getting the Jumbo Bags so just be sure to ask the National Silver Hotline operator for your discount. So if lines are busy keep trying. How much are the Silver Vault Bags worth: It’s hard to tell how much these Silver Vault Bags could be worth since they are in pristine condition, but those who get in on this now will be glad they did. That’s because the State Minimum set by the Federated Mint goes up to $500 per bag after the deadline ends. So you better believe that at just $290 the Silver Vault bags are a real steal for everyone who beats the deadline. Can I buy one State Silver Bar: Yes. But, the lowest ever State Minimum set by the Federated Mint of just $29 per bar applies only to residents who purchase a Silver Vault Bag(s). That means only those residents who order a Silver Vault Bag(s) or a Jumbo Silver Ballistic Bag get the lowest ever State Minimum set by the Federated Mint. All single bar purchases, orders placed after the 2-day deadline and all non-state residents must pay the $50 per silver half ounce bar. Why is the State Minimum set by the Federated Mint so low now: Thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to get the silver at the lowest ever State Minimum set by the private Federated Mint. Now all residents who find the first three digits of their zip code on the Distribution List above are getting the Silver Vault Bags for themselves and all the solid .999 pure State Silver Bars found inside. The price for each Silver Vault Bag after the deadline ends is set at $500 which is $50 per bar, but residents who beat the 2-day deadline only cover the lowest ever State Minimum set by the Federated Mint of just $290 for each State Silver Vault Bag which is just $29 per bar as long as they call the National Silver Hotline before the deadline ends at: 1-800-280-2754 EXT. FMM4262. Hotlines open at 8:30 A.M. FRONT VIEW

BACK VIEW INDEPENDENCE: 1776 signifies the year America declared independence proclaiming inalienable rights including life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

SIGNIFICANT: Numbered in the order of which the state ratified the Constitution and was admitted into the Union.

HISTORIC 13 STARS: Each star represents one of the original 13 Colonies arranged in a circle to symbolize the perpetuity of the union as depicted in the “Betsy Ross” flag.

■ SILVER HITS ROCK BOTTOM: It ’s g o o d n ews fo r s t a te residents who get the Silver Vault Bags each loaded with 10 solid .999 pure Silver State Bars. That’s because residents are getting the lowest ever State Minimum set by the private Federated Mint as long as they call before the deadline ends.

LOWEST EVER: State Minimum set by the Federated Mint drops to the lowest ever for State Residents.

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FEDERATED MINT, LLC IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS FROM SHIPMENT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED, RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. THIS SAME OFFER MAY BE MADE AVAILABLE AT A LATER DATE OR IN A DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION. OH RESIDENTS ADD 6.5% SALES TAX. FEDERATED MINT P.O. BOX 1200, MASSILLON, OH 44648 ©2020 FEDERATED MINT P7260A-OF21722R-1


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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

For more business visit WestValleyView.com WestValleyView.com

/WestValleyView

Business Briefcase

BY TOM SCANLON

West Valley View Managing Editor

While Business Briefcase is filled with exciting news and tidbits to keep you on the edge of your seat, this one is a real snoozer: On. Sept. 8, one of Arizona’s leading sleep health management providers, Valley Sleep Center, will open its sixth location right here in Goodyear. Similar to the other clinics, this one will focus on sleep studies, diagnosis and treatment of sleep disorders. The snoozy new location will feature six overnight sleep study rooms, each one complete with a private bathroom. It will be in the Cornerstone Medical Center at 13481 W. McDowell, Suite

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New to Goodyear, from left: SpringHill Suites has Sept. 2 grand opening. A Valley Sleep Center is coming Sept. 8. Maia and Douglas Bachmeier are the owners of Homewatch CareGivers of Goodyear. (Photos submitted)

200. Dr. Michael Lepire is the medical director of this new clinic. He received his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Nevada, Reno. He is board certified in pulmonary and sleep medicine and is also a member of the American Academy of Chest Physicians and the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. “So many people struggle with sleep problems,” said Dr. Lepire. “But every person deserves good sleep, every night. Our main goal with all of our locations is to offer a wide range of sleep treatments, and Goodyear will be no exception to this.” If you are having trouble sleeping, are sluggish during the day or if your partner is keeping you awake with truck-horn snores, this is the place. Valley Sleep Center in Goodyear is taking new patients. Appointments can be made by calling 480-830-3900 or online at valleysleepcenter.com. Indeed, all the construction noise from items normally in BB might send you to this place! Speaking of which, we roll on to the usual news: • HCW is unveiling the 88-room SpringHill Suites by Marriott on North Bullard Avenue just off Interstate 10.

A grand opening is scheduled for 5 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2, at 1370 N. Bullard Avenue, Goodyear. This is actually a double grand opening, as this new hotel shares a 3.7-acre lot with the HCW owned TRU by Hilton hotel, which opened in July. “We are thrilled to be opening our second hotel in Goodyear. SpringHill Suites offers a wide array of amenities and larger all-suite rooms, perfect for business and leisure travelers,” said Rick Huffman, HCW president and CEO. The pitch: “SpringHill Suites is a brand of hotels operated by Marriott International. Geared toward the upper-moderate lodging segment of the hospitality industry, the chain consists of all-suite hotels. Amenities include spacious suites, mobile check-in, free Wi-Fi, complimentary breakfast, insuite workspaces, fitness center, 24hour market and airy beds. You can also enjoy a night in at the Springhill Suites with a full selection of handpicked wines, local craft beers and tasty food options.” For more information or a room reservation, call 602-354-9540 or visit springhillsuites.marriott.com. • Homewatch CareGivers recently launched a new office in Goodyear “to meet the increased need for home care

as more locals are seeking alternative senior care options for their loved ones.” The company has more than 200 franchised units across 34 states. Homewatch CareGivers of Goodyear will serve the entire West Valley, including Goodyear, Avondale, Litchfield Park, Peoria and Glendale. Maia and Douglas Bachmeier are the owners of Homewatch CareGivers of Goodyear. “Opening amidst a pandemic was a whirlwind, especially as home care services continue to increase in demand for those who are seeking out alternative care arrangements for their loved ones,” said Maia. “We’ve hired and trained caregivers who believe in our vision and provide the highest quality service with integrity and compassion to our clients.” Homewatch CareGivers of Goodyear provides home care services for loved ones who are seniors and for those living with chronic illnesses, convalescing after illness or surgery or who prefer to age in their own homes under the supervision and care of highly trained caregivers. For more information about Homewatch CareGivers of Goodyear and its assortment of at-home assistive services, visit homewatchcaregivers.com/ goodyear, call 623-471-5404 or email mbachmeier@hwcg.com.


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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

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Buckeye couple lands on ‘Supernanny’ BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Joe and Clarissa Esquivel of Buckeye are on the brink of divorce. His new career as a police officer causes Clarissa to deal with all four rambunctious kids all day long. There’s no balance between their parental obligations, leaving Clarissa feeling isolated. Sounds like a job for ... Supernanny! Starring Jo Frost, new “Supernanny” episodes premiere at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 1, on the Lifetime cable network. This season’s episodes feature families like the Esquivels, who are dealing with quarantine, homeschooling and other added pressure during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to a press release, “Armed with 30 years of experience and strategies, Jo helps parents tackle social and behavioral challenges and everything else that is thrown their way. With a

Jo “Supernanny” Frost drops into the Esquivel family home in Buckeye to help solve their problems on a new episode of the Lifetime cable show. (Photo courtesy Lifetime)

recipe of honest, direct and nurturing support, Jo offers real-life solutions to parents—uplifting families with advice, techniques and tips to iron out the chaos in their lives, helping families evolve.”

