Globe Miami Times January 2023

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A Martial Arts Master in Globe Teaches Physical and Spiritual Health

Is one of your New Year’s resolutions to develop more calmness, clarity and concentration? Or maybe to improve your physical fitness, or to work on your boundaries with people? Help is at hand, and his name is Master Chand Hee Kim. He’s a ninth-degree black belt, and for more than 40 years, he’s lived in downtown Globe and taught martial arts.

Deborah Yerkovich, whose two sons study tae kwan-do at Master Kim’s studio, says he “teaches them respect, how to stand up for themselves, and how to stand up for others.”

“Tae kwon-do includes kicking, punching, concentration, safety, and defense,” explains Grand Master Chang Hee Kim. “Hap ki-do builds the spiritual component.”

Master Kim offers separate classes for kids, teenagers and adults. Students must be five years old or older to enroll, though in one case a three-year-old was allowed to put on a uniform and “kick things” while his older siblings took lessons.

Wings of Hope seventh annual car show calls attention to suicide prevention

Seven years ago in the wake of the tragic suicide of their son Angel, Monica and Johnnie Perez started an event they hoped would call attention to an epidemic of suicides and to help ease the pain of the family’s loss.

The Angel Perez Wings of Hope Show N Shine Car Show has exceeded expectations, and after outgrowing the streets of Miami and Globe, is setting up at the Gila County Fairgrounds on March 25 and is expected to be bigger than ever.

Proceeds from the event will go toward a scholarship fund that honors Angel Perez, a Globe native son who took his own life in May 2015 at the age of 21.

“As a family, we all kind of missed the signs,” says Monica Perez. “It took us a long time to even understand suicide and depression. Looking back, we could probably see some signs, but at the time, we had no idea, never suspected, and it completely caught us off guard.”

Angel Perez seemed to be fine on the outside. The 2012 graduate of Globe High School had many friends and took pleasure in activities from car shows to sports to spending time with his newborn son, who is

now eight and living with his grandparents. In high school, Angel played football, baseball and was a wrestler. Everything in his life was not perfect, but he lived life with a smile that masked his inner turmoil. It wasn’t until the day he took his own life that the people around him realized the toll his pain and sadness were taking.

Nursing Staff Ranked Best in the Nation

“If you’re in a dark place, I think that you honestly believe the lies in your head, that you are a burden, you are not needed, nobody cares, you are alone, and the world is better off without you,” Monica says. “I really believe they think that, so they’re not going to reach out for help.”

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*Patient experience scores for “Top One Percent in Quality of Nurse Care in Outpatient Surgery,” 2022 Globe Kearny Superior Tonto Basin Young 928-425-3261 cvrmc.org CITY OF GLOBE 5 MIAMI HIGH CULINARY TOPS CTE PROGRAM 11 ROSE MOFFORD FLOAT 8 HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS 17 WINGS OF HOPE, Continued on page 14
Weston Wong successfully demonstrates his ability to break through 2 planks of wood. Photo by LCGross
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MARTIAL ARTS, Continued
on page
Cars emerging from the Queen Creek Tunnel on their way to Globe for last year’s event. Photo by TB Photo.
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January 2023 | 3

Remarkable.

Conceived on a whim, constructed by volunteers, and created to represent Globe-Miami in the Fiesta Bowl Parade, the float is nothing short of extraordinary, exceptional, and worthy of attention – the dictionary definition of remarkable.

An immense amount of thought and effort went into its creation, and it shows. In the cardboard flowers and copper-infused papier-mache rocks, in the choreography of the song and dance steps, in the choice of a turquoise Cadillac convertible and a vintage Conservation Corps truck to pull the float.

It all adds up perfectly to honor a woman who made history in State government while championing Globe-Miami and its people.

The Rose Mofford float stood out amid a sea of uninspired, un-exceptional floats from corporate sponsors – most of them were large, inflatable floats of cartoon figures or corporate logos. Given the exposure, including national TV coverage, you would think the sponsors would put a little more thought and effort into their entries. The Fiesta Bowl Parade is, in fact, one of Arizona’s largest events, with attendance in the tens of thousands.

The Rose Mofford float stood out thanks to the dedication of people who stepped up at every stage of its development to make it extraordinary and something our community could be proud of – reflecting our pride in Rose herself, a remarkable woman.

Remarkable also comes to mind when I read about the small tae kwon-do studio on Broad Street, run by the Kims for more than four decades (see p. 1). Master Kim has been producing extraordinary, exceptional results that go well beyond the belts that students earn and the techniques they learn.

Remarkable people like Rose Mofford and Master Kim show us that if you’re going to attempt difficult challenges, like breaking boards with your hand or making an indelible mark on history, the first thing you have to learn is not to give up.

To have a vision, belief in its importance, and faith in your ability to achieve it.

Here’s to the extraordinary, exceptional people in our midst – and the potential in each of us to make remarkable things happen.

Wishing you remarkable moments in the year ahead.

Creative Designer Jenifer Lee

Contributing Writers David Abbott

Linda Gross

Patricia Sanders

Contributing Photography

Linda Gross

Tory Satter

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Publisher Linda Gross Editor Patricia Sanders
PUBLISHER’S NOTE 5 Good news around Globe 7 Superior Mayor’s Minute 7 Superior Home Tour 8 Hometown Float honoring Rose Mofford wins hearts 10 Copper Corridor Trail Run First Choice Lumber Real Estate Wrap Up 11 Miami High School 12 Downtown Maps 16 Miami Merchants 17 Globe-Miami-San Carlos Sports 18 Public Notice of Hearing and Public Comment Meetings on Arizona Public Service Company 20 In Loving Memory 21 Service Directory ON THE COVER A Martial Arts Master in Globe Wings of Hope Car Show Inside this issue
LINDA GROSS
Publisher
That’s the word that comes to mind when I look at the parade float honoring Rose Mofford (featured on pp. 8-9).
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INSIDER’S SCOOP Good news around Globe

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City of Globe makes progress in 2022, rides momentum into 2023

The City of Globe made considerable progress toward its goals in 2022 and is poised to build on those successes as the calendar turns to 2023.

In addition to strengthening its ability to provide services to residents by increasing the civic workforce, Globe has invested in aging infrastructure and laid the groundwork for more improvements in basic services. City leaders have also worked to build important relationships to help provide funding – and political heft –in the future.

“Obviously, one of the things we will continue to do is to build stronger relationships and partnerships, not only locally but statewide,” says Globe Mayor Al Gameros. “We would not be able to accomplish many of these projects without those relationships. One of our key goals is to leverage this collaboration and advance as a key rural region in Arizona.”

Through efforts including strengthening ties with Gila County and other local stakeholders, seeking funding opportunities with federal agencies, and engaging a lobbyist in Washington DC, the City has picked up momentum that will serve residents well into 2023 and beyond.

Laying groundwork for the future

Highlights of the past year include establishing several large-scale projects, such as senior affordable housing at the former Hill Street School site, the Northeast Corridor Sewer Expansion Plan, the Community Center Pool rehabilitation project, and the upcoming replacement of Connie’s Bridge.

The City has utilized funds from the recently established 1% sales tax to ensure it can continue to improve services to residents and maintain major infrastructure improvements without raising property taxes or going into debt through municipal bonds.

The revenues will also help the City hire and retain employees. Initial hiring is targeted for the Public Works Department to provide more efficient service and in preparation for the major expansion in recreational amenities. The City has also hired its first Grants Manager, who will coordinate with all departments and identify funding opportunities, and a Building Official, tasked with modernizing internal and external processes and updating building codes in preparation for upcoming residential and commercial development.

One of the main projects targeted for the new revenue stream is the replacement of Globe’s fire station, a building that is more than 100 years old and is in dire need of replacement. With the help of a USDA loan the City hopes to procure, the $10 million to $13 million project is expected to make big gains this year. Once built, the new station will be an asset to the City for decades to come.

“The 1% sales tax increase will provide the vital resources for the City to best serve our current residents and best prepare for the growth and development that is coming,” Gameros says. “To provide the quality service that is expected of a modern city, we must invest in our staff, which is one of our greatest assets. If they don’t do the work, it doesn’t get done.”

Gameros added that in order to grow the local workforce, the city must work to address a housing shortage that leaves many workers with no option but to commute from the Valley.

To that end, the 2022-2023 budget helps lay the groundwork for future growth, from modernizing water and sewer systems to preparing for development in one of the few places in the region amenable to construction, the Northeast Corridor.

“When we have employee leakage, so many people that work here in the mines and other professions don’t live here because housing is unavailable,” Gameros says. “If we don’t start addressing our aging infrastructure, which includes housing stock, we’re going to run into a situation like other cities that constantly have these issues.”

Partnerships and successes

Globe’s leadership has forged many partnerships in its efforts to revitalize the community, including with local mines, the US Forest Service, Gila County, the Eastern Arizona College Small Business Development Center, the Department of Homeland Security, USDA, and the Water Infrastructure Finance Authority of Arizona (WIFA).

The City of Globe has been a major driver in the Cobre Valley Wastershed Partnership efforts for the past several years, under a grant from the University of Arizona. The group includes vested stakeholders working to create and implement a Watershed Restoration and Action Plan throughout the region.

“Bettering our community is about being involved at every level, listening to constituents, industry, and business leaders, and then making the best decisions as a Council for our City,” Gameros says. “Working with a dedicated lobbying firm in Washington has already provided a return for the City. With the lobbyists’ assistance, we were able to secure $100,000 in funding for the study for the McCormick Wash Diversion Project that directly impacts the safety and sustainability of our historic downtown commercial corridor. We are looking forward to going to Washington in March, because not only do you need the lobbyists, but it’s absolutely necessary

to have one-on-one dialogue with our legislators, to discuss our priorities and issues so that they will remember our faces when they make decisions that directly impact our hometown.”

