east valley
Volume 1 Issue 41 Mesa, AZ
May 26, 2019
Phoenix Children’s new VP discusses hospital BY COLLEEN SPARKS Tribune Staff Writer
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IN THE BIZ
highly experienced healthcare executive, Chandler resident and mother of young twins is steering the growth and development of expanded services for babies, children and women in the East Valley. Lee Ann Benson, 38, took the reins as the new vice president of the East Valley market for Phoenix Children’s in January. It is a busy time for Benson and the rest of the team as Phoenix Children’s is going to expand outpatient services with a new medical office building, which will be about 80,000 square feet with 45,000 square feet operated by Phoenix Children’s providers, at Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center’s campus. That medical building is expected to open in January of next year. Dignity Health and Phoenix Children’s Hospital are also jointly building the Dignity Health Phoenix Children’s Women & Children’s Pavilion at the Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center, 3555 S. Val Vista Drive in Gilbert. That center is expected to open in early 2021. Phoenix Children’s already runs a 22bed Pediatric Inpatient Unit at Mercy Gilbert Medical Center where pediatrictrained nurses and hospitalists work 24 hours a day. Phoenix Children’s Care Network (PCCN) collaborates with more than 170 pediatricians and specialists in the East Valley and Phoenix Children’s pediatric specialists are available for consults at Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center. Benson had previously worked as the vice president of Pediatric Network DePublic Notices ............... page 3 © Copyright, 2019 East Valley Tribune
Lee Ann Benson, 38, took the reins as the new vice president of the East Valley market for Phoenix Children’s in January. Benson and the rest of the team at Phoenix Children’s is going to expand outpatient services with a new medical office building at Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center’s campus in Gilbert. Dignity Health and Phoenix Children’s Hospital are also jointly building the Dignity Health Phoenix Children’s Women & Children’s Pavilion at the Dignity Health Mercy Gilbert Medical Center. (Kimberly Carrillo/Staff Photographer)
velopment and Growth at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville, Tennessee. Over her 13 years at Vanderbilt, she worked in leadership roles managing strategic planning, business development, as well as operations of clinical and on-clinical ancillary services, space and facilities planning projects, facility security and emergency preparedness. Before joining Vanderbilt in 2005, she served as a member of marketing and strategic business development at Children’s Hospital of Alabama. Benson is a Fellow in the American College of Healthcare Executives and previously she served on the Board of Directors for the American College of Healthcare Executives of Middle Tennessee chapter and on the Tennessee (USPS 004-616) is published weekly
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Regents Advisory Council. She was honored with the President’s Award of Excellence from the American College of Healthcare Executives of Middle Tennessee in 2018. Benson also received the American College of Healthcare Executives Regent’s Early Careerist Award and she was nominated for the “Nashville Business Journal’s” Top 40 Under 40 Awards. She has Bachelor of Science degree in healthcare administration from Auburn University, as well as a master’s degree in health administration and a master’s of business administration from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She and her husband, Beau, have two-and-ahalf-year-old twins, Lynlee and Reid. We asked her about her job and the projects she oversees. Subscriptions are $26 for 2 years, $14 for one year. Periodicals postage paid at Phoenix, AZ 85026.
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What are your responsibilities?
This is a new role for Phoenix Children’s. It really came about because of our growing presence in the East Valley. We’re committed to just becoming an integral part of the community. Having a leader whose focus was that community was a key part of that. It’s very much a collaborative project with Dignity Health. Dignity is leading the construction efforts. They have collaborated with Phoenix Children’s. The new medical office building is on the campus of Mercy Gilbert and I’m very involved in the planning of that.
Talk about the new Women & Children’s Pavilion.
Adding these new services will really provide a comprehensive scope of care for pregnant women and their children. We’re really focused on the continuum. We, with Dignity, are there for the entire journey. We’ll actually have the only dedicated pediatric emergency department in the East Valley. So, for all of those unexpected injuries and illnesses, we’ll have (services) there 24 hours a day, seven days a week (for) broken bones, beans in ears. One of the incredible services we’ll be adding is a 60-bed, level three neonatal intensive care unit, for premature babies, babies with medical or surgical (needs), private rooms designed for the babies and the family will have space to stay in there. The neonatal intensive care unit will be adjacent to the post-partum unit. You always want to plan for the what ifs…just in case the baby needs some specialized care. It will create this seamless continuity of care for moms and children. We also will be adding six operating rooms and two procedural suites. The operating rooms are specifically for children so Phoenix Children’s will operate those. Procedural suites: that would be for things like an endoscopy…surgical type things. The key design principle is all around family-centered care, keeping families is a key part of the care team, creating spaces for them to support them. It’s just this great comprehensive program for both women and their babies and children as they grow.
How will the pavilion differ from the Pediatric Inpatient Unit?
