Santan Sun News - 05.23.2021

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May 23, 2021 | www.santansun.com

Relentlessly local coverage of Southern Chandler

An edition of the East Valley Tribune

Chandler gradually returning to normalcy Chandler Unified easing Nearly half of eligible residents fully vaccinated campus COVID-19 rules BY PAUL MARYNIAK Executive Editor

Nearly half of Chandler residents 15 and older have been fully vaccinated with one of the three COVID-19 vaccines. Data released last week by the Maricopa County Department of Public Health show that 47.1 percent of the city’s population has been fully vaccinated while 56.7 percent has received one dose of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines, which require two shots for full protection, or the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Those rates and the ebbing number of COVID-19 cases prompted Chandler Mayor Kevin Hartke on May 14 to rescind his Proclamation Declaring the Existence of a Local Emergency that he issued 14 months ago.

Tomorrow, May 24, the Chandler Senior Center will reopen and resume programming, with social distancing and sanitation measures in place. “I would like to thank our residents and businesses for working with us through the unparalleled challenges of COVID-19, and for coming together to support one another through these times.,” Hartke said. “The community and our economy are stronger than we have ever been, and the City is working hard to keep that momentum,” he added, urging residents to follow federal health guidelines and respect individual businesses’ virus-mitigation rules. According to the county, south Chandler ZIP codes show the highest rates of full vaccination with 85249 See

VACCINE on page 18

BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer

New mitigation measures released by the Chandler Unified School District show students won’t have to wear masks in the next school year and will be allowed to stand closer to each other. After more than a year of social distancing and mask mandates, CUSD officials are planning to ease some of their pandemic-related restrictions and begin the process of returning to a sense of normalcy. The district’s mitigation plan for next year includes more than 20 changes to Chandler’s current policies and include reduced restrictions on after-school activities and off-campus field trips. “We are optimistic and it is reflected in this plan for 2021-2022,” said Super-

intendent Camille Casteel, who will be retiring this summer. Perhaps the biggest deviation in the district’s new plan is the removal of a mandate that had been requiring all 44,000 of Chandler’s students to wear face masks on campus. The district says it will support every student’s wish to continue wearing masks and will be encouraging administrators to prevent any mask-related bullying observed between students. The mitigation measures are still subject to change as Arizona’s vaccination rates continue to change and new recommendations come down from state and federal agencies. “There still is no playbook on how to manage a pandemic,” the superintendent added. “We’ve been operating See

VACCINE SIDE on page 18

Chandler students try saving peers from suicide BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer

In the aftermath of two Chandler teenagers dying as a result of mental health struggles, local high school students are ramping up their efforts to reach out to classmates in distress before it’s too late. Chandler Unified may be wrapping up the 2020-2021 school year, but some students are focused on ensuring their peers have the resources they need for help during the summer break. Their efforts have taken on a greater urgency this month after a Perry High School sophomore took his life and a Hamilton High senior died of a drug overdose. In Scottsdale, a Chaparral High freshman girl took her life as well. A group of Perry High School students recently assembled at Uptown Cheapskate on Chandler Boulevard with a box of business cards. The teenagers spent a couple of

As a member of Perry High School’s Pumas for Pumas Club, student Samuel Cristerna, 17, two weeks ago put cards with helpful information for students in distress inside shoes and clothing at a store in Chandler. (Pablo Robles/Staff Photographer)

hours strolling around the clothing store, placing hundreds of the cards inside jackets, purses, and pockets – hoping they’d be discovered someday by someone who needs them. The cards list phone numbers of free hotlines available to teenagers experiencing suicidal ideation, depression or anxiety. The Perry students are hoping the cards will come in handy for someone in Chandler who needs help and doesn’t know where to go. The teenagers are members of Pumas for Pumas, a school club that advocates for mental health awareness on campus. Samuel Cristerna, the club’s president, said hiding hotline numbers around the community has been a new outreach strategy. “People just need to know that they always have someone to talk to at the end of the day,” Cristerna said. “It’s okay

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LD 17 reps lament rental bill collapse. . . . . . . . . . . . . COMMUNITY . . . . Page 23 Chandler drone business takes off. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BUSINESS . . . . . . . Page 35 Chandler thespians return to live theater . . . . . . . . ARTS . . . . . . . . . . Page 49 U.S. Egg thriving in Chandler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . EAT . . . . . . . . . . . Page 58

Real Estate .................................... Center Section

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MENTAL on page 10

More Community . . . 1-27 Clip-It . . . . . . . 32-24 Business . . . . . 35-38 Sports . . . . . . . 39-42 Opinion . . . . . . . . 43 Neighbors . . . 45-48 Arts . . . . . . . . . 49-53 Faith . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Directory . . . 48-49 Eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58


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