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January 20, 2016 Vol. 14, No.10 www.thefoothillsfocus.com
Anthem | Black Canyon City | Carefree | Cave Creek | Desert Hills | New River| North Phoenix | Tramonto
KIWANIS:New River Kiwanis
honors local students
Page 9
BOATING:Mussel classified as invasive
species discovered at lake
Page 13
OTHER : Bluhm Column 7
Service Directory 15
Classified Ads 18
JUDGES COLUMN: Judge Williams discusses
Stolen Valor Law
Page 11
ECRWSS Carrier Route
PreSorted Standard U.S. POSTAGE PAID
Permit No. 371 Cave Creek, AZ
POSTAL PATRON CAVE CREEK
Distribution of Buffalo Chip employee fund donations questioned
POWERBALL continued on page 11
Youth Ballet Company dancers to perform story ballet Snow White & Rose Red
SCOTTSDALE The Youth Ballet Company dancers of Plumb Performing Arts Center will bring the classic fairy tale Snow White & Rose Red to life with two performances on Sunday, Feb. 6, at 1 p.m. and 6 p.m., at the Cactus Shadows Fine Arts Center in north Scottsdale.
Ballet dancers ages 6-18 will enchant their audience in this originally choreographed story ballet about sisters Snow White and Rose Red. Two casts of dancers will perform a retelling of a classic tale. From the Royal Palace to the Black Forest, the
audience will meet a Snow Princess and her fairies, the Woodland Dwarfs, Meadow Fairies, and an Evil Reflection Mirror. Snow White and Rose Red must outwit the Queens plan and her magnificent vultures, and restore happiness to the kingdom.
The dancers will perform under the choreography and direction of Kelly Roberts and Kendra Dahl, ballet instructors at PPAC. A full-length story ballet is an essential experience for pre-professional ballet dancers; instructors Roberts and Dahl have cast dancers in roles
to showcase their abilities. The audience will enjoy a full ballet with beautiful costumes and stunning dancers on pointe.
With a cast of over 50 dancers, this exciting story ballet, The Fairy Tale of Snow White & Rose Red, will captivate all members of the audience.
To purchase tickets, visit the Plumb Performing Arts Centers Web site at www.plumbperformingartscenter.com, or call (480) 661-7461 for more details.
The Cactus Shadows Fine Arts Center is located at 33606 N 60th St, in north Scottsdale.
Winning Powerball ticket worth $2 million
sold in AnthemANTHEM Someone in
Anthem may be $2 million richer and they may not even know it yet.
A Powerball ticket for the Jan. 13 drawing worth $2 million was sold at the Circle K on Daisy Mountain Drive, in Anthem. As of Foothills Focus print time, Arizona Lottery representatives reported that no one had yet come forward to claim the prize. The winning numbers in the Jan. 13 drawing are 4, 8, 19, 27, 34, and the Powerball is 10.
According to Arizona Lottery representatives, the ticket holder has 180 days from the draw date to claim their prize. Once they claim their prize, the winner may
choose to remain anonymous for 90 days. After that, the information will be available through a public information request.
The ticket sold in Anthem is one of four $1 million-plus winners in Arizona. The winner who bought in Anthem matched all five white ball numbers and purchased the Power Play option for a prize of $2 million. Three Arizona tickets matched all five white ball numbers, generating second-prize payouts of $1 million each; these tickets were sold in Littlefield, Casa Grande,
TARA ALATORRESTAFF
CAVE CREEK The Buffalo Chip Saloon in Cave Creek may have reopened its doors last Saturday for the first time since a suspected arson devastated it on Thanksgiving, but a shadow still looms over as it rebuilds not only a bar, but a reputation.
The flames destroyed Cave Creeks iconic saloon, and the livelihood of 120 employees who lost their job in an instant. The town rallied, and showed overwhelming generosity by raising $58,000 for the Buffalo Chip employees, and then just like wildfire, accusations and rumors spread about the use of those donations.
Marc Peagler, the owner of
Frontier Town in Cave Creek, organized an auction and a fundraiser event on Dec. 16, 2015, for the employee fund that had been set up at Foothills Food Bank shortly after the fire. The auction raised around
$25,000, which doesnt include merchandise sales, and other donations gathered that evening, he said.
EMPLOYEE FUND continued on page 8
Tara Alatorre photo
The Foothills Focuspage 2 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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Carefree Indian Market and Cultural Festival set for this weekend
CAREFREE The Carefree Indian Market and Cultural Festival will be opening on Friday, Jan. 22 and running through Sunday, Jan. 24, in the Carefree Desert Gardens, located at 101 Easy Street in Carefree. The festival is free to enter and will be open 10 a.m -5 p.m. daily.
Now in its fifth year, the Carefree Indian Market and Cultural Festival has evolved into a benchmark event featuring 100 highly-acclaimed artists, and thousands of traditional and contemporary designs.
This years show has an impressive lineup of featured artists and performers. Nelda Schrupp, a jeweler and sculptor of the Pheasant Rump Nakota First Nation will display her ceremonial dance rattles and necklaces. Each of her designs is beautifully embellished with horse hair, natural stones, and other decorative elements. A National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) Artist Fellow, Schrupps work is widely recognized and showcased in the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Dance and music performances will feature traditional Native American hoop dancing by world champions Brian
Hammill of Native Spirit Productions and Moontee Sinquah. The live entertainment will take center stage in the Sanderson Lincoln Pavilion.
The Carefree Indian Market and Cultural Festival emphasizes quality artwork with an array of mediums on display, from sculptures and paintings to handmade musical instruments and handcrafted fine jewelry. Vendor booths will be located throughout the desert botanical paths, giving visitors the opportunity to interact with the artists and learn about their craft. Attendees may also purchase a variety of sweet and savory selections in the Southwestern culinary food court.
For more information, visit magicbirdfestivals.com.
TheFoothillsFocus.com page 3The Foothills FocusJanuary 20, 2016 Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus
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Merlin Falcon photographed in
Desert Hills
DESERT HILLS Local photographer Jim Simmons photographed a Merlin Falcon in Desert Hills a few weeks ago. This raptor is not especially common in Arizona and only winters here.
The Merlin Falcon is eating a smaller bird in the photo; these birds of prey subsist mainly on a diet of smaller birds, which they catch in mid-flight.
After photographing the Merlin Falcon, photographer
Simmons contacted the Arizona Game and Fish Department to help identify the bird. Simmons also reached out to The Foothills Focus, offering the fascinating photos for printing. He noted that he just happened to notice the Merlin Falcon and was able to photograph it.
If you have an interesting photo youd like to share, feel free to contact The Foothills Focus at [email protected].
