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SROs appear assured for Mt. Pointe, Desert Vista BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
D
espite opposition by three Tempe Union Governing Board members last year, school resource officers never left the Mountain Pointe and Desert Vista campuses. And last week, Phoenix City Council took a big step toward ensuring they won’t be leaving for the rest of the current school year.
Council unanimously approved paying 25 percent of the SRO salaries and benefits, with the district responsible for the remaining three quarters. Led by member Brian Garcia, who is now board president, Governing Board members Andres Barraza and Berdetta Hodge in July voted against Superintendent Kevin Mendivil’s request for $450,000 to pay for SROs at Desert Vista and Mountain Pointe high schools.
But that money was never re-appropriated for additional social workers and counselors, which Garcia and Barraza wanted to do. However, at the time of the 3-2 vote, the money was basically not assigned to any expenditure. Mendivil stressed that the money was still in the budget for the SROs and that the board
see SRO page 6
The play's the thing
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CHEF FOR YOUR HOME
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HOUSING COST SURGE
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PHOENIX POLICE SGT. THOMAS CRAIG
COVID-19 claims beloved Ahwatukee police officer BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
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hoenix Police Sgt. Thomas Craig, whose devotion to his job and community was surpassed only by his devotion to his family and friends, died Sept. 3 after a monthlong battle with COVID-19. He was 61 and
see CRAIG page 4
For Hamlet, "the thing" was catching the king's conscience, but for the Mountain Pointe Theatre Company, it's catching the audience's attention as Maia Pattison plays the lead in "Wit," a somber but inspiring drama. Flanking her are, from left, Chase Carter, Phoenix Torres, Connor Murry and Luciana Navarro. To learn about this weekend's performance, see page 42. {Pablo Robles/AFN)
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
The Ahwatukee Foothills News is published every Wednesday and distributed free of charge to homes and in single-copy locations throughout Ahwatukee Foothills.
Do you agree wth Kyrene's strategy of requiring face coverings as part of the District's leveled mitigation strategies, on a school -by-school basis when transmission is in the "substantial" or "high" range, based on Maricopa County data, at your school?
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This chart shows survey respondents' reaction to Kyrene's overall COVID-19 mitigation strategies. (Kyrene School District)
Survey shows support for Kyrene COVID policies AFN NEWS STAFF
A
survey of Kyrene families and staff released last week shows a slim majority of parents and guardians support the district’s COVID-19 mitigation strategies – including mandatory masks. While Gov. Doug Ducey has said he will withhold $5.2 million in federal pandemic relief funds from the district – and $2.8 million from Tempe Union – for imposing a mask mandate at least until Sept. 29, the survey shows 53 percent of 7,059 responding families thought Kyrene’s strategies are “just right.” Asked to rate its safety measures, another 22 percent of responding families said they are “not strong enough,” 19 percent thought them “too strong” and 7 percent had no opinion. The survey also showed 63 percent of families said they would have their children vaccinated against COVID-19 when a vaccine for children under 12 is available. Of the remaining families, 21 percent said no and 17 percent declined to answer. Among 1,115 staff that responded to the survey, 86 percent said they would have their children under 12 vaccinated while only 3 percent said no and the rest declined to answer. Kyrene said it emailed or texted a total 21,549 surveys, with one going to a parent or guardian “per school level of children.” Of that total, it received 8,174 responses. Besides the 1,115 staff, that total broke down to 4,261 elementary parents, 2,407 middle school parents, and 391 parents of kids in the K-8 program. The district has 10337 unique home addresses for active students. The survey comes at a time when Ducey is at war with a number of districts that imposed mask mandates after a Maricopa County Superior Court judge ruled last month that the ban on mandates passed by Republicans in the Legislature cannot take effect until Sept. 29.
see MASKS page 12
3
4
NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
CRAIG from page 1
lived in Ahwatukee since 1993. A native of Scottsdale, Sgt. Craig was remembered in numerous social media posts for his acts of kindness on the job and in the community, his sense of humor, his woodworking talents and, most of all, his devotion to his widow Lynn, their three daughters and son as well as two daughters by a previous marriage. Recalling her husband of 35 years, Lynn Craig said his humor was instantly apparent when she met him while she was looking for an apartment in California. Sgt. Craig owned a pizza shop and lived in a unit near the one the manager was showing her. “I was just about to walk out and he opened the door and told the landlord, ‘It’s about time you have a good-looking one moving in.’” They had been dating for about a year and a half when one day in 1990 while cruising around, they were stopped at a signal and “he asked me, ‘would you marry me?’” Lynn recalled. “I said, ‘yeah, whatever. I thought he was joking,” she said, recalling how he shouted to a couple in a convertible stopped alongside them, “I asked her to marry me and she thinks I’m joking.” “I got embarrassed,” Lynn said, “and sort of scooted down in my seat and they said, ‘We’re not leaving till you answer.’” She said yes. The couple moved to Ahwatukee from California a few years later after he tried to join the Los Angeles Police Department, where he was one of only a dozen of 500 applicants to pass the written qualification test. “I didn’t want him to join LAPD because he would be a target for everybody,” she said. But Sgt. Craig was not to be deterred. “He always wanted to be a police officer,” Lynn said, adding that her husband then suggested they move to Phoenix because at the time, it seemed a far less dangerous place than L.A. for a policeman. He joined Phoenix PD in 1995 and, numerous social media posts recalled, stayed in touch with the people he served. A spokesman for Phoenix Police said Sgt. Craig served in the patrol divisions in the South Mountain, Central City and Cactus Park precincts and the traffic and prop-
This was one of the last family photos that Sgt. Thomas Craig posed for, according to his widow Lynn. (Special to AFN) erty management bureaus. One woman recalled how her then 10-year-old son had been egged by a carload of bullies and Sgt. Craig tracked down the culprits. “In less than 30 minutes after the eggs were thrown we were sitting in the home of the egg throwers,” she said. “Officer Craig read them the riot act, showing them my son’s face …It was a great teaching moment for these boys about their actions, a good lesson for me in showing mercy.” Another tribute came from David Khalaj, who started a gofundme.com account to raise money for Sgt. Craig’s family and offered to match up donations up to $15,000 (the fund already exceeds $17,000). “He approached every situation with an open mind,” Khalaj wrote. “His goal was always to deescalate the situation and he truly loved his Job and the community he served.” Another man wrote how Sgt. Craig stopped by his home in a patrol car so his 5-year-old son could sit in it. Off the job, Sgt. Craig was a devoted husband and father who drew endless humorous cartoons, often to remind Lynn how much he cared for her. Countless others recalled those cartoons as well. His brother Robert wrote that Tom never forgot to write him when he was
stationed with the Army in Germany and that “my little brother was a big brother to me.” “Tom would send me letters filling me in as to what was happening back home,” Robert wrote. “He would draw a character on the envelope called Sgt. Olive Head. It was a character with a green olive for a head in a military dress uniform. Every time I would get one of his letters I would crack up as they were so funny. Even our mail clerk for my battalion would comment about the drawings. Those little bits of humor from Tom made my three-year tour in Europe seem much shorter.” Lynn said her husband loved woodworking and made numerous household furniture items, most notably a dining room table for 12 that he eventually cut down to eight. His at-home shop, Lynn said, “looked like a miniature Home Depot. Above all, she said, “from his handwriting to his woodworking to whatever, he was a perfectionist.” His devotion as a father was recalled by a former principal of Kyrene de la Estrella who said, “Tom was a very selfless and devoted parent and a great supporter of our school. He continuously partnered with his children’s teachers to promote their lifelong successes…. If he wasn’t stopping by to check on us, or sharing his many hu-
morous stories with me, we could always count on him attending all of our school events and parent/teacher conferences. “He interacted with all children on campus and helped them to realize that police officers were a friend who would help you in case of need.” Sgt. Craig’s family devotion extended to the softball pursuits of his twin daughters, Tia and Tyra. He often went to games, coached them not only through middle and high school – they played for Desert Vista – but also when they went on to Chandler Gilbert Community College. He was such a frequent and inspirational presence that the college’s Coyotes softball team posted last week: “This season and every season is dedicated to you. CGCC Softball would not be what it is without you. You trusted us with your twins, believed in the coaching staff and created opportunities and made dreams into reality for all young ladies who have played and will play at CGCC. You are Chandler-Gilbert Softball and will always be our Forever Yote.” Sgt. Craig is survived by his widow Lynn and their children, Tiffany (Chad) Heinrich, Tia, Tya and Thomas, as well as two daughters from a prior marriage, Bethany Kneubuhl and Jennie Welti. Also surviving him are his father Charles Craig and stepmother Cheri Craig, sister Becky Miller and brother Robert. A viewing will be held 6-8 p.m. Sept. 22 at Hansen Desert Hills Mortuary, 6500 E. Bell Road, Scottsdale. A service will be held at 9 a.m. Sept. 23 at Gateway Church, 1137 E. Warner Road, Tempe. In a final community-wide tribute to Sgt. Craig, a raffle and fundraiser also have been scheduled for Sept. 22 besides the gofundme.com account (search by Sgt. Thomas Craig). Between 11 a.m. and 11 p.m. Sept. 22, Zzeeks Pizza and Wings will donate 20 percent of all take-out and delivery sales to Sgt. Craig’s family. In addition, a woman is organizing a giant raffle to be held Sept. 22 at Zzeeks, 4825 E. Warner Road, Ahwatukee. People who wish to donate items for raffle baskets can drop them off at any of Zzeeks’ locations. In addition, Suzuki Law Offices will match the total amount raised during the fundraiser. ■
GOT NEWS? Contact Paul Maryniak at 480-898-5647 or pmaryniak@timespublications.com
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
SRO from page 1
could reallocate it at another time. “The $450,000 that was earmarked for SROs is still a part of the budget,” Mendivil said then, adding, “We just have that flexibility now to make wise decisions.” He repeated his intention “to look at the variety of ways in which we can secure additional funding from the City of Tempe and from the City of Phoenix.” The three board members’ vote against SROs came amid the national outcry over a rash of civilian deaths caused by police officers. Uniformed resource officers were dragged into the national debate by activists who claim SROs intimidated students, “militarized campuses” and treated students of color more harshly than whites. That argument had supporters among students and other Tempe Union community members – as well as police opponents outside the district – though there was scant evidence produced to support their assertions as far as the two Ahwatukee campuses were concerned. Many other parents and students also opposed the move against SROs and pointed C to the numerous non-enforcement acarp
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tivities of SROs. All the Tempe Union principals protested the move, writing in a joint letter that resource officers are “not just cops on campus.” They said SROs “positively educate students about the law, both in small groups and larger classrooms, support and mentor students when they are feeling pressure, help our students make good and wise decisions, get to know our students and their families and connect them to community resources, understand the pressures that teenagers are dealing with so police officers can better deal with our students and young people in our community, protect our campus community from outside threats, and be an integral part of our school support teams.” Tempe Union joins 18 other school districts for whom the city is paying the partial cost of a total 58 SROs at 65 schools. Several schools share SROs. Those districts include American Charter Schools, Laveen Elementary; Cartwright Elementary, Murphy Elementary, Cave Creek Unified, Paradise Valley Unified, Deer Valley Unified, Premier Charter, Empower College Prep, Scottsdale Unified, Glendale Union, Tolleson Union, Horizon rea Rugs ~ Luxury Viny top s
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Community Learning Center, Washington Elementary, Kaizen Education Foundation, Wilson and Kyrene, according to a city administration memo to Council. Tempe Union spokeswoman Megan Sterling said the district’s end of the agreement with Phoenix will be on the board’s agenda for its meeting today, Sept. 15. The agenda had not been posted by the time of AFN’s print deadline. Council’s action helps to ensure that Tempe Union’s two Ahwatukee campuses are not the only ones in the district without SROs. All its Tempe campuses have SROs from Tempe Police, thanks to public safety grants from the state Department of Education. Kyrene has SROs at four middle schools – Aprende, Akimel A-al, Centennial and Pueblo. That department declined to fund Tempe Union’s request for SROs at all its campuses, and took back the money it had awarded for an officer at the Compadre campus before the board decided to close that school. “ADE re-absorbed the grant money,” Sterling said. “Since the campus is closed for the time being, we could not repurpose it for anything else, according to the rules of the grant.”
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The Education Department annually gets more requests for SROs than its federal funding can pay for. Sterling said off-duty officers were working at Desert Vista and Mountain Pointe from the first day of the 2021-22 school year through “an SRO testing process” that would help the district and the police department determine the best fits for the two campuses. Phoenix Police say an SRO costs $180,379 a year and that a school district is responsible for picking up $135,284 of that amount. That total SRO cost for a Phoenix officer includes $81,479 annual salary, $7,613 in career enhancement pay, $1,150 clothing allowance and $2,080 in “productivity enhancement pay” for a total $92,322. Of that amount, the school district is on the hook for $69,242. On top of that is another $88,057 in fringe benefit costs for which a school district is responsible for $66,043. ■
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
GOP pushback on vaccines may not fly, experts say
BY HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services
G
ov. Doug Ducey says it’s illegal and “will never stand up in court.’’ Attorney General Mark Brnovich says it is taking “federal overreach to unheard of levels.’’ But attorneys who specialize in labor law say the decision by President Biden that large employers must have all workers vaccinated is well within the power of the federal government. And companies that listen to the Republicans and ignore the requirement could find themselves facing stiff fines. Biden said the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is developing a rule to require all companies with 100 or more employees to ensure their workforce is fully vaccinated. Workers who remain unvaccinated would have to produce a negative test result on at least a weekly basis before coming to work. The administration estimates it will impact more than 80 million workers in the private sector.
Gov. Doug Ducey joined other Republican governors in condemning the Biden Administration's vaccination plans. (Special to AFN) Normally, that kind of rule change takes time, including hearings. But the president said OSHA will implement an “emergency temporary standard’’ to put it into effect.
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“What the Biden administration is doing is government overreach, pure and simple,’’ the governor said. Brnovich promised to “take all legal recourse to defend our state’s sovereignty and the rights of Arizonans to make the best healthcare decisions for themselves.’’ And House Speaker Rusty Bowers and Senate President Karen Fann, also both Republicans, call it “an illegal government mandate.’’ But Shefali Milczarek-Desai, director of the Workers’ Rights Clinic at the University of Arizona College of Law, said the actions by the administration are neither as questionable nor as outrageous as the Republican politicians contend. The key is that the plan is rooted in the authority of OSHA to ensure that employers have safe workplaces. “Not only is this something that OSHA can do but it’s something OSHA’s always done in the past,’’ she said. Milczarek-Desai said a federal statute that allows for emergency temporary
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“This is not the power vested with the federal government,’’ Ducey said, promising to push back against a “dictatorial’’ Anytime. approach.
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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Beautifully updated home! 1,096 sf, 2 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms. Split master floor plan! Open kitchen family room concept! Kitchen boasts trendy white cabinets with ORB hardware, new upgraded kitchen faucet, breakfast bar and pantry. Laminate wood flooring in kitchen and family room. Vaulted ceilings. Split floor plan. Both bathrooms updated with contemporary vanities. Newer AC, roof, dual pane windows. Exit French doors from the family room to the resort-like backyard with built-in BBQ with burner, sink, stone bar top and stone surrounds. Pool size backyard. North / South exposure. High efficiency hot water heater. Security cameras. Newer garage door and opener with keyless entry. Built in cabinets in garage. 2021 carpet in bedrooms. 2020 ceiling fans. New trendy dining room light fixture
Markwood North Listed for
$725,000
3,807 sf home with 5 bedrooms + loft and 3 bathrooms! Open kitchen family room floor plan! Rick dark wood cabinetry with granite slab counter tops, extended island, extra deep stainless steel sink and upgraded faucet, eat-in kitchen area, pantry and stainless steel appliances. Gas cooking! Soaring ceilings! Plantation shutters throughout. Hardwood flooring, porcelain tile and upgraded carpet. The enormous master suite is a retreat you won’t want to leave with his and hers vanities, large walk–in shower with custom glass door enclosure, Roman soaking tub and enormous walk–in closet. Large secondary bedrooms! Two bedrooms and one full bathroom downstairs. 2021 exterior paint. Staircase bannister was painted in 2021. Exit the family room to the covered back patio and pool size backyard! Gas hook up in back for a BBQ. R/O and soft water systems. 220v outlet in garage. Nest thermostats and Ring doorbell. 2018 water heater. Dryer has gas and electric hook up.
Vistancia Listed for
$485,000
Beautifully updated 4 bedroom PLUS LOFT, 2.5 bathroom, 2,344 sf home! Home backs to a sprawling greenbelt! No neighbors behind! Exterior of home freshly painted in July 2021. Kitchen boasts granite slab counter tops, large center island with breakfast bar seating, pantry, and large eat-in kitchen dining area. Gas cooking! Enormous family room! Acardia door exit to the covered back patio and pool-size back yard! Low maintenance landscape in front and back. Large loft makes a great second family room/game room or an office! The master suite has his and hers walk-in closets, double sinks and separate shower and Roman tub. Secondary bathroom also has double sinks! Good size secondary bedrooms. Ceiling fans and wood blinds throughout. Neutral color 20" porcelain tile in kitchen, bathrooms and downstairs traffic areas. North/south exposure.
Tartesso
Listed for $410,000
2021 construction! Home has never been lived in! 2,024 sf 4 bedroom 3 bathroom single level home with open kitchen – great room floor plan. Four bedrooms plus office and three bathrooms. Split master floor plan! Kitchen boasts espresso colored cabinets, granite counter tops, large center island / breakfast bar, Whirlpool stainless steel appliances (gas cooking!) and pantry. Porcelain tile throughout with carpet in bedrooms only. Smart home technology. 14 seer HVAC unit. Large master suite with walk in closet, double sinks and walk in shower. Faux wood blinds throughout. Oversized premium lot with east facing back yard! Backs to a common area; no neighbors immediately behind! Covered back patio and pool size back yard! Low maintenance front and backyard landscaping.
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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NEWS
MASKS from page 3
Kyrene Superintendent Laura Toenjes has indicated the district will obey the law when it takes effect. Tempe Union has declined comment on what it will do. The latest data released last week by the county health department shows the district remains at the highest level of transmission of the virus with 230 cases per 100,000 and positive new test results at 10.9 percent. Those numbers have essentially remained the same for two weeks. In that transmission range, 58 percent of parent respondents said they “strongly agree” that Kyrene should require masks on a school-by-school basis. Another 14 percent agreed for a total 72 percent in favor of a selective mask mandate. Among the other parents who replied, 11 percent strongly disagreed and 6 percent of disagreed on the issue of mask mandates. Ducey’s threat to withhold funding took a severe hit late last week when the White House said local school districts can apply directly to the federal government “to restore funding withheld by state leaders.” The new policy was announced by President Joe Biden as part of a six-point plan that will include mandatory vaccinations or tests for teachers and for
DUCEY from page 9
standards “when workers are exposed to ‘grave danger.’ ‘’ “The exposure here can be toxic substances, it can be something that is physically harmful,’’ she explained. “Or, interestingly, the statute also says ‘from new hazards,’’ said Milczarek-Desai, who also as a practicing attorney. “And that can be where COVID is coming in.’’ Attorney David Selden agreed. “They do that under the ‘general duty’ clause which requires that all employers have a workplace free of recognized hazards that can cause serious injury,’’ he said. And while that may be “ill-defined,’’ Selden said it’s broad enough to sweep in COVID-related issues. It is true, he said, that Arizona has its own OSHA plan and program, funded in part by the federal government and administered by the state Industrial Commission. But he said that does not make Arizona free to ignore federal rules, as the federal law requires the state program be “at least as effective’’ as the federal plan.
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 Have you or do you plan to get vaccinated/vaccinate your child(ren) against COVID-19 when vaccines become available for childen under 12?
