Scottsdale Airpark News - February 2022

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Y E A R S

FEBRUARY 2022

‘Fore’

the Fans The People's Open returns with new features

SISTER ACT

Scottsdale natives ready to compete at Arabian Horse Show

Girl Scout Cookies



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Contents February

16

18

28 T H E

V O I C E

O F

T H E

A I R P A R K

B U S I N E S S

C O M M U N I T Y

F O R

4 1

Y E A R S

FEBRUARY 2022

10 A Hazard?

261-unit Kierland apartment building gets 1st OK

14 Sweet Treats

Girl Scouts learn entrepreneurship through cookie sales

18 ‘Fore’ the Fans

The People’s Open returns with new features

The People's Open returns with new features

31 What’s Cooking? Candy charcuterie board

SISTER ACT

32

Scottsdale Community says it’s filling a void in the Airpark

Scottsdale natives ready to compete at WestWorld

the Fans

8600 E. Anderson Drive, Scottsdale

26 Hailing a New Bank

16 Sister Act

‘Fore’

28 Hot Properties

Scottsdale natives ready to compete at Arabian Horse Show

Girl Scout Cookies

On the cover:

Spanish golfer and ASU alum Jon Rahm photographed at the Waste Management Phoenix Open by Dennis Murphy.

23 Let’s Par-tee!

Restaurants and bars to hit during the WMPO

25 Betting Royalty

PGA Tour and DraftKings expand relationship to TPC

2 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

6 32 36 39 40

Business News Remember When Business Horoscopes Business Directory Scottsdale Airpark Map


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Published monthly since 1981, Scottsdale Airpark News serves the fastest-growing area in Arizona. Scottsdale Airpark News is delivered to businesses in and around the Greater Airpark Area. ©2020 Scottsdale Airpark News. For calendar and news items, the deadline for submission is the first of the month previous to the month you would like it to run. All submissions are handled on a space-available basis. Unsolicited manuscripts, photographs, or illustrations will not be returned unless accompanied by properly addressed envelope bearing sufficient postage. Scottsdale Airpark News has made every effort to authenticate all claims and guarantees offered by advertisers in this magazine, however, we cannot assume liability for any products or services advertised herein. The tradename Scottsdale Airpark News is registered. Reproduction of material in Scottsdale Airpark News in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Times Media Group sets high standards to ensure forestry is practiced in an environmentally responsible, socially beneficial and economically viable manner. Scottsdale Airpark News is printed by American Web on recycled paper fibers with inks containing a blend of soy base. Our printer is a certified member of the Forestry Stewardship Council, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, and additionally meets or exceeds all federal Resource Conservation Recovery Act standards. Scottsdale Airpark News is distributed by AZ Integrated Media, a circulation service company owned by Times Media Group. The public is permitted one copy per reader. For further information regarding the circulation of this publication or others in the Times Media Group family of publications, please contact AZ Integrated Media at circ@ azintegratedmedia.com or 480-898-5641. For circulation services please contact Aaron Kolodny at aaron@azintegratedmedia.com.

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AIRPARK BusinessNews AquaSafe swim school involved in $2.1M deal AquaSafe, a familyowned and -operated swim school in Scottsdale, closed on its second sale/leaseback transaction. The owners sold their property for $2.143 million but will remain at the property with a long-term lease agreement with the new owner. This is also the second transaction for Rommie Mojahed, director of retail Fried with West End Hotel leasing and sales investments, LLC from Los Angeles. and Lindsey Dulle, associate Bob Broyles with Colliers adviser with SVN in Phoenix. International represented Rommie Mojahed, director The seller, Thomas Spivey of retail leasing and sales the buyer. with Spivey Real Estate LLC, investments The 8,760-square-foot saw this as an opportunity to swim school is located at sell properties in Gilbert and Scottsdale, while 9830 E. Bahia Drive in Scottsdale. keeping the swim school open for business. “The buyer and sellers were great to work Mojahed and Dulle were instrumental with,” Mojahed says. in negotiating the leaseback terms between “It is not often that tenants get to write their the seller and the new buyer, Marshall own lease and pick their landlord. It felt great

By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

The 8,760-square-foot AquaSafe swim school is located at 9830 E. Bahia Drive in Scottsdale. (Photo courtesy of AquaSafe)

to see it all come together for both.” The buyer came in with a 1031 exchange, which made it easy for the seller who felt it was the right time to sell because of the current market. The buyer who is looking to invest more in Arizona commercial real estate recently purchased other property in the nearby area as well. “We couldn’t be happier to help our client maximize the value of the property,” Mojahed says. Info: rommie.mojahed@svn.com

Pinewell Capital acquires majority stake in Dickens Quality Demolition Dickens Quality Demolition and Scottsdale-based Pinewell Capital completed a majority stake acquisition of Dickens by Pinewell. Dickens will continue to operate with its current management and staff, at its current location. Details of the transaction remain private. “I made the decision to partner with Pinewell after very careful consideration and nearly a year of getting to know Pinewell and its owners,” says Richard Dickens, founder of Dickens who will continue in his previous role as president of the company. “The additional support, resources and relevant knowledge that Pinewell brings

to the table will provide DQD a force multiplier to continue and further accelerate our leading position in the markets that we serve. My entire management staff and I are truly excited about this joint prospect with Pinewell and the vision that we share for the company.” Chris Christensen, Dickens’ vice president of sales, added, “I am genuinely excited by what this partnership means for my company, our employees and our customers. We are in discussions around exciting plans that we will roll out in the coming months and years to increase our ability to serve our customers via greater investments in our people and training, in equipment and

related tools and in potentially expanding the breadth of our services.” Ziv Bendor, partner at Pinewell Capital says, “Yuta (Matsui) and I founded Pinewell as a people-centric investment company, realizing that healthy, sustainable growth and delivering top quality services starts and ends with people. “Thus, one of the attributes that we look for in a company is whether we believe it has an emphasis on its people resulting in a strong, positive culture. After getting to know Richard, Chris and others for almost a year, we feel that DQD is truly an exceptional company with exceptional people.” Info: pinewellcapital.com

Jason Reddington named partner at Scottsdale-based LevRose CRE Jason Reddington, CCIM, has been named a partner at LevRose Commercial Real Estate, a full-service commercial real estate firm. Reddington, whose specialties include office sales, office leasing and landlord representation, has been with LevRose for almost five years. His focus is office properties primarily in the Scottsdale, MidtownPhoenix, and Central-Phoenix submarkets. “Jason Reddington possesses the social skills, leadership, and past business success needed to be a top producer in the industry,” says LevRose Managing Director Mike

Jason Reddington spent seven years in Cleveland, where he was named the 2013 Northern Ohio Teacher of the Year. (Photo courtesy of LevRose)

6 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

Baumgardner. “We couldn’t be happier to see his incredible growth at LevRose.” A native of Evansville, Indiana, Reddington played NCAA Division I collegiate golf at the University of Evansville. Reddington spent seven years in Cleveland, where he was named the 2013 Northern Ohio Teacher of Year. Reddington moved West, spending 14 years as a golf professional. He was director of instruction at Mirabel and Forest Highlands. Info: levrose.com …continues on page 8


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AIRPARK BusinessNews

…continued from page 6

WestWorld manager Brian Dygert earns Hall of Fame recognition

Brian Dygert, the man behind WestWorld of Scottsdale, was inducted into the League of Agricultural and Equine Centers Hall of Fame in January in Austin. Dygert has been a recognized leader in the equine management industry for nearly three decades and will celebrate his 15th anniversary with the city later this year. Fittingly, Dygert’s journey to becoming an industry Hall of Famer started on a farm in Western New York. As the son of an equine veterinarian and the grandson of a standardbred horse trainer, he was born into the lifestyle of caring for and learning from horses. Under his leadership as general manager, WestWorld has grown into a world-class, full-service events facility, which annually welcomes nearly 1 million visitors, across all seasons. WestWorld serves as the venue for roughly 40 equestrian events each year, in addition to dozens of conventions, trade shows, concerts and other large-scale gatherings, including the Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show, the Arizona Quarter Horse Sun Circuit and the Barrett-

