Tuesday, November 12, 2019

2019 Year's End Wrap-Up Dates & Times For Mesa City Council Meetings

Only six weeks to-go! What's getting "uploaded"
The clock is ticking for squeezing-in more business-as- usual
. . . "The Mesa Way" to keep you in-the-dark all the time.
 O Yeah! That's the way they like it:
> Dis-engaged and un-involved citizens who don't care
> City officials who listen more to special-interests
Consequences: fast-tracked growth at any cost to the public to gamble and cash-out on profits from rampant real estate speculation. All fueled by Buy-Ins using millions in public debt obligations and increases in fees/charges/use taxes.
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Those are only the direct costs - taken right out-of-your-pocket - that hit anyone who lives or works here whether man, woman, child or family irrespective of income level.
Here in Mesa (and the entire East Valley) the faith-based religion in The Real Estate Industrial Complex for Short-Term Capital-Gains produces long-term consequences 
  • DEGRADATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT
  • DEPLETION OF NATURAL RESOURCES
". . . That's The Mesa Way"
> Short-Term Capital Gains / Cash-Outs
> Fast-Growth-At-Any-Cost / Business-as-Usual Model
is simply NOT SUSTAINABLE over time
There are consequences to endless Suburban Sprawl and the prevailing commuter car-driven culture: It's the worst area in the entire country for violations of clean air standards and toxic contaminated risks and hazards to public health. 
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KEEPING THE PUBLIC INFORMED IS REQUIRED . . .
What you decide to do - to know and understand the issues and items on the agendas for these public meetings - is entirely up-to-you!
Information for Mesa City Council Meetings > CLICK HERE
It's all out there, only usually about 3 days or 24 hours ahead of time - but YOU CAN FIND IT AND TAKE ACTION
. . . a government in a representative democracy cannot be effective if the public is not involved, informed, or engaged 
UPCOMING EVENTS FOR
NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER 2019
  • 4 Happened Already
  • How many more to go?
Mesa's new Development Services Director showed up just to provide an introduction, then turned the presentation over. Please notice all the empty chairs in the background. . .
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Council Study Session - 11/4/2019 - Duration: 41 minutes.

  • 36 views
  • 2 days ago

City Council Meeting - 11/4/2019 - Duration: 47 minutes.

  • 70 views
  • 2 days ago

 

Council Study Session - 10/31/2019 - Duration: 2 hours, 27 minutes.

  • 31 views
  • 6 days ago


Monday, November 11, 2019

Exclusive: Anonymous Author Depicts Deep Trump Admin Dysfunction | Rache...

"Anonymous" puts duty to country above ________________ (U know who) ....I still miss that person who had a different name DEEP THROAT. He remained anonymous until many years later.
Running time for this streaming upload 11:16
Published on Nov 8, 2019
Views: 688,675+
Rachel Maddow shares exclusively obtained quotes and excerpts from the forthcoming book "A Warning" by an anonymous author described as “a senior official in the Trump administration,” who depicts dark dysfunction in the White House. Aired on 11/07/19.
» Subscribe to MSNBC:
http://on.msnbc.com/SubscribeTomsnbc

Google Timelapse: Phoenix, Arizona

     Fast + easy-to-see
Published on Nov 29, 2016
Views: 38,700+
Timelapse is a global, zoomable video that lets you see how the Earth has changed over the past 32 years. Explore the world through time at https://earthengine.google.com/timelapse.
Image credit: Landsat / Copernicus

Category

A Delightful Revelation: Mitt Romney The Twitter Troll

Nothing more than a flash >

Pierre Delecto

. . . Just another one of those almost-perfect
Images of Family Guys

OK
Who's next ???
Time will tell. There are so many!

