The Mesa Tribune - Zone 1 - 1.23.2022

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Celebrate Arizona wines / P. 32

City's labor shortage / P. 4

Sunday, January 23, 2022

FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | TheMesaTribune.com

An edition of the East Valley Tribune

Mesa officials aim to make city totally wired

INSIDE

This Week

BY GARY NELSON Tribune Contributor

NEWS ....................... 6 Owners of controversial food truck park give up.

M

esa has unveiled an ambitious plan to bring fiber-optic technology to every address in the city. “We’ve decided that the best way to get the Internet everywhere is through fiber,” Ian Linssen, an assistant to the city manager, told the City Council on Jan. 13. The technology, though more than 50 years

old, is still rather amazing: A strand of glass or clear plastic about the size of a human hair, covered in a plastic case, carries data in the form of – and at the speed of – light. Hundreds of fibers can be bundled together for various users. Deploying fiber across the city “gives us a huge amount of new benefits for the foreseeable future,” Linssen said. “Fiber futureproofs Mesa.” His point: Fiber is flexible enough to handle

Ideal for i.d.e.a.

BUSINESS............. 27

Zone

31

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First Hawes Crossing housing plan advances

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Mesa wrestling coach on farewell tour. COMMUNITY ................................ 15 HEALTH & WELLNESS ................ 21 BUSINESS ...................................... 27 OPINION ....................................... 29 SPORTS........................................... 31 GET OUT......................................... 32 CLASSIFIED.................................... 36

see WIRED page 3

BY JOSH ORTEGA Tribune Staff Writer

Them bones worth gold to new Mesa business.

SPORTS..................

whatever new technologies may emerge in coming decades. The benefits include attracting tech-dependent businesses, more efficient government operations, and greater opportunities for residents to access the Internet, Linssen said. With fiber in every street, there would be no worries about some neighborhoods lacking access to an Internet provider.

If Jarrad Bittner looks like he’s having fun, you’re right. The new director of Mesa’s innovative i.d.e.a. Museum looks forward to providing children of all ages engaging and instructive activities and programs. Read about him on page 12. (Srianthi Perera/Tribune Contributor)

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lmost a year after Mesa City Council approved the 1,131-acre Hawes Crossing, the first residential community in the massive master planned community is one step closer to breaking ground. The City of Mesa Planning and Zoning Board earlier this month unanimously approved rezoning 80.66-acre for what the developers call “charming and desirable” Hawes Crossing Village One around Hawes and Elliott roads and 80th Street. The approval only changes minor development standards to allow for specific homes and townhomes by homebuilder Lennar, which must also get approval of the Specific

see HAWES page 6


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