Brian Dygert says he’s humbled to be inducted into the League of Agricultural and Equine Centers Hall of Fame. (Photo by Jessica Lema/city of Scottsdale)

Jackson Collector Car Auction. “There is no one in the city more deserving of this honor than Brian Dygert,” says City Manager Jim Thompson. “He has done much to advance the Western spirit in Scottsdale and make the city a destination for people from around the world. His work ethic, experience and values

have made an indelible mark not only on the city, but also on the equestrian community nationwide. People who love horses, know that Scottsdale shares in, and respects, that passion, and we have Brian to thank for growing that legacy to what it is today.” Among other career highlights, Dygert rode in an exhibition in the 1996 Olympics and served as the chair of the organizing team that introduced Reining as a discipline in the 2002 World Equestrian Games in Jerez de la Frontera, Spain. Before coming to Scottsdale, he was widely recognized for his work with the Bob Martin Eastern Agricultural Center in Williamston, North Carolina. Dygert is the co-founder of the League of Agricultural and Equine Centers and served on its board of directors for 14 years. “I am very humbled and extremely proud to be recognized in this way,” Dygert says. “I have always approached everything I’ve done as leaving it better than I found it. My parents instilled this in me, and I am so grateful for them and my family. The league induction means to me that I worked hard to leave an industry better than I arrived and for this I am grateful, very proud and happy to know my work will carry on for some time for others to enjoy.”

Valley recovery center launches alumni-focused nonprofit Scottsdale Recovery Center launched Scottsdale Recovery Continued, a nonprofit of more than 300 alumni members that focuses on connection after treatment for all graduates of the recovery program. SRC has been a long-standing partner in the community since its inception in 2009, providing drug and alcohol treatment for those struggling with addiction. “Our alumni group fosters a community of champions, who have struggled and overcome their addiction” says Lee Yaiva, CEO of SRC. Membership in Scottsdale Recovery Continued is organized under a nonprofit, at no cost to the graduate and begins upon completion of treatment, regardless of the

level of care. The organization has five alumni board members, including directors of alumni, administration, outreach, communication and events. “Scottsdale Recovery Continued is a family,” says Andrea Dermott, director of alumni. “We stay connected, support each other and most importantly have fun.” The nonprofit also incorporates full dimensional wellness through activities and volunteerism that promote sobriety, enhance the recovery lifestyle and positively impact outcomes upon completion of treatment. “I am 100% into my recovery and the alumni program,” says John Bentley, director of outreach. “I have to be, my life depends on it. If I’m even only at 98%, there’s a chance

that I won’t do everything I need to stay sober.” The organization has weekly meetings and activities that create opportunities for alumni to engage in occupational wellness with significant benefits. Members will have access to structured activities that support full dimensional wellness addressing each of the eight dimensions — emotional, spiritual, intellectual, physical, social, occupational, financial and environmental. Members will also be encouraged to take part in volunteer opportunities that enhance community relations, inspire others, empower people, minimize stigma, promote unity, and strengthen the core of the SRC family. Info: scottsdalerecovery.com

Scottsdale's Economic Development Department gets a new look Scottsdale’s Economic Development Department kicked off the new year with a brand refresh. “The newly refreshed logo and color scheme helps to clearly articulate the brand and values to the marketplace and beyond,” says Rob Millar, director of Scottsdale’s Economic Development Department. The extensive refresh project, launched in

2021, began with an analysis of stakeholders that included residents, talent, companies, site selectors and visitors. Their feedback was crucial in the creation of the new logo and color palette. The new brand persona will continue to position Scottsdale as an inviting and inclusive community. As simple graphics and clarity have become more appealing within the modern

8 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

marketplace, our new logo captures the “S” in a nod to the balance found in the city. The featured font is bold and sends a message of confidence with the period at the end. The fresh-yet-bold color palette achieves one of the key themes of the new brand persona — balance. The city is accessible, beautiful, modern and skilled in work and leisure.


AIRPARK BusinessNews Land Advisors Organization expands to Nashville “Eric’s experience as a connector fits our Scottsdale-based Land Advisors Organization is expanding its southeast regional culture very well. He and his future team are footprint with the addition of a new office joining Land Advisors Organization at a time in Nashville, to serve middle Tennessee and when there is a significant opportunity for the surrounding markets, which include national builders and developers to expand Huntsville, Alabama and southern Kentucky. in the greater Nashville market. We’re pretty excited about the The new office will be partnership and thrilled managed by Eric S. Deems, to be able to connect our a real estate professional customers with someone with expertise in strategic of his caliber.” real estate planning, land Land Advisors Orgabrokerage and developnization’s Nashville office ment, and site selection. will provide advisory serThe firm plans to continue vices to landowners, home growing its Nashville team builders, developers and with the addition of several investors. more advisers and support “I’ve always viewed staff throughout the first Eric S. Deems will lead the firm’s myself as an entrepreneur part of the year. newest office serving middle TenThis new location marks nessee and surrounding markets, and a problem solver,” Land Advisors Organiza- providing land brokerage and real Deems says. “Joining the team of tion’s sixth office in the estate advisory services. (Photo Land Advisors Organizaregion, with offices in courtesy of Land Advisors Organization) tion fits perfectly for me Charlotte, North Carolina, along with Atlanta, Orlando, Jacksonville because of the firm’s entrepreneurial approach and the fact that middle Tennessee and Tampa. Deems has facilitated more than $500 and its surrounding markets are primed for million in real estate transactions over his investment by larger developers from major career. A resident of Nashville, Deems is markets. It’s exciting to facilitate introductions recognized in the real estate industry for his and help build relationships that mean so ability to connect parties with shared objec- much to the economy and future of this area tives as well as his adeptness in navigating we call home.” Deems earned his MBA from Vanderbilt complex transactions and guiding investor relations through acquisitions, public-private University and his bachelor’s degree in partnerships, and joint venture arrangements. political science from Belmont University. “Bringing our national resources and Deems is a licensed real estate broker in Tenrelationships to the Nashville market has nessee, Kentucky and Alabama and serves been a goal of ours for a while,” says Greg the community as a volunteer firefighter with Vogel, founder and CEO of Land Advisors Williamson Fire-Rescue, board chairman of Nashville Emerging Leaders. Organization.

SUSD Governing Board elects 2022 officers Former Desert Canyon Middle School educator Julie Cieniawski and community college instructor Dr. Libby Hart-Wells were elected president and vice president, respectively, of the Scottsdale Unified School District Governing Board at the board’s January 11 meeting. The board chooses new leaders for the calendar year at its first meeting of the new year. Cieniawski says working collaboratively toward decisions that have the best impact for students and the community is not always easy, but is necessary. “Maintaining a focus on doing right by our students and having a willingness to learn how to be better can help our students and community move through even the most challenging of times.” Cieniawski calls SUSD students the dis-

trict’s most valuable asset. “They need us to demonstrate the value of hard work, perseverance, showing calm through adversity, pursuing creativity, sensibility and facts, and to regularly display grace.” Hart-Wells says her active support of SUSD involves working with the district’s education and education support professionals, SUSD families, district leadership and her governing board colleagues. “I pledge to continue focusing my energy on ensuring SUSD is and remains a place where all of our students thrive academically, emotionally and socially,” she says. “Our students deserve nothing less than our best.” Patty Beckman, Jann-Michael Greenburg and Zach Lindsay round out the five-member board.  FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

9


AIRPARK Buzz

A Hazard?