CHRONICLES: Mesa City Council The Reader of The Consent Agenda

It's a pleasure to find someone else "outside-of-the-bubble" of the city of Mesa who actually takes the time to watch City Council Meetings!
Most people who do live here just don't care what's going in the City Council!
https://councilchronicles.com/tag/arizona/page/2/
"Somewhere out there, a city council meeting is happening. And you're not watching itBut I am. 
 Each week, I bring you the highlights, lowlights, and weirdlights from places you don't live."
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BLOGGER NOTE: Here's an official group shot of the seven incumbents on the council - all elected in their own right, some in their first terms or seconds terms and some hoping to mange to get elected again.
At least two - Kevin Thompson in District 6 and David Luna in District 5 - will get termed-out. They served their time for two terms and can't run again.
Both the current mayor John Giles and current District 3 Councilmember Frank Heredia were first appointed to fill-in the unfinished terms of their predecessors.
Mark Freeman is the Vice-Mayor and Councilmember representing District 1. Jeremy Whittaker represents District 2, and Jennifer Duff represents District 4
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One person who's been a frequent face City Council meetings is the silver-throated Kevin Christopher, one of whose responsibilities is to speed-read rapidly through the meetings' Consent Agendas where items are all thrown together in the hope that there are no questions or no requests to have the item(s) removed or pulled for individual attention.
Sad to say, but oftentimes some Mesa City Council members know little about the meeting details ahead of time.
#59: Mesa, AZ 10/17/16
"It’s a troubled time in America. People are confused. Searching for answers. They want a calm, steady presence to chart the way forward.
Ladies and gentleman, I think I found the hero we are looking for at the Mesa city council meeting.
His name? Kevin Christopher.
“Good evening, mayor and council members. These are the items on the consent agenda,” the bespectacled, baritone-voiced city employee announced.  Then, attempting the unthinkable, he turned a standard agenda-reading into a can’t-tear-your-ears-away vocal marathon. . .
Minutes ticked by. The man raced through FORTY-THREE items without so much as a drink of water!
“Item 6G–authorizing the city manager to enter into a subgrantee agreement for grant funds for the Fire and Medical Department’s Rapid Response Team.”
Not stumbling and not slowing down, the captions sped by underneath him as he rounded an incredible EIGHT MINUTES OF NONSTOP READING!
“Item 9A–subdivision plat. Bella Via Parcel 15 located on the east side of Signal Butte Road. Mayor and council members, these are the items on the consent agenda.”
Although I was giving him a standing ovation at home, Mayor John Giles was unfazed by Christopher’s oral Olympics.
“Please cast your vote,” he deadpanned. In less than two seconds, six “ayes” popped up and Christopher’s Last Stand was no more.
Switching to public comment, puzzlingly, there were two people at the podium.
Buenas tardes,” a diminutive woman introduced herself.
“Good afternoon,” the man in the maroon shirt repeated.
“I don’t mean to interrupt,” Mayor Giles interrupted, “but I notice you’re using an interpreter. So we’ll allow a total of six minutes.”
Six minutes–or, as it’s known in Mesa, a “Three-Quarters Christopher.”
Honorable miembros de concilio–”
Translator: “Honorable council members…me and my brothers come here to ask for our rights…for a place to live….We know that you have a heart….Thank you.”
One of her brothers, in matching red, took her place at the podium to clarify:
Translator: “The moving us out that the City of Mesa has tried to do…along with the owner of the mobile home park….you can help us but you haven’t wanted to….The mobile home park of Mesa Real has not been able to be helped.”
Mayor Giles furrowed his brow and tightened his grip on his pen.

