Official: Fed ozone limits could cripple Valley growth
BY PAUL MARYNIAK Foothills Focus Staff Writer
The Phoenix Metro region could lose more than $100 million in economic growth if it fails to meet upgrade federal air quality standards for ozone levels by August 2024, a Valley environmental official told Phoenix City Council recently.
And those losses would steadily increase over the next 20 years to as much as $848 million if the Valley’s ozone levels are not brought under control, Tim Franquist, environmental policy director for the Maricopa Association of Governments told council’s Community and Cultural Investment Subcommittee Jan. 4.
Moreover, the controls necessary to
meet more stringent federal air quality controls will carry a substantial cost to taxpayers, he indicated.
“That’s going to be a big issue for this area,” he continued. “We really haven’t put in ozone-control measures for about 20 years, so we’re definitely going to need a lot more measures coming into place.”
Right now, the only way the Valley could meet the elevated Environmental Protection Agency’s ozone limits would be taking all four million gasoline-powered motor vehicles in Maricopa County off the road by August 2024, Franquist said.
And even then, he added, “we would barely make the standard.”
And since that’s a virtual impossibility, the cost of meeting tougher air quality
standards will come in lost industrial development opportunities as businesses avoid relocating or expanding here rather than pay for federally-imposed, tougher emission controls.
That cost would extend beyond the Valley since tougher emission standards would exist even for trucks and cars that come into the region on a regular basis from other parts of the state and country that may not have similarly tough standards, he said.
It also would be reflected in other ways, Franquist said, such as higher construction permit fees and more stringent vehicle emissions inspection standards.
“It impacts us by aborting businesses,”
Wreaths Across America unveils new theme
BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
Each year, millions of Americans come together to remember the fallen, honor those who serve and their families, and teach the next generation about the value of freedom.
This gathering of volunteers and patriots takes place in local, state and national cemeteries in all 50 states — most recently at 3,702 participating locations — as part of National Wreaths Across America
Day.
Each year, a new theme is chosen to help volunteers and supporters focus their messaging and outreach in their own communities. Recently, the national nonprofit unveiled the theme for 2023: “Serve and Succeed.”
The inspiration for this year’s theme came while discussing the significance of 2022’s theme, which was “Find a Way to Serve,” and the need to continue to stress the importance of service and the
positive ways it can impact lives. Wreaths Across America plans to focus on the storylines of veterans and military families who have found success through their own service, while also highlighting local volunteers across the country and the success that comes from serving their communities.
The organization will continue its commitment to supporting and bringing atten-
The latest breaking news and top local stories!
www.foothillsfocus.com
Cave Creek - Carefree Area Edition TheFoothillsFocus.com CALENDAR PAGE 18 Serving the communities of Cave Creek and Carefree OPINION......................8 BUSINESS................. 12 FEATURES ................ 15 YOUTH ...................... 19 CLASSIFIEDS ............ 22 Zone 2 INSIDE This Week •• BUSINESS......... 13 U-Haul ranks Arizona No. 7 growth state of ‘22 FEATURES ........ 16 Stories appeal to bluesman Tommy Castro YOUTH ............. 19 Youth-led nonprofit supports active duty, vets Wednesday, January 11, 2023 FREE SUBSCRIPTION
see OZONE page 4
see WREATHS page
4
2 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 •• Assisted Living & Memory Care Take a virtual tour of the community The care they deserve Get 24/7 peace of mind knowing your loved one is getting the care they deserve. Come be a part of our community! (Located near 19th Ave and Happy Valley Road) 1920 W Alameda Rd. Phoenix, AZ 85085 SPACE IS LIMITED. CALL FOR AVAILABILITY: 602.320.0437 | www.RetreatSeniorLiving.com 1 & 2-Bedroom Floor Plans Beautiful Dining Venues Movie Theater, Gym, and more... Open Phone Camera Point at QR Code Click on Pop-Up Link 1. 2. 3.
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 602.508.0800 • liwindow.com Clean lines. Crisp angles. Sleek designs. Vintage style. Pulse is a contemporary series of door styles and glass designs that can be combined to make a bold statement — the entrance becomes modern art. Smooth-Star Looking the surface. is your READY FOR A MAKEOVER? BARN Stop by our interactive showroom and see the newest trends. Our experienced and knowledgeable staff is here to help you with all your upcoming projects. Wishing you a safe and happy holiday season! Available from Lasting Impressions. Stop by our design showroom. 4454 E. Thomas Road, Phoenix, AZ 85018 Showroom Hours: Mon - Thu 8:30-5:00 | Fri 8:30-4:00 Saturday 9:00-2:00 | Evenings by appointment: 602.508.0800 | liwindow.com Pulse is a can be becomes Smooth-Star Looking to add a splash of color to your entryway? Smooth-Star the answer if the best look for your home is a smooth, surface. Budget friendly, with a variety of glass options is your collection if you’re seeking color options for your MAKEOVER? SavingsHURRY! to Clean lines. Crisp angles. Sleek designs. Vintage style. Pulse is a contemporary series of door styles and glass designs that can be combined to make a bold statement — the entrance becomes Smooth-Star Looking to add a splash of color to your entryway? Smooth-Star is the answer if the best look for your home is a smooth, paintable surface. Budget friendly, with a variety of glass options available, this is your collection if you’re seeking color options for your doorway. Dress up for the Holidays! Speaking of moves, we’ve moved to a new location: 4454 East Thomas Rd. READY FOR A MAKEOVER? SavingsHURRY!up to $300! BARN DOORS & HARDWARE Pulse® Clean lines. Crisp angles. Sleek designs. Vintage style. Pulse is a contemporary series of door styles and glass designs that can be combined to make a bold statement — the entrance becomes modern art. Smooth-Star® Looking to add a splash of color to your entryway? Smooth-Star is the answer if the best look for your home is a smooth, paintable surface. Budget friendly, with a variety of glass options available, this is your collection if you’re seeking color options for your doorway. Dress up for the Holidays! Speaking of READY FOR A MAKEOVER? SavingsHURRY!up to $300! BARN DOORS & HARDWARE MAKE A GRAND ENTRANCE! Buy local and SAVE up to $1500!
OZONE
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
The Foothills Focus is published every Wednesday and distributed free of charge to homes and in single-copy locations throughout the North Valley. To find out where you can pick up a copy of The Foothills Focus, please visit www.thefoothillsfocus.com
CONTACT INFORMATION
Main number: 623-465-5808 | Fax: 623-465-1363
Circulation: 480-898-5641
Publisher: Steve T. Strickbine
Vice President: Michael Hiatt
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Display Advertising: 480-348-0343
Classifieds/Inside Sales: 480-898-6500 | classifieds@TimesLocalMedia.com
TJ Higgins | 480-898-5902 | tjhiggins@TimesLocalMedia.com
Steve Insalaco | 480-898-5635 | sinsalaco@timeslocalmedia.com
Advertising Office Manager: Tricia Simpson | 480-898-5624 tsimpson@timeslocalmedia.com
Director of National Advertising Zac Reynolds | 480-898-5603 | zac@timeslocalmedia.com
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Executive Editor: Christina Fuoco-Karasinski | 480-898-5631 christina@timeslocalmedia.com
Design: Nathalie Proulx | nproulx@timeslocalmedia.com
Design/Production Supervisor: Shannon Mead | 480-898-5616 smead@timeslocalmedia.com
CIRCULATION : 623-535-8439
Circulation Director: Aaron Kolodny | aaron@phoenix.org
Distribution Manager: Brian Juhl | brian@timeslocalmedia.com
Proud member of :
Queen Creek Tribune is distributed by AZ Integrated Media a circulation company owned & operated by Times Media Group The public is limited to one copy per reader. For circulation services, please contact Aaron Kolodny at aaron@phoenix.org.
To start or stop delivery of the paper, please visit: https://timespublications.com/phoenix/ or call 480-898-7901
To your free online edition subscription, please visite: https://www.thefoothillsfocus.com/e-subscribe/
The content of any advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. The Foothills Focus assumes no responsibility for the claims of any advertisement.
© 2023 Strickbine Publishing, Inc.
from page 1
he said, noting that the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. plant in north Phoenix theoretically would need a permit and be operating before the new standards kick in. “Now, a $40 billion investment: I think the White House gets involved and I think (it) comes here.”
Vice Mayor Yassamin Ansari seized on that example, saying“the hallmark example of an incredible foreign investment” would be scuttled because “we are dangerously close to reaching serious nonattainment, which means that those businesses would not be able to come here after 2024.”
“Nonattainment” is the classification that the EPA gives metro areas that fail to meet air quality standards. Other metro areas already have studied the economic impact of non-attainment and have projected staggering losses in future economic growth.
For example, Franquist said, the Oklahoma City metro area faces an economic loss of as much as $15.2 billion over the next 20 to 30 years for violating tougher federal air quality standards. Corpus Christi, Texas, estimates a loss of $600 million to $1.7 billion a year in economic activity for failing to meet impending EPA ozone standards.
“We have kind of a table of increasing stringency in programs as we don’t meet the standard,” Franquist said. “So obviously. as we don’t meet those standards, those programs become more stringent and there’s more of them.”
Franquist said the culprit in all this is the ozone level.
