Ahwatukee Foothills News - August 05, 2020

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Wednesday, August 12, 2020

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@AhwatukeeFN

With the primary done, Campaign 2020 kicks into high gear BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor

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ith the Primary Election now in the history books. Ahwatukee voters can expect some more localized political activity as the Legislative District 18 campaign and local governing board races pick up steam. While plenty of other of�ices are at stake Nov. 3 – from President and Arizona U.S. Senator to Congress to virtually all county of�ices and many judicial seats – the LD18 and Kyrene and Tempe Union governing board elections will offer no small share of their own drama for political junkies. And if it seems like de ja vu, Ahwatukee voters also will once again be casting their votes for Phoenix mayor – roughly 20

months after �irst electing Kate Gallego in a runoff election to �ill the unexpired term of U.S. Rep. Greg Stanton. This time around, Gallego will be running for a full four-year term, facing Republican Merrisa Hamilton, who ran as a Libertarian candidate for U.S. Senate in 2016, and Tim Seay, who describes himself as president and CEO of several nonpro�its and was recently reelected Most Honorable Grand Master of The Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge Free & Accepted Masons of Arizona. The election for the State Senate seat and two State House seats in LD18 – which covers Ahwatukee and parts of Mesa, Chandler and Tempe – is a little different this year. And it’s not just because Tempe airline pilot Frank Schmuck isn’t running after two failed

COVID-19 survivor

FALL SPORTS

bids for State Senate the last two elections and two unsuccessful House races before that. This year, only one Republican is running for a House seat. Ahwatukee resident Rob Robson will be trying to take a seat away from one of the two Democratic incumbents, Mitzi Epstein of Tempe or Jennifer Jermaine of Chandler. The LD18 Senate campaign is an all-Ahwatukee affair as Realtor Suzanne Sharer, a Republican and member of the Ahwatukee Foothills Village Planning Committee, tries to deny Democrat Sean Bowie a third term. Robson and Sharer have their work got out for them as registered Democrats outnumber registered Republicans in LD18, 53,755 to 49,958, according to the latest registration

��� ELECTIONS ���� 16

School campuses here may stay closed for weeks

BY PAUL MARYNIAK AFN Executive Editor and HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services

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Don’t tell 12-year-old Joelle Prestegard of Ahwatukee survived a brutal encounter with COVID-19 and faces a somewhat uncertain future medically as a result of her infection. She’s back home after a hospitalization in Texas and finally could come out of her bedroom last week after being quarantined after returning to Ahwatukee. Her ordeal, and that of her mom Marissa King, is detailed on page 3. (Marissa King/Special to AFN)

ost Ahwatukee classrooms likely will remain empty through at least Labor Day after both Kyrene and Tempe Union High School delayed reopening campuses until the threat of COVID-19 ebbs in Maricopa County. Kyrene Superintendent Dr. Jan Vesely at a special Governing Board meeting Aug. 3 announced that only online instruction will be provided for most students when classes begin next Monday, Aug. 17. The Tempe Union Governing Board two days later extended online-only instruction until Oct. 13 unless data on the status of COVID-19 cases in the district allows for a safe reopening of campuses earlier.

��� SCHOOLS ���� 12


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