Sunday, March 04, 2018

Agendas for Mesa City Council Meetings Mon 05 March 2018

Citizens, residents, voters and other interested parties are strongly encouraged to first get informed about what's going on in your government.
You can find schedules for Mesa City Council Study Sessions and Regular Meetings easily, as well as other board and committee meetings with elected and salaried officials, and those appointed to serve the interests of the public.
It's not easy and takes a considerable amount of time to access information.
Get to know how to contact City Manager Chris Brady.
Democracy cannot work unless you get active in government, so get-to-know what district you live in, and who's job it is to represent your interests. 
please Go to > www.mesaaz.gov   for more information from the official website for City Hall and City Council Meeting information and agendas
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Meeting Name: City Council Study Session Agenda status: Final
Meeting date/time: 3/5/2018 5:00 PM Minutes status: Draft  
Meeting location: Council Chambers - Lower Level
Published agenda: Agenda Agenda Published minutes: Not available  
Meeting video:  
Attachments:
File #Agenda #TypeTitleActionResultAction Details
18-0318 2-aMinutesHuman Relations Advisory Board meeting held on January 24, 2018.  Not available
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CITY COUNCIL MEETING

PREVIEW:
6 Liquor License Applications [Item 3]
2 Contracts
Item 5a : Resolution to extinguish a drainage easement to accommodate the proposed development of New Training Academy
File #: 18-0183   

Type: Resolution Status: Agenda Ready


In control: City Council
On agenda: 2/26/2018

Title: Extinguish a drainage easement located at 2836 South Signal Butte Road. (District 6) The property owner has requested the City extinguish the existing drainage easement to accommodate the proposed development of New Traditional Academy School.
Attachments: 1. Council Report, 2. Resolution