While Maricopa County has actu-
WREATHS
ally done a good job reducing many air pollutants, he said, ozone levels have been aggravated in large part by things beyond its control – namely, forest fires in both Arizona and California and the Valley’s average 300 days of sunny weather.
“Unlike some pollutants, like carbon dioxide—which is a direct pollutant that comes from your tailpipe or from an industrial stack,” Franquist explained, “Ozone is considered a secondary pollutant. So it actually requires volatile organic compounds.”
Those compounds react to the sun’s ultraviolet radiation, adversely affecting air quality.
Franquist produced a chart showing how wildfires in Arizona and California have adversely impacted air quality, posing a growing health risk to vulnerable adults and even more children.
“This is what our children are breathing,” he said. “What most folks don’t realize with children—they do breathe in the same amount of air as an adult. They just breathe faster than we do. So they actually take in these pollutants more than we do.”
Franquist said the Valley’s future ability to meet federal air quality standards has been crippled by former Gov. Doug Ducey’s veto last year of a bill that would have asked the public to vote last November on an extension of the half-cent gas tax that funds a variety of rapid transit and road improvement projects.
While the Legislature could again vote to put Proposition 400 on next year’s ballot ahead of the tax’s expiration in 2025, the uncertainty currently surrounding it threatens a number of
projects already on county and municipal drawing boards – including an expansion of public transportation aimed at curbing car traffic.
Franquist praised Phoenix for being “a fantastic leader” in programs aimed at reducing ozone pollution—mainly involving its multi-million-dollar investment in replacing a large portion of the city’s gas-powered vehicles, such as fire engines and garbage trucks with electric ones and its aggressive expansion of bus and light rail routes.
But many of those city vehicles won’t be replaced until 2028—well beyond the federal deadline for ozone reduction.
Franquist also warned, “There’s no silver bullet in terms of reducing ozone in one different control program. It takes a lot of different control programs working together to actually reduce ozone.”
“I think it’s important that we continue to get the word out to both the public and to our legislators that this is important for our economy, but it’s absolutely important for our public health,” he added, conceding the ozone control programs “are not cheap to implement.”
Franquist’s message provoked Ansari to express alarm about the impending air quality measures and the region’s attitude toward them.
“We are treating them as though they’re not urgent, and they’re not priorities and they don’t have financial implications even though they really, really do and they will hurt us economically,” Ansari said. “So I feel very strongly that we need to be doing a lot more than we have.”
from page 1
tion to the needs of our veteran community, while also showcasing the continued contributions of those who serve.
“There are many ways to serve your community and country, and just as many definitions of success,” said Karen Worcester, executive director, Wreaths Across America. “We hope through focusing on those stories of
success we will help change the dialogue around what it means to serve your country.”
In 2022, more than 2.7 million veterans’ wreaths were placed by volunteers on headstones at 3,702 participating locations around the country in honor of the service and sacrifices made for our freedoms, with each name said out loud. Wreaths Across America volunteers work year-round to ensure
military laid to rest are remembered, their families and living veterans are honored, and the next generation is taught about the value of freedom.
This year, National Wreaths Across America Day is Saturday, Dec. 16. It is a free event and open to all people. For more information on how to volunteer locally or sponsor a wreath for an American hero, visit wreathsacrossamerica.org.
4 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 NEWS ••
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 5 ••
we
air conditioning,
THERE’S NO SUBSTITUTE FOR INTEGRITY & A JOB WELL DONE! That’s Why You’re Going To Love Us! We Are Your Resident Experts Family owned company 623.582.1117 VALLEY WIDE SERVICE ROC #221431 #274551 We are dual licensed to service both residential and commercial
you for getting our air working for us! It was an urgent matter, and they had someone at our house within
hours of my phone call.”
Not only are
experts in plumbing and
we are your neighbors. As residents of North Phoenix, we bring over 31 years of experience with 16 years in business and a neighborly approach to service. We recognize that nobody likes to have air-conditioning/heating or plumbing problems, but when you do, you have a choice. When you choose West Coast Plumbing and Air, you are choosing the company that looks out for its neighbors and one that comes with a 100% money back guarantee.
Testimonials “Thank
2
- Anthem Resident “The technician was awesome he was fast, professional and polite. Hopefully I won’t have to call anyone anytime soon but, if I had to West Coast Plumbing & Air would be my rst choice.”
“Great service! Got the job done right, and for the right price.”
A+ rating Call Us! We keep our appointments We x it right the rst time We o er a 100% money back guarantee We work weekends with no extra weekend charges We o er Valley Wide Service *Cannot be combined with any other o ers. Expires January 31,2023. 16 Years in Business $25000* OFF A NEW TRANE UNIT INSTALL January Special BESTOF 2022 Like Our Facebook Page facebook.com/westcoastplumbingandair Independent Trane Dealer
- North Phoenix Resident
- Glendale Resident
Liv Communities breaks ground in Norterra
BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
Liv Communities broke ground on a 55-and-older-qualified rental community in Norterra.
The upscale community, Liv+ Union Peak, 25400 N. 21st Avenue, Phoenix, will boast 145 units and will be ready for occupancy in late summer/early fall of 2024.
“Building on our extensive background serving all ages with unparalleled hospitality and wellness centered services, Liv is excited to bring our purpose of ‘helping people live fuller lives’ to an underserved group of 55+ adults,” said Heidi Arave-Noonan, Liv Multifamily vice president.
Active adults can choose from apartment style-homes or larger, upgraded casitas. The community offers eight acres of vacation-style living, attractions and adventurous activities including a clubhouse (The Hub), a pool house (The Cabana), a private dog park (The Bark
Park), outdoor spaces for yoga, swimming, pickleball and overall relaxation/ well-being (The Rec) and a state-of-theart gym (Liv Fit).
“We understand the desire to stay vibrant longer, while enjoying life with others that share your passions and energy. Liv is thrilled to enter the 55-plus age-qualified housing space with our focus on mind, body, spirit health and community centric programs designed to help people thrive and live life to its fullest,” said Arave-Noonan.
The community was designed by Todd & Associates (architect) and is being built by MT Builders (general contractor) with Envision Interiors taking the lead on interior finishes. All apartment homes will feature smart home technology with energy efficient appliances and offer the convenience of lock and leave for residents with a jet-set lifestyle.
Info: 1-844-liv-here or email livplusunionpeak@livcommunities.com
6 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 NEWS •• 42104 N. Venture Drive, Suite A 118, Anthem, AZ 85086 GENERAL PRACTICE LAW FIRM IN ANTHEM General Practice Law Firm for all your legal needs! 623-551-9366 CarrollLawFirm.com SERVICES INCLUDE: ESTATE PLANNING • PERSONAL INJURY BUSINESS LAW • FAMILY LAW • PROBATE BANKRUPTCY • DUI/TRAFFICE VIOLATIONS AND MORE!
Attending the ground-breaking ceremony at Liv+ Union Peak are, from left, Eric Johnston, Beth Heath, Heidi Arave-Noonan, Jean Constantine, Kip Linse and Scott Brooks. (Liv Communities/Submitted)
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 7 •• Reviews ROC328401 * Must be purchased and installation started prior Dec 12. Must present coupon or ad at the time of initial appointment. Offers are first appointment incentives only and only good if both decision-makers are present. Cannot combine offers. Dustless tile removal does not actually mean no dust, rather a lot less dust and still a construction site and will need professional cleaning. $9 a day based on 36-month financing including basic installation and product with 1000sf or less, and room size 12x15. Rooms greater in size or using upgraded flooring will add additional monthly costs. Does not include stairs or rip up. Financing is based on approved credit. $5,500 min purchase for free air duct cleaning. Free home disinfectant service makes no claims to kill COVID-19 or prevent it. FREE Air Duct Cleaning* Shop At Home Next Day Installation Lifetime Labor Warranty Exclusive customer installation tracking portal Dustless Tile Removal* Free Home Disinfectant* FREE Air Duct Cleaning* Shop At Home Next Day Installation Lifetime Labor Warranty Exclusive customer installation tracking portal Dustless Tile Removal* Free Home Disinfectant* PAINTING OF BASEBOARDS PAINTING OF BASEBOARDS Vinyl Plank Laminate Wood Tile Carpet Bundle Savings Discount When you purchase both carpet & any hard surface together Expires February 1st, 2023 1,500 1,500 COUPON OFF OFF * * Pet Proof Flooring Expires February 1st, 2023 $750 OFF $750 OFF * * COUPON Or Go Online Or Go Online www.healthyhomeflooring.co www.healthyhomeflooring.co Call NOW! 623-244-8260 623-244-8260 Call NOW! ROOM SALE * $35 up to 60 months up to 60 months 0% interest!* 0% interest!* Ne w Year New Floors!
AROUND THE BLUHMIN’ TOWN
This egg debacle is cracking up no one
BY JUDY BLUHM Foothills Focus Columnist
Eggs, where art thou? How we miss your oval beauty and deliciousness. How will we manage without this essential ingredient for our yummy baked goods and that pairs perfectly with toast? Where will we find the joy that we get from cracking the little balls of wonder? So easy to eat, so lovely to taste, what horror is besetting us? A world without eggs?
If you have been to a grocery store lately, you will see the empty refrigerator shelves where eggs once sat. You might get lucky and be able to score a dozen, for about eight bucks. The bird flu caused millions of chickens to be slaughtered. And now, all eggs are as scarce as hen’s teeth. Which makes me wonder where exactly that old saying came from.