Photos courtesy of Jim Simmons
Arizona Archaeology Societymeeting to focus on Belize caves
CAVE CREEK Dr. Jaime Awe will be the featured presenter at the next Arizona Archaeology Society Desert Foothills Chapter meeting, happening Feb. 10.
Awe will present Tales from the Dark Side: Cave Archaeology in Western Belize and its Implications for the Decline of Maya Civilization. In Maya cosmology, few locations were (and are) considered more sacred or ritually charged than caves. Representing portals to the netherworld and places of origin, these dark subterranean sites also served as the abode for important, powerful, and often capricious deities. The Maya further believed that the spirits of deceased ancestors descended to the watery underworld where they could eventually be reborn. Caves were thus places of death and creation. Both the ancient Maya and their descendants visited and visit these sites to conduct rituals.
Until recently, intensive scientific investigations of cave sites were rare. The Western Belize Regional Cave Project embarked on a multi-year research program designed to ascertain the nature of Maya cave utilization. By combining ethnographic and ethnohistoric information with data from archaeological investigations, this presentation provides
evidence which suggests that the Maya visited caves in an effort to communicate with particular gods or ancestral spirits and the primary focus of their ritual activities were directed toward sustenance and agricultural fertility, and that intensified cave ritual in the ninth century A.D. was intrinsically related to factors that led to the decline of Maya civilization.
Dr. Awe was born in San Ignacio Town of the Cayo District in Belize. A graduate of St. Johns Junior College in Belize City, he was awarded a Bachelors Degree with Honours and a Masters Degree in Anthropology at Trent University in Ontario, Canada. In 1992, he completed a Ph.D. in Archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology at the University of London, England. In addition to serving
as a professor of Archaeology at multiple universities, Awe has directed major conservation projects in Belize and has conducted research at many different sites. Dr. Awe now lives in Flagstaff, where he teaches in the Anthropology Department of Northern Arizona University and continues to conduct archaeological investigations in western Belize.
Everyone is welcome to attend Arizona Archaeology Society Desert Foothills Chapter meetings. Meetings begin at 7:30 p.m.; refreshments are offered prior to the meeting start. Meetings are held at the Foothills Community Foundation, 34250 North 60th Street, in Scottsdale.
For more information on the Arizona Archaeology Society Desert Foothills Chapter, see www.azarchsoc.org/desertfoothills.
The Foothills Focuspage 4 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
Publisher: John Alexander
Managing Editor: Elizabeth Medora Office Manager: Karen Alexander
Art Director: Dave McQueenWeb Master:
Eric RodriguezAccount Executive:
Stan BontkowskiContributing Writers:
Tara AlatorreJudy Bluhm
Shea StanfieldGerald WilliamsKatlyn EwensMonte YazzieJessica Watts
Kendal OConnor
Disclaimer:The Foothills Focus is a free and weekly publication. It is delivered to Anthem, Black Canyon City, Carefree, Cave Creek, Desert Hills, New River, North Phoenix and Tramonto. We reserve the right to refuse any proposed advertising. No part of this publication may be reproduced by any measure without the expressed written permission of the publisher. The Foothills Focus cannot and will not be held responsible for any content of the contained advertisements in this issue. This consists of any inserts, display advertising, Service Directory or classified advertisements. The content of the contained advertisments are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. For any questions regarding information contained in such endorsements, please contact the specified advertiser.
Thank you. -The Foothills Focus
TheFoothillsFocus.com
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Desert Sun Academy to offer French Immersion
SCOTTSDALE Desert Sun Academy, one of the schools in Cave Creek Unified School District, will be instituting a French Immersion program, set to begin August 2016.
Seats for this kindergarten and first grade program are currently open until the cap is reached. This French Immersion program will follow the same model as the Spanish and Chinese Immersion in other CCUSD schools.
Learning a second language has multiple benefits for students, not only in the language itself, but in the critical thinking skills practiced. French is one of the top languages in the global economy.
Dual Language Immersion programs follow the AZ Academic Standards but teach 50 percent of the day in the target language and the other 50 percent in English. Results across the U.S. are consistent with what Spanish and Chinese Immersion students experience in CCUSD: students are functioning at grade level or higher in English and are reaching high levels of proficiency in the second language. Some students are going on to add a third language by the time they graduate.
To find out more about reserving a spot in the French Immersion program, call (480) 575-2900.
For more information about CCUSD language immersion programs, call Cristina Ladas, CCUSD World Language Programs Coordinator at (480) 518-4289.
Canyon Springs PTSA holding Bingo Night
ANTHEM Looking for something fun to do with the family? Join the Canyon Springs School PTSA for Bingo Night on Friday, Jan. 29, starting at 5:30 p.m.
Everyone is welcome to join the fun. Admission is one non-perishable food item or $1 per person to be donated to a local food bank.
Bingo Night will include a raffle with a variety of items. Raffle tickets will be sold at the door for $1 each, starting at 5:30 that night. Raffle items include greens fees for four at the Anthem Country Club, four tickets to a Musical Theatre of Anthem show, I9 Sports registration, PrimeTime Flag Football registration, a birthday party at Arizona Sports Complex, four tickets to a Southwest Wildlife Conservation Center event, piano lessons, golf lessons, tennis lessons, a $100 gift card to a Wild Hair Salon & Spa, gift cards to The Tennessee Grill, Click-it Necklaces from Fashion Frenzy, and child admission passes to Flagstaff Extreme Adventure course. Additional items to be raffled will be announced at the event.
Food trucks will be serving food, starting at 5:15 p.m. and continuing throughout the event. Drinks and desserts will be available for purchase inside the Canyon Springs multi-purpose room.
Dont miss this fun event! Seating is limited, so first come/first served.
Canyon Springs School is located at 42901 N. 45th Ave., on the west side of Anthem.
Boulders Resort names new Executive Chef
CAREFREE Brian Archibald has been appointed Executive Chef for the Boulders Resort & Spa. In his new position, he will oversee the resorts five dining outlets, which includes The Palo Verde restaurant, the Bakery Cafe, The Grill Kitchen and Bar, the Spotted Donkey Cantina, and the Spa Caf, as well as all catering operations.
An 18-year veteran in the culinary arts, Archibald is an ingredients-driven chef who has developed a distinctive style that he describes as a blend of Mediterranean cuisine (Spain/Italy) and Southwestern influences in his dishes. He joins the Boulders Resort from The Graduate, a newly remodeled/rebranded boutique hotel in Tempe, Arizona where he was part of the opening team as Executive Chef. He was also part of the opening team as
the Executive Chef for Rosso, located in the boutique Hotel Sorella, in Kansas City.
