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SILVER BELT ARIZONA February 6, 2019 B4 Apache Moccasin San Carlos

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Page 1: PUBLIC NOTICES - Gila County, Arizona · PUBLIC NOTICES Extension of bar patio is source of debate Continued from page 1 Black added that this business is growing and expanding, which

June 21, 2017A2 SILVERBELTARIZONA

ARTICLES OF AMENDMENT1. ENTITY NAME- J&BAZ LAND2. A.C.C. FILE NUMBER: L147922023. ENTITY NAME CHANGE- SATCO-MOPS, LLCI ACCEPTPrinted Name- William M ReynoldsDate- 04/04/2017This is a member-managed LLC and I amsigning individually as a memberFirst pub:6-21-17Final pub:7-5-17LE1138_______________________

Eco-Site proposes to build a 95-foot

Monopine Communications Tower at theapprox. vicinity of 51630 Forman Rd., Topof The World, Pinal County, AZ 85539,LAT: 33-20-42.77, LONG: -111-0-6.80.Public comments regarding potential ef-fects from this site on historic propertiesmay be submitted within 30 days from thedate of this publication to: Trileaf Corp,Andrew Cavalcant,[email protected], 2121 W. Chan-dler Blvd, Suite 203, Chandler, AZ 85224,(480)850-8575.One pub:6-21-17LE1140_______________________

SAN CARLOS APACHE JUVENILECOURTPO BOX 6

SAN CARLOS, ARIZONA 85550NOTICE and SUMMONSTO BIOLOGICAL MOTHER:

MATERNAL PARENT MOLLIE SIGNThe Natural Parents, Guardian, LegalCustodian and any interested Extended

Family membersIN THE MATTER OF SAID MINOR

CHILD,BURANDI GOODE, DOB: 03/06/2017PURSUANT TO: ORD. 1-56, Chapter 3,Section 3.2.17 Adjudication Hearing Et.Seq. A Petition for Child in Need of Care

has been filed in the matter of: the afore-mentioned child(ren), in behalf of theChildren you have the right to appear

and represent your interest at the sched-uled Adjudication Hearing set for:AUGUST 15. 2017 AT 9:30 A.M.Dated 14th day of June, 2017

Judge Donavan Case, Presiding JuvenileJudge

First pub:6-21-17Final pub:7-5-17LE1141_______________________

INFORMATION • TRANSPARENCY • THIRD PARTY VERIFICATION USEFULIn your Arizona Silver Belt and online at

www.publicnoticeads.com/az

PUBLIC NOTICESPUBLIC NOTICES

Extension of bar patiois source of debateContinued from page 1

Black added that thisbusiness is growing andexpanding, which bringsrevenue to Miami.The extension will take

place inside the currentbuilding and the patiowill remain unchanged.Code Enforcement Of-

ficer Joshua Derhammerpresented the councilwith the bid the town re-ceived for the propertylocated at 267 Went-worth. Mr. Jeff Kingstonsubmitted a bid in theamount of $1,801 andplans to refurbish thehome.Resolution No. 1192,

extending repayment ofunderfunded PublicSafety Personnel Retire-ment System contribu-tions to the 30-year planwas approved, althoughit was opposed by ViceMayor Gonzales. Therewere two options to makerepayment — 20 years or30 years. Heatherly rec-

ommended the 30-yearplan to help the town af-ford it. Gonzales wantedto know the interestcharge before the ap-proval of the plan.Resolution No. 1193,

adoption of tentativebudget for fiscal year2017/2018, and setting adate for a public hearingon the tentative budgetand approval of a finalbudget was approved. Apublic hearing was ap-proved for July 10.Funding to the town of

Miami in the amount of$13,674.37 for legal andother project-related ex-penses was approved.A payment of