“Fernando, would you translate that there is a sheet of paper with frequently asked questions related to the Mesa Real trailer park?”
Seriously, Your Honor? An FAQ? Not so much as an “I feel your pain” or “si, se puede?”
The mayor grimaced and anxiously ruubbed his chin as the translator conveyed the message. Council members eased the tension by staring at their cell phones and tablets.
Finally, Mayor Giles adjourned the meeting not with a whimper, but with a sick guitar riff. Crank it:


Final thoughts: I give 10 out of 10 stars to Kevin “The Reader” Christopher and whoever added that outtro music. And negative 10 stars to everyone else for not helping the trailer park.
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Interview #20: Mesa, AZ PIO Kevin Christopher (with podcast)
  This podcast interview is available on iTunesStitcherPlayer FM and right here:
Audio Player
If you saw the Mesa city council meeting review, you’ll recognize Kevin Christopher as the announcer of a HUGE agenda. But did you know he once reported on city council meetings? He did–and he has the stories to prove it!
Q: For your current job in Mesa, you read the entire agenda–45 items–and it took you eight whole minutes to get through. Do you prepare for that? Do you do vocal warm ups?
A: I look it over. There’s a few tricky–with restaurants and things that are in Spanish. My favorite of all time: a liquor license application for “What the Hell Bar & Grill.”
Q: Are there any memorable moments from Mesa?
A: When I first came to the city, we had one council member, Tom Rawles, who decided back in 2007 he was not going to stand for the Pledge of the Allegiance. So he kind of pulled a Colin Kaepernick. This was a protest against the war in Iraq. All of a sudden we started getting these people showing up at meetings and criticizing him. He actually got police protection for a few days to be safe. I’m not sure what he’s doing now.
 
Q: You were a journalist covering city council meetings in the early 1980s. How were meetings different in the ’80s other than, obviously, uglier eyeglasses?
A: Yeah, and interesting hair and fashion! I think the biggest change is the technology. Nowadays, it’s very easy to find out the agendas.
Q: When you started in Cincinnati, Jerry Springer was there. Did he stand out at all during council meetings?
A: He was pretty colorful. He was very charismatic and personable and I think that’s what was very appealing.
Q: You’ve sat through city council meetings in Cincinnati, Madison, and Mesa. Take me down the list–who stuck out?
A: I think the most memorable was a woman in Cincinnati. It wasn’t her real name, but she went by Fifi Taft Rockefeller. She claimed to have affairs with presidents and Winston Churchill. She’d be at city council almost all the time
mmm. 

A Day In The Life of Mesa City Manager Chris Brady

When we never see what the public schedules are for elected and salaried city employees - how they work or what-they-do on the clock to earn their salaries and generous benefits paid for by citizens and people who live and work here in Mesa - here's a mainstream media write-up by Mike Sunnucks published by the Rose Law Group Reporter.
Note that it is filed under Real Estate - that just about tells you almost everything about City Manager Chris Brady!
It's all about BIG Deals
What did you do yesterday?
Chris Brady, Mesa City Manager
Posted by   /  August 9, 2019  /  No Comments 
By Mike Sunnucks | Rose Law Group Reporter
Published: 3 months ago on August 9, 2019
  • Posted by:
  • Last Modified: August 9, 2019 @ 9:30 am
  • Filed Under: By Mike Sunnucks, Real Estate
  • Tagged With: ,  
  • __________________________________________________________________________________
    "Mesa has some pretty big deals a foot and that is keeping City Manager Chris Brady busy.
    Brady has been Mesa City Manager since 2006.
    He documented a recent day.
    That includes briefings on Google’s big new data center, a major expansion by AT&T, new developments and Arizona State University’s planned footprint in downtown Mesa.
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    4:45 a.m.: Alarm going off
    5:00 a.m.: Workout
    7:30 a.m.:  Staff meeting to discuss how we are achieving “The Mesa Way” vision throughout the city
    9:00 a.m.: Review plans for ASU@MesaCityCenter and the Innovation Studios

    10:30 a.m.: Review city council agenda with department directors to discuss upcoming budget forecast
    12:00 p.m.: Lunch/walking tour of downtown
    1:00 p.m.:  Briefing from Economic Development on the big deals coming to Mesa (Google, AT&T, the Union at Riverview and more…)
    2:00 p.m.: Briefing with the Mayor to discuss the next major ribbon cutting for a business located near Gateway Airport
    3:00 p.m.:  Meeting with developers and land-use attorneys on their latest development proposals
    4:00 p.m.:  Recognize city employees for their years of service with Mesa
    5:00 p.m.: City Council Study Session
    5:45 p.m.:  City Council Meeting
    7:00-8:30 p.m.:  Return Home