The difference will be in the new Women & Children’s Pavilion, we will also have a wide range of specialists. It will be
a more broad range of services. We offer over 20 subspecialties in the East Valley. We will be able to work with specialists. The majority of our specialists will actually have most of their time dedicated in the East Valley. Their time is focused on the East Valley. By exception they come down to the main campus. Some of them do highly unique specialized procedures and care. What can patients expect in the new Medical Office Building? We are going to have seven key services in that clinic, as well as another rotating clinic. It will include neurology, general surgery, ENT (otolaryngology), orthopedics, endocrinology, including hematology/oncology services as well, an infusion clinic (which will open in March of 2021). It (the infusion clinic) will be for children of all ages. The 45,000 square feet of building will all be for children. The building is 80,000 square feet total. Other practices will lease space in the building.
for families to navigate it. Having my own children, that really speaks to me, being able to simplify that and include the family in the decisionmaking, that resonates.
Where was your first job in healthcare?
I started my career at the Children’s Hospital of Alabama and spent three years there and then moved on to Vanderbilt Hospital in Nashville.
What types of medicine/ treatment are most needed?
The population growth in the East Valley has really just been astounding. The majority of that growth has been for young families. We know that easily accessible, high quality care lends itself to healthier communities and overall wellness. That was really the catalyst for Phoenix Children’s growing in the East Valley. We need comprehensive services right there in the backyard.
Your take on the relationship What advice do you have for between Phoenix Children’s any expecting mothers? When I was pregnant with my twins, I and Dignity Health? We have created a strategic alliance with Dignity Health and it’s been wonderful. We’re able to take the best care for adults and women and paired that with the best in care for children.”
How do you juggle so many projects?
It’s always a challenge. I have an incredible husband who is a key part of our family. My family always comes first. I’ve been blessed to have a career and employers who are supportive of that. I tend to be just a very organized individual. I keep a very detailed calendar and to-do list.
What made you interested in healthcare?
I experienced healthcare failing significantly growing up. I saw firsthand the wonderful aspects of healthcare, as well as the challenges that families experienced. My mother had cancer twice growing up. She actually passed away from cancer when I was in high school. I actually did an internship in college at Auburn University with the Children’s Hospital in Alabama. The unique culture and the positive environment and the culture people brought to work just hooked me. I think what was most apparent to me even in that young age was the complexity of healthcare and how challenging it was
EAST VALLEY BUSINESS
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think to understand where the best service is available, planning for the what ifs, if your child would need specialty care, as they’re making decisions about where to go. There are different classes and things like that. Mercy Gilbert offers a wide array of courses for families to learn, everything from how to care for a newborn, car-seat safety. Finding a pediatrician that aligns well with you and the East Valley is blessed with many wonderful physicians. Having a great pediatrician partner is building that relationship so at any point in your pregnancy they identify any concerns.
What are some recent advances in treating women and children?
The ability to identify abnormalities or potential healthcare needs of the babies when they’re in utero. We have a phenomenal (pediatric) radiologist at Phoenix Children’s who does fetal MRIs, to help mothers understand, being able to early on identify any challenges or needs that babies may have so there is no delay in care when they are born. We will have pediatric imaging in the new Women’s and Children’s as well. Information: dignityhealth.org/arizona/locations/mercygilbert
MAY 26, 2019
Construction job increase no reason to fret, official says BY HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services
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rizona added another 75,300 private sector jobs in the last year — with more than one out of every four of them being in the construction industry. But Doug Walls, director of labor market information for the Office of Economic Opportunity, said last week this is not an indication that the state is headed back to the days of the last decade when dependence on construction — particularly home building — left the state especially susceptible to recession. The strong construction growth, both in the past month and past year, was enough to drop the state’s seasonally adjusted unemployment growth in April to 4.9 percent, down a tenth of a point. At the same time the national jobless rate dropped two-tenths of a point to 3.6 percent. Most of the state’s economic sectors showed job growth. But it has been the construction industry that is exploding. What makes the growth in that sector noteworthy is that, prior to the recession, one job out of every 11 in the state was in construction. So when the real estate bubble burst and the bottom dropped out of the economy, Arizona was particularly hard it, with the jobless rate topping 11 percent.