$80,406.16 was ap-proved to AMEC for onemonth of design and con-struction managementservices.The council went into

executive session to con-tinue and complete theevaluation of TownMan-ager Joseph Heatherly.The council returned andapproved the renewal

contract for Heatherly,according to the terms di-rected in executive ses-sion.Joseph Heatherly re-

ported that the publicworks department is stillwaiting for a part to fin-ish the repair on thegarbage truck. Smoketests will be done on thesewer lines on Gordonand Elam Street.Mayor Darryl Dalley

thanked everyone whohelped with the Memo-rial Day Ceremony.C o u n c i l m e m b e r

Hansen reported thatMiami Genesis received agrant in the amount of$45,000 for the lightingproject at Bullion Plaza.Hansen thanked Freeportand Mrs. Anna Petty andthe consortium group fortheir support of the project.During the call to the

public, Miami residentand Army Veteran Mr.AnthonyMesangial com-mented that he has beenpatrolling Miami to helpwith the juvenile situa-

tion. He also said thereneeds to be more neigh-borhood watches.Mr Ray Webb, a

Miami resident and busi-ness owner, echoed Mr.Mesangial’s commentsand also thanked the po-lice department for work-ing on these issues, butsaid we need to keepdoing more. There needsto activities and placesfor the kids to go at nightto stay busy.Councilmember Rose-

mary Castaneda reportedon the Music in the Parkthat took place last Satur-day night. Councilmem-ber Castaneda voiced herconcerns with all the “go-ings on” that took placethat evening and com-ments regarding a ladywho was punched in theface.She also commented

that citizens are gettingtired of this kind of be-havior and he town needto take a serious look atthis issue and try to dosomething about it.

Fog coating project startstoday in GlobeContinued from page 1

• Hagen Road (to CityYard)• Monroe Street (East

Street to 7th Street)District 3 roads

• Maple Street (10thStreet to end Loop)• High Street (bridge to

Mesquite)• Mesquite (Copper

Rim to Bailey)District 4 roads

• Mayss (end to end)• Sycamore (East to

Hill)• Cottonwood (Broad

to 4th)City of Globe District

5• Santee (US60 to

Collins Street)

• High Street (Tonto toNorth)• Pinal Street (US60 to

Maurel)City of Globe District

6 Roads• Hospital Road (Main

to Besich)• Pinaleno Pass (Chap-

arral to Cattle Guard)• Lemon Lane (entire)Community Center• Besh Ba Gowah

Parking Lot• Drive to Besh• Jesse Hayes to Park-

ing Lot• Community Center

Parking LotIn the case of emer-

gency, contact CactusAs-phalt at 602-319-0472 orGlobe Public Works at928-425-4959.

PHOENIX — TheCity of Globe continuesto take measures to en-sure safe, reliabledrinking water for itscitizens. The Water In-frastructure FinanceAuthority of Arizona(WIFA) announcedtoday that it has closeda $3 million loan for theCity of Globe to repairand upgrade its agingdrinking water system.This new loan continuesthe WIFA funding pro-vided in 2014 to sup-port the City’s efforts torehabilitate and im-prove its drinking waterdistribution infrastruc-ture.Utilizing the financial

assistance provided byWIFA, Globe will re-place waterlines in theArlington, downtownand northeast areas ofthe City. Other drinkingwater infrastructure tobe upgraded with thesefunds includes watermeters for commercialestablishments, abooster pump and awell. The City’s drink-ing water service areaincludes approximately7,500 people.“Updated efficient

water infrastructure is

essential to safeguard-ing the well-being ofArizona families andbuilding Arizona’s sus-tainable water future,”said WIFA ExecutiveDirector, Trish Incog-nito. “We are workingclosely with the City ofGlobe and other munic-ipalities around thestate to invest in impor-tant water and waste-water projects that willprotect the environmentand keep Arizona com-munities healthy andlivable.”After evaluating

Globe’s financial situa-tion and the ability ofthe community to affordthe loan, WIFA ap-proved $750,000 in for-givable principal tooffset the project costs.In addition, WIFA pro-vided Globe with$35,000 in technical as-sistance funding to de-velop a PreliminaryEngineering Report forthese and other waterdistribution system im-provements. In 2014,WIFA financed a $5.5million loan with $3million in forgivableprincipal to fund thefirst phase of systemimprovements.