Chef Archibalds diverse culinary background includes cooking with many of the top toque chefs including New Yorks legendary Chef Daniel Boulud, and he also cooked at the famed James Beard House. Most recently, he competed on the Food Networks Bobby Flay Competition that will air nationally February 2016.
For more information on The Boulders Resort & Spa, call (480) 488-9009 or visit www.TheBoulders.com.
Applications sought for 2016-2017 Community Arts grants
PHOENIX The Phoenix Office of Arts and Cultures 2016-2017 Community Arts Grants Program is now open for applications. The program supports the general operations of Phoenix-based arts and cultural organizations, as well as festival and arts learning projects. The deadline for applications in all categories is March 30.
The purpose of the Community Arts Grants Program is to expand the availability of arts and cultural activities throughout all sectors of the city of Phoenix; to promote cultural diversity; and to foster programmatic and organizational support for
TheFoothillsFocus.com page 5The Foothills FocusJanuary 20, 2016 Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus
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The Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture will host a series of orientation workshops for applicants to learn about the funding opportunities and how to improve application proposals. An orientation workshop will be held in the North Valley at the Goelet A. C. Beuf Community Center, 3435 W. Pinnacle Peak, in Phoenix.
For detailed information about the Community Arts Grants Program, visit the Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture Web site at www.phoenix.gov/arts/grants-program.
Anthems Red Kettle drive raises over $21,000
ANTHEM This years Salvation Army bell-ringing in Anthem netted over $21,000. Local volunteers reported that money had been donated into red kettles during this past Christmas season.
In addition, Anthems Salvation Army collected 96 toys and nine jackets at their Anthem December toy drive at the Walmart in conjunction with the Daisy Mountain Fire Fighters. The Anthem unit of the Salvation Army assisted 116 families (407 individuals) in 2015 with their utilities in the amount of $30,940. The Salvation Army wants to thank all the volunteer bell ringers
and contributors to the 2015 Red Kettle Drive.
The Anthem Extension Unit of the Salvation Army services the following ZIP codes: 85083, 85084, 85085, 85086, and 85087.
D-backs spring training tickets on sale now
PHOENIX The Arizona Diamondbacks individual tickets for all 2016 Spring Training games at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick are on sale now at dbacks.com/spring and at the Salt River Fields Box Office.
Tickets for all games at Salt River Fields, including the D-backs vs. University of Arizona game, are priced from $11-37. General admission lawn seating that will hold 4,000 people will range in price from $11-15 depending on day of game. Tickets for the 7,000 reserved seats in the seating bowl range from $21-$37 depending on day of game.
Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, a shared Spring Training complex between the D-backs and Colorado Rockies, drew a season-record 351,866 fans in 2015 and is the only spring training venue to exceeded 300,000 fans for the fifth consecutive season in Major
League Baseball. In addition,
the D-backs set a single-game
complex attendance record in
2015 with 13,507 fans on March
14 vs. the Rockies.
Pitchers and catchers will
report to Salt River Fields on
Feb. 17, with their first workout
on Feb. 18. Position players will
report on Feb. 22, with the first
full-squad workout on Feb. 23.
Workouts are open to the
public, and fans may park in
the Desert Lot on the north side
of the complex, which is best
accessed via 90th Street off of
Via de Ventura.
The D-backs open their 19th
Spring Training on March 1 at
Salt River Fields at Talking Stick
with a game against University
of Arizona as part of an annual
Collegiate Series. The collegiate
series will take place each
year for the next five seasons,
and the D-backs will rotate
opponents between Arizonas
three Division I NCAA baseball
programs ASU, University of
Arizona, and Grand Canyon
University.
For more information or to purchase tickets for Spring Training, visit dbacks.com/spring.
Get breaking news updates and more when you follow The Foothills Focus on Facebook at
facebook.com/thefoothillsfocus.
The Foothills Focuspage 6 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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PUBLISHED IN THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS
obituary
Kay R. (Sletten) Kendall(2/01/1933 12/29/15)
Kay R. (Sletten) Kendall, a long-time resident and former Hair Dresser/Salon owner of Kays Beauty Nook in Black Canyon City, AZ went to be with our Lord on Dec. 29, 2015, at 82 years old.
Kay loved to play the piano and for many years enjoyed playing for The BCC Lions Club during their Annual Old-time Radio Show & Dinner. She enjoyed Cooking, Painting, Sewing, Camping, Fishing, Traveling to-and-from her former hometown of Wibaux, MT and the Annual 4th of July Reunion Festival there and in Medora, ND. She grew up in that area and owned several different businesses including a Ceramic Shop, Beauty Shop and then The Firelight Bar and played in her own band. She also owned a Beauty Salon in Medical Lake, WA.
Moving to AZ, she lived in both Scottsdale and Phoenix
where she was an Insurance Agent, prior to her move to BCC and opening her Beauty Shop there. Kay also made a point to visit her kids whenever she could in WA/ID, on her annual visits. She, as well, made trips to Yuma, AZ to visit another Daughter, and numerous camping trips with Family & Friends to Rocky Point, MX. For many years, she enjoyed attending an Annual Reunion in Mesa, AZ with all of her Montana friends. Kay loved to play cards, tell jokes, laugh and enjoy time with her friends. She will be fondly remembered by all whom knew and loved her.
Kay is survived by Son Steve Tennant of BCC, Daughter Karen Steuer of Yuma, AZ, Daughter Nola Steuer & Son Eric Tennant of Pullman, WA, Granddaughter Alon Steuer of Seattle, WA, Granddaughter Joyelle Richie of Bismark, ND, Grandson Brent Rogers of Grand Forks, ND, and 5 Great Grandchildren.
In lieu of any flowers, donations to the Family or to the BCC Lions Club would be appreciated. (contact: Rose Fouch: 623-934-1263) Memorial is in the planning stages look for notices at PO and around town.
ANTHEM Recruiting expert Paul Putnam will deliver his free seminar College Recruiting 101 College Recruiting Simplified on Feb. 10, at 6:30 p.m., at Boulder Creek High School. All high schoolers and their families are welcome to attend.
During the one hour event, Putnam will discuss when the recruiting process starts, how student-athletes can position themselves to be discovered, how college coaches evaluate prospects, and more. Participants will also receive access to online search tools to assist them in finding schools with roster openings.
Putnam, who was named Utahs Most Versatile Athlete of 1980-81, was awarded a track & field scholarship at Bakersfield College and Weber State University. He travels to more than 70 high schools annually, as well as speaking at several national camps, tournaments, and showcases, to help student-athletes and their families get ahead.
Putnams lecture series is made possible through a partnership with NCSA Athletic Recruiting, the NFL Players Association, the American Volleyball Coaches Association, Ripken Baseball, and the National Fastpitch Coaches Association.
