Thursday, January 10, 2019

Cubbies: The Boys of Spring Are Back! Play ball!

Thinking spring tickets:
The general sale for single-game tickets to Cubs spring-training games at Sloan Park in Mesa, Arizona, begins at 11 a.m. Saturday.
Fans can secure tickets one day earlier through the online MasterCard presale, beginning at 11 a.m. Friday through 11:59 p.m., pending availability.
Fans using a MasterCard can purchase single-game spring training tickets in advance of the general on-sale at a 15 percent premium in excess of face value, while fans using other forms of payment may purchase tickets at a 20 percent premium.
A limited number of tickets will be made available to each home game for the MasterCard Presale.
Tickets may be purchased online at
www.cubs.com, over the phone at 800-THE-CUBS (800-843-2827) or in person beginning Saturday at the Sloan Park ticket office from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. MST.
There is a limit of eight tickets per game and a maximum of eight games an order.
The Cubs open their 2019 spring home schedule against the Milwaukee Brewers on Feb. 23
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Story image for mesa arizona from NBC Chicago
NBC Chicago-15 hours ago
The general on-sale for single game tickets to Cubs Spring Training games at Sloan Park in Mesa, Arizona, begins Saturday at 11 a.m. CST. Fans can secure ...

Relieving The Boredom of Retirement: Art Morale Boost

Bits and pieces from a story published yesterday in Nearby News:

Mesa Couple Open Arizona’s Only Veteran-Owned Art Gallery
January 9, 2019 by Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
Mountain Bridge residents Susan Paige and her husband, Lt. Col. Barry Rosenblatt, are spreading their message that art boosts veterans’ morale by hosting exhibits at Paige Artists Studio/Gallery/Gifts in Downtown Mesa’s OneOhOne collective. . .
“My husband and I are exhibiting all our work throughout the building,” Paige said. “It’ll be a pretty big show highlighting the things he does and the work I do.”
Paige has an extensive past with the Arizona art scene. In the early 1980s, she owned the only avant-garde art gallery in Downtown Phoenix. She hosted emerging artists that Scottsdale galleries wouldn’t entertain because they weren’t well known.
“I did performance art, too,” she added. “I was the first gallery to do performance art and mixed media. It was a lot of fun. I’ve been doing art and been involved in the art world here and in Dallas and Chicago. Then I got into the healing arts and was a massage therapist.”
Rosenblatt was a dentist and engineer in the military. He learned art and the creative process helps with post-traumatic stress disorder. Paige said her husband doesn’t suffer from PTSD, but he saw those who did. For him, it relieves the boredom of retirement. . .
Paige, 64, said her gallery’s location is perfect, as she believes Downtown Mesa will become the Valley’s cultural center.
“It’s going in that direction, with The Nile and all the venues with entertainment,” Paige said. “There are so many open mic nights. Susan Woodruff, who created the Second Friday Night Out, owns our building.
“Downtown Mesa has a great energy for creative people. I just wanted to be a part of it. I wanted to give my husband the opportunity to have goals and have something to do.” . . .
READ MORE /Source: http://nearbynews.com/

Wednesday, January 09, 2019

New Times Reporter Joseph Flaherty: Fresh Hell For All of Us

Will politicians set Arizona's future aflame with some bone-headed idea or a brazenly unconstitutional scheme?
That's the opening question from a New Times local reporter starting off a new news story with some strong words.
Unlike some "contributing writers" writing stories for The East Valley Tribune and The Arizona Republic, Flaherty pours the fuel on the new legislative session, starting with the water fight. He's got credentials and bravado.
What Fresh Hell Awaits During Arizona's New Legislative Session?
| January 7, 2019 | 7:30am
The Arizona Legislature, a notorious cauldron of bad ideas, will reconvene on Monday, January 14. What fresh hell awaits?
Gage Skidmore/Flickr; New Times illustration by Zac McDonald
Joe Flaherty's report 07 Jan 2019
Once again it's Mesa conservative Mormon Republican Rusty Bowers in the picture >
New legislators from Mesa represent LD 18,
LD 16 and LD 24
Over all these issues is the narrow Republican margin of control in the House. The Republicans lost seats in the House, reducing their margin from 35 during the last session to just 31. This 31-29 split between Republicans and Democrats means that one GOP dissenting voice can make life difficult for the majority.
Despite their efforts in several competitive districts, Democrats were unable to claw back the State Senate, so the 54th Legislature will be a continuation of last year's 17-13 Senate split
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Joseph Flaherty is a staff writer at New Times.
Originally from Wisconsin, he is a graduate of Middlebury College and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism
Contact: Joseph Flaherty
Follow: Twitter: @flahertyjoseph





 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Martha McSally + East Valley Mayors

Martha makes more overtures meeting mayors in cities where the aerospace and defense industries have a big footprint and economic impact.
Where's Arizona's other senior U.S. Senator Synema?