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Please pay attention to: Item 6-a and Item 6-b You can open links below
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ITEM 7-a:  A PUBLIC MEETING ON A MINOR GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT
                 ZON17-00572 in District 5
                 Access link below
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Meeting Name: City Council Agenda status: Final
Meeting date/time: 3/5/2018 5:45 PM Minutes status: Draft  
Meeting location: Council Chambers - Upper Level
Published agenda: Agenda Agenda Published minutes: Not available  
Meeting video:  
Attachments:
File #Agenda #TypeTitleActionResultAction Details
18-0257 2MinutesApproval of minutes of previous meetings as written.  Not available
18-0248 3-aLiquor License ApplicationMesa Encore Theatre This is a three-day event to be held on Friday, March 23, 2018 from 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M., Saturday, March 24, 2018 from 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M, and Sunday, March 25, 2018 from 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M, at Elite Classic Auctions, 1600 West Main Street. (District 3)  Not available
18-0249 3-bLiquor License ApplicationQueen of Peace Catholic Church This is a one-day event to be held on Saturday, March 17, 2018 from 5:00 P.M. to 11:59 P.M. in the Queen of Peace Catholic Church Madonna Hall, 141 North Macdonald. (District 4)  Not available
18-0252 3-cLiquor License ApplicationRosa’s Mexican Grill A restaurant that serves breakfast, lunch and dinner is requesting a new Series 12 Restaurant License for Rosas LLC, 328 East University Drive - Lauren Kay Merrett, agent. The existing license held by JKG LLC will revert to the state. (District 4)  Not available
18-0253 3-dLiquor License ApplicationRosa’s Mexican Restaurant & Taqueria A restaurant that serves breakfast, lunch and dinner is requesting a new Series 12 Restaurant License for Rosas LLC, 3129 East McKellips Road - Lauren Kay Merrett, agent. The existing license held by KJCC LLC will revert to the state. (District 1)  Not available
18-0251 3-eLiquor License ApplicationJD Chens Chinese Food A restaurant that serves lunch and dinner is requesting a new Series 12 Restaurant License for JD Chens Chinese Food, 9303 East Baseline Road, Suite 102 - Yong Deng, agent. There is no existing license at this location. (District 6)  Not available
18-0250 3-fLiquor License ApplicationEl Cancun Bar A bar is requesting a new Series 7 Beer & Wine Bar License for Agustin Moreno Loza, Sole Proprietor,1328 West University Drive. There is no existing license at this location. (District 3)  Not available
18-0246 4-aContractOne-Year Renewal to the Term Contract for the Safety Shoe Program for the Human Resources Department (Citywide) This contract provides a list of qualified vendors for safety shoes for approximately 900 City employees who perform jobs where safety shoes are required. The Human Resources Department and Purchasing recommend authorizing the renewal with American Safety Shoe Co. Inc.; Boot Barn (a Mesa business); Bound Tree Medical LLC; International Corporate Apparel (ICA); Jay Joel Rivin (J.R.’s Shoes and Boots); LeHigh Outfitters; Michael Colistro (Red Wing Shoes) (a Mesa business); Matlick Enterprises (United Fire Equipment); and Universal Police Supply; at $150,000, based on estimated requirements.  Not available
18-0245 4-bContractThree-Year Term Contract for Pipe Repair Clamps for the Materials and Supply Warehouse (for the Water Resources Department) (Citywide) This contract provides pipe repair clamps for new service installations and repair work by the utilities departments. Materials and Supply places orders and maintains inventory as needed. The Business Services and Water Resources Departments, and Purchasing recommend awarding the contract to the lowest, responsive and responsible bidders: Core & Main LP dba FKA HD Supply Waterworks; Arizona Water Works Supply; and Fortiline Waterworks Inc. (a Mesa business); at $101,400 annually, based on estimated usage.  Not available
18-0183 5-aResolutionExtinguish a drainage easement located at 2836 South Signal Butte Road. (District 6) The property owner has requested the City extinguish the existing drainage easement to accommodate the proposed development of New Traditional Academy School.  Not available
18-0177 6-aResolutionResolution declaring that certain documents filed with the City Clerk and entitled “Appendix A: Amendments to the Mesa Zoning Ordinance 2017” to be a public record and providing availability of the documents for public use and inspection. (Citywide)  Not available
18-0176 6-bOrdinanceOrdinance amending Mesa Zoning Ordinance; title 11 of the Mesa City Code. Amendments include various technical updates and minor revisions to Chapters 1 through 5 and other Chapters that relate to the changes made in Chapters 1 through 5. (Citywide) The changes include minor revisions to word choice, spelling and grammar; revising certain definitions; minor revisions to the AG and residential zoning districts, including changes to land use and development standards for specific uses and activities; revisions to the requirements for accessory dwelling units, and certain building setbacks and building forms; and modifying design elements and other requirements in the RSL zoning district.  Not available
18-0267 7-aPublic HearingConduct a public hearing on the Minor General Plan amendment ZON17-00572 (District 5)  Not available
18-0180 7-bResolutionZON17-00572 (District 5) Resolution. The 5800 through 5900 blocks of East Thomas Road (south side) and 3400 through 3500 blocks of North Recker Road (west side). Located at the southwest corner of Recker Road and Thomas Road (27± acres). Minor General Plan amendment to change Character Type from Mixed Use Activity District to Neighborhood. The request will allow for the development of a single-residence subdivision. Sean Lake, Pew & Lake, PLC, applicant; DTD-DEVCO 13, LLC, owner. Staff Recommendation: Denial P&Z Board Recommendation: Adoption (Vote: 5-2)  Not available
18-0178 7-cOrdinanceZON17-00320 (District 5) Ordinance. The 5800 through 5900 blocks of East Thomas Road (south side), and the 3400 through 3500 blocks of North Recker Road (west side). Located at the southwest corner of Recker and Thomas Roads (27± acres). Rezoning from RS-90 to RSL-4.5-PAD; and Site Plan Review. This request will allow for the development of a single-residence subdivision. Sean Lake, Pew & Lake, PLC, applicant; DTD-DEVCO 13, LLC, owner. Staff Recommendation: Denial P&Z Board Recommendation: Approval with conditions (Vote: 5-2)  Not available
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Let's Get Down to The Real Nitty-Gritty > City's Annual Financial Forecast / O Yeah

Here's some good stuff to keep your eyes on and keep your eyes - and ears -wide open: The typical Power Point presentation used for the City Annual's Financial Forecast in Item 3-a somehow manages to slide under the radar screen year-after-year: due to the fact that all the figures are not easy-to-understand by your average citizen.