261-unit Kierland apartment building gets 1st OK

By Scottsdale Airpark News Staff

A plan to add a five-story, 261-unit apartment building in the Kierland District passed its first approval in the city of Phoenix planning review process. (Image courtesy of city of Phoenix)

project that would add 261 luxury apartments in the Kierland District passed its first review in Phoenix recently but the developers must meet two concerns by Scottsdale Airport officials. The Paradise Valley Village Planning Committee on January 10 recommended Phoenix Planning Commission approval of the Davis Kierland building, which would replace six “underutilized” two-story office buildings on 4.2 acres at 71st Street and Marilyn Road with a 75-foot-high, five-story building. If the Planning Commission OKs the project, it still must go before Phoenix City Council. But city planners in their review of the project says developer Davis Development must notify the Federal Aviation Administration before it begins construction because the building is in the Scottsdale Airport flight path and must obtain a “no-hazard” declaration from the agency. That means developers will have to assure the FAA that cranes used during the

building’s construction won’t pose an obstacle to aircraft. City planners also noted in their evaluation of the project, “The city of Scottsdale Aviation Department expressed concern with the location of this project as it relates to the airports flight paths and the 55- and 60-Day Night Average Sound Level (DNL) noise contours of Scottsdale Airport.” An undated noise study performed by Coffman Associates Airport Consultants cited a multiagency study of noise levels generated by airports produced guidelines that describe a 65 DNL contour as “the threshold of significant impact for residential land uses and a variety of noise-sensitive institutions (such as hospitals, nursing homes, schools, cultural activities, auditoriums, and outdoor music shells).” That study also said multifamily developments were compatible with the 55 to 60 noise contours. Phoenix planning staff apparently agreed, although it also said: “The property owner shall record documents that disclose the existence, and opera-

10 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

tional characteristics of Scottsdale Municipal Airport (SDL) to future owners or tenants of the property. The form and content of such documents shall be approved by the planning and development department.” Another document prepared for the city by the developer’s law firm, Snell & Wilmer, describes the overall project as “appropriate,” citing its “proximity to retail, office and light industrial employment opportunities.” It said the apartment building will “provide quality, modern urban living experiences” and “create a pedestrian oriented, walkable environment along its roadway frontages for the benefit of the larger community” and offer “an opportunity to integrate residential uses with existing retail and employment centers.” “The project contributes to the recent development trend that has reinvented the larger surrounding area with quality pedestrian edges, elimination of surface parking lots, and an emphasis on quality design that has visual interest within the pedestrian realm and to the broader community,” the firm writes. …continues on page 12


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AIRPARK Buzz …continued from page 10 It said the sidewalk along the two frontage roads will be widened and walk-up groundfloor units built “to create a streetscape design that supports an enhanced pedestrian network in the Kierland Commerce South subdivision.” The building will offer a combination of one-, two- and three-bedroom units with 45 to 57 apartments on each floor, according to plans submitted to the city. Among the planned amenities are a pool and spa above the garage — there will be no surface parking — and an indoor sky lounge with open viewing deck may be added atop the fifth floor of the building. One Phoenix couple objected to the project, writing: “This area is already over saturated with personal residences and traffic. Please do not support the changes requested by the applicant. This area does not need more residential housing. The street off of the proposed site, East Acoma, is already a pass-through that is highly used to escape traffic from Scottsdale Road and Kierland Boulevard. … Leave the area zoned as it is now, industrial/ commercial.” Phoenix planners said a traffic study in-

The Davis Kierland apartment building would be located not far from Scottsdale city limits and within the flight path of Scottsdale Airport. (Image courtesy of city of Phoenix)

dicated the apartment building will generate “1,438 weekday trips with 89 trips (23 in/66 out) during the a.m. peak hour and 112 trips (68 in/46 out) during the p.m. peak hour. The analysis determined that, during the peak

It’s simple. More sensitive tests lead to more accurate results. There are two types of COVID-19 tests: rapid antigen tests and PCR diagnostic tests. Antigen tests can detect COVID-19 in your system after you’ve been experiencing symptoms for a few days, but they are not as sensitive, accurate or reliable as PCR tests. At Sonora Quest, we only offer the gold standard PCR diagnostic tests, which can detect small amounts of COVID-19 even if you don’t have symptoms. With locations across the Valley and most results delivered in 24-48 hours, we empower you to make smart health decisions for yourself and your loved ones.

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hours, a large distribution of vehicles (47%) will exit the property at the south driveway heading southwest on 71st Street.” The report did not address any potential impact on Scottsdale Road traffic in the area. 



PHILANTHROPY

Sweet Treats

Girl Scouts learn entrepreneurship through cookie sales

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Girl Scouts cookie season runs through Sunday, February 27. (Images courtesy of Girl Scouts-Arizona Cactus-Pine Council)

By Alison Bailin Batz irl Scouts from the Arizona Cactus-Pine Council are hitting shopping centers and other outlets to sell their trademark cookies through Sunday,

February 27. More than 11,000 girls in grades kindergarten through 12 in more than 90 communities will develop their leadership skills and tools with the sales. The Girl Scout Cookie Program is the world’s largest girl-led entrepreneurial program, generating over $700 million in annual sales. Nearly 200 million boxes of Girl Scout cookies are sold annually to 50 million customers. Girl Scouts-Arizona Cactus-Pine Council sold over 2 million packages of cookies last year. Amid the challenges of COVID-19, troops are hoping to meet or exceed previous sales goals.

“As we continue to find our new normal and navigate the COVID-19 pandemic, many girl entrepreneurs will utilize digital sales in the upcoming cookie program,” says Mary Mitchell, interim co-chief executive officer for the Girl Scouts-Arizona Cactus-Pine Council. “Cookie entrepreneurs are planning on a safe and fun season by opting into in-person and/or digital sales through Digital Cookies, Girl Scout’s e-commerce platform available for each girl to build and manage her own website.” Girls will also provide socially distant and contactless options in person and apply CDCrecommended precautions like wearing a face mask, advising customers to pay with card, and using hand sanitizer in between purchases. “The Girl Scout Cookie Program is more than a sale,” says Christina Spicer, interim co-chief executive officer for the Girl ScoutsArizona Cactus-Pine Council. “It provides girls the skills they need to

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become successful women. Girl Scouts learn to invest in themselves, their troops, and their community. Encouraging girls’ interest in entrepreneurship prepares them for any future career pathway. “The qualities that lead to successful entrepreneurship, like curiosity, confidence, and innovation, are essential for all types of academic and career success. There aren’t many organizations that help girls learn key entrepreneurship skills, but Girl Scouting does.” The cookie lineup is as follows: • New: Adventurefuls: Brownie-inspired cookie with caramel-flavored crème and a hint of sea salt. $5 • Lemon-Ups: Crispy lemon cookies baked with inspiring messages. $5 • Thin Mints: Mint flavored with a delicious chocolaty coating. Vegan. $5 • Tagalongs: Layers of peanut butter with a rich, chocolaty coating. $5


PHILANTHROPY Girls will apply CDC-recommended precautions like wearing a mask.

Over 11,000 girls in grades kindergarten through 12 in more than 90 communities will develop their leadership skills and tools with the sales.

• Samoas: Caramel and toasted coconutcovered cookies. $5 • Trefoils: Iconic and delicious shortbread cookies. $5 • Do-si-dos: Crisp and crunchy oatmeal outside and creamy peanut butter inside. $5 • Girl Scout S’mores: Crunchy graham sandwich cookies with creamy chocolate and marshmallow-ish filling. $6 • Toffee-tastics: Buttery (and gluten-free) cookies with sweet, crunchy golden toffee bits. $6 “As our nation continues to adapt to life with COVID-19, girls are still encouraged to expand their efforts to web safely with the options to sell online only or online and in person,” says Czerina Harvey, product program manager for Girl Scouts-Arizona Cactus-Pine Council. Lemon-Ups are crispy lemon cookies baked with inspiring messages.