Both Kyrene staff and parents who answered the survey indicated they would have their children vaccinated if a vaccine is approved for kids under 12. (Kyrene School District) workers in large companies, among other measures, to check the surging number of COVID-19 cases. Ducey called Biden’s school policy as “dictatorial” and “un-American.” “Today marks another egregious big government overreach robbing Arizonans and all Americans of their fundamental rights to make their own decisions about their health and the health of their chil-
“Once federal OSHA adopts a standard, it will be mandatory for Arizona to enforce the same standard,’’ said Selden, who normally represents employers in legal issues, including OSHA compliance. Attorney James Barton, who represents worker interests, said he believes legal efforts to void the mandate will fall flat. “I think you’d have a hard time saying that this language isn’t about workplace safety,’’ he said. “It sure seems like it is to me.’’ Nor is this unprecedented. “There have already been OSHA reviews and inspections based upon COVID protocols,’’ said Selden. “We have situations, even in Arizona, where an employee may make a complaint to OSHA.’’ Usually, he said, it involves people who want to work at home because they say they’re being asked to work too close to others, especially if they are not wearing masks. That forces him, as an attorney for the company, to respond to state OSHA officials to assure them that there are policies in place to protect the health of the workers. That can include leaving every other cubicle open, testing workers and even tak-
dren,” Ducey said. But Biden, without naming names Thursday, said school districts that are trying to keep their students safe should not have to put up with a governor who “picks a fight with them and even threatens their salary and job.” “Talk about bullying in schools,” Biden said. The proposal was welcomed by Arizona
ing their temperature when they report to work. But citations remain possible. Milczarek-Desai said it is up to OSHA to show that there is that risk of “grave danger’’ when workers have to be in proximity with others who are not vaccinated. And if that’s the case, Milczarek-Desai, requiring vaccinations “is something that comes within OSHA’s purview.’’ Barton agreed, stating, “it doesn’t seem any different than any other health and safety measure.’’ Barton also noted there is an alternate option: weekly testing. “So, it doesn’t mandate vaccines,’’ he said. And Barton said there always are the requirements for accommodations to be made in cases where there are medical reasons or someone’s sincerely held religious belief. If there is a potential weak point in the plan, Selden said it is the fact it will apply only to companies with 100 or more employees that may provide some basis for a challenge. “That kind of gives the appearance this is a politically driven thing rather than pure safety because every worker should be en-
Schools Superintendent Kathy Hoffman, a vocal critic of Ducey’s plan to punish schools that require masks or vaccinations. She tweeted that the White House plan is “broadly supported by a majority of Arizonans.” “Controlling the virus has always been the key to ensuring safe in-person learning,” her tweet said. “Enough political games – our focus must be on accelerating student learning and helping schools recover.” One Arizona health official said he believes the school section of Biden’s plan was driven in part by anti-masking efforts of Republican governors like Ducey. “I think this White House decision was informed greatly by what Gov. Ducey did by disqualifying schools from funding if they are using masking as a mitigation effort,” said Will Humble, executive director of the Arizona Public Health Association and the former state health director. According to the most recent data from the state Department of Health Services, Arizonans under age 20 account for 18 percent of positive COVID-19 cases in the state – a number that Humble blames on Ducey’s decision to withhold funds from schools implementing mitigation efforts. (Cronkite News contributed to this report) ■ titled to protection, particularly when the grounds for this are that it’s a grave risk,’’ Seldon said. Barton, however, said federal statutes on age and race discrimination apply only to companies with 15 or more employees. Milczarek-Desai said there’s something else that could become an issue. Take, for example, a company that has more than 100 employees but most of them work from home. She said the firm might be able to make a case for an exemption. But Milczarek-Desai said she expects challenges “to be quite limited in scope.’’ Selden said there’s a word of caution for employers who implement the new policy: address employee concerns on an individual basis and avoid “uniform edicts and ultimatums that cause people to be resistant to a top-down mandate.’’ He also said companies must take care to maintain medical information about employees as confidential, including vaccine ID cards and COVID test results. And Selden said employers should not have a retaliatory attitude towards those who are resistant to vaccines. ■
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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NEWS
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Needle exchange program starting in county increased 30 percent across the U.S. last year, and 32 percent in Arizona, in large part because of the pandemic. “The disruption to daily life due to the COVID-19 pandemic has hit those with substance use disorder hard,” Robert Redfield, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a statement imploring Americans “to take care of people suffering from unintended consequences.” Dozens of programs statewide have long been facilitating clean needle Jaclyn Brown, volunteer coordinator at Shot in the Dark, said exchanges, despite the that one of the greatest challenges clean-needle exchanges potential consequences. In Phoenix, Brown face is the misconception that they enable drug use. (Gianluca said, Shot in the Dark D’Elia/Cronkite News) has faced no legal issues who died from a heroin overdose in No- aside from occasional trespassing complaints or being asked to leave properties vember 2018 at age 29. The resources Shot in the Dark offers – where volunteers set up exchanges. LifePoint, a needle exchange program such as clean needles, safe injection kits and the overdose reversal medication founded by the Pima County Health Denaloxone – could have been a lifeline for partment, was among the first in Arizona her brother, whose addiction began with to offer this form of harm reduction. The opioids prescribed for pain after a car ac- program was founded in 1996 as the nacident, Brown said. “After my brother died, I didn’t care what people thought of us or our family, and I didn’t care about the stigma of it anymore,” she said. “I’m just going to help people how I can, so no one has to ever go through what we went through.” The law comes as drug overdose deaths
BY GIANLUCA D’ELIA Cronkite News
F
or about a year, Jaclyn Brown has been training volunteers for a needle exchange program that works with drug users in Maricopa County. One of the first things she has told her helpers is the work they signed up for could be considered a felony in Arizona. Soon, Brown and other volunteers won’t face any risk of arrest – and neither will those seeking the materials they distribute. Arizona lawmakers in May passed legislation with bipartisan support legalizing syringe access programs. The law takes effect Sept. 28. Exchanges provide sterile syringes, dispose of used needles and connect individuals with other resources or medical care, such as testing for HIV and hepatitis C. About 30 states allow such programs, and research shows that they’re safe, effective and helpful in reducing the transmission of viral infections through contaminated needles. For groups like Shot in the Dark in Maricopa County, the law doesn’t bring drastic changes, but it does lay out some specific guidelines. For example, the number of needles disposed of through an exchange program must be equivalent to the number of needles distributed. Exchanges also will be required to distribute needles for free and provide access to overdose reversal medication as well as educational materials on blood-borne diseases and substance abuse treatment. Brown joined Shot in the Dark last summer as its volunteer coordinator, motivated by the loss of her brother, Marc Kane, Voted Best Dentist & Customer Service
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tion battled HIV and AIDS. Miguel Soto, HIV program coordinator in Pima County, has been involved in the needle exchange since 1999 and has advised other Arizona organizations that followed in its footsteps. Participation by behavioral health organizations, nonprofits and public health departments can boost support for such programs among the public, law enforcement and politicians, he said. The new law decriminalizing the programs protects employees, volunteers and participants from possession charges. Soto said he hopes the legal recognition will lead to state and federal government funding for needle exchanges. Local, state and tribal health departments have been permitted to use federal funding to support syringe programs but not to specifically buy needles or syringes. Rita Leal, from Shot in the Dark, said legalization will provide more legitimacy for exchanges and potentially help programs expand services and locations. “We’ve been trying to ask people to use their parking lots – and this is when a business was closed – but they were so scared of the liability of what we were doing,” she said. “So now if it’s like, ‘Hey, it’s legal. Your governor signed this.’ … I think people will be more receptive.” The future work of needle exchanges
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The nonprofit group Shot in the Dark offers safe injection kits at its needle exchange sites. The kits typically include clean needles, alcohol wipes, swabs and tourniquets. Gianluca D’Elia/Cronkite News)
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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NEWS
NEEDLES from page 14
will likely be about more than just needles. Overdose deaths from synthetic opioids, particularly fentanyl, have spiked across the country. The governor signed legislation this year to remove fentanyl testing products from the state’s list of illegal drug paraphernalia. Exchange volunteers said they’ll adapt their services as substance use evolves. Leal said people are more likely to turn to pills, sometimes placing them on pieces of foil, lighting them from the bottom and inhaling the smoke with a straw. Shot in the Dark provides items like straws and foil to avoid reuse. Regardless of the drug, Brown said, one of the greatest challenges exchanges face is the misconception that they enable drug use. “Before Shot in the Dark existed, people were doing drugs. People have done drugs. They’re going to do it regardless,” she said. “But if we can be there and help them, and they don’t have to reuse, (they) have naloxone, whatever it may be – why not be there?” ■
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Wagers pour into Arizona sports betting sites BY JILL R. DORSON Managing Editor, Sports Handle
A
t 12:01 a.m. Thursday morning, Arizona reached the end of a sprint that started in April. When DraftKings, FanDuel, and WynnBET went live with digital sports betting, the moment marked the culmination of nearly daily negotiations, meetings and controversy for the Arizona Department of Gaming, which was tasked with implementing the state’s new law. That law did something that no other sports betting law in the United States has done – capped the number of available operator licenses at a number that would not include all existing casinos. In every other U.S. legal sports betting jurisdiction, licensed casinos can apply for a sports wagering license. But Arizona lawmakers, saying they were shooting for “parity” between the state’s Native American gaming tribes and commercial interests, allowed for 20
see SPORTS BET page 17
The state Gaming Department and geocomply.com stream a location detection service at https://youtu.be/IL4xSGqxIc8 that ensures users do not place wagers in unauthorized locations. This shows the many bets that had been placed in Arizona the first 12 hours sports betting became legal on Sept. 9. Green indicates an android user, white an iOS user, blue a Windows user. Red is a geofencing or other violation. More information: geocomply.com. (Courtesy Arizona Department of Gaming)
NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
SPORTS BET from page 16
licenses – 10 each for the tribes and professional sports teams/franchises. That created a situation in which at least six tribes were denied licenses and has resulted in two lawsuits and plenty of angst. The day before the ADG awarded 18 of 20 possible event wagering licenses, two lawsuits seeking injunctions were filed. Indian Country appears to have hit another roadblock – no tribal retail casinos opened on Sept. 9 while FanDuel unveiled its cutting-edge new sportsbook at Footprint Center and Caesars opened for wagering at Chase Field in temporary locations around the ballpark. The ADG confirmed that tribes could not launch until the appendices to their new compacts were signed. Until that is done, the tribes’ operators, suppliers or vendors cannot ship needed equipment into the state. One tribe, the Yavapai-Prescott, and one sports venue, Turf Paradise, sued both Gov. Doug Ducey and the Arizona Department of Gaming, claiming they were unfairly left out of the process or denied a license. Neither lawsuit has legs – at least at the moment – after a Maricopa County Superior Court judge declined to delay the Sept. 9 sports betting launch in the YavapaiPrescott case, and the court declined to hear the Turf Paradise case. But in making his ruling, Judge James Smith did suggest that the YavapaiPrescott Tribe might further explore one part of its lawsuit. Smith did not completely reject the idea that tribes are at a disadvantage with regard to the ability to get a license. The tribe argued that everyone in Indian Country had about a 50 percent chance of getting a license. There are 20-plus gaming tribes in the state while commercial entities had a nearly 100 percent chance. The ADG got 16 applications from tribes and 10 from commercial entities. It awarded 10 licenses to tribes and eight to teams/franchises. Smith suggested that the argument could have merit going forward, but that in its current form did not meet the requirements for him to issue an injunction. Another surprise made the news just days after the issuance of licenses when the Yavapai-Apache Nation, which owns and operates the Cliff Castle Casino, made it known that the ADG had issued it a license only to rescind it.
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digital platform and temporary wagering locations at Chase Field on Sept. 9. The new retail location, which will be in what is now the Game 7 Grill, will be 20,000 square feet and two stories and is scheduled to open in early 2022. Until then, patrons can wager at ticket windows 21-25 and at five kiosks on the north side of the plaza in front of the new sportsbook site.
DraftKings Sportsbook
Caesar’s and the Arizona Diamondbacks will open a 20,000-square-foot, two-story sportsbook at Chase Field in early 2022. The venue will feature both indoor and outdoor seating, a fullservice bar and VIP lounge, an extensive menu, and wall-to-wall televisions. The space will be open year-round, not just on gamedays, and will have flexible hours of operation to cater to specific sporting events. (Courtesy of Caesar’s) The only explanation was an “administrative error,” leaving the tribe – and its partner PointsBet – full of questions. The tribe would seem to have little recourse as the law allows for 10 tribal licenses, all of which have been allocated. PointsBet, on the other hand, would appear to be free to partner with a currently approved but unpartnered tribe or try to find a commercial partner that fits the definition of a professional sports team/ franchise. That entity could then apply for one of the two remaining commercial licenses – though the ADG said it has no clear plan for when or if it will allocate that licenses and PointsBet would be the operator. Against that backdrop of intrigue, Arizonans now have more than half a dozen options for legal wagering with more to come. In addition to DraftKings, FanDuel, and WynnBET, BetMGM, Caesars and Penn National Gaming’s Barstool Sportsbook launched digital platforms by 9 a.m. Sept. 9. According to the ADG, Kindred’s Unibet, which is partnered with the Fort Yuma Quechan Tribe, was also approved for launch. Here’s a look at the platforms that are currently live.
Barstool Sportsbook
PNG, which is partnered with Phoenix Raceway, launched its Barstool Sportsbook Sept. 9. Plans for the book at the raceway are still in development, and the company did not release a go-live date for in-person wagering, but when the sports-
book opens, it will be among the first at a NASCAR track anywhere in the U.S. Offers: $1,000 new player offer (make a deposit and get the first wager risk-free up to $1,000), the Dave & Dan’s $1.5 million Overs Tournament, and two specials on the Bears – a multiplier odds boost on a $5 bet to win $50 if the Bears cover the spread. Barstool is also offering Arizona bettors $400 worth of free bets when a player deposits $100 or more using the code “Arizona.”
BetMGM
Partnered with both the NFL Cardinals and Gila River Casinos, BetMGM launched its digital platform. Sept. 9 through the Cardinals’ license. The company is planning a retail sportsbook at State Farm Stadium in time for the 2022 NFL season, and says sportsbooks at Gila Rivers’ Wild Horse Pass, Lone Butte and Vee Quiva casinos will open brick-and-mortar sportsbooks by the end of 2021. Offers: BetMGM is offering myriad specials and promotions, including $20 added to every mobile account from which a wager is made during Week 1, $1,000 riskfree for college football and several college football team-specific wagers. Players will also be able to build a parlay in a single college football game. The company is offering several free-to-play games.
Caesars Sportsbook
One of only two operators to go live with retail wagering, Caesars launched both its
DraftKings is the first operator to leverage a partnership with the PGA. The company has plans for a retail sportsbook at TPC Scottsdale, and along with FanDuel and WynnBET launched its digital platform at 12:01 a.m. Sept. 9. Offers: DraftKings is offering those in Arizona a $150 launch bonus with no deposit.
FanDuel Sportsbook
FanDuel was the first to gain market access in Arizona, and as such, had about a year to design and build out its physical sportsbook at Footprint Center. The net result is that FanDuel was the only operator to open a permanent retail location Sept. 9. The company launched its digital platform at 12:01 a.m., and opened the book at Footprint Center at 9 a.m. For the time being, FanDuel’s state-ofthe-art space in the Suns’ home arena is the only place Arizona bettors can get a full sportsbook experience -- food, drink, a wraparound LED video wall, teller windows, and kiosks. Offers: FanDuel is offering a $1,000 riskfree first bet, among other specials.
WynnBET Sportsbook
Partnered with the San Carlos Apache Tribe, which owns and operates the Apache Gold Casino Resort, WynnBET launched its digital platform at 12:01 a.m. The company is building out a sportsbook at the casino, which is located in the high desert, about two hours east of Phoenix. Offers: WynnBET is offering a $1,000 risk-free bet to new Arizona customers. If you win your first bet, you keep the money, and if you lose, WynnBET will issue a $1,000 credit to your account. In addition, new customers will be entered into a sweepstakes to win a trip to Allegiant Field in Las Vegas. The winner plus seven friends will get to sit in the Wynn Field Club Experience, and the will also get four hotel rooms, a $2,000 credit at the hotel, and roundtrip airfare. ■
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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2 chances for duffers to help worthy causes AFN NEWS STAFF
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olfers of all experience levels in the next couple weeks have two tournaments they can join to support good causes. First up is the Corpus Christi Knights of Columbus Council 10062 ‘s 30th annual Joe Hasulak Memorial Golf Tournament at 6:30 a.m. Sept. 25 at the Foothills Golf Club, 2201 E. Clubhouse Drive, Ahwatukee, with a 7:30 a.m. shotgun start. There’s a four-person scramble format and men and women are welcomed. The $85 per person registration fee includes greens fee, two beverage tickets, cart, prizes and lunch. Contests, raffles and fun are in store for participants as they help the Knights raise funds for local charitable organizations through the nonprofit K of C Charities. All golfers must be registered by Friday, Sept. 17. For information on tournament sponsorship levels and advanced registration,
contact Mike Moore at 480-360-5956 or moore4mike@msn.com. Next is the Ahwatukee Foothills Chamber of Commerce, which is seeking players and sponsors for its charity golf tournament Oct. 1 at the Arizona Grand Golf Club, 8000 Arizona Grand Pkwy. Registration and breakfast will begin at 6:30 a.m. with a shotgun start at 7:30 a.m. Masks are required in and around the clubhouse and highly recommended on the course itself. Attendees will enjoy breakfast, lunch, raffles and awards. To donate raffle prizes email info@ahwatukeechamber.com. A portion of the proceeds will benefit the Ahwatukee Chamber Foundation Scholarship program. Over $50,000 in scholarships has been awarded over the years. Foursomes can register at bit.ly/TukeeGolf, 480-753-7676 or info@ahwatukeechamber.com. Presenting sponsors are Neighborhood Loans and Spooner Physical Therapy. ■
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NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
21
Kyrene finance group saluted by national association
tendent Laura Toenjes. “This recognition is another example of Kyrene’s dedication to being a leader in public education.” The Kyrene Business Services team is led by Chief Financial Officer Chris Herr`mann and Business Services Director Brian Lockery. Business Services is responsible for accounting, purchasing, payroll, financial reporting, budget control, food services, National School Breakfast and Lunch Program, Medicaid, property control and auditing. ■
AFN NEWS STAFF
K
yrene School District’s Business Services group has earned national recognition. The Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada awarded it a certificate of achievement for excellence in financial reporting. The Kyrene Business Services Team has received this award every year for nearly three decades. It’s the highest form of recognition in governmental accounting and financial reporting. “Receiving this award represents a significant accomplishment by the Kyrene School District and its leaders,” a district spokeswoman said. “We hope that the financial reporting excellence in Kyrene will encourage other government officials in their efforts to achieve and maintain an appropriate standard of excellence in governmental accounting,” said Michele Mark Levine, the association’s director of technical services. Kyrene was honored for its comprehensive annual financial report for the fiscal
GOT NEWS? Contact Paul Maryniak at
Kyrene School District’s Business Services Team was recognized for excellence in financial reporting. (Kyrene School District) year ending on June 30, 2020. The association established the recognition program in 1945 to encourage and assist state and local governments with comprehensive annual financial reports in the spirit of transparency and full disclo-
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If you thought you have been to a Mexican restaurant lately you probably need to reconsider and visit La Casa De Juana in Ahwatukee. The fare is authentic Mexican, and when we say authentic we mean it, unlike many of the restaurant chains that call themselves Mexican. Upon entering you’ll be dazzled by the colorful décor, the tables and chairs are beautiful, Mexican painted murals, colorful banners hanging from the ceiling and the gracious service with warm orange and yellow tones echoing throughout the restaurant will make this your favorite Mexican restaurant. With great lunch and dinner specials, live guitar player on Tuesdays and a bar with freshly made drinks, TVs, and live guitar music for all ages on the weekends and least but not last their happy hour from 2 pm to 6 pm every day $2 beer domestic and imports and $3 margaritas this place is a must. In conclusion The flavorful salsa, the delicious margaritas, the extraordinary and well-priced food will definitely keep you coming back.
