In train's path
Skyline Unified Sports / P. 18
/ P. 2
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
Lehi residents, food truck mall win board OKs
INSIDE
This Week ST e BEST of th BE
Sunday, October 31, 2021
FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | TheMesaTribune.com
Prepping for Halloween
BY TOM SCANLON Tribune Managing Editor
EAST VALLEY
THE IR VOTERS PICK
FAVORITES!
BUSINESS ............ 14 EV getting nation's largest indoor pickleball complex.
GETOUT ............... 19 Rare Native American photo collection unveiled. COMMUNITY ............................... 12 BUSINESS ..................................... 14 OPINION .. ..................................... 16 SPORTS ........................................ 18 GET OUT ...................................... 19 PUZZLES ...................................... 20 CLASSIFIED ................................. 21 Zone
1
F
inal score: Neighbors 1, Developers 1. At a marathon Planning and Zoning Board meeting last week, residents of two neighborhoods less than 10 miles apart lined up to protest commercial plans they insisted would wreck their lifestyle. Lehi neighbors emerged victorious after convincing the board to vote down an apartment complex that threatened to invade their “equestrian neighborhood.” But those living near Power Food Park left the meeting disgruntled after the board narrowly approved plans for it to not only continue, but expand. While the food truck operation on Power Road near McKellips percolated at a previous public meeting, the latest neighbors-vs.-developer showdown emerged Wednesday over The Homestead at Lehi Crossing near McDowell Road and the Loop 202. The developers insisted they have been listening to neighbors’ concerns, reducing heights and density of an apartment complex and a planned roundabout to replace a stop sign intersection. Neighbors countered with a list of too’s: Too much traffic, too many people, too much potential crime, too high building. The locals gave a big raspberry to the
see LEHI page 3
In a possible prelude to today's evening of trick-or-treating, Zaid Sanchez, 6, got his face painted last weekend at the 2021 Mesa Día de los Muertos celebration at Mesa Arts Center, in Mesa, Arizona. (David Minton/Tribune Staff Photographer)
Enrollment skid may force some Mesa school campus closures BY TOM SCANLON Tribune Managing Editor
I
t was good news/bad news at the Mesa Public Schools Governing Board meeting this week. The worst of the news: With enrollment numbers at MPS continuing to fall, schools
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may have to be closed. The board also approved an increase for computer hardware and support of $15 million for a new total of $25 million. The good news on that: Through the federal Emergency Connectivity Fund, MPS will be reimbursed
see MPS page 6