Retooling its outreach / P. 8
Food park in E. Mesa / P. 18
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
INSIDE
This Week
COMMUNITY .........
12
This dog is a veteran's lifesaver.
BUSINESS .............. 14 Mesa's Asian District digging out of pandemic.
SPORTS .................... 17 New fields for Mesa school athletes. COMMUNITY ............................... 12 BUSINESS ..................................... 14 OPINION ....................................... 16 SPORTS ........................................ 17 GET OUT ....................................... 18 PUZZLES ...................................... 20 CLASSIFIED ................................. 20 Zone 1
Sunday, January 10, 2021
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Relief money spent, Mesa ponders next moves BY JIM WALSH Tribune Staff Writer
M
esa’s pandemic relief efforts combined millions in federal dollars, a redeployed army of city employees and a strong network of non-pro�it organizations to aid thousands of people in different ways. But the once powerful outreach from Mesa
CARES has run out of gas, leaving behind a patchwork of programs to help the needy while a second wave of COVID-19 rages through Arizona. “It’s kind of a work in progress,’’ Deputy City Manager Natalie Lewis. “We spent all the dollars. They are no longer available.’’ She said the funding expired at the end of December and Mesa will not need to return
2 major high school projects on new MPS board’s plate
any money to federal of�icials because “the entire amount was invested in eligible programs and services.’’ In all, the city received $132 million in federal funds to combat the economic fallout from the pandemic. It included $90 million in direct funding from the federal government
A 'pick me up'
��� CARES ���� 4
BY PAUL MARYNIAK Tribune Executive Editor
O
pen classrooms, learning gaps and other issues related to the pandemic may be at the forefront of decisions awaiting the new Mesa Public Schools Governing Board, but the condition of many district schools won’t be far behind. This summer voters could see construction beginning on two of the biggest projects funded by the $300 million capital bond issue that they approved in 2018: an extensive overhaul of Mesa High and Mountain View campuses with some new buildings and additions, revamped athletic �ields and other improvements that will cost an estimated $35 million for each school. So far, the board has only approved contracts for �inal proposed designs and cost estimates for the two projects. The board must also decide whether the Mesa High project should include a new campus for Franklin East Elementary School. Nine of Franklin’s 15 buildings are in such a deteriorated condition that replacing the complex at $20 million would make more sense in the long run, district ad-
��� SCHOOLS ���� 6
Mesa teen Nevaeh Gable has invented a game called 52 Card Pick Me Up that she and her dad say helps ease some of the stress her peers and their parents are feeling during the pandemic. For the story, see page 12. (Staci Hauk/Special to the Tribune)