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Abortion foes foresee Texas-style ban in Arizona
BY HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services
T
he head of the state’s premier antiabortion organizations said she is looking to use the newly enacted Texas ban on the terminating a pregnancy after fetal heartbeat has been detected as a template for legislation here. Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, said the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Texas law to take effect appears to provide a “road map’’ for enacting abortion restrictions in this state that, until now, have been struck down by federal courts. But the key to the Supreme Court action is the difference between SB 8 and all other abortion restrictions. Laws from other states make it a crime to terminate a pregnancy in certain situations or after a certain date, with the state in charge of enforcing the law and prosecuting offenders. For example, a 2012 Arizona law to make it a crime to perform an abortion after 20 weeks was struck down by a federal court, a decision upheld by the Supreme Court. Similar laws from other states have met similar fates. In Texas, however, the law empowers individual citizens – and not necessarily from Texas – to file civil suits against not only abortion providers but anyone who “aids or abets’’ aborting a fetus after a heartbeat
Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, said the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Texas law to take effect appears to provide a “road map’’ for abortion restrictions in Arizona. (AFN file photo) has been detected. A judge late last week barred citizens from going to Planned Parenthood clinics to test the law there. A heartbeat usually occurs about six weeks into pregnancy, which may be before a woman knows she is carrying a child. It also could effectively become a nearly total ban on the procedure based on estimates that at least 85 percent of abortions are performed after that point. Herrod is taking a closer look at what she calls a “novel approach’’ to restricting abortion. “The Texas heartbeat law is a road map
to what other states can do,’’ she told Capitol Media Services. “The Texas heartbeat law is worthy of serious consideration by the Arizona Legislature.’’ SB 8 spells out that its ban on postheartbeat abortions is enforced only by individuals who can sue doctors, friends, associates or others that help a woman terminate a pregnancy. It even provides for them to recover their legal fees and offers a $10,000 minimum reward for every successful lawsuit. Herrod isn’t the only one paying attention to the ruling and what it could mean in Arizona. So is Sen. Nancy Barto, R-Phoenix. She is the sponsor of a new Arizona law which makes it a crime, enforceable by the state, to abort a fetus due to “genetic abnormalities.’’ That law is set to take effect at the end of this month, though there is a lawsuit challenging its constitutionality. Barto said she wants to see how this particular approach to banning abortions at six weeks is considered by the courts on its merits. But the senator indicated she is hopeful. “So far, it’s saving lives,’’ Barto said of the Texas statute. “And that should encourage everyone who cares about protecting life in the womb.’’ The ruling, however, concerns Planned Parenthood of Arizona. Spokeswoman Murphy Bannerman pointed out that the law Barto already ushered through actu-
ally has some of the same elements of civil enforcement as the Texas statute. For example, she noted, the law does more than make it a crime to perform an abortion knowing that the reason was the genetic abnormality. It also allows the husband of the woman who has such a procedure to file a civil suit on behalf of the unborn child. And if the woman is younger than 18, her parents can sue. What all that means, Bannerman said, is that those who want to preclude this kind of law in Arizona will have to be vigilant. “We are asking for people to email their legislators and tell them that you don’t support abortion bans, that you don’t support something similar to SB 8 being enacted here in our state,’’ she said. Herrod said there are other circumstances where a private citizen can enforce laws. “If you walk by a car that’s locked and you see a child that’s inside that car, and it’s in our heat and the child is clearly not going to survive, you’re going to bust open the window and save that child,’’ Herrod said. “That’s analogous to what Texas is trying to do, that the private citizen is able to protect that child from the abortionist’s hand.’’ There was no immediate response to the Supreme Court ruling from Gov. Doug Ducey, who has signed every abortion restriction that has reached his desk. ■
EVP hosting gubernatorial hopefuls this month TRIBUNE NEWS STAFF
T
he East Valley’s leading organization of businesses and community leaders is hosting a roundtable discussion by Democratic and Republican candidates for governor. Candidates will share their views on building on the momentum of the state’s robust economy at a Sept. 30 luncheon hosted by the PHX East Valley Partnership. Among the participants will be Republicans Steve Gaynor, Kari Lake, Kar-
rin Taylor Robson, Matt Salmon and Kimberly Yee, along with Democrats Katie Hobbs, Aaron Lieberman and Marco Lopez. Topics of discussion will include continued jobs growth, bolstering small businesses and creating a fertile environment for entrepreneurs, along with expanding the talent pipeline and balancing development with quality of life. “The event will not be a debate but rather a moderated discussion focused exclusively on the jobs economy,” said Denny Barney, EVP president and CEO.
“After all, jobs will remain a key issue regardless of who occupies the governor’s office.” The event will be held 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Doubletree by Hilton in Gilbert and online. Stacy Derstine, vice president of external affairs at APS, will serve as the program’s moderator. “We look forward to an illuminating discussion that will help inform public opinion of our state’s next top leader,” Derstine said. APS, Okland Construction and Times Media Group are the event sponsors. The cost to attend is $800 for a table of
23
eight and $125 for single tickets. For more information and to register, contact Jessica Hubbard at 480-5320641 or jhubbard@phxeastvalley.com. EVP was established in 1982 as a nonprofit, nonpartisan coalition of civic, business, education and political leaders dedicated to the economic development and promotion of the East Valley of Greater Phoenix. The Partnership advocates for economic development, education, transportation and infrastructure, health care and other critical areas. Information: phxeastvalley.com. ■
GOT NEWS? Contact Paul Maryniak at 480-898-5647 or pmaryniak@timespublications.com
24
NEWS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Cardinals receiver praises Barrow Brainbook BY DAVID RODISH Cronkite News
C
oncussions have forced their way into the national health conversation, in large part because of a better understanding of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, the byproduct of numerous concussions and head trauma. Arizona Cardinals’ wide receiver Christian Kirk recently talked about the Barrow Brainbook, an educational module introduced 10 years ago to teach students how to prevent concussions, on a Zoom news conference with Dr. Javier Cárdenas of the Barrow Neurological Institute. The average annual concussion rate is 39.8 per 100,000 athlete exposures, according to a study compiled from 2005 to 2016 for the American Journal of Public Health. For ages 15 to 24, sports are the second most common cause of brain trauma behind motor vehicle accidents. Trauma can seriously inhibit brain development in that age group, resulting in side effects that last a lifetime, affecting mental health and acuity. The Barrow Brainbook, which teaches players about brain safety and concussions, has been utilized by more than 1 million high school athletes in Arizona, which became the first state to require all students to complete the training before competition. No other state has officially required students to learn the Barrow Brainbook, but some states have inquired about implementing the program in their states. Kirk praised the book for keeping him safe and educated about head trauma. “During my time at Saguaro, I was intro-
book, he felt and safer more educated about concussions and what they mean for his brain health. “I know what signs and symptoms to look for, to be able to evaluate myself first and to know if something is wrong,” he said. Kirk, who was drafted by the Cardinals out of Texas A&M in 2018, said he has managed to avoid concussions t h ro u g h o u t his NFL career, only having to go Cardinals’ receiver Christian Kirk, shown at a Zoom conference Sept. 1, credits through sidethe Barrow Brainbook for his better understanding of head trauma and its line protocol effects on his brain. (Courtesy of Barrow Neurological Institute) once. Cárdenas said it can be difficult getting duced to the Barrow Brainbook,” he said at the Sept. 1 Zoom conference. “Normally, students and parents alike to heed caution we would go through a normal baseline about contact sports and concussions, concussion test with our athletic trainer, despite the dangers especially associated and it didn’t allow things to be caught as with the young, developing brains of high school student athletes. in depth as the program book.” Kirk and Cárdenas also talked about After Kirk first used the Barrow Brain-
other developments meant to make football safer, particularly the technological advancements of helmets. “For the last three to four years, the helmet technology has improved eightfold for each of those years,” said Cárdenas, who directs Barrow’s Concussion and Brain Injury Center. “At the NFL level, nearly every single athlete is in the highest performing helmet. That matters because that technology trickles down to our college athletes and, most importantly, our youth athletes.” Athletic trainers also play a big role in protecting high school athletes, he said. “In my opinion, the athletic trainers are the most important health care provider for all of our athletes whether it’s at the professional level, the college level and the high school level,” Cárdenas said. “They are not just trying to put a temporary Band-Aid over an injury,” Kirk said. “They want to look out for your long-term health and longevity and make sure that not only your quality of your career and your play is at a high level, but your quality of life as well.” Football, and high school football in particular, has been getting safer, according to researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Cárdenas noted that eliminating the blindside block and other dangerous plays has lessened helmet-to-helmet contact. Two out of three concussions occur during a blindside block, according to the National Athletic Trainer’s Association. Even so, football has the greatest chance for exposure to head trauma. The extent to which the sport can become safer is up to the continuation of research and education of players. ■
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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REAL ESTATE
Real Estate Guide Valley analyst sees ‘precarious’ times for home buyers, sellers BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
D
riven by iBuyers and investors that are gobbling up substantial numbers of houses, Valley home buyers and sellers may be entering a disquieting and even “precarious” period while renters are facing a continuing rise in rents, judging by the latest observations by a leading analyst of the Phoenix Metro market. The Cromford Report outlined a series of trends from August sales and listings that likely won’t bring many smiles to anyone but landlords.
Bonny Holland
“Many surprising changes have occurred in the market over the past month,” Cromford said as it reported that the average sale price per square foot soared by 27.9 percent between August 2019 and last month, up from $194.97 to $249.31. That pushed up the monthly median sales price in the same time period by 23.4 percent, from $325 to $401,000. Several developments in August caught the Cromford Report’s eye, particularly a decline in new listings that appears to
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REAL ESTATE
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Million dollar babies
Ahwatukee home prices continue to surge BY ALLEN HENDERSON AFN Columnist
S
The market in Ahwatukee is still hot, as evidenced by the sale of three seven-figure homes in a matter of a couple weeks. From the top: This 4,628-square-foot house on E. Rocky Slope Drive, built in 2005, sold for $1.8 million. The two-story Tapestry Canyon house boasts four beds and baths with a private elevator, two fireplaces, 18-foot ceilings, gourmet chef’s kitchen, and floor-to-ceiling windows. It also sold for nearly $100,000 above the list price. 2) This 4,818-square-foot house on E. Kachina Drive sold for $1.6 million. The five-bedroom, 4 ½-bath, two-story house, built in 1996, not only was uopgraded but boasts nearly 1,000 square feet of pool, spa, waterfall and even caves and diving rocks along with a lighted sport court. Inside, a custom iron staircase, travertine and wood floors, 20-foot ceilings and a gourmet kitchen are just a few of the many amenities. 3) This single-story, 3,363-square-foot house on W. Morgan Ivy Lane sold for $1.1 million. The year-old home built by Taylor Morrison in the Promontory community has a resort-style backyard that even has an outdoor pizza oven. (Special to AFN)
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o, what is going on in the Ahwatukee real estate market? In a nutshell, prices have continued to climb, but the number of units closing escrow has declined. The most perceptible change in the Ahwatukee in August was the increase in the inventory. For months the average number of active listings on a given day has been under 50 units, frequently less. August saw active listings hovering around 100 units. This increase is the largest shift we have seen in the market in several months. The current active listing inventory of 100 units would be depleted in about 24 days. Another indicator of a shift in the Ahwatukee market is a significant dip in the number of units that closed escrow in August: The number slipped to 125 – 23 percent less than the 155 average sold per month since January. Indicators of a market shift can be subtle. If the inventory of active listings continues to increase and the number of units sold continues to decline, it could bode well for frustrated buyers. A slowing or reversal of the rising prices and an increase in the number of homes for sale could result. Despite the increase in listings and the decrease units sold, the average sale price of a home in Ahwatukee increased again in August to $566,695 – up 34 percent over the average $423,540 in August 2020. The marketing time dropped to 21 days – half the time August 2020. Only 20 percent of the properties that closed escrow in August required a price reduction. From Jan. 1 to Aug. 31, 1,243 Ahwatukee properties closed escrow at an average price of $515,164. with an average 26 days on the market. The number of units sold increased 16 percent over the 1.068 units sold in 2020. The average sale price for that period in 2021 is up dramatically – 27 percent – from that of the same period in 2020,
when it was $404,313. In August 2021, there were two closed sales over $1 million. So far this year, 16 have been over that number, closing at an average price of $1,081,687. Here are how Ahwatukee properties in other price ranges fared in August: • $600,000-$999,000: 17 sales for an average price of $657,994. • $500,000-$599,000: 18 sales at an average $562,404. • $400,000-$499,000: 40 sales at an average $461,379. • $300,000-$399,000: 17 sales at an average $365,971. • Under $300,000: Nine sales at an average $249,063. We are not seeing any softening of prices in Ahwatukee. The dramatic increase in the average sale price in Ahwatukee continues to be fueled by high demand coupled with low-interest rates. Those rates are allowing buyers to purchase homes that would be out of their reach if interest rates were even a few points higher. The same trends are occurring in Metro Phoenix, where between Jan. 1 and Aug. 31, 58,787 properties closed escrow at an average price of around $524,846 – far higher than the average $404,472 in the same time period last year. The current hot market is very reminiscent of the market we experienced leading up to the real estate debacle of 2007 and 2008. People are justifiably concerned about the stability of the market. The current situation, while appearing similar to the events of 2008, is remarkably different. Demand remains incredibly high and the record low inventory levels are pushing prices steadily higher. Bidding wars are not as common as they were even a couple of months ago. The mortgage interest rates have remained at record lows, and demand is at record highs. This has allowed the Ahwatukee and Metro-Phoenix real estate market to continue to expand. As we have said before, most experts believe that this market will continue
�ee HENDERSON page RE7
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Appraisals, gaps can be challenging for all the house. Following are some ways appraisal gap issues are being managed in this market: The AAR has an additional clause addendum that needs to be signed, and there are a couple of paragraphs that deal with appraisal. Waiver of appraisal: Buyer agrees to waive the appraisal contingency pursuant to the financing section of the contract. In the event the premises fail to appraise for at least the sales price, buyer agrees that the buyer’s down payment shall be increased in an amount equal to the difference between the appraised value and the purchase price. Appraisal shortfall: In the event the premises fails to appraise for at least the purchase price in any appraisal required by the lender, buyer agrees that buyer shall submit additional funds or financing in the amount equal to the difference
have been driven by a spending spree by large investors and iBuyers. “Ordinary home buyers are losing some of their motivation, thanks to prices that are vastly higher than last year,” Cromford said. “Despite low interest rates, affordability has slipped below the normal range for Greater Phoenix.” The report stated, “If it were not for the activity of investors and iBuyers – and particularly the latter – the market would have cooled during August. This would have been following the trend established since April. “However, iBuyers have purchased so many homes over the last month that they are significantly distorting the market dynamics. These homes are mostly going to be re-marketed shortly, so they will almost certainly increase supply over the coming weeks.” Cromford noted, “iBuyers have made offers well in excess of the pricing that we saw from them” in the first half of 2021. He said it is unclear how iBuyers will
between the appraised value and the purchase price, provided the difference does not exceed an agreed-upon amount. Here is an interesting story that recently happened to us regarding one of our listings and appraisal. The winning offer to buy the home came in over asking price, and the buyer was not willing to sign the waiver of appraisal. We knew there was no way the home would appraise for that price, so we countered back to the potential buyer with a counteroffer that was less than their original offer so the home would appraise, they would sign the waiver, and the deal would move forward. Just goes to show what a crazy market this is: You start seeing situations you’ve never seen before. Dave Cox, is part of Bonny Holland, Leading Luxury Experts. Reach him at 602-369-1085. ■
Leading Luxury Home Experts SALE PENDING
CORDOVA
1659 W Cottonwood Lane, Phoenix
BONNY HOLLAND Ahwatukee Resident and Realtor since 1995
602.369.1085
Bonny@LeadingLuxuryExperts.com
2016 & 2017 BREA Award for Most Sales in Ahwatukee!
1519 E Desert Willow Dr, Phoenix
$2,399,000
14616 S 1st St, Phoenix 7209 sqft, 6 bedrooms and 5.5 baths
Located in the Hillside gated community of Summerhill, this custom luxury estate has it all!
2157 E Tecoma Rd, Phoenix
$799,000
THE SANCTUARY
15832 S 22nd St, Phoenix
$1,650,000
AHWATUKEE CUSTOM ESTATES
11640 S Warcloud Ct, Phoenix
5100 sqft. 5 (+6) bedrooms, 4.5 baths
4270 sqft, 5 bedrooms (+7), 4 baths
Gorgeous highly upgraded single level home in Mountain Park Ranch.
Luxury Custom Estate nestled on a 40,000 square foot lot with amazing views!
Beautiful custom home in the highly sought after Ahwatukee Custom Estates.
Each Keller Williams Office is Independently Owned and Operated.
Meghann Holland:
Meghann@LeadingLuxuryExperts.com 480-241-4976 Transaction Coordinator
$1,259,000
2928 sqft, 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths
www.LeadingLuxuryExperts.com
Dave@LeadingLuxuryExperts.com 509-869-0358 Team Leader
$2,499,000
Exclusive custom home offering picturesque sunsets and captivating mountain views on over 1.7 acres in Tapestry Canyon!
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The average rental price per square foot has increased from $1 per square foot to $1.36 in the past two years, Cromford said. “That is a 36 percent increase in just two years and must be a budget problem for tens of thousands of tenants,” it said, noting rents increased by 28 percent in the previous 18-year period. “The cost of renting has escalated over a very short period,” Cromford said. “The housing bubble of 2004-2008 saw little to no rise in rents and in fact the low point was 64 cents in February 2005, just as the forsale market was reaching its highest frenzy. This time is very different, showing that the rapid appreciation in home values is due to real shortage of housing rather than speculative activity based on easy money.” However, Cromford also noted that all housing costs are soaring in the Valley. “Although the cost of renting has jumped 36 percent over two years, the average home price per square foot has increased by far more – from $169.26 to $262.21, a jump of 55 percent,” it said. ■
Dave Cox:
6377 sqft, 6 bedrooms and 5.5 baths
3909 E Cherry Hill, Queen Creek
$1,610,000
SUMMERHILL
Beautiful move in ready Ahwatukee home in Foothills Club West
SALE PENDING
Old World elegance and modern amenities join in this gated Cordova custom home with fine finishes throughout.
$395,000
TAPESTRY CANYON
1782 sqft, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths
MOUNTAIN PARK RANCH
5137 sqft. 4 (+6) bedrooms, 3.5 baths
buying spree at a moment’s notice. The market is therefore more precarious than if demand were primarily growing through owner-occupiers,” it added. The news is a lot happier for investors that rent – and not so hot for their tenants, judging by the Cromford Report’s findings. “Investors intending to rent out their properties are a different matter and the rapid rise in rents over the past year has justified them splashing out,” it said. “Indeed, far more homes are going from iBuyers straight to the rental operators than we saw prior to July 2021. This takes homes off the re-sale market for a long time and reduces supply.” It also noted “large scale investors with deep pockets are crowding out smaller investors.” “We have seen larger buying sprees from investors before, notably between 2011 and 2013,” it continued. “However we have never seen iBuyers so determined to increase their top line.”
#1 AGENT IN AHWATUKEE CLOSED VOLUME 2020
FOOTHILLS CLUB WEST
T JUSED LIST
price their homes once they return them to the market because “normal buyers no longer have the appetite” they showed through June 2021. “Achieving sale prices well over cost could prove quite tricky” for the iBuyers, it suggested. Cromford noted that iBuyers purchased about 2,850 homes over the last three months, which “represents almost 9 percent of resale purchases.” The iBuyer and investor buying spree has sharply impacted the availability of resale homes, it said. “We can see that the iBuyers (particularly Opendoor and Zillow) have increased their inventory massively,” the Cromford Report said. “If iBuyers had not done this, we estimate that supply would already be higher by some 1,800 listings…We conclude that pricing would also be weaker without their intervention. This begs the question: what happens if they stop buying on this massive scale?” “Investors, too, can decide to stop their
JUST LISTED
W
ith the drama and craziness in today’s real estate market, appraisals and appraisal gaps have become a huge issue – for both buyers and sellers. With a shortage of homes on the market for buyers to choose from, we have been seeing multiple offers on homes – most above asking price. This is where the problem comes in: will the home appraise? An appraisal is an assessment of a property’s value and performed by an independent appraiser. It gives mortgage lenders the confidence that the home value meets the loan amount. An appraisal gap occurs when the buyer’s offer on the home is higher that the appraised value.