The Economic and Community Development Department (ECD) had a banner year in 2022, as it led the way on projects intended to bring more tourism dollars to the City and stimulate future economic development.

The success of Globe’s First Friday has created a signature regional event that increases traffic for downtown businesses and vendors and acts as a magnet for residents, visitors, and classic car aficionados who participate in the downtown cruise.

ECD Director Linda Oddonetto has assembled a growing team of dedicated employees and volunteers to plan and staff the event, but that’s only one of the department’s recent successes.

In December 2022, ECD received notification that thanks to the bipartisan Build Back Better Bill, the City will receive $750,000 to invest in the Michaelson Building Incubator Workforce Development Project in downtown Globe.

The project to rehabilitate the building that was once a location for Gila County offices has been in the planning stage for three years. Federal funds will go toward the renovation of the historic structure to create an innovation hub for local entrepreneurs and provide much-needed office space for post-Covid remote workers who are moving to Globe.

After months of work with mayors, law enforcement, and local leaders, these new investments will go directly to Arizona communities,” says Senator Mark Kelly of the bill, which will allocate $132 million statewide. “Whether it’s providing critical resources for our police officers, improving high-speed internet access for rural Arizonans, or upgrading water infrastructure during this drought, these projects are going to improve people’s lives across the state.”

Senator Sinema says she and her colleagues have “secured resources that empower our local communities and tribes

with resources to provide critical services for public safety, health, education, water infrastructure, transportation, and more.”

The incubator project is expected to begin this year and represents a major accomplishment for the City of Globe.

“The Michaelson Building Incubator Workforce Development Project is going to be a catalyst for the Globe downtown renaissance,” Oddonetto says. “Thanks to the work of our elected leaders in Washington and our partnership with Gila County, this modern concept of the 21st-century center for innovation and workplace is coming to fruition.”

In the coming year, Gameros expects the momentum to continue. City Council will have its annual planning facilitation in February and will continue with the far-reaching planning that it hopes to put in place for the future of all residents of Globe.

“We’re going to continue to refresh plans, evolve, and keep moving forward not only this year, but like always, we have to have the vision for five, ten, and twenty years down the road,” Gameros concluded. “We are committed to building a strong, vibrant, sustainable community for the generations to come.”

January 2023 | 5
Globe Mayor Al Gameros
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SUPERIOR MAYOR’S MINUTE

Greetings of the New Year! The holidays have come and gone too quickly it seems, and hopefully by now, we are all settling into 2023!

Our Town achieved many major milestones in 2022, including the purchase of the original high school; the groundbreaking of the wastewater treatment plant renovations, and by the end of this fiscal year, we will have administered almost 16 million dollars in grant funds.

At Town Hall, we are excited to begin this New Year with a new Public Works Director, Manuel Castillo, who previously served as Superior’s Building

important position, and we warmly

As many of you know, Manuel brings many years of municipal

Also in 2023, renovations will continue at the original Superior High School; funding is in place to build the elevator that will allow full accessibility to the campus. The Superior Enterprise Center will likely be the first program to fully move into the facility once the electrical work is completed. Once the electrical is upgraded, the welding units can be installed, and we are eager to begin offering welding and other job training courses at the Superior Enterprise Center.

The Town is anticipating finalizing the purchase of the land exchange parcels, comprised of 546 acres on the west side of town including our Superior Municipal Airport. This transaction is expected to be completed in the summer of 2023. Purchasing the land from the federal government is just the first step to expanding our economic and community development opportunities. Just as important is the need to shift our focus to infrastructure development in that area. This of course will require time and attention, but we will be kicking off that body of work this year and creating plans to ensure that Superior can grow sustainably.

It was disappointing to close out 2022 still waiting for the Resolution Copper Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) to be re-released by the federal government. It will be imperative for the Town and all community leaders to increase our advocacy to the federal government to re-release the FEIS. In March, it will be two years since the document was put into bureaucratic purgatory, and every day that we wait for this document to be released our community is disenfranchised.

This month we will once again welcome an AmeriCorps Crew to live and work in our community. We are fortunate to have them stay in our community through March. The eightmember team will be building fire breaks around Superior and assisting with invasive species removal. They will also be volunteering with other community organizations and getting to know what life is like in our community. Their work provides benefits to our community, including substantial savings for important town projects, which helps us stretch grant dollars that we have received to conduct these projects.

Throughout 2022, we have read the reports on water and drought conditions across Arizona and the west. Our Town leadership, in partnership with Resolution Copper and the Arizona Water Company, have been laser-focused on the immediate and long-term water needs for Superior. The release of water into Queen Creek to replenish our aquifer is slated for 2023. We will be working on creating a rainwater garden to help with drainage on upper Main Street. This project will likely kick off a longer-term plan to address drainage issues across town and making repairs that will also improve our aquifers. Every little bit helps when it comes to water sustainability. I encourage you to visit the Superior Sustainability Elevated page and follow them on Facebook to learn more about what we can all do to save water: https:// sustainabilityelevated.com

One upcoming opportunity that I am most excited about is our Youth Council making a trip to our Nation’s Capital in March to attend the National League of Cities Conference. Five of our local youth leaders will make the trip along with chaperones to learn more about community service and experience first-hand the business of our country in Washington D.C. This trip is well deserved for these incredible young leaders who have devoted the past 5 years of their school careers to serving on the Town of Superior Youth Council. We have much to be proud of in our community. While much work remains to be done, I am proud of our staff, Town Council, and the countless volunteers who help make Superior a shining example for rural community development across the nation. Wishing you the very best of life in 2023!

15th Annual Superior Home Tour & Antique Show Scheduled for January 28-29, 2023

Superior, Arizona —

The 15th Annual Superior Home Tour & Antique Show will take place on January 28th and 29th in the historic mining town of Superior, Arizona. Hosted by the Superior Chamber of Commerce, the event offers ticket holders a chance to explore several unique homes in the historic community. This year’s tour includes “The Surprise House,” a brick home built in the 1920s that has been fully restored. The home has retained much of its original character, including in the kitchen, which features the original cabinets from a bygone era. The home is one of several in the area that housed the mine supervisors from Magma Copper Mine and were company owned until the 1970s.

The antique show will take place at the Magma Club, a beautifully restored 100+ year old building in downtown Superior. The building once hosted dinners, dancing, and boxing matches for Magma Mine workers. Attendees can browse quality antiques or relax and listen to live music on the veranda while taking in the mountain views.

Both days begin with a pancake breakfast. Throughout the day, attendees can explore at their own pace, while also taking part in guided hikes, or listening to dynamic speakers. Attendees will hear stories of Superior’s history and the legends who once roamed there, including Mattie Blaylock, Wyatt Earp’s common-law wife, who is buried in the Pinal Cemetery just outside of town. This year’s speakers include Wyatt Earp, a descendant of the western lawman. In addition, the Tour will feature handmade pottery for sale from the Mexican village of Mata Ortiz and a chance to browse the various shops in downtown Superior.

Tickets are $20 on the day of the event or $17 presale. All ticket holders receive 2-for-1 tickets to the Renaissance Festival and Boyce Thompson Arboretum. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.superiorazhometour.com

January 2023 | 7
Official. Manuel applied for and was promoted to this critically welcome him as a member of our senior management team. experience to the job.
•21 Very Stylish Bedrooms •Beautifully Landscaped Courtyard •A Welcoming Lobby •Exquisite Dining Room •Cozy Tea Room and Bar •Roof-top Patio •Second Floor Veranda From a 109 Year Old Boarding House to a Cozy Boutique Hotel HISTORIC HOTEL MAGMA Hotel | Restaurant | Tea Room MIGUEL SFEIR, MANAGER www.hotelmagmasuperior.com 100 W Main Street • Superior, AZ 85173 info@hotelmagmasuperior.com • (520) 689-2300
The Americorp Fireteam 1 will be working to build fire breaks around Superior. Courtesy Photo.

Hometown Float honoring Rose Mofford wins hearts in this year’s Fiesta Bowl Parade

The Alliance to Honor Rose would like to take this opportunity to thank the following individuals and businesses who helped make the float possible.

Artistic Contributors

– Parade Chairman,

Spearheading the effort were Aurelie Flores, Regina Ortega-Leonardi, and Vernon Perry - all Globe High School alumni. But the project would require over 100 individuals, businesses, and organizations to bring it to life.