For another matter, people who live here in Mesa are getting slightly more involved to tune-in to what your government is doing > YOU, dear readers are actively encouraged to engage more ...so let's get right down to the real nitty-gritty
Simple because it deserves more of your attention
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^ Here's a little intermezzo to get you in the mood - and perseverance - to watch 62 minutes they try to make boring on purpose
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Last Thursday was the morning study session about an hour in length with some changes discussed at the beginning by City Manager Chris Brady.
Here's the streaming vide uploaded from YouTube - it's about an hour. Before hitting the play button please take the time to read the study session's agenda
The streamed presentation is a a.PDF 17 pages
Financial Forecast General Governmental Funds 
Presented by:
Candace Cannistraro, Management and Budget Director
Brian Ritschel, Management and Budget Deputy Director

 


Next Steps –Anticipated Calendar
10
April 2 Review Proposed FY 18/19 Budget
April 5 Review Enterprise Fund, Utility CIP and UtilityRates Hear from Utility departments April 12 Review Non-Utility Capital Improvement Program (CIP)

Hear from various departments April 16, 19, 26 May 3
Hear from various departments
Budget Wrap-up May 21
Adoption of the CIP and Utility Rates Tentative
Adoption of the FY 18/19 Budget
June 4 Final Adoption of the FY 18/19 Budget

June18 Adoption of the SecondaryProperty Tax Levy
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Meeting Name: City Council Study Session Agenda status: Final
Meeting date/time: 3/1/2018 7:30 AM Minutes status: Draft  
Meeting location: Council Chambers - Lower Level
Published agenda: Agenda Agenda Published minutes: Not available  
Meeting video:  
Attachments:
File #Agenda #TypeTitleActionResultAction Details
18-0265 2PresentationInformation pertaining to the current Job Order Contracting projects.  Not available
18-0238 3-aPresentationHear a presentation and discuss the City's financial forecast on the General Governmental Funds.  Not available
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File #: 18-0265   
Type: Presentation Status: Agenda Ready
In control: City Council Study Session
On agenda: 3/1/2018
Title: Information pertaining to the current Job Order Contracting projects.
Attachments: 1. Project List, 2. Project Map, 3. Sub Participation Cumulative
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File #: 18-0238   
Type: Presentation Status: Agenda Ready
In control: City Council Study Session
On agenda: 3/1/2018
Title: Hear a presentation and discuss the City's financial forecast on the General Governmental Funds.
Attachments: 1. Presentation

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Revenue Forecasting • The city subscribes to a forecast group out of the University of Arizona which allows for access to raw data regarding econometrics • Statistical software is applied in house to analyze the correlation between economic trends and the city’s revenue sources • Relevant economic indicators are considered such as: population growth, wages, unemployment, building permits, gas prices, etc. • Mesa specific factors are applied such as economic development activities, retail trends, etc. • Includes an economic correction estimate
Included in Expenditure Forecast • Public Safety Retirement contributions (25-year unfunded liability payment plan) • Police contribution rate essentially unchanged (50%) • Fire contribution rate increase to 52% (from 48% in FY17/18) • Investment earnings assumption reduced from 7.5% to 7.4% • Arizona State Retirement • Contribution rate increase to 11.8% (from 11.5% in FY17/18) • Investment earnings assumption reduced from 8.0% to 7.5% (impact to rates phased in over five years) • Medical premiums increasing 4% in CY 2018 and 8% in later years
Expenditure Forecast –Transfer to Other Funds • Arts & Culture • The Arts and Culture Department operates facilities that charge for services provided: admission/tickets to shows. Expenditures are offset by these charges however the revenues do not cover the costs • The General Fund contribution is projected at $9.8M in FY 17/18 and $9.5M in FY 18/19 • Transit –Bus, Light Rail, Dial-a-ride • The city receives transit revenues from the State and a portion of the fares for light rail ridership however the revenues do not cover the costs • The General Fund contribution is projected at $11.0M for FY 17/18 and $13.8M in FY 18/19 • Gilbert Light Rail Extension is included in FY 19/20 forecast.  $4.0M annual estimated increase in expenses and $1.8M anticipated increase in revenues.