    Link > Rose Law Group Reporter
     

    Sunday, November 10, 2019

    THE TRICK-OR-TREAT City Council 'Study Session' 31 Oct 2019 > Mesa City Center Project [Including ASU, The Plaza + the Studios]

    “Our goal is to blur the lines between ASU and the community’’ by linking them with the plaza, the City's Director of Downtown Transformation Jeff McVay said. 
    REALITY CHECK: McVay has been more than fuzzy on details to finance that scheme to bring an ASU campus here to downtown next to the 8-story seat of government.
    It all started more than five years ago when Hizzoner Mayor John Giles tried to pull-off a major stunt with the costumed ASU mascot 'Sparky' when they both appeared together on the stage at the Mesa Arts Center making under-handed gestures to each other. Amusing? No. . . it was a major goof.  - a goof backed-up by a privately-funded $500,000+ public relations campaign to trick Mesa taxpayers to go-into-debt obligations to finance a $200M 'satellite ASU campus' here in Downtown Mesa. They didn't give up when taxpayers got smart and REJECTED that proposition in 2016.
    Fast-forward to 2018, little did we know what was going on behind-the-scenes, except after-the-fact, to find out that in anticipation of the public-financing, one [or more] closely-connected cohorts of "friends-and-family" and one then-AZ State Senator had snatched up title to 10 commercial properties to gamble making millions on real estate speculation here in downtown Mesa for their own private wealth-creation.
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    HERE'S JAKE PINHOLTZER from the chosen 'screen-grab' uploaded to YouTube. . . The 2-hour study session featured a debate over the unusual ASU@Mesa City Center building’s appearance, with the big screen display and a height equivalent to a five-story building even though it has only three stories. East Valley Tribune staff writer Jim Walsh was somewhat understated when he wrote three days later,  
    ". . . there is great hope that the project will awaken slumbering downtown Mesa and turn it into a more dynamic location, the ASU collaboration has been controversial from the start. . . "  The overall cost of Mesa’s innovative Arizona State University project is now estimated at more than $103 million – with ASU paying an additional $10 million.
    "You will see this is a spectacular building.’’  ^ NOT
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    That is EXACTLY what District 2 Mesa City Council member Jeremy Whittaker stated right at the start where he and everyone else kept hearing conflicting numbers about ASU.
    Here's a link to the source > https://jeremywhittaker.com
    How much will this building cost?"
    "Everyone is entitled to their opinion on this issue but not to their own facts"
    Why is there so much confusion on the price?
    The people have been misinformed and lied to constantly. As a councilmember, I personally was mocked by the city manager citing, “fake news”.
    The video below was posted by a Facebook group pointing out the discrepancies in the costs. I personally find these demeaning comments from the city manager unnecessary and appalling. https://www.facebook.com/752993211756142/videos/762107290844734/
     