In today’s rapidly appreciating market, appraisal gaps are much more common. Home prices are rising so rapidly (homes in Arizona appreciated 29 percent in 2021), that it can be challenging for appraisals to keep up. Risk to sellers: If a seller accepts an offer that is above the asking price and appraised value, the buyers must be willing to bridge the gap between the accepted offer price and the appraised value. If the don’t have the resources to do that, or choose not to, they can walk away from the home and get their earnest money returned to them. At this point, the seller’s home has effectively been off the market for 20-30 days and now they must start over. Risk to Buyers: Buyers have to hope that the home appraises around their offer price, or they risk having to come up with more cash to bridge the gap, or risk losing
MARKET from page RE1
SOLD
BY BRIAN COX AFN Guest Writer
REAL ESTATE
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
JUST LISTED
REAL ESTATE
SOLD
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FAMILY RUN TEAM
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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SPO OTLIGHT home
Circle G at Riggs Ranch
Estate living with refined tranquility in this exquisite setting. Meticulous stonework adorns entire exterior of this luxury home. Inviting entry opens to diagonally laid tile with granite inlays and dramatic wooden staircase. Formal dining room with stacked stone fireplace. Gourmet kitchen features granite countertops, large island, Subzero refrigerator, and Wolf gas cooktop with double ovens. Fireplace and wet bar in great room. Floor plan boasts seven bedrooms, playroom and large game room. Expansive master suite includes large sitting area with two-way fireplace, crown molding, separate walk-in closets and spacious bathroom. Three custom iron doors lead to massive covered patio with pavers, built-in barbeque, heated pool with waterfall and slide, gorgeous landscaping with fruit trees and koi pond. Large secondary bedrooms. Oversized laundry room with sink, granite countertops, cabinetry and room for a refrigerator. Additional upgrades throughout include 8’ solid core doors, speakers, surround sound in numerous locations, designer paint and exterior security cameras. Three masonry fireplaces. Anderson windows installed six years ago on entire first level. Four Trane a/c units with variable speed. Over-sized side entry four car garage. Availability to park an RV in the back as long as a garage is built for it. Over 7,000 square feet of stone on exterior. Almost acre-sized lot affords complete privacy.
Listed for $1,790,000
SOLD!
Mike Mendoza 480.706.7234 www.MendozaTeam.com
kw
®
SONORAN LIVING
KELLER WILLIAMS® REALTY
3909 E CHERRY HILL, QUEEN CREEK
PARADISE VIEWS IN CLUB WEST
JUST LISTED 5137 sqft, 4 (+6) bedrooms, 3.5 baths Old World elegance and modern amenities join in this gated Cordova custom home with fine finishes throughout.
Listed for $1,610,000
kw
®
SONORAN LIVING
KELLER WILLIAMS® REALTY
Bonny Holland
602.369.1085 • www.LeadingLuxuryExperts.com
IMMACULATE SINGLE LEVEL HOME LOCATED IN CLUB WEST ON A PREMIUM LOT•PARADISE VIEWS OF SOUTH MOUNTAIN•3 BED,2.5 BATH, PLUS EXECUTIVE OFFICE AND LOADED WITH UPGRADES•FORMAL LIVING ROOM•FORMAL DINING ROOM•FAMILY ROOM W/WETBAR, BUILT-IN MEDIA CENTER, & FIREPLACE•KITCHEN INCLUDES: S/S APPLIANCES ,CORIAN COUNTERS, LARGE ISLAND, GAS COOKTOP, 42’ CABINETS, RECESSED & PENDANT LIGHTING, & S/S HARDWARE•BREAKFAST NOOK•NEUTRAL PAINT & CARPET•STONE-LOOK TILE FLOORING•PLANTATION SHUTTERS•LARGE MASTER SUITE WITH VIEWS•MASTER BATH W/DUAL VANITIES, GLASS BLOCK WALK-IN SHOWER W/TRAVERTINE & MOSAICS•PARADISE OASIS BACKYARD WITH PEBBLETEC POOL, WATERFALL, PALM TREES, COVERED PATIO, EXTENSIVE DECKING, BUILT-IN BBQ, GRASSY PLAY AREA, & ENDLESS VIEWS•PATIO FURNITURE INCLUDED•THIS IS THE HOME YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR!
Listed for $799,000
Geno Ross (602) 751-2121 www.GenoRoss.com
REAL ESTATE
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
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Homie helps buyers make cash offers AFN NEWS STAFF
T
he brokerage Homie has now launched a service to help homebuyers pay cash for a house so they don’t lose out in a competitive bidding situation. Its subsidiary Homie Loans now offers “Homie Cash,” which it says “allows buyers to make all-cash offers to drastically increase their chances of winning” the house they want. “Cash offers are three times more like-
HENDERSON from page RE2
until buyers are forced to the sidelines because they can no longer afford the escalating prices. So is there any end in sight? In my opinion, as long as real estate interest rates remain relatively low, and demand remains high, the number of units sold and the
ly to win in a competitive bidding war, making it one of the most effective strategies to improve a buyer’s likelihood of their offer being accepted,” the company said in a release. “I’ve watched too many Arizonans, from first time home buyers to empty nesters, lose out on the home they really want because of investors or cash buyers. We saw the need, so we started Homie Cash to give buyers a leg up on the competition,” said Johnny Hanna, Homie co-founder and CEO.
average price of a property will continue to increase in the Ahwatukee and Metro Phoenix markets. However, many forces are in play that could slow the market. When this market does slow down, it will be a result of prices surpassing the ability of buyers to afford to make the payments. A rise in interest rates, out-of-control inflation, and
Homie cited ARMLS data in reporting that cash buyers currently account for 20.96 percent of homes purchased in Maricopa County and that cash transactions account for 23 percent of home sales as opposed to 15 percent a year ago. “Homie Cash levels the playing field by allowing buyers that don’t have hundreds of thousands of dollars in their bank accounts to become cash buyers and compete,” said Hanna. “We’re putting power back into the hands of buyers who have been disadvantaged in this
intensely competitive market.” Participating in Homie Cash requires buyers to complete a short application to qualify for the program. Once the application is submitted, Homie Loans will pre-approve buyers to ensure they are eligible for a conforming mortgage before sending an offer on a property. Once approved they work with a Homie Realtor to make all-cash offers with Homie Loans funds. Information: 480-999-2360 or homie. com/cash. ■
continuing increases in prices will be the most likely culprits in slowing or stopping the local, regional, and national real estate markets. The rate of inflation should be the highest concern to home buyers and sellers. If the increasing rate of inflation is allowed to continue to rise unabated, it will push the cost of all consumer items, including
properties, higher. Despite our current strong real estate market, inflation should be on the watchlist for all buyers, sellers and those contemplating getting into or out of the real estate market. For a consultation, Ahwatukee Realtor Allen Henderson can be reached at 480-392-2090. ■
GOT NEWS? Contact Paul Maryniak at 480-898-5647 or pmaryniak@imespublications.com
480-706-7234 ! LD O S
Ahwatukee’s #1 Team for Over 30 Years 7BR / 4.5 BA / 8,873 SQFT Estate living with refined tranquility in exquisite setting. Meticulous stonework adorns entire exterior of home.
Circle G at Riggs Ranch
Listed for $1,790,000
ST ! JU TED S I L
3BR / 2BA / 1,878 SQFT Enjoy living in Ahwatukee’s active adult community in this completely renovated home.
Ahwatukee
New exterior paint and 2019 Trane AC units in gated Chandler community.
UDC build on oversized cul-de-sac lot with newer AC units and hardwood flooring.
5 BR / 5 BA / 6,455 SQFT Stunning panoramic views from privately gated luxury retreat with casita on elevated preserve lot.
Sanctuary ! LD O S
Germann Country Estates
Listed for $1,950,000
4 BR / 3.5 BA / 3,860 SQFT Superb single level with travertine patio and fenced Pebble Tec pool with water feature.
Listed for $1,250,000
Listed for $675,000
Listed for $675,000
Sierra Canyon
Listed For $490,000
4BR / 2.5 BA / 3,289 SQFT
5 BR / 2.5 BA / 3,156 SQFT
D! L SO
Mike Mendoza MendozaTeam.com
Monte Vista
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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Ahwatukee Custom Estates One of the most amazing view lots in
$2,099,000
SOLD!
all of AZ. Custom home with everythingl 10,000 sq. ft., 3/4 acre prserve lot, 6 bedrooms, 6 bathes, Executive Office Suite, Master Suite with Sitting Room, Master Bath with Jacuzzi, Theater Room, Exercise Room, Loft, Guest House, Grand Foyer, Gourmet Kitchen, Resort Backyard with Pebbletec Diving Pool, Watertalls, slide, Volcano, firepit, Spa, Sport Court, Grassy Play Areas, & Outdoor Kitchen, 4-car A/C Garage. A true masterpiece!!!
Calabrea
Ahwatukee Custom Estates
SOLD!
$1,339,000
$1,750,000
Pristine & Classy Gated Estate On A Premium 2/3 Acre Hillside Lot, Private Cul-De-Sac, 6 Bedrooms, 4.5 Baths, 5200 Sqft Of Pure Luxury Finishes, Stunning Views In Every Direction, Iron Door, Butted Glass Windows In Entry & Kitchen, Custom Window Treatments, Decorator Paint, Dome Ceiling Foyer & Groin Vaulted Ceilings In Living Room, Travertine & Hardwood Floors Throughout, 7-Inch Baseboards, Media Room, Dream Kitchen Includes S/S Appliances, Slab Granite Counters, Alder Cabinets, Huge Island, Walk In Pantry, Large Master Suite W/Stone Fireplace, Master Bath W/Jacuzzi Tub, 3 Vanities & Snail Shower, Paradise Backyard W/Travertine In Versailles Pattern, Turf Grass, Pebbletec Pool/Jacuzzi, 4 Water Features, Large Covered Patio, Stacked Stone Bbq, 4 Car Garage W/Epoxy & Storage! Your Dream Estate Awaits!!
SOLD!
Amazing Remodeled Custom Estate with mountain views located at the end of a cul-de-sac.Over 8000sqft of pure luxury finishes.6 Bedroom,5.5 Baths.Custom Kitchen.Elevator.Executive Office.Basement Media Room.Dance Studio.Huge Backyard with Pool, Jacuzzi, Turf, BBQ, Sportcourt.This Spectacular Estate has it all!!!
Summerhill $1,099,000
Calabrea $1,099,000
Cabrillo Canyon $689,000
SOLD! Stunning Single Level Custom Remodel on a huge corner lot in a cul-de-sac! *4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath *The highest quality custom finishes throughout *Grand foyer *Formal living & dining room *Familt room w/fireplace *Wetbar *Designer kitchen includes: quartzsite counters & island, s/s appliances, custom cabinetry, walk-in pantry *Recessed LED lights throughout *Plantation shutters *Large master suite *Master bath w/walk-in shower, free standing tub, & walk-in closet *Laundry room w/sink *Wood flooring *Custom fixtures *Trane A/C’s *Private backyard w/covered patio, pebbletec pool, turf, & RV gate with tons of room to park the toys *3 Car garage with epoxy *The lot is very private *The house shows like a new build *Do not miss your opportunity to own this amazing Cabrillo Canyon Estate!
5 bedroom / 3 bath, 3,506 SqFt, Cul-de-sac location with huge backyard, sports court, built-in BBQ, mature shade trees, very private backing to wash. Good size SOLD! bedrooms, master downstai5. Features a large office with balcony, plus office/loft with built-in bookcase and 3 full baths. Th� home is perfect for family gatherings BEST NEAR THE LOOP 202 in gated withand stunning mountain only. views. andLOCATION entertaining. CanNEW be previewed with 24Calabrea hour notice appointment
SOLD!
Canyon Verde/$899,000--SOLD IN 1 DAY Foothills/$299,000--SOLD IN 1 DAY Ahwatukee/$489,000--SOLD IN 1 DAY
Complete with the highest quality build and finishes. Gourmet kitchen includes slab granite counters, alder cabinets, and stainless steel appliances. This estate also features a media/ theater room with 105 inch screen. The basement includes a full wet bar, family room & 2 bedrooms. Resort Backyard with pool. A perfect 10!
www.GenoRoss.com Donna Leeds TOP GRI, ABR REALTOR
®
�
949.310.5673
Stunning single-level custom estate gated summerhill on a 1/2 acre lot. beautiful mountain views. Gourmet Kitchen. Master Suite w/sitting area. Two master suites. Split floorplan. Executive office w/built-in cabinets. Tropical paradise backyard w/covered patio, gazebo, pebbletec pool, rock waterfall, built-in bbq, turf, & putting green. This estate has the perfect floorplan!!
lf"fl!
Geno Ross
602.751.2121
wwwBestAgentWUSA.com
Making Ahwatukee
Home Dreams Come True Since 1986 www.WestUSA.com I 480.893.0600
4505 E. Chandler Boulevard, Suite 170, Phoenix, AZ 85048
Mountain Park Ranch
Lakewood
SOLD!
$635,000
2,498 Sq Ft. EXCEPTIONAL HOME Which Has One of the LARGEST LOTS in the Premier Lakewood Community! PEBBLETEC POOL and SPA in your own Oasis backyard! 4 bedrooms 3 baths with Lakewood Parks, Greenbelts & 2 Fishing Lakes, Playgrounds and More.
Original Owners Phoenix charmer in the Ahwatukee Foothills! 3 bedroom, 3 full bath home with tons of upgrades, vaulted ceilings, and a gorgeous pool. Plantation shutters and top of the line energy efficient Anderson Windows installed throughout in 2014. The kitchen features granite countertops, a breakfast bar, and pendant lighting with an open concept feel. Optional space downstairs for a 4th bedroom with full bath if desired.
SOLD! Pristine Curb appeal in desirable Adult 55+ Golf Community of Ahwatukee. Open concept split floor plan with Vaulted ceilings. Many upgrades include remodeled and updated kitchen, tile floors, master bath, murphy bed, travertine deck and patio with misting system and a putting green. updated duel pane windows, Plantation shutters throughout, pebble-tech heated pool with a water feature, North South exposure and mountain views. Enjoy all the benefits that the ARC has to offer.
Troy Royston 480-435-3461 troyston61@gmail.com
SOLD!
$600,000
2,438 sq ft. Beautiful 4 bed, 2.5 bath. Master Down ! Great curb appeal with easy-care desert landscape and a two-car garage. New Carpeting discover formal dining and living areas, plantation shutters, and a soothing palette throughout. The charming kitchen offers ample oak cabinetry, tile counters, recessed lighting, & an island complete with a breakfast bar. The primary bedroom boasts its own ensuite filled with natural light & a sizable walk-in closet. Spacious bedrooms offer plush carpets and ceiling fans. Interior laundry with shelving. Backyard offers the best of both worlds with a covered patio and sparkling pool to cool off in.
Marty Griffin 602-692-7653 martygriffin@q.com
Marty Griffin 602-692-7653 martygriffin@q.com
Equestrian Estates
Maricopa
Jenifer Bulfer 480-297-6968 jbulfer@westusa.com
Ahwatukee
SOLD!
$499,900
Coventry Tempe
$769,000
PENDING!
Nicely updated single level custom home on cul-de-sac lot in coveted Ahwatukee neighborhood. Attached 2 car garage and 1020 sf detached 3 car garage with A/C and plenty of room for your toys and tools. Enter home to huge great room, vaulted ceilings, and a wood-burning fireplace. Kitchen features recently refaced cabinets and roll-out shelves. Spacious main bedroom with two walk-in closets. Beautiful backyard with diving pool (and slide!), spa, large lighted sports court, and mature landscaping. Half bath accessible from pool.
Bonnie Kennedy 602-320-0677 blkennedy5@cox.net www.azkennedygroup.com
$389,900
Park Promenade Chandler
$540,000
PENDING IN ONE DAY!
Immaculate 4 Bed/3 Bath home Professionally Designed by owner & located in coveted Park Promenade is a MUST SEE. Grand Entrance w/Vaulted Ceilings, Formal Sitting area, Plus Permitted Office Addition w/ workspace for 2. Gorgeous Updated White Kitchen w/ Granite Island, Newer high-end Appliances & Eat-in Nook Opens to Lrg. FR w/Full Hall Bath. Designer touches include high-end Wood Laminate flooring, custom lighting & beautiful tiled baths. Stunning Master Retreat has Classy Closets, Dual Vanities, & spa-like Shower. Resort-Like Backyard Boasts Lrg turf lawn, Mature trees & Ext’d Cov’d Patio.
Jill Ostendorp 480-678-7308 jillo@homesbyjillo.com
Mountain Park Ranch
PENDING!
This amazing single level 3 bed, 2 bath, plus den home sits on a lrg. Corner Golf lot w/ lots of privacy, 8.5’ deep salt water pool & 3 car garage. Enjoy spacious living/dining room, cozy family room & chefs kitchen w/ Corian counters, stainless appliances, pantry, butlers area & island. Primary bedroom is a full retreat w/ lrg. Walk-in closet, ensuite tiled shower/ tub, dual sinks, custom cabinetry, & storage loft above bath w/ backyard access. Oversized Backyard has covered patio, gated pool, custom pool shed & view fencing to 16th green (no balls). Newer HVAC (17), Exterior Paint (21), Solar Screens, Attic Insulation are just some of the many extras. Great home and walking distance to school and parks.
Jill Ostendorp 480-678-7308 jillo@homesbyjillo.com
SOLD!
$495,000
3,250 sq ft. 5 bedroom, 3 baths! 3 car garage, short walk to the huge HOA pool and top-rated Kyrene Monte Vista. Large kitchen with multiple living areas, nice front/ afternoonshaded patio, in a family-friendly cul-de-sac. Plantation shutters, new plumbing, one newer AC on a split-system, newer interior paint and flooring.
Link Paffenbarger 602-989-7221 linkpaff@gmail.com
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
Community
COMMUNITY
@AhwatukeeFN |
27
@AhwatukeeFN
www.ahwatukee.com
Ahwatukee man pens a loving guide to S. Mountain BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
M
oadag – or South Mountain – is one of the most sacred sites for Arizona’s four southern tribes. While 20 Arizona tribes attach some cultural significance to the mountain, it has strong religious significance for the Gila River Indian Community, the Ak-Chin Indian Community, the Salt River PimaMaricopa Indian Community and the Tohono O’odham Nation. Andy Lenartz can understand that attachment. He, wife Tracy and their two daughters, Cicily and Ruby, have pretty much the same attachment. Now, Lenartz has poured that love into a book devoted exclusively to South Mountain. “South Mountain Park and Preserve” – part of the Southwest Adventure Series published by the University of New Mexico Press – is as much an homage to
of our favorite things to do as a family,” said the Minnesota native, who has lived in Ahwatukee since 2008, A psychology professor at Gateway Community College, Lenartz plumbs the South Mountain Park and Preserve in every conceivable way, writing about its history and geology as well as its biology and recreational opportunities. “This incredible local treasure is the largest municipal park in the Ahwatukee resident and community college professor Andy United States, a stunLenartz recently published a comprehensive guide to South ning example of the SoMountain. (Pablo Robles/AFN Staff) noran Desert environthe mountain as it is a detailed 125-page ment located right in our backyard,” said Lenartz said, who includes familiar spots guide to its trails, plants and animals. “Spending time at South Mountain is one and new discoveries in his book.