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FEATURES

Salt River Project honors dedicated volunteers BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Goodyear resident Brandon Dean, a volunteer with the Boy Scouts of America, was one of five Salt River Project employees honored with the 2020 SRP Presidents’ Volunteer Spirit Awards. “This award embodies SRP’s longstanding commitment to our community. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, SRP’s elected board recognizes and values the organization’s unique role in the community and duty to give back,” said SRP President David Rousseau. “Thousands of SRP employee volunteers can be seen doing wonderful things all around the Valley, giving time to local nonprofits, coordinating donations and volunteering their skills. Award recipients represent the best of SRP, and we are grateful for their selfless efforts to help those in need and

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

build a stronger community.” To honor the five outstanding volunteers, SRP presented checks for $2,500 to their respective nonprofit partners. When Dean, an SRP cyber security analyst, earned the rank of Eagle Scout in 1985, he took an oath to contribute a lifetime of service to the community to repay the generosity that adult volunteers and leaders showed him along the way. Since, he has dedicated 28 years of service to the Boy Scouts of America in three states, guiding and mentoring dozens. Dean said he’s honored to be able to help shape youth into the leaders of tomorrow.

Brandon Dean of Goodyear was honored by the Salt River Project for his dedication to volunteering. (Photo courtesy SRP)

Moving Business Forward 623-932-2260 www.SouthwestValleyChamber.org


WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

GOby FIGURE! Linda Thistle

ANSWERS ON PAGE 21

King Crossword ACROSS 1 Early bird? 4 Said “not guilty” 8 Molt 12 By way of 13 Emanation 14 Rent 15 Work unit 16 Whirl 17 Long-billed wader 18 Sprinter’s device 21 Many millennia 22 Parcel of land 23 Allude (to) 26 Driver’s license datum 27 Foundation 30 Out of control 31 “Oklahoma!” baddie 32 Stead 33 Vat 34 Haw partner 35 Tureen accessory 36 Prohibit

37 Emeril’s shout 38 Extremely exciting 45 Plankton component 46 Love god 47 Dove’s remark 48 Works with 49 New Haven school 50 Choose 51 Not so much 52 Resorts international? 53 “The Matrix” role DOWN 1 Prior nights 2 Encircle 3 Lady -4 Cleric 5 Pea-family plant 6 Ms. Brockovich 7 Hung 8 Half a circus clown’s pair 9 Vagrant 10 -- The Red 11 Dilbert’s worksite

FEATURES

19 Stench 20 Go a few rounds 23 Snitch 24 Ostrich’s cousin 25 Pass (off) 26 Total 27 Auction action 28 Wet wriggler 29 Payable 31 Football garb 32 Genie’s home 34 Chapeau 35 Expires 36 Marching-band section 37 Half of 49-Across’ fight song 38 Booty 39 Otherwise 40 Census statistics 41 Snare 42 PC picture 43 “Unh-unh” 44 Attend

SUDOKU TIME

The idea of Go Figure is to arrive at the figures given at the bottom and right-hand columns of the diagram by following the arithmetic signs in the order they are given (that is, from left to right and top to bottom). Use only the numbers below the diagram to complete its blank squares and use each of the nine numbers only once.

DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK H H H

H Moderate HH Challenging HHH HOO BOY!

EVEN EXCHANGE

by Donna Pettman

19

Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine.

DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK H H

H Moderate HH Challenging HHH HOO BOY!

Each numbered row contains two clues and two answers. The two answers differ from each other by only one letter, which has already been inserted. For example, if you exchange the A from MASTER for an I, you get MISTER. Do not change the order of the letters.

SCRAMBLERS Unscramble the letters within each rectangle to form four ordinary words.

Then rearrange the boxed letters to form the mystery word, which will complete the gag!


20

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

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Avondale’s UTI honored for excellence BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Universal Technical Institute in Avondale made the 2019-20 “Schools of Excellence” list by the Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges (ACCSC), as part of the 2019-20 ACCSC accreditation renewal process. The Schools of Excellence distinction is ACCSC’s highest honor. “The Schools of Excellence award is not something ACCSC gives. It is something schools earn,” according to ACCSC Associate Executive Director Christopher Lambert. “ACCSC is incredibly proud of the work being done by UTI to deliver high-quality educational programs.” UTI-Avondale is one of just 14

ACCSC-accredited institutions across the country to be honored by ACCSC as Schools of Excellence. “We’re honored to be recognized among this premier group of post-secondary institutions,” said Adrian Cordova, president of UTI-Avondale, which provides education in automotive, diesel and welding. “It is especially meaningful this year, as we’ve worked diligently to overcome and innovate amid the challenges of an unprecedented pandemic. I’m so proud of our instructors and the entire campus team for the work they do to support students and prepare them for careers in this vital industry that keeps America moving.” For more information, visit uti.edu.

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UTI-Avondale, which provides education in automotive, diesel and welding, made the “Schools of Excellence” list. (Photo courtesy UTI)

BASIS Goodyear student named National AP Scholar BY WEST VALLEY VIEW STAFF

Raymond Gue, a student at BASIS Goodyear, was stunned to learn he was named a National AP Scholar. This award came after Raymond earned perfect scores on all five of the AP exams he took in May while finishing his sophomore year at BASIS Goodyear. The College Board’s National AP Scholar Award is granted to students in the United States who receive an average score of at least 4 on all AP exams taken, and scores of 4 or higher on eight or more of these exams. The National AP Scholar Award is granted to less than 1% of students nationwide and is the top honor bestowed by the College Board. The exams that Raymond received perfect scores on in 2020 include: AP Calculus, AP European History, AP Biology, AP English Language & Composition, and AP Environmental Science. In a video released on YouTube, Raymond’s brother Matthew predicted Raymond’s success. Raymond thanked his

Raymond Gue learns his perfect scores in five AP exams led to his being named a National AP Scholar. (Photo courtesy Raymon Gue)

teachers and his brother for preparing him to achieve the perfect scores. Raymond’s father, Richard, and BASIS Goodyear environmental science teacher Leslee Briggs both said Raymond’s grandmother played a huge role in his academic life and deserves credit for keeping him on a path to success. Raymond, 15, is now in 11th grade at BASIS Goodyear, a kindergarten through 12th grade charter school in Goodyear that emphasizes college preparedness.


YOUTH

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

Westside Head Start begins all-virtual teaching Catholic Charities Westside Head Start began virtual learning programs last week. To ensure that all students can participate, staff members are delivering supplies to children and families who request them. Westside Head Start serves families in Avondale, Buckeye, El Mirage, Glendale, Goodyear, Littleton, Peoria and Tolleson. Catholic Charities Westside Head Start provides comprehensive early, continuous, year-round childhood education through a holistic approach by working with family members. Programs emphasize pre-reading; language; math; cognitive skills; and health, social and emotional competence to prepare disadvantaged children for school and to maximize their potential for a bright future. “Children of all ages will be dealing with the largest achievement gap in recent history, so we are doing everything we possibly can to ensure kids are getting what they need to continue their development and education, even at this early age,” said WSHS Executive Director Yatin Dua. “Staff is doing all they can to connect parents with the information they will need. If a family doesn’t have a computer or even a phone to connect through Zoom or Skype, staff is dropping off packets, crayons, supplies and more so the kids

can participate.” All staff members are working from home but can go to classrooms at district sites and modular locations to pick up supplies or access technology as needed. CDC protocols for hygiene and safety are strictly enforced. WSHS collaborates with Catholic Charities’ Philanthropy Department and other area agencies to assist families struggling with food insecurity to ensure they continue receiving food boxes generously provided by donors. In addition, the district is working to provide grab-and-go lunches as well. “During normal times, the kids are provided food each day in the classroom, and many families count on that,” Dua said. Dua said no estimate on returning to the classroom has been made. WSHS is monitoring the local guidelines as well as working with national head start to ensure the safest environment possible. Parent, advisory and policy councils will hold meetings virtually. Students and families eligible to enroll in Westside Head Start include expectant mothers, children up to age 5, children with special needs, foster children and homeless children. Enrollment can be done online at catholiccharities.org/all-locations/ youth-development. For more information, call 623-436-9868.