Janice Schweizer: Choreographer, Dance Instructor, Performer, Donor / Chris Burke: Float Design and Construction, Procurement, Donor / Darryl Poenisch: Caricature Artist / Aileen Rahamani Bell: Crafting, Performer, Construction/Deconstruction / Debra Runkle-Sieling and Fran O’Conner: Costume Creators / Renee Brunner VanAusdal, Regina Ortega, Aurelie Flores, Red Mountain Technical Theater Class: Props / Al Gameros, Mayor of Globe Arizona: Construction, Artistic Painter / Theresa Lynn Howe: Creator of the Rose Bobblehead / Adrian Marks, Miami High School Shop: Float Construction, Artistic Painting / David Flores, US Forest Service: Float Construction, Stuck Float Genius, Performer, Painter, Draper, Lighting / Angelo Leonardi: Float Construction, Crafting, Painting, Volunteer Support / Kyle Smith, US Forest Service: Float Construction, Lighting, Painting, Bobblehead Rose Performer / Matthew Smith, US Forest Service: Float Construction, Performer/ Dancer, Safety Crew, Lighting / Grace Bombulum, US Forest Service: Geology Consultant, Performer, Float Construction / Mary Yazzie, Art Teacher at Miami High School, and her art class students

Major Contributors

Wisdom Family: Wayne, Isabelle, Isaac: Electrical, Float Construction/Deconstruction, Float Transportation, Music, Sound System, Safety, Procurement, Volunteer Support, Performers, Procurement, Music, Donors / Fernando Shipley, State Farm Insurance: Float Construction/ Reconstruction, Painting, Insurance Assistance / Anna Ortega Chavolla and Rick Chavolla: Float Construction/Reconstruction, Component Transportation, Donors / Senecca and Chris Johnson: Parent Support Team, Performers, Safety Crew, Troubleshooting / Buzzy Sneezy: PA System and Lights, Donor / Crystal Corral and Raul Corral: Float Construction, Performers, Crafters / Lex Cueto: Float Construction, Procurement / JC and Joanna Sanchez and Georgia and Jessica Dorame and family: Float Construction, Crafting / Photographers: Kristie Flores, Chris Johnson, Sarah Atkinson, Regina Ortega, Linda Gross

Vehicles

Thank you to the patient and generous vehicle owners who prepared their vehicles and then were exceptional at navigating all the rules and crowds at the parades: Russ Dalmolin, Chris Yerkovich, Robyn Schluter, Wayne Wisdom

8 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
Rose Mofford, hometown legend and Arizona’s 18th governor, left a mark on the state and her hometown of Globe-Miami. And this year, her legacy was on display as the group known as the Alliance to Honor Rose Mofford created a float worthy of a legend for the 50th Fiesta Bowl Parade in downtown Phoenix. The Parade is the highestattended event in the State of Arizona, according to its organizers, with approximately 100,000 spectators
“Having The Alliance to Honor Rose Mofford as one of our Parade entries was a highlight of the day.”
Ben Smith

Float Construction, Crafters, and Contributors

David Uhl, Serena Pizano, Sherry Hockersmith, Tammy Guevara, Burris Family, Gary Lopez

Thank you to the organizations and businesses that contributed:

Oasis Printing: Scott and Dani Crick / Dottie’s Cookies: Dottie Durham / KIKO Radio: Liz Mata/ City of Globe: Mayor Al Gameros, City Council, and Public Works Department / Globe Historic Downtown Association: Christmas Parade Organizers, Molly Cornwell

Many thanks to the Globe-Miami Times for their support.

Facilities provided by

VFW Globe: GHS Class of ‘66, Carlos Mejia, John McBride, and Lonnie Burgett / Globe-Miami Boys and Girls Club: Carmen Casilla / Red Mountain High School: Matt Erickson / Cobre Valley Center for the Arts: Tanner Hunsacker and Wil Bowen / Globe Unified School District: Jerry Jennex / Miami Unified School District: Dr. Sherry Dorathy, Superintendent, Gilbert Olivares, Resource Officer

Thank you to the Globe High School alumni who donated toward the purchase of 135 pounds of chocolate copper foil-covered pennies that were distributed to the parade crowds:

Class of ‘74: Dominic Ortega / Class of ‘82: Anna Ortega Chavolla, Doug Brown, Monica Magoon / Class of ‘83: Scott Martin, Callie Embry, Natalie Gilstrap, Michael Rivera, Lorie Trobaugh Luipold (Splash of Copper), Aurelie Flores, Callie Embry, Cheryl Guilfoyle, Brenda Dodge / Class of ‘84: Teddy von Pingel, Michelle Holder-Clavell, Ginger Collard, Kris Boykin, Jennifer Wunderl, Sheryl Robison, Deanna Palmer, Xena Uhl / Class of ‘85: Regina Ortega, Donna Nelson, Geno Bocardo, Anna Casillas, Aileen Bell, Manny Fresquez, Joe Rodriguez, Nancy Rodriguez, Sherry Borgnaes / Class of ‘86: Richie Macias, Mitch Moody, Aaron Termain / Class of ‘87: Misty Escobedo

Historical Memorabilia provided by

Special Donors

A special thanks to the Dalmolin family

A big shout-out to our talented performers:

Vocalists: Kyle Atkinson and Trinity Muniz / Bobble Head Rose: Kyle Smith / Performers: Aurelie Wisdom, Jamie Green, Jerry Bell, Isaac Nitta, Brendan Burris, Rebekah Haverland, Gaylynn Quintana, Xian Eutsler, Hailey Ericsson, Robin Aitken, Eleanora Bernstein, Devani Solbert, Ellie Ericsson, Michelle Yerkovich, Anna Casillas, Aileen Bell, Attilio Leonardi Jr, Karen Bayless Feldman (Karen wanted to be in the Fiesta Bowl Parade for 15 years. We made her dream come true.) / Dancers (miners and 1940s era softball players): Carter Johnson, Gregor Hocknull, Benjamin Miller, Kaydence Gilroy, Josephine Norgren, Stevie Islas, Mason Lindsey, Marcos Martinez, Brooke Reed, Sorrin Garcia, Lisa Chow, Raquel Murietta, Kami Christensen, Isabelle Bandt, Gabriella Laredo

We appreciate the parents who supported our float in the parades: Rebekah and Brian Haverland, Kenneth and Sarah Bernstein, Chris and Senecca Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Burris

Thank you to our Alliance Partners:

Kyle Spitler and the Queen Creek Theater Troupe: Provided the majority of our performers. / Matt Erickson of the Red Mountain Drama Department and the Red Mountain Technical Theater Class: Prop Construction, Deconstruction, Sound System, Mesa Site Coordinator, Trailer Acquisition / Karen Mischlispy of the Arizona Softball Hall of Fame / Globe High School Alumni Association Leadership: Vernon Perry, President; Susie Horn, VicePresident; Darlene Troglia Medina and Patti Troglia Nolan, Treasurers

Special Thanks

Many thanks to our sponsor Freeport-McMoRan for the financial contributions that allowed us to take our parade entry to the highest level. A special thanks to Robin Bradford, FreeportMcMoRan Miami Operations, for providing us with creative financial freedom to fulfill every aspect of the vision to honor Rose Mofford.

Alliance Leadership

Vernon and Lynn Perry: Advisors on Float Construction, Materials Procurement, Lights, Finance, Globe-Sites Coordinators, Safety Manager, Volunteer Support, Globe Parade Liaison, Strategist, Lead instigator, Yellow Pad Master. Donors / Regina Ortega: Community Activist, Funding Wizard, Procurement, Sole Sponsor Liaison, Scenic Painter, Master Crafter, Construction/Deconstruction, Vehicle Recruitment, Expert Glitterer, Media Relations, Volunteer Recruitment, Coordinator for Globe Sites, Donations Manager, Volunteer Support, Promoter, Donor / Aurelie Flores: Alliance Team Leader, Concept Development, Artistic Director, Project Management, Design, Construction/Deconstruction, Talent Recruiter and Coordinator, Costume Designer, Performer, Procurement, Media Relations, Liaison with Fiesta Bowl Committee, Valley Site Coordinator, Volunteer Support, Transportation, Finances. Also responsible for getting the float stuck in the shop door. Donor.

January 2023 | 9
The Bullion Plaza Cultural Center and Museum: Tom Foster Deanna Arellano Rivette, Lexi Cueto, Seneca and Chris Johnson, Vernon & Lynne Perry, Janice Schweitzer, Connie New, Wayne Wisdom, Aurelie Flores, Regina Ortega, Chris Burke Including Frank, Russ, and Brett. The family refurbished a vintage truck originally used by the Conservation Corps in the ‘30s, and provided a place to store our fragile float. Plus they transported the truck to the parades, lent us beautiful Splashes of Copper, and Russ drove the truck in both parades.

Copper Corridor Trail Run comes to Superior on February 25

The Copper Corridor Trail Run, which first launched in 2020, is back! The event offers runners five distances to choose from ranging from a 5-mile course to a 50 Km course (approximately 31 miles). Depending on the course length, runners will wind their way towards Arnett Canyon, take in the Picketpost Trailhead and a portion of the Arizona Trail. Start and finish for all runners will be downtown Superior.

While the original four distances head south towards Picketpost Mountain and pass through the beautiful Arnett Canyon, the new 5 Mile Hill Climb will take runners east out of Main Street in downtown Superior, climbing up the Old 60 abandoned highway. Winding up Queen Creek canyon, you’ll pass through 300 ft long Claypool’s Tunnel, once regarded as “an outstanding example of road engineering,” and looking up at the Queen Creek Canyon bridge, a large metal arch bridge completed in 1949 that connects Superior to Miami. Please visit https://www.aravaiparunning.com/copper/ for complete details.

Lumberyard has new ownership

The first big load of lumber and block was delivered to Pinal Lumber in December - a welcome sign of things to come from the recent sale of Pinal Lumber to Brian Kay and Dustin Bayers of Kay Supply.

Pinal Lumber struggled in recent years to keep inventory stocked in the face of supply chain and pandemic woes. So the owners welcomed the sale to Kay Supply, which has facilities in Show Low and Thatcher. Although the Globe location will operate independently of Kay Supply, under the name 1st Choice Lumber, staff will be able to draw on the experience and resources of the parent company.

“I don’t know when was the last time we were able to order block,” says Tanya Weaver, a Pinal Lumber employee who is happy to see the yard filling up again with product. She will be staying on with the company, along with the other employees of Pinal Lumber.