The mountain has been an endless magnet for Lenartz and his family, who spend several days a week sampling its treasures. “We spend several days a week at the park either hiking, biking, having a picnic, or taking some time to reflect on what is meaningful in life,” he said. “I enjoy spending time volunteering there as a Park Steward. And I was even able to write portions of the book at the park.” Lenartz started the book out of another passion, noting that “encouraging people to get outdoors was a significant motivator for me.” “I have seen clearly – both in research and my own personal experience – the transformative effect that time outdoors can have on our physical and mental wellbeing,” he explained. Plus, he said he “wanted to introduce people to South Mountain Park, this incredible community resource.”
OPAS program from Mountain View to the YMCA,” she said. “I remember thinking ‘geez these OPAS volunteers are really passionate and committed to this program.’ To my utter delight, quite a few of these passionate and committed volunteers are still volunteering and helping to keep the program running like a well-oiled machine.” Among those volunteers is Jane Forde, a 30-year Ahwatukee resident who has been with the senior program for 18 years and continues to be a leading “passionate and committed” volunteer. “For so many of us more senior volunteers of Y OPAS, we’re more than excited to have Brenda return to the YMCA and lead this amazing program once again,” Forde said. “Brenda was our YMCA leader when we
helped the environmental changes with such class and enthusiasm and made it a seamless process for us all. She was present for all our functions and participated in the plans to expand the program. “Now, here we are, 15 years later, and relieved that we now have the leadership stability to continue our service to the seniors of Ahwatukee. Brenda brings her knowledge and energy, so I am sure I can safely speak for all of our clients and volunteers when we delight in her return to us.” After being away from the all-volunteer program for many years, there were changes Nichols had to absorb. She lauded the volunteers – among them Forde and Kate Bibber for assisting her as she learned the ropes.
Y OPAS gets an old friend to take the helm BY COTY DOLORES MIRANDA AFN Contributor
Y
OPAS, the Outreach Program for Ahwatukee Seniors located within the Ahwatukee Foothills Family YMCA, is celebrating a homecoming. Brenda Nichols, who helped the group make the move from Mountain View Lutheran Church in 2005, has returned to serve as the Y OPAS Director. When the organization was founded in 2001, it was known as OPAS to be a free support service to village seniors. Nichols was an employee and swim instructor at the local YMCA when the volunteer organization made its move. “Over 16 years ago as a Y employee, I remember being assigned the duties of assisting with the transition of moving the
Brenda Nichols is the new director of the Ahwatukee YMCA’s Outreach Program for Ahwatukee Seniors, or Y OPAS. (Pablo Robles/AFN Staff)
moved to the Y so many years ago. She
�ee LENARTZ page 29
�ee Y OPAS page 29
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COMMUNITY
Local teen seeks help in getting water to needy people AFN NEWS STAFF
A
n Ahwatukee teen is hoping the community will open their hearts and their wallets to help him deliver water and food bags to people experiencing homelessness and others in need. Milan Merchant at age 16 started a nonprofit called Project Hydration two years ago and hopes to deliver another 1,000 bags and over 5,000 bottles of cold water to shelters, bus stops, fire stations and emergency rooms before the end of September. He said those totals reflect what he delivered last year. Project Hydration is a qualified charity and donors can get a dollar-for-dollar tax credit. Donations can be made at projecthydration.com. Donation hours are also available if anyone would like to help assemble care
Foothills Golf Course Ladies League ready to swing on Tuesdays
The Foothills Golf Course Ladies League is open for play. Participants play 18 holes of handicap golf every Tuesday morning now through May. Play includes weekly games, prizes and friendly competition. Interested women can email Lucille Heid at lpheid@ outlook.com for details.
Memorial pavers honor veterans and current service people An engraved commemorative paver placed at Ahwatukee’s Blue Star Memorial is the perfect way to honor a family member or friend who served or is currently serving in the U. S. military. Pavers ordered before Oct. 1 will be placed at the memorial in time for Veterans Day. The Blue Star Memorial is a joint project of Desert Pointe Garden Club and the Ahwatukee Board of Management. It is located on the north side of Warner Road just west of 48th Street. Parking is available in the ABM lot. Pavers cost $50 each without a military logo or $60 with the logo. Pick up an order form at the Ahwatukee Board of Management office, 4700 E. Warner Road.
Golf tournament will support Tempe Union District’s students
The nonprofit Tempe Union High School Education Foundation is taking reservations for a Nov. 18 golf tournament with proceeds supporting district students.
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
packages or make deliveries. Please contact me at projecthydrationaz@gmail.com A senior at McClintock High School and the son of Sarika and Birju Merchant, Milan explained that as his parents would drive him to school, “I would look around to see homeless people on the street corners and people waiting at the bus stops in the killer 115-degree weather. “I wondered how many of these people’s health and quality of life was affected by what seems so simple as receiving water.” Right there and then, he said, “I knew I had to make a difference and I started to brainstorm ideas.” Milan, who is hoping to have a career in business and entrepreneurship, created “hydration stations” where the bottles are stored so people can simply take bottles and give them to those in need – and leave donations so he can buy more
bottled water. He also drops off water at various bus stops “on a consistent basis to ensure that those who need the water are able to receive it” and has put together care packages containing food, water, socks in the winter, and other essentials that he gives to different charities and food banks “that are able to distribute the packages to the homeless in a swift manner.”
The tournament at Arizona Grand Golf Course, 8000 S. Arizona Grand Parkway, Ahwatukee, will begin at 8 a.m. with a shotgun start and will include a long drive contest for men and women, closest to the pin and longest putt competition as well as raffle prizes. Last year’s tournament that raised over $40,000. Individual carts are available if requested. To register and learn about sponsorship opportunities, go to OnParForAPurpose.com.
East Valley’s Devorah Hadassah slates activities for the fall
Information: proje c t hyd ra t i o n a z @ gmail.com. ■
Milan Merchant of Ahwatukee is on a mission to deliver bottled water and food bags to needy people. (AFN file photo)
AROUND AHWATUKEE
Ahwatukee women’s group schedules luncheon with guest speakers
Ahwatukee Friends Family and Neighbors) will hold a luncheon 11:30 p.m. Sept. 27. Special guest speakers Beverly Beck and Susan Conaway’s will discuss “Women Helping Women Reach for the Stars.” The two local women are part of PEO, Philanthropic Educational Organization, the longest continuous women’s group in the US founded in 1869. Contact affanwomensgroup@gmail.com. Cost is $17 prepaid. Registration closes Sept. 19.
Petition signing for protection of rights slated here
A petition signing effort to protect voting rights and public education funding is being held in Ahwatukee. Locations include: 7-10 a.m. Saturdays and Sundays at the Nosh Café, 4855 E. Warner Road; 9-11 a.m. Saturdays at Ironwood Library, 4333 E. Chandler Blvd; 8-11 a.m. Sundays at the Ahwatukee Farmers Market, 4700 Warner Road.
Devorah Hadassah is the East Valley chapter of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America. The volunteer organization’s mission is to further a “passion for and commitment to the land, the people, and the future of Israel. Through education, advocacy, and youth development, and its support of medical care and research at Hadassah Medical Organization, Hadassah enhances the health and lives of people in Israel, the United States and worldwide.” Among upcoming activities is an online auction Oct. 18-Nov. 1 at biddingowl.com/DevorahHadassah. Payment by check only, made out to HADASSAH. Contact Susan by phone /text at 520-705-3226 or email Susanesq1@gmail.com for information. The group’s general meeting will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 14 with the topic “Jews and the early Christians.” To register for the Zoom meeting: hadassah-org.zoom. us/meeting/register/tZArculoqTgoG9Cjfd1hyUmuZvOr2J44E. Another Zoom meeting at 7 p.m. Nov. 17 will be held on the topic “Hannah’s War” by Jan Eliasberg. Register at hadassah-org.zoom.us/meeting/register/ tZUrfumgrz4iHdVwZ1B11ugG9MAPrKds6vv1. For more information: ruth.devorah.had@gmail.com or ann.hadassahmembership@gmail.com.
Ahwatukee Republican Women slate September meeting
Rep. Mark Finchem, a candidate for Arizona Secretary of State will address the next meeting of the Ahwatukee
Republican Women at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 28 at Foothills Golf Club, 2201 East Clubhouse Drive, Ahwatukee. For more information contact ARW President Judy Krahulec at 603-520-5082 or judy.krahulec@gmail.com or visit ahwatukeerepublicanwomen.com.
Banner opens first urgent care center in Ahwatukee
Banner Urgent Care has opened its first urgent care center in Ahwatukee. The urgent care, located at 4206 E. Chandler Blvd., is open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. “We are always focused on customer needs and we believe this location will offer the community access to the right care at the right time,’’ said Katrina Catto, CEO of Banner Urgent Care. “Right now, we are helping a lot of people by providing COVID-19 testing. We’re just about to enter cold and flu season, so we can offer flu vaccinations and easy-to-access care right here in Ahwatukee. And of course, we provide outstanding care for non-life-threatening injuries and illnesses as well.’’ Banner Urgent Cares offers COVID-19 testing as well as care for common medical conditions such as sinus infections, bronchial infections, sore throat, insect bites and bladder infections. Additional services include flu shots, X-rays, sports physicals, stitches, and diagnostic tests. Information: BannerHealth.com/urgentcare. ■
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COMMUNITY
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
LENARTZ from page 27
“I have been working to get people connected with nature in a manner that is safe and responsible. I particularly enjoy helping children and families reconnect with our natural environment. I find watching children develop a love of being outdoors to be immensely fulfilling. “South Mountain Park was a clear focus for this effort, a place that my family and I have a deep connection to.” “My intention is that this book will be a guide for users of all levels,” he said, citing his specific sections for newcomers to hiking and South Mountain. “And there is extensive information on trails, plants, animals, and geology for experienced users. I am confident every reader will learn something new about the park.” The first-time author spent a year writing the book and another year going through the editing process with the university press. He said he was able to work out some of his initial ideas through various pieces he has written for the Ahwatukee Foothills News. “This provided a chance to receive feedback from readers about what worked, what didn’t, and what information they found most helpful,” he said. “I am appreciative to all those who shared their input.”
Y OPAS from page 27
“I’m just in awe of this program. It’s been especially tough during the pandemic, but the program is persevering and has maintained more than 200 volunteers and I’m amazed at how it’s all online now and 400 clients,” she said. She said she appreciated how volunteers had adjusted to the new parameters necessitated by the pandemic. “Now our volunteers can go online and choose which rides they want to take,” Nichols explained. “They can pick those that work with their schedule or are located closer to their homes. It used to be we had to call them and ask if they had time to give someone a ride.” Among the most popular programs is one offering free rides for Ahwatukee seniors who are unable to drive or without a vehicle. With Y OPAS volunteer drivers who literally offer door-to-door service, seniors can go grocery shopping or get to their medical appointments. Nichols knows the ongoing pandemic
The Gila River Indian Community fought the South Mountain Freeway for years because South Mountain is sacred to the tribes that live there. Federal courts rejected their appeals. (AFN file photo)
Still, he admitted, “I had a big learning curve with every step of the process, as this was entirely new to me.” “I was fortunate to be signed by a publishing company with a talented team of editors and marketing staff who were willing to walk me through the process. It was a bit of a leap of faith never having done this before, but the excitement of seeing my work in print was worth the
reality is and will continue to affect the organization’s ability to serve the community as they once did, and would like to continue to do. Face-to-face events have fallen to the pandemic and the upsurge in the Delta variant of COVID-19 canceled September’s annual community outreach and last spring’s popular volunteer appreciation luncheon. “It is sad we’ve had to curtail events like our 20th anniversary that’s upcoming in October. We had planned a big in-person celebration, but we’ll do it again when it’s safe,” she said. “I don’t think people will care if we’re a year late.” Nichols arrived in Arizona to fulfill an internship needed to earn her degree in nonprofit management from the University of Nebraska. She accepted an invitation from the Ahwatukee Community Center Tennis and Swim Club and was subsequently hired, working there for eight years. She married Nick Nichols, a Kyrene de las Lomas Elementary physical educa-
time and effort.” Besides, he considered the entire exercise “more fun than a challenge.” “I did hike every single trail in at South Mountain Park in a one-year period to create the trail guide portion,” said Lenartz, who also took all but the cover photo for the book. Lenartz has been both an avid hiker and mountain biker for more than 15 years.
tion teacher. Starting in 1994, she was recruited as aquatics director at the nascent Ahwatukee Foothills Family YMCA, giving swim lessons at neighbors’ pools as there was one yet to be built at the Liberty Lane facility. In 2000, she left the Y to start a family, returning three years later, but resigned when the housing bubble hit in 2008. She worked as a grant writer for a domestic violence shelter, and was wooed by the state Department of Health Services. “One month I was writing grant proposals, the next month I was reading them,” she said. At DHS, she had three different titles while working in domestic violence prevention, family planning, and lastly with their High-risk Perinatal Program (HRPP), a topic she knew well as she was herself a participant from 2000-2003 when her twin daughters arrived two months early, and were in the neonatal intensive care unit for two months and required developmental follow-up two years thereafter. “Today my daughters are happy and
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“I had done occasional hikes growing up, but upon moving to Arizona and discovering the Sonoran Desert, these activities became a main focus of my life,” he said. “I absolutely love being outdoors and seek every opportunity I can to spend time in nature.” He and his family “have hiked and biked all over the state of Arizona and beyond.” “We all love to travel and have hiked, biked, paddled, and camped in over half of the U.S. states in our explorations,” he added. “A particular favorite are national parks. We are on a quest to visit all of those in the United States. “ Yet, for all his enthusiasm at discovering new places, he’s left his heart at South Mountain. “It is a truly unique place and a spectacular outdoor playground right in our backyard,” Lenartz said. “While there are bigger and more extensive mountains, it is the biggest municipal park in the U.S. It is absolutely incredible that so many people in the nation’s fifth biggest city have easy access to this sprawling natural space. “South Mountain Park was initially under consideration as a national park when it was established nearly 100 years ago, and we are all so very fortunate to have daily access to this special place.” The book can be purchased on amazon. com and a number of other sites. ■
healthy and live in Flagstaff where Vanessa is a cosmetologist and Bailey is a senior at NAU,” she said. After 11 years with the state, she accepted the offer to come to Y OPAS as their new director. “I plan to be here until I retire, and that’s at least another nine years away,” she said. She brings with her a new title: Associate Executive Director of Y OPAS and Senior Engagement. The last three words are an indication of the program’s planned expansion. “I think it might open up other avenues we haven’t yet thought to explore,” she explained. “The opportunity to expand when it’s safe again.” For now, Nichols is basking in her new position. “It feels like coming home. I’m looking forward to rekindling friendships, making new ones and strengthening Y OPAS as it expands to meet the ever-changing needs of Ahwatukee seniors,” she said. “And I couldn’t do it without the many amazing Y OPAS volunteers.” ■
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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*https://www.yahoo.com/now/senior-housing-wealth-exceeds-record-150300719.html Reverse mortgage loan terms include occupying the home as your primary residence, maintaining the home, paying property taxes and homeowners insurance. Although these costs may be substantial, AAG does not establish an escrow account for these payments. However, a set-aside account can be set up for taxes and insurance, and in some cases may be required. Not all interest on a reverse mortgage is tax-deductible and to the extent that it is, such deduction is not available until the loan is partially or fully repaid. AAG charges an origination fee, mortgage insurance premium (where required by HUD), closing costs and servicing fees, rolled into the balance of the loan. AAG charges interest on the balance, which grows over time. When the last borrower or eligible non-borrowing spouse dies, sells the home, permanently moves out, or fails to comply with the loan terms, the loan becomes due and payable (and the property may become subject to foreclosure). When this happens, some or all of the equity in the property no longer belongs to the borrowers, who may need to sell the home or otherwise repay the loan balance. V2021.06.21 HYBRID NMLS# 9392 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). American Advisors Group (AAG) is headquartered at 18200 Von Karman Ave., Suite 300, Irvine, CA 92612. Licensed in 49 states. Please go to www. aag.com/legal-information for full state license information.
These materials are not from HUD or FHA and were not approved by HUD or a government agency.
BUSINESS
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
@AhwatukeeFN |
@AhwatukeeFN
www.ahwatukee.com
Local catering business kicks…well, fill in the blank BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
T
here are basically three kinds of customers that Britta Healey caters to: those looking for extra special sweet treats, couples looking for an extraordinary wedding cake and those looking for a memorable dining experience right in their own home. With her partner/sous chef/neighbor Kevin Marshall, Healey recently launched a business whose name pretty much reflects her confidence that whatever those customers choose, they won’t be dissatisfied: Kick A** Katering. That self-confidence is not misplaced, she feels. Even before the Desert Vista High School alumna became a culinary school student, she explained, she discovered the kitchen is her kingdom. She was just a high school kid when she started working at Safeway, starting as a bagger and helping a friend in the bakery.
Britta Healey and Kevin Marshall of Ahwatukee launched a catering business recently and they not only bring all the ingredients for any meal at a customer’s home but even bring all the table settings as well. (Pablo Robles/AFN Staff) She started out modestly in the bakery. “I’d help her box cookies and stuff and
I got to see people decorate cookies and I always thought that was kind of cool,”
Healey recalled, adding that she was delighted when she finally was promoted to an actual baker. When the time came to ponder life after high school, the idea of college didn’t much appeal to her and her father suggested she look into culinary school. And by the time she graduated from culinary school in 2008, she knew she had discovered her life’s work. She parlayed an internship at Fort McDowell Casino Resort into a fulltime job as its only baker – and discovered she could do more than bake. “Everyone around me cooked,” she said, “and they kept pushing me and pushing me to do more and it actually turned out I could cook and I was actually very good at it. So I would do the soup of the day and help prep the line and then I just kind of grew into not just baking but cooking.” “Every ounce of me enjoyed being in the kitchen – like, I didn’t want to be
�ee CHEF page 34
2 Ahwatukee pet sitters align for dogs and cats BY COTY DOLORES MIRANDA AFN Contributor
A
hwatukee residents Kate McPike and Tracy Zipay have become allies in separate businesses that cater to what they call “Pet parents.” McPike is the longtime owner and operator of K8’s Pet Care, but has changed her business model and name to K8’s Cats, focusing strictly on felines. Zipay has an extensive background fostering dogs and working with American Kennel Club Labrador Retrievers and started a business called Pawsitive Pet Sitter. To ensure her former dog sitting clients are cared for, McPike aligned with Zipay and her new business Pawsitive Pet Sitter. Zipay assumed care for a majority of McPike’s dog owner clients. Together, they’re planning to introduce
themselves to area pet owners with a meet-n-greet at Ahwatukee’s Pet Planet in Mountainside Plaza 10 a.m.-noon Oct. 2. More than two separate entities, the women say theirs is a partnership with each one there for the other while allowing the opportunity to specialize. McPike started her business in 2016, shortly after arriving from Texas, where she’d been employed with a pet sitting company. “K8’s Pet Care LLC has been very successful in Ahwatukee. It was voted Best of Ahwatukee the past three years,” she said proudly. “I attribute this success to my professionalism, business background, my organization and people skills and, of course, my love of animals.” “For the last two years, I’ve been trying to figure out a way to specialize in
�ee SITTERS page 33
Ahwatukee residents Kate McPike and Tracy Zipay, holding on to Sampson and Meeko, have aligned their respective pet-sitting businesses to best serve dog and cat owners. (Pablo Robles/AFN Staff)
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
Kitty Café first of its kind in the region AFN NEWS STAFF
N
ow that she’s retired from A.T. Still University, Marsha Ham has found her purrfect new endeavor. Ham has launched the Kitty Pause Kitty Café at 1837 W. Guadalupe Road, Mesa, and there may not be another café like that in the region. Not only does it offer a chance to play with felines, but the café also gives customers a chance to adopt them – one of the reasons people are encouraged to make a reservation at kittypausecafe.com, even if it’s almost last-minute thought. “I have had a long-term loving relationship with rescue cats,” Ham wrote on her blog as she kept followers apprised of her progress in building the café. Ham had been director of A.T. Still’s Teaching & Learning Center – and a longtime fan of felines. “I adopted my first rescue cat, Hannibal, not long after I moved to Phoenix in 1990,” she said. “Over the years since then, I have provided a loving home to a total of 11 cats. I now have a kitty family of seven cats including one special needs kitty, Harley.”