Oh well, we are resilient and have been through shortages before. Right? Perhaps I will go past the barren egg shelves and get some butter. But, oh wait, it seems butter is being sold at the same price as gold. By the ounce! OK, I will move my sorry grocery cart on to greater things. We can survive without butter and eggs. Maybe.
Shopping anxiety is evidently a “real deal” for Americans as we try to navigate prices, low product inventory and shortages. One woman in Phoenix broke down and wept in the supermarket when she saw the prices of items that were on her list.
Crying in the aisle doesn’t help. Well, we did get through the toilet paper debacle, so we can probably cope with the egg crisis. But we better not get a headache over it, because ibuprofen is in short supply.
Which came first — the chicken or the egg? Yikes, if we can’t find eggs, what’s next? Should we buy a separate freezer just so we can stock up on chicken? Might not be a bad idea. I would like to get a few live hens. Sadly, I don’t think my HOA would approve.
When I was a child, my family had 20 chickens. My job was to fetch the eggs every morning. It was fun, until I left their gate open a few times. My mother and grandmother would have to run around with brooms trying to herd the chickens back into the pen. It was comical watching the chaos of the hens flying the coop. I was seriously scolded for “upsetting” the chickens because they would retaliate by not laying eggs for a week.
Evidently, there are a whole bunch
TheFoothillsFocus.com |
/TheFoothillsFocus
8 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 OPINION ••
@TheFoothills.Focus
For more opinions visit thefoothillsfocus.com
see BLUHM page 11 Justin Simons, Agent 3655 W Anthem Way Anthem, AZ 85086 Business: 623-551-3700 justin.simons.j663@statefarm.com Discount up to 30% with Drive Safe & Save™!* I’m inviting you to make our roads safer and get rewarded for doing so. Are you in? Contact me today to get started. *Some customers could see a discount up to 50%. Discount names, percentages, availability and eligibility may vary by state and coverage selected. Enrollment, terms and conditions apply. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, State Farm Indemnity Company Bloomington, IL State Farm County Mutual Insurance Company of Texas Richardson, TX 1901979 Justin Simons, Agent 41722 N. Gavilan Peak Parkway, #110 Anthem, AZ 85086 (Next to Barro’s Pizza) Business: 623-551-3700 justin.simons.j663@statefam.com
NC State broadcaster faces a woke-up call
BY J.D. HAYWORTH Foothills Focus Columnist
He’s spent three decades calling the play-by-play for the “Red and White,” and like the legendary Red Barber, he may wind up with a pink slip—for the sin of telling the truth.
Gary Hahn, the “Voice of the Wolfpack,” has used his microphone as a palette, painting colorful word pictures of football and basketball contests for North Carolina State fans. His style of describing the action for radio listeners can best be described in three words: Vivid. Accurate. Honest.
A master of that medium comes to understand that broadcasting an event of several hours’ duration must be punctuated with current events, comic relief and an acknowledgment of the absurd.
Hahn included all three in a single utterance, during his play-by-play account of the Dec. 30 Duke’s Mayo Bowl Game in Charlotte. A pause in the action between the Wolfpack and the Maryland Terrapins provided an opportunity for Hahn to update his audience on the only other post-sea-
son collegiate contest underway at the time: “Down among all the illegal aliens in El Paso, it’s UCLA, 14… Pittsburgh, 6.”
Irreverent, but on target. And given the absurdity of Uncle Sam’s unwillingness to enforce immigration law, amusing in a “laughto-keep-from-crying” fashion.
Ironically, NC State’s last bowl victory came in El Paso, a 52-31 win over Arizona State in the 2017 Sun Bowl. In the years since, El Paso has changed…and not for the better.
In fact, this year’s Sun Bowl “Fan Fiesta” was canceled on Dec. 21 because the city has been using its convention center to house illegal aliens, who have flooded across the international border there in recent weeks.
American media outlets, from the Associated Press to the alphabet networks, adhere to the P’s-and-Q’s
of political correctness, also now known as “wokeism.”
That simply means that these allegedly objective journalists now convey a bias on behalf of open border advocates, employing the terms “migrants,” “newcomers,” or as that noted theologian and soon-to-be former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi once proclaimed, “God’s Children.”
And faster than Nancy omits any reference to the unborn as “God’s Children” when she changes the subject to abortion, Hahn’s employers took immediate and public exception to his brief Sun Bowl score update.
Learfield Communications, the current broadcast rights holder for NC State Athletics, “suspended Wolfpack Sports Network play-by-play announcer Gary Hahn from his agreement indefinitely following com-
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 9 ••
1 0 4 3 8 W E K O P A W A Y F O R T M C D O W E L L , A Z 8 5 2 6 4 C O L L E C T O R C A R A U C T I O N J A N 2 7 & 2 8 | 2 0 2 3 see HAYWORTH page 11
Bills player’s collapse raises questions about football
BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Foothills Focus Columnist
It was shortly after supper time on the first Monday night in 2023 when Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin collided with Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins near midfield. Hamlin popped to his feet. He adjusted his face mask. Then the 24-year-old toppled directly backwards, his heart stopped cold.
“That’s, uh, that’s not what any of us want to see,” said Troy Aikman, the former Dallas Cowboys quarterback turned Monday Night Football commentator. “You just hope that he’s going to be okay.”
Most of us agree utterly with the second part of Aikman’s analysis: We fervently hope Hamlin, who remains in critical condition as I write this, will not only survive his episode of cardiac arrest, but once again thrive.
That remains to be seen so early on, but some things we already can say for certain:
The impromptu show of support for Hamlin, including the $8 million donated to his GoFundMe toy drive—initial goal $2,500—is heartening, especially when this country of 350 million people can agree on precious little.
Also, we can submit that Aikman was wrong, or more than a little naive, if he truly believes that football fans don’t tune in to games to see the obliterating hits that Monday Night Football and every other broadcast thrives on.
True, no one wants to see a young man meet death or be maimed on the field. But be real: When hulking brutes of enormous strength square off 11 on 11, some capable of bench pressing 400 pounds while others run 40 yards in a little over four seconds, what do you expect to happen?
Every football play at the professional and college level is a traffic
accident, minus the vehicles, bumpers and seat belts. The wonder isn’t that Hamlin was felled midgame; it’s that no one has died on a gridiron since football started being played for money more than 100 years ago.
The NFL can talk all it wants about player safety, but the league didn’t command $100 billion in television rights because Joe Sixpack loves to see a well-executed screen pass for 11 yards and a first down.
Football fans watch because we thirst for machismo, combat, violence. Then we cue up the highlights and watch it again. At least until an incident like Damar Hamlin’s collapse reminds us that this isn’t ancient Rome and these aren’t gladiators.
These are human beings risking their lives and who suffer from such high levels of chronic traumatic encephalopathy that the NFL has paid out more than $1 billion in settlement funds since 2015 to more than 1,500 concussed former players and their kin – with thousands of additional claims pending.
Since Hamlin fell, I have heard all manner of analysis about how the league handled postponing the game, how ESPN covered it and how Hamlin’s heart may respond to treatment.
All this chatter focuses in precisely the wrong direction. It looks outward at the conditions on the field, instead of looking inward, at why we
tolerate a game that inevitably cripples a good number of combatants annually.
Since 1931, when the American Football Coaches Association undertook the first “Annual Survey of Football Fatalities,” statistics show that 1,064 football players have died as a direct result of the game—not counting heat strokes suffered in practice, etc.
That includes last year, when “there were four traumatic injury fatalities that occurred among football players during football-related activities.” All four were high school kids. All four suffered traumatic brain injuries.
Let’s pray Damar Hamlin isn’t fatality number 1,065. Let’s also look in the mirror and ask the face staring back why we never consider turning off the TV and finding something better to occupy our attention?
10 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 OPINION ••
GIVEAWAYS AND SPECIAL OFFERS! 1545 Main Event Way Quartzsite, AZ JANUARY 14-15 SAT 9-5, SUN 9-4 General admission $10 Veterans and 55+: $9 Children under 12: Free It’s the annual QUARTZSITE GUN SHOW Firearms, ammunition, tactical gear, accessories and more from the best vendors How to get a letter published E-mail: christina@timeslocalmedia.com The Foothills Focus welcomes letters that express readers’ opinion on current topics. Letters must include the writer’s full name, address (including city) and telephone number. The Foothills Focus will print the writer’s name and city of residence only. Letters without the requisite identifying information will not be published. Letters are published in the order received, and they are subject to editing. The Foothills Focus will not publish consumer complaints, form letters, clippings from other publications or poetry. Letters’ authors, not the Foothills Focus, are responsible for the “facts” presented in letters.
of “upset” chickens right now. I tend to shy away from conspiracy theories, but I do have a neighbor who believes there is an “egg plot” of some sort which is undermining a staple of Americana (doubtful). My doctor says we don’t need eggs because they
are raising everyone’s cholesterol levels (oh, come on).
I do have a full bottle of ibuprofen that I will gladly trade for a dozen eggs. Don’t crack up — I am serious. It could be egg-cellent.
Judy Bluhm is a writer and a local Realtor. Have a story or a comment? Email Judy at judy@judybluhm.com.
WARNING!
PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY AND CHRONIC PAIN TREATMENTS NOT WORKING!!
ments made during today’s Duke’s Mayo Bowl radio broadcast.”