Those employees, as well as Pinal Lumber’s strong relationships within the community, were two of the selling points, says Bayers.

“We weren’t really looking at the time,” Bayers added. But when he was approached by Weaver and Brad Henry, the Orgill representative for Pinal, he and Brian Kay were intrigued enough to make a trip to Globe.

Bayers said it was the community that sold them, ultimately.

1st Choice Lumber is now stocking lumber, block, rebar, insulation, and concrete and is open Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. They can be reached at (928) 425-5716.

Real Estate Wrap Up

According to real estate statistics on single-family home sales in the local Multiple Listing System (Globe MLS, Realty Pro), the highest sale in 2022 was $640,000 for a single-family residence at 1052 N. Estate Drive in Globe. This house was built in 1973 and offered 4,200 square feet of living space on 1.31 acres. It was on the market for a total of 43 days.

It’s a sign of the times that all of the 125 single-family residential properties that sold in 2022 sold for close to the listing price. The median time on the market was 65 days, and just over 25% of homes took more than 100 days to sell.

For sold listings in 2022, the average price per square foot was $156, up $25 from 2021. Approximately 30% of the homes sold in 2022 were built between 1900 and 1950, and 65% were built between 1951 and 1999. Less than 5% were built after 2000.

The increased cost of building materials during the COVID-19 years created delays in potential building plans for new construction.

However, according to Adrea France, a realtor with Smart Concepts Realty, the real estate market has benefited from historically low mortgage rates in the last two years. In 2022, mortgage rates steadily increased, resulting in longer listing days on the market for sellers. Fortunately, It now appears that mortgage rates have stabilized. France says the outlook for this year “may not be as robust as 2021 and early 2022, but 2023 appears positive.”

Currently, there are 42 single-family residence listings for sale in Globe-Miami and surrounding areas. Prices range from $59,000 to $780,000, and all of the listings are resale homes (no new homes).

Both buyers and sellers should discuss their real estate goals with a Realtor and a lender to develop a plan for a successful and smooth transaction.

10 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
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OPINION

MIAMI HIGH SCHOOL MIAMI HIGH SCHOOL

Miami High School CTE program helps students prepare for the future

At Miami High School, real-world education has become a cornerstone of the curriculum. And the school’s Career Technical and Education (CTE) program is key, helping participating students acquire the tools they need for success in post-high school jobs and academic study.

CTE offers an alternative to traditional classroom education, providing students an opportunity to see how the work world functions and also to get a leg up on their entry into the job market or college.

Once known as vocational technical education, or Vo-Tech, CTE is federally and state funded to help students gain proficiency in work and life skills and build their confidence in their abilities to function as adults.

Connecting school to “real” life

MHS’s CTE programs include culinary arts, graphic and web design, early childhood education, journalism, agriculture, construction, and software and app design.

According to MHS Principal Glen Lineberry, students are often more motivated to attend school by sports and extracurricular activities, or because they have a favorite teacher or class, rather than by quadratic equations and five-paragraph essays.

“Through CTE, our kids are guaranteed that at least a few hours of every day, they’re going to know why they’re learning this,” Lineberry says. “When kids believe in the utility of what they’re being taught, for even part of the day, they’ll believe in it most of the day.”

According to ASU’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy, CTE is intended to “prepare students to enter the workforce with the academic and vocational skills needed to compete successfully in the job market.”

ASU research suggests CTE reduces the likelihood of students dropping out of high school and increases the chance they’ll be able to hold a job after high school.

Better alternatives for everyone

In the past, Vo-Tech programs targeted students who weren’t expected to succeed academically, and they tended to track young men and women into traditional gender-stereotyped career paths. But modern CTE programs are allencompassing and are considered to be equally beneficial to students who expect to go into the workforce and those who plan to pursue further education.

“We believe that the skill set of how to work and how to collaborate and how to conduct yourself is equally important in a college classroom as it is on the job site, or as it is in an apprenticeship,” Lineberry says. “So it’s not ‘academic’ or ‘low-tech,’ it’s clear thinking, accurate description and proper use of mathematics and arithmetic. These things all tie together.”

In addition to offering alternatives to students, CTE helps generate classroom funding. Arizona schools are required to provide “non-traditional” programs for students – meaning boys will get a foundation for become teachers, for example, while girls might learn the basics of construction. And schools are financially rewarded for doing so, under the Perkins Act, which allocates federal funding for participating students.

Lineberry says those funds are discretionary – they can be used for classroom instruction related to CTE or to build infrastructure, such as the school’s commercial kitchen for the culinary program, a greenhouse for agricultural courses, or a technical center for the

graphic design program. Funds can also be used to send students to leadership training conferences.

New leadership coming to MHS’s CTE program

Lineberry is currently serving as director of the CTE program at MHS, but this fall he’ll be handing the reins over to longtime instructor Dan Hill. Hill currently leads the culinary program, familiar to Globe-Miami residents as the caterers of many local events.

Hill, who also teaches government and Japanese, has seen positive outcomes and higher wages for students who successfully complete the culinary program. Just having basic certification, such as a ServSafe food safety certificate – a difficult accomplishment – can open up opportunities in food handling.

Hill also believes CTE gives students a sense of what to expect in the “real world” and baseline skills for survival, as they get exposure to the behind-the-scenes operations of business, be it bookkeeping or supply chains.

“I realized I’m not training a team of future chefs, but I am helping kids get a start,” Hill says. “It really gives them some kind of realistic skills. If they go great places in life, great, but if not, they’ve always got something they can fall back on.”

Benefits for students now and in the future

Kayla Tetors is new to the area after moving from the Valley prior to her senior year. She says that not only has the program helped her academically, but it has also smoothed her assimilation to a new community during a major transition in her life.

“I think having that hands-on experience really makes you more comfortable with the people that you’re working with,” Tetors says. “The environment that you put yourself in really helps.”

Jaxon Silvers has been in the culinary program for two years and likes the way it gives him a break from the traditional classroom.

Silvers says he doesn’t enjoy having to spend all day in a classroom, sitting down. “But then you get to come in here and it’s just so much better,” he says. “In class it’s all dark and gray, but then you come in here and it’s colorful. It’s way better.”

Silvers and Tetors also like the end-ofyear field trips, which are paid from the

According to instructor Dan Hill, the Culinary class does five or six events a year. “We turn down more events than that because there just isn’t time to put any more on the calendar and still get our required classwork done.”

proceeds of the program’s sales throughout the year. Last year, students traveled to San Diego and attended a dinner cruise that allowed them to see how such an event is catered.

Silvers says he may go into a culinary field after high school, and Tetors says she intends to attend college, but they will both leave MHS with experience to help them in whatever they choose to do next.

Shaping responsible citizens

Lineberry says the district is working to create similar programs for middle school students, albeit on a smaller scale. MHS also partners with Eastern Arizona College’s Cobre Valley Institute of Technology (CVIT), located at Gila Pueblo Community College and the old National Guard armory, for programs MHS doesn’t have the capacity to facilitate.

In the big picture, the CTE program is helping mold citizens to participate in society.

January 2023 | 11
“This is just fundamental to turning out educated students,” Lineberry says. “We’re supposed to graduate people who are ready to go on the job, to go to college, to defend the republic, to raise their own children, and to meet their responsibilities in the community as responsible citizens. We see CTE as an integral part of that mix.” Dan Hill The Culinary program at Miami Highschool caters local events as well as serving students and staff at their ‘local cafe’ set up in the classroom. The students are a mix of 10th through 12th grade. Left to right: Front Row (on one knee): Eric Troglia, Sebastian Freeman, and David Barragan. Second Row: Iasic Castillo, Serenity Verdigo, and Kayla Green. Back Row: Cesar Yniguez, Jaxon Silvers, Jeffrey Sanders, Juan Ramirez, Dan Hill
12 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com miami historic district CITY PARK HWY 60 SULLIVAN STREET BULLION PLAZA Straight Ahead GUAYO’S EL REY COPPER MINERS’ REST CITY HALL STUDIO CAFÉ MIAMI MERCANTILE MIAMI ROSE JOSHUA TREE LAMPSHADES INSPIRATION AVENUE CHISHOLM NASH STREET FOREST AVENUE TO PHOENIX JULIE’S QUILT SHOP BURGER HOUSE DICK’S BROASTED CHICKEN GIBSON STREET MIAMI AVENUE KEYSTONE AVENUE ADONIS EARTHMOVER TIRES LEMONADE’S ANTIQUE P C AND CES AUCTION DACITE MITZIE’S TAX SERVICE SULLIVAN STREET ANTIQUES BRUCE BERRY BANJOS COURTNEY ODOM RECORDS MIAMI ARTWORKS STEWARTS ANTIQUE NOOK INSPIRED BY TIME *Please note: is map is not to scale, it is intended for informational purposes only. P Parking Railroad N Bullion Plaza Museum 60 SullivanSt Cobre Valley Recreation Center LittleLeague BallPark Electric Dr Escudilla Dr NMainSt E Golden Hill Rd S Russell Rd SRagusRd S Old Oak St AdonisAve Mtn View Dentistry Golden Hill Nursery Oak Realty Miami High School Library and Sports Hall of Fame Judy’s Cookhouse To Phoenix 188 To Tonto Basin SW Gas Guayo’s On The Trail APS Freeport-McMoRan Copper Bistro Cobre Valley Regional Medical Center Liquor Stables and Roosevelt Lake Resort Gila Historical Museum State Farm F. Shipley Chamber of Commerce DeMarco’s MY MOMS HOUSE DZYNES PIN DROP TRAVEL TRAILERS Dominion Firearms LIVE OAK STREET SODA POPS MIAMI LIBRARY TO GLOBE Gila RV AIMEE MUNDYELLISON FARM BUREAU MIAMI SENIOR CENTER Welcome to Globe-Miami M IAMI M EMORIAL L IBRARY Join us! The HeART of Tai Chi Tuesday/Thursdays at 4pm Music and Movement Thursdays at 10am Find our classes on FACEBOOK!
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Suicide rates have increased in recent years

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), suicide is one of the leading causes of death in the U.S. Between 2000-2018, suicide rates increased by 30%, although there were slight dips in 2019 and 2020, the most recent data available.