College recruiter to speak at
Boulder Creek
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Around the Bluhmin Town
JUDY BLUHMI won the lottery! (In my
dreams). I see it all now, flashing before me. I turn on the television and watch excitedly when they call out the winning numbers. Nervously, I look down at my Powerball ticket and then in complete disbelief, I realize I have won 1.5 Billion dollars! I keep staring at the flimsy piece of paper in my shaking hands as I look at the five sets of numbers on Line A that suddenly mean my world has changed forever. From this moment forward my life will be grouped into two distinct chapters.before winning the Powerball and afterwards. This is usually when I wake up.
Hey, we Americans know how to have fun and maybe a good laugh. With the stock market tanking, why not plop down ten or twenty bucks for the chance of becoming a billionaire? We get nothing from interest in our savings accounts and we continue to roll the dice by putting our hard earned money in the markets, so why not gamble like a fool on a three million to one chance of winning the lottery? It has been said that we have more chances of getting hit by an asteroid than winning. Or a greater chance of getting hit by lightning while swimming and fighting off an alligator. Well, all that could happen!
We are not supposed to think about what we would do with the money we win till we win it. But I already know that there is a certain horse ranch in Peeples Valley (Hidden Springs Ranch) that I admire every time I drive by it. I think if I won the lottery I would walk up the long driveway, knock on the door and tell the owners (nicely) to start packing. Leave the horses! Name your price! (Hope
the owners are not reading this). Oh yea, winning could be a blast.
I do know that handing out million dollar bills (is there such a thing?) to kids and grandkids does not necessarily make for a happy life. I would emulate Bill and Melissa Gates who know how to responsibly give huge amounts of money away
for worthy causes that matter. I told my husband, Doug, that if I won the lottery we could give 100 million people one hundred
thousand bucks and end poverty. Of course, he pointed out that my math is off and it is not that easy. Oh, the hassles of becoming a billionaire!
Some folks who have won the lottery have been pretty stupid! Do not win 10 million bucks and then six months later go out and steal a car because you are bored! Do not hand a friend your winning ticket to go collect the money for you (lawsuit pending)! Never win 15 million and spend it on booze, parties and demolition derby activities! A man in Texas won 31 million and in two years was broke. Sadly, he took his own life when faced with being poor again.
How is your timing in life? One man won 5 millionthe day after his divorce was finalized. Seems his new ex-wife tried to reconcile. Then she tried to get alimony. When that didnt work she tried to sue the judge for speeding up the divorce date and causing her to lose a large sum of money. Sounds like a sore loser to me. Hey, sudden wealth can bring out the evil in people. One guy (psychotic) in New Jersey hired a hit man to kill his own brother after the brother won 20 million in the lottery. Guess big money can create bigger problems.
Oh, getting back to my lottery win, I promise to learn from other winners mistakes. I will not go on a spending spree and
buy fancy cars, toys or houses. Okay, well maybe a few pairs of shoes. And I could never have wild booze parties because I dont have wild friends. And, fortunately, I dont think my brother would try to kill me. Well thats a relief. I could start making a bucket list. You know, maybe take a vacation to Monaco and sip champagne while counting my chips at a casino. Oops, I think that is out of a James Bond movie. Okay, better to call financial guru Dave
Ramsey and ask him what to do.I could run for President.
You know, like Donald Trump, become the Judy and happily spout off ways to fix the country and make it great again. Or, I could buy a villa in Italy and take up painting (sounds like a place to dabble in water colors) and learn how to make pasta from scratch. Or maybe an oceanfront mansion in La Jolla is calling my name!
My girlfriend is an attorney and she said the winner of a billion bucks would have to go into hiding, almost like into the witness protection program, just to keep the masses of scammers away. She said if I won the lottery I would have to move immediately, stop working, change all my phone numbers while figuring out a strategy. She also said wearing a dark wig and sun glasses would not help (my original plan). Hmmmdoesnt sound like much fun after all.
So, Dear Readers, if this is my last column you know what happened. I won the Powerball and it wasnt just a dream! Or I got hit by an asteroid, struck by lightning and eaten by an alligator. Good luck to all of us. May you have a winning week.
Judy Bluhm is a writer and a local realtor. Have a story or a comment? Email Judy at judy@ judybluhm.com.
I could run for President. You know, like Donald Trump, become the Judy and happily spout off ways to fix the
country and make it great again.
The Foothills Focuspage 8 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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The Buffalo Chip is a part of Cave Creek and we have never had anything like this [fire] happen before, Peagler said in an email. Thats why I stepped in to help.
However, before the checks could clear, before the rubble and ashes of The Chip could be swept away, the mud was already flying. Allegations started to surface on social media about the donations being misappropriated, undistributed, and certain employees receiving large amounts of cash to fund vacations and pay off car loans.
I feel there is a small group of four to five people who are causing unnecessary drama on social media, said Peagler in an email regarding the allegations that employees were not receiving donations.
There was a week delay in the distribution of funds because of a clerical error in the auction slips gathered, and they needed to wait for the checks and credit card transactions to clear the bank. For a while, the personal donations just kept pouring in and it was hard to even determine an exact total amount donated, according to Peagler.
How can you know how much to give out when you dont know how much you are going to have in the end? he said.
Then on Jan. 4, 2016, ABC15 aired a segment about Buffalo Chip employees claiming they
had not received donations yet, and that there was a big discrepancy between the amount actually distributed and the total amount donated. Pamela Lowry worked for the Buffalo Chip one day a week up until the fire, and says first she was denied assistance, and then she was only given $200.
We were called greedy, says Lowry in an email interview. When we were only asking what they were spending it on if they werent helping anyone.
She and other Buffalo Chip employees who are asking to not be named say all the employees were given a $200 check at a meeting on Jan. 6, 2016, which was after the news segment aired, and raised their suspicions further. With the 120 employees Wendt had on the distribution list, that would only be $24,000 that was accounted for. Lowry claims many others were reaching out sharing the same story as her: denied assistance, and then only given a $200 check.
We just really want the public to demand where their donations went, Lowry said.
Furthermore, some claim that there were never 120 employees on the payroll ever, and can only count around 80 employees at the time of the fire, according to background sources.
Larry had kept 40 inactive employees on the payroll, for who knows why, those 40 people also received that $200 check, Lowry asserted. We feel its
only right to the public to see how they have been spending the money they made everyone believes was for the staff.
Kevin Southar has been a bartender at the Buffalo Chip for over five years. Over the last two weeks he has been working to help reopen the bar. He says everyone received their fair share of the money donated, although he did not disclose an amount.
