THE VOICE OF THE EAST VALLEY SINCE 1891 AND WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR LOCAL REPORTING
Mesa school remembers Barbara Bush
THE SUNDAY
Tribune
PAGE 3 Northeast Mesa Edition
INSIDE
This Week
NEWS ............................. 6 Mesa school renamed after education advocate.
COMMUNITY ........ 12 Central Christian Church cleans up schools.
Every day is Earth Day for local caterer
EAST VALLEY
FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | EastValleyTribune.com
PAGE 10 Sunday, April 22, 2018
EV families scramble amid teachers’ historic defiance BY PAUL MARYNIAK Tribune Executive Editor AND HOWARD FISCHER Capitol Media Services
T
housands of East Valley families are preparing for one of Arizona’s most far-reaching political confrontations in history as public school teachers gear up for a strike this Thursday. The walkout will come a week after leaders of the #RedforEd movement reported that 78
percent of more than 57,000 teachers statewide cast paper ballots favoring a walkout – spurning Gov. Doug Ducey’s effort to defuse their threat and directly challenging the State Legislature’s decade-long stance on funding public education funding. “This is undeniably and clearly a mandate for action,’’ said Joe Thomas, a Mesa Public Schools government and president of the Arizona Education Association, which has been leading the #RedforEd movement with a start-up group called Arizona Educators
United. Both Thomas and AEU leader Noah Karvelis, a West Valley elementary school teacher, delayed the walkout for a week to let families prepare for its impact and work with local school districts to address other issues. “We need to give our communities time to prepare,’’ Karvelis said. But Karvelis left no doubt of his movement’s resolve. See
TEACHERS on page 8
Technology helping rescue units aid more stranded hikers
BUSINESS ................ 13 Mesa Chamber recognizes businesses, people for their work.
(Central Arizona Mountain Rescue Association)
Members of the all-volunteer Central Arizona Mountain Rescue Association earlier this year used a helicopter to rescue some stranded hikes at Bulldog Canyon, near the Bush Highway near the Lower Salt River Recreation Area. More cell phone towers in the East Valley make it easier for rescuers to located stranded hikers, provided they have their cell phones in good oeprating condition.
EVENT ........................ 17 Beer fest celebrates the lowly can.
COMMUNITY.......... 11 BUSINESS.....................13 OPINION.................... 14 SPORTS......................... 15 CLASSIFIEDS............. 22
BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
N
othing is foolproof in the wild, where nature routinely demonstrates that it is more powerful than man.
But Central Arizona Mountain Rescue, the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office and other organizations say technology is helping them even the odds when it comes to saving stranded hikers. Technology has significantly reduced the
number of long ground searches for lost hikers, they say, and that turns more missions into rescues of injured or lost hikers rather than body recoveries. See
RESCUE on page 4
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