City worker raises / P. 6
Safety rankings slip / P. 8
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
INSIDE
This Week
Mesa puts tournaments on COVID probation BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
M
esa last week adopted strict public health protocols at sports �ields as an alternative to closing them, allowing out-of-state sports tournaments to proceed amid the surge in COVID-19 – and save millions of dollars in local hotel bookings. But the city’s decision came with a stiff
warning. Mesa Mayor John Giles said he was initially inclined to close the �ields after Dr. Marjorie Bessel, chief health of�icer of Banner Health, told him that intensive care units are �illing up with COVID-19 patients at an alarming rate. “The quote I remember was, ‘we are going to be crushed,’’ Giles said, with Bessel predicting double-bunking as a necessary evil when
Christmas cheer
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hospitals reach 150 percent of capacity within the next two months. But Giles reversed course and recommended that City Council approve a compromise approach engineered by Marc Garcia, president and CEO of Visit Mesa, as a lifeline to Mesa’s beleaguered hospitality industry. He said Garcia told him the already decimat-
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Mesa’s newest public of�icial prepares for work BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
Plenty of ways to volunteer this season.
A
BUSINESS ............. 19 Mall owner's outlook gets brighter COMMUNITY ............................... 16 BUSINESS ..................................... 19 OPINION ....................................... 21 SPORTS ........................................ 22 GET OUT ....................................... 23 PUZZLES ...................................... 24 CLASSIFIED ................................. 24 Zone 1
Sunday, December 20, 2020
FREE ($1 OUTSIDE THE EAST VALLEY) | TheMesaTribune.com
Ana Zurita, 7, holds a gift she received Dec. 15 at Jefferson Elementary in Mesa, where city and school district workers got together to give kids from economically challenged households gifts they might not otherwise see this week on Christmas. For a story, see page. 3. (Pablo Robles/Tribune Photographer)
s she prepares to take of�ice next month, the newest Mesa City Council member just wants everyone to get along. Julie Spilsbury, a mother of six who will be sworn into her �irst elected position in January, prides herself on getting along with just about everyone and wants to serve her constituents in District Two. “I love people, I love talking to people, I love listening, I truly want to represent everyone in my district, not just the people who look like me or go to my church,’’ Spilsbury said. Spilsbury grew up in Mesa and graduated from Mountain View High School. She believes that she parlayed her deep
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