Westside Head Start, which serves families in Avondale, Buckeye, El Mirage, Glendale, Goodyear, Littleton, Peoria and Tolleson, has started virtual learning programs.

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22

CLASSIFIEDS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

OBITUARIES

Robert Allen Bailey Robert Allen Bailey, age 90, of Winchester, California passed away on August 11, 2020 in Winchester, California. Robert retired from Garrett AiResearch in 1991, and was a resident of Arizona for 50 years prior to moving to Winchester, California in 2017. He was born on October 28, 1929 in Kenton, Ohio. Robert is survived by his daughter, Lisa Carrasco and his son Brett Bailey. He is also survived by his four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Services are private at this time.

Sylvia Ann Wallace

Sylvia Ann Wallace, age 85, of Buckeye, AZ passed away on August 15, 2020 in Surprise, AZ. She was born December 21, 1934 in Ellensburg Washington to Edwin and Alexandria Brummer. Sylvia was married to Oren (Bud) Wallace for 54 years and they had four boys. Sylvia was a homemaker when the kids were young and worked for Liberty Elementary School for 20 years. Sylvia loved her family, traveling with her husband Bud, holiday gatherings with her family, camping, and fishing. She loved playing games with her close friends, visiting her sister Dorothy, and family vacations with her sisters and brothers. Sylvia is survived by her sons, Donald Bentz (Jackie), Richard Wallace (Nancy), Roger Wallace (Lynn), Joe Wallace (Kris); her sisters Dorothy Nelson (Bill), Laurette Walker (Tuffy), Xan (Mary) Trowbridge (Ed); her brothers, Toby Brummer, and Bob Brummer( Bonnie), and she is also survived by her nineteen grandchildren and thirty-two great-grandchildren, and 3 great-great-grandchildren. Sylvia is preceded in death by her husband, Oren R. Wallace Jr. Visitation will be from 6:00 to 9:00PM on Wednesday, August 26th at Thompson Funeral Chapel, 926 S. Litchfield Road in Goodyear. A funeral Mass will be held at 11:00AM on Thursday, August 27th at St Thomas Aquinas Church in Avondale followed by burial at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery, 9925 W Thomas Rd, Avondale, AZ 85392. A reception will follow the funeral. The family suggests that donations be made to St. Vincent de Paul or the Hospice of the Valley in lieu of flowers. Condolences for the family can be left at http://www.thompsonfuneralchapel.com/ obituary/sylviaann-wallace/

Funeral Chapel

Sean E. Thompson, Funeral Director Cynthia Thompson, Owner

623-932-1780

email@thompsonfuneralchapel.com

Marcelino Bravo

Ruthie Fay Wood

Parents: Antonio Bravo and Maria Delores Bravo Preceded him in death by his father Antonio Bravo and sister Esperanza Bravo Survived by his son Marcelino Bravo Jr , daughter Angelica Bravo, five grandchildren, nine sisters and three brothers

Ruthie Fay (Karstetter) Wood went home to be with her Lord and Savior on August 15, 2020. She passed away peacefully in her sleep at the age of 95. Ruthie was born on May 16, 1925 to William Fay and Mary Ruth Karstetter, in Gilbert, AZ. Ruthie who spent her life in the Palo Verde - Buckeye area was known to many as mother, grandmother, great and great great grandmother, sister, aunt and friend. She loved her family greatly and enjoyed uncovering the ancestry and history of the family generations. This often involved stopping at libraries, graveyards and county seats during road trips; thus documenting the family's legacy. She loved music and playing the organ at church each week. She shared her joy of the piano with many students, teaching piano lessons more than thirty years. Even last week, she enjoyed giving her great granddaughter a piano lesson. Most of all, Ruthie loved her lord and savior, Jesus Christ. Each day she spent time in God's word, prayed faithfully for her family, and shared her faith with all who were willing to listen. Those around her have been blessed by her faithful walk with the Lord. She is survived by sons Tom Wood (Ilene), Tim Wood (Jana), Robert Wood (Jan), Reuben Wood (Carrie) and daughter Nelda Joy (James), many grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great great grandchildren, as well as many nieces and nephews and a sister Kathleen (Karstetter) Bruehl. Ruthie was proceeded in death by her husband John Wood, son John Christopher Wood and siblings Alfred Karstetter, Verna (Karstetter) Martin, Wilmer Karstetter, Jeannie (Karstetter) Campbell and Garland Karstetter. Services will be held Friday Morning August 21, 2020 at 9:00 am at the Palo Verde Baptist Church. In Lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to Interlink Ministries PO Box 460 Apple Creek, OH 44606. Her Grandson and wife, Ryan and Rachel Joy, missionaries in Brazil serving in missionary aviation. A funeral service will be held from 9:00 AM to 11:30 AM on 2020-08-21 at Palo Verde Baptist Church, 29600 West Old Highway 80, Palo Verde, AZ, USA.

Sommer Pahl

Sommer Pahl passed away unexpectedly on August 15, 2020 in Goodyear, AZ. Sommer was a Registered Nurse and Clinical Coordinator at the Abrazo Buckeye Emergency Center and a Clinical Nursing Instructor at Estrella Mountain Community College. Her vibrant personality and compassionate nature made Sommer a great leader and patient advocate. Her laugh and smile were magnetic, contagious, and lit up any room that she entered. She had the most beautiful Sunflower hazel eyes.Sommer had a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing, Master of Science Degree in Organizational Leadership, as well as Certified Emergency and Trauma Nurse certifications. When not at work, Sommer enjoyed spending time with her family that she loved with all of her heart. This included sleepovers and trips to Disneyland with her three grandchildren, family pool parties, and getaways to Las Vegas with her husband.Sommer is survived by her mother Mary Toole, husband Ed Pahl, daughters Kasie Barclay and Allison Phillips and brother Brian Krotky. Sommer is also survived by her three wonderful grandchildren, Alanna, Scarlet, and Riley. She had a wonderful work family that inspired her on a daily basis. She loved her Abrazo family and shared in their triumphs and tragedies. Sommer is preceded in death by her father Ronald Krotky and beautiful son Kyle Dickens. The family takes comfort in knowing that the pain suffered from the loss of her son is relieved as they are now reunited. Due to the Covid 19 Pandemic, the family will be holding a private family service in their home on Sommer's birthday. A public Celebration of Life is being planned for a later date as the pandemic restrictions allow. The family understands that Sommer was loved by many people and wants to be able to celebrate together safely. Condolences for the family can be left at http://www.thompsonfuneralchapel.com/ obituary/sommer-pahl/

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WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

OBITUARIES

Shirley Rae Johnson Shirley R. Johnson from Sun City passed away on August 9th, 2020 at the age of 94. Shirley was born in Tenstrike, Minnesota and moved to Arizona in 1942 where she was a long time resident of the Avondale/Tolleson area. She retired from Agua Fria H.S. where she served as the front desk telephone receptionist. She was very active in her church and community, always of service to others. The highlight of her life was her family where she was a devoted wife, mother of three, grandmother of 10, great grandmother of 24 and great great grandmother to 8. Her family, extended family and host of many friends will miss her sorely. Shirley is survived by her daughters Arlene Ruble, Lynette Pack (Joedy), DIL Kathy Johnson and above mentioned Grands. She was pre-deceased by her husband Clarence Johnson and son Donald Johnson. Private services were held August 22nd with interment at Holy Cross Cemetary. Memorial donations may be made to Celebration Lutheran Church, 8726 W. Olive Ave., Peoria. AZ. 85345. Condolences may be shared at www.menkefuneralhome.com.