The girls’ selling options this year are as follows

Digital Cookie: Through this digital selling platform, girls build a custom website so they can invite friends and family to purchase cookies, with the option of having cookies delivered in person or shipped directly to their home. Girls can also use the Digital Cookie Mobile App to accept credit card payments on the go from customers. Digital Cookie also introduces lessons about online marketing, application use, and eCommerce to Girl Scouts, through building their own cookie website and managing their virtual sales. Drive-thru booths: Local Girl Scout troops have the option to coordinate drive-thru booths, with cashless transactions being strongly requested. The drive-thru booths will be in parking lots that allow for plenty of distancing and space for the girls and their parents. Cars will have the chance to pull to the front of the line, make their orders, and have the contactless or near contactless ability to pick up their cookies as they would from a traditional booth. There will be parents stationed at each of these booths with sanitizing products to help the girls ensure maximum safety and monitor cookie transfer to cars. Booths: As permitted and with CDC-recommended guidelines in place, including wearing masks and social distancing, girls will be setting up a temporary “shop” in front of local businesses providing socially distanced options for customers to purchase

Girl Scouts will advise customers to pay by card to help provide a socially distant and contactless option for in-person sales.

cookies. Booth locations this year include longtime supporters Fry’s Food Stores, Bashas’ Family of Stores, Walmart, Sam’s Club, Sonic and other retailers and small businesses. “Over the years, community partners like Bashas and Fry’s have been game changers for us and our local Girl Scouts,” Harvey says. “We are incredibly thankful for all of our retail partners, small and large, who help our girls in their sale by simply sharing their space and support. “We’d also like to acknowledge that because of partners like Bashas, our girls on the Navajo Nation and Hopi Lands also get the opportunity to reach cookie customers safely in more rural areas of our jurisdiction.” Visit girlscoutsaz.org/cookiefinder and use the Girl Scout Cookie Finder. To find a list of nearby cookie booths, enter the ZIP code. There is also an on-the-go Girl Scout Cookie Finder app for iOS or Android mobile phones. 

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Act

Sister

AIRPARK Events

Scottsdale natives ready to compete at WestWorld By Laura Latzko

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Molly Schwanz has won four Arabian Youth Nationals in the Arabian hunter pleasure category. (Submitted photos)

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orses have changed Scottsdale native Molly Schwanz’s life. The ASU student finds solace in riding, which has led to four Arabian Youth Nationals wins in the Arabian hunter pleasure category. At this year’s Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show, she will be joined by her older sister, Madison, who will compete with her halfArabian horse in hunter pleasure. The 67th annual Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show is Thursday, February 17, through Sunday, February 27, at WestWorld of Scottsdale. The event highlights Arabians and half-Arabians in events that focus on their breeding, movements, attitude, ability to perform certain tasks and skill in following handler or rider commands. This year, more than 2,000 horses will compete for $3 million in prize money. The event will have hands-on opportunities to ride, touch and learn more about Arabian horses through the HoofbeatZ USA program, as well as a shopping expo with art, clothing and jewelry vendors.

Taking it seriously

Molly and Madison grew up showing horses, which created a deeper sisterly bond. “We can support each other and help each other get ready. It’s been a very fun experience having your sister by your side,


AIRPARK Events Molly Schwanz essential part of competing. won Miss Teen “The most important thing Arizona USA in when it comes to riding horses 2020, leading to is making sure the horse that various modeling you are showing or riding knows opportunities. you,” Molly says. “When you are showing them, having a relationship with them and knowing they can trust you is super important.” She has two horses: Montie, whom she describes as “a very sweet boy” and Chuck, who is energetic. Montie, 4, will attend the Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show with her. Throughout the years, Molly has competed in showmanship, reign, hunter, English, halter and hunter pleasure events. This year, Montie will take part in hunter pleasure class, and he may also compete in the halter class. Arizona USA in 2020. At the national Miss In the hunter pleasure Teen USA Pageant, she placed in the top 16. Molly Schwanz class, judges look at a This led to modeling opportunities in started competing horse’s manners, ability New York, Arizona and Paris. in Arabian horse to perform different gaits events at age 9. and suitability as a hunter. The college experience The halter class focuses A graduate of the private Jones-Gordon on a horse’s conformation School in Paradise Valley, Molly is studying to breed-specific stanbusiness communication at ASU. She’s a dards and movement. member of the Phi Beta Phi Fraternity. She says her strong work ethic as a Life changing student developed from caring for and Working with horses training horses. has changed Molly’s life. “Sometimes, when you are doing She learned important homework, it can be a lot, but you’ve just life lessons and values, got to keep working hard and working and gained skills that through it, and it’s all worth it in the end,” she can use in othe r Molly says. aspects of her life, such She’s still deciding on her post-college as school, charity work career, but she knows that Arabian horses and pageantry. will be part of her life. “I think just growing “No matter where I go in life and wherup and having a bond ever it takes me, I will always be involved with such a big animal with horses no matter what,” Molly says.  teaches you about love, patience and what you can do if you are so passionate about something WHEN: Various times Thursday, February 17, to and love something so Sunday, February 27 much,” Molly says. WHERE: WestWorld of Scottsdale, 16601 N. Pima “Horses also give you Road, Scottsdale skills. Not always when COST: General admission tickets are $15 for adults, you get on a horse is it $10 for seniors, free for children 12 and under; $75 the best ride, but you’ve for 11-day general admission ticket; admission is just got to know that the bad rides don’t take away free on Tuesday, February 22, for military members from the good ones.” and their families, and on Friday, February 25, after Molly began compet6:30 p.m. during family night ing in pageants in 2016 INFO: scottsdaleshow.com a n d w o n M i s s Te e n

growing up with horses, learning about it together and helping each other,” says Schwanz, 20. On Saturdays, they continue the tradition of traveling to the barn as a family to spend time with their horses and train. Still, Molly goes multiple times a week. “I think every time that we left the barn, we were so excited for the next time we could go back there,” Molly says. “Growing up, we used to stay at the barn all day on Saturdays. My mom would drop us off. We would help to feed the horses, just do anything we could to help out. We would travel to horse shows with our trainers to help set up. We fell in love with it instantly.” Their mother turned them onto horses. Molly, who started competing in Arabian horse events at age 9, says it can take years to connect with horses, but this is an

Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show

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‘Fore’

Professional golfer James Hahn, a South Korea native, is anticipated to make a great showing at the Waste Management Phoenix Open from Monday, February 7, to Sunday, February 13. (Submitted photo)

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’ the Fans

THE PEOPLE’S OPEN RETURNS WITH NEW FEATURES By Joe McHugh

ith a competitive field and a multitude of golf and charity experiences, the Waste Management Phoenix Open is returning to TPC Scottsdale. “It is going to be great to have everybody back out on the course and experience the Waste Management Open the way we all know and love it,” tournament Chairman Michael

Golding says. One of Arizona’s premier golf tournaments, “The Greatest Show on Grass” surrounds a 162-yard par 3. The 2022 Waste Management Phoenix Open hits the greens from Monday, February 7, to Sunday, February 13. “The People’s Open” has been named the Tournament of the Year by the PGA Tour four times in the past seven years (2014, 2015, 2018 and 2019). The 2022 edition will mark the 87th playing of the event (one of the five oldest events on the PGA Tour) and the 13th with Waste Management as title sponsor. The field, as of January 21, has 20 players ranked in the Top 50 of the Official World Golf Rankings, led by Jon Rahm, who sits first in the standings, and followed closely by Justin Thomas at fifth. The other top-ranked players include Hideki Matsuyama (10), Sam Burns (13), Scottie Scheffler (14), Jordan Spieth (15), Tony Finau (17), Brooks Koepka (18), Abraham Ancer (20), Jason Kokrak (21), Billy Horschel (23), Matt Fitzpatrick (24), Webb Simpson (29), Talor Gooch (31), Max Homa (34), Kevin Kisner (36), Corey Conners (38), Russell Henley (40), Lucas Herbert (43) and Seamus Power (49). The 132 players will vie for the $8.2 million purse, the $1.476 million first-place check, and 500 FedExCup points. PGA Tour members have until 5 p.m. Friday, February 4, to commit to play in the WM Phoenix Open. Eligible players are assigned one of 34 PGA Tour priority ranking categories based on their past performance on tour. The field will continue to change as players with higher priority rankings commit to play in the open. “We are expecting one of, if not the best, fields in the history of our tournament, with our field getting stronger with each announcement we make,” Golding says. FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

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The 2022 tournament will also include ASU freshman Preston Summerhays, who received the first sponsor exemption for the Waste Management Phoenix Open. “I first started standard bearing at the Waste Management Phoenix Open when I was 10 years old, so this event is like a major championship to me,” Summerhays says. “To be able to compete against the very best players in the world, in this amazing atmosphere, in my own backyard, is a dream come true.” The Thunderbirds have five exemptions to award for the 2022 WM Phoenix Open. The remaining four exemptions will be announced leading up to the tournament.