In 2020, 45,979 people died at their own hands, about one death every 11 minutes, according to the CDC.

“The number of people who think about or attempt suicide is even higher. In 2020, an estimated 12.2 million American adults seriously thought about suicide, 3.2 million planned a suicide attempt, and 1.2 million attempted suicide,” the CDC website states.

Demographically, in 2020 suicide was among the top nine leading causes of death for people ages 10-64 and the second leading cause of death for people ages 1014 and 25-34.3. Rural populations and veterans have higher than average rates, as well as those in industrial occupations such as mining and construction.

In 2019, suicide cost the U.S. “nearly $490 billion in medical costs, work loss costs, value of statistical life, and quality of life costs,” but more than 90% of people who survived an attempt never go on to die from suicide, according to the CDC.

According to the Arizona Health Care Containment System, Arizona ranks 20th in the nation for deaths by suicide — 1,359 Arizonans died by suicide in 2020 — and suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the state. On average, one person in Arizona dies by suicide every six and a half hours.

The biggest toll, though, is on the people who survive, the web of families, friends and loved ones left to wonder if there was anything they could have done to avert tragedy.

Finding meaning in the aftermath

The first Wings of Hope event took place in downtown Miami in 2016. Monica and Johnnie Perez chose September, Suicide Awareness Month, as a time to honor their son and raise awareness of the issue. They also established a memorial fund called the Angel Perez Wings of Hope Scholarship administered through The Pinal Mountain Foundation for Higher Education.

That first year, the Perez family dug into their own pockets to fund the scholarship and get the program started.

“It was so generous and a huge blessing on my life,” says Alyssa Dickson, the first recipient of the scholarship. “I really respect Monica and everything that she’s gone through and how she has turned something so negative and so difficult into something positive to help the community that she loves.”

Dickson did not know Angel directly, but as happens in small towns, there were many community connections between the two families. Her elder brother was a wrestler at Globe High School and her father was the wrestling coach, so the families knew each other through the GHS community.

The scholarship jump-started Dickson’s career, as she obtained her education degree from Arizona State University. She briefly taught at Miami High School, but has since moved to Flagstaff to pursue her master’s in education.

Suicide awareness is an important message, Dickson says, and she is glad there is an event to bring more attention to the problem.

“I think that our small community really needs that reminder that there’s help, and there’s resources,” she says. “It might be a hard time in your life right now, but it’s not always going to be that way. So many people are constantly comparing themselves and their lives to other people, and it’s not healthy.”

14 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
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Wings of Hope, Continued from page 1 Detty Rodriguez and the Redeemed Christian Car Club. Courtesy Photo Event hosts, Monica and Johnnie Perez have moved the event to the Gila County Fairgrounds this year to accommodate a growing list of attendees and vendors. Photo by LCGross Lalo Hernandez at last year’s event, always drives out to support this event. His vehicle has over $30K in stereo equipment, to match the exquisite detailing of his car. Photo by LCGross One of the cars on display at last years event. Photo by LCgross

Growing success

The event quickly grew, and after a few years in Miami, moved on to downtown Globe to accommodate larger crowds.

“Now we’re moving to the fairgrounds because we’re out of room downtown,” Monica says. “Our first and second year, we might have had 80 or 90 entries, but we’re pretty much at 100 now.”

The show includes cars, bicycles and pedal cars, in addition to more than 40 vendors selling a variety of food and craft items.

The car show brings car club members from all over the state, including Detty and Jimmy Rodriguez, founders of the Redeemed Christian Car Club in Phoenix.

The couple has participated every year since Wings of Hope’s inception, and the event has special meaning to them, as Detty is a K-8 school counselor and Jimmy Rodriguez has served the Phoenix Police Department for 22 years.

When Johnnie Perez reached out to Jimmy, though, he didn’t realize there was already a Globe connection, as Rodriguez’ parents immigrated to Globe from Chihuahua, Mexico in 1968 to find a better life in Arizona. They moved to the Valley in 1978, but Rodriguez still feels connected.

Through his work as a police officer, Rodriguez has seen the pain those left behind suffer when a family member takes their own life. He has also seen his fellow officers struggle with the same issues.

“In my 22 years in law enforcement, I’ve responded to calls for service that was a suicide or suicide attempt, and no matter the means or the reason for it, it’s always devastating,” he says. “A lot of times we’ll find out maybe it was because of a relationship, finances, terminal illness, or maybe they did something that’s going to bring great shame. Unfortunately, they think that’s the solution.”

Detty Rodriguez has seen it in the youths she counsels as well.

“Anxiety and anger are definitely things that students struggle with,” Detty says. “I have even seen students as young as third grade have suicidal ideations. It’s definitely a concern right now.”

They see Wings of Hope as a way to turn tragedy into a positive for the community.

“You can’t find a more fitting name for the event, bringing hope to those that are lost or are hurting,” Jimmy says. “For them to take something so devastating, so tragic, and to turn it and what they’re doing now speaks volumes of them and their character.”

New date and events for 2023

To facilitate the move to the fairgrounds, the event has moved from its fall date to March 25, a date chosen because it is near to Angel’s birthday of March 23. Perez says the move was made due to the difficulty of scheduling around events like the Gila County Fair, but he also thinks the weather will be better for the crowds that will show up.

In addition to the car show, there will

Wings of Hope, and is being organized by Renee Alcaraz and the Chief Development Officer for the American Cornhole League, Todd Kisicki.

Alcaraz’ brother-in-law is Angel’s godfather, so for her it is a family affair. She has also helped a good friend who lost a son to suicide. Last year, Alcaraz raised more than $6,500 for the cause, according to Perez.

The tournament is taking place in the Valley in order to be closer to the “cornhole family,” and at a different time of the month so Monica Perez can attend the festivities.

“I incorporated cornhole to raise money,” Alcaraz says. “It started with about 30 people and in 2022 we did two tournaments, one up in Globe and one down here. It just grew and got bigger and bigger as more people got involved.”

Kisicki is donating his facility, Hole 9 Yards, and proceeds from the event, which is expected to draw upwards of 200 participants. He started his cornhole odyssey nearly a decade ago establishing KB Kornhole games and was so successful he was able to quit his “regular job” as an instructor at Arizona State University to devote time to his passion.

Both Kisicki and his wife, Erin, who was a social worker working with high school LGBTQ students, have worked within a community especially hard-hit by suicide.

“We both volunteered with organizations that worked with the LGBTQ community,” Kisicki says. “And we heard stories about those sorts of things and how suicide was always on the back of their minds.”

Alcaraz believes that reaching out to friends or family members who are suffering can make a difference, even if it’s something small to let them know they are not alone.

“My friend Susie Webster always says, ‘shoulder taps,’” Alcaraz says. “You tap somebody’s shoulder and you say something nice to them and maybe that changes their day or their outlook.”

The tournament will open with a ceremony at 12:30 p.m. and will feature Monica Perez talking about Wings of Hope. There will be other speakers and a raffle, and when the beanbags start to fly, there will be prizes in three different categories, from competitive to casual.

The entry fee is $25 and sponsorships are available for $500 per board.

“If somebody can get an education that could not afford one, they have a chance for a better future,” Alcaraz says. “If they can get an education, they’re not going to be stressed and they’re not going to have that burden on them later on in their life.”

To sign up or sponsor the event, go to the Angel Perez Wings of Hope 4th Annual Cornhole Tournament Facebook page or www.hole9yards.com.

Wings of Hope will take place at the Gila County Fairgrounds on March 25 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will feature music by Neto and Imagine, vendors, and activities for kids and adults. There will be a raffle with items including a PlayStation 5, big screen

Angel’s Aunt Lucia and Uncle David will have a booth selling churros and elote, as a “labor of love.”

“When you’re there the kindness and generosity is magnified,” Monica says. “There’s a whole spirit there. God really does something different every year.”

The show is sponsored in part by Edward Jones, Dallin Law and Azteca Glass but more are available to help fund the event.

For more information, go to the Angel Perez Wings of Hope Facebook page or Instagram at wingsofhopeshownshine.

For those experiencing a crisis there are resources available at the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, 800-273-TALK (8255) or 988. Information and resources can also be found at www.azahcccs.gov/ suicideprevention.

Alyssa Dickson Luis Pristine (L) owns a barber shop in Mesa and also goes to Superior a few days a week. He helped set up chairs and donated free haircuts at last years’ event. Photo by LCGross
To date, the event has funded 49 scholarships in Angel’s name, according to Perez.
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Globe High School Girls Varsity Basketball Miami High School Boys Varsity Basketball Senior Guard Shanell Francis drives to the basket for the Lady Tigers. Senior Forward Keiana Anderson shoots her first of two free throws. Freshman Guard Tanyka Cepress goes up for a contested lay up against Valley Christian High School. Senior Guard Jaden Peru plays some high flying defense looking for a block. Senior Point Guard Jaykob Armenta brings the ball down the court for the Vandals. Senior Forward Aidan Guthrey drives down the lane looking for two. Globe High School Girls Varsity Basketball Senior Gabe Gonzales pinned his opponent thirty seconds into the second round. Gonzales is a two-time state champion. Freshman Kendahl Hooke pinned her opponent in the third round. Hooke is the only female on the Globe wrestling team. San Carlos High School Varsity Wrestling Senior Trevan Alvarado is ready to take on his opponent from Thatcher High School. Freshman Jacob Goseyun works hard to try and pin his opponent.