That statement came from Wolfpack Sports Properties general manager Kyle Winchester; NC State Athletic Director Boo Corrigan followed his customary practice of not saying “boo.”
There are two reasons for Boo hitting the mute button: His future aspirations as an upwardly mobile athletic administrator; and, directly related to that, his apparent acceptance of a “Great Awokening” throughout higher education.
Corrigan’s current stint in West Raleigh was preceded by eight years as the AD at West Point. While there, he learned that our military leadership today is more in the mold of Mark Milley than Dwight Eisenhower.
For Boo, the reasoning was simple… if West Point was going “woke,” how much more prevalent would “wokeism” be on the NC State campus? His hunch: a whole bunch.
So, since his arrival in 2019, Corrigan has joined with other university administrators, lurching further leftward, embracing the toxic doctrine intent on destroying the very diversity it claims to champion.
Where does all this leave Gary Hahn? Not in a good place, it appears.
But should NC State issue Hahn his “walking papers,” he can seek solace in the fact that it also happened to one of sportscasting’s greats.
In 1966, Red Barber pointed out that the team for whom he broadcast games—the New York Yankees, ironically owned by CBS at the time—was in last place, losing games in front of crowds as sparse as 413 in 65,000seat Yankee Stadium.
CBS canned the “Ol’ Redhead” for his candor; NC State would repeat that mistake, should Gary Hahn meet the same professional fate.
J.D. Hayworth’s column was written before N.C. State announced that Gary Hahn would return to his play-by-play duties, effective Jan. 14.
Mesa, AZ – When it comes to chronic pain and/ or neuropathy, the most common doctor-prescribed treatment is drugs like Gabapentin, Lyrica, Cymbalta, and Neurontin. The problem with antidepressants or anti-seizure medications like these is that they offer purely symptomatic relief, as opposed to targeting and treating the root of the problem. Worse, these drugs often trigger an onset of uncomfortable, painful, and sometimes harmful side effects.
The only way to effectively treat chronic pain and/or peripheral neuropathy is by targeting the source, which is the result of nerve damage owing to inadequate blood flow to the nerves in the hands and feet. This often causes weakness, numbness, balance problems. A lack of nutrients causes the nerves degenerate – an insidious
cannot survive, and thus, slowly die. This leads to those painful and frustrating consequences we were talking about earlier, like weakness, numbness, tingling, balance issues, and perhaps even a burning sensation.
The drugs your doctor might prescribe will temporarily conceal the problems, putting a “Band-Aid” over a situation that will only continue to deteriorate without further action.
Thankfully, Mesa is the birthplace of a brandnew facility that sheds new light on this pressing problem of peripheral neuropathy and chronic pain. The company is trailblazing the medical industry by replacing outdated drugs and symptomatic reprieves with an advanced machine that targets the root of the problem at hand.
1. Finding the underlying cause
2. Determining the extent of the nerve damage (above 95% nerve loss is rarely treatable)
3. The amount of treatment required for the patient’s unique condition
Aspen Medical in Mesa, AZ uses a state-of-the-art electric cell signaling systems worth $100,000.00.
Th is ground-breaking treatment is engineered to achieve the following, accompanied by advanced diagnostics and a basic skin biopsy to accurately analyze results:
1. Increases blood flow
2. Stimulates and strengthens small fiber nerves
3. Improves brain-based pain
The treatment works by delivering energy to the affected area(s) at varying wavelengths, from low- to middle-frequency signals, while also using Amplitude Modulated (AM) and Frequency Modulated (FM) signaling.
It’s completely painless!
THE GREAT NEWS IS THAT THIS TREATMENT IS COVERED BY MEDICARE, MEDICAID, AND MOST INSURANCES!!
The number of treatments required varies from patient to patient, and can only be determined following an in-depth neurological and vascular examination. As long as you have less than 95% nerve damage, there is hope!
Aspen Medical begins by analyzing the extent of the nerve damage –a complimentary service for your friends and family. Each exam comprises a detailed sensory evaluation, extensive peripheral vascular testing, and comprehensive analysis of neuropathy findings.
Aspen Medical will be offering this free chronic pain and neuropathy severity evaluation will be available until January 31st, 2023 Call (480) 274-3157 to make an appointment
Due to our very busy office schedule, we are limiting this offer to the first 10 c allers Y OU DO NOT HAVE TO SUFFER ANOTHER MINUTE, CALL (480) 274-3157 NOW!!
We are extremely busy, so we are unavailable, please leave a voice message and we will get back to you as soon as possible.
As displayed in figure 1 above, the nerves are surrounded by diseased, withered blood vessels. A lack of sufficient nutrients means the nerves
Effective neuropathy treatment relies on the following three factors:
Depending on your coverage, your peripheral neuropathy treatment could cost almost nothing – or be absolutely free.
Aspen Medical 4540 E Baseline Rd., Suite 119 Mesa, AZ, 85206
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 11 OPINION ••
HAYWORTH from page 9
*(480) 274-3157* *this is a paid advertisement* 480-274-3157 4540 E Baseline Rd., Suite 119 Mesa Az 85206 BLUHM from page 8
Local vendors take center stage at show
BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Foothills Focus Executive Editor
The Maricopa County Home & Garden Show is celebrating its 30th anniversary by once again hosting local industry vendors as well as Taste the Desert, a food and beverage tasting event.
The show is Friday, Jan. 13, to Sunday, Jan. 15, at the Arizona State Fairgrounds.
“The new year brings opportunity for renewal and improvement. This show gives attendees an opportunity to feel educated about any item they take home,” said Katie Jones, Maricopa County Home Show manager. “We’re thrilled to celebrate our 30th anniversary of bringing the Home Show to the Valley and hope to provide endless inspiration for your home in 2023.”
Among the local vendors is Dave Newham with North Valley Water Solutions in Anthem. Marking his 10th year of participation, Newham will offer his water treatment services and hold a drawing for a reserve osmosis system.
Newham founded North Valley Water Solutions 15 years ago, but has been in the industry for more than 40 in Arizona, Minnesota and Indiana. He recently won Small Business of the Year at the 19th Annual Anthem Area Chamber of Commerce Awards Gala on Dec. 3.
“We do water treatment, water softeners, any type of filtration for people’s homes,” Newham said. “We service and install systems that use salt, that don’t use salt.”
Importantly, North Valley Water Solutions services and installs products with its own employees. They don’t outsource or work with contractors.
“When the service techs come out, it’s my men, my trucks,” he said. “We’re all licensed and bonded and insured. People appreciate that a lot.”
North Valley Water Solutions’ regular business hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday, but the staff is accessible 24-7 via an answering service. Info: 623551-0515, northvalleywatersolutions.com
Other activities at the Maricopa County Home & Garden Show:
• Taste the Desert: A hands-on culinary education and tasting with local food and beverage experts and aficionados. Daily seminars on wine pairing, coffee roasting and brewing, Kombucha, teas and mastering flavor profiles.
• Greenhouse: Wander through an assortment of house plants, cactus, succulents, exotic plants, pottery, terrariums, trees, soil, supplies and décor.
• Handmade headquarters: Sign up for free make-and-take crafts, including customized candles, silk flower arrangements and peyote stich bracelets.
• DIY terrariums: Create your own eye-catching terrarium to bring home.
• DIY bonsai: Receive an introduction to the art of bonsai. The class comes with a terra cotta bonsai pot, pruners and a little book of bonsai.
Free seminars
Contact Christina Fuoco-Karasinski at 480-898-5631 or christina@timeslocalmedia.com
Vacation cabin: Stop by and tour a “move-in ready” high-end vacation cabin, available for rent in Flagstaff.
Ask a master gardener: The University of Arizona Master Gardeners are
highly trained experts. Watch and learn as they discuss and demonstrate the basics of gardening, and how to maximize space.
Exotic plants: Explore a local plant shop’s offering of exotic plants, terrariums, succulents and house plants.
Design Your Backyard Oasis: Free walk-up landscape consultation and take-home design with the landscaping professionals, a value of $350. Bring existing backyard pictures and measurements for a personalized session.
Maricopa County Home & Garden Show
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13, to Sunday, Jan. 15
WHERE: Arizona State Fairgrounds, 1826 W. McDowell Road, Phoenix
COST: $8 general admission; $1 for kids ages 3 to 12; free for children 2 and younger.
Senior morning is 10 a.m. to noon Friday, Jan. 13, when admission is $4 for guests 60 and older. Customer appreciation is $2 admission from 2 to 5 p.m. Friday and Sunday. Military appreciation is $4 admission with valid military ID all three days.
INFO: 602-485-1691, mchomeshows.com
TheFoothillsFocus.com | @TheFoothills.Focus /TheFoothillsFocus For more Business News visit thefoothillsfocus.com 12 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 BUSINESS ••
HAVE BUSINESS NEWS?
The 30th anniversary of the Maricopa County Home & Garden Show will run Friday Jan. 13 to Sunday, Jan. 15 hosted at the Arizona State Fairgrounds. (Maricopa County Home & Garden Show/ Submitted)
The Greenhouse offers patrons the opportunity to wander through a variety of plants, cacti and more. (Submitted)
U-Haul ranks Arizona No. 7 growth state of ’22
BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
Arizona is the No. 7 growth state in America, according to the U-Haul Growth Index analyzing customer moves during 2022. People arriving in Arizona in oneway U-Haul trucks dropped 5% over 2021, while departures fell 4% as overall traffic slowed.