SITTERS from page 32
cats only. My dilemma was my clients and their dogs. I have a personal relationship with most of them and I’ve come to love their dogs; how could I tell them I was going ‘cats only’?,” she recalled. “As luck, or fate, would have it, I was talking to Tracy Zipay one day and she said that she was thinking of going into dog training or pet sitting. I told Tracy if she was interested in going into pet sitting, I would help her and teach her everything I know.” Zipay learned McPike’s much-acclaimed style of interacting with pet owners. When she meets with clients, McPike said she explains her policies, and then finds out exactly how the client wants their pets cared for. “I follow their instructions to the letter,” she explained. “When they return home, they receive notes for each visit I made along with a checklist of duties I carried out according to their instructions.” For Zipay, a 23-year-Ahwatukee resident, the COVID-19 lockdown prompted her move from fostering to pet sitting. “I stayed home during the pandemic,
Levi Grandinetti, 6, plays with some cats at Kitty Pause Kitty Café in Mesa. (Pablo Robles/AFN Staff) She was inspired to open Kitty Pause after a visit to a cat café in San Francisco. As Ham puts it, Kitty Pause is “a hub for cat-centered activities designed to create a sense of joyfulness for both the visitors
and sadly watched and nursed my beloved Aussie mix companion of 15 years, Cami, as she grew older and weaker. I had to put her to sleep last August. She was my only foster fail, which means the only foster I ever kept. I didn’t have the heart to replace her, so I decided to put that love into fostering puppies again.” She worked with Mesa-based The Farm Rescue. Years earlier, with her two daughters, Zipay fostered dogs and cats for the Humane Society, and as a family they were involved with the Maricopa County 4-H, where she was a certified youth leader in horse and dog projects. “Fostering again with The Farm Rescue renewed my love for caring for animals, and when a friend challenged me to consider caring for pets as a living, I contacted Kate. She was a friend who’d been in business for years as a pet sitter with a great reputation, and I approached her to see if I could work with/for her and learn the ropes,” she recalled. “Through a great stroke of fortune for me, it turned out Kate wanted to slow down a bit and care for cats only. I love dogs, so it was a no-brainer to work with
and the cats.” Its goal “is to provide rescue cats with a free roaming and enriched space where they can thrive until they find their forever home.”
her on a plan for us to move forward with an alliance,” she said. “She put all the materials in my way to learn and grow quickly in the best practices of professional sitters,” she said. “She also told me the importance of updating my pet first aid and CPR skills, which I did locally, through an organization called The Frontline Coalition. I started taking courses in pet industry topics, and am working on my Fear Free Pet Sitter Certification, as well as studying animal behavior and joining industry organizations.” “One thing the pandemic is proving to us is the importance of pets, how they make us happy, how us trying to make them happy just multiplies the effect. As a professional pet sitter, knowing these relationships between pet owners…is so important,” she said. “In their absence, we’re the ones relied upon to not only make sure the pet is fed, has water, goes to the bathroom, etc., but also maintains the care standard and forms a relationship with the pet ourselves.” She said pet sitting is not merely “popping in and filling a bowl.” “It’s filling the void in the animal’s heart
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That means, people can play bingo with cats, enjoy yoga with them and maybe take one home since Kitty Pause is also an adoption center for Saving One Life. The 1,700-square-foot cat cafe is designed for playing, relaxing and cuddling with cats and includes lounge furniture, a life-size kitty climbing tree, wall perches, walkways and play cubes, as well as quiet spaces where the felines can rest. “The space is designed to be flexible and welcoming to felines and humans alike,” the café website notes. “Kitty Pause will also offer free Wi-Fi with lots of space to study or work with the companionship of the felines while keeping a safe social distance from others,” Ham added. The cafe also features the Katnip Boutique with fun items for felines and cat lovers alike and sells prepackaged human treats as well. “We’re excited to partner with Kitty Pause to showcase our fabulous felines in an inviting and comfortable space,” said Carrie Neidorf, director of Saving One Life, a no-kill shelter. Information: kittypausecafe.com. ■ when its owner is not there. It’s a huge responsibility, especially when you consider what can go wrong,” she said. “Being pet owners ourselves, we know how hard it is to leave pets. There’s so much more that goes into being a professional sitter than just loving pets and being willing to do a favor for your neighbor or friend.” McPike noted that both she and Zipay “are bonded and insured, background checked, pet CPR/first aid-trained and renewed every two years, participate in continuing education webinars via Pet Sitters International and other pet-specific organizations, and keep up to date on petspecific topics and trends.” “We understand that pet parents can be stressed when they leave a pet at home alone and pets can be stressed to be left home alone. One of our many goals is to lessen that stress,” McPike added. “My promise to my clients is that “I will treat your pets as if they were my own,” she said – to which Zipay added, “And mine, too.” Information: Yesspet.com for Zipay and K8scats.com for McPike. ■
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BUSINESS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
CHEF from page 32
per mile unless the customer wants to anywhere else. I would spend over eight pick it up. hours a day. I’d come in on my days off. It As for cooking for was my passion.” her family, special As time went on, she broadened her cumeals are still on the linary skill and repertoire at a restaurant, menu, but not every then Casino Arizona, where she baked all day since sons Aiden, their pastries. 3, and Lucas, 6, are But then she married her husband Dan“typical boys” who iel and became pregnant with the first of prefer chicken nugtheir two sons. gets to coq au vin. And that put her on the road to the place “I try to do interwhere she is now. esting things on the “I decided to stay at home because we had weekends,” she said, that option, which I was very blessed with, noting that on a rebut I couldn’t stay away from being in the cent Friday evening, kitchen,” Healey explained. “So, I opened she and Daniel were my own business and I strictly did pastries.” entertaining and she But a few months ago, she and Marshall, was preparing barbeBritta Healey cut her culinary teeth as a baker and still makes her longtime friend, decided to go full cued lamb chops with eye-popping, mouth-watering desserts. (kickasscateringllc.com) bore with an in-home catering business a cherry tart sauce on that covers the gamut – from pastries to casion and can even bring recorded mu- top of her special mashed potatoes and wedding cakes to a full four-course meal sic to match. vegetables. And when it’s all over, they’ll clean up. they’ll cook in a client’s kitchen. Ironically, Healey herself has dietary re“We take care of everything and every- strictions – “which kind of sucks but I still After conferring on what the client wants served, Healey and Marshall shop thing is homemade – noodles, sauces, taste my food even if it’s going to kill me.” for the ingredients that they’ll cook with whatever,” Healey said. “We provide someAnd it certainly doesn’t slow her down. thing that’s the next level, not what you’d Late last month she was baking three their own cookware at the client’s home. They bring tableware to match the oc- get at a regular restaurant. It’s a little bit more high-end.” That four-course dinner inANSWERS TO cludes appetizers, salad, enPUZZLES AND SUDOKU trée and, of course, dessert. from Page 44 And while they have a menu offering choices, Healey said they’re willing to make offmenu items, depending on what they might be, and can adapt to any special dietary requirements. And it doesn’t have to be just dinner. “It could be breakfast. It could be brunch. It could be lunch. It’s all up to our customers and what they want and the time they want it,” Healey explained. While the meal service for Kick A** Katering not only brings ingredients to cook meals now is limited to Ahwatukee, in customers’ homes but also brings place settings and the pastries and wedding cakes can be delivered farther even music for the right ambience. (kickasscateringllc.com) at an extra cost of 50 cents
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three-tiered cakes for one Saturday and one of them was a spider cake that she insisted have real legs. “There’s a lot of time and detail that go into these cakes,” she explained, adding that one day she’d like to open a modest storefront. And she hasn’t stopped challenging herself, stretching to expand her culinary repertoire. “I try to challenge myself with family and friends that I know won’t judge me,” Healey said. As for outside that circle, she said the most challenging aspect of cooking at someone else’s home is timing. “When I’m there in someone’s house, making sure every part of the meal goes out at a certain time – pacing it at their pace and everyone is different. It can be a bit of a challenge to read the room and where people are but I just talk to them and most people are very open, very sweet. I’ve had good experiences so far, so nothing is super challenging except my nerves.” Information: kickasskateringllc.com, 602-510-2785 or kickasskatering@ gmail.com. ■
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A C O N V E R S AT I O N W I T H
ARIZONA’S 2022 GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATES 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. | Thursday, Sept. 30 Doubletree by Hilton Phoenix-Gilbert Arizona’s economy is recovering at a record pace after COVID-19, but how will the next governor build on that momentum? Find out at a special event focused exclusively on Arizona and the PHX East Valley jobs economy. Don’t miss what promises to be the business community’s first look at Arizona’s 2022 gubernatorial candidates. Presented by:
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OPINION
Opinion 36
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Share Your Thoughts:
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Minority-owned businesses rising out of pandemic BY ED ARONSON AFN Guest Writer
A
ccording to the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, minorityowned businesses are unique in that 56 percent are family-owned seeing an average revenue of $110,000 compared to non-minority-owned businesses that generate $500,000 on average per year. The stakes are higher for minorityowned businesses in Arizona because the success of the family is directly tied to the success of the business and there are fewer cash reserves to cushion economic downturns, much less the ongoing impact of a global pandemic. In recognition of Small Business Week, Cox Business has studied the challenges of minority-owned businesses aiming to catch a glimpse of the issues they face, and
Correction
more importantly, how they rise above. The results of the 2021 Cox Business Comeback Survey paint a resilient and hopeful picture, particularly for minority business owners under the age of 45. Less than half of businesses with owners 45 years and older have returned to pre-pandemic �inancial levels while more than half of businesses owned by someone younger than 45 have reached or exceeded their pre-pandemic levels. Regardless, nearly 90 percent of surveyed minority business owners are hopeful about growth in the next year and the future of their businesses. Minority-owned businesses are investing in their future with 83 percent having received funding from the Payroll Protection Program and nearly 75 percent received personal stimulus funding. Of those that received funds, 81 percent put their
stimulus money back into their business. Most minority business owners 18 to 44-years-old are keen on implementing new products and services like eCommerce this year, as well as new technologies into their business processes. Yet, of those owners 45 years and older, less than half are saying yes to new technology. Nearly half of the respondents promote their businesses as minority-owned and 43 percent believe that being minorityowned has generated more sales in the last year. Fifty-�ive percent of those under 45 have posted or commented in response to the current social justice movement with 20 percent claiming to be very vocal and 41 percent claiming to post or comment very sparingly. For the most part, those 45 and older
were not vocal at all. Resoundingly, 85 percent of those who have posted on the subject have seen a positive response to their business’s voice in the movement. Minority-owned businesses are looking for support from large enterprises with 55 percent of those surveyed indicating they want improved supplier diversity; 54 percent would like increased minority-speci�ic grants and 45 percent are looking for more mentorship or advisory programs with business executives. During Small Business Week, and throughout the year, Cox Business supports small businesses throughout the state by providing them vital telecommunications services while also purchasing their services and supplies to keep our business humming. Ed Aaronson is vice president for Cox Business, Arizona. ■
A column by David Leibowitz about school boards erroneously stated that at an August meeting of the Scottsdale Uni�ied Governing Board, a mother had falsely accused a district employee of distributing a neo-Nazi comic book on some campuses. The mother did not make such an accusation.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Conservancy should buy Club West Course
As a Foothills resident, I’m worn out by the endless legal wrangling over Club West. The former golf course is an eyesore and an embarrassment to the community. It seems that The Conservancy and a handful of residents with homes on the course seem most concerned with their particular views and property values being protected than trying to �ind a viable solution to the problem. If blowing dust, dead trees and acres of weeds aren’t hurting their property values, I’m not sure how a Taylor Morrison home would; but I digress. Since these folks are committed to only a golf course, green space and unobstructed
views – a nice idea that realistically limits selling options as investors normally look for a return – I have a suggestion: buy the property yourselves. Build your course, have your green space and protect your views. The rest of us can bene�it with an end to the legal �ights and a more pleasant drive along Chandler Boulevard. -Scott Cox
Quality workout tough to �ind at Ahwatukee YMCA
What does it take to get a quality workout at the Ahwatukee Foothills YMCA? I am a military veteran and having moved into Ahwatukee in 2007, I have been a member of the only YMCA in the area since that time. It was always well run
and quite enjoyable to be a member, up until the last few years and that’s mostly due to the change in management and the supervisory chain at the Valley of the Sun YMCA ignoring many complaints. Member disputes went unresolved, the pool “remodeling” over last winter took three times longer than promised, should long ago have been completed. Staff turnover and morale have gone in opposite directions. Most acutely, the turnover of personal trainers has come to the point that the local YMCA has had one part-time personal trainer with exceptionally limited availability. In attempting to switch to an-other, no one was available until recently and restrictions have been placed on access to availability as well. Sure, we all understand at this point how
business have struggled to come back, post COVID 19 and quarantining but this is all now about how the YMCA is being managed at this point. The needs of the members take precedence, for without them there will be no more YMCA in Ahwatukee! -John Clark
Ahwatukee poet mourns outcome in Afghanistan It’s hard to keep from crying Our administration lying. Our freedoms slowly dying. Our treasurer troops keep trying. Human suffering intensifying. End results – all terrifying -Marlene V. Saens
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
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SPORTS
39
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Late touchdown drive lifts Pride over Brophy BY CHRIS FAHRENDORF AFN Contributing Writer
M
ountain Pointe coach Eric Lauer raved about his team’s ability to find a way to win against Corona del Sol in the season opener, avenging last year’s rout at the hands of the Aztecs. He aimed to have his team carry over the momentum from that game into their season opener against Brophy, a team on the rise under head coach Jason Jewell. But the Pride are also on the rise. That was made clear in their final offensive drive of the game when Mountain Pointe took the lead and the win, 26-23 over the Broncos. It’s the first time since 2016 Mountain Pointe starts the season 2-0. The Pride have already matched their win total from the last two years combined. Ahead of the game, Jewell said while both teams had down years in 2020, “Mountain Pointe is Mountain Pointe.”
Mountain Pointe junior quarterback Chris Arviso orchestrated a late drive in the fourth quarter to seal the Pride’s win over Brophy Friday night. (Andy Silvas/AFN Contributor) “Just like us last year, who cares what the record was. It’s 6A football,” Jewell said. “Their defense likes to smack people and they’ve got plenty of team speed.” Mountain Pointe’s defense was on full
display Friday night, as they limited the Broncos to a mere 23 points just one week after Brophy put up 49 points in a win over Saint Mary’s. Both teams traded multiple drives in the
first quarter, but neither was able to get on the board. To start the second quarter, Brophy senior kicker Marcus Lye got the Broncos started with a 45-yard field goal. Then, with just under five minutes left in the first half, Brophy senior quarterback EJ Warner connected with senior running back Taj Hughes for the first touchdown of the night. But, with under two minutes left in the half, the Pride suddenly found their stride. Junior quarterback Chris Arviso hit senior receiver Jordan Huff for a 38-yard touchdown. Just 42 seconds later, senior defensive back Amier Boyd intercepted Warner and returned it for a touchdown. The Pride converted their only two-point conversion of the night and took a 14-9 lead into halftime.
see PRIDE page 40
DV football almost added an 11th game, then didn’t
BY ZACH ALVIRA AFN Sports Editor
D
esert Vista’s football program entered this week, and proceeded through most of it, thinking it would be off last Friday night for its bye. Then, Cactus came calling. The Cobras, one of the top teams in 4A who many entities have picked to either win the conference title or break into the Open Division this season, was suddenly in need of a contest after Coconino was forced into quarantine. Desert Vista Athletic Director David Klecka said in a statement he was excited for the opportunity for a potential 11th game for his school’s team, but knew he needed approval from the AIA. That came faster than expected. “At Desert Vista we strive to create opportunities for our student-athletes, which was the case Thursday evening
Desert Vista’s football program, on a bye last week, was attempting to schedule a lastminute contest against 4A Cactus Friday, Sept. 10, but logistical hurdles forced the game to be called off. (Zac BonDurant/AFN Contributor) when we received a call from Cactus High School requesting a contest between our two football programs,” Klecka’s state-
ment read. “Excited about the opportunity, I immediately called Desert Vista Principal Michael Deignan and contacted
the Arizona Interscholastic Association to be approved for an 11-game season. “A short time later, AIA Executive Director David Hines said we were approved and that he would work on an officiating crew for the game. Within 15 minutes, I heard from Commissioner of Officials Brian Gessner.” Hines, who was in attendance for Campo Verde’s Thursday night matchup against Cactus Shadows, said the officiating crew for the Cactus-Coconino game was available to head down the mountain to Ahwatukee to officiate the lastminute contest. He reiterated those claims on Twitter. “A crew was made available within 20 minutes of the request,” Hines replied to one user. Klecka said he told head coach Ty Wisdom and the team about the possibility
see VISTA page 41
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SPORTS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Mountain Pointe inducts 6 into school Hall of Fame BY ZACH ALVIRA AFN Sports Editor
A
group of six individuals who have made or are currently making an impact on Mountain Pointe High School and the surrounding community were inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame Friday, Sept. 10. The group, which includes athletes, veterans, a doctor and librarian, were honored as part of a special dinner before the Pride football team played Brophy. They were then officially introduced to the crowd during halftime of Mountain Pointe’s win over the Broncos. “We are celebrating these six individuals for their tremendous achievements both during their time at Mountain Pointe, and after they graduated,” Principal Tomika Banks said in a press release ahead of the event. “But this is also a student-driven event that highlights the culture and community of our school - all of the things that make it such a special place.” Among those inducted into the Hall of Fame are former Mountain Pointe football player and 2011 graduate Alex Lewis, who went on to star at Colorado and then Nebraska before he was drafted by the Baltimore Ravens in 2016 with the No. 130 overall pick. Lewis spent three years with the Ravens before he was traded to the New York Jets in 2019. Lewis signed a three-year contract ex-
PRIDE from page 39
Mountain Pointe head coach Eric Lauer believed that interception by Boyd changed the course of the game. “The pick definitely changed the momentum, but our tempo was to push and push and push regardless,” Lauer said. “The more we see hands on hips and guys asking for a break, we turn it up even more.” Much like in the first, it took Mountain Pointe a quarter to adjust to the tempo of the game. The Pride could not get it going in the third quarter, while the Broncos were able to muster up seven points on another touchdown pass from Warner to Hughes. Hughes did it all for the Broncos on offense as he finished with 8 carries for 45 yards and 13 receptions for 136 yards and two touchdowns.
From left: Mountain Pointe junior Leila Cabanillas representing David Pettibone, Joann Pompa, Scott Kingery, Tomika Banks, Alex Lewis’ mother, Kimberly, and uncle Kurt Broer, Dr. Aubri Carman and Ben DeMarr were all either inducted or represented inductees into Mountain Pointe most recent Hall of Fame class. (Andy Silvas/
AFN Contributor)
tension with the Jets in 2020, but on Aug. 6 of this year, he suffered a head injury. Three weeks later, on Aug. 18, Lewis announced his retirement. Ben DeMarr, who played basketball and football for the Pride before graduating in 2011, was also inducted into the Hall of Fame. DeMarr joined the U.S. Air Force after high school where he has since become a captain and is also a member of the U.S. Space Force. Scott Kingery, a 2012 graduate, starred on the diamond for Mountain Pointe’s baseball program. Kingery walked-on at the University of Arizona and played outfield for two years before he switched to second base as a junior. He earned recognition that season as the Pac-12 Conference College Baseball Player of the Year and was
Mountain Pointe opened up the fourth quarter with a three-minute drive that ended in a quarterback sneak for a touchdown from Arviso to take back the lead. Just over a minute later Warner led the Broncos to their last touchdown of the night on an eight-yard pass to junior receiver Layton Duncan. With just over seven minutes left in the game, the Broncos intercepted Arviso for the second time, but squandered an opportunity to add to their lead as Lye missed a 39-yard field goal. Arviso then led the Pride down the field and capped off the drive with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Boyd. “I was seeing that the defense was tired,” Arviso said. “We had time to just move the ball and keep making positive gains.” Arviso finished the night passing
a finalist for the Golden Spikes Award. In 2015, Kingery was drafted in the second round by the Philadelphia Phillies, where he has since worked his way through the farm system and is now a starter. However, he is currently ailing with a shoulder injury that will require him to miss the rest of the season. Kingery, who was in attendance for the Hall of Fame ceremony, said it was an honor to be inducted by his school. “It’s a super special night and a super special honor,” Kingery said. “I was really surprised when I got the call. It’s a really cool experience and I’m happy to be back here at Mountain Pointe.” Kingery, Lewis and DeMarr joined 1999 graduate David Pettibone and faculty member Joann Pompa as inductees.