Need help writing an obituary? We have articles that will help guide you through the process. Deadline for obituaries is Thursday at 5pm for Wednesday. All obituaries will be approved by our staff prior to being activated. Be aware there may be early deadlines around holidays.

Call 623-535-8439 Mon-Fri 8:30-5 if you have questions. Visit: obituaries.WestValleyView.com

23

Classifieds West Valley View 1050 E. Riley Dr., Avondale, AZ 85323

EMPLOYMENT Residential remolding, looking for general contracting skilled labored employees, call 623-707-3590 Avondale based HVAC contractor, looking for fulltime HVAC technician. Diagnose/clean/maintain HVAC equipment as directed. Wage commensurate with experience. email: kdoglasmax@gmail.com

AIRES is looking for caring, capable and compassionate people! Our mission is to help people live happy, healthy & fulfilling lives.

Hiring Caregivers, Program Leads and Managers. Offering additional incentive pay through August 31st in the West Valley. Paid training provided. Must be 21+yrs, w/ good driving record & reliable transportation. Apply at www.aires.org or visit us at 2140 W. Greenway Rd, Ste 140, Phoenix.

623.535.VIEW (8439) • Deadlines

EMPLOYMENT Immediate Openings for Direct Support Professionals working with individuals with developmental disabilities. $12.00 - $13.00/hr, paid training, benefits, FT & PT hours avail. Apply online at www.aztec1.org or in person M-F 8:00a-3:30p at AZTEC, 7400 W. Olive, Ste. 24. 623-412-2888 or EOE.

Reputable feed mill in Buckeye looking for a Full time bagging machine operator. Will need to be able to lift 50 lbs. stack bags and keep track of count. Forklift experience is plus. Full benefits offered along with 401k. We are ESOP employer. Candidates are welcome to apply online at www.westernmilling.com at the careers center. Walk ins are welcome. Face masks required. Apply at 29700 W. Lower Buckeye Rd. Buckeye 602-251-3600

EMPLOYMENT

Classifieds: Friday 4pm for Wednesday

HANDYMAN

HOMES FOR RENT

JOEL Cedillo- I do construction work! Concrete, Block, Stucco, Bobcat work, Haulaway, Demolition. Call for free estimates, 623-707-6072.

Home for Rent, in Rancho Sante Fe, 2,000 sq. ft. home, 3 bedroom, den, 2 baths, kitchen, 2 living rooms, laundry room, 2 car garage. Call 623-6067852

*Not A Licensed Contractor

HANDYMAN - 37 years experience. Drywall, framing, plumbing, painting, electrical, roofing and more. Stan 602-434-6057

LANDSCAPING SERVICES O.N.B. Specializes in landscaping and trimming. Also Concrete: patios, driveways, sidewalks, additions and more. Free estimates. 623-249-0610 - Robert Residential/Commercial. West Valley View CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 623-535-8439

WANTED TO BUY $100-$500+ Cash for Junk Cars all "as is" autos! Good condition more $$$$. Best Prices! Fast, free pickup. 623-329-2043

West Valley View CLASSIFIEDS Make your ad stand out! Add Color! Call 623-535-8439

WANTED TO BUY

H COLLECTOR BUYING H

European & American Classic Cars

(All Models, Any Condition,Including Barn Finds)

CALL ROY

H 602-810-2179

RECREATION CENTERS OF SUN CITY WEST EMPLOYMENT

VALLEYLIFE is a non-profit organization that provides programs and services to men, women, and children with developmental disabilities.

Full Time and Part Time Caregivers Needed!

Must have reliable transportation We are currently looking for caregivers to work in group homes throughout Glendale, Phoenix, Peoria and Scottsdale. Must pass background check.

Please apply at www.valleylifeaz.org

GREENSKEEPERS - $13.08 p/h, FT/PT with benefits Manual labor. Must be able to communicate in English, work weekends and OT. Previous golf exp. preferred. LANDSCAPE WORKER - FT Mon-Fri $12.25/hour with benefits. Plan, care and maintain recreational grounds for the community; including trimming, weeding, raking and water plants. Experienced in use of small power tools and lawn maintenance equipment. Apply online/view more jobs: employment.suncitywest.com or at Human Resources, 19803 N. R. H. Johnson Blvd, Sun City West, AZ 85375. The above positions include golf when availability is open. All positions must be able to communicate in English. All positions are open until filled. EOE

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MERCEDES

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24

CLASSIFIEDS PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF SALE OF MOBILE HOME NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following item of personal property will be sold at public sale to the highest bidder, to satisfy a landlord's lien: Mobile Home Make: TRAVELEZE Body Style: 8 X 35 Model Year: 1968 VIN: S18109 Date and Time of Sale: 9/9/2020 10:00AM Location of Sale: Space No. 604 HOLIDAY VILLAGE 701 S DOBSON ROAD MESA, AZ 85202 Name of landlord: HOLIDAY MHC, LP DBA HOLIDAY VILLAGE Amount of Claimed Lien: $1392.00 as of September 9, 2020 The Landlord reserves the right to bid at said sale and if its bid is the highest, to purchase said mobile home. The Landlord claims a lien against this property in the amount shown above as of the date shown above, for rents and other charges which have accrued through that date under a rental agreement covering the space occupied by the mobile home. The rental agreement giving rise to this lien was entered into by the Landlord and the following parties, owners of the mobile home, as tenants: Date of Rental Agreement: 7/11/2019 Name(s) of Tenant(s): Tammy North Owner of Record: Tammy Lynne North Said mobile home is located at the address shown above as the location of sale. The above described property shall be offered for sale pursuant to A.R.S. �33-1023. The proceeds from the sale will be applied to the cost of sale and to the lien, and any money that remains will be disposed of as provided in A.R.S. �33-1023. HOLIDAY MHC, LP DBA HOLIDAY VILLAGE By: Cecilia A. Prendergast Title Administrator Dated: August 19, 2020 August 26, 2020 Published: West Valley View Aug 19, 26, 2020 / 32433

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

AZCANS

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

39 ACRE SELF SUFFICIENCY HOMESTEAD $182 MONTH - Outstanding buy on quiet - secluded off grid northern Arizona homestead at cool clear 5,800’ elev. Entirely useable grassy meadowland with sweeping views of surrounding red rock ridges. Situated within a secluded valley location surrounded by thousands of acres of uninhabited wilderness. Bordered by 1,280 acres of uninhabited State Trust land. Free well water access, rich loam garden soil, and ideal year round climate. No urban noise and dark sky nights. Zoned for livestock. Camping and RV use ok. Maintained road access. On special at $19,900, $1,990 dn. with no qualifying seller financing. Free brochure with similar property descriptions, photos/terrain maps/ weather data/ nearby pioneer town info. 1st United Realty 1-800966-6690. (AzCAN)