Arizona’s top growth cities are Surprise, Tempe and Goodyear. Other notable net-gain markets include Kingman, Buckeye, Pinetop-Lakeside, Prescott, Anthem, Avondale, Cave Creek, Fort Mohave, Page, Green Valley, Dewey-Humboldt and Sierra Vista. Despite a slightly greater year-overyear drop in arrivals, do-it-yourself movers arriving in the Grand Canyon State still accounted for 50.3% of all one-way U-Haul truck traffic in and out of Arizona (49.7% departures) to keep it a top-10 growth state for the third consecutive year. Arizona ranked fifth among growth states in 2020 and 2021.
“Everyone is pretty much ditching California and coming to Arizona where things are more affordable,” stated Jesse Ashdown, U-Haul Company of Northwest Phoenix president. “The moderate cost of living and job opportunities in Arizona are huge benefits.”
The U-Haul Growth Index is compiled according to the net gain of oneway U-Haul trucks arriving in a city or state, versus departing from that city or state, in a calendar year. Migration trends data is compiled from more than 2 million one-way U-Haul truck transactions that occur annually across the United States and Canada.
Texas paced the nation in growth for the fifth time since 2016, while Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia round out the top five growth states. California ranks 50th and Illinois 49th for the third year in a row, indicating those states saw the largest net losses of one-way U-Haul trucks.
Sonoran
A unique gathering of local and regional artists and craftsmen exhibiting throughout the open-air plaza. Patrons enjoy patio dining and live music, while strolling through the Village - A place where Art meets the West.
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 13 BUSINESS ••
623-734-6526
www.vermillionpromotions.com
People arriving in Arizona in one-way U-Haul trucks dropped 5% over 2021, while departures fell 4% as overall traffic slowed. (U-Haul/Submitted)
14 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 •• Now in our 38th year! ARIZONA’S LONGEST-RUNNING EXPO IS HERE! Healthcare | Retirement Living Financial|Leisure | Home Repair Education and More... (480) 898-6500 • www.seniorexpos.com(480)959-1566 Lots of Prizes andINCLUDINGGiveaways a $100 CASHEveryDRAWING Hour! FREE PARKING! FREE ENTRY! Bag Sponsor Entertainment Sponsor Gold Sponsor MS. SENIOR EntertainmentARIZONA by Monday, January 23rd 9am - 1pm Sundial Recreation Center 14801 North 103rd Ave., Sun City, AZ 85351
Mars and Venus: A tale of two views
CHURCH COMMUNITY CONNECTION
Pastor Ed Delph Foothills Focus Columnist
Here’s a mind-popping story
I found on the internet with two perspectives — one coming from Venus (the feminine perspective) and the other from Mars (the masculine perspective). The story is called The Wife’s Diary and The Husband’s Diary.
The Wife’s Diary
“Tonight, I thought my husband was acting weird. We had made plans to meet at a nice restaurant for dinner. I was shopping with my friends all day, so I thought he was upset that I was a bit late, but he didn’t comment. Our conversation wasn’t flowing, so I suggested we go somewhere quiet to talk. He agreed, but he didn’t say much.
“I asked him what was wrong; He said, ‘Nothing.’ I asked him if it was my fault that he was upset. He said he wasn’t upset, that it had nothing to do with me and not to worry about it. On the way home, I told him that I loved him. He smiled slightly and kept driving. I can’t explain his behavior. I don’t know why he didn’t say, ‘I love you, too.’
When we got home, I felt I had lost him completely, as if he wanted nothing to do with me anymore. He just sat there quietly and watched television. He continued to seem distant and absent. Finally, with silence, I decided to go to bed. About 15 minutes later, he came to bed. But I still felt he was distracted, and his thoughts were elsewhere. Finally, he fell asleep; I cried. I don’t know what to do. I’m almost sure that his
thoughts are with someone else. My life is a disaster.”
The Husband’s Diary
“A 2-foot putt! Who the ‘!*#%’ misses a 2-foot putt?” I’ve been there, done that, got the T-shirt.
Years ago, my wife Becky and I had a similar Venus/Mars story to the wife and husband story. At that time, we were selling our home and our home was in escrow. Becky was worried because we hadn’t found a new home. Here is what she posted on her Facebook page about how she was feeling.
“Well, as of last night, we have a contract on our house. We haven’t found a house to move to yet, so I’m in bed with my mind racing, thinking, ‘OK, our daughter said we could stay with them, or we could stay with Ed’s dad, but Ed needs the internet for his work. And where will we put all our furniture, belongings, and the rest of our stuff? I must pack. Where am I going to find the time and energy?’ So, I couldn’t fall asleep. I got up, did some stuff, and finally fell asleep sometime after 2 a.m.
“Today Ed and I were sitting in the family room, and Ed was strangely quiet, so I assumed he was thinking about our move. So, I said, ‘Whatcha thinkin?’ He says, ‘I can’t believe Jeff Gordon blew that NASCAR race!’ So, I replied, ‘Oh my gosh, you are such a guy!’”
She got 37 likes and 20 comments in a few hours (mostly from citizens of Venus).
The Venus/Mars phenomenon occurs with God and human beings, too. But it’s not Venus and Mars. It’s heaven and Earth.
Our Diary
“God, my world’s falling apart, things are terrible, everything is out of control, I can’t cope and there’s no hope. Things will never change. Someone else got my promotion, and I won’t recover from this. I’m falling apart, the bill collectors are coming, my kids are out of control,” and all the other stuff we feel, think, and say in times of crisis and ambiguity.
God’s Diary
“Yes, I understand the way you feel. This is God! I will be handling all your problems today. I will not need your help. So, have a good day.” In a Venus/Mars sense, God is such a guy!
My pastor friend, John Lynch, has a great quote from his new On My Best Day series, which captures heaven’s perspective of life. “On my best day, I’m trusting God’s perfect love, unique intention, endless forgiveness and mistake-free care, giving me peace, purpose, joy and safety on even my toughest days.” That couldn’t be said better or more accurately. That’s trust in action. But, of course, the best way to have your best day is this perspective, “I don’t know what the future holds, but I do know who holds the future.”
By the way, I never mentioned how Becky’s and my home dilemma turned out. So, here we were, our home in escrow, with no place to go without heaps of logistics and work. A few days later, I’m looking at houses on the internet, discovering a home for sale. I say to Becky, “Hey, this house looks OK. Let’s check it out.” We go to the house, along with 20 other people looking at it, and it’s
perfect for us. What happened then? The outcome was the same day our home for sale closed escrow, we closed escrow on our new home and moved in. It was seamless. Becky skipped as a calf let out of a stall. Please don’t think that I’m suggesting beautiful Becky looks like a calf. It’s a Biblical concept. (I suppose a calf sounds better than a cow).
Now, picture me like Snoopy in Peanuts, lying on top of his doghouse on my best day saying to myself, “Oh, the things one must do when writing articles in today’s world.”
Ed Delph is a noted author of 10 books, as well as a pastor, teacher, former business owner and speaker. He has traveled extensively, having been to more than 100 countries. He is president of NationStrategy, a nonprofit organization involved in uplifting and transforming communities worldwide. For more information, see nationstrategy.com. He may be contacted at nationstrategy@cs.com.
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 15 FEATURES ••
TheFoothillsFocus.com | @TheFoothills.Focus /TheFoothillsFocus For more features visit thefoothillsfocus.com
Stories appeal to bluesman Tommy Castro
BY BILL FORMANI Foothills Focus Contributing Writer
From the Who’s “Tommy” and “Quadrophenia” to Green Day’s “American Idiot” and Beyonce’s “Lemonade,” the pop music world has produced more than its fair share of rock operas and concept albums.
But unless you count Muddy Waters’ “Electric Mud” — a psychedelic blues project that producer Marshall Chess described as “a concept album like David Bowie being Ziggy Stardust” — blues artists have steered clear of all of that.
When Tommy Castro first hit upon the idea of writing and recording a blues opera — or, as he puts it, “sort of a blues opera” — he was surprised that no one had thought to do it before. Soon, the six-time Blues Music Award winner was in the studio with Nashville producer Tom Hambridge, co-writing and recording tracks like “Child Don’t Go,” “Women, Drugs and Alcohol” and “I Want to Go Back Home” for a concept album about an aspiring guitarist who leaves the family farm in search of success, gives in to the temptations of life on the road, and realizes that there is, in fact, no place like home.
“Tommy Castro Presents a Bluesman Came to Town” — which came out in September 2021 on Alligator Records and debuted at No. 2 on the “Billboard” magazine Blues Chart — may not have the most original plotline, but that wasn’t really the point.
“I knew it wasn’t going to be as epic
as, you know, the Who’s ‘Tommy’ or ‘The Wall’ (by Pink Floyd) or ‘American Idiot,’ where people had giant recording budgets and all kinds of amazing creativity,” said the soulful singer and guitarist in a
recent phone interview.
“But the idea of telling a story from the beginning to the end, that appealed to me. I kicked the idea around with the record label, and then I talked to my producer, who got really excited about the concept. So that’s how it came about, and then it was just a matter of doing it and hoping it was good.”