PUBLIC NOTICE OF HEARING AND PUBLIC COMMENT MEETINGS ON ARIZONA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY (“APS”) RATE APPLICATION. (DOCKET NO. E-01345A-22-0144)

Summary

On October 28, 2022, APS filed with the Arizona Corporation Commission (“Commission”) a Rate Application (“Application”) requesting approval of rates, charges, and schedules that would result in an annual increase in revenue from base rates of $772.27 million, or 22.9%. The Application uses a test year ending June 30, 2022. APS reports that the net revenue increase experienced by customers would be significantly lower, at $459.94 million, or 13.62%, because of a test year adjustor revenue transfer (-$107.83 million), a Power Supply Adjustment Mechanism (“PSA”) revenue reduction (-$220.59 million), and a Renewable Energy Standard Adjustment Clause (“REAC”) revenue increase (+$16.09 million).

The Application proposes a return on equity of 10.25%, a 7.17% weighted average cost of capital, and a return on the fair value increment of 1.0%, resulting in a proposed fair value rate of return of 4.92% on a proposed fair value rate base of $16.6 billion. APS reports a test year fair value rate of return of 1.43%.

Adjustor Mechanisms

APS proposes:

• To eliminate the Environmental Improvement Surcharge adjustor mechanism (“EIS”) and have $10.3 million in test year EIS-eligible costs recovered through base rates;

• To eliminate the Lost Fixed Cost Recovery Mechanism (“LFCR”), have $58.5 million of test year LFCR-eligible costs recovered through base rates, and have future LFCReligible costs recovered through a revised Demand Side Management Adjustment Charge (“DSMAC”);

• To increase the DSMAC-eligible costs recovered through base rates from $20 million to $59.4 million;

• To revise the DSMAC performance incentive to align better with peak load reduction goals and change its annual processing schedule;

• To revise the REAC to allow recovery of the capital carrying costs of new APS-owned clean energy resources and energy storage facilities, to recover Coal Community Transition obligations, and to change its annual processing schedule;

• To retain the PSA and increase the base fuel and chemical rates, with a corresponding reduction to the PSA;

• To retain the Transmission Cost Adjustment mechanism (“TCA”); and

• To retain the Tax Expense Adjustor Mechanism (“TEAM”), which is set at zero.

Limited-Income Residential Customer Assistance Programs

APS proposes to change its current Energy Support Program to a two-tiered program that would provide a 60% monthly bill discount (capped at $165 per month) to customers with verified income levels up to 75% of the federal poverty level (“FPL”) and a 25% monthly bill discount (capped at $95 per month) to customers with income levels of 76% to 200% of the FPL. Customers with income levels of 76% to 200% of the FPL who have qualifying medical equipment would receive the current 35% discount (with a new cap of $95 per month).

AG-X Program

APS proposes to modify its AG-X program:

• By providing AG-X customers two resource adequacy options (provided by APS or provided by the customer) and corresponding reserve capacity rates, to facilitate eliminating the $15 million currently being recovered through the PSA mechanism;

• By reducing the AG-X administrative management fee;

• By requiring longer notice to leave the AG-X program for AG-X customers who provide their own resource adequacy; and

• By expanding AG-X program eligibility.

Coal Community Transition (“CCT”)

APS requests approval of those portions of the CCT proposal from its last rate case that the Commission did not approve in Decision No. 78317 (November 9, 2021), specifically requesting to recover $106.5 million from ratepayers through the REAC over nine years, with $16.09 million to be recovered in year one.

Residential Rate Design Changes

APS proposes to eliminate credit card fees and in-person kiosk fees and to provide two additional off-peak holidays for time-of-use rate plans.

Bill Impacts

The following table shows APS’s proposed revenue increase percentages for customer classes:

Customer Class

Requested Retail Revenue Increase for Class as a Whole

Residential 22.79% General Service

Extra-Small, Small 23.75% Medium 23.58% Large 22.30%

Extra-Large 20.88%

Schools 24.17%

Houses of Worship 23.75%

Irrigation/Municipal 27.59%

Outdoor Lighting 17.67%

Total Retail 22.87%

The actual impact of the proposed revenue increase on any customer’s bill depends on the customer’s rate plan and usage.

For example, a residential customer on the “Time-of-Use 4PM to 7PM Weekdays” plan would see a 25% increase in basic service charge, approximately a 24% increase in on-peak energy charges per kWh (summer and winter), approximately a 22.4% increase in off-peak energy charges per kWh, and a 16.1% increase in super off-peak energy charge per kWh.

A residential customer on the “Fixed Energy Charge Plan” would see an increase in basic service charge by 24.4–25% (depending on tier) and an increase in energy charge per kWh of 22.6–22.7% (depending on tier).

APS reports that on the effective date of its new rates, the average net class bill impact for residential customers will be a 13.6% increase, and the average net class bill impact for general service customers will range from 9.2% to 15.9%.

Other Requests

APS also proposes to modify several service schedules, to modify decommissioning funding allocations for the Palo Verde Generating Station, to eliminate several Commission-required compliance and reporting requirements, and to defer Energy Support Program costs for possible recovery or refund in a future rate case.

18 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
22-APS-1989 ALJ Order 2022 Rate Case Legal Print Ad_Globe Miami Times-10x15.375_r01.indd 1 1/6/23 3:11 PM

NEITHER THE COMMISSION’S UTILITIES DIVISION (“STAFF”) NOR ANY INTERVENOR HAS YET MADE ANY RECOMMENDATION REGARDING APS’S APPLICATION. THE COMMISSION IS NOT BOUND BY THE PROPOSALS OF COMPANY, STAFF, OR ANY INTERVENORS. THE COMMISSION WILL DETERMINE THE APPROPRIATE RELIEF TO BE GRANTED IN RESPONSE TO APS’S APPLICATION BASED ON THE EVIDENCE PRESENTED IN THIS MATTER. THE FINAL RATES APPROVED BY THE COMMISSION MAY BE HIGHER, LOWER, OR DIFFERENT THAN THE RATES PROPOSED BY COMPANY OR BY OTHER PARTIES.

If you have any questions concerning how the Application may affect your bill or other substantive questions about the Application, you may contact APS at: its office at 400 N. 5th Street, M.S. 9708, Phoenix, Arizona, 85004, Attn: Rate Case Manager, call 602-250-2767 or email ratecase@aps.com

How You Can View or Obtain a Copy of the Application

Copies of the Application are available from APS at www.aps.com/ratecase; at the Commission’s Docket Control Center at 1200 West Washington Street, Phoenix, Arizona, and its Tucson office at 400 West Congress Street, Suite 218, Tucson, Arizona, during regular business hours; and on the Commission website (www.azcc.gov) using the e-Docket function.

Public Comment Meetings at Commission Offices

The Commission will hold the following public comment meetings in this matter at the Commission’s offices at 1200 West Washington Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85007:

Date

Time

1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., or until the last caller is finished speaking, whichever comes first June 7, 2023 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., or until the last caller is finished speaking, whichever comes first June 20, 2023 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., or until the last caller is finished speaking, whichever comes first June 20, 2023 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., or until the last caller is finished speaking, whichever comes first July 31, 2023 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., or until the last caller is finished speaking, whichever comes first

June 1, 2023

During public comment meetings at the Commission’s offices, both telephonic and in-person public comment may be provided.

To provide telephonic public comments, call 1-877-309-3457 and use passcode 801972877##

If you plan to attend a public comment meeting held at the Commission’s Phoenix offices in person, please complete a “Request to Speak” on one of the kiosks in the lobby at the Commission’s Phoenix office or on any computer or mobile device through the ACC Portal (available on the Commission’s website (www.azcc.gov) using “Cases and Open Meetings” and “Request to Speak at Open Meetings”).

Written public comments may be submitted by mailing a letter referencing Docket No. E-01345A-22-0144 to Arizona Corporation Commission, Consumer Services Section, 1200 West Washington, Phoenix, AZ 85007, or by submitting comments on the Commission’s website (www.azcc.gov) using “Cases and Open Meetings” and “Make a Public Comment in a Docket.” If you require assistance, you may contact the Consumer Services Section at 602-542-4251 or 1-800-222-7000.

The Commission will impose a 3-minute time limit per speaker to ensure that everyone who desires to speak has an opportunity to do so.

Commission Public Hearing Information

The Commission will hold a hearing on this matter beginning August 2, 2023, at 10:00 a.m., at the Commission’s offices at 1200 West Washington Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85007.

If you do not intervene in this proceeding, you will receive no further notice of the proceedings in this docket unless you sign up to Follow the Docket. However, all documents filed in this docket are available online (usually within 24 hours after docketing) at the Commission’s website (www.azcc.gov) using the e-Docket function. Information on how to Follow a Docket is available on the Commission’s website using “Cases and Open Meetings” and “Follow a Docket or Document Type.”

About Intervention

The law provides for an open public hearing at which, under appropriate circumstances, interested persons may intervene. An interested person may be granted intervention if the outcome of the case will directly and substantially impact the person, and the person’s intervention will not unduly broaden the issues in the case. Intervention, among other things, entitles a party to present sworn evidence at hearing and to cross-examine other parties’ witnesses. Intervention is not required for you to attend the hearing and provide public comment, to file written comments in the record of the case, or to receive emailed notice of each filing made in the case by following the docket.