It is a great community, said Southar in an interview. Everyone got helped, I cant describe how good it felt.
Palma DiPietro is the director of the Foothills Food Bank, and she is the only person with authorization to write checks from the fund, and has been managing it since its inception. She gave The Foothills Focus a copy of the check roster with the names and amounts of every check written upon assurance that our newspaper would keep all employees personal information confidential.
Currently, the fund has paid 71 employees and dispensed
just under $42,000 in 59 checks, with about $18,000 left, and more payouts are planned for the upcoming weekend. Larry Wendt has not received any money from this account, according to the check roster.
We will be dispensing all the funds within the next two weeks, said DiPietro in an interview. We are writing the checks and closing the account next week so we dont need donations. More donations will only confuse the issue on how much everyone receives.
Although DiPietro is the only person with access to the account, she is writing checks based solely on the instruction of Wendt. Some employees were receiving larger amounts because they were still actively working for the Buffalo Chip during rebuilding, or based on other criteria Wendt created to help with the disbursement of donations.
It hurts my feelings that a few disgruntled employees ruined something so beautiful,
said Wendt in an interview. Every single penny has gone to employees.
Based on the food banks records, the four largest checks written were in amounts ranging from approximately $1,000 to $3,500. Twenty checks were $400 to $999, and the remaining 35 checks were under $400, for a total of $41,307.
Wendt says that not only has he not taken any money for himself or the business, but that he contributed $11,000 of his own money to the fund, and is no longer drawing salary from the Buffalo Chip.
The first distribution of $11,000 was decided with criteria in mind that would help those most in need, single parents raising families, he said in an interview.
Some people were not given the first round of distributed funds, either because they had another job, did not work full time at the Buffalo Chip, or did not participate in fundraiser events. Also, it took time with the arson investigation and reopening process for Wendt to figure out a method to fairly distribute the cash, he says.
We went above and beyond, said Wendt. I am just so appreciative of my staff and this town, for everything.
The Buffalo Chip has reopened seven days a week from 10 a.m. to midnight, complete with food, beer, bands, and rodeo.
EMPLOYEE FUNDcontinued from page 1
TheFoothillsFocus.com page 9The Foothills FocusJanuary 20, 2016 Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus
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The Enclave at Borgata luxury condos scheduled to open in autumn 2016
SCOTTSDALE Valley
residents will soon have a
new choice for luxury living.
Framing is now underway on all
three buildings at The Enclave
at Borgata, located just south
of Scottsdale Road and Lincoln
Drive. Residents will be able to
move in this autumn, and sales
are underway now.
Located at the site of the
former Borgata Shopping
Center, The Enclave is just steps
away from restaurants, grocery
stores, and many boutique shops.
Phoenix-based company Antera
Development is developing
the new condos.
The Enclaves tagline is Live
at the intersection of luxury &
convenience, and that theme
has been forefront throughout
the planning for the new condos.
John Waldron, Enclave media representative, noted that 30 units have already been sold, many by local residents who already live in the area and want to stay in the area but have the ease of shopping and restaurants in walking distance. Waldron noted that The Enclave is ideal for those who want a walk-able lifestyle.
Unit square footage ranges from 1,500 to 5,400 sq. ft., with multiple floor plans from which to choose. The luxury condominium community includes three buildings, four stories each, with 86 units total. The development will be situated on 4.7 acres. Pricing starts in the mid-700,000s.
The Enclave will be an all-ages community and will welcome pets. Nate Pile, VP of Antera Development and The Enclave
at Borgata Project Director, noted that The Enclave will include a 75x25 ft. pet park.
Pile listed other planned Enclave amenities, including a swimming pool in the courtyard, a 1,500 sq. ft. gym with a yoga room within, and a 1,500 sq. ft. club room with a demonstration kitchen, eating area, bar, TV, sitting area, outside courtyard, barbecue, fireplace, and water feature.
Pile specified that each unit will include an oversize laundry room and a full kitchen with a large island. Every unit also has a patio.
Our patios are probably one of the largest in Arizona, Pile described, adding that the ground floor units have almost a backyard, the patios are so large.
Waldron noted that the Antera Development vision for the luxury community and the Borgata location have shown to be a really great match. He cited the diversity of the area coupled with the residential feel of the community.
Visit The Enclave at Borgata and learn more about the new community. The Enclave Sales Center, located at 6176 N. Scottsdale Road, is open daily.
For more information, visit www.EnclaveAtBorgata.com or call 480) 362-5283. Pictured: Construction on The Enclave development.
Pictured is a rendering of the new luxury condominium community The Enclave at Borgata.
New River Kiwanis honors local studentsNEW RIVER The New
River Kiwanis presented awards to four New River Elementary students at the schools second quarter assembly last week.
Fourth graders Esther Herrington and Nikki Pence received this quarters Terrific Kids awards. Fifth graders Ava Rackley and David Herrington received this quarters Bringing Up Grades awards.
These awards recognize students hard work and determination to reach their goals. Students who receive these awards are being honored for showing exemplary character and good citizenship. Each quarter, local fourth and fifth graders are selected for these awards.
To learn more about Kiwanis programs and awards, see www.newriverkiwanis.org.
Kiwanis photosPictured above: Terrific Kids awardees Esther Herrington and Nikki Pence. Pictured below: Bringing Up Grades awardees Ava Rackley and David Herrington, with fifth grade teacher Ms. McDevitt.
The Foothills Focuspage 10 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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movie reviewMONTE YAZZIE
MOVIE COLUMNISTOn September 11th, 2012
a group of heavily armed militants from Libya attacked a United States diplomatic compound in Benghazi. The group quickly overwhelmed the compound and set fire to the buildings and later launched mortar rounds at a secret C.I.A. compound that was within a few miles of the first attack. U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three Americans were killed in the attacks. This tragic event is the inspiration for director Michael Bays new film 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi, based from the novel by Mitchell Zuckoff, which includes accounts from the security contractors who were working with the C.I.A. during the attacks, 13 Hours: The Inside Account of What Really Happened in Benghazi. Michael Bay, a director known for his boisterous, excessive, and overindulgent style, tackles this heroic, chaotic story with less identifying flair than he typically expels, though thats not saying very much considering the directors excessive tendencies. This demonstration displays many of Bays strengths but also his glaring weaknesses; this both helps and hinders 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi.
Former Navy Seal Jack Silva (John Krasinski) arrives in the
heat of Benghazi and is greeted by an old acquaintance Tyrone Rone Woods (James Badge Dale). Jack is the new member to a security team of former elite military operatives tasked with protecting C.I.A. agents hoping to assist in the restructuring of Libya. Benghazi is dangerous, filled with weapon-carrying citizens and roaming militant squads. Jack and his team protect a compound called the Annex and escort C.I.A. operatives to meetings with different influential figures. Things take a turn for the worse when a nearby U.S. diplomatic compound is attacked, forcing the team to take action in order to save lives and stay alive.