Public Notice CITY OF MESA MESA, ARIZONA NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING Red Mountain Park Improvements Project No. CP0932
With voter approval of the 2018 General Ob-ligation Bond in November 2018, the City of Mesa is beginning the design process for the Red Mountain Park Improvements. Improvements include the construction of up to nine regulation-sized lighted soccer fields, lighted parking lot expansion, expansion of the existing Red Mountain Park pond, a new restroom building, and additional landscaping improvements. These improvements will be located within the Red Mountain Park parcel south of Brown Road and west of 80th Street. Addition-ally, four lighted youth baseball/softball fields, lighted parking lot expansion, and a new restroom building will be constructed as part of the Red Mountain Park Improvements projects. These improvements will be located within the existing Red Mountain Baseball & Softball Complex north of Brown Road. You are invited to attend a Public Meeting where City staff will be available to answer your questions. No formal presentation will be given. Date: Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Walls, however, said he doesn’t see the same situation developing now. First, there are the pure numbers. There are just 175,100 people employed in construction. That compares with the pre-recession peak of 247,500. And construction jobs make up just 6 percent of total employment, not 9 percent as it did in 2006. But Walls said there are other indications that Arizona is not once again setting itself up to have the economic rug pulled out from underneath it. It starts with a pent-up demand for housing. Homeowner vacancy rates — the number of unoccupied single-family homes are below 1 percent. It rose as high as 4.6 percent during the recession. Ditto on rental vacancies which are down to 4.3 percent, versus nearly 19 percent in 2009. Then there’s the fact that the number of building permits for residential housing has remained relatively steady for the past two years. “You just drive around the Valley, you’ll see a lot of the construction going on,’’ Walls said. In addition, developers generally are not doing what they did before the recession: building a lot of homes “on spec’’ with the
de dos mil diecinueve. Publicado: East Valley Tribune, May 12, 19, 26, 2019 / 20716
Time: 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Location: Red Mountain Center – Rooms 3 and 4 7550 E. Adobe Road Mesa, AZ 85207 If you have any questions or concerns regarding this project, please contact Michele Arrollado or Lucy Lopez with the City of Mesa Engineering Public Relations Department at (480) 644-3800. Si usted tiene preguntas de ste Proyecto, favor de llamar a Lucy Lopez, con la Ciudad de Mesa al (480) 644-4431. Published: East Valley Tribune, May 26, Jun 5, 2019 / 20902
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Public Notice
Public Notice SUMMONS To: GABRIELLA HANDY aka GABRIELLA GUTIERREZ, an individual. You have been sued by Idaho United Credit Union, the Plaintiff(s), in the District Court in and for Ada County, Idaho, Case No. CV01-19-02462. The nature of the claim against you is collection of sums due. Any time after 21 days following the last publication of this summons, the court may enter a judgment against you without further notice, unless prior to that time you have filed a written response in the proper form, including the Case No., and paid any required filing fee to the Clerk of the Court at 200 W. Front Street, Boise, Ada County, Idaho, 83702, (208) 287-6900, and served a copy of your response on the Plaintiff’s attorneys, Mark D. Perison, P.A., at P.O. Box 6575, Boise, Idaho 83707, (208) 331-1200. A copy of the Summons and Complaint can be obtained by contacting either the Clerk of the Court or the attorney for Plaintiff(s). If you wish legal assistance, you should immediately retain an attorney to ad-vise you in this matter. Dated: 4/12/2019 2:52 PM PHIL McGRANE Clerk of the Ada County District Court By: /s/ A. King Deputy Clerk Published: East Valley Tribune, May 5, 12, 19, 26, 2019 /
Public Notice EDICTO JUZGADO PRIMERO DE PRIMERA INSTANCIA DE LO FAMILIAR DEL DISTRITO JUDICIAL DE H. NO-GALES, SONORA, SE RADICO SUCESORIO INTESTAMENTARIO A BIENES DE REFUGIO DIAZ RIOS Y URBANO CLARK, SE HAN SENALADO LAS OCHO HORAS CON TREINTA MINUTOS DEL DIA CINCO DE JUNIO DE DOS MIL DIECINUEVE PARA LA CELEBRACION DE LA JUNTA DE HEREDEROS.Expediente 1662/2018, convocandose presuntos herederos y acreedores a deducir derechos. LICENCIADO ALBER 0 AMON SALAZAR RIVERA C. SECRET ARlO SEG NDO DE ACUERDOS H. Nogales, Sonora. A dieciseis de abril
EAST VALLEY BUSINESS
presumption that the buyers will come later. Finally, said Walls, indications are that lenders are not loosening up their lending standards. Part of what happened during the recession is people took out loans, both in new mortgages and refinancings, that they could not afford to pay. That was only exacerbated when the bottom dropped out of the housing market and people defaulted and abandoned their homes when they found they actually owed more than the property was worth. “Lending standards remain quite high,’’ Walls said. “So those are all good signs that this is organic growth and less speculative within the construction industry and what we’ve seen in the past.’’ Elsewhere in the state economy, growth in retail trade employment remains anemic, adding just 1,100 jobs in the past year as the industry continues to face heavy competition from online retailers. The clothing and accessories sector was hit particularly hard, with employment there down by 700 in the past year. Manufacturing continued to add workers, up 600 last month and 6,800 in the past year.
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CITY OF MESA PUBLIC NOTICE
The Mesa City Council will hold a public hearing concerning the following ordinance at the June 3, 2019 City Council meeting beginning at 5:45 p.m. in the Mesa City Council Chambers, 57 East First Street. 1. ANX19-00066 (District 5) Annexing property located north of University Drive and west of Ellsworth Road and adopting comparable zoning (13.07± acres). Initiated by Sean Lake, Pew & Lake, PLC. 2. ZON19-00067 (District 5) Within the 400 to 600 blocks of North Ellsworth Road (west side) and within the 9000 to 9200 blocks of East Decatur Road (south side). Located north of University Drive, on the west side of Ellsworth Road (13.07± acres). Rezoning from RS-9 and RS-43 to RM-3-PAD; and Site Plan Review. This request will allow for development of a multi-residential use. Sean Lake, Pew & Lake, PLC, applicant; Ellsworth-University, LLC, owner. DATED at Mesa, Arizona, this 26th day of May 2019. DEE ANN MICKELSEN, City Clerk Published: East Valley Tribune, May 26, 2019 / 20899
MAY 26, 2019
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