Information about what intervention means, including an explanation of the rights and responsibilities of an intervenor, is available on the Commission’s website (www.azcc.gov) by clicking on “Cases and Open Meetings” and then clicking on “Intervene in a Case.” The information includes a Sample Intervention Request and a Fillable Intervention Request Form.

To request intervention, you must file a written request to intervene, either (a) by filing a hard copy request (meeting filing requirements) with Docket Control (Docket Control, 1200 West Washington, Phoenix, AZ 85007), or (b) by eFiling the request. Your request must be filed or eFiled no later than March 3, 2023. Instructions and restrictions for eFiling are available on the Commission’s website at http://azcc.gov/hearing/efile-for-utilities-instruction. You also must serve a copy of the request to intervene on each party of record, on the same day that you file the request to intervene with the Commission.

Your request to intervene must contain the information below:

1. Your name, address, and telephone number;

2. The docket number for the case in which you are requesting to intervene;

3. A short statement explaining:

a. Your interest in the proceeding (e.g., a customer of APS),

b. How you will be directly and substantially affected by the outcome of the case, and c. Why your intervention will not unduly broaden the issues in the case;

4. A statement certifying that you have sent a copy of your request to intervene to APS’s attorney and to the representatives for all other parties of record in the case; and

5. If you are not represented by an attorney who is an active member of the Arizona State Bar, and you are not representing yourself as an individual, sufficient information and any appropriate documentation to demonstrate compliance with Arizona Supreme Court Rules 31.1, 31.2, 31.3, 38, 39, and 42, as applicable. This only applies if you are NOT representing yourself and you are not an Arizona licensed attorney.

The granting of motions to intervene shall be governed by A.A.C. R14-3-105, except that all motions to intervene must be filed on or before March 3, 2023

ADA/Equal Access Information

The Commission does not discriminate on the basis of disability in admission to its public meetings. Persons with a disability may request a reasonable accommodation such as a sign language interpreter, as well as request this document in an alternative format, by contacting the ADA Coordinator, Carolyn Buck, E-mail ADACoordinator@azcc.gov, voice phone number 602-542-2247. Requests should be made as early as possible and no later than 48 hours in advance of the event to allow time to arrange the accommodation.

January 2023 | 19
22-APS-1989 ALJ Order 2022 Rate Case Legal Print Ad_Globe Miami Times-10x15.375_r01.indd 2 1/6/23 3:11 PM

HELEN PHILLIPS, October 5, 1927 –December 31, 2022, age 95, of San Carlos, passed away at Haven of Globe. Helen worked as a craft maker. (LM)

ROSE MARIE QUINN, July 15, 1929 –December 31, 2022, age 93, of Globe, passed away at Heritage Health Care in Globe. (LM)

JONATHAN HAMMER, May 13, 1968 –December 31, 2022, age 54, passed away. He was originally from Carlsbad, NM, and was a certified gunsmith. (BM)

DEREK JOE KINNEY, June 29, 1970 –December 31, 2022, age 52, of San Carlos, passed away at Haven of Globe. (LM)

RICHARD GATES, March 6, 1943 – December 30, 2022, age 79, passed away. (BM)

CRAIG WILSON, May 9, 1965 – December 30, 2022, age 57, passed away. (BM)

SERAPHINA EARLEY, August 8, 1946 –December 29, 2022, age 76, of San Carlos, passed away at Chandler Regional Medical Center. (LM)

ELIZABETH MAY VIOLA KELLER, March 28, 1935 – December 28, 2022, age 87, of Globe, passed away at her home. Libby was originally from Silver City. (LM)

MYRNA SUE LONG, December 5, 1936 –December 28, 2022, age 86, of Globe, passed away. (LM)

JESSIE RUTH JONES, October 1, 1973 –December 28, 2022, age 49, of Peridot, passed away at HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center. Jessie worked as a clerk for the Tribal Administration. (LM)

DANIEL VINCENT ANTONIOLI, April 11, 1951 – December 25, 2022, age 71, of Butte, Montana, passed away at Faubush Family Homes in Globe. Daniel worked as a foreman doing ore drilling. (LM)

BARBARA VILLEGAS, January 17, 1967 –December 25, 2022, age 55, passed away. Barbara was originally from Superior. (BM)

KELLY M. FRIEND, September 6, 1968 –December 25, 2022, age 54, of Claypool, passed away at his home. He was born in Miami and worked at Heritage Health Care, Holiday Hills, and Country Kitchen. (BM)

MARY J. ALLEN, September 11, 1937 –December 24, 2022, age 85, of Globe, passed away at her home. (LM)

BABY BOY SANCHEZ-COSEN, of San Carlos, passed away on December 24, 2022, at Banner Desert Medical Center in Mesa. (LM)

ENRIQUE SILVA, July 15, 1936 – December 23, 2022, age 86, passed away. (BM)

BERTHA BURDETTE, March 2, 1962 –December 21, 2022, age 60, of San Carlos, passed away at Tucson Medical Center. (LM)

EDDIE JOE EASON, December 14, 1940 –December 20, 2022, age 82, of Globe, passed away at his home. He worked as an office equipment salesman and was originally from Detroit. (LM)

SHERYL L. (PETERSON) SCHWALM, July 16, 1954 – December 19, 2022, age 68, passed away. She was originally from Michigan. (BM)

SOCORRO RAMIREZ ALVARADO, June 28, 1929 – December 18, 2022, age 93, of Superior, passed away at her home. Socorro was born in Parral, Chihuahua. (BM)

PATSY ZAHGOTAH, January 4, 1950 –December 18, 2022, age 72, of San Carlos, passed away at San Carlos Apache Healthcare in Peridot. She worked as an administrative assistant and was originally from Bylas. (LM)

CYNTHIA MULLES, March 11, 1957 –December 18, 2022, age 65, passed away. (BM)

SILAS CARLOS NEWTON SR., October 25, 1939 – December 17, 2022, age 83, passed away at Banner University Medical Center in Phoenix. Silas worked for the Ash Creek Cattle Association, Magma Mine as an underground miner, for Fort Thomas School District as a bus driver, for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and as a haul truck driver for BHP in Miami. (LM)

VERNON RAY FRANCE, February 28, 1948 –December 17, 2022, age 74, passed away in his sleep in Chandler. He was a pipe fitter for Pinto Valley, union member, business owner, Gila County Supervisor, head of maintenance at Walmart, and prolific volunteer. (LM)

MELISSA ANN ALLISON, December 8, 1973 – December 17, 2022, age 49, of Superior, passed away in Gilbert. Melissa was born in Mesa. (BM)

JEANNE MABLE FERREIRA, May 1, 1950 –December 16, 2022, age 72, of San Carlos, passed away at Haven Hospice in Globe. Jeanne worked as a licensed nurse and was a foster mom. (LM)

JANET PASCHALL, January 31, 1956 –December 16, 2022, age 66, of Globe, passed away at her home. She grew up in Central Heights and worked at Walmart. (LM)

ROBERT LEE STEELE, July 8, 1958 –December 16, 2022, age 64, of San Carlos, passed away at Banner Payson Medical Center. He worked as a ranch hand for the Tribal Cattle Association. (LM)

DESIREE LIANOZ, September 7, 1967 –December 16, 2022, age 55, passed away at

worked for Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co. for 38 years. During strikes he worked as an upholsterer. He retired from Cyprus Copper as a general foreman in 1994. (BM)

JANNIE MORA, October 25, 1945 – December 14, 2022, age 77, of Globe, passed away at CVRMC. She was originally from Dallas, Texas, and served in the US Air Force. (LM)

LINDA LOUISE MOTTESHARD, July 6, 1955 –December 14, 2022, age 67, of Globe, passed away at her home. She was born in Miami. (LM)

RONALD OZIE LEDBETTER, June 8, 1943 –December 13, 2022, age 79, of Globe, passed away at his home. He worked underground at the #9 shaft and Miami East. (LM)

PATTY SUE NOSIE, October 3, 1980 –December 13, 2022, age 42, of Thatcher, passed away at her home. She was originally from Phoenix and worked as a housekeeper. (LM)

HENRIETTA SALAS GOMEZ, November 28, 1928 – December 12, 2022, age 94, passed away in Tucson. Henrietta was born in Globe and grew up in Ruiz Canyon. She was active with the VFW Women’s Auxiliary and the American Legion. (BM)

MARY ALICE BRYANT, January 12, 1936 –December 12, 2022, age 86, of Globe, passed away at her home. Mary was originally from Shady Point, Oklahoma. (BM)

FRANCES MONTERDE PEREZ, December 3, 1938 – December 12, 2022, age 84, of Dudleyville, passed away. Frances was born in Santa Barbara, California. (BM)

TOMAS S. PALACIOS, June 18, 1945 –December 12, 2022, age 77, of Superior, passed away. Tomas worked for Magma Copper from 1967 to 1982 and also worked for Freeport McMoRan in Indonesia as a mechanic supervisor for three years. (BM)

RAINBOW ROSE GILPIN, January 3, 1976 –December 12, 2022, age 46, of Bylas, passed away. She was originally from Minneapolis and worked as an administrator and social worker. (LM)

PERCY VIA III, September 1, 1992 – December 12, 2022, age 30, of San Carlos, passed away at San Carlos Apache Healthcare. (LM)

ANALDA H. BAEZA, January 22, 1938 –December 11, 2022, age 84, passed away at her home. She was born in Presidio, Texas. (BM)

