The Mesa Tribune - Zone 1 - 05.02.2021

Page 1

MPS mask furor / P. 14

Chandler of�icer slain / P.10 An edition of the East Valley Tribune

Mesa a leader in pedestrian deaths

INSIDE

This Week

NEWS .......................

Sunday, May 2, 2021

FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | TheMesaTribune.com

BY TOM SCANLON Tribune Managing Editor

6

Colorado River warning no threat here.

BUSINESS ................ 20 New BBQ restaurant opens downtown.

SPORTS ................... 26

Ashtin Webb has learned from adversity. COMMUNITY ............................... 17 BUSINESS ..................................... 20 OPINION .. ..................................... 24 SPORTS ........................................ 26 GET OUT ...................................... 28 PUZZLES ...................................... 29 CLASSIFIED ................................. 30 Zone 1

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olice reports tell the chilling story, in bland language: “Unit two was northbound on South Dobson Road just south of Southern Avenue in lane number two. Unit one, a pedestrian, was crossing in the crosswalk against the light from west to east. “This crosswalk has a traf�ic light but the

Despite Google’s absence, ‘Industrial Mesa’ in bloom

signal was green for northbound traf�ic. The pedestrian crossed the street in the darkness of night and was struck by unit two going northbound. “The pedestrian was taken to Banner Desert Hospital where he succumbed to his injuries.” The average road vehicle weighs about 4,000 pounds with top speeds of around 120 mph. The average weight of a pedestrian is around 181 pounds with top walking speeds of around 4 mph.

When the two meet, the result is lopsided and horrible. Vehicle vs. pedestrian collisions are, said Mesa Police Department Sgt. Greg Loewenhagen, “very brutal, very gory. “When vehicles weighing between 3,000 to 8,000 pounds hit a human being, it does massive damage.” The good news in Mesa: As of Thursday, no

Heroes' award

��� PEDESTRIANS ���� 11

BY TOM SCANLON Tribune Managing Editor

L

ike spring �lowers popping up in gardens and lots around town, what can be called “Industrial Mesa” is in bloom. In the southeastern corner of the city, big chunks of land remain undeveloped – but not for long. Development plans zipped through approval phases for multiple projects that will throw up huge warehouses and other industrial buildings. Mayor John Giles, Economic Development Director William Jabjiniak and others have joked about “landing some big �ish” with recent deals. Google, the prized marlin, has been hard to reel in.

��� INDUSTRIAL ���� 3

Three generations of military service were honored with Quilts of Valor at Fountain of the Sun in Mesa last week. Among the 13 veterans honored were World War II bomber pilot Henry Darlington, flanked by his grandson Erick Valdes, left, and son-in-law Jim Siefert, who both served as well. See the story on page 17. (Pablo Robles/Tribune Staff Photographer)

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