“A Bluesman Came to Town” is also a departure for Castro because his band The Painkillers doesn’t play on it. “I usually prefer to use my own band — I’ve done that on 18 out of 19 records — because they’re out on the road with me doing all the hard work,” said Castro. “But Tom Hambridge wanted to use his studio guys, and he’s kind of a big deal. He’s got a few Grammys under his belt,
and he’s worked on the last few Buddy Guy albums, as well as with ZZ Top, George Thorogood, Johnny Winter and Joe Bonamassa, you know, a lot of people. So, I kind of followed his lead on this album.”
Now that music venues have reopened, Castro and the Painkillers have returned to the more than 150 shows per year schedule that the San Jose native has maintained for most of the past four decades. Along the way, he’s earned a loyal fan base as well as the respect of artists like John Lee Hooker, who did his final session on Castro’s “Guilty of Love” album. All of which still amazes him.
“Where I grew up was a notch or two below a working-class neighborhood, and nobody there was going to college or getting music lessons or any of that stuff,” said the self-taught guitarist, who spent his early years playing along to records by his favorite blues artists.
“I tend to like the slower guys — like Michael Bloomfield, B.B. King, Albert King, Muddy Waters and Elmore James — because I could figure out what they were doing,” he said.
As time went on, Castro realized he was going to be making his living playing music. He tried taking guitar lessons and studied music theory. “But it was too late,” he said. “I’d already learned to play the way I did, and I couldn’t really switch over to the proper way of doing it.
“I still work on my guitar technique every day, trying to learn something new, even if it’s just some new licks,” said Castro. “But I’m no virtuoso, I’m no Bonamassa, I’m not that kind of guitarist. I’m more of a cross between John Lee Hooker and, I don’t know, Michael Bloomfield, maybe. Somewhere in there. I kind of just play the way I play, and it works for me, you know?”
Tommy Castro and the Painkillers
WHEN: 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 18
WHERE: Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Boulevard, Phoenix
COST: Tickets start at $44.50
INFO: 480-478-6000, mim.org
16 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 FEATURES ••
Tommy Castro and the Painkillers hit the Musical Instrument Museum stage on Wednesday, Jan. 18.
(Victoria Smith/Contributor)
Cave Creek Museum features local artists
BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
This season, the Cave Creek Museum is featuring the work of several artists in the community.
The organization is celebrating a collection of art accrued through the generosity of donors this year. According to Evelyn Johnson, the museum’s executive director,
Cave Creek Museum has been proud to offer a venue featuring a single Cave Creek artist at a time.
Beth Zink, whose art will be on display through Jan. 22, has enjoyed teaching painting to adults for more than 20 years. She has a Bachelor of the Arts from Bethany College and studied drawing and painting at the graduate level.
Zink’s paintings hang in numerous private and corporate collections, hospitals, restaurants and country clubs across the country.
The museum will also be showcasing photographer Jerry Sieve, who captures the colorful, sculpted landscapes of the desert southwest. His work will be on display from Jan. 25 to May 31.
The mission of the 52-year-old museum is
to preserve the artifacts of the prehistory, history, culture and legacy of the Cave Creek Mining District and the Cave Creek and Carefree foothills area through education, research and interpretive exhibits.
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 17 FEATURES ••
1720 E DEER VALLEY RD., #104 Carpet • Tile • Grout • Upholstery • Air Duct Cleaning • Commercial & Residential Cleaning We only have one care. It’s Your Satisfaction. ANY 3 ROOMS Up to 600 sq. ft. total $9900 Prices Include: Truck Mounted Units • Pretreat Vacuum • Optical Brightener • General Soil Removal Also Available: Carpet Stretching • Carpet Repair BUSY LIFE? Call Today! Clean Today! ANY 5 ROOMS Up to 975 sq. ft. total Reg. $149.00 $13900 Reg. $189.99 Mention West Valley View for an Exclusive Offer! VALLEYWIDE SERVICE • 623-218-7044 PNPOneCareCleaning.com • pnponecarecleaningtoday@protonmail.com www.TheFoothillsFocus.com See MORE online! Cave Creek Museum 6140 E. Skyline Drive, Cave Creek 480-488-2764, cavecreekmuseum.org Beth Zink has taught painting to adults for over 20 years and has studied drawing and painting at the graduate level. Her art will be on display through Jan. 22. (Cave Creek Museum/Submitted) The work of landscape
will be featured from Jan. 25 to
(Cave
photographer Jerry Sieve
May 31 at the
Cave Creek Museum.
Creek Museum/Submitted)
The Foothills Focus publishes on Wednesday. The weekly calendar — a listing of entertainment events such as concerts, theatrical performances, events for schools, churches, county parks and nonprofit groups — runs every issue.
Events must be open to the public to be considered and generally must be held within the Foothills Focus coverage area. Events such as concerts and theatrical performances that fall outside the Foothills Focus circulation area will be considered because there are no concert halls or theater venues within our boundaries.
Weekly calendar items print on a space-available basis. The only way to guarantee that an item will print is to purchase an advertisement.
Submissions must reach our office by 4 p.m. Wednesday to be considered for the following Wednesday publication. Submissions must be in writing and may be emailed to Christina Fuoco-Karasinski, christina@ timespublications.com.
Live Music at Janey’s Coffeehouse
NIGHTLY
Come listen to live music every night at Janey’s Coffeehouse, performed by a variety of talented local artists. New talent is encouraged to come by and sign up to perform. This week, check out Glade Wilson, Pop Top, Bill Dutcher, Jeremy Graham and Darryl Scotti.
Janey’s Coffeehouse, 6602 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., free admission, cavecreekazmusic.com
The Healing Pathway
JAN. 12
Grief is a universal feeling among all humans,
regardless of who they are and where they’ve come from. This group seeks to bring comfort to those who have lost someone important to them, and helps participants cope through mutual interaction, supportive conversation and practical tools.
Desert Foothills Library, 38443 N. School House Road, Cave Creek, 9:30 to 11 a.m., free admission, 480-488-2286, dfla.org
Friday Night Country Swing Dance Party Featuring Silver Sage Band
JAN. 13
Join the eager Silver Sage Band as they play the night away. Bring your dancing boots and spend time with family and friends.
Harold’s Cave Creek Corral, 6895 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 8:30 p.m., no cover charge, 480-488-1906, haroldscorral.com
Sonoran Fine Art Festival
JAN. 13 TO JAN. 15
With over a hundred artists and talented craftsmen out showing off their fine art, the Sonoran Fine Art Festival features something for everyone. The festival also features wine, music, food and gourmet chocolates all available from the many restaurants and food trucks across the festival grounds.
Stagecoach Village, 7100 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., free admission, vermillionpromotions.com/
Kiwanis Family Fun Day with Wild at Heart
JAN. 15
Bring the whole family to learn more about the majesty of raptors for free thanks to Wild at Heart, a raptor rescue and education group. Learn about the importance of raptors in the ecosystem, as well as their diet and how to care for an injured raptor from the wild.
Cave Creek Museum, 6140 E. Skyline Drive, Cave Creek, 2 to 4 p.m., free, 480488-2764 cavecreekmuseum.org
Tech Tuesday Series: iPhone Tips (You Never Knew)
JAN. 17
Apple products can be difficult to get a handle on without help. Learn more about the important way the iPhone works, as well as a few tips and tricks that are difficult to figure out when not deliberately told by someone.
Desert Foothills Library, 38443 N. School House Road, Cave Creek, 3 to 4 p.m., free, 480-488-2286, dfla.org
Free Couples Dance Lessons
JAN. 19
Learn how to line dance to country music with significant others, friends or alone. Anyone from beginners to seasoned dancers are encouraged to swing by and learn the ropes.
Buffalo Chip Saloon and Steakhouse, 6823 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 7 to 10 p.m., free, buffalochipsaloon.com
Cornhole Tournament for Triple R Horse Rescue
JAN. 21
Grab your partner and throw some bags to support the Triple R Horse Rescue. The tournament comes in two tiers, a casual social tournament and a bigger advanced bracket for the pros.
Harold’s Cave Creek Corral, 6895 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 1 to 6 p.m., $50 entry fee, 480-488-1906, haroldscorral. com
The Boulders at The Boulders Aren’t Really Boulders
JAN. 21
Learn more about the geology of the Desert Foothills. Learn what the mysterious boulders in the area really are, as well as why Black Mountain is black. Figure out what strange minerals are lurking underground, as well as why saguaro cactuses mostly grow on the west slope.
Cave Creek Museum, 6140 E. Skyline Drive, Cave Creek, 2 to 3:30 p.m., $10 for nonmembers, free for members, 480488-2764 cavecreekmuseum.org
Carefree Fine Art & Wine Festival
JAN. 20 TO JAN. 22
Enjoy fine wine and high-class art together in one place in the heart of Carefree. With over 150 juried artisans coming from all over the U.S., the festival prides itself on variety and quality. Visitors are encouraged to check out the paintings, watercolor works, life-sized sculptures, hand-blown glass, jewelry and photography.
Carefree Town Center, 101 Easy Street, Carefree, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., $5 cash admission, thunderbirdartists.com
Cave Creek Indian Market
JAN. 22 TO JAN. 24
Enjoy an open-air market celebrating the Native American arts. Either come by to pick up all kinds of interesting art or souvenirs, or just take a look around, listen to the music and learn more about the native history of Cave Creek.