Michael Bay understands how to construct an action film: big explosions over big special effects combined with dynamic photography and breakneck
editing; it can be difficult to completely register what is going on at times but its also strangely hypnotic, mind-numbingly so. Regardless of how one may feel about these extremes, the director is one of the best at utilizing them. Bay has scaled back these elements within 13 Hours but his distinctive signatures still permeate in many moments. Unfortunately, in one dramatic instant, its
used in the absolute worst way. Once the build-up ends and the action takes over completely, Bay keeps the tension high and the action quick and frenzied by utilizing a mix of first-person perspective photography, wide angle establishing shots, constant flashes of gun fire, and violence that is rapid and in a few moments graphically rendered.
With Bay operating with a little more restraint, it offers an opportunity for more character developments to shine through. The introduction allows ample time to get to know these brave men operating in a system that doesnt quite accept or appreciate them. For instance, the director of the C.I.A. compound consistently talks down and berates these mens lifestyle and purpose. Unfortunately, most of the structure avoids the deeper angles, like the enemies these men fight both in the smoky fields and abandoned buildings that surround the compound and those operating on the American side miles away, safe and sound,
watching the conflict in front of a computer. The film opts for the simplified version of dedicated men doing a dangerous job. The only offering of insight comes when these soldiers are given little moments to communicate with family via video or during down time between gun fights to talk about life away from the battle, but these moments come as secondary filler flashes instead of being purposefully designed. This underutilization of character building lessens the emotional aspects that could have allowed a greater connection to these characters.
John Krasinski is exceptional here, crafting a character that is professionally focused but also wholly aware and affected by the risk he is taking. James Badge Dale, playing the team leader, and Pablo Schreiber, playing the smart aleck of sorts, are also very good in their roles throughout.
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi doesnt tell the most cohesive story, and the characters lack the nuance that would provide them greater emotional connection. However, underneath the excesses of Michael Bays filmmaking style, restrained yet still obviously noticeable here, is a film about heroes and the dedication, responsibility, and self-sacrifice thatdefine their commitment to America. Bay never sways from this fundamental purpose, even ifhis indulgent filmmaking signature sometimes overshadows the spotlight.
13 HOURS: THE SECRET SOLDIERS
OF BENGHAZI
Dir: Michael BayStarring:John Krasinski, James Badge Dale, Pablo
Schreiber, David Denman, Dominic Fumusa, Max
Martini, David Costabile, Alexia Barlier, and Toby
Stephens
Montes Rating: 3.00 out of 5.00
TheFoothillsFocus.com page 11The Foothills FocusJanuary 20, 2016 Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus
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JUDGE GERALD A. WILLIAMSNORTH VALLEY
JUSTICE OF THE PEACEA federal law, known as the
Stolen Valor Act, made it a crime to claim that you received military medals that you did not actually earn. It almost immediately came under attack as being in conflict with the First
Amendment. One of the main legal issues is: To what extent does the First Amendment protect false statements of fact?
In 2012, in United States v. Alvarez, the U.S. Supreme Court held that most of the Stolen Valor Act was unconstitutional. In that case, a local politician in California announced, after he had been elected, that he had been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor while serving as a United States Marine. In reality, he had never served in our nations armed forces.
The Supreme Court stated that the federal law was not necessary to protect the militarys system of awarding medals and that this was different than someone making a false claim to receive some type of veterans benefit. The justices that dissented believed that false statements about military medals deserved no First Amendment protection and that these types of
statements were different than a debate on military policy, which would receive Constitutional protection.
The Ninth Circuit recently looked at these issues again. In that case, a Korean War veteran, over 40 years after his honorable discharge, filed a claim for service connected PTSD with the Department of Veterans Affairs. He submitted an altered discharged form in support of his claims. There was also a photograph of him in uniform wearing various medals that he never received, including a Purple Heart and a Silver Star. In addition to being convicted of charges in connection with the false claims, he was also convicted of wearing unauthorized military
medals in violation of th Stolen Valor Act.
On January 11, 2016, the Ninth Circuit reversed the conviction for the charge concerning the Stolen Valor Act. In doing so, it held that wearing medals that you did not earn is a type of symbolic speech that cannot be made illegal due to the protections of the First Amendment.
The Ninth Circuit held that wearing unearned medals is a form of speech that is intended to communicate an idea, similar to wearing a black arm band. The Ninth Circuit went on to write that wearing an unauthorized medal is a type of speech because wearing an authorized medal is type of speech.
My view, perhaps not surprisingly, is different. The Stolen Valor Act addresses a unique type of deception that is intentionally done for personal gain. It is not a type
of discussion that inevitably
occurs in free debate.
There is a difference between
speech and conduct. This is
true even when the conduct
may be done with an intent
to communicate. In addition,
free speech is not absolute.
For example, someone
cannot slander someone
and successfully claim that
they had a First Amendment
right to do so.
The Stolen Valor Statute did
not prohibit veterans and non-
veterans from bragging about
alleged accomplishments.
Instead, it specifically targets
a specific type of uniquely
shameful lie.
As the dissenting opinion
points out, wearing a medal or
an award (whether it is a military
medal, an Olympic medal,
or a Cub Scout pin) means
that someone in a position
of authority determined that
you should be awarded this
emblem and are entitled to
wear it. In short, honor matters.
Achievement matters.
The Defendant did not have to
explain to anyone what wearing
a Purple Heart on a military
uniform means. Without any
words being exchanged, many
if not most would recognize
that his Purple Heart meant that
he had been wounded in battle.
The Ninth Circuit believes that
his doing so is a type of free
speech. I consider it a type of
dishonorable conduct.
Judge Williams is the justice
of the peace for the North Valley
Justice Court. His column appears
monthly in The Foothills Focus.
Ninth Circuit Overturns Stolen Valor Law
Judge Williams Column
As the dissenting opinion points out, wearing a medal or an award (whether it is a military medal, an Olympic medal, or a Cub Scout pin)
means that someone in a position of authority determined that you should be awarded this emblem and are entitled to wear it.
In short, honor matters. Achievement matters.
and Yuma. In addition, 21 tickets matched four white ball numbers and the red Powerball for $50,000 prizes.
Three tickets in California, Florida, and Tennessee matched all five white numbers and the red Powerball to split the grand
prize jackpot of $1.586 billion in
the Jan. 13 drawing.
To check your Powerball
ticket numbers, go online to
www.ArizonaLottery.com or
www.Powerball.com.