INVITATION TO BID Bids Due: October 1, 2020 – 10:00A Project: Tiger Mountain Drive (Victory Phase 6) CFD Civil Improvements

INVITATION TO BID Bids Due: October 1, 2020 – 10:00AM Project: Tuthill (Acacia) Ph1 Path & Trail CFD Landscape

Verrado ARC, LLC seeks qualified General Contractors, with a minimum A- General Engineering license, to submit sealed bids for the Tiger Mountain Drive (Victory Phase 6) CFD Civil Improvements which consists of, but is not limited to storm drain, concrete, paving, street lights (excluding conduit between poles), signage & striping in accordance with the plans and specifications (the “Work”). The Successful Contractor shall be responsible for all coordination associated with the Work. Copies of the plans, specifications, bid documents and detailed information for this project will be available on August 21, 2020. All interested parties should contact Deana Burris at dburris@dmbinc.com to make arrangements to receive the bid documents electronically. Please reference the project name listed above in the email subject. The MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on September 2, 2020 at 10:00AM Arizona Time. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the pre-bid meeting will be held via Zoom call. A meeting invitation will be sent to all interested parties. Sealed bids will be received until 10:00AM Arizona Time on October 1, 2020 at the DMB Verrado Offices – 4236 N. Verrado Way Suite A200, Buckeye, AZ 85396. Bids submitted after 10:00AM will not be accepted. Bids will be opened privately but read aloud at 10:05AM via Zoom call. A meeting invitation will be sent to all interested parties. Unless all bids are rejected, the Contract will be awarded within twenty one (21) days. The Contract will be awarded to the lowest qualified bidder that submits a complete and accurate bid. A complete and accurate bid will include all information requested in the bid documents. Every bid made by a Contractor pursuant to this Notice shall be accompanied by a surety bond for ten percent (10%) of the bid amount, listing Verrado ARC, LLC as the Obligee, as a guarantee that the Contractor will enter into a contract to perform the Work, or as liquidated damages in the event the Contractor refuses or fails to enter into the Contract with Verrado ARC, LLC upon award. Cashiers checks will not be accepted. The bonds will be returned to all Contractors whose bids are not awarded the Contract, and to the successful Contractor, upon execution of the Contract, and receipt of Payment and Performance bonds for the Work. The cost for providing Payment and Performance bonds shall be included in the bid submittal. A Payment and Performance bond will be required in the amount of 100% of the original Contract value for the duration of the Contract. All bidders shall be required to submit, with their bid proposal, a completed Certificate of Insurance evidencing their ability to meet the insurance requirements for this project. The Contractor shall carry property damage and public liability insurance and shall hold and save harmless Verrado ARC, LLC, DMB White Tank, LLC, the City of Buckeye and the Verrado District 1 Community Facilities District from any employer’s liability and from any and all liens for materials or labor in connection with this Work as specified in the bid documents. Any bids submitted without the bid bond, certificate of insurance and any other items as required in the bid documents will be deemed incomplete, and will be rejected. Verrado ARC, LLC reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to withhold the award for any reason Verrado ARC, LLC determines necessary and appropriate. Award of the successful bid shall be subject to approval by Verrado ARC, LLC or its representatives. Interested parties shall refer to the bid package and addendums for further information, or contact Deana Burris at dburris@dmbinc.com – reference Tiger Mountain Drive (Victory Phase 6) CFD Civils. No engineer’s estimate will be distributed. Published: West Valley View / Business Aug. 19, 26, 2020 / 32598

Verrado ARC, LLC seeks qualified General Contractors, with a minimum CR-21 Landscaping and Irrigation Systems license, to submit sealed bids for the Tuthill (Acacia) Ph1 Path & Trail CFD Landscape, which consists of, but is not limited to all work associated with installation of the landscape in accordance with the plans and specifications (the “Work”). The Successful Contractor shall be responsible for all coordination associated with the Work. Copies of the plans, specifications, bid documents and detailed information for this project will be available on August 21, 2020. All interested parties should contact Deana Burris at dburris@dmbinc.com to make arrangements to receive the bid documents electronically. Please reference the project name listed above in the email subject. The MANDATORY pre-bid meeting will be held on September 2, 2020 at 11:00AM Arizona Time. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the pre-bid meeting will be held via Zoom call. A meeting invitation will be sent to all interested parties. Sealed bids will be received until 10:00AM Arizona Time on October 1, 2020 at the DMB Verrado Offices – 4236 N. Verrado Way Suite A200, Buckeye, AZ 85396. Bids submitted after 10:00AM will not be accepted. Bids will be opened privately but read aloud at 10:30AM via Zoom call. A meeting invitation will be sent to all interested parties. Unless all bids are rejected, the Contract will be awarded within twenty one (21) days. The Contract will be awarded to the lowest qualified bidder that submits a complete and accurate bid. A complete and accurate bid will include all information requested in the bid documents. Every bid made by a Contractor pursuant to this Notice shall be accompanied by a surety bond for ten percent (10%) of the bid amount, listing Verrado ARC, LLC as the Obligee, as a guarantee that the Contractor will enter into a contract to perform the Work, or as liquidated damages in the event the Contractor refuses or fails to enter into the Contract with Verrado ARC, LLC upon award. Cashiers checks will not be accepted. The bonds will be returned to all Contractors whose bids are not awarded the Contract, and to the successful Contractor, upon execution of the Contract, and receipt of Payment and Performance bonds for the Work. The cost for providing Payment and Performance bonds shall be included in the bid submittal. A Payment and Performance bond will be required in the amount of 100% of the original Contract value for the duration of the Contract. All bidders shall be required to submit, with their bid proposal, a completed Certificate of Insurance evidencing their ability to meet the insurance requirements for this project. The Contractor shall carry property damage and public liability insurance and shall hold and save harmless Verrado ARC, LLC, DMB White Tank, LLC, the City of Buckeye and the Verrado District 1 Community Facilities District from any employer’s liability and from any and all liens for materials or labor in connection with this Work as specified in the bid documents. Any bids submitted without the bid bond, certificate of insurance and any other items as required in the bid documents will be deemed incomplete, and will be rejected. Verrado ARC, LLC reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to withhold the award for any reason Verrado ARC, LLC determines necessary and appropriate. Award of the successful bid shall be subject to approval by Verrado ARC, LLC or its representatives. Interested parties shall refer to the bid package and addendums for further information, or contact Deana Burris at dburris@dmbinc.com – reference Tuthill (Acacia) Ph1 Path & Trail CFD Landscape. No engineer’s estimate will be distributed. Published: West Valley View / Business Aug. 19, 26, 2020 / 32600

WEEKLY DEADLINES for the View Classifieds is

FRIDAY AT 1 PM

623.535.VIEW (8439)

CITY OF TOLLESON PUBLIC NOTICE CITY COUNCIL MEMBER VACANCY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City of Tolleson Mayor and Council are seeking candidates to serve as a member of the City of Tolleson City Council. The member selected and ultimately appointed by the City Council must be eighteen years of age or older, must be a qualified elector residing within the City of Tolleson and has resided in the City of Tolleson for the last year or longer. Please keep in mind, due to the postal service, many residents in Phoenix may have a Tolleson mailing address; so they do not reside in Tolleson. The Tolleson Boundary Map is included for your reference in the City Council Vacancy Application that is available online at www.tolleson.az.gov, under the City Clerk section. The City that provides your utility services is the City you reside in. The partial term of office will expire at the first regular Council Meeting in December 2022. If interested in serving the community as a member of the Tolleson City Council, please submit your application, letter of interest and resume to the City Clerk’s Office at cityclerk@tolleson.az.gov by 5:00 P.M. (local time, Phoenix, AZ) on Tuesday, September 15, 2020. We thank you for your interest and willingness to serve the community of Tolleson. Published in the West Valley View and West Valley Business on Wednesday, August 26, 2020 / 32587