Stagecoach Village, 7100 E. Cave Creek Road, Cave Creek, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., free, onlineartfestival.com/
18 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 FEATURES ••
CAVE CREEK NEW YORK BAGELS N’ BIALYS Open Everyday 6:30am-3pm Village Plaza • 4722 E. Cactus • Just East of Tatum • 602-358-7199 www.nybbaz.com Up to $13.00 value. May not be combined with any other offers or discounts. Valid Mon-Fri only. Expires 2/28/23.
Youth-led nonprofit supports active duty, veterans
BY SUMMER AGUIRRE Foothills Focus Staff Writer
Veterans and deployed heroes will find support in Anthem, where the nonprofit Youth for Troops works tirelessly to help those who serve our country.
Youth for Troops’ mission is to inspire patriotism and encourage youth and families to volunteer on behalf of veterans, service members and their relatives through community service, education and advocacy. The organization is in its fifth year of operation, and continues to grow and reach more of the military community.
“We’ve been very fortunate for how the kids structured this nonprofit and started it,” said Tonya Piatt, Youth for Troops president.
“It’s building community relationships all around the world, and that’s a really unique thing. To think that what we’re doing right here in the North Valley — driving around to different schools, organizations and businesses — we’re not only impacting locally with great feelings and great experiences, we’re impacting globally.”
Youth for Troops is led by a youth board consisting of the organization’s founders, the Piatt and Hoffa families’ six children, who spearhead events, business visits and speeches and presentations. An adult advisory board provides assistance.
The organization’s work consists of preparing care packages for deployed troops, assembling plastic mats for homeless veterans, hosting box decoration and appreciation card drives, and organizing events for local veteran groups and chil-
dren of veterans in crisis.
Their efforts are supported by volunteers and donations. Hundreds of community members of all ages volunteer their time and energy to events each month, and the organization fosters strong relationships with local schools that supply items for care packages.
YOUTH
“When you go to our events, it is awesome because you see active duty (military) working alongside World War II and Vietnam veterans working with Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, church groups, school groups, all just coming together and getting to know each other,” said Youth for Troops founder Heather Piatt, 20.
“When you walk in the room and you see dozens of different organizations working together and the youth stepping up and getting involved, that’s an accomplishment every time. It’s not easy to pull everyone together like that, but it’s really rewarding.”
Youth for Troops founder Hannah Piatt, 17, shared that the group receives many “uplifting” letters from deployed troops explaining just how much of an impact the care packages make.
She recalled an encounter at an event with a man whose deployed son was opening one of their packages that very moment. Months later, they met the man’s son and his family when he returned to the U.S.
“He brought back these cards that were in the care packages that were written to him from little kids around the Anthem area who attended our events, as well as his favorite items in the care packages,” she said. “He also brought back this American flag that flew over NATO Headquarters on
May 4, so we keep that flag around at all of our events.”
“(It was nice) to actually have a name and face, and to actually sit there and talk to him for a while and meet his family,” she added. “That’s probably one of my favorite moments from Youth for Troops that we’ve had so far.”
The care packages not only reach U.S. troops, but allied forces, as well.
“Sometimes they get subdivided out,” said Tonya. “I know one of our people who received our boxes let us know that he couldn’t use everything in the box, so he takes it out with him when they’re on patrol and he gives it to the kids they run into.”
Youth for Troops’ 2022 Mission Report revealed that it garnered its highest numbers last year, with 3,928 shifts totaling 12,149 hours. Its mission was shared with approximately 31,830 people across events, schools, businesses and presentations, as well as through articles and interviews.
“(Over the past five to six years) we have sent over 9,000 care packages — 5,557 is what we’re at for total shipments. We’ve raised a little over $143,000 to pay for shipping expenses, and we’ve made almost 750 plastic mats so far. So it was a good year
for us,” said Heather.
“The total community service hours since they started this organization in 2017 is nearing 45,000 hours of people serving together, and we’ll hit that in the next few months,” added Tonya. “It’s just amazing to me that something that six kids here in the North Valley started is having such a great impact.”
The Piatt and Hoffa families were already active volunteers in the Anthem community when their six kids established Youth for Troops nearly six years ago.
Upon seeing a lack of youth volunteers and a need for more organizations allowing volunteers under the age of 16, the families’ children were inspired to launch the organization. They wanted to give youth who were also interested in getting involved in their communities the opportunity to do so and show them that they can make a difference at any age.
The group chose to support the military community in particular to help educate others about how to best help deployed troops and the struggles that veterans endure once out of the service.
TheFoothillsFocus.com
more
News visit thefoothillsfocus.com
@TheFoothills.Focus /TheFoothillsFocus For
Youth
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 19 YOUTH ••
see TROOPS page 20
2022 was the nonprofit Youth for the Troops’ most successful year yet. (Youth for Troops/Submitted)
“I think it’s really important to just continue the tradition of trying to inspire patriotism in the youth of our community,” said Heather. “I think it still is dwindling in this day and age.”
The organization is not short on opportunities to further help the active duty and veteran communities, and its members are confident that they will exceed last year’s success.
Their goals for the new year include raising $80,000 to support all Youth for Troops’ projects, shipping an additional 2,400 care packages and delivering a total of 800 plastic mats by the end of 2023.
Its members are also aiming to acquire a permanent space by Easter to better serve North Valley’s service members.
“Hopefully we’ll be able to get groups to come to us and we can do birthday parties, business get-togethers and field trips, stuff like that,” said Heather. “They can come to us and we’ll have a place where they can get to hang out, eat lunch and then they can pack care packages and make some plastic mats.”
Youth for Troops has been ap -
proached by corporations to work on team building, as well, and its members expressed their excitement at the opportunity to partner with them and help their employees and staff support the organization, troops and veterans.
As events season approaches in the Valley, the organization is preparing for several big military-focused outreach opportunities to go in tandem with the Super Bowl, Scottsdale Arabian Horse Show and other events.
Youth for Troops will be participating in the 11th Annual Shred-aThon from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Jan. 21 in front of Freeman Income Tax Service in Anthem. Those looking to safely discard old and unwanted documents can drop off up to four banker size boxes. Youth for Troops volunteers will help unload documents from vehicles.
The event is free, but volunteers will accept money donations to support their mission, which will all go toward helping ship care packages to deployed troops.
Throughout the year, the organization also hosts numerous monthly events. These include First Friday Coffee with veterans, Anthem Cars and Coffee Car Show every first Saturday, care package preparation on
second Mondays and plastic mat assembly meetings on third Tuesdays.
Those interested in further helping Youth for Troops continue its mission can share information with others and become a sponsor by donating $100 or more. Youth for Troops can also be chosen as your charity of choice with Fry’s and AmazonSmile, and supported through Walmart purchases.
With the community’s support, the organization can send more packages to deployed troops, provide additional service projects for volunteers of all ages, inspire patriotism through meaningful service experiences, and raise morale and show appreciation to deployed heroes.
Youth for Troops
youth4troops@gmail.com youthfortroops.org
20 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 YOUTH ••
The Anthem-based Youth for Troops nonprofit organization was established in April 2017 by the Piatt and Hoffa families. Its mission is to inspire patriotism and encourage youth and families to volunteer on behalf of veterans, service members and their relatives through community service, education and advocacy. (Youth for Troops/Submitted)
Youth for Troops’ work consists of preparing care packages for deployed troops, assembling plastic mats for homeless veterans, hosting box decoration and appreciation card drives, and organizing events for local veteran groups and children of veterans in crisis. (Youth for Troops/Submitted)
TROOPS from page 19
Youth for Troops is led by a youth board consisting of the six founding members, with an accompanying adult advisory board. They receive hundreds of community volunteers at their events every month. (Youth for Troops/Submitted)
Whether sponsored by colleges, government job agencies or professional organizations, career fairs are an opportunity to meet with employers, learn about job openings and companies, schedule interviews and maybe even go home with a job.
PREPARING FOR A CAREER FAIR
The first thing you need to do is decide what you want from the fair. Are you merely collecting information? Are you hoping to get a job while there? Are you planning to market yourself?
Dress for the job you want. If you’re
going to a career fair that is hiring for a manufacturing job, it may be acceptable to wear clean jeans and a shirt. For a professional job, a business suit is more appropriate. It is always better to be overdressed than underdressed. While a career fair for artistic/design and creative jobs might allow for more leeway, generally you want to dress conservatively.
Get a list of who will be at the career fair and research them. This helps you plan who you want to see. This also lets you spend your limited time with each recruiter talking about your qualifications rather than having to learn their basic information.
Prepare questions to ask about a job opening — but avoid such things as pay rate or benefits. What are some good questions? Ask things like the average tenure of employees at the organization, what sort of attributes are essential to success in the organiza-
tion, or what accomplishments are valued and rewarded in the organization. Prepare your elevator speech or commercial. Introduce yourself in 30 seconds and communicate what you are looking for and why you are interested in a job provider. Practice before you go. The ASHA Career Portal recommends including who you are, what your passion is, what your purpose is and the skills you have to achieve it, and what your something “extra” is.
PACKING FOR A FAIR
Print several copies of the strongest version you have of your resume, one designed to appeal to the type of companies that will be at the career fair.
Other things to take include a pen, notepad and breath mints. Don’t chew gum. Carry a portfolio or a briefcase.