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What Don't People Get About The PR Ploys for ASU Schemes Here in Downtown?

Your MesaZona blogger is catching some "jumping" to the wrong conclusions by some people who read an article by the Arizona Republic news reporter  Lily Altadena, who's job is to cover Mesa, published last Monday at 9:36 pm just a couple of hours after the Mesa City Council meeting finished.
The reporter made sure to interview Mayor John Giles, quoting him many times, at the same time making sure to strike a balance with different points of view.
Noting, however, "officials" led by Giles, want to develop the downtown area into a hotbed of technology startups, called an "Innovation District." Giles envisions ASU as the anchor of the district.
That "vision" is a tunnel vision where all the officials led by Giles - and most of his friends called THE FOG by your MesaZona blogger - have tried time-and-time again to impose their version in one-track blind-sided thinking with an ideological bias from the generations-old political machine that has monopolized and controlled this city for generations to benefit and profit their own special-interests creating "The Old Donut Hole" in what used to be the central commercial and business center of the city. The new mantra "Innovation District" didn't enter their vocabulary until a few months ago and they quickly seized on it to hatch another scheme.
Recent years have seen schemes to fill it in - all of which have failed [see below]
Voters REJECTED the last scheme two years ago in what was a sketchy bogus public relations pitch, privately-financed by the FOG.
You can see who contributed in a required disclosure form available online at the City Clerk's  office
They've had two years to get their act together - and two years to buy up downtown properties and re-package it all to sell the schemes to voters in November's General Election.
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John Giles now owns this ASU scheme.
His political career is at risk.
He's a goofy guy who just doesn't "get it" when it comes to open, transparent and accountable government. . .He's goofy and foolish when he just doesn't it that Innovation Districts need to work for everyone - not just the FOG.
Education is NOT THE ISSUE in the mayor's pitch - he's throwing a bunch of "foul balls" to the electorate whom he admits in public that he's failed to engage the community at-large in government. 
In his first State-Of-The-City speech Giles stated he needs to hear and listen to ideas at the same time appearing to be tone-deaf to what anyone says outside of his close "friends-and-family". Giles is goofy, foolish and all boxed-in to an ideological bias he can't shake-off.
Here's a direct quotation from Lily Altavena's reporting with these preceding comments from your truly: We do value education. In spite of million$ getting thrown at improving achievement levels, the entire education bureaucracy in Arizona, from PreK-12, community colleges and state universities has failed in basic skills like reading and math. It's the entire State of Arizona that has a bad reputation for education, as well as for teaching and training the skills for workforce development. You can't compete without having the talent.
"If we decide that we don’t value education, we don’t think it’s important for us to continue to be competitive, to attract technology companies to our downtown, I think we’re being foolish," he said.
"This is our play at having a 21st century economy." 
Whose Play???????? This is serious
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Mesa City Council approves initial agreement to bring ASU downtown
, The Republic | azcentral.com Published 9:36 p.m. MT Feb. 26, 2018
"The Mesa City Council approved the first step in bringing Arizona State University downtown during a packed meeting Monday night that drew opponents worried about what it will cost the city.
The intergovernmental agreement, which passed on a 5-2 vote, plunges Mesa into a familiar debate over whether ASU is the missing piece in reviving its downtown or a financial burden on a city grappling with ballooning public-safety pension costs.
More than a dozen people spoke at the two-hour meeting, rare for a Mesa council meeting.
"Our city is undereducated and we’re trending in a negative way in terms of higher-education attainment, school readiness," Mesa Mayor John Giles said in an interview after the meeting. "I don’t want to be overly dramatic, but I truly believe that’s at risk here." 
This is the second time Mesa has approved such an agreement. The first time city officials gave the project the green light in 2016, voters later nixed a sales tax hike that would have provided funding for an ASU campus . . .
Giles has said that this time around, the project will not impose an onerous cost to taxpayers. Instead, the city will pay for it with existing revenue sources. 
Councilman Kevin Thompson opposed the resolution, adding that such an expense should go to voters.
Several other public speakers said the issue had already gone to voters and failed.
"To me this is like Captain Ahab chasing Moby Dick and we all know how that ended," Thompson said.
Councilman Jeremy Whittaker also voted against the agreement. 
Mesa officials and ASU still need to hammer out a budget and lease agreement, requiring council approval. 
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Bob Worsleybusinessman and state senator, supports the project. He, along with developer Habitat Metro and other firms, have already invested $20 million into downtown, he said during the meeting. . .
Blogger's Note: Worsley is double-dealing here mixing up his public life as an elected official in the Arizona State House with his schemes as a private real estate speculator - that's the worst case scenario to get accused of conflicts-of-interest. He's also involved in a recent revenge-sex porn scandal along his business partner in this Mesa gamble.
Mayor John Giles, center left with developers
Worsley is a part of a group that recently bought eight historic buildings along Main Street with hopes to redevelop them. 
Habitat Metro, known for its role in reviving downtown Phoenix, is also planning a 15-story hotel and apartment complex along with a sustainable apartment development downtown. 
"Every 15 years or so, a city has a transformative moment," Worsley said. "Our downtown is ready for that next moment." 
At least three developers, including Worsley, Tim Sprague of Habitat Metro, and Tony Wall of 3W Management spoke in support of ASU.
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Is Mesa giving ASU preferential treatment? 

