November 6, 2022 | www.santansun.com
Relentlessly local coverage of Southern Chandler
An edition of the East Valley Tribune
Legislature, inflation loom as city financial threats BY KEN SAIN Managing Editor
Chandler City Council got its first look at the 2023-24 budget at an Oct. 27 work session and learned there are some worrying issues on the horizon – so troublesome that members suggested staff look at increasing the budget stabilization reserve. That’s a fund the city uses as a stopgap if there’s an unplanned change to
the city’s finances. Council hopes that provides a three-year window to make adjustments. There are a number of reasons for budget concerns in the future, but the two biggest are inflation and state lawmakers. Dawn Lang, the city’s deputy city manager and chief financial officer, said the price of asphalt, concrete, pipes, data fiber, anything cement-based, or
anything with a computer chip are up 10% or more. Those increases mean the city may not be able to complete all the capital improvement projects officials promised voters in last year’s bond election. “The impact that it’s having is they always build in contingency on the capital projects,” Lang said. “They’re having to use that contingency upfront. So as they get closer to the end of those
projects, they’re having to have conversations around reducing scope, and things like that, or canceling a project.” That may lead to council going back to voters to ask for more bond money sooner than it usually does. “In the long run when it comes to our bond authorization, because projects are costing more, our bond authorizaSee
BUDGET on page14
Tempers flare as Chandler Council debates NDO BY KEN SAIN Managing Editor
A feisty Chandler City Council on Oct. 24 began hammering out what a non-discrimination ordinance (NDO) would look like and the heated discussion led to confrontations, accusations, some shouting and pleas to follow decorum. “I’m desperately trying to get through this meeting and you are desperately getting in the way of that,” Mayor Kevin Hartke told Councilman OD Harris. “I
am reaching the end of my patience, and I would appreciate it if you would show the respect and the decorum that we have shown you.” Chandler is the largest city in Arizona without a NDO and Council has been exploring how to improve its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) for two years. “What I don’t like is that people are being discriminated in our ordinance in our city,” Harris said. “And we’re playing games [with] numbers. I don’t like that.
I want to live in a city where I can walk down the street and not be discriminated on. That’s what I want.” A non-discrimination ordinance would allow employees and customers to file complaints if they believe they are being discriminated against because they are a member of a protected class. There are federal and state laws that protect many of those classes already, but not all of them. The ordinance the city is looking at would include sexual
orientation, gender identity and veteran status, which are not protected now. The clock is running out on the current council as Vice Mayor Terry Roe’s and Rene Lopez’s terms end in January. The current council has not been eager to pass a NDO, with only Harris and Matt Orlando supporting one. Roe and Lopez are being replaced by Angel Encinas and Jane Poston, who See
NDO on page10
City honors veterans Chandler Council adding days to fireworks calendar BY KEN SAIN Managing Editor
Chandler City Council is expanding the number of days residents can legally light fireworks and one member wants to expand it even more. “There are so many other holidays that we have -- Chinese New Year, we have graduations, Juneteenth, weddings, all those kinds of things,” Councilman Mark Stewart said. “And so I’d hope that staff could help me write up an amendment to this so that we can include those holidays.” Other members, however, were not ready to do that at the Oct. 24 study session. “As the mayor indicated before, that’s probably the largest issue we get every year is the impact to the animals, the impact to the PTSD world,” Councilman Matt Orlando said, noting the “Amer-
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ican Legion right now is looking at a policy to help restrict the fireworks.” Mayor Kevin Hartke said he also opposed expanding the days beyond the change that was before them. Council was expanding the days to include Diwali, which is the India’s Festival of Lights and one of the most important Hindu holidays. It is usually celebrated over five days in late October or early November, based on the Hindu lunar calendar. State lawmakers approved fireworks for up to two days. The Legislature also gave the cities something that some municipalities have been asking for: the ability to regulate when people could set off fireworks. Cities and towns can now restrict fireworks between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m. for See
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Bob Dalpe, chairman of Chandler Military and Veteran’s Affairs Commission, stands in the Field of Honor at Veterans Oasis Park, ready to mark Veterans Day this Friday. Throughout the region, people will pay tribute to the men and women who served. Chandler will host a celebration and veterans throughout the region also will be marching in the East Valley Veterans Parade on Friday in downtown Mesa. For details, see page 6.
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