Big Windfall For Boeing & Partners In 2018: Billion$ in Rotorcraft Work Contracts

According to this report , in Rotor & Wing International on 04 Jan 2019 "Atop winning several of the largest and most contentious military acquisition competitions of 2018, Boeing in the month of December alone took home a share of nearly $2 billion in rotorcraft contracts from the U.S. Defense Department, much of it in conjunction with joint-venture partners.
Boeing was selected in 2018 to build both the U.S. Air Force T-X trainer replacement competition and the Navy’s MQ-25 aerial refueling drone — work which Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg estimated at $60 billion — and the Air Force’s replacement for UH-1N Huey helicopters.
 
> The late-year windfall in rotorcraft began Dec. 20, when Boeing Sikorsky Aircraft Support, a joint venture of the two aerospace giants that provides logistics support to U.S. Special Operations Command, was awarded more than $1 billion to maintain SOCOM rotorcraft.
The indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity, firm-fixed-price, cost reimbursable contract is worth up to $1.1 billion for life cycle contractor support for the MH-6 Little Bird, MH-47 Chinook, and MH-60 Black Hawk aircraft.
The majority of the work will be performed in Fort Campbell, Kentucky
> The same day, Boeing proper took home a $250 million contract for engineering and logistics support services for the Army’s CH-47 Chinook fleet, an award that had only one bidder.
Work locations and funding will be determined with each order, with an estimated completion date of Dec. 31, 2023.
> Less than a week later, on Dec. 26, the company’s Mesa, Arizona, arm signed a deal to sell $49 million of AH-64 Apache aircraft, weapons, sensors and related equipment to the Qatari Air Force through the foreign military sales program.
> The following day, the Bell-Boeing joint program office in Amarillo, Texas, got a $13 million fixed-price contract from for 218 V-22 operational test sets for the U.S. Navy, Japan and other unnamed FMS customers “including non-recurring engineering to address potential obsolescence issues,” according to a U.S. Defense Department contract announcement.
> On Dec. 28, the same JPO won a huge $366.6 million modification to a previous contract that covers production and delivery of three CMV-22 carrier onboard delivery aircraft for the U.S. Navy and two MV-22B Ospreys for the Marine Corps.
> To kick off the new year, the V-22 team on Jan. 2 was awarded $23 million for continued operation of the V-22 test aircraft at Naval Air Station Patuxent River and Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Arizona.
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https://www.rotorandwing.com/2019/01/04
 

Mesa City Council Meetings [2] Mon 07 Jan 2019

Monday's meetings were the last for the present composition of the seven-member Mesa City Council - District 4 Councilmember Chris has been termed-out after occupying a seat for the past eight years. Mayor John Giles referred to that 8-year time span as marking 'the end of an era'. 
Tomorrow will see the swearing-in of one new woman to join the all-male cast - Jennifer Duff who barely eked-out a victory in the November 2018 General Election over Chris Glover's second cousin [endorsed by both him and D2 Councilmember Mark Freeman] by less than 300 votes.
Glover has registered a political action committee with the Mesa's City Clerk's office to run for mayor in 2020.
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Agendas for both of Monday's meetings were posted earlier on this blog. Per usual some items that deserve individual attention were passed over and left on the Consent Agenda that was read-out by Kevin Christopher, while 3 items were requested to get removed by submitting blue cards. 
STUDY SESSION > Take the time to watch this, seriously
Views: 6 at the time of upload
Running time: 53:50
The image you see is Jeff McVay, the City's Director of Downtown Transformation, who appears to have undergone 'a new image make-over' during a presentation and discussion on an item that was removed from the study session's agenda 

Review of items on the agenda for the regular meeting with one blue card to remove Item 5-d
> ITEM 5: 6 RESOLUTIONS all on the Consent Agenda
Item *5-d 
Approving and authorizing the City Manager to enter into a Purchase Agreement and a Development Agreement with Chicanos Por La Causa, Inc. for the development of approximately 2.5 acres of property, of which approximately 1.3 acres is City-owned, on the northwest corner of Country Club Drive and Main Street.
The Purchase and Development agreements will facilitate the development of a mixed-use, transit-oriented development. (District 4)
Attachments: 1. Council Report with Exhibits
2. Resolution
3. Development Agreement with Exhibits
4. Purchase Agreement with Exhibits
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MESA CITY COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING
Views: 30

