February 14, 2021 | www.santansun.com
Relentlessly local coverage of Southern Chandler
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
Survey: most CUSD parents Storefront winery prefer in-person learning BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer
More than 70 percent of Chandler Unified School District parents support in-person learning and want it to remain for the foreseeable future, according to a new survey conducted by the district. Of the 13,600 parents who responded to the survey last month, 72 percent preferred the in-class instruction model CUSD has had in effect districtwide since Jan. 19. Of the remainder, 19 percent prefer the virtual instruction CUSD briefly implemented during the first two weeks of the current semester and 8 percent prefer the district’s online school. The appeared to support the district’s contested choice to return to in-person learning at a time when COVID-19 cases were spiking in early January. Arizona reported its highest number of positive cases on Jan. 4, the day before CUSD students were scheduled
to return to classrooms. The district decided at the last minute to have students temporarily stay home for two weeks and learn virtually until the state’s infection rate started to drop. The results were discussed by the CUSD Governing Board on Feb. 10, the day before new data from the county health department showed that one of three benchmarks measuring COVID-19 spread – hospital visits with COVIDlike symptoms – had finally fallen into the moderate range after registering substantial spread levels for nearly two months. The other two benchmarks remained in the substantial spread category, but had fallen from the previous week with cases per 100,000 going from 578 to 403 and positive new test results falling from 19.3 to 14.9 percent. The survey showed 21 percent of respondents were dissatisfied with the See
SCHOOLS on page 2
Basil and Colleen Kaspar's Down Time Wines houses a real winery and the only thing missing are the grapevines. It started as a hobby nearly two decades ago for Basil but it has given birth to a multifaceted enterprise. For the story, see page 23. (Pablo Robles/Staff Photographer)
Teen’s suicide an impetus to 2 Chandler politicos in update manslaughter law historic confrontation BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer
BY HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services
The family of a Chandler teenager who died by suicide in 2019 is hoping state lawmakers will pass legislation that allows law enforcement to prosecute individuals who encourage vulnerable minors to take their own lives. The State House unanimously passed Chandler Rep. Jeff Weninger’s House Bill 2459, which expands the crime of manslaughter to include individuals who advise others how to commit suicide. The impetus behind Weninger’s bill was the tragic death of Adrio Romine, who at age 16 was Chandler High School’s Class of 2018 valedictorian and graduated with a 4.9 QPA. On the surface, Romine appeared to have a bright future ahead of him with a
Two Chandler Republican officials are at the epicenter of a historic confrontation between the State Senate and Maricopa County Board of Supervisors over the Nov. 3 presidential election results. Sen. J.D. Mesnard and Board of Supervisors Chairman Jack Sellers, a former Chandler City Council member, are on opposing sides of the Senate’s demand for access to voting machines and ballots from the last election. The Senate GOP effort to hold Maricopa County supervisors in contempt – possibly exposing them to arrest – faltered last week when Glendale Sen. Paul Boyer refused to go along. Boyer said that while he believes the Senate has the power to use its subpoena power to demand access to the
See
SUICIDE on page 12
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voting machines and ballots, he believes that power should be used “sparingly and reluctantly.’’ Boyer said he believes the county is willing to conduct an additional audit of the results of the Nov. 3 election to answer questions about whether the reported results giving the edge to President Biden were accurate. What’s needed, he said, is a judge to issue an order clearing the way for the access that senators seek rather than a contempt citation. “I believe the board genuinely seeks the confidence and clarity of a court order to legally proceed,’’ Boyer said. And once that happens, he said, there will be no legal reason for the supervisors to claim that giving the Senate what it wants would violate the law. That drew derision from Gilbert Sen.
F E AT U R E STO R I E S Mesnard Airbnb bill draws flack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . COMMUNITY . . . . . Page 6 Gila Indian Community plans huge playground. . . BUSINESS . . . . . . . Page 23 Children's Hospital a lifesaver for Chandler man. . NEIGHBORS . . . . . . . Page 31 Local artist's AZ Creates! starts new season . . . . . . ARTS . . . . . . . . . . Page 36
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Cosnider the Pastabilities at this eatery. . . . . . . . . . EAT . . . . . . . . . . . Page 42
See
SELLERS on page 3
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