WIFA announces $3Mloan for City of Globe

GLOBE — SouthStreet from 7th Street toUS 60 will be milled onWednesday, June 21. Theproject will continue oncompleted on Thursday,June 22 and Friday, June23.

Businesses and resi-dents in the area are ad-vised to please movetheir vehicles out of theroadway and plan to havetraffic interrupted from 7a.m. until 6 p.m. on theaffected days.

South Street in Globe to bemilled this week

Send your community news [email protected]

COPPER CORRIDOR

— Pinal-Gila Commu-nity Child Services/HeadStart is gearing up forthe 2017-18 schoolyear. Children must be 3years old byAug. 31 andup to date with immu-nizations.Families must provide

proof of income andguardianship. Applica-tions for child enroll-ment in Head Start canbe completed online at:pgccs.orgHead Start is a free

preschool that prepares

children ages 3 and 4years old for kinder-garten, and also pro-motes school readinessfor children and theirfamilies and providesage-appropriate learningactivities and socialguidance through a vari-ety of educational, be-havioral health,nutritional and health ac-tivities.Children receive free,

healthy meals and if theyqualify, may also receivefree medical and dentalcare.

While Head Start isprimarily for at-risk chil-dren, foster, homelessand low-income chil-dren, children with dis-abilities may be eligibleregardless of income.Children being raised

by grandparents or otherrelatives may also qual-ify.Services are provided

at no charge, however,there is no transportationavailable.Pinal Gila Community

Child Services (PGCCS)provides Head Start Pre-

school and Early StartPrograms in Globe,Miami, Mammoth,Payson, Winkelman andSuperior.For further informa-

tion, call the Head Startnumber in your area —Globe 928-425-9610;Mammoth 520-487-2843; Miami 928-473-3640; Payson928-474-2738; Superior520-689-2812; andWinkelman 520-356-6245.Apply online now for

the 2017-18 school year.

Pinal-Gila Head Start is now acceptingapplications for 2017-18 school year

GILA COUNTY —EAC's Small BusinessDevelopment Center(SBDC) is offering atwo-day seminar ti-tled, QuickBooks forSmall Business. Thesame class will be of-fered on two differentdates: one class inGlobe, and one inPayson.On July 18-19 from 8

a.m. to noon, this classwill be offered at theGila Community Col-lege Globe Campus,Room #700, and willteach the Desktop Ver-sion of QuickBooks. OnJuly 26-27 from 8 a.m.to noon, this class will

be offered at the GilaCommunity CollegePayson Campus, Room#108. At the Paysonevent, we will determinewhether we teach theDesktop or Online Ver-sion of QuickBooksbased on what is neededby registrants.The fee for the course

is $149 per person (thisincludes the price of thetextbook) and will betaught by Petrea Kunz,Advanced Certified ProAdvisor for Quick-Books.“It is important to

know what items are onyour financial statementsso that you can make ed-

ucated financial deci-sions. By understandingQuickBooks you willlearn where items appearand how that affectsyour business,” saysKunz. “This class is forpeople who know how touse computers but arebeginners with Quick-Books. The class will befor those using the desk-top version of Quick-Books.”EAC SBDC director,

Kevin Peck says, “Thiseight-hour course willcover how to set upQuickBooks, workingwith QuickBooks lists,working with bank ac-counts, entering sales in-

formation, as well as re-ceiving payments, mak-ing deposits, enteringand paying bills, analyz-ing financial data, settingup inventory, trackingand paying sales tax,payroll, estimating andprogress invoicing,tracking time, customiz-ing forms, and writingQuickBooks letters.”For more information

or to register for Quick-Books for Business, con-tact the SBDC at928-428-8590 at:[email protected]. Seatingis limited, so registerearly. Seats are not con-firmed until payment hasbeen received.

SBDC offers QuickBooks for Small Business class

February 6, 2019B4 Apache MoccasinSan Carlos