Paula Norby, dean of Mesa's Benedictine University campus, said her university supports the growth of higher-education downtown. However, she raised questions about whether ASU would get discounts Benedictine did not receive. 
Blogger Note: another member of the FOG, Revolving-Door former AZ Congressman Matt Salmon was hired by ASU as Vice-President for Government Affairs
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The nuts and bolts of the agreement 

The creation of a budget is the next step in the process.
A cost estimate is not yet available.
The previously proposed ASU downtown Mesa campus was estimated to cost $102 million. At an earlier council meeting, a city official said the updated proposal is considerably scaled down: About half the size of the 2016 development. 
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PLEASE TAKE THE TIME TO FIND OUT MORE INFORMATION AND DETAILS FROM LILY ALTAVENA'S REPORTING by going to this link
AZ Central PART OF THE USA TODAY NEWTWORK
 

Why has the West gotten China so wrong, so often?

It's more than "a war of words" - it's a good thing to listen and try to understand a different point-of-view - perhaps an
IDEOLOGICAL BIAS when we need to take a fresh look.
Published on Mar 4, 2018
Views: 1,393
China’s has developed rapidly over the past 40 years, despite prophesies of doom from overseas observers. Chinese scholar Zhang Weiwei considers why so many predictions about China have proved to be so wrong.

Global Chamber Mexico: 2018 Outlook Guanajuato & Sonora

About an hour long - when you have the time there are some valuable talking points to listen to
Published on Feb 26, 2018
Hear from experts on the opportunities that 2018 will bring to foreign businesses in Mexico.
We will discuss the performance of the Mexican economy in 2017 and will provide an outlook on how 2018 is looking.
On this event, we will focus on three states that are being an important engine for manufacturing and services exported to the world: Guanajuato and Sonora.
Dr. Luis Núñez - Federal Delegate of Economy Secretariat in Sonora
Guillermo Gaxiola - Owner at SOLUCINT

BEA News: Gross Domestic Product by State and Personal Income by State, 3rd Quarter 2025

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