Turmoil grips Val Vista Lakes HOA board
Council OKs big S. Gilbert complex
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An edition of the East Valley Tribune
INSIDE
This Week
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Gilbert pondering $465M bond for projects BY CECILIA CHAN GSN Managing Editor
NEWS.......................... 14 Gilbert council seeking Eddie Cook replacement.
COMMUNITY.......... 18 Gilbert man fixes broken lives with cars.
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parking garage in the Heritage District, safety improvements for trail crossings and a bridge connecting Ocotillo Road over the regional park are some of the 43 projects that could be built as Gilbert contemplates going to voters with a $465 million bond issue this November. The ad hoc Citizens Transportation Task Force is scheduled April 8 to adopt a resolution recommending the Council put the transportation and infrastructure bond on the Nov. 3 ballot. Council is scheduled to
Gilbert thespians dominate new “Frankenstein.”
COMMUNITY...................... 18 BUSINESS............................22 OPINION...............................26 SPORTS.................................29 GETOUT................................32 CLASSIFIED.........................38
take that vote on June 16. The town plans to allocate the proposed bond for projects to address safety and congestion at $221 million; reconstruction and maintenance projects at $91 million; multi-modal investment at $43 million; transportation technology at $61 million and redevelopment projects at $49 million. Bond debt is generally paid off through an increase in the secondary property tax rate but officials say there wouldn’t be an increase because old bond debt is being paid off each year and the new debt would replace it. “We know that keeping steady the tax rate is important for citizens,” Kelly Pfost,
Management and Budget director, said at last week’s task force meeting. “Can we get the tax rate to 99 cents with the bond? Yes, we believe we can keep it to the 99 cents rate. It’s really good news.” Task Force member Lawrence Paschich, a retiree, said his wife has widowed friends who are worried about a possible tax increase if the bond passes. “You did good,” he told Pfost. So, for a typical $270,000 home in Gilbert with the current 99 cents per $100 of assessed value, the secondary property tax impact is $267. Business owners also are
Higley looking at locks, A star is born cameras in vape war BY CECILIA CHAN GSN Managing Editor
GET OUT....................32
Sunday, February 23, 2020
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ocks, cameras outside bathrooms and a text number for anonymous reporting are some measures underway at two Higley high schools to combat vaping. Higley and Williams Field high schools have already implemented a number of preventative actions and Higley Unified School District also has taken steps, the district Governing Board heard last week. “The numbers have grown with access to vape pens,” Hig-
ley High Principal Alan Fields said, adding the number for repeat offenders was quite low. Overall, officials this year are seeing a reduction of students caught vaping compared with last academic year. Data from Williams Field showed 15 students nabbed in 2016-17 for a tobacco violation; 60 in 2017-18; 54 in 2018-19 and 15 so far this year. At Higley, 21 students were caught in 2016-17; 77 in 2017-18; 70 in 2018-19 and
see VAPE page 3
see BOND page 4
Gilbert’s Hale Centre Theatre is basking in a sense of accomplishment as he unveils his radically renovated complex in Heritage Square. To appreciate his vision and that accomplishment, see on page 16. (Srianthi Perera//GSN Contributorr)