East Valley Tribune - Chandler/Tempe July 15, 2018

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

THE SUNDAY

Special section: Back to school in the EV

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INSIDE

This Week

EAST VALLEY

We need more balance on immigration PAGE 16

Sunday, JULY 15, 2018

EV growth driving public Canine comfort in Mesa safety training complexes

Kimberly Carrillo/Tribune Staff Photographer)

BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer

COMMUNITY ........ 13

Chandler woman’s Chinese ballet earns honors.

E

ast Valley fire and police officials are feeling the region’s growth – and so will taxpay-

ers. Both Gilbert and Chandler have grown so explosively that their police and fire departments no longer can rely on other municipalities to train officers and firefighters.

As a result, on Tuesday, July 17, Chandler will be opening the first phase of a new public safety training complex – a $26.3 million facility. The Gilbert Town Council voted 5-2 last month to place a $65.3 million bond issue on the Nov. 6 election ballot for a police-fire training facility, though the overall cost is See

Mesa police introduced the newest member to the force – a 16-weekold English Lab named Macy. Once she goes through training, she’ll be a therapy dog to help comfort crime victims, especially those in sex assault cases. Read her story on Page 6.

SAFETY on page 4

Storm-felled tree leaves Mesa woman, 75, hurt and homeless BY CECILIA CHAN Tribune Staff Writer

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llen Sims was sitting up in her bed when powerful monsoon winds swept in MonBUSINESS ................ 15 day afternoon, uprooting a pine tree in the Saucy Mesa business picked by front yard of her West Mesa home that was planted Walmart. shortly after she was born 75 years ago. The 150-foot-tall tree came crashing through the roof and landed on top of Sims, who is virtually bedridden after a stroke in 2009 left her with aphasia and paralyzed her right side. “My older brother and my niece and nephew were home,” said Tia Oso, who flew from Los Angeles to help her family through this ordeal. “The house shook and they heard a loud, loud banging noise, SPORTS ...................... 17 and they all jumped up and ran into the bedroom EV Little Leaguers win to play where my mom was and saw the tree through the another day. roof and pinning her down and her screaming. COMMUNITY........ . 13 “My nephew Zach jumped on the bed and tried BUSINESS..................... 1 5 to lift up the tree. They went into crisis mode and realized it was the whole tree that came down and

OPINION.................... 16 SPORTS......................... 17 CLASSIFIEDS............. 23

See

STORM on page 2

(Kimberly Carrillo/Tribune staff photographer)

Tia Oso stands next to the remnants of a huge tree that fell on her 75-year-old mother and the Mesa house where her mom was born and raised. The tree was knocked down by heavy winds that accompanied the storm July 9, and the damage has left her mom and five other occupants facing homelessness by the end of this week. Oso has started a gofundme.com campaign to prevent that from happening.


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