Ahwatukee Foothills News - Sept. 7, 2016

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Free of charge WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016 Today: High 90, Low 77, Chance of storms Tomorrow: High 93, Low 76, Sunny

REAL ESTATE Long-time realtor recalls Ahwatukee’s past. RE1

Celebrating 38 years of service

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21 Ahwatukee neighborhoods could face $5 mill damages

FREEWAY MYSTERY Phoenix, ADOT officials mum on design plans. p15

REFORM SCHOOL

By Paul Maryniak AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS EDITOR

(Cheryle Haselhorst/AFN Staff Photographer)

Kyrene program helps misbehaving students. p24

MILLIONAIRES ROW Third home on block sells for more than $1 million. p34

Flying High

The Desert Vista High School Varsity Dance Line was flying high Friday celebrating the Thunder’s romp over Basha. Celebrating Desert Vista’s 49-20 win are, from left, Ally Trevino, Ashley Bultman and Sophie Spencer. They had a lot to be happy about. Page 46

ESCAPE ART New entertainment in Ahwatukee: unlocking rooms. p41 Real Estate RE1 Community p19 Around AF p26 Opinion p28

Faith p39 GetOut p41 Sports/Rec p46 Classified p50

Ahwatukee Lakes Golf Club designer, Gary Panks, longs to revive his creation SPECIAL REPORT By Lee Shappell AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS NEWS MANAGING EDITOR

Many of the finest golf courses in Arizona have Gary Panks’ architectural fingerprints on them. Antelope Hills South in Prescott. Grayhawk Golf Club’s Talon in Scottsdale. The Raven Golf Club at South Mountain. Sedona Golf Resort. Tonto Verde Golf Club’s Ranch and Peaks courses. Whirlwind Golf

Club’s Cattail and Desert Claw courses just south of Ahwatukee. And the list goes on. Panks also has overseen remodeling of longestablished courses at Paradise Valley Country Club, Phoenix Country Club and Rio Verde Country Club. And while his design of The Golf Club at Chaparral Pines in Payson gained him perhaps his greatest critical acclaim, the golf-course architect still has a fondness >> See DESIGNER on page 13

More than 492 homes and buildings in Ahwatukee would sustain damage exceeding $5 million in a 100year flood, a study by Phoenix and Maricopa County warns. Completed earlier this year, the study was aimed at identifying known and potential flood hazards in Ahwatukee. The study’s authors say they are now working on a plan that would recommend structures, such as channels and basins, and new land use regulations “to help reduce and manage flooding in areas identified with particular flooding concerns.” “Ultimately, the results will be used to help the (Maricopa County Flood Control) District and Phoenix make more informed decisions on future land development,” the study states, “and help guide local developers and property owners in building more safely. “This will reduce potential damage to property and loss of life from drainage issues and storm-water flooding.” The term “100-year flood” refers to an extreme hydrologic event that has a likely recurrence interval of a century. Put another way, such a major flood has a 1 percent chance of happening in any given year. >> See FLOOD on page 14

Work part time for Kyrene, a top-rated school district. Positions in schools, transportation and Kids Club. www.kyrene.org/employment


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