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Big apartment project / P. 6
Are kids tested too much? / P. 3
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
INSIDE
This Week
COMMUNITY......... 1 5 Mesa kid plays young villain on popular series.
A canal runs through it: city site’s new challenge BY SCOTT SHUMAKER Tribune Staff Writer
A
ll the buildings on a city-owned vacant lot near downtown Mesa have been cleared in preparation for longsought development, but an archaeological consultant thinks the site could still hold Mesa history and prehistory underground. As part of city development partner Miravista Holdings’ master planning process for the development of the so-called Trans-
form 17 site, Phoenix-based archaeology firm PaleoWest reviewed historic documentation of the area and issued a report on the site’s historical features. PaleoWest tried to assess what cultural resources might still exist beneath the lot before construction crews potentially disturb it if the city and Miravista sign off on a final development agreement in August for the 27-acre site just north of Main Street near Phoenix Marriott Mesa.
Welcome respite
Land deals tighten Gateway Airport market.
see ARCHAEOLOGY page 10
BY SCOTT SHUMAKER Tribune Staff Writer
SPORTS................ 2 8
COMMUNITY................................. 15 BUSINESS....................................... 18 HEALTH & WELLNESS................ 20 OPINION......................................... 26 SPORTS........................................... 28 GET OUT......................................... 30 CLASSIFIED.................................... 34
It studied historic maps and scoured databases of previous archaeological and historic research within the site and a half-mile radius around it. PaleoWest believes its study is the first cultural resource survey of the Transform 17 site, which is within the original Mesa townsite and less than a mile from the Mesa Grande pueblo. While the surface was modified by the
Mesa Police now end chases by ropin' vehicles
BUSINESS.............. 1 8
Ukraine invasion worries Russian player in Mesa.
Sunday, April 17, 2022
FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | TheMesaTribune.com
Carol Perry is overcome with emotion as she and her partner Jess “Jac” Conant talk with Linda Lotz, chief development officer for oncology at Banner Health, inside the home that The Christopher Todd Communities Built By Taylor Morrison donated for a year to the healthcare system in the companies’ new development on Ellsworth Road near University Drive. The home will be used by out-of-area patients Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center during treatment. For the story, see today’s Health and Wellness section on page 20. (David Minton/Tribune Staff Photographer)
W
hen a fleeing vehicle must be stopped because it poses a serious danger to the public, Mesa and other police departments’ go-to tool has been a well-placed nudge to the rear of the vehicle, causing the suspect car spin out and hopefully come to a stop. The so-called Pursuit Intervention Technique, or PIT maneuver, often works, but it carries significant safety risks for all involved. Across the country, bumped cars sometimes careen wildly from the roadway, or start rolling, posing a hazard to the suspect, passengers and bystanders. Mesa PD uses PIT, but officials are not completely satisfied with the risks of the technique.
see GRAPPLER page 4
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