East Valley Tribune: Southeast Edition - Oct. 16, 2016

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THE VOICE OF THE EAST VALLEY SINCE 1891 AND WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR LOCAL REPORTING

Hindus protect THE SUNDAY Copperstate Fly-In Queen Creek cows, EAST VALLEY brings spread kindness aircraft to Falcon Field

Tribune

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INSIDE

COVER STORY

This Week

Judge rules against ADA lawsuit, lawyer

NEWS.............................. 8 Goldwater Institute rips Gilbert’s Xavier deal as ‘betrayal’ of taxpayers

COMMUNITY ......... 14

BY JIM WALSH TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

A

(Courtesy of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation)

Collector toils to preserve pulp magazine literature

Frank Lloyd Wright, with wife Olgivanna and kids, gets ready to leave Ocatilla Desert Camp for the summer. The camp housed him and his entourage while they drew plans for A.J. Chandler's San Marcos in the Desert resort, which would have been built near present-day 32nd Street and Chandler Boulevard.

BUSINESS ................. 22

Frank Lloyd Wright, A.J. Chandler worked to remake East Valley

Mesa entrepreneur keeps expanding, has Suns in sight

Great Depression scuttled resort, other projects BY MIKE BUTLER TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

T

he city of Chandler and the Ahwatukee Foothills would look and feel very different today if Dr. A.J. Chandler and famed architect Frank Lloyd

Wright had a little better luck and timing. If they’d succeeded, wealthy winter visitors—guests of the lavish San Marcos in the Desert resort—would be sipping drinks tonight and looking down at twinkling lights See

WRIGHT on page 4

ART .............................. 28 Chandler woman mixes paint and wine for fun

COMMUNITY ................14 OPINION........................20 BUSINESS ....................... 22 SPORTS...........................24 FAITH ..............................26 CLASSIFIED .....................31

Sunday, October 16, 2016

FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | EastValleyTribune.com

Southeast Edition

(Courtesy of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation)

Approximately where the city of Chandler's downtown library now sits, Wright envisioned a quirky motor resort called San Marcos Water Gardens.

federal judge imposed sanctions against a controversial attorney and his co-counsel, citing their “bad faith behavior” in dealings with a defense attorney after they filed a “boilerplate” suit accusing property owners of violating the federal Americans with Disabilities Act. Attorneys Peter Strojnik and Fabian Zazueta and the foundation they represent, Advocates for Individuals with Disabilities, were ordered by U.S. District Court Judge G. Murray Snow to reimburse Golden Rule Properties for specified legal fees stemming from the case. Snow also ordered the case remanded to Maricopa County Superior Court, ruling that the foundation lacked standing to sue Golden Rule in federal court because it could not prove that any individual was harmed by the alleged ADA violation cited, or that plaintiffs Shannon Puckett or David Ritzenthaler were members of the foundation. Snow wrote in his ruling that the foundation filed 162 similar ADA claims in federal court and about 1,000 in state court, with all of the suits containing “the same general language alleging the local business violated the ADA by having inadequate signage or parking spaces for the disabled.” In the Golden Rule case, the foundation cited a lack of van-accessible parking spaces or signs that were not at least 60 inches high, as required by the ADA. But Snow said the foundation failed to prove that “any disabled individual See

LAWSUIT on page 10


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