Desert Sun Performing Arts “Rocks The Mouse” and Wins Top Honors

General, Members in the News — admin on April 27, 2010 at 3:43 pm

Desert Sun Performing Arts “Rocks The Mouse” and Wins Top Honors

April 14, 2010.  Desert Sun Performing Arts Competition team, the DSPA Gems, traveled with 34 dancers to perform at Disney.  They performed their award winning dances on Carnation Stage next to the Disney Castle.  Dances included “Fast As You Can” “Ironic” “Trickle Trickle” “Follow the Leader” “Breathe” and “You Should Be Dancing.”   While there they attended multiple workshops with professional Disney choreographers.  To achieve this trip, the dancers had to fundraise thousands of dollars.  They worked diligently selling cookbooks, cookie dough, hosting car washes, and working at Firebird Raceway.

Being able to perform at Disney was an incredible experience for everyone.  “I have been to Disney many times but my favorite part was having my dance family there to share it with,”  said Denise Baker.

The dancers learned a lot from their trip that can be applied both on stage and off  “Natasha’s favorite part was dancing.  We talked about why it is important for them to perform at places like Disney, and she first said because people like to watch them dance…because it helps her be comfortable in front of an audience.  She agrees that it has helped when she’s had to make presentations at school, “  Christine Nechvatal said.

The DSPA Gems then competed in the Kids Artistic Revue held in Mesa on March 19 and 20th.  They won seven First Place trophies and six Top First Place trophies.  Additional awards included:

3rd runner up 8 and under age division Miss Petite Dance
4th high score overall solo 12-14 age division
4th high score overall small group 15-17 age division
4th high score overall large group 9-11 age division
Judges awards “Way to Work It Award”, ” Touching Tribute Award”, “Fabulous Faces Award”

DSPA Gems also competed at I Love Dance Competition held in Phoenix on April 3rd.  They won:

3- 2nd place awards
8- first place trophies
Overall costume winner
3rd high score overall solo ages 8-10
1st place high score overall beginner group age 8-10

Desert Sun Performing Arts is Maricopa’s premiere dance and performing arts school.  We believe in a positive atmosphere for our students and their parents. Our school takes the responsibility of educating and guiding children very seriously. The lessons learned at dancing school go beyond the technique and steps they master. We believe they gain an understanding of discipline, commitment, teamwork, and the value of hard work. We offer them a way to express themselves and a better understanding of themselves.  DSPA features Rising Stars program for ages 2-5, Ballet, Jazz, Tap, Modern, Lyrical, Musical Theatre, Jazz Funk, and Inspire, a unique program for dance lovers with special needs.

Desert Sun Performing Arts
www.desertsunperformingarts.com
19756 John Wayne Pkwy
Maricopa, AZ  85239
520.483.8915
dance@desertsunperformingarts.com

Local Design Firm Build Regional Ace Hardware Web Site

Business Information, General, Members in the News — admin on April 8, 2010 at 4:55 pm

This was a really exciting project to work on here at factor1. Ace Hardware Phoenix is a regional site to represent the collective marketing efforts of all Phoenix metro valley stores. A total of just over 50 stores.

The new website features a Do-it-yourself video archive, news, sales & promotions, seasonal tips, and a Google Map™ store locations page. The new site is built on the cutting edge software Expression Engine—which also powers many large government and retail sites around the world. Factor 1 Studios worked with local Ace Hardware Phoenix staff to develop this beautiful, easy to navigate website. Visit the new Ace Hardware Phoenix website at http://www.acehardwarephoenix.com and see more work from Factor 1 Studios at http://www.factor1studios.com.

ace hardware phoenix home

The Core design was planned around the focus of our unique location. Phoenix Ace Hardware stores have a different season of marketing than other states. They sell grass seed while other stores in the US sell snow salt. We had to make sure that the visitor knew they were local to Arizona. So We have a cycle of quarterly images to rotate into the background of the site, all with very clear Arizona landscapes.