Pettibone is currently a Professor of Art at the University of Alaska-Anchorage and a professional artist. Pompa, a former department chair at Mountain Pointe, is currently a librarian at the school. Dr. Aubri Carman, a former athlete, 2008 graduate of Mountain Pointe and a Flinn Scholar, went on to the University of Arizona to study medicine and received her medical degree. Now a pediatric emergency medicine fellow at UT-Austin Medical Center in Austin, Texas, she said her nomination to be inducted into her high school’s Hall of Fame was “humbling.” “It’s humbling, for sure. I was flattered, blown away,” Carman said. “I think it’s a really cool tradition they have here, and it
see HALL page 41
for 317 yards and two touchdowns alongside one rushing touchdown. The Broncos got the ball back with the chance to drive down the field, but an interception from Mountain Pointe junior defensive back Timmy Allen sealed the game. Lauer emphasized his belief that Mountain Pointe’s “culture is changing quicker than we thought.” “It’s about embracing the chase and they’re buying into that,” Lauer said. “We bent, we wiggled a little bit but we didn’t break.” Next week, Mountain Pointe (2-0) will face off against Perry (1-1). Lauer said the Pride will immediately move their focus to their next opponent. “(They are a) well coached team. They’re sound in everything they do,” Mountain Pointe senior wide receiver Jordan Huff’s clutch deep-ball catch against Brophy helped set up the Pride for a Lauer said. “We’re gonna have our touchdown, and the win. (Andy Silvas/AFN Contributor) hands full.” ■
SPORTS
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
HISPANIC HERITAGE WEEKEND SEPTEMBER 24-26
Mountain Pointe 2012 alum Scott Kingery, who plays for the Philadelphia Phillies, was among those honored Friday night as one of six newest inductees into the school’s Hall of Fame. (Andy Silvas/AFN Contributor)
Dr. Aubri Carman, a Flinn Scholar from Mountain Pointe’s 2008 graduating class, was inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame. She is currently a pediatric emergency medicine fellow at UT-Austin Medical Center in Austin, Texas.
HALL from page 40
president Breyonnah Owens oversaw the unveiling of the new members. Six Mountain Pointe students were tasked with researching the inductees and introduced them during the ceremony. “It’s awesome,” Kingery said. “This is, I think, the first time I’ve been back here since I graduated in 2012. This is where I grew up. This is where I met my friends and where I met teachers who I still keep in touch with. “This is a place that will always hold a special place in my heart.” ■
makes me feel connected to a place that gave me so much when I was in high school. “It’s really an honor and to be able to come back out here where we used to play soccer games and run track meets, it’s a lot of nostalgia for sure.” The six inductees were nominated by the Mountain Pointe community and selected by a panel of seven individuals. A dinner was held before kickoff Friday and current Mountain Pointe student body
VISTA from page 39
of a game taking place at Desert Vista. But on such short notice, he said there were too many logistical hurdles. “We informed our team and went to work on the logistics of hosting the game Friday night, Klecka said. “However, it was too short of notice to put the right personnel in place to create a safe environment for both programs. The AIA worked diligently and in a swift manner to make this game happen, but it simply did not work on our end with our team on a bye week.” Within minutes of announcing on Twitter the game was going to take place, the Desert Vista Football account retracted its statement, saying the sudden change was due to a “lack of officials.” Hines replied to the tweet and said officials were available. “That is not accurate,” Hines replied to the Desert Vista football account. “A crew
(Andy Silvas/AFN Contributor)
was made available.” Klecka issued an apology to Hines and the AIA Friday morning for the misunderstanding in what took place that resulted in the game not being played as originally thought. He also apologized to Cactus and head coach Joseph Ortiz, who were able to organize a contest Friday against West Point. “I would like to apologize to the AIA for any negativity aimed at them because of this game not being played,” Klecka said. “I would also like to apologize to the Cactus football program and Coach Joseph Ortiz for the whirlwind of events that took place Thursday night. I wish you and your program the best tonight against West Point and throughout the rest of the season.” Desert Vista will return to action Friday, Sept. 17 on the road at Mesa. “As for Desert Vista, we look forward to our matchup against Mesa next Friday,” Klecka said. ■
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GET OUT
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
THEATER
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Mt. Pointe theater season begins this weekend BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor
T
he pandemic has not been kind to the world of theater, where the adrenalin rush of in-person performances many times gave way to the disembodied experience of online shows. Fortunately for the Mountain Pointe High School Theatre Company students and faculty, the pandemic didn’t completely shut down live performances during the 2020-21 school year. “We did do a few shows last year,” said Corey Quinn, a biology teacher who also is the student theater sponsor. “We were very careful with COVID during rehearsals – masks mandatory, sanitation, etc. As for the show, we only sold 150 of the 900 seats available and spaced out people. There was a dedicated entrance and exit, no food or drink sold, masks mandatory and we moved our lobby outside.” And the show will again go on with the theater company’s �irst performance of the 2021-22 school year – a somber but inspiring play that has much signi�icance for Quinn, who is directing. “Wit” will be presented at the Moutain Pointe High theater, 4201 E. Knox Road, at 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 17 and 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. Saturday. Admission is $10 for adults and $7 for students. Mountain Pointe this year is marking 30 years since it �irst opened its doors. It also was the year Quinn �irst walked through those doors – as a freshman. Outside of getting his degree, he has spent 26 of those 30 years at Mountain Pointe. “Wit” is the �irst show Quinn directed at the high school in 2000, though its theme is not what anyone would call typical anniversary material – or something that gets one’s mind off a pandemic. Yet, he said, “It is a powerful show about a woman with stage 4 ovarian cancer.” “She is a professor of 17th century poetry, and the show is about her experience
Mountain Pointe student thespians Ireland Hanrahan and Maia Pattison rehearse a scene from “Wit.” (Pablo Robles/GetOut Staff) with cancer and her treatments, while re�lecting on her life through the studies of life, death and poetry.” Quinn considers “Wit” to be “strong, beautiful and even humorous.” “Anyone who has been affected by cancer can and would appreciate this show. It is intelligent, thoughtful, funny, and beautifully told. It is a drama, and will touch the hearts of anyone who sees it,” he added.
Lots of others think so too. “Wit” won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for drama, earned “Sex and the City” star Cynthia Nixon a Tony Award when it was brought back to Broadway in 2012 and won Emma Thompson kudos for her performance in a 2001 HBO movie version. In other words, for the students – both on stage and behind the curtain – “Wit” is a chance to shine.
Maia Pattison plays the lead role in “Wit,” starring as an English professor who is dying from ovarian cancer. (Pablo Robles/GetOut Staff)
“The set is extremely minimal,” Quinn said. “The focus of the show is on the actors and the story itself. There are a few set pieces, but it most relies on lighting, sound and the actors themselves.” The show also marks a changing of the guard for the small group of parent boosters who devote time and energy to making sure the kids get the chance to devote their talents to the stage. Gretchen Murry is taking over as president of the boosters club. Her son Connor, now a junior at Mountain Pointe, “has been involved in theater since middle school,” she said. “It’s his passion and so it is my passion. I enjoy seeing Connor and his friends perform and want to be there for my son as well be a part of theater.” Gretchen herself did some plays in grade school growing up – including the role of Fagen in “Oliver Twist.” She and other boosters helped with concessions and ticket sales as well as other tasks for the two shows the company was able to mount last school year. But it wasn’t an easy year. “The pandemic really took a toll on everyone, as we all know,” Gretchen said. “A lot of things were restricted and it was really hard to get the shows going, so not much was going on. We even had to cancel the haunted house, one of our biggest fundraisers.” They only had one fundraiser with Crumbl Cookies and made some money on give-back programs maintained by Amazon and Fry’s, but this is a rebuilding year and Murry is hoping parents will be joining her and the other boosters. Graduation took its inevitable toll of veteran boosters and Murry said those who are still around “are building to get everything back together and making it a stronger booster club with more participants.” All that, she stresses, is for the kids’ sake. “I feel like they have missed a lot of Mountain Pointe traditions that all the kids look
��� THEATER ���� 43
GET OUT
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
THEATER ���� ���� 42
forward to – thespian festival, banquet and just being involved in more shows.” She’s upbeat about the future, noting, “The haunted house is coming back. That is our biggest fundraiser and hope to see many people there. It’s always a fun time.” And she’s hoping people turn out to see “Wit.” “These students are hungry for performance and want to express their creativity,” she said. “They have been working very hard to perform the best they can to spread awareness and perspective of this very sensitive subject. They wish to perform in front of an audience who will listen, laugh, and cry with them. It is a show worth seeing.” Quinn seconds that emotion. He recalled when they could put on their �irst show earlier this calendar year, “They had been away so long and were so thankful to be back with friends, and doing something away from home and their computers. Each of them understood that at any minute the show could be canceled, but they still wanted to be there.” Besides, Quinn added, “The best reason
to see a show is that it is live, unpredictable, and so much better than the TV. Everyone should support the arts, and this is a great place to start.” With Maia Pattison following in the footsteps of Cynthia Nixon and Emma Thompson in the lead role of Vivian Bearing, the cast also includes Brody Stolfa, Phoenix Torres, Anissa Moreno and Ireland Hanrahan. The ensemble includes Chase Carter, Grif�in Weber, Lucianna Navarro, Constance Kelly, Connor Murphy and Molly Corbin. The crew is led by technical director Trevor Perry and includes Prima Fombo, Courtney Stinson, Loui Mendoza, Rueben Martin, Kyra Deeney, Clarissa Frommelt, April Conyers, Zoe Shaw, Breyonah Owens, Olivia Pattison, Makayla Blunt, Hannah Kinsman, Teresa Guenther, Lilliana Lopez, Berlin Jacobson and Ryan Martin. ■
BESTOF
2020 Elizabeth Estes
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
King Crossword ACROSS 1 5 8 12 13 14
15 17 18 19 21 24 25 26 30 31 32 33 35 36 37 38 41 42 43 48 49 50 51 52
Havana’s land For each -- Valley, Calif. Miles away Parisian pal Former Yankee slugger, to fans Abe Lincoln’s first home Cello’s ancestor In the style of Shiny, as a photo Trombone part Swizzle Ireland Backyard structure Old Oldsmobile Move to one side -- roll (winning) Theme park attraction Landed Mater lead-in Test score Spider’s creation Spill catcher Location Cozy spot on the slopes Sandwich shop Last (Abbr.) Jeopardize Pieces for one Evening hrs. 53 Hose woe
With JAN D’ATRI GetOut Contributor
Apple pie cookies a tasty version of iconic dish
M 35 37 38 39 40
Garden shelters Baseball’s Hodges Scoundrels Sandwich treat Phone inventor
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Sudoku
DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 16 20 21 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 34
Morsels Carrier to Amsterdam Cacophony Fed. property manager Heart chart (Abbr.)
Nev. neighbor Flying saucer Satchel Video-game hub Sunscreen additive Brit. record label Cellphone tune Relishes Eye part Cattle calls? In a lazy way Hearty quaff Joyful tune Lowly worker Stead Press agent? “The March King” “OK” gesture Spanish greeting Oklahoma city See socially Only Aloha State
y generation is the last one to use pencil and paper as the primary method of gathering, compiling and sharing information. So, for me, rescuing recipes from the past where our ancestors scribbled beloved dishes on scratch pads, napkins, receipts or back of envelopes has taken an even greater sense of urgency. I also love writing about how an old favorite becomes trendy again, reintroducing itself to a whole new generation. The apple pie is the perfect example. Do you ever remember life without it? But have you seen the newest version of our nation’s sweetheart dessert? Let me introduce you to the latest viral food sensation, the apple pie cookie. It’s fun, it’s delicious, it’s cute and it makes you feel like you can eat one and not gain a pound. The apple pie cookie uses all the same ingredients as a good old-fashioned apple pie;
Ingredients: 2 packages Pillsbury ready-made pie dough (2 crusts per package) 4-5 Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and sliced thin 2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons brown or granulated sugar Directions: Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Roll out both pie crusts from the first package. With a 2-inch round cookie cutter, cut out as many mini dough rounds as you can. (Roll out leftover pieces of dough and make more rounds until dough is used up.) Place them on a lightly greased or foil-lined baking sheet. Brush the tops with a thin coating of beaten egg and sprinkle the 2 tablespoons of sugar evenly over all of the dough rounds. Bake for about 10 minutes or until lightly golden brown. Meanwhile, make filling. Peel, core and cut apples into very thin slices. Place in bowl and toss gently with one teaspoon of lemon juice. Place slices in a medium pot. Add sugar,
PUZZLES ANSWERS on page 34
it’s just reconstructed into little lattice-topped discs of yumminess. Nothing will ever replace our love for the iconic American apple pie, but I think even Granny Smith would love these. ■
2 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1/8 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons cornstarch or flour 2 eggs, beaten Decorative sugar butter, cinnamon and salt. Over medium high heat, stir very gently and cook just to soften apple slices, about 2-3 minutes. (Do not let the apple slices get mushy.) Add cornstarch or flour and incorporate to thicken mixture. Remove from heat and set aside. Remove mini dough rounds from oven. Place 4-5 apple slices on each cooked round. Roll out both pie crusts from the second package. Cut each crust into thin strips, 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick. Make lattice design over the apple slices. Gently pinch around the edges. Brush lattice tops lightly with remainder of beaten egg. Sprinkle with decorative sugar and return to oven. Cook until tops are golden brown, about 15 minutes. Makes approximately 14 apple pie cookies.
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$
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Over 1,000 Five-Star Google Reviews ★★★★★
Appliance Repairs
• Same Day Service • On-Site Repairs • Servicing All Major Brands • Quality Guaranteed
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Air Duct Cleaning & Dryer Vents BY JOHN
★ 30+ Years HVAC Experience ★ Disinfected & Sanitized With Every Job
Family owned and proudly serving Ahwatukee for over 20 years. Powerful Truck Mounted Soft Hot Water Extractions. Carpets, Tile & Grout, Upholstery, Pet Stain/Odor Treatment Residential/Commercial
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Cleaning Services
Contractors
Not Enough Time in the Day? Call
Glass/Mirror
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
GLASS, MIRRORS, SHOWER DOORS
East Valley/ Ahwatukee
Quality Professional Cleaning
Weekly, Bi-Weekly & Monthly
(480) 833-1027 JENNIFER BEEBE References Available 20 Years Experience Bonded & Insured
Garage/Doors
It’s a Clear Choice!
Drywall
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
★ Room Additions ★ Water Damage ★ Popcorn Removal ★ Residential/Commercial ★ Interior/Exterior Painting
Call Bruce at 602.670.7038
Insured / Not aCall Licensed Contractor Bruce at 602.670.7038
C. READ & SON ELECTRIC
LLC
Ahwatukee Resident
JOSE DOMINGUEZ DRYWALL & PAINTING House Painting, Drywall, Intall Doors, Baseboards, Crown Molding Reliable, Dependable, Honest! QUICK RESPONSE TO YOUR CALL!
Electric Car Chargers for ALL your Fans electrical needs Lighting 41 years Troubleshooting And much more experience 2008 through 2019
ROC #158440 Bond/Insured
www.readelectricaz.com
480-940-6400
15 Years Experience • Free Estimates
Block Fence * Gates
HONESTY • INTEGRITY • QUALITY
• Panel Changes and Repairs • Installation of Ceiling Fans • Switches/Outlets • Home Remodel
ALL RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL ELECTRICAL Call Jim Endres 480.282.7932 Over 28 Years Experience • ROC #246019 Bonded/Insured
GENERAL CONTRACTOR / HANDYMAN SERVICES SERVING THE ENTIRE VALLEY
All Estimates are Free • Call:
520.508.1420
www.husbands2go.com
Licensed, Bonded & Insured • ROC#317949
CALL DOUG
Not a licensed contractor.
Electrical Services
• Electrical Repair • Plumbing Repair • Dry rot and termite damage repair
MALDONADO HOME REPAIR SERVICES
josedominguez0224@gmail.com
Concrete & Masonry
• Drywall Repair • Bathroom Remodeling • Home Renovations
Ask me about FREE water testing!
480.266.4589
• Serving Arizona Since 2005 •
2010, 2011 2012, 2013, 2014
Ahwatukee Resident/ References/ Insured/ Not a Licensed Contractor
ROC# 262737
602-789-6929 Roc #057163
2012, 2013,
Ahwatukee References/ Insured/ NotResident a Licensed Contractor Since2014 1999 Ahwatukee / References Call BruceResident/ at 602.670.7038 Affordable, Quality Work Electrical Services Ahwatukee Resident/ References/ Insured/ Not a Licensed Contractor
★ Ahwatukee Resident ★ Call 480-200-0043
YOU’LL LIKE US - THE BEST!
Jaden Sydney Associates.com
Family Owned with 50 years' EXPERIENCE. Broken Springs Shower and tub enclosReplaced ures, Framed, FrameNights/Weekends less or Custom Doors, Bonded/Insured Visit our website! We also install insu480-251-8610 Landlord and Homeowner Property Services Not a licensed contractor lated glass, mirrored Repairs • Drywall • Painting • BINSR Items closet doors, window Trash Removal • HOA Compliance glass, mirrors, patio HIRING? AND so much more! doors, glass table proMarks the Spot for ALL Your Handyman Needs! Ahwatukee Resident tectors. If it’s glass, we People are looking Painting • Flooring • Electrical can help you. QUALPlumbing • Drywall • Carpentry at the Classifieds Not a licensed contractor.Decks • Tile • More! ITY SERVICE at ComEvery day! petitive Prices. Marks the Spot for ALL Your Handyman Needs! FREE Estimates Marks the Spot for ALL•Your Handyman Needs! ✔ Painting Painting Flooring • Electrical Email Your “No Job Too WESLEY'S GLASS & MIRROR ✔Small Flooring Painting • Flooring • Electrical Plumbing • Drywall • Carpentry Man!” Job Post Plumbing • Drywall • Carpentry ✔ Electrical wesleysglass.com Decks • Tile • More! to: class@times 1999 e Quality Work Sinc Decks •Affo Tile • More! rdable, ✔ Plumbing SERVICING THE 2010, 2011 publications.com 2012, 2013, 2014 Call Bruce at 602.670.7038 ✔ Drywall or Call ENTIRE VALLEY Ahwatukee Resident/ References/ Insured/ Not a Licensed Contractor “No Job ✔ Carpentry 480-898-6465 Call 480-306-5113 Too Small Marks the Spot for“No Job Too ALL Your Handyman Needs! ✔ Decks Painting • Flooring • Electrical Small Man!” “No Job Too Man!” ✔ Tile Plumbing • Drywall • Carpentry Add a Background Color to Your Ad! Small Man!” Decks • Tile • More! ✔ Kitchens Since 1999 Classifieds 480-898-6465Affordable, Quality Work ✔ Bathrooms BSMALLMAN@Q.COM 2010, 2011 rk Since 1999 2012, “No 2013, Job Too Affordable, Quality Wo And More! 2010, 2011 Small Man!” 2014 Call Bruce at 602.670.7038
480.335.4180
Carpet Cleaning
Lowest Prices * 30 Yrs Exp Serving Entire Valley
Handyman
480.201.5013
THE HANDYMAN THAT HANDLES SMALL JOBS THAT OTHERS DECLINE
Residential Electrician
Call Sean Haley 602-574-3354 ROC#277978 • Licensed/Bonded/Insured
✔ Painting ✔ Gate Restoration ✔ Lighting ✔ Plumbing Repairs ✔ Replace Cracked ✔ Sheetrock Roof Tiles Texturing Repairs ✔ & MUCH MORE! Ahwatukee Resident, References Available, Insured
*Not A Licensed Contractor
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Home Improvement
Insurance
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REMODEL CONTRACTOR
AUTO INSURANCE
Irrigation Systems & Outdoor Lighting Fountain Repair alls C - Caring Repairs & Instuse. D - Dedicated for long term S - Service No Yard .
