THE VOICE OF THE EAST VALLEY SINCE 1891 AND WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR LOCAL REPORTING
THE SUNDAY
Opioid maker from Chandler fights back
Tribune
PAGE 10
This Week
NEWS ............................. 6 Events abound in EV, Phoenix for the holidays
COMMUNITY ......... 11 Mesa women help bring holiday joy to hundreds of foster kids
BUSINESS . ................ 14 Indian store offers mall a different shopping experience
EAST VALLEY
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Northeast Mesa Edition
INSIDE
Defending champ faces first-timer in 6A title game Sunday, November 26, 2017
EV agencies now do more than shelter domestic violence victims BY JIM WALSH Tribune staff writer
F
lo knew the beatings at the hands of her alcoholic husband had to stop. She knew it not just from her own injuries, but from the look in her children’s eyes as they watched. Pinned to a couch on a day that would change her life forever, Flo was getting beaten again by her manipulative husband, who was constantly accusing her of imaginary infidelity
– making her check in with him from stores while shopping, even saying that some other man was the father of one of their children. That was hurtful enough and experts say that is the classic scenario for domestic violence. It can take the form of belittling psychological abuse, designed to control victims by stripping them of their self-worth and self-esteem. Flo suffered all of that and more. Flo said she would have left the abusive situation much earlier if she could have received the holistic outreach approach now used by A
New Leaf, a Mesa-based social service agency that also serves a hub in the seemingly endless battle against domestic violence. Catholic Social Services and the Arizona Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence also have put in place more options for victims even if they haven’t left an abusive relationship. “It was fragmented, kind of a piecemeal approach. It wasn’t cohesive. Now, everything See
DOMESTIC on page 4
TechShop Chandler rescue in the works Tumbleweed tree time BY WAYNE SCHUTSKY Tribune Staff Writer
T
echShop Chandler – the maker space for small business owners, hobbyists and students throughout the East Valley – may have a new lease on life after unexpectedly closing on Nov. 15 in the wake of a bankruptcy announcement by its parent company. Dan Rasure, a Kansas resident with a
background in manufacturing, is in talks with the parent company to purchase the entire entity, which includes 10 TechShop locations across the country. “I have met with the TechShop board several times and have an agreement in principal, but there are outstanding issues with landlords and agreements such as with ASU and we will need to have some See
TECH SHOP on page 8
EVENTS ..................... 24 Light displays welcome holidays across the Valley
COMMUNITY.......... 11 BUSINESS.....................14 OPINION.................... 19 SPORTS....................... 20 FAITH............................ 23 CLASSIFIEDS............. 28
(Kimberly Carrillo/Tribune Staff Photographer) (Kimberly Carrillo/Tribune Staff Photographer)
TechShop Chandler, closed unexpectedly on Nov. 15 in the wake of a bankruptcy announcement by its parent company, may get new life if a Kansas businessman has his way.
A Chandler worker fills chicken wire to build the city’s iconic tumbleweed Christmas tree at Dr. A.J. Chandler Park. The city has celebrated the holidays by making the tree of tumbleweeds since 1957. Story, Page 2.