Santan Sun News - 11.22.2020

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November 22, 2020 | www.santansun.com

Relentlessly local coverage of Southern Chandler

An edition of the East Valley Tribune

Chandler holiday events continue amid pandemic BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer

Some of Chandler’s holiday events won’t look and feel the same as they did in previous years, but the city hopes the pandemic won’t completely stop residents from enjoying the winter season. Mainstay traditions like the lighting of Chandler’s iconic tumbleweed Christmas tree will go forward but without a public ceremony with crowds of spectators. The lighting event will instead involve a handful of city officials and be broadcast live at 6 p.m. Dec. 5 through television and social media. It is a necessary precaution Chandler must take, said Hermelinda Llamas, the city’s events coordinator, in order to discourage the transmission of the coronavirus.

Chandler's iconic tumbleweed tree will be lit as usual, but you''ll be able to watch the event only online.

“It just wouldn’t be safe for everybody to gather in that kind of a forum,” she said. But the city hopes its virtual ceremony will still be meaningful to Chandler’s residents, Llamas added. “We’re just hoping that we can give a little fun and spice back into the holiday spirit for the community,” Llamas said. “We want them to still feel that we’re there and we’re thinking about them during the holiday season.” More than 9,000 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Chandler since the pandemic started nine months ago. Despite the pandemic’s dreary circumstances, the city has a full calendar of holiday-themed events over the next month aimed at giving residents a pleasant but safe holiday experience. Llamas said her department has

(File photo)

See

HOLIDAY on page 16

COVID-19 changes, doesn’t Chandler Unified adopts new stop Christmas shopping approach to closing campuses BY WAYNE SCHUTSKY Staff Writer

Despite the pandemic’s economic fallout, experts expect holiday shopping sales will remain relatively consistent this year compared to 2019. “If it stays flat or even down by 3 or 4 percent…that for me is an optimistic scenario,” said Hitendra Chaturvedi, professor of supply chain management at Arizona State University’s W. P. Carey School of Business But how and when shoppers purchase gifts, decorations and other seasonal items is expected to change dramatically. The pandemic likely accelerated the ongoing shift away from brick-andmortar retail, experts say, and they expect online shopping’s share of sales to jump dramatically this holiday season. “Between e-commerce and retail, you’re going to see a K-shaped curve… this is more like one is going to lose at the expense of the other,” Chaturvedi said. “K-shaped” refers to an economic recovery in which different segments of the economy diverge on different

paths, with some performing better than offers and each trending in opposite directions – like the prongs on a letter K. While one segment, like online sales, is on the upswing, another, brick-and mortar, trends downward, experts explained. Chaturvedi said e-commerce made up 14 to 15 percent of the $740-billion holiday retail market in 2019, but he expects that share to jump to 40 percent this year. But while the distribution of sales may be different, Chaturvedi said he expects overall holiday sales to remain consistent with 2019. Katherine Cullen, senior director of industry and consumer insights for the National Retail Federation, agreed, citing her organization’s polling of consumers. In 2019, the federation projected sales during the holiday season – Nov. 1 to Dec. 31 – totaled between $727.9 and $730.7 billion, which equates to an average of $1,047.83 per consumer. This year, Cullen said polling shows consumers will still shell out about $1,000 during the holidays. See

ECONOMY on page 19

See related story on page 6 BY KEVIN REAGAN Staff Writer

As COVID-19 surges across Arizona, Chandler Unified officials are taking a school-by-school approach to closing campuses rather than implementing a district-wide shut-down. Stating transmission rates are not high enough district-wide to warrant closing all campuses, CUSD administrators last week unveiled a plan to close campuses on an individualize basis if the number of coronavirus cases among staff and students combined would hit certain percentages of that total. Gilbert Public Schools adopted a similar approach earlier this month. CUSD administrators told the Governing Board that the county’s data, released every Thursday morning, don’t entirely represent how the virus is spreading in Chandler’s schools. “Our early CUSD data does not indicate COVID-19 is being transmitted on our campuses really at any substantial rate,” said Larry Rother, the district’s ex-

ecutive director of educational services. “Transmission rates at our schools do not mirror the transmission rates in the community.” As of Nov. 18, CUSD reported 45 active cases of COVID-19 among its students and staff district-wide. Another 180 cases have been cleared and the infected individual has been allowed to return to campus. Casteel High School has had one of the highest rates of infection among the district’s 46 campuses -- reporting at least 61 cases of the virus since CUSD reopened schools in September. Casteel’s infection rate is currently still below new thresholds CUSD has recently implemented dictating when it will temporarily have to close a school. At least 1 percent of a high school’s population would have to test positive for COVID-19 before CUSD closes the campus for five days and shifts back to virtual learning. Elementary schools would need to have a 2-percent infection rate and junior high schools a 1.5 percent rate

F E AT U R E STO R I E S Sellers wins in stunning election finale . . . . . . . . . . . COMMUNITY . . . . . .Page 2 Chandler firm tackles college ins and outs . . . . . . . BUSINESS . . . . . . . Page 40 Perry badminton rocks the net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SPORTS . . . . . . . . Page 49 Chandler film fest expands access. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ARTS . . . . . . . . . . Page 59

Each office is independently owned and operated

The best of the best Chandler eateries . . . . . . . . . . EAT . . . . . . . . . . . Page 66

See

VIRUS on page 5

More Community . . . 1-30 Real Estate . . . 31-38 Business . . . . . 40-44 Sports . . . . . . . 49-51 Opinion . . . . . . . . 52 Neighbors . . . 54-57 Arts . . . . . . . . . 59-62 Faith . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Directory . . . 64-65 Eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66


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