WEST Valley View

LEGAL ADS Submit your notice to:

legals@westvalleyview.com Questions? Elaine 623-535-8439


CLASSIFIEDS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

623.535.VIEW WEST VALLEY BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY

AS LOW AS $45 PER ISSUE

AZCANS

DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 866932-4184 (AzCAN)

LOOKING for an affordable 62+ senior apartment? Superior Arboretum Apartments, immediate occupancy, one bedroom & studios, on-site laundry & utility allowance. Rent based on Income Guidelines. 199 W. Gray Dr., Superior, AZ. Call 1-866962-4804, www.ncr.org/superiorarboretum. Equal Housing Opportunity. Wheelchair Accessible. (AzCAN) OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 866-397-4003 (AzCAN) SAVE BIG on HOME INSURANCE! Compare 20 Arated insurances companies. Get a quote within minutes. Average savings of $444/year! Call 855-6027212! (M-F 8am-8pm Central) (AzCAN) DIRECTV - Switch and Save! $49.99/month. Select All-Included Package. 155 Channels. 1000s of Shows/Movies On Demand. FREE Genie HD DVR Upgrade. Premium movie channels, FREE for 3 mos! Call 1844-244-7498 (AzCAN) TRAIN ONLINE TO DO MEDICAL BILLING! Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get Trained, Certified & ready to work in months! Call 866459-5480. (M-F 8am-6pm ET) (AzCAN) COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Grants and Scholarships available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! 855-626-7941 (M-F 8am-6pm ET) (AzCAN)

AIR CONDITIONING

AUTO SERVICES

100-$500+ ABANDONED CARS All “As Is” Autos!

CONCRETE / MASONRY

GARAGE DOOR/ SERVICES 15 Years in Business and Still A+

$

25 OFF $

A/C Repair! COUPON REQUIRED

★ Emergency Service ★ ALL Makes & Models ★ FREE Quotes for New Units ★ Financing Available ★ Local Family Owned Business ★ Friendly Service Every Time!

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Avondale Garage Doors Inc. PATIOS, WALKWAYS, DRIVEWAYS, RV PARKING COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL CONCRETE DEMOLITION & PLACEMENT SPECIALTY CONCRETE FREE ESTIMATES

ROC Lic. #K-09 149540 • Insured • References Available

Office 623-872-7622 CONTRACTORS RESIDENTIAL

Good Condition = More $$$ Best Prices! Fast, free pickup!

BUILDINGS

PATIOS

DECKS ROOM ADDITIONS

623-329-2043

BOB PARRA • 602-384-4014

APPLIANCE SERVICES

CARPET CLEANING/ REPAIR

ELECTRICAL

Appliance Repair Now

COOPER’S CARPET CLEANING TILE & GROUT

www.acexpertek.com

If It’s Broken, We Can Fix It!

• Same Day Service • On-Site Repairs • Servicing All Major Brands • Quality Guaranteed

We Also Buy, Sell & Trade Used Appliances Working or Not

480-659-1400 Licensed & Insured

37 Years Experience OwnerOperator

ROC#328209 BONDED

We do it RIGHT the first time! Electric & Solar

602-510-1529

allstarelectricaz.com ROC#321507 Licensed, Bonded & Insured

ELECTRICAL

Appliance Repair 4 Less

SUPERCHARGED

623-872-8552

Indoor/Outdoor Lighting Spa Circuits Panel Replacement/ Upgrade

Mention this ad: Buy One Window Replacement Get the Second -1/2 OFF* Residential • Commercial Family Owned & Operated In Arizona Since 1977 www.demersglass.com

Bonded • Insured • Licensed AvondaleGarageDoors.com ROC#198687

623.466.3712

GARAGE DOOR/ SERVICES

(623) 878-1180

*Equal or lesser value of materials ONLY

ROC# CR65 090690D

HANDYMAN Professional Handyman Over 25 Years Construction Experience

Garage Doors

Repair • Service • Installation Family Owned & Operated

623.556.8378

Same Day Service & Free Estimates Licensed, Bonded & Insured ROC #289066

GARAGE DOOR/ SERVICES

WHY PAY MORE? Mike 714-742-4527 Not a licensed contractor

LANDSCAPING David P. Nunamacher

• Service & Installation • Door Off Track • Routine Maintenance • Licensed, Bonded & Insured • Valley Wide Service 24/7 • Hablo Español ROC# 319202

Horticultural Consultant

Professional Advice On: Lawns, Shrubs, Trees, Citrus Trees, Palm Trees and Orchids

BROKEN SPRINGS

623-225-1930

www.azbestgaragedoors.com

Call or Text to: 602-677-0483

CONTRACTORS

Ceiling Fans Troubleshooting/ Inspection Repairs Remodels/Additions

623-546-7714

Family - Owned and Operated LICENSED ROC#181530 BONDED • INSURED www.superchargedelectric.com

CLEANING

GARAGE DOOR/ SERVICES

Commercial & Residential Housecleaning

Licensed • Bonded • Insured

Broken Springs Replaced

FREE ESTIMATES

Family Owned & Operated Same Day Service Free Trip Charge with Repair

Call Today/Clean Today

New Doors & Openers Sales/Service/Installations/Repairs

Licensed/Bonded/Insured

ROC# 299652

www.pnponecarecleaning.com

602.550.7732

“We’ll work together to make your dream project come true.” Featured in Architectural Digest and Phoenix Home & Garden • Local, family owned West Valley commercial / residential custom builders for over 40 years • Specializing in up to date architectural designs • Provides innovative and high quality products and services

appliancerepair4less.biz

623-208-4613

Don’t let your broken panes... Break your bank!!!

ELECTRIC

Carpet, Tile-Grout, & Air Duct Cleaning

Check OUR website for all major brands

GLASS SERVICES

FOR ALL YOUR ELECTRICAL NEEDS COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL

25% OFF Repa

Brands We Service: • Sub-Zero • Whirlpool • GE • Maytag • Amana • Kitchen Aide • LG • Samsung

LOW PRICES!

20 YEARS IN BUSINESS | FREE ESTIMATES

APPLIANCE SERVICES

ir Labor We Repair: • Refrigerators • Freezers • Icemakers • Dryers • Washers • Ovens • Ranges • Stoves • Dishwashers • and much more

Fix & Replace

Garage Doors & Openers

COMMERCIAL

HOMES

KITCHENS

432 N. Litchfield Rd. Unit 300. Showroom & Parts Store

25

623-512-6194

• Superb customer service from start to finish

Call for further information regarding our services

623-824-4481 OR 602-540-4940

stacy@romackbuilders.com | john@romackbuilders.com LICENSED - CONTRACTED - BONDED • ROC 054363


26

CLASSIFIEDS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

623.535.VIEW WEST VALLEY BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY AIR CONDITIONING

LANDSCAPING

PAINTING

PEST CONTROL

Lawn Care

BRANDENBURG PAINTING Interior & Exterior

Termite•Pest•Pigeon Pro’s

• Tree Trimming

• Weed Removal/Spray • One-Time Cleanup

Specializing in LARGE TREE TRIMMING Antonio or Laura 623.206.3403

*FREE SECOND OPINIONS *EMERGENCY SERVICE *ALL MAKES & MODELS

VISTA VISTA VISTA

623-932-1674

Landscape Maintenance Services * Irrigation system and repairs (Valves, drip, timers, & sprinklers) * Pavers * Artificial grass * Malibu lights * Maintenance, general clean-ups & hauling * House painting, interior & exterior AND MUCH MORE. CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE.