The Arizona Lottery operates
from the revenue it generates through
the sale of its products. Learn more
at ArizonaLottery.com.
Pictured: The Circle K on Daisy Mountain, where a Powerball ticket worth $2 million was sold.
The Foothills Focuspage 12 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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Dear Foothills Focus Readers,I have been in the home care industry for over 20 years and it is sucha rewarding career. Everyday I go to work I get to help someone. ResCare employees say they love their jobs because they can reach out to their communities and make a real difference in peoples lives.
Recently ResCare HomeCare has expanded our in-home care and support services into your area. We are actively seeking care attendants to join our team. If you have a desire to give back to the community, looking to earn extra money, have life experience caring for loved ones and/or Professional Caregiving skills, caring and compassionate, then I encourage you to consider learning more about our Caregiving opportunities. Our open positions are part-time with flexible hours and all training is provided for free.Please call me if you have any questions about employment with ResCare HomeCare, or if you would like to learn about how our in-home care and support services could benefit you and your loved-ones. You can reach me at 480-435-9939.Sincerely, Rebecca Rangel
Rebecca Rangel 480-435-9939
SHEA STANFIELDARTS COLUMNIST
Jackson Brown reflected, Always have something beautiful in sight, even if its a daisy in a jelly glass. Stepping into local glass artist Kathy Nelsons studio is as visually breathtaking as experiencing
Europes cathedral glass sparkling in the sunlight. The pieces are arranged on glass shelving by color, shape, or functionality, each one more stunning than the next. You will find the play of light on glass as fascinating, as it is captivating, moving about the exquisitely arrange collections.
Born in Pennsylvania, Kathy spent most of her childhood growing up in the west between California, Oregon, and Nevada. She relays her art classes in school were a huge influence in introducing her to a variety of mediums from photography to clay. Kathys favorites were pastels, ceramics and being introduced to the historical perspectives provided by studies in art history. She credits early experiences in her art classes providing her with a creative outlet. Kathys day job is on the analytical side so
she appreciates the balance expressing though art brings to her life. As she would put it, Art helps me relax and use a different part of my brain. Kathy shares that her inspiration comes from many of her life interests, such as showing horses, karate, and auto racing, just to name a few.
Reflecting back over all her experience in the creative process, Kathy states she has always enjoyed glass objects. She states, One thinks of glass as fragile, however, pieces from ancient Egypt have survived for thousands of years to provide
us with a window into the life of one of human civilizations most prosperous and creative cultures. A number of years ago, Kathy received a stained glass class as a Christmas present. This brought her love of glass into a very real place in her life. A fused glass class followed; Kathy knew she was in her element. She observes, While a stained glass projects would take me weeks and even months to complete, fused glass
results in a finished project in 48 hours. She enjoys the much quicker pace of both medium and method.
Kathy belongs to the Sonoran Arts League and participates in their yearly Hidden in the Hills Studio Tour. This year, she participated in the Holiday Artisan Market, also sponsored by S.A.L. and will be in the Franciscan Renewal Centers CASA Art Walk, February 13, 14, 2016. Her work can also be seen in the Gallery at El Pedregal, Scottsdale from January through March 2016.
Kathy offers beginning classes, by appointment, in the fused glass method. For more information on arranging a class or to purchase something beautiful and functional for your space, contact Kathy via e-mail at [email protected], view her Web site at www.imagesinglassaz.com, or leave a message at (602) 616-0905.
Contact Arts Columnist Shea Stanfield at flowingquill @yahoo.com.
arts
Always Have Something Beautiful in SightStarlight Community
Theater presenting Seussical, the MusicalPHOENIX The magic of
Dr. Seuss will come alive on the stage, starting Jan. 29, when Starlight Community Theater opens Seussical, the Musical.
Oh, the thinks you can think! when Dr. Seusss best-loved characters collide and cavort in this fantastical, magical, musical extravaganza. The powers of friendship, loyalty, family, and community are challenged and emerge triumphant in this musical. Seussical offers entertainment for the whole family.
Seussical will be directed by Graca and Susan Gibson. The musical is based on the works of Dr. Seuss and is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI).
Starlights Seussical
performances will be held on
Friday, Jan. 29, 7 p.m.; Saturday,
Jan. 30, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.;
Friday, Feb. 5, 7 p.m.; Saturday,
Feb. 6, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Friday,
Feb. 12, 7 p.m.; and Saturday,
Feb. 13, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Tickets are available online
at www.StarlightCommunity
Theater.com. Tickets are $15.
For a limited time, advance
purchase tickets are $12 online.
Starlight Community Theater is located at 1611 W Whispering Wind Dr. #9, in north Phoenix. For more information, go to w w w. S t a r l i g h t C o m m u n i t y Theater.com or www.facebook.com/Starlight CommunityTheater.
TheFoothillsFocus.com page 13The Foothills FocusJanuary 20, 2016 Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus
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NORTH VALLEY In mid-December of 2015, personnel from the Arizona Game and Fish Departments Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) Program positively identified an adult quagga mussel attached to the hull of a boat recently removed from Canyon Lake, a major recreational lake on the Tonto National Forest.
Previous sampling conducted at Canyon Lake in October and November produced evidence of the genetic presence of quagga mussels near Mormon Flat Dam. Microscopic analysis of the October and November samples yielded a total of two veligers (quagga larvae). The findings suggest, for the first time, that quagga mussels are able to survive and reproduce in the lake.
Due to these discoveries, AZGFD will be ramping up its monitoring efforts at Canyon Lake and Saguaro Lake. In addition, the Department will classify Canyon Lake as an AIS-affected water under AIS Directors Orders #2. Because Apache Lake is interconnected through a pump-back water system, and Saguaro Lake, the lower Salt River to Granite Reef Dam, the Salt River Project Canal Systems, and Tempe Town Lake are connected by moving water downstream, the Department and partners might also be classifying those waters as AIS-affected.
In addition, AZGFD will expedite plans to utilize 2016 federal AIS grant money to add personnel in the Mesa region and to purchase several mobile watercraft decontamination units. This will aid in assisting the public to clean, drain, and dry and especially decontaminate their watercraft and equipment prior to exiting this area of the Salt River chain of lakes. These increased efforts are necessary to curtail the advancement of this highly invasive species to other waters in central Arizona and the rest of the state.
Quagga mussels colonize rapidly on hard surfaces and can ruin recreational watercraft motors, alter water quality for aquatic wildlife, and clog water intake structures such as pipes and screens, thereby impacting pumping capabilities for power and water treatment plants.