AT THE FAIR
Always behave professionally—
whether you are in the restroom, the elevator or standing in front of a booth. You never know who is going to see or hear you.
Project confidence. Use a strong handshake, make eye contact and speak in a clear and natural voice. Be aware of your body language and project the image of a professional.
AFTER THE FAIR
Send thank-you letters to those employers that you have a high amount of interest in, especially if you gave them a resume. Identify the jobs you are interested in and if you didn’t give them a resume at the fair, follow up with a cover letter and resume, mentioning that you met a representative.
Update your resume with anything you learned that better reflects your qualifications.
LOCAL JOBS. LOCAL PEOPLE.
JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG
THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 | JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG / JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG / JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG / JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG / JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG / JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG 21
jobs.phoenix.org 480-898-6465 •• CALL TO ADVERTISE 480-898-6465 NOW HIRING
JOB SEEKERS
CAVE CREEK UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT JOB FAIR 2023 FIND OUT MORE: JANUARY 25 FEBRUARY 21 MARCH 23 BESTOF 2022 4 PM - 7 PM Come work for the BEST SCHOOL DISTRICT in the North Valley! We are seeking Pre-K - 12th grade teachers including special education and elective areas. CCUSD DISTRICT OFFICE 33016 N. 60TH ST SCOTTSDALE, AZ 85262 Career fairs are a time-honored way of bringing many employers and job seekers together at once. Find a Job at a Career Fair
22 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 CLASSIFIEDS •• Ahwatukee Chandler Gilbert Glendale Mesa North Valley Peoria Phoenix SanTan Scottsdale Queen Creek West Valley To Advertise Call: 480-898-6500 or email Class@TimesLocalMedia.com CLASSIFIEDS.PHOENIX.ORG DONALDSON DRYWALL Cave creek Resident Since 1984 Licensed Bonded Insured ROC #289594 Family Owned & Operated 480-861-1375 FREE ESTIMATES • Water Damage • TV Niche Changes • Texture Match • Repairs/Remodels • New construction DRYWALL DUKES EXCAVATING ROC KA 302118 General Contractor JIM DUKES 623.606.8411 515 E. Carefree Hwy, #44, Phoenix, AZ 85085 dukesexcavatinginc@gmail.com SEPTIC SYSTEMS ◆ COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL CONVENTIONAL, ALTERNATIVE SEWER, STORM DRAIN & RETENTION SITE DEVELOPMENT ◆ UTILITIES EXCAVATING KIB EXCAVATING Your Septic System Experts 602.319.1089 Licensed • Bonded • Insured COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL Mobile Complete Septic Systems • Conventional & Alternative and Repairs Engineered Pads • Site Prep • Grading • Hard Digs Utilities • Trucking/Hauling • Driveways (Gravel, Dirt and Rock) EXCAVATING Check for more jobs every day! JOBS.PHOENIX.ORG Quality Prices • Quality Work Free Estimates ROC 204048 & ROC 341586 Licensed • Bonded • Insured Greg Macho Bus: (602) 618-1489 | Cell: (602) 999-9438 greg@jdhomerepair.com JD’s Home Repair LLC www.jdhomerepair.com • Drywall • Painting • Plumbing • Electrical • Stucco Repair • Roofing • Additions • Remodeling • Home Maintenance • Renovations NORTHRIDGE TAX & ACCOUNTING 35+ years experience Former IRS Auditor Specializing in IRS problems IRS Enrolled Agent Personal & Business TAX PREPARATION 42302 N.Vision Way, #113,Anthem, AZ (Just South of Walmart) 623-551-0552 Anthem Plaza 25% OFF NEW CLIENTS ACCOUNTING FEEL THE Comfort YOU’VE BEEN Missing! HEATING • COOLING • INDOOR AIR QUALITY VETERAN OWNED & OPERATED • ROC#300933 • BONDED & INSURED 602-789-3000 info@azperfectcomfort.com www.azperfectcomfort.com AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING Lifetime Warranty on Workmanship New 3-Ton 14 SEER AC Systems Only $5,995 INSTALLED! New Trane Air Conditioners NO INTEREST FINANCING - 60 MONTHS! QUALITY, VALUE and a GREAT PRICE! Bonded/Insured • ROC #289252 602-805-0703 Plumbing Heating & Air PlumbSmart $49 Seasonal A/C Tune-up! AIR CONDITIONING/HEATING 480-235-6101 www.aboveandbeyondglass.com ROC 233846 & ROC 236899 • Custom Glass • Shower Doors & Enclosures • Window Glass Replacement • Custom Mirrors • Glass Table Tops & Shelves Come and visit our custom glass showroom behind the Dairy Queen in Cave Creek. GLASS/MIRROR Time Keepers Clock Repair HOUSE CALLS Jim Hawkins (602) 643-6479 aztimekeepers.com timekeepersclocks@gmail.com Today’s Treasures, Tomorrow’s Heirlooms HOME SERVICES HOME IMPROVEMENT CALL CLASSIFIEDS 480-898-6465 We'll Get Your Phone to Ring! We Accept: Legal Notices Place your Notice Today Call 623-535-8439 Email your notice to: Legals@TimesLocalMedia com
y e
g e
b
, o
f l y e
s W h a t i t d o e s
e q u i r e u n d e r A R S § 3 2 - 1 1 2 1 A 1 4 ( c ) w w w a z l e g g o v / a r s / 3 2 / 0 1 1 6 5 h t m i s t h a t t h e a d v e r t i s i n g p a r t y , i f n o t p r o pe r l y l i c e n s e d a s a c o n t r a c t o r , d i s c l o s e t h a t f a c t o n a n y form of advertising to the public by including the words "not a licensed contractor" in the advertisement Again, t h i s r e q u i r e m e n t i s i n t e n d e d t o m a k e s u r e t h a t t h e c o nsumer is made aware of the unlicensed status of the individual or company Contractors who advertise and do not d i s c l o s e th e i r u n l i c e n s e d s t a t u s a r e n o t e l i g i b l e f o r t h e h a n d y m a n s e x c e p t i o n R e f e r e n c e : h t t p : / / w w w a z r o c g o v / i n v e s t / l i c e n s e d b y l a w h t m l A s a c o n s u m e r , b e i n g aware of the law is for your protection You can check a business' ROC status: http://www azroc gov/
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 23 CLASSIFIEDS •• Rapid Response! If water runs through it we do it! 602-663-8432 Drain Cleaning Experts, water heaters, disposals, water & sewer lines repaired/replaced. Cobra Plumbing LLC PLUMBING PLUMBING PLUMBERS CHARGE TOO MUCH! FREE Service Calls + FREE Estimates Water Heaters Installed - $999 Unclog Drains - $49 10% OFF All Water Puri cation Systems Voted #1 Plumber 3 Years In A Row OVER 1,000 5-STAR REVIEWS Bonded/Insured • ROC #223709 602-805-0702 IRRIGATION Irrigation & Landscape ROC#215280 623-203-7717 est. 2002 ~ Anthem, Arizona Install • Repair • Replace LANDSCAPE DESIGN Care Affordable! JOE 480-703-6686 Serving Cave Creek for 40 years • We Spread Rock • Sprinkler Repair • Same Day Service LANDSCAPE DESIGN 623-465-2546 DESIGN CREATE MAINTAIN ROC #166390 iddingsandsons.com LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE North Valley Landscaping Quality you deserve for a great price you can a ord. 480-388-9442 Call Brian ✔ Yard Clean-ups ✔ Maintenance ✔ Tree trimming ✔ Water features ✔ Irrigation / Repair FREE ESTIMATES! ROOFING Almeida Roofing Inc. All Types of Roofing www.almeidaroofing.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured • ROC #215758 602-743-3175 Free Estimates & Inspections • Tile • Shingles Foam • Coatings • Modified Bitumen • New Roof Repairs • Reroofs ROOFING PhillipsRoofing.org PhillipsRoofing@cox.net PHILLIPS ROOFING LLC Family Owned and Operated 43 Years Experience in Arizona commercial and residential Licensed 2006 ROC 223367 Bonded Insured 623-873-1626 Free Estimates Monday through Saturday ROOFING Serving All Types of Roofing: • Tiles & Shingles • Installation • Repair • Re-Roofing FREE ESTIMATES sunlandroofingllc@gmail.com 602-471-2346 Clean, Prompt, Friendly and Professional Service Licensed Bonded Insured ROC#341316 855-401-1184 ASK US HOW TO GET THE AMAZING iPHONE® 11 FOR $0 WHEN YOU SWITCH TO AT&T Find out how to get our most popular phones, call now! © 2020 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T and the Globe logo are registered trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. NOTICE TO READERS: M o s t s e r v i c e a d v e r t i s e r s h a v e a n R O C # o r " N o t a l icensed contractor" in their ad, this is in accordance to the A Z s t a t e l a w A r i z o n a R e g i s t r a r o
C o n t r a c t o r s
R O C ) :
advertising requirements
the statute does
vent anyone from
ad
f
(
The
of
not pre-
placing an
in the
l l ow p a
s
n
u s i n e s s c a r d s , o r o n
r
r
24 THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | JANUARY 11, 2023 •• BEST JEWELRY STORE - ANDBEST CUSTOMER SERVICE BESTOF 2022