Weekly, Biweekly, Monthly & Quarterly Residential & Commercial, Big Properties Not a licensed contractor

• Tree, Bushes & Palm Trimming • Weed Removal, Spray • Tree & Tree Stump Removal • General Cleaning • Landscape Maintenance • All Type Garbage Removal

Pavers. Artificial Grass. Putting Greens Fireplaces. Outdoor Kitchens. Curbing. Custom Landscaping and Hardscaping Concrete. Walls. Irrigation and Repairs Pavers • ArtifiInstallation cial Retaining Grass • Putting Greens Fireplaces. Outdoor Curbing. Tree• and PlantKitchens. Installation Concrete Retaining Walls Fireplaces Irrigation Installation and• Repairs Outdoor • Cubring E FRE Tree andKitchens Plant Installation ST E Licensed-Bonded-Insured Irrigation Installation and Repairs IMATES ROC#202397. ROC#219652 TreeLicensed-Bonded-Insured and Plant Installation

623-308-2801

D:(623)670-0080 D:(623)670-0080 D:(623)670-0080 O:(623)536-8275 O:(623)536-8275

ROC#202397. ROC#219652

deserttree.az@gmail.com INSURED

O:(623)536-8275 Licensed - Bonded - Insured • ROC#202397 ROC#219652

RESIDENTIAL SPECIALISTS FOR ALL YOUR INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PROJECTS

• • • • • •

Tree Trimming •Mowing & Edging Sprinkler Systems - Install & Repair Landscape Renovations General Clean Up • Weed Control Lighting • Concrete • Pavers Plant & Tree Installation

9

▲▲

▲▲▲▲▲▲▲▲ ▲ ▲▲ ▲

E ★★C

11126 W. Wisconsin Ave, #5 - Youngtown For Discount Coupons Visit www.AlbrechtandSon.com Licensed/Bonded/Insured Limited Liability Corp • ROC #155822 KB02

▲▲▲▲▲▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲

▲ ▲▲ ▲

623-933-4312

• In-Home care service for your loved ones • On Call 24/7 Customized Care • Experienced Staff • RN Supervised • Serving the Greater Phoenix West

623.547.7521

Listed HOA/PORA

L&M PEST & WEED CONTROL 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

“A Passion for Caring”

www.acompassionatehomecare.com

• Water Treatment Specialists • Residential & Commercial • Water Heaters Sr & Military Discount • Slab Leaks FREE Water Heater Flush with Service call. Valley Wide Service

623-386-0710

www.1buckeyeplumbing.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured ROC Lic #138051

PLUMBING

Jack Pacheco

The Bug Stops Here

The most experienced and compassionate home care service in the West!

623-293-7095 623-293-7095

Buckeye Plumbing

Free Estimates Jack Pacheco

PEST CONTROL

G ★▲▲▲▲▲▲

8 CE 19

Licensed • Bonded • Insured

Veteran Owned

HOA REPAINT REPAINT SPECIALIST HOA SPECIALIST HOA REPAINT SPECIALIST ROC#302675 ROC#302675 •• Fully Fully Insured Insured jppaintpros445@gmail.com jppaintpros445@gmail.com

MEDICAL SERVICES N

S

IN

ROC 233444 Licensed • Bonded • Insured

We’Wree’ only a call away !

602-422-3648 602-422-3648

YEARS

Senior Citizen Discount 20 Years Experience

License #ROC209589

623-385-9580

PLUMBING

Your West Valley Plumber

Mike (623) 764-1294

B R AT L E ▲▲▲▲ I

Your Custom Remodeling Specialist For All Your Home Improvement Needs!

Quality Attention to Every Detail

References Available

includes labor

Lic# 4147

For All Your Plumbing Needs

We’re on A-CALL A-CALL aa cacallllreawawonayaylyly PAINTING

Weekly Year Round Service! No job too big or too small

Painting, Remodeling and Construction

Serving Arizona Since 1976 • Locally Owned & Operated

FREE ESTIMATES POWER WASH • WINDOW CLEANING • CABINETS DRYWALL REPAIR • ACOUSTIC CEILINGS BRUSH / ROLL / SPRAY • INTERIOR / EXTERIOR brushstrokepaintingllc@gmail.com MOBILE: Licensed, Bonded & Insured ROC #170982

585 Unclog Drains from $ 4400 $

Senior Citizen Discount

MIKE MORAN PLUMBING LLC

602-722-7696

Water Heaters from

FREE Estimates • Service/Repair

ERIC SAUNDERS

BRUSH STROKE PAINTING

Mike’s Lawn Service LLC

Not a licensed contractor

Kitchen & Bathroom • Designer Showroom

Lic. • Bonded

REPAINT SPECIALIST (HOA) EPOXY GARAGE FLOORS (CHIPS) CABINETS REFINISHED

Total Care Plumbing LLC

Remodels • Repairs Leaks • Toilets Water Softeners Gas • Sink/Faucets

ROC #328924

Interior Exterior

PAINTING

Serving the West Valley Since 1990

▲▲ ▲

PEST CONTROL

LANDSCAPING

REMODELING

▲ ▲▲ ▲

PAINTING

PLUMBING

Same Great Service! Pavers. Artificial Grass. Putting Greens

30

623-869-7378

PAINTING

Same Owners, Same Service! Custom Landscaping andGreat Hardscaping Concrete. Retaining Walls.

ALBRECHT AND SON

Bonded & Insured - ROC #123818

LANDSCAPING

Custom Landscaping and Hardscaping Same Owners, formerly Flatiron Landscape

RESIDENTIAL SPECIALISTS FOR ALL YOUR INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PROJECTS

Lic. 8166 BC / Est. 1981

Jorge Ruiz • jorgeruizpaint@yahoo.com

OSCAR LOPEZ

stonecreek-az.com

WINTER BROS PESTS, inc.

800-284-2392 602-275-4888 www.biochemexterminating.com

Same Owners, Same Great Service!

stonecreek-az.com stonecreek-az.com

FREE Quotes, Family Co. All phases of PEST control.

602-680-7263

LANDSCAPING

(Call/Text)

Disinfectant, Sanitize, and Vircuide Available

Uriel 623-297-0114 Uriel 623-297-0114 Uriel623-297-0114 623-297-0114 Uriel 623-297-0114 Uriel

vistadelsollandscape@q.com vistadelsollandscape@q.com vistadelsollandscape@q.com vistadelsollandscape@q.com

A+ REPAIR-SERVICE-UPGRADE

PLUMBING

Residential, Commercial & Industrial Customers

Irrigation Install Install && Repairs Repairs Irrigation Irrigation Install Install Repairs Irrigation Pavers&& Repairs Pavers Pavers Pavers Outdoor Lighting Outdoor Lighting Outdoor Lighting Outdoor Lighting Arbor Care/Cleanups Arbor Care/Cleanups Arbor Care/Cleanups Care/Cleanups Arbor

www.airNOWac.com

623.910.0742

Insured&&Bonded Bonded Insured Insured Bonded Insured &&Bonded ROC#230926 ROC#230926 ROC#230926 ROC#230926

DEL DEL DEL DEL SOL SOL SOL SOL LANDSCAPE LANDSCAPE LANDSCAPE LANDSCAPE

FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED WESTSIDE BUSINESS LICENSED ROC#313262-BONDED-INSURED “World Class Service - Hometown Feel”

602.301.3429

623-972-9150 623-695-3390

CALL BOB

LANDSCAPING

**FREE QUOTES ON NEW EQUIPMENT** “FINANCING AVAILABLE”

LANDSCAPING Landscape

FREE ESTIMATES

AS LOW AS $45 PER ISSUE

• Fleas / Ticks • Bed Bugs • Roaches • Weed and Turf control • 6 month guarantee • Residential / Commercial

Our Goal is not to be the Biggest – Just the best!

