Blog Archive for November, 2014

Avondale Ranked No. 1 in 2014 Digital Cities Survey

For the second consecutive year, the City of Avondale came out on top in the 2014 Digital Cities Awards. Run by the Center for Digital Government and publisher e.Republic, the awards are a competitive honor with hundreds of municipalities contending each year. The program recognizes cities that use technology to engage their citizens, provide exceptional municipal services, innovate, and collaborate.

 

Avondale Mayor Kenneth Weise will accept the award on behalf of the city at a special ceremony during the National League of Cities Congress of Cities in Austin, Texas, on November 20th.

 

According to the Center for Digital Government, the top-ranked cities in their population categories – Los Angeles, CA; Winston-Salem, NC; Avondale, AZ; and Dublin, OH – provide financial transparency, performance measurement data, and opportunities for citizen feedback on city initiatives. They also have superior technology infrastructures, set data and application architectures, made strides in cybersecurity, and demonstrated collaboration efforts that provided cost savings and enhanced services.

 

Avondale received first place honors in the 75,000 – 124,999 population category. Avondale has placed in the top-ten of the Digital Cities Awards for four straight years with first place honors in both 2013 and 2014, earning recognition as a community that applies technology well in everything from operations to community relations to public safety.

 

“Avondale is demonstrating continued success in supporting our residents and businesses through technology,” said Rob Lloyd, the city’s Chief Information Officer. “We have an exceptional City organization that takes pride in working together to render superior services and achieve the City’s vision. It’s humbling to receive such a prestigious honor and to share a stage with impressive cities from across the nation that share in the public service mission.”

 

Avondale’s key efforts in 2014 were a community-driven and social media-supported branding effort with local citizens and businesses; innovative progress on cybersecurity and Green IT; the City’s action-oriented strategic planning process; and joint work with other communities in the areas like cybersecurity.

 

Said City Manager Dave Fitzhugh: “Our advances in technology are a core component of our larger efforts to sustain Avondale as a strong, growing community. Avondale’s forward-thinking residents, city leadership, and staff make this level of consistent achievement possible.”

Tempe’s Goodwin Park receives NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant

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Tempe, ARIZ –Community members and neighbors will gather at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 15 at Goodwin Park in Tempe to plant trees that were awarded through an NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant. A total of 27 trees will be planted including: 7 Chinese Elm (Ulmus Parvifolia), 9 Red Push Pistache (Pistache X “Red Push”) and 11 Eldarica Pine (Pinus Eladarica).

 

 

“The City of Tempe is pleased to receive the NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant,” stated Tempe Mayor Mark Mitchell. “Adding 27 new trees of varied species to the Tempe community will enhance our urban forest and provide a host of benefits – from environmental to aesthetic – and will be enjoyed by present and future generations. The planting of these trees would not be possible without the dedication and generosity of the Super Bowl Urban Forestry Program.”

 

 

Hundreds of trees will be planted throughout the Phoenix area this fall and winter as part of the greening of Super Bowl XLIX. Trees will be planted in public spaces in Tempe, Mesa, Phoenix and Glendale beginning November 15, 2014 in Tempe and finishing in Glendale in January 2015 – just one week before Super Bowl XLIX.

 

 

“Urban forestry has been part of Super Bowl for ten years – ever since our first tree planting project in Jacksonville back in 2005,” said Jack Groh, NFL Environmental Director. “It is one of the many ways that the NFL works to leave behind a positive legacy in each Super Bowl host community.”

 

 

The four cities applied for and were awarded matching grants by the NFL and the Arizona Super Bowl Host Committee in partnership with Super Bowl sponsor Verizon and local nonprofit Valley Permaculture Alliance. Grants can be used to match the cost of trees for local urban forestry projects – in some cases allowing the city to double the size of an existing tree planting project.

 

 

The Alta Mira Neighborhood Association, which surrounds Goodwin Park, teamed up with the City of Tempe earlier this year to plant 50 trees in Goodwin Park. Funds for those trees were both donated by residents and awarded through the City’s neighborhood enhancement and beautification grant. The neighborhood aims to plant a total of 100 trees in Goodwin Park by spring of 2015.