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    So what more did we get for TRICK-OR-TREAT on October 31st?
    That just happens to have fallen on a day we call "Halloween") . . . and Hizzoner the mayor presiding on the opening of the study session properly called it "The Halloween Edition"
    District 2 Councilmember Mark Freeman was away at a water meeting of some kind, but the other five elected councilmembers were all present - some more informed than others ahead of time on the details in the presentation up for consideration in a hearing and discussion for an early morning study session.
    Two new members in the supporting cast of characters:
    1 Ray Naimark [not so new]
    2 Jake Pinholtzer  
    What did the public find out? To put it bluntly, it became apparent that city officials didn't due their homework or due diligence in the desperate rush to get something - anything at all whether on the drawing boards or in pretty-pictures or conceptual or schematic drawings - million$$$$$$ more are now needed due to either omissions or errors for the costs of the supporting infrastructure in the constricted site and its physical boundaries.
    People showed up in droves at a Design Review workshop in front of the City's Planning & Zoning Board where all the designated contracts said "trust us" and the City's Director of Downtown Transformation said "trust me,"  - that was back at the end of September.
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    You are getting tricked all over again! Everything will cost more due to all the major blunders and planning errors by city officials and their cohorts and the ASU lobbyists hired on to push this proposition . . . Now really kids, what else could you have expected from these tricksters? A Grab-Bag-of-Goodies perhaps or just more schemes to fill the already deep-pockets of some friends of the mayor?
    At this stage in the game of playing Mesa taxpayers for fools, when city officials have exposed and over-played their hands, Hizzoner has called in a new cast of characters - all chosen by ASU President Michael Crow - to try to save their scheme.
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     + a new rendering of what's called (get this)
    < The ASU Creative Futures Lab . . .

    _________________________________________________
    File #: 19-1182   

    Type: Presentation Status: Agenda Ready


    In control: City Council Study Session
    On agenda: 10/31/2019

    Title: Hear a presentation and discuss an update on the Mesa City Center project including ASU, the Plaza, and the Studios.
    Attachments: 1. Presentation

     
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    31 views
    Item 2-a Director of Downtown Transformation Jeff McVay brings in new reinforcements in a new supporting cast
    A WHOLE CREW > more to catch-and-see on November 4
    Rick Naimark
    Jake Pinholtzer  
    Who are they?

    Fortunately Item 2-a comes up first on the study session that runs on for close to two-and-a-hours [02:27:53]
    "Mission
    To create a world-class center at the leading edge of media technologies and practices that brings students, faculty, community and industry together to design, visualize and explore transformative, imaginative futures."
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    GMP NO. 1 CITY CENTER INFRASTRUCTURE
    Additional Infrastructure Improvements 
    $1.7M: System and reliability upgrades 
    $1.5M: Electric 
    $190K: Communications (fiber) 
    $30K: Future development 
    $25K: Street resurfacing 
    $210K: Public Safety (approved bonds) 
    __________________________________________
    $1.95M: Total Additional Infrastructure
    ASU @ MESA CITY CENTER UPDATE
    Timeline Update 
    Mid-November: ASU building final design complete 
    February 2020: ASU construction start 
    October 2021: ASU building construction complete 
    January 2022: ASU classes begin

    Budget Update 
       $73.5M: ASU building budget 
       $63.5M: City commitment 
    > $10M: ASU commitment 
    > ASU FF&E commitment: min. $10M 
    > $2.4M: Supporting infrastructure budget

     
    _______________________________________________________________________
    FULL AGENDA
    Meeting Name: City Council Study Session Agenda status: Final
    Meeting date/time: 10/31/2019 7:30 AM Minutes status: Draft  
    Meeting location: Council Chambers - Lower Level

    Published agenda: Agenda Agenda Published minutes: Not available  
    Meeting video:  
    Attachments:
    • 4 records

    File #Agenda #TypeTitleActionResultAction Details
    19-1182 2-aPresentationHear a presentation and discuss an update on the Mesa City Center project including ASU, the Plaza, and the Studios.  Not available
    19-1146 2-bPresentationHear a presentation, discuss, and provide direction on proposed adjustments to solid waste, gas, and electric rates.  Not available
    19-1083 2-cPresentationHear a presentation, discuss, and provide direction on the proposed Streetlight Master Plan.  Not available
    19-1192 3-aMinutesHuman Relations Advisory Board meeting held on September 25, 2019.
    ________________________________________________________________________

    NEWS: LeMonde in English | Sunday, January 25, 2026 Time: 10:46 pm (Paris)

    Le Monde.fr https://www.lemonde.fr › ...   France's leading newspaper brings you the latest coverage from France, Europe, and all aro...