The home is very short and to the point. We know the audience is not here to shop online, but to find a store, or watch video DIY tips and messages.

ace hardware phoenix locations

The locations page was built using Google Maps API for a dynamic store browsing experience. A user can pan and zoom to a location near them, or select a store from the list to see it pinpointed on the map.

ace hardware phoenix video

Videos were a must. Ace Hardware Phoenix has several media relationships that keep the content rolling in on a routine basis. We built a system where Ace can simple add a new video, add the YouTube code, notes and any associated files, and our tools would sort them, newest up top, and rolling archives below. This makes management of the videos a breeze.

ace hardware phoenix news

News operates similar to the videos page. Simply add a new news article title, description and content.

MARICOPA SENIORS PRESENT SENIORS’ “SENIOR” PROM

General — admin on April 8, 2010 at 4:44 pm

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:   THERESE STARKEY, President, Maricopa Seniors, Inc.

Phone: (520) 568-8945

Email: theresestarkey1@msn.com

MARICOPA SENIORS PRESENT SENIORS’ “SENIOR” PROM

Maricopa Seniors, Inc., in cooperation with the Maricopa Unified School District and Maricopa High School, proudly presents the Seniors’ “Senior Prom” on Friday, April 30, 2010. Reservations are limited to 70 people, so RSVP today!

The evening is themed “Down Memory Lane” and festivities kick-off at 6:30pm with a reception and light hors d’oeuvres followed by a buffet-style dinner at 7:00pm. Members of the Maricopa High School Culinary Arts group, under the direction of Rex Sherry, are preparing the menu, which includes mixed greens salad, lemon herb marinated chicken with an orange Dijon mustard sauce, garlic mashed potatoes, choice of vegetable, rolls, coffee, iced tea or lemonade and pumpkin spice bars for dessert. Vegetarians may also request Pasta Primavera as their main entrée.

This is a fundraising event and all net proceeds benefit programs offered by Maricopa Seniors, including Pendant for Life and Infinity Card.

There will be a DJ, plenty of music for dancing and a few surprises. Dress is “after 5” – cocktail attire. Tickets are $25 each / $50 per couple. So get out your party dresses, put on your suits and ties and dust off your dancing shoes! This is sure to be a fun-filled evening for all!

For tickets, contact Board Vice-President Helen Brown at (520) 868-6111 or President Therese Starkey at (520) 568-8945. Tickets are also available on our web site at www.MaricopaSeniors.org.

Business After 5 Maricopa Veterans Center

Chamber Directors Blog, General, Members in the News — admin on April 8, 2010 at 4:12 pm

April 8, 2010

Business After 5

Maricopa Veterans Center

Thank you to the Maricopa Veterans Center for hosting us last night!  They did a fantastic job with the remodeling and sprucing up of the old Library Building.  The Center also serves as a museum of sorts with VFW & American Legion member donated memorabilia.  Center Coordinator Jack McClain proudly gives you a tour and explains the history of various items on display.  They even have the original bell from the Enlisted Men’s Club in DaNang, Vietnam!

Service groups, self help groups  and other community organizations can rent meeting space at very low cost.  The funds earned from these fees are placed directly back into the facility for this like continued maintenance, utilities and insurance.

Thanks to the donation of  raffle items from Maricopa Chamber Member’s, Coyote Trails Bed & Breakfast, Ride Arizona, Benchmark Home Loans and Balance Personal Training,  we were able to donate back over $200!