MICHAEL J. YBARRA, December 20, 1952 – December 11, 2022, age 69, of Superior, passed away at his home. He was born in Miami and worked in the copper mines, construction, and street maintenance. (BM) , October 15, 1960 –

ZONA VICTOR, February 9, 1930 – December 9, 2022, age 92, of San Carlos, passed away at San Carlos Apache Healthcare. She worked as a store clerk and maid/housekeeper before becoming a mother and homemaker. (LM)

CYNTHIA JAMIE HOFFMAN, July 31, 1986 – December 8, 2022, age 36, of San Carlos, passed away at Honor John C. Lincoln Hospital in Phoenix. She was originally from Phoenix and was a homemaker. (LM)

ALICIA CHAIDEZ DANIEL, July 18, 1941 –December 7, 2022, age 81, passed away in Mesa. Alice was born in Jerome and assisted her brother with his business for many years. (BM)

OSCAR “WAYNE” BAKER, November 3, 1932 –December 6, 2022, age 90, passed away. (BM)

JEANETTE DEE NOBLE, November 5, 1999 – December 6, 2022, age 23, of Top of the World, passed away. (LM)

KAIJUAN DRE TALKALAI, July 30, 2007 –December 6, 2022, age 15, of Globe, passed away at CVRMC. (LM)

MICHAEL ALLISON, September 29, 1965 –December 5, 2022, age 57, passed away. (BM)

LINDA KAY ROGERS, July 27, 1966 –December 4, 2022, age 56, of Globe, passed away at CVRMC. She was originally from Seattle. (LM)

GINA E. RIVERA, October 24, 1956 –December 3, 2022, age 66, of Miami, passed away at her home. (LM)

EDSEL GENE OLIVAR, August 13, 1964 –December 3, 2022, age 58, of San Carlos, passed away at San Carlos Apache Healthcare. Edsel was a veteran of the US Army. (LM)

MARGARET ANGEL LITTLE, June 4, 1992 – December 3, 2022, age 30, of San Carlos, passed away at San Carlos Apache Healthcare. She was born in Globe and worked as a homemaker. (LM)

MARK SAMSON HARNEY, October 29, 1993 –December 3, 2022, age 29, of Peridot, passed away in San Carlos. Mark was born in Miami. (LM)

BABY MIREYA MARIA MELCHER, December 2, 2022 – December 3, 2022, of Globe, passed away at Banner Desert Medical Center in Mesa. (LM)

GORDON ALAN SEAVER, March 14, 1948 –December 1, 2022, age 74, passed away. He was originally from Ravenna, Ohio. (LM)

20 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
(LM= Lamont Mortuary. BM=Bulman Miles Funeral Home)
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“Younger is the better,” says Master Kim. “What we’re teaching, they absorb it faster.”

Tae kwon-do puts more emphasis on kicks than karate; hands are used as backup. One of the first benefits of tae kwon-do, Master Kim says, is concentration and a calm mind. Tae kwon-do, he says, is a useful tool in teaching active young boys to calm themselves.

“By the time the boys know girls,” he says, “they have greater problems with concentration.”

Bethany Herwaldt, who lives in Ft. Thomas, started her kids in tae kwon-do in 2019 because her neighbors moved away and her kids needed “something to do.”

“I’ve always liked the idea of martial arts,” Herwaldt says. “It was something to do along with my children. It was fun to start at the same level and work on up with them.”

She started making the one-hour drive from Ft. Thomas to downtown Globe one night a week. She worked through the lower belts with her then nine-year-old son, Adam, and seven-year-old daughter, Janie.

Together they learned the five tenets of tae kwondo: courtesy, integrity, perseverance, self-control, and indomitable spirit. As they advanced, Herwaldt began taking classes two nights a week. There was some time off for Covid, but not much.

“We practiced what we had learned,” says Bethany. “It wasn’t really in the cards to do things online.”

Last month, Bethany, Adam, and Janie received their first-degree black belts, along with four other students, in a special ceremony.

Care and Discipline

Master Kim has a reputation for high standards. Bethany Herwaldt points out that everyone at the studio is expected to “toe the mark.”

“He pushes himself and expects no less from his students,” Deborah Yerkovich says.

“They can tell if you’ve been practicing, so it’s a good motivation,” Herwaldt adds. “It’s good for practicing selfdiscipline.”

The combination of caring and high standards generates results. Master Kim recalls, with heartfelt pride, a troubled teenager who was into drinking and was being disrespectful at school. Through tae kwon-do, the young man learned to channel his feelings and empower himself rather than be destructive. Today, he’s married and provides leadership to others.

“Sometimes there is a fear of the unknown, in starting something new, a fear of failure,” says Scott Murphy, the father of three students. “The Kims worked with the kids where they are and worked toward their goals.”

The principles the kids learn – mental, physical, spiritual, and social – will stay with them throughout their lives, Murphy says. Those principles will also go with them wherever they go. Murphy’s daughter Jessica began tae kwon-do training at 16; now 32, she uses the training as a tool in her work with girls in eastern Europe – teaching them life skills and self-defense.

A Dream Come True

When Ronnie Attaway was eight years old, people dismissed his dream of teaching martial arts, but Master Kim helped make it a reality. Ronnie was born with Down Syndrome. Master Kim encouraged his mother, Chris Attaway, to bring him to study tae kwon-do.

“I know he can do it, “ Master Kim told her.

Ronnie became his longest-running student. In 20 years, he earned all his belts, kicked bricks, and ultimately became a black belt. He began to teach the lower belts what they needed to learn.

22 | January 2023 www.GlobeMiamiTimes.com
Martial Arts, Continued from page 1 A class demonstration was held in December. Photo by LCGross Bethany Herwaldt, who makes a two-hour round trip from Ft. Thomas every week, started her kids in 2019 Photo by LCGross
MARTIAL ARTS
Continued on page 23
Master Kim follows up on an unsuccessful kick, saying “again!” Photo by LCGross. , Students prepare to break boards with a round kick. Photo by LCGross

Ronnie was held up as an example and inspiration to the other students.

“Many kids looked at Ronnie and looked at his commitment and said to themselves, if he can do it, I can do it,” Scott Murphy says.

In addition to his black belt, Ronnie received many awards for his achievements in tae kwon-do. He passed away in 2018 at age 43, after a three-year fight with leukemia.

“He loved Master Kim,” Ronnie’s mother says. “Master Kim was family to him.”

Ancient Wisdom

Tae kwon-do is a hand-to-hand combat method that dates back to 50 B.C.E. in Korea. It was banned, along with other military arts, when the Japanese occupied Korea between 1910 and 1945. Though some adherents continued to practice in secret, others traveled to study martial arts in China and Japan, and the influences of judo, karate and kung fu led to the development of different styles of tae kwon-do.

Today the World Tae Kwon-Do Federation sets the standards for competition rules and new developments in the sport. With over 50 million practitioners, tae kwon do is the most widely practiced martial arts style in the world. It debuted as an Olympic sport in 2000, with competitors from 51 different countries.

Master Kim began his own practice of martial arts at age five. His father, a judo instructor, got all three of his sons involved in martial arts for the health benefits that a life of sport offers.

Master Kim moved to the United States from Seoul in 1976, following many other members of his family. He taught tae kwon-do in Phoenix and met his future wife in a church choir. In 1979, they married and moved to Globe, where they’ve lived ever since.

“Small town, nice people,” says Master Kim.

“Friendly, like a family,” Mrs. Kim adds.

In addition to opening a studio, Master Kim drove to Sierra Vista and surrounding towns to teach in church halls and other venues. In 2013, he opened a dojang – the word essentially refers to a school, but

literally means “training hall” and denotes the main teaching space itself – in Safford. Some years, he took students to Korea to train.

Today, Master Kim holds all his classes at his school at 300 N. Broad St. in Globe. For the past seven years, he’s been supported by instructor Christian Ring, who was his student for 12 years.

Family and Community

Nearly 71 years old, Master Kim stands with a strong physique, a bright face and a calm manner. He maintains his physical and spiritual strength through his own tae kwon-do practice, which he performs before classes. He also lifts weights at the gym. He and his wife both maintain a healthy lifestyle by walking in the mountains and working out.

“We try to do a good diet,” Mrs. Kim says with a laugh. “We love food!”

Mrs. Kim is also a black belt, an honor she earned in the 1980s. Today she runs the business and the backroom. The couple owned Kim’s Fashions for many years and now run JC Fashions, the formal wear shop next to the studio. Mrs. Kim knows the names of all the students – and their parents.

“The Kims become like family,” Bethany Herwaldt says. “They want to make sure everyone is doing okay. They care about their students. That’s refreshing.”

“My kids came away loving Master Kim and Mrs. Kim, with her personal touch,” says Scott Murphy. “They make such a great team.”

As a longtime resident, small business owner, and mother to two young students, Deborah Yerkovich has a clear perspective on what the Kims have brought to the community over many years.

“They have offered decades of building confidence, experience, and pride within their students,” she says. “We are all better people for having them inspire us.”

While students and parents describe the Kims as generous, caring, helpful, and passionate, they’re modest about speaking about themselves.

“If you are interested, come see us,” says Mrs. Kim. “Anytime.” u

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Ronnie Attaway, who was born with Down Syndrome, became Mr. Kim’s longest-running student. In 20 years, he earned all his belts and ultimately became a black belt. He passed away in 2018 at the age of 43. Courtesy Photo San Carlos student, Adrius Elgo has been training with Master Kim for four years where he has achieved his black belt. Photo by LCGross
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