Items 5-b, 5-d and 5-e were asked to be removed from the Consent Agenda
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Hybrid-Electric Bell eVTOL Nexus Air-Taxi For Everyday Use


Meet Bell Nexus, the Six-Ducted-Fan Air Taxi Of the Future
By Dan Parsons | January 7, 2019 
The model displayed at CES is the only example built so far, but the company is proceeding on a speedy development and test schedule that should see an operational air vehicle on the nearer end of the next decade.
Since Bell flew its first helicopter in 1943, the company has delivered more than 35,000 helicopters and tiltrotor aircraft. Bell is now combining their deep understanding of vertical flight technology with hybrid-electric power to create a disruptive new VTOL air taxi for everyday use.
Also for safety and affordability reasons, autonomy will play a key role in making the experiment become a widely accepted mode of transportation, he said.
Out of the gate, Nexus will run on a hybrid-electric propulsion system specifically designed for the urban air mobility mission, according to Kyle Heironimus, the innovation engineer in charge of developing the Nexus propulsion system.

The seed could begin to germinate within six or seven years, if all of the regulatory, economic and technological pieces fall into place. The vehicle uses six pivoting ducted fans attached to a fuselage that can carry four passengers and a pilot. Ducts augment the power provided by the fans, reduce noise and promote “approachability” of the aircraft for passengers who might hesitate approaching an aircraft topped with a series of spinning knives, Drennan said.



It is such a complex nut to crack that Bell is coming at urban air mobility from more than just an air vehicle. To create an entire urban mobility “ecosystem,” the company and its partners have identified four avenues of approach: operational, regulatory, manufacturing and technological, Drennan said.
The name "Nexus" is meant as a nod to the various forms of transportation, technologies and regulatory changes that will converge to form what Drennan sees as a continuum of mobility options from light rail to aircraft to the rental scooters found in increasing numbers clogging major cities' sidewalks.
Cities were designed to be three-dimensional spaces that incorporate aircraft, but until now have been limited to terrestrial transportation options, Drennan said.

“Since the first skyscraper was built, cities have been destined to become multi-dimensional, yet we still think, plan and build our mobility solutions in a 2D world,” he said. “It limits our space, but with the convergence of key technology advancements … small urban aircraft can play a role where the current solution set is not keeping up with our needs.”
“The concept of urban taxi is nothing new to us,” he added. “We’ve been moving people over urban obstacles for a long time. What is new is the emergence of technologies that enable safe, quiet, efficient, and perhaps most importantly, affordable urban air mobility operations at scale using small, heavily automated electric and hybrid-electric vertical lift aircraft.”
READ MORE > https://www.rotorandwing.com/2019/01/07/
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08 January 2019
Need A Vertical Lift? . . . New Bell Nexus eVTOL An Air Taxi For Everyday Use
PRESS RELEASE: FAIRFAX, Va. (PRWEB)   
The Vertical Flight Society, the world’s leading non-profit organization working to advance vertical flight, salutes the unveiling of the Bell Nexus hybrid-electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft today at CES 2019, the world's largest consumer technology show.
“The unveiling of the Bell Nexus concept highlights that the ‘Electric VTOL Revolution’ is gaining momentum,” said Mike Hirschberg, VFS Executive Director.
Since Bell flew its first helicopter in 1943, the company has delivered more than 35,000 helicopters and tiltrotor aircraft. Bell is now combining their deep understanding of vertical flight technology with hybrid-electric power to create a disruptive new VTOL air taxi for everyday use.
Bell Nexus eVTOL air taxi
Bell unveiled its Nexus eVTOL air taxi on Jan. 7, 2019.
Bell executive Michael Thacker will give the keynote at the Vertical Flight Society's 6th Annual Electric VTOL Symposium Jan. 30 here in Mesa, AZ. (Bell image)
The Vertical Flight Society will host its 6th Annual Electric VTOL Symposium in Mesa, Arizona, on Jan. 29-31, 2019, where Michael Thacker, Bell’s Executive Vice President of Technology and Innovation will deliver the keynote address on Nexus and the company’s other autonomous and electric VTOL aircraft
This will be the first opportunity for Bell to present its Nexus air taxi to an aerospace audience. The Symposium will be held in conjunction with the 8th Biennial Autonomous VTOL Technical Meeting.
The combined event features more than 100 speakers on the promise, progress and challenges of autonomous and electric VTOL aircraft. More information is available at http://www.vtol.org/eVTOL2019.

Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...