In the running

James Hahn is expected to make a great showing at the open, as he has performed well since 2017 with three top-25 finishes. Shooting an 11th place-worthy -12 in 2018, a 25th place-worthy -9 in 2020, and a

10th place-worthy -15 in 2021, Hahn could be in prime striking distance for this year’s title. “Any opportunity where I can play a home game, sleep in my own bed and have the support of a hometown crowd, it’s really exciting for me as a PGA Tour professional,” Hahn says. Hahn is also coming into the Waste Management Phoenix Open with another plus — his health. In 2019, Hahn was sidelined for eight months with a partial tear in his elbow. Healthy, he returned in 2021, when he had one of the best years of his career, scoring five top 10 finishes. Hahn carried that momentum into the 2021-22 season, where he has a top 15 finish at the ZOZO Championship in Japan and a 27th-place bid at the World Wide Technology Championship. “It was one of those stretches where my putter got hot,” Hahn says about 2021. “I was making a lot of puts, and I was feeling good and I was fresh.”

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Full-throttle event

Although it is primarily a golf tournament, the Waste Management Phoenix Open has plenty of peripheral events. This year features a 16th hole, 16,000-person-capacity coliseum so country’s Thomas Rhett and Old Dominion can kick off the festivities. “It is going to be a spectacular night and, certainly, a tradition that I think will have a stable place as a part of our week for years to come,” Golding says. The 2021 iteration has a new presenting sponsor, Taylor Morrison, which leads to the Fairway House, a 36,000-squarefoot structure for general admission attendees. Marked with a large American flag, the Fairway House is parallel to the 12th hole fairway at the highest point of the golf course. “You could spend a day watching four holes of golf from the highest point on our golf course,” Golding says. “It is a great example of how important it is for


the Thunderbirds to have a place for the general admission population to have a great experience at a hospitality venue like no other on our golf course.” The week’s worth of events caters to golfers and nongolfers. On Monday, February 7, practice rounds are free for attendees. The pro-am follows with evening concert experiences at the Coors Light Birds Nest with Diplo and Cole Swindell on Wednesday, February 9; Sam Hunt and Russell Dickerson on Thursday, February 10; Macklemore, Quinn XCII and Ayokay on Friday, February 11; and Kygo, Sam Feldt and Forester on Saturday, February 12. “We are ‘The People’s Open,’” Golding says. “We are dedicated to our fans coming out, having a great day, and being able to watch some great golf.” 

The Waste Management Phoenix Open WHEN: Monday, February 7, to Sunday, February 13 WHERE: TPC Scottsdale-Stadium Course, 17020 N. Hayden Road, Scottsdale COST: Tickets start at $50 INFO: wmphoenixopen.com

In 2019, James Hahn took an eight-month hiatus after suffering from a partial tear in his elbow. He returned in 2021 and went on to tackle one of the best years of his career, scoring five top 10 finishes. (Submitted photo)

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IT’S A THREE-PEAT Avery Lane Named Best Consignment Store 3 Years in a Row by

Darlene Richert, Proprietor

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t cocktail parties, on the tee box and amongst the ladies who lunch, there’s a subtle whisper about an unusual design mecca — Consignment. The valley’s most savvy shoppers and discerning designers are regulars at Avery Lane Fine Consignments and they are rewarded with great deals on one-of-a-kind home décor. Avery Lane’s design style is “Paris Apartment” which is a curated aesthetic of items collected from a lifetime of international travels, inherited from generations or salvaged when the flat upstairs was vacated. And, the 30,000 sq. ft. of inventory is like a Parisian merry-go-round — constantly changing and revolving. Come check it out … sit for a spell … we’ll pour the champagne. Discover more at AveryLaneHome.com

10% OFF ANY SINGLE ITEM * Not to be combined with other in-store promotions, expires May 30, 2021 February 28, 2022

Monday-Saturday 10am-5pm • Closed Sunday 15613 N. Greenway-Hayden Loop 480.991.0700 FONT: Edwardian Script and Charlemagne

Now Accepting Fine Furniture, Antique and Art Consignments


The borracho burro is a spotlight entrée at Someburros. (Photo courtesy of Someburros)

LET’S

Par-tee!

Restaurants and bars to hit during the WMPO By Scottsdale Airpark News Staff

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estaurants and bars around the Scottsdale Airpark area are expecting an influx of tourists and locals ready to imbibe in the food and drink they have to offer. Check out these restaurants:

Blue Clover Distillery (@bluecloverdistillery) Downtown Scottsdale To celebrate this year’s WMPO event, spectators can enjoy specialty craft cocktails handcrafted at Blue Clover Distillery. Popular cocktail options include the Scottsdale sunset ($9) made with Arizonamade Blue Clover grapefruit vodka, lemon, aperol, prosecco and lavender bitters, as well as the lucky lady ($9) made with Blue Clover gin, creme de violette, elderflower and citrus. Dining options include hand-tossed pizzas, build-your-own salads and the green chile breakfast burrito. Blue Clover is offering a 15% discount on the entire bill for those who show their same-day ticket. 7042 E. Indian School Road, Scottsdale, 480946-1062, bluecloverdistillery.com

ComicX’s s’mores are the perfect way to top off a meal. (Photo courtesy of ComicX)

The Buzz Eatery and Treats (@thebuzzeatery) Scottsdale To caffeinate before — or after — Waste Management Phoenix Open, attendees can show proof of attendance to receive a free small drip coffee. 15215 N. Kierland Boulevard, Suite 190, Scottsdale, 480-998-0202, thebuzzeatery.com ComicX (@comicxusa) North Phoenix/Desert Ridge Marketplace Put a creative twist on a Waste Management Phoenix Open visit — dining among life-sized

figurines of comic book characters. ComicX’s themed menu features the croc burger 2.0 ($18) made with two Angus beef patties, Fresno queso sauce, house-smoked bacon, cheddar and American cheese, lettuce, crispy onion, tomato and garlic aioli. Lantern’s avocado fries ($12) are made with panko-crusted avocado strips, smoky aioli, feta cheese and cilantro, and, for dessert, the fluffy s’mores dip ($10). 21001 N. Tatum Boulevard, Suite 95, Phoenix, 480-306-6780, comicx.us Hash Kitchen (@hashkitchen) Scottsdale

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Cannoli doughnuts put an Italian twist on breakfast at Hash Kitchen. (Photo courtesy of The Maggiore Group)

Home of Arizona’s largest bloody mary bar, Hash Kitchen is not appropriate for a quiet brunch — and that’s a fun thing. Nosh on over-the-top pancakes (various pricing), cannoli doughnuts ($14) or coconut- and almond-encrusted French toast ($13) as DJs spin. Craft mimosa flights and boba mimosas keep the open party going. 14838 N. Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard, Scottsdale, 480-361-5228; 8777 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, 480-947-3214, hashkitchen.com The Italian Daughter (@theitaliandaughteraz) North Scottsdale This lively piano bar and restaurant features an extensive Italian menu with mouth-watering pasta dishes and stonefired pizza options. Fan favorites include the spaghetti carbonara ($22) with fresh spaghetti pasta, pancetta, English peas, grana Padano and an organic egg yolk; and the handcrafted butternut squash purses ($25) made delicious with brown butter, sage and amaretti dust. Standout stone-fired pizzas include the Daughter ’s White Pie ($17) Spaghetti carbonara is one of many pasta dishes at The Italian Daughter, another offering from The Maggiore Group. (Photo courtesy of Carrie Willis)