The Department recognizes that finding one adult quagga mussel and indications of reproduction do not mean total infestation at the lake, said Tom McMahon, AZGFD aquatic invasive species program coordinator. But all recreationists and boaters need to remember to clean, drain, and dry their watercraft and equipment after every use to minimize the looming threat of a full-blown infestation in this system, and perhaps statewide.
Under Arizona law, boaters and all recreationists who take watercraft and other equipment out of waters designated as having
aquatic invasive species must use the following steps when leaving that listed water: CLEAN. Clean/remove
any clinging material such as plants, animals, and mud from the anchor, boat, motor, hull, trailer, etc.
DRAIN. Remove all water drainage plugs (and keep them out during transport). Drain the water from the bilge, live-well, and any other compartments that could hold water. Drain the water from the engine and engine cooling system(s). You can do this by lowering the outboard, while on the ramp, until the water is removed.
DRY. Ensure the watercraft, vehicle, equipment, or conveyance is allowed to dry completely before placing in another water in Arizona. Leaving your plugs out during transport will assist in ventilating and speeding the drying time of those difficult-to-dry areas of your boat.
For more information on quagga mussels, including the Directors Orders lists of aquatic invasive species, waters, and statewide decontamination protocols, visit https://www.azgfd.com/fishing/invasivespecies. If you are in need of decontaminating your moored boat before transporting from an AIS-affected water, contact AZGFD at (623) 236-7608.
Adult quagga mussel discovered at Canyon Lake, could impact lakes use
YCSO detectives investigating homicide in Black Canyon City
BLACK CANYON CITY Yavapai County Sheriff s Office detectives are investigating the murder of a Black Canyon City woman.
On Jan. 12, YCSO detectives were called to a residence on Mud Springs Road. At the scene, they found a woman who had died; the death was classified as suspicious. The victim has been identified as 42-year-old Janine Appleford.
The following day, YCSO detectives booked 47-year-old Wayde Chaulklin into the Camp Verde Detention Center for one count of 2nd Degree Murder. The victim was reported to be Chaulklins girlfriend.
According to a release from YCSO, Chaulklin claims he accidently shot the victim during early morning hours on Tuesday (Jan. 12) when part of a rifle he was carrying hit the corner of a table and went off and that he saw Appleford fall to the floor. YCSO noted
that Chaulklin made no effort to contact medical personnel. He told a neighbor what had happened, and they notified YCSO. Chaulklin claims the shooting was accidental but has changed details in his story.
The rifle involved in the incident was recovered from the scene. YCSO reported that Chaulklin was in possession of methamphetamine when he was arrested.
Anyone with information on this crime should contact the Yavapai County Sheriff s Office at (928) 771-3260.
YCSO photoPictured: Wayde Chaulklin
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The Foothills Focuspage 14 TheFoothillsFocus.com Facebook.com/TheFoothillsFocus January 20, 2016
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KIB
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JD KIMBRELL602.319.1089
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PUBLIC NOTICEARTICLES OF
INCORPORATION HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE
ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION FOR
ROADRUNNER EXPRESS WASH, INC.2057304-3
THE ADDRESS OF THE KNOWN PLACE OF BUSINESS IS:
17203 N 19TH AVEPHOENIX, AZ 85023
THE NAME AND STREET ADDRESS OF THE STATUTORY AGENT IS:
ANDRE REMILLARD17203 N 19TH AVE
PHOENIX, AZ 85023
PUBLISHED IN THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS
PUBLIC NOTICEARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED
IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION
COMMISSION FOR
TABLE MESA FIREARMS, LLCL-2035012-9
THE ADDRESS OF THE KNOWN PLACE
OF BUSINESS IS:
46619 N 12TH LANE NEW RIVER, AZ 85087
THE NAME AND STREET ADDRESS OF THE
STATUTORY AGENT IS:
46619 N 12TH LANE NEW RIVER, AZ 85087
MANAGEMENT OF THE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
IS VESTED IN A MANAGER OR MANAGERS. THE
NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF EACH PERSON WHO IS A
MANAGER AND EACH MEMBER WHO OWNS A
TWENTY PERCENT OR GREATER INTEREST IN THE
CAPITAL OR
PROFITS OF THE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ARE:
COREY SPIELMAN46619 N 12TH LANE
NEW RIVER, AZ 85087MONICA SPIELMAN46619 N 12TH LANE
NEW RIVER, AZ 85087
PUBLISHED IN THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS
Northland Pioneer College is looking for a responsible individual to instruct inmates at Arizona State Prison Complex-Winslow in subjects relating to
building trades, construction technology. For detailed job announcement go to www.npc.edu
EEO/AA
Faculty in Construction Technology
PUBLIC NOTICEARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED
IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION
COMMISSION FOR
LAUNDRY, LLCL-2050332-1
THE ADDRESS OF THE KNOWN PLACE
OF BUSINESS IS:
1825 E REDFIELD RDPHOENIX, AZ 85022
THE NAME AND STREET ADDRESS OF THE
STATUTORY AGENT IS:
1825 E REDFIELD RDPHOENIX, AZ 85022
MANAGEMENT OF THE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
IS VESTED IN A MANAGER OR MANAGERS. THE
NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF EACH PERSON WHO IS A
MANAGER AND EACH MEMBER WHO OWNS A
TWENTY PERCENT OR GREATER INTEREST IN THE
CAPITAL OR
PROFITS OF THE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ARE:
TREVOR VANHUIZENP.O. BOX 10731
PHOENIX, AZ 85064SILVIA VANHUIZEN
P.O. BOX 10731PHOENIX, AZ 85064
PUBLISHED IN THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS
BlackCanyon
CommunityPharmacy
Full PharmacyServicesCustom
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Arizona 85324
623.374.5067Fax 623.374.5201
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Call now to schedule your Annual Service at Hales Marine Service and receive 10% off!(with coupon. Exp. 2/29/2016
Thank you for being our loyal customer!
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46641 N. Black Canyon Hwy. New River, AZ 85087
email: [email protected]
Any changes or corrections required must be received by Friday 10 A.M. prior to the publication date. The ad will run as is if we dont receive a response by the Friday 10 A.M. deadline.
This ad is Copyright The Foothills Focus for use in The Foothills Focus newspaper and Websites only. No other use is permitted without written permission of the Publisher.
UPHOLSTERYWe Are A Better Choice!
Redo your
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NOTICESStarting a Basic Dog Obedience Training class. 1 hour class for 6 weeks. $15 per week. Must sign up. Claws N Paws, 46639 N Black Canyon Hwy. New River, 623-465-8765
Looking for men and ladies, beginners or experienced who would like to play mah jongg and/or cards at the Anthem Civic Bldg. Call Nancy after 6pm. 623-465-9317 for info.