MESA TRIBUNE SOUTHEAST, JULY 31, 2022

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Lehi apartment turmoil/ P. 4

MPS' money problem'/ P. 3

An edition of the East Valley Tribune

INSIDE

2 hot Mesa Council races head to wire

BY SCOTT SHUMAKER Tribune Staff Writer

COMMUNITY .......... 16 Mesa actress fashions cabaret autobiography.

BUSINESS ................ 20 EV business cleans trash cans.

GETOUT ....................... 25 Mesa thespians shine in new musical

COMMUNITY .............................. 16 BUSINESS ................................... 20 OPINION ..................................... 22 SPORTS ...................................... 24 GET OUT ...................................... 25 CLASSIFIED ............................... 28 ZONE 2

Sunday, July 31, 2022

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

T

hree Mesa City Council seats are up for grabs in Tuesday’s Primary Election but voters will be deciding only two of them. The third race already is resolved as the District 5 seat drew only one candidate, corporate lawyer and former Las Sendas HOA board member Alicia Goforth. The deadline to mail in early ballots has

passed, but voters can drop off their early ballot at any early voting location, any ballot drop box, or any Election Day voting location by 7 p.m. on Aug. 2. Vote Centers for inperson voting on Election Day are open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Visit elections.maricopa.gov for locations. In the other two districts, two candidates who started the election season looking like underdogs had made the races appear more competitive heading toward the finish.

To win outright and avoid a runoff in the Nov. 8 General Election, a candidate must garner at least 50% of the vote plus 1. In District 4, two candidates, college student and disability advocate Nathaniel Ross and former governor’s office staffer Trista Guzman Glover are challenging the incumbent, downtown arts booster and business owner Vice Mayor Jenn Duff.

Stunning re-done Prepping for his part campus awaits Mt. View students

see ELECTIONS page 10

BY MARK MORAN Tribune Staff Writer

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here has never been a better time to be in the marching band at Mesa Mountain View High School. Or the choir, or drama, dance, music, or anything else considered Performing Arts, for that matter. The most prominent visible feature of the two-year, $50-million modernization project is a brand-new building at the front of campus that will house Mountain View’s Fine Arts programs. It’s designed to let students’ imaginations flourish, fuel dreams to come alive and for aspirations to become realities for the arts-inclined. Most Mountain View students will get their first look at the renovated campus Wednes

see SCHOOL page 6

Tre Moore of Mesa is in the final days of rehearsals for his title role in “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” the latest musical production by Limelight Performing Arts that will bring a host of talented young thespians from throughout the East Valley to the stage at Mesa Arts Center next month. For the story see page 25. (David Minton/Tribune Staff Photographer) 4454 East Thomas Road • Phoenix, AZ 85018

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