Special Guest on hand was our May 19, 2010 Keynote Speaker, Micheal Crain to give us a sneak peak of the upcoming event.  Anyone interested in more information can contact the Chamber or follow this link…

From the Maricopa Monitor

Consumer News, General — admin on April 7, 2010 at 3:19 pm

By John Gubbash
Staff Writer
Published: Friday, April 2, 2010 8:10 AM MST
Print | E-mail | Comment (4 comment(s)) | Rate | Text Size

Photo by Eric Mungenast/Maricopa Monitor, Maricopa Unified School District business services director Aron Rausch speaks Thursday night at a special Governing Board meeting discussing plans for the district’s budget shortfall. Plans to possibly close Maricopa Wells Middle School and cut dozens of teachers were postponed by the board until early next week.

In front of a packed and emotional audience, the Maricopa Unified School District Governing Board tabled its vote to both potentially close Maricopa Wells Middle School and Reduce in Force, or RIF, 89 classified staff members Thursday night.

On top of that, the board learned the district now has to reduce its budget even more.
More than 150 teachers and parents came to the approximately three-hour meeting, with a majority of it devoted to a call to the public section, with repeated pleas to avoid cutting certain programs.

A slew of Maricopa Wells teachers and students spoke on behalf of keeping the school open, including science teacher Thad Miller, who called the RIFs a “cruel joke.”

“This was all news to us (staff) that Maricopa Wells was being repurposed,” said guidance counselor Donna Wittwer.

The night before the meeting, an Ad Hoc budget advisory committee, consisting of teachers and community members, overwhelmingly voted to recommend closing the school, and recommended having the closure as one of the earlier cuts.

If the vote to close Wells does pass, superintendent Jeff Kleck said at least 24 teachers would receive RIF notifications, and the district could see every teacher at the school receive a notification, although board attorney Jill Osborne is researching the situation to see what other options could be available in that situation.

If repurposed, the six elementary schools would offer kindergarten through sixth grade, and moving all seventh and eighth grade students to Desert Wind Middle School.
Wells was chosen after the district personnel discussed the ramifications of closing one of the elementary schools, Kleck said, a decision that was not financially feasible.

The fact that the school is in corrective action from the state, which could lead to the state replacing half of its staff if the school does not pass Adequate Yearly Progress this year, was another factor in the decision.
“It becomes difficult to keep the school in corrective action and close the school (Desert Wind) that’s performing,” Kleck said.

If repurposed, the school could be used to house emotionally disabled private placement students, which would save the district additional money, at most $600,000, by allowing them to place those students within the district.

Alternatively, the district could rent the space to an online or charter school or rent out the school to Central Arizona College and the City of Maricopa.
The move would save the district approximately $1.1 million for next year.

The other item up for a vote was the elimination of approximately 89 certified staff members and staff positions, among them assistant to the superintendent Burnie Hibbard and volunteer coordinator Margaret Jackson, as well as the assistant principals at each elementary school.
It also includes a reduction of 35 teachers, with 21 of them leaving the district by their own volition.

All-day kindergarten, which the state will likely no longer fund next year, also had its own chorus of parents and teachers asking to make sure the district still provides it next year.

Parent Amy Jamieson was the most emotional speaker of the night, and credited her daughter’s ability to excel in school to all-day kindergarten.

“And I cannot believe we have to go through this drastic measure,” she said.

Butterfield Elementary School kindergarten teacher Jennifer Seaman said the teachers take advantage of the time allotted to them with all-day kindergarten, and said the program needs to remain “free of tuition.”

“A lot of things have changed over the years,” she said. “Please, don’t take a step backward.”

Other speakers wanted to ensure other programs on a potential chopping list, including middle school arts, security and to maintain facility managers, remained viable for next year.

However, budget advisory committee vice-chair Justin Price pointed out that “everyone in this room thinks everything on this list (of suggested cuts) is worth saving,” a sentiment Santa Rosa Elementary teacher Michael Russoniello concurred with.

“It’s a numbers thing,” he said. “It (cuts) has to come from something else.”

Governing Board President Geoff Goddard motioned to table the decisions because two board members, Carrie Vargas and Tim White, were absent, saying he did not want to make a vote without a full board.