The newly opened Mexicano serves a variety of tacos, including these with carne asada. (Photo courtesy of The Maggiore Group)

made with herbed ricotta, fresh mozzarella, Parmigiano, garlic confit and evoo; and the classic margherita pizza ($16) created with san marzano tomato sauce, mozzarella, basil and a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. 23655 N. Scottsdale Road, Suite 120, Scottsdale, 480-404-6085, theitaliandaughter.com The Mexicano (@themexicanocomida) North Phoenix/Paradise Valley Newbie The Mexicano offers standout menu items like lava rock fajitas served on sizzling lava stones; the smoking grouper ceviche presented in a coconut shell; 36-inch quesadillas; and charcoal-grilled prime meats and seafood such as half chicken, ribeye with chimichurri and chipotle agave shrimp. The Mexicano also features a buildyour-own michelada bar and a donkey cart with a tequila ice luge and shot glasses to celebrate this annual event with other spectators. 4801 E. Cactus Road, Scottsdale, 602-8122100, themexicanocomida.com The Sicilian Butcher (@thesicilianbutcher) North Phoenix A build-your-own meal experience, The Sicilian Butcher is a nationally recognized

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craft meatball and charcuterie bar specializing in fresh Italian cuisine. Offerings include hand-rolled meatballs made daily, made-from-scratch pasta and house-made sauces. The menu features the 5-foot-long Sicilian in Strada charcuterie board ($16 per person/four-person minimum), made for Waste Management Phoenix Open party groups, and the Italian saganaki ($15) with imported fontinella cheese, flambeed tableside, lemon and ciabatta. Cocktails are aplenty, like the $12 violette, made with butterfly pea flower italicus, cocchi Americano, apricot liqueur, and hibiscus and acai bitters; and the Amalfi spritz created with prosecco, fiorente elderflower, orchard pear, combier bleu and Mediterranean tonic. 15530 N. Tatum Boulevard, Phoenix, 602775-5140, thesicilianbutcher.com Someburros (@someburros) Scottsdale Attendees craving Sonoran-style Mexican food should check out the Arizona staple Someburros. Options include the pollo cundido ($10.55), which is marinated chicken breast wrapped in a deep-fried flour tortilla topped with jalapeno cream cheese, grated cheddar, green onions and served with rice; or the borracho burro ($10.55) consisting of a soft flour tortilla filled with green chili beef, covered with green sauce and melted cheese and topped with guacamole and sour cream. Authentic beverages include the creamy horchata and the freshly made strawberry margarita. 7501 E. Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard, Scottsdale, 480-443-8226, someburros.com Zinqué (@zinque) Scottsdale Parisian-inspired café, bistro and wine bar Zinqué at Scottsdale Fashion Square boasts made-from-scratch French pastries like madeleines and croissants, and morning plates like a breakfast sandwich that can be made with prosciutto, smoked salmon or avocado. For lunch or dinner, try the smoked salmon carpaccio ($19) with potato gratin dauphinois; the grilled whole branzino ($32) with chimichurri; or le bowl ($16) with brown rice (or cauliflower rice), avocado, tomatoes, arugula, Comté, Parmigiano reggiano, Sriracha mayo and choice of meat (or frittata). Pair these eats with craft cocktails including the matcha and melon ($15) made with gin, egg white, midori and fresh lime; or L’Amante ($15) composed of tequila, cilantro, lime and fresno chile. 4712 N. Goldwater Boulevard, Suite 110, Scottsdale, 623-745-9616, lezinque.com 


The TPC sportsbook, illustrated in this rendering, will be 12,000 square feet and offer “luxury dining” as well as a place to lay sports bets. (Image courtesy of the city of Scottsdale)

Betting Royalty PGA Tour and DraftKings expand relationship to TPC

W

ith the passage of HB 2772, sports betting is legal in Arizona. The Arizona Cardinals, the Arizona Coyotes and the Arizona Diamondbacks have aligned with providers. DraftKings is the exclusive sports betting partner of the Waste Management Phoenix Open hosted annually at TPC Scottsdale. The PGA Tour and DraftKings are collaborating on co-marketing initiatives and exclusive hospitality experiences for the WMPO. Also included in the agreement announced last spring, the PGA Tour and DraftKings will operate a retail sportsbook at TPC Scottsdale. “We are thrilled to work with DraftKings

By Scottsdale Airpark News Staff — along with the city of Scottsdale and the Thunderbirds — to explore a one-of-a-kind sportsbook experience at TPC Scottsdale and the world-class Waste Management Phoenix Open,” says Norb Gambuzza, senior vice president of media and gaming at the PGA Tour. “‘The People’s Open’ is one of the most attended events in golf, and with this announcement we look forward to taking the fan experience to another level.” Ezra Kucharz, chief business officer at DraftKings, is just as excited. “This momentous effort to pursue a firstof-its-kind sportsbook with the PGA Tour is a testament to the vision of both organizations that we believe will ultimately benefit Arizona sports fans who want to legally bet on sports,” Kucharz says.

The PGA tour and DraftKings plan to create the “19th hole” experience at TPC Scottsdale where fans can gather year-round to place wagers, watch sports, and enjoy food and beverage options. The PGA Tour and DraftKings are working closely with the city of Scottsdale and the Thunderbirds, the host organization of the Waste Management Phoenix Open, to develop the project and maximize economic, tourism and charitable benefits to the community. Several locations are being considered at TPC Scottsdale for the retail sportsbook, with details to be announced soon. DraftKings can find daily fantasy golf contests as well as golf betting markets by downloading the DraftKings apps via iOS and Android. 

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Scottsdale Community Bank, which obtained the state's first independent bank charter in more than 14 years, is locally owned and managed. (Submitted photo)

HAILING A NEW Scottsdale Community says it’s filling a void in the Airpark By Scottsdale Airpark News Staff

he Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions hailed the opening of Scottsdale Community Bank — which obtained the state’s first independent bank charter in more than 14 years. “Scottsdale Community Bank’s willingness to invest in Arizona demonstrates the state’s strong position as a great place to do business and the need for continued banking expansion,” DIFI Director Evan Daniels says. “Community banks continue to perform a significant role in the country’s banking sector, and I welcome this addition to Arizona’s banking community.” The newly chartered full-service commercial bank opened at 8767 E. Via De Ventura, after receiving final regulatory approval from both the state and the

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Boasting “personalized financial services while leveraging market opportunity with small and medium-size businesses, especially those wishing to pursue product off erings with local decision-making and concern for the Scottsdale community,” the bank is locally owned and managed. “There is a tremendous banking opportunity in Arizona, which is one of the fastest-growing fi nancial and business centers in the nation, yet is drastically underserved,” says Neill LeCorgne, president and chief executive officer of Scottsdale Community Bank. He noted that Arizona has only 10 community banks, compared with 410 in Texas, 401 in Illinois, 144 in California and 41 in Utah. “Our greatest opportunity is rooted in our local decision-making and having our products and services delivered through the most innovative banking platforms

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available in the industry today,” LeCorgne adds. “If you want a banker who answers your calls, actually listens to you, and makes house calls to your business, then we are your bank.” Vice Chair Hemant Patel says the leadership team comprises people with extensive backgrounds in banking, business, nonprofit and public service, including longtime Scottsdale and Arizona community leaders. He said the approval process involved a 1,000-page application, extensive background checks of board members and executives, and even a pandemic banking forecast. “We raised over $19 million in capital, which was $3 million more than targeted, from over 200 insightful founders who saw the dire need in our community for an innovative, effi cient bank that truly provides personalized attention and swift financial services to its clients,” Patel boasts. “One of our guideposts is: ‘Doing