MITCH STEVENS OWNER-OPERATOR

A REFERRAL IS THE BEST COMPLIMENT

Bus: 623 932 4168 Cell: 623 810 6035 Lic. #8555 ld.lmpest@yahoo.com

NO CONTRACTS • PAYMENT PLANS

55

$

DRAIN CLEANING with Plumbing Inspection

Senior & Military Discounts

For All Plumbing Repairs

623-299-2637 Licensed • Bonded • Insured ROC#216918 • 216982


CLASSIFIEDS

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

623.535.VIEW WEST VALLEY BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY ROOFING

POOL SERVICES

ROOFING

ROOFING

Dobash

TRIPLE “R”

Estrella Custom Designs

New Roofs & Reroofs

Almeida Roofing Inc.

Painting & More

All Types of Roofing

Quality Plumbing with Quality Service

REPAIR • REMODEL WATER/SEWER/GAS WATER HEATERS REMOVE & REPLACE

Your leaks stop here! New Roofs, Repairs, Coatings, Flat Roof, Hot Mopping & Patching & Total Rubber Roof Systems

30 Years Experience References Available

Licensed Bonded Insured ROC 286561

Senior & Military Discounts

623-522-9322

COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED Lic# C37R122566 L37-122567

PLUMBING

Honest Locally Integrity & Veteran Value Owned

FREE SERVICE CALL

Water Heaters • Drain Cleaning • Faucets/Sinks • Slab Leaks Water Softeners • Toilets • Garbage Disposals

SENIOR DISCOUNTS • MILITARY DISCOUNTS

49.95

Remodel All Repairs Cleaning SVC

24 Hr. Service Plumbing Service & Repair Sewer & Drain Cleaning Free Estimates Free Plumbing Inspection

623-322-9100

623-935-9221

triplerpool@gmail.com

Built Stronger to Last Longer

REMODELING

125 OFF

$

Water Heater Flush

Water Heater Install

Call for details. Some restrictions may apply. Exp 09/30/20

Call for details. Some restrictions may apply. Exp 09/30/20

All Complete Pool Remodeling

480-299-0113

623-688-5243 www.theplumberguy.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured ROC 185143, 192987

www.aeandsons.com

623-418-9941 602-505-8066 Cell

Se Habla Espanõl Lic’d, Bonded • ROC #235771 • ROC #235770

Additions Garages Patios

Kitchens Concrete Flooring

35 Years Experience in the Valley

EstrellaCustomDesigns.com

602-743-3175

FREE ESTIMATES

623-293-2648

ROOFING We raise the roof with our quality, service and value!

All types of roofing!

www.almeidaroofing.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured ROC #215758

Re-Roofs New Roofs • Repairs

FREE ESTIMATES!

26 Years Experience in the Valley! ROC Lic. #133241 • Bonded • Insured

HANDYMAN

Check out the Handyman Section!

West Valley Remodeling

AE&Sons

FALL SPECIALS FREE Estimates BEST Prices

Repairs, Coatings, Walk Decks Home New Build or Renovate

Honey Do List Too Long?

Great bathrooms without the great big price!

Plastering, re-plaster & pebbles All types of custom plastering Dive-to-play pool conversion New Pool Builds We accept credit cards

ROC#273001 • 0 STRIKES • INSURED & BONDED

602-622-2859 623-936-5775

Pools Plastering Co. LLC

$

www.triplerpool.com

Plumbing & Drain Cleaning

POOL SERVICES

PLUMBING

15% OFF

“No Nonsense”

H&H

Licensed • Bonded • Insured ROC 229722 • PORA & HOA Gold Member

Any Plumbing Service Call for details. Some restrictions may apply. Exp 09/30/20

U.S.A.F. Retired. 25+ Yrs. Exp.

Licensed Contractor ROC C-37-120135 • ROC C-05-159059

623.878.1102

WE DO IT ALL!

1 Call Doe It All! s

SAME DAY SERVICE

AS LOW AS $45 PER ISSUE

PLUMBING

PLUMBING, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES & MONSOON SPECIALS

27

UPHOLSTERY FREE Estimates

Commercial & Residential Expert Custom Upholstery Since 1976

DAVID’S UPHOLSTERY (623)

872-3047

POOL SERVICES

POOL TILE CLEANING

LIC.-BONDED-INSURED

Your Satisfaction Is Guaranteed! ROC 324615

BEFORE

Car for Sale? AFTER Advertise It Here!

Call 480.898.6465

CLASS@TIMESPUBLICATIONS.COM

623-695-9199

www.miraclepoolcare.com


28

WEST VALLEY VIEW NEWS | AUGUST 26, 2020

LABOR DAY SALES EVENT

ARTWORK IT’S BACK, BIGGER &

SIGN & RIDE

2020 FUSION SE

BETTER

2016 FORD FUSION HYBRID SE

PRE-OWNED LABOR DAY SALES EVENT

P9010A

11,475

1 owner, $ Excel Cond

2019 FORD ESCAPE SE

Like new!

2015 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR

Warr Incl, 4x4!

$

Loaded!

12,979

1 Owner, Loaded

12,996

X9058

15,878

$

2019 DODGE JOURNEY GT

3rd Row, Rear AC

$

Warr Incl!

$

20,887

623.386.4429 | JONESFORDBUCKEYE.COM All prices and offers cannot be combined with any other offers or promotions. Prices do not include sales tax, license, $379.00 dealer doc fee and dealer add ons. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Prices valid through 09/01/2020. Sales vehicles may have scratches, dents or dings. See dealer for details.

17,376

$

Low mi, Loaded

$

4x4, 1 Owner

$

2019 MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER SEL

T9080

2017 MINI COUNTRYMAN COOPER

21,888

20249B

33,828

West y! Valle

3rd Row, Rear AC

$

P9087

18,734

2012 FORD F-150 FX4

X9073

2015 CHEVROLET TAHOE LT

20444B

29,915

24600 W. YUMA ROAD, BUCKEYE JUST SOUTH OF I-10 BETWEEN MILLER AND WATSON ROADS

1 Owner, Like new

P9088

2015 FORD SUPER DUTY F250 LARIAT

X9064

28,554

$

Warr incl!

T9068

19,994

$

2018 FORD F-150

4x4, 1 Owner

2018 FORD ESCAPE SE 2019 NISSAN ALTIMA S

20426A

$

2019 FORD TAURUS LIMITED

X9067

27,816

$

1 owner, 4x4

T9083

19,626

$

2017 FORD EXPLORER SPORT

1 Owner, Sharp

2016 FORD ESCAPE SE

20204B

2016 FORD EDGE TITANIUM

19365B

26,979

$

Warr incl!

20164A

18,797

$

2017 CHEVROLET MALIBU LS

STARTS AUGUST 2 th 8 !

Won’t Last!

20442A

24,748

$

2019 JEEP WRANGLER UNLTD SPORT

X9059

39,941

Must See! $ 1 owner

24 24


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