He also wanted to have the budget advisory committee and the district send out surveys to see if employees would be willing to take a percentage from their salary to avoid closing Wells.

Goddard also wanted to see what the district could do to preserve all-day kindergarten, for the budget committee to reconvene on Monday, and to have the district look to reduce the number of teachers at all sites.

“I personally believe it (cuts) should be performance based,” he said.

Both motions were tabled with unanimous 3-0 votes.

But, earlier in the day, trimming the district’s budget became much more difficult, thanks to the loss of additional funding from the state.

Kleck said the district learned that day it would see its Proposition 301 funding drop from $80 per child to $25 per child.

That loss of funding forces the district to cut an additional $330,000, from its budget, meaning it has to at least trim more than $5 million even if the sales tax increase passes in May.

If the vote fails, the district could need to remove a total of approximately $7.7 million from its maintenance and operations budget ¬– almost 25 percent.

“Everybody in the state will face the devastation of that failure (to pass the sales tax),” Kleck said.

Due to money complications, Maricopa Wells Middle School will be sadly closed down. Now next year, Desert Wind Middle School will be Maricopa Wells Middle School. Now on April, 30th, Wells will be riding Desert Winds bus. We the City Counsel are sorry to tell you this, but it is better than cutting teachers because of budget cuts.

Sincerely
Maricopa City Counsel

Discover Arbonne Ribbon Cutting

Chamber Directors Blog, General, Members in the News — admin on April 7, 2010 at 10:20 am

Mach 12, 2010

Maricopa, AZ

Arbonne Office in Rancho El Dorado
43370 W Rio Bravo Dr
Maricopa, AZ 85138

520-705-0998

The Maricopa Chamber of Commerce was honored to facilitate another exciting Grand Opening!  Jolene Miller, Local Distributor for Arbonne International, opened her office/showroom in true Chamber fashion.  This event also featured special guest speaker Jenelle Adams, Arbonne guru to showcase the products.

In addition to Jolene and her guest speaker the following Chamber Ambassadors and  members were on hand to show their support. Ambassador Bob Gillespie, Ambassador Suzie Miller, Ambassador Cynthia Morgan.  Chamber Members, Jill Smith, Rita Schmidt.

Garden Helps Legacy Students Grow

Members in the News — admin on April 6, 2010 at 1:25 pm

The students at Legacy Traditional School in Maricopa are learning a lesson in giving and receiving. The school, which opened in Maricopa in 2007, participated in the Disney Give A Day Get A Day program. This program allowed the nonprofit charter school to give a 1 day pass to Disneyland for every person age 6 and over who donated a day of volunteering at the campus. One of the projects that the volunteers completed was making garden boxes for the students to grow vegetables. This past Friday the kindergarten through 6th grade classes were able to go to their class garden and plant tomatoes, onions, peppers, and many other vegetables. Although the younger students had been told that it will take a few weeks to see the seeds sprout, many wanted to watch for a few minutes just in case something happened sooner. The vegetables grown by the students will be used in the Legacy kitchen for staff lunches and also donated to the Maricopa Food Bank.Rise Pictures&StudentsGarden 033

Frito Lay Donates Tortilla Chips!

Business Information, Chamber Directors Blog, General — admin on April 6, 2010 at 1:22 pm

For Immediate Release:

March 24, 2010

Contact: Terri Kingery

520-568-9573

Maricopa, Az……The Maricopa Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce that Frito Lay has donated all the tortilla chips needed for the upcoming 6th annual Salsa Festival.  This is a wonderful donation and will help defray some of the cost for the event.  Other business sponsors are Waste Management and Orbitel Communications.

This event is from 5:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m., Saturday, April 24, at Pacana Park.  The event is free and families can enjoy games, live entertainment, business and craft vendors, food & drink and sample and vote on their favorite salsa.  There are a few vendor spaces available and if anyone is interested they can contact the Chamber by calling 520-568-9573 or visit our website at www.maricipachamber.com