W BANK well for our investors by doing good for the community.’” SCB plans to partner with other financial institutions on various projects of mutual interest. Sandra Watson, president/CEO of the Arizona Commerce Authority, congratulated board Chairman George Weisz, stating, “As the first new community bank in Arizona in nearly 15 years, Scottsdale Community Bank’s personalized services to small, medium and family businesses demonstrates their commitment to support the growth of local businesses.” Mayor David Ortega says he welcomes the new bank. “This is a significant sign of the thriving economic climate that Scottsdale’s business community and government sector have been producing for years,” he says, predicting the bank “will bring local banking and cutting-edge financial services to our businesses, which are the lifeblood of our flourishing economic engine.” Arizona Bankers Association President Paul Hickman says the bank “brings additional energy, technology and resources to our vibrant financial landscape at a time when our community needs it the most.” People interested in becoming charter members of the bank can email nlecorgne@scbaz.com. Find more information at scottsdalecommunitybank.com.  FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

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PROPERTIES 8600 E. Anderson Drive, Scottsdale For lease: $28.50 full-service gross lease +/-2,409 square feet Info: Andrea Davis, 480-225-0838, andrea@daviscreaz.com, Venue866.com

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By Scottsdale Airpark News Staff

h e m o d e r n a rc h i t e c ture of 8600 E. Anderson Drive is a highlight of this +/-2,409-squarefoot building in North Scottsdale. Surrounded by lush landscaping, the space features a functional layout with two entries into the suite. There are northeast views from the four offices, which can be set up into a small conference room. The space has built-in cabinets and

server rooms, as well as high-speed internet and fiber. The full-service lease includes two nights of janitorial per week. Located on the second floor of Venue 8600 North Scottsdale Corporate Events and Education Center, the space has a beautifully decorated lobby with a reception desk and café with a patio that overlooks the McDowell Mountains. It is available for individual use or corporate events, holiday parties, small weddings or networking. 

Property details • Suites 210-220 • +/-2409 square feet • 2 entryways from the main hallway • 7 offices • 2 potential server rooms • Reception area • Built-in cabinets/storage area with microwave and small fridge • 4 covered parking spaces included in the lease; others available for $60 per month • Within minutes to Highway 101, restaurants, hotels and golf • 25 minutes to Sky Harbor International Airport

Hot Properties is a new feature of the Scottsdale Airpark News, in which we feature new, remodeled or special spaces that are up for lease or sale. Want to be included? Email Christina Fuoco-Karasinski at christina@timespublications.com.

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FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

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Candy charcuterie board

ow did charcuterie b o a rd s b e c o m e s o popular and an Instagram sensation? If I had to guess, I’d say they found their groove simply because the pictures of them are highly, well, Instagrammable! These gorgeous oversized platters piled with delectable meats, cheeses, nuts, dried fruits, pickles, olives, pepperoncini and specialty mustards have become a hit for movie watching, game night and, of course, big sporting events like the Super Bowl or World Series. Plus, folks just can’t get enough of posting pics and videos of this trending moveable feast. But I have another idea for this treat tray. It’s a candy charcuterie board, and I’ve incorporated so many fun ideas that my tray has everything from vintage and retro candy favorites and Southwestern sweets to fan favorites and state fair fare. The idea for the candy charcuterie board follows the same criteria as for the meat and cheese boards. First, I think a charcuterie board is a conversation piece. We love to gather and share morsels of gourmet goodness that spark comments as we graze. My candy charcuterie board is no different. It’s meant to remind people of their favorite candy growing up, specialty treats from their own regions of the country, and some fun novelty candies; and, of course, it’s loaded up with everyone’s favorite chocolate bars, hard candies, licorice, and even popcorn to balance out the sweet! So, here’s how I put my candy charcuterie board together! Step 1: Choose a tray or board. Mine was 18 inches by 12 inches.

Step 2: Look for fun, colorful containers and scoops. Party City is a great place to start. Step 3: For retro and vintage candy, I included Necco Wafers, candy necklaces, Sugar Daddys, candy cigarettes, Pixy Stix and Beemans, Clove and Blackjack gum. Step 4: For regional treats, I included Mexican Del La Rosa Marzipan candy and a taco made of gummy candies. Step 5: For novelties, I added SpongeBob SquarePants gummy hamburgers, cotton candy and tins of mint “Impowermints,” “Enlightenmints” and “14th Amendmints”! Step 6: Add a lot of fan favorites: bubble gum, M&M’s, hard candies, old-fashioned candy stick, licorice and Boston baked beans. Step 7: Look for treats that give back. ACE Hardware sells chocolate bars that help raise money for children’s hospitals around the country. Step 8: Incorporating mini boxes of

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freshly popped popcorn helps balance out the sweet with salty. Step 9: Find sweets and treats with a theme. For instance, for the Super Bowl, include chocolate footballs and mini toothpick pennants.

Where to find these items

I found all my fun retro, vintage and novelty candies and mints at Old Town Candy and Toys, 4000 N. Scottsdale Road, oldtowncandyandtoys.com. Scoops, candy containers, mini popcorn boxes, chocolate footballs and pennants, individually wrapped bitesized candy and Pixy Stix are available at Party City. Food City has the Del La Rosa Marzipan candy. 

Watch Jan D’Atri’s how-to videos at https://bit.ly/JanDAtri.

FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

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REMEMBER When

Who Knew?

Cotton was the economic engine of Scottsdale from the 1910s through the 1940s. Farmers brought their cotton crop to the Cotton Gin on Second Street at Brown Avenue. (Photo courtesy of Scottsdale Historical Society)

Quirky bits of Scottsdale history that still fascinate

S

By Joan Fudala ome threads of Scottsdale history are monumental — 1888 founding, agricultural era, World War II impact, 1951 incorporation — while others are just plain fascinating. For old timers, these are the triggers for pleasant memories. For newcomers, they might be head scratchers or links to recollections of their own hometown. For anyone, they are too good to be forgotten. Who knew that:  Scottsdale was nearly named Orangedale (for its citrus groves) or Utleyville (after a major landowner Albert Utley). However, townsfolk decided that honoring founder and leading citizen Chaplain Winfield Scott might be most appropriate. In early listings, it was spelled with a hyphen, “Scotts-dale.”  As most early settlers in Scottsdale were teetotalers, they were ardent supporters of the temperance movement. Anti-Saloon League rallies were held here. Some property owners put restrictions on their deeds, declaring that liquor would never be sold or consumed here. After nationwide prohibition was repealed in the 1930s, the first taverns and cafes serving alcohol opened in Scottsdale. Further signs of change — one of the first five town councilmen, Jack Sweeney, owned the Saguaro Inn Tavern; three-term Mayor Herb Drinkwater owned a liquor store. Today, Scottsdale is known for its vibrant nightlife

During the Parada del Sol festivities of the 1950s and 1960s, local men participated in the Whiskerino beard-growing contest. (Photo courtesy of Scottsdale Progress)

and has a wine trail throughout Old Town Scottsdale.  In 1917-18, Scottsdale Grammar School children collected peach and apricot pits in a drive to provide filter material for gas masks

32 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

used in the Great War (World War I).  Cotton growing was Scottsdale’s main economic engine beginning in the 1910s. A cotton gin opened on the south side of Second Street at Brown Avenue in the early 1920s


REMEMBER When

and operated through the 1950s. The building was repurposed in the 1980s as a farmers market and trolley barn, in the 1990s as The Works nightclub, and torn down for expansion of the then-Scottsdale Healthcare Osborn campus.