Plans / Additions, Patios New Doors, Windows Lowest Price in Town! R. Child Lic#216115, Class BO3 Bonded-Insured-Ref's
WHY PAY MORE? LOW RATES!
CASH OUT!
Phone Quotes Welcome • Low Deposit • Immediate ID Cards • Homeowners & Renters Insurance Too!
480-215-3373
EVENINGS & WEEKENDS NO PROBLEM
480-698-9818
Home Improvement
FREE INSURANCE ANALYSIS
Home Remodeling No Job Too Small! Senior Discounts!
Maintenance
• 6am - 7pm Monday - Saturday • You Pay Labor & Materials Only • FREE ESTIMATES • ROC#312942 • David R Smith Phone, Text or Email
480-580-4419
david@swo-of-artworks.com www.swo-of-artworks.com
David Hernandez (602) 802 3600
daveshomerepair@yahoo.com • Se Habla Español
Shadetree Dreams Remodeling Custom design and renovations turning old into NEW!
Irrigation
Landscape/Maintenance
• Sprinkler/Drip Repairs • New Installs Poly/PVC • Same Day Service
25 Years exp (480) 720-3840
480.898.6465 CLASS@TIMESPUBLICATIONS.COM
Specials
Lawn Mowing Starts At $40 Full Service Starts At $70 480-745-5230
Licensed • Bonded • Insured
Specializing in Controllers, Valves, Sprinklers, Landscape Lighting, P.V.C. & Poly Drip Systems
480.654.5600 azirrigation.com
CALL US TODAY!
Cutting Edge LLC • ROC 281671
Landscape Design/Installation
ARE ENDLESS... Specializing in: • Cabinets - Granite • Plumbing - Electrical • Drywall/Texturing, Crown Molding, Painting, Tile, Carpet • Natural Stones • Roof repair and installation
SONORAN LAWN
NTY 5-YEAR WARRA
SPRINKLER DOCTOR Repairs - Installs - Modifications
THE POSSIBILITIES
ROC# 225923 Licensed, Bonded & Insured
TREE
TRIMMING
Irrigation Repair Services Inc.
LANDSCAPE LIGHTING
480-730-1074
YOUR CLASSIFIED SOURCE
Juan Hernandez
Get Your Lawn Ready For Fall!
Timers/Valves/Sprinklers DRIP-PVC-COPPER Backflows & Regulators
Call for a FREE Consultation and Estimate!
Landscape/Maintenance
15 + Yrs Exp! All English Speaking Crew NOT A LICENSED CONTRACTOR
• BASE BOARDS • DRYWALL • ELECTRICAL • PAINTING • PLUMBING • BATHROOMS • WOOD FLOORING • FRAMING WALLS • FREE ESTIMATES • GRANITE FABRICATION & INSTALLATION • CARPET INSTALLATION • LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
480.721.4146 www.irsaz.com
ROC# 256752
INSTALLING A WINTER LAWN?
480-940-8196 theplugman.com
25 years Experience & Insured Serving the Valley for over 28 years
The Possibilities are Endless
Custom Design and Renovation turning old to new Custom Built-ins, BBQs, Firepits, Fireplaces, Water Features, Re-Designing Pools, Masonry, Lighting, Tile, Flagstone, Pavers, Culture Stone & Travertine, Synthetic Turf, Sprinkler/Drip, Irrigation Systems, Clean ups & Hauling
Call for a FREE consultation and Estimate To learn more about us, view our photo gallery at: ShadeTreeLandscapes.com
480-730-1074
Bonded/Insured/Licensed • ROC #225923
Not a licensed contractor.
Arizona Specialty Landscape
New & Re-Do Design and Installation Affordable | Paver Specialists All phases of landscape installation. Plants, cacti, sod, sprinklers, granite, concrete, brick, Kool-deck, lighting and more!
Free Estimates 7 Days a Week! ROC# 186443 • BONDED
480.844.9765
MORE CLASSIFIED ADS ONLINE! www.Ahwatukee.com
47
IMPROVE GRASS SEED GERMINATION AND REDUCE SOIL COMPACTION FERTILIZATION
• SOIL AMENDMENTS • SOIL TESTING
ROC 282663 * BONDED * INSURED YOUR LAWN EXPERT SINCE 1995
High Quality Results TRIM TREES ALL TYPES GRAVEL - PAVERS SPRINKLER SYSTEMS Complete Clean Ups
Jose Martinez Not a licensed contractor.
602.515.2767
CLASSIFIEDS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Landscape/Maintenance
Painting
Painting
Complete Lawn Service & Weed Control Starting @ $60/Month! • One Month Free Service • Licensed, Bonded Insured for your protection.
PROFESSIONAL PAINTING Interior, Exterior House Painting. Stucco Patching. Gate/Front Door Refinishing. Quality work/Materials Free Estimate Ignacio 480-961-5093 / 602-571-9015 ROC #189850 Bond/Ins’d
Plumbing
CONKLIN PAINTING Free Estimate & Color Consultation
Interior Painting ● Pressure Washing Exterior Painting ● Drywall/Stucco Repair Complete Prep Work ● Wallpaper Removal
480-888-5895
• Call or Text for a Free Quote
ConklinPainting.com
kjelandscape.com • ROC#281191
480-586-8445
Lic/Bond/Ins ROC# 270450
MD’S LANDSCAPING Drip Systems Installed, Valves/Timer Repairs
Let’s get your Watering System working again! System Checks • Drip Checks
“We get your house looking top notch!” ★ Interior/Exterior Painting ★ Drywall Repair & Installation ★ Popcorn Ceiling Removal
★ Elastomaric Roof Coating ★ Epoxy Floors ★ Small Job Specialist
Scott Mewborn, Owner 480-818-1789 License #ROC 298736
FREE ESTIMATES! CALL 24 HOURS 25 Yrs Exp. I Do All My Own Work! Call Mark
480.295.2279 Referred out of Ewing Irrigation Not a licensed contractor.
SUN TECH
PAINTING
SH
ALL YOU NEED IS A PU
480.898.6465 CLASS@TIMESPUBLICATIONS.COM
Painting Looking To Freshen Up Your Home? WE CAN HELP!
Interior & Exterior Residential/Commercial Free Estimates Drywall Repairs Senior Discounts References Available
480-405-7099 Affinity Plumbing LLC 480-487-5541
602.625.0599 ROC #155380 Family Owned • Free Estimates
affinityplumber@gmail.com
www.affinityplumbingaz.com
• High Quality Materials & Workmanship • Customer Satisfaction Free Est imates • Countless References • Carpentry Services Now Available Visit us at Suntechpaintingaz.com or view our video promo at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GM5pbvpZJlg
10% OFF
All Water Purification Systems Voted #1 Plumber 3 Years In A Row OVER 1,000 5-STAR REVIEWS
Bonded/Insured • ROC #223709
(602) 502-1655
Serving Ahwatukee Since 1987 Interior / Exterior
FREE Service Calls + FREE Estimates Water Heaters Installed - $999 Unclog Drains - $49
PAINTING
— Call Jason —
INC.
WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED!
PLUMBERS CHARGE TOO MUCH!
Plumbing
Your Ahwatukee Plumber & East Valley Neighbor Anything Plumbing Same Day Service
AHWATUKEE SPECIAL $
Off 40work done *Any
East Valley PAINTERS
Water Heaters
24/7
Inside & Out Leaks
Bonded
Toilets
Insured
Faucets
Estimates Availabler
Disposals
$35 off
Any Service
Proudly Serving Ahwatukee for 15 Years! Family Owned & Operated Residential & Commercial Painting • Interior & Exterior • Professional Cabinet Refinishing • Epoxy Floors & Concrete Coatings • In-Home Color Consultations “Professional, Punctual & Clean”
Veteran Owned
Voted #1 Paint Interior & Exterior • Drywall Repair Light Carpentry • Power Washing • Textures Matched Popcorn Removal • Pool Deck Coatings Garage Floor Coatings • Color Consulting
Plumbing
SERVICE • REPAIR • REPLACEMENT
10% OFF
We offer personalized service for our customers. We use the best materials that we can find.
We Beat Competitors Prices & Quality Free Estimates! Home of the 10-Year Warranty!
www.ACP www.A CPpaintingllc.com paintingllc.com Licensed - Bonded - Insured ROC 290242
FREE ESTIMATES • CALL TODAY!
(480)785-6323
Not a licensed contractor
48
480-688-4770
www.eastvalleypainters.com Family Owned & Operated Bonded/Insured • ROC#153131
Now Accepting all major credit cards
Owned and Operated by Rod Lampert Ahwatukee Resident Serving Ahwatukee for over 25 years
Our services include: Sinks, Toilets, Faucets, Water Heaters, Garbage Disposal, Drain Cleaning, Pressure Reducing Valves, Pressure Vacuum Breakers, Hot Water Circulation Systems, Main Service Valves and Hose Taps.
(480)
279-4155
Licensed • Bonded • Insured • ROC 189848
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SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
Pool Service / Repair
$25 OFF
Filter Cleaning!
Watch for Garage Sales in Classifieds!
www.barefootpoolman.com See our Before’s and After’s on Facebook Licensed, Bonded & Insured ROC# 272001
Roofing
MARK’S POOL SERVICE
Over 30 Years of Experience
Owner Operated - 20 Years
Play Pools start at
You will find them easy with their yellow background.
$85/month
Garage Sale Fri & Sat 7a-11am Household, clothes, kitchen items, furniture, electronics, mason jars, kid items, DVDs, MORE 555 W. Lane Dr Mesa
Monthly Service & Repairs Available
602-546-POOL 7 6 6 5
Pool Service / Repair
To place an ad please call: 480-898-6465 class@times publications.com
Family Operated by 3 Generations of Roofers!
Valley Wide Service
Ask About Filter Cleaning Specials!
Mark
Roofing
Spencer 4 HIRE ROOFING
with chemicals
Only $27.50 includes 1 week online
49
602-799-0147
480-446-7663
CPO#85-185793
Roofing
Juan Hernandez Pavers • Concrete • Water Features • Sprinkler Repair
LICENSED | BONDED | INSURED | ROC #269218
$1000 OFF when you show this ad *on qualifying complete roof replacements
10% OFF with this ad
Ahwatukee’s Premier Tile, Shingle & Foam Roofer!
PPebbleOcracking, O L Plaster R Epeeling, P ARebar IR showing, Pool Light out? I CAN HELP!
Call Juan at
480-720-3840 Not a licensed contractor.
Serving All Types of Roofing: • • • •
Clean, Prompt, Friendly and Professional Service
FREE ESTIMATES
Tiles & Shingles sunlandroofingllc@gmail.com Installation Repair Re-Roofing
602-471-2346
FREE Estimates • Credit Cards OK www.spencer4hireroofing.com ROC#244850 | Insured | Bonded
e IN
-EX D i ffe r e n c e
602-938-7575
PLUMBING $35.00 Off Any Service Call Today!
A+ RATED
ROC # 272721
u Th
Call
Plumbing
We Repair or Install
Let Us Show Yo
!
FALL SPECIAL! $500 OFF COMPLETE REMODEL! 25 Years Experience • Dependable & Reliable
AHWATUKEE’S #1 PLUMBER
for your FREE Roof Evaluation Today! Your leaks stop here! New Roofs, Repairs, Coatings, Flat Roof, Hot Mopping & Patching & Total Rubber Roof Systems
www.InExRo
ofin
g.c o m
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Licensed • Bonded • Insured
704.5422
(480)
SHARE WITH THE WORLD!
Place a Birth, Anniversary, Wedding Announcement, In Memoriam, Obituary or any life event in this paper today! Call us for details. class@timespublications.com or call 480-898-6465
SAME DAY SERVICE 30 Years Experience References Available
See MORE Ads Online!
Licensed Bonded Insured ROC 286561
Senior & Military Discounts
623-522-9322
www.Ahwatukee.com
50
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AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
Roofing
Roofing
Window Cleaning
Roofing
TILE ROOFING SPECIALISTS
Family Owned & Operated for over 30 years
Flat and Foam Roof Experts!
10% Discount for Ahwatukee Residents 100% NO Leak Guarantee Re-Roof & Roofing Repairs Tile, Shingles & Flat Roof
MonsoonRoofingInc.com Licensed – Bonded – Insured – ROC187561
Quality Repairs & Re-Roofs Complimentary & Honest Estimates
desertsandscontracting.com FLAT ROOFS | SHINGLES | TEAR OFFS | NEW ROOFS | REPAIRS TILE UNDERLAYMENT | TILE REPAIR | LEADERS | COPPER ALUMINUM COATINGS | GUTTERS | SKYLIGHTS
10% OFF COMPLETE UNDERLAYMENT
Call our office today!
480-460-7602
480-706-1453
SCRAMBLER: “F” Foods Unscramble the letters to find food that starts with “F”.
PHILLIPS
ROOFING LLC COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL
Family Owned and Operated 43 Years Experience in Arizona
623-873-1626
Family Operated by 3 Generations of Roofers! We have a “Spencer” on every job and every step of the way.
Free Estimates Monday through Saturday Licensed 2006 ROC 223367 Bonded Insured
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2. Dr. Hannibal Lecter loves these... Licensed, Bonded, Insured
480-330-2649
FREE ESTIMATES 602-736-3019
CLUES 1. Licorice flavor herb
Licensed/Bonded/Insured • ROC #236099
www.cousinswindowcleaning.com
AZROC #283571 | CONTRACTOR LIC. AZROC #312804 CLASS CR4 | FULLY INSURED
www.porterroofinginc.com
Over 30 yrs. Experience
See our reviews and schedule at:
Commercial & Residential Family Owned & Operated
Ask us about our discount for all Military and First Responders!
Tiles, shingles, flat, repairs & new work Free Estimates • Ahwatukee Resident
Ahwatukee Based Family Owned and Operated Insured • Free Estimates
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3. Usually consumed as a dried fruit, it’s leaves frequently adorn paintings and statues.
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4. A form of milled wheat used to make porridge, puddings and cereals.
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5. Named for a German city, they are hot-dog shaped sausages.
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6. Tex-Mex favorite you put jstfaia together yourself from thin strips of grilled meat, green and red peppers, onions and served with warm tortillas, sour cream and guacamole. CB
Safety Alert
480-446-7663
PhillipsRoofing.org PhillipsRoofing@cox.net CLASSIFIEDS 480-898-6465 class@times publications.com
Ahwatukee’s Premier Tile, Shingle & Foam Roofer!
FREE Estimates • Credit Cards OK www.spencer4hireroofing.com ROC#244850 | Insured | Bonded
LIFEGUARD
YOUR CHILD
The more layers of protection you have around water, the safer your child is.
1. fennel, 2. fava beans, 3. figs, 4. farina, 5. frankfurter, 6. fajitas
480-699-2754 • info@monsoonroofinginc.com
ROC #152111
CLASSIFIEDS
SEPTEMBER 15, 2021 | AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS
palmabrisa.com
NOW SELLING
A new gated resort community is now selling in the Ahwatukee Foothills with a dramatically different style. It feels exclusive, but also lively and exciting — and it's called Palma Brisa. • Modern resort-style gated community with stately palms
• Diverse architecture: Modern Bungalow, Urban Farmhouse, Italian Cottage, Andalusian, Modern Craftsman, French Country, and Spanish Mission • Four amenity areas connected by expansive lawns
• Homes from 1,700 sq. ft. to 4,000 sq. ft. from the low $600’s
ERIC WILLIAMS
480-641-1800
TERRY LENTS
© Copyright 2021 Blandford Homes, LLC. No offer to sell or lease may be made prior to issuance of Final Arizona Subdivision Public Report. Offer, terms, and availability subject to change without prior notice. Renderings are artist’s conceptions and remain subject to modification without notice.
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CLASSIFIEDS
AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS | SEPTEMBER 15, 2021
OVERSTOCKED
WAREHOUSE WASHER
• 3.5 Cu. Ft. • Porcelain Tub • 700 RPM Spin Speed
$
NTW4500XQ CLOSEOUT
• Normal Wash Cycle • Heated Dry On/Off • Standard Upper Rack
1000’s OF ITEMS IN STOCK FOR FAST DELIVERY
569
UN58TU7000
FRONT LOAD WASHER
• Large Crisper Drawer
• 2 Glass Adjustable Shelves • LED Lighting • Independent Temperature Controls
DRYER
DVE45T6200W
$
RANGE • 4.8 Cubic Foot Capacity • Self Cleaning Oven • Smooth Top • Proudly Made in USA WFE505W0HS CLOSEOUT
• Integrated Control Styling • Premium Nylon Racks • In Door Silverware Basket • Energy Star Qualified WDF520PADM
2350
$
429
CRH10SW
• 7.5 Cu. Ft. Capacity • 4.5 Cu. Ft. Capacity • 10 Cycles • 10 Wash Cycles • 9 Options • Smart Care • Steam Sanitize WF45T6200AW
MONTHS
NO INTEREST **
TOP MOUNT REFRIGERATOR
99 $
$
DISHWASHER
12 MONTHS NO INTEREST**
• 2 HDMI Inputs • Airplay2 Built-In
299 599 EACH
HDA2000TWW CLOSEOUT
$
58” 4K UHD SMART TV
58”
449
DISHWASHER
Our Warehouse Is Packed! Bring Your Truck or Trailer And Save Even More. Everything Is Priced To Move… With Deals Like These You Need To Get To Spencers Today!
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REFRIGERATOR
BFTF2716SS
STAINLESS STEEL 23 CU. FT. SIDE BY SIDE • Deli Drawer • Crisper Shelves
$
• LED Lighting FFSS2314QS CLOSEOUT
949
• 25 Cubic Foot Capacity • Spill Proof Glass Shelves • Humidity Controlled Drawers WRS325SDHZ
BUYS ALL 3 PIECES
NO MATTER WHERE YOU SEE IT, READ IT, OR HEAR ABOUT IT, SPENCERS IS GUARANTEED TO BE A LOWER PRICE!
** NO INTEREST IF PAID IN FULL IN 12 MONTHS. $799.00 Minimum Purchase Required Minimum Payments Required 30.79% APR If the promotional balance is not paid in full by the end for the promotional period or, to the extent permitted by law, if you make a late payment, interest will be imposed from the date of purchase at the APR noted above. This APR is as of 7/4/2019 and will vary with the market based on the Prime Rate. Your card agreement, the terms of the offer and applicable law govern this transaction including increasing APRs and fees and terminating the promotional period.
MESA SHOWROOM & CLEARANCE CENTER 115 W. First Ave. | 480-833-3072 AHWATUKEE 4601 E. Ray Rd. | Phoenix | 480-777-7103 ARROWHEAD RANCH 7346 W. Bell Road | 623-487-7700 GILBERT Santan Village | 2711 S. Santan Village Pkwy | 480-366-3900 GLENDALE 10220 N. 43rd Ave | (602) 504-2122 GOODYEAR 1707 N. Litchfield Rd | 623-930-0770 RECONDITION CENTER 160 EAST BROADWAY | 480-615-1763 SCOTTSDALE 14202 N. Scottsdale Rd. | 480-991-7200 SCOTTSDALE/PHOENIX 13820 N. Tatum Blvd. | (602) 494-0100 NOW OPEN - MESA 5141 S. Power Rd. | 480-988-1917
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WWW.SPENCERSTV.COM OPEN DAILY 9AM-9PM | SATURDAY 9AM-6PM | SUNDAY 11AM-5PM
HOUSE IN S R E C SPEN PLANS PAYMENT BLE AVAILA Due to current circumstances, some items may be out of stock.