 Members of Scottsdale’s art colony, led by Garnet Davy Grosse and the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, originated National Art Week here in 1922.  Facilities used to house World War II German prisoners of war were converted into a temporary veterans hospital in Papago Park. The hospital served vets from 1946 until the permanent VA Hospital opened in 1951 in Phoenix.  During the late 1940s, the Treasure Island Amusement Park offered “thrilling rides, swell games and loads of fun,” per an August 4 ad in the Arizona Republic. It was located three-quarters of a mile off East Van Buren on Scottsdale Road near the Welfare Sanatorium.  The Scottsdale Chamber of Commerce opened the town’s winter tourist season with a dinner that “featured a 4-square-foot chicken pie” and “entertainment included hillbilly music and square dancing,” according to a blurb in the December 12, 1949, Arizona Republic.  During the Cold War years of the 1950s, Scottsdale farmers and ranchers like Mike Dominguez had their specialized equipment logged by Maricopa County Civil Defense officials — trucks, tractors and trailers, “which might be brought into play in case of a mass evacuation” or other disaster, according to the April 5, 1951, Scottsdale Progress. There were air raid warning klaxons at Motorola and Kaibab Elementary School, which were tested regularly. O’Malley Lumber Co. sold do-it-yourself fallout shelter kits at its Scottsdale location.  In 1954, George Bergstrom moved his La Solana Pottery ovenware business from Southern California to a plant on Second Street in Scottsdale. One of two small factories on Second Street in the heart of Downtown Scottsdale,

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During the 1960s, the American Heritage Wax Museum, an affiliate of the London-based Madame Tussaud’s, was a key attraction on Scottsdale’s Stetson Drive. It hosted historic and timely wax dioramas, featuring the Beatles, the Kennedys, Dick Van Dyke’s Mary Poppins chimney sweep, and Babe Ruth. (Photo courtesy of Scottsdale Historical Society) FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

33


REMEMBER When

If the 1956 Scottsdale Town Council hadn’t voted to lift the ban on dancing in Scottsdale, this 1970s benefit to Save the Little Red Schoolhouse and hundreds of other dances might not have taken place. (Photo courtesy of Scottsdale Historical Society)

Bergstrom’s pastel-colored Solanaware was a popular wedding gift and was given away as an incentive at gas stations throughout the United States.  From the December 12, 1956, Arizona Republic: “Dancing, presently forbidden within the town city limits here (in Scottsdale), will

be allowed on special occasions at the nearly completed Hotel Valley Ho, the city council (sic: it was then a town council) decided last night.”  During the 1950s there were proposals to build a Muslim temple and a motocross track at Curry’s Corner, the intersection of

Scottsdale and Pinnacle Peak roads.  The Parada del Sol parade has lots of quirky legends and lore. At least five times in the 1950s and 1960s, the winner on the “Queen for a Day” TV show was gifted a trip to Scottsdale, often attending Parada. A highlight of the run-up to Parada for Scottsdale men

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REMEMBER When was the Remington-sponsored “Whiskerino” contest. Prizes were given for the best and worst beards, which had been grown over a three-month period.  In February 1962, residents of South Scottsdale turned up in force wearing gas masks to protest the stench emanating from Scottsdale’s Sewage Treatment Plant. The American Heritage Wax Museum, an affiliate of Madame Tussaud’s of London, operated from 1961 to 1971 on Stetson Drive (today the approximate location of the Marshall Way bridge and Southbridge). Museum tour guides were high school coeds dressed in cowgirl costumes.  Billie Jean King, who won the 1967 Phoenix Thunderbird Tennis Tournament, was named the Female Athlete of the Year 1968.  The August 12, 1968, issue of the Scottsdale Progress reported that “when the new Scottsdale civic center complex opens in October it will have something for everyone — even the kids. Plans now call for the installation of a ‘spider monkey’ island in a large pond on the grounds. The uncaged monkeys will be allowed to cavort on poles and swings placed on the island.” The front-page article further stated that peacocks and African brush chickens would also be allowed to wander around the grounds. None of it happened — yet. But

there were swans. During the 1950s through 1970s,  Fossilized bones the La Solana Pottery factory were discovered by a was located on Second Street in heavy equipment opDowntown Scottsdale, producing ovenware in pastel colors. erator in 1971 during excavation for a lake on the McCormick Ranch master-planned community. ASU geologists tentatively identified the bones as those of a giant mammoth, prehistoric horses, tortoises and ground sloth.  During the 1980s, several Scottsdalebased members of the Hashknife Pony Express took a detour and rode their horses up the city hall stairs to visit Drinkwater.  In 1990 there were discussions to locate Scottsdale area resident Robert McCall. That a UFO (unidentified flying object) center in Scottsdale. The former didn’t happen either. People, places, projects and proposals — Loloma School was one of the sites considered. It didn’t happen. In the mid-1990s there was some mainstream, some quirky — continue talk of locating a space museum here which, to give us a rich history and plenty of reasons among other things, would feature the art of for nostalgia. 

FEBRUARY 2022 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS /

35


ADVICE fromWeiss

FEBRUARY 2022 Business Horoscopes By Weiss Kelly, PMAFA

ARIES 3/21-4/20 The skies for the month ahead are filled with planetary wild cards, meaning take nothing at face value. A new player — a larger planet — has entered space, and it will be interesting to see its effect on our planet. The new moon on February 2 emphasizes social involvements and connections. Pick up the phone and reconnect with someone. Circle February 15 onward. Personal power days: February 5 and February 6 TAURUS 4/21-5/20 Prepare for interruptions that force you to make much-needed personal changes. Mercury goes direct on February 4, and so can you. There will be a heavy emphasis on real estate, housing, banking, construction and services. Your social life becomes active around midmonth. Personal power days: February 7 and February 8 GEMINI 5/21-6/21 Your financial situation will improve slowly. Think about the long term. The new moon on February 1 and the full moon February 16 can give insight into opportunities and jobs. It’s an excellent time to reconnect with associates. Personal power days: February 9, February 10 and February 11 CANCER 6/22-7/22 Cancers are savers, but you may not be able to save much in the weeks ahead. The world’s upheavals will cause prices to continue to rise. From February 1 to February 15, those in the housing and construction industries will see progress in the supply chain. Sun moving into Pisces shows improvements/gains. Personal power days: February 12 and February 13

LEO 7/23-8/22 Social and cultural issues have to be addressed. Sudden social encounters can lead to partnerships and/or new job opportunities. Pay attention! Shared debts or financial resources will be highlighted in late February. Then again, it’s February. Romance could enter your life. Personal power days: February 14, February 15 and February 16 VIRGO 8/23-9/22 Catch up on minor tasks, friends or events the first two weeks of February. You may find more compatible working conditions or people within the next two weeks once Jupiter brings unusual happenings. That may include a job/career change this year. Personal power days: February 17 and February 18 LIBRA 9/23-10/23 Follow through on your career and personal goals. You may have to tighten your money belt a bit from now through May, as costs rise and supply inventory spins out of control. Various crises will continue, including climate change, COVID-19 pandemic and 5G. You are a genius in relationships. You’ll be working things out this month. Personal power days: February 19 and February 20 SCORPIO 10/24-11/21 Spring welcomes the first eclipse of 2022. It will force you to do some selfsearching and reevaluating. The current socioeconomic insecurities may force you to make new connections. Fulfill those dreams of learning a new profession. February is the start of the social season. Personal power days: February 21, February 22 and February 23

36 / SCOTTSDALE AIRPARK NEWS / FEBRUARY 2022

SAGITTARIUS 11/22-12/21 The wild card planets will add to your chaotic life. But that does not deter you from moving forward. Believe in yourself, and believe in the “free to be me” philosophy. Personal power days: February 24 and February 25 CAPRICORN 12/22-1/19 Keep up your good work; it will pay off soon. Your ability to stick with it is admirable. Plenty of social and cultural activities come your way. Lighten up a bit. You can attract like-minded people with interests new to you. They will expand your personal or professional circle. Personal power days: February 26 and February 27 AQUARIUS 1/20-2/18 Technology and science may dominate the news, but this month is more about your needs, interests and friends. You start the month off with the new moon in your sign, suggesting new interests and new persons entering your life. This may alter your goals. It’s best to send resumes or inquiries the week of February 21. Personal power days: February 1 and February 28 PISCES 2/19-3/20 From February 1 to February 18, catch up on networking or assignments. Once the sun enters your sign on February 19, you will feel energized and you’ll be in demand. Look back on your life 12 years ago. Personal power days: February 2, February 3 and February 4 



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Check-in: 10:30 AM; Shotgun Start: 12:00 PM

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For sponsorship benefits contact: Ann Deasy at adeasy@scottsdalechamber.com 480-355-2712

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