El Mirage Fire Department Receives New Thermal Imaging Camera from Firehouse Subs Public Safety Foundation

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On November 13, 2014, the City of El Mirage Fire Department received a new thermal imaging camera from the Firehouse Subs Public Safety Foundation. The Foundation is dedicated to improving the life-saving capabilities of first responders and public safety organizations in communities served by Firehouse Subs by providing funding, resources and support.

 
The thermal imaging camera was on display today during a presentation ceremony held at the Firehouse Subs location near the Loop101 and 67th avenue in Glendale, AZ. Representatives from both the El Mirage Fire Department and the Firehouse Subs Public Safety Foundation were on hand as El Mirage gratefully accepted their new piece of life saving equipment.

El Mirage Fire Chief Jim Wise summed it up when he said, “We are extremely grateful to receive such a valuable piece of equipment from a truly first class organization such as Firehouse Subs. The El Mirage community will benefit from this as it allows our firefighters to rapidly detect fires, rescue victims, and save lives.”

 

Firehouse Subs Public Safety Foundation recently donated
a thermal imaging camera, worth more than $9,600 to the
City of El Mirage Fire Department. The donated camera will
detect body heat and hot spots in burning buildings, allowing
firefighters to reach victims quicker and put out deadly fires.

 
For more information contact Christopher House at (623) 583-7968/chouse@cityofelmirage.org

Goodyear partners to equip homes with smoke alarms

smoke alarm installation oneThe Goodyear Fire Department again joined forces last weekend with the Arizona Burn Foundation to help make homes safer by providing free smoke alarms in hopes of saving lives.
On Saturday, Nov. 1, 56 volunteers from Liberty Water, Waste Management, Goodyear Fire Department Cadets, and local high school students installed 106 new smoke alarms in 83 homes in Litchfield Park. Goodyear has contracted to provide fire and emergency services to the town for about the last four years.
About three out of five fire deaths happen in homes without smoke alarms or in homes where they are not properly maintained, according to information from the Goodyear Fire Department’s Risk Reduction division.
Tanja Tanner, community risk reduction coordinator for the Goodyear Fire Department, said she was grateful for the participation in the program as more homes become equipped with new smoke alarms.
“The program isn’t to save a house, it’s to save a life,” Tanner said. “Our goal is to have a working smoke alarm in every home. We look for the older homes that need them the most. Now, the majority of homes in Goodyear are at least 10 years old, and people need to know they should not only have a smoke alarm, but make sure it works.”
In the past, Goodyear fire has provided smoke alarms to homes in the Historic Goodyear, Canada Village and Palmateer neighborhoods, and has partnered with the Arizona Burn Foundation for five years for the free smoke alarm program.
“It’s important that people check a smoke alarm every month, and change the batteries once a year.” Tanner added. “Smoke alarms last about eight to 10 years, so it’s important to replace them at least every decade.”
Each installation in Litchfield Park also included information about how to maintain the new alarms and also information such as escape plans and proper 911 instructions.
For more information on this program, call (623) 882-7308 or visit or www.azburn.org.

Gilbert Saves Millions of Gallons of Water During September

By Haley Paul, Gilbert Water Conservation Specialist
During the month of September, with all those rains, you took notice! Our water production data indicates that Gilbert residents and businesses did an amazing job of responding to the rainfall by reducing outdoor water use.
It’s rare in the world of water conservation to see drastic decreases in water use in a short amount of time. We’ve seen a steady decrease in household water use over the years, with the implementation of new indoor technology such as water efficient toilets, showerheads, and clothes washers. However, to see real-time water conservation responses is a rare treat indeed.
After the September 7th and 8th flooding rain event, you responded by reducing your total water consumption by 20 million gallons… a day. You kept those controllers off too, and the savings persisted for about a week.
Then, with all the predictions that Hurricane Odile was going to drop another whopper on us, you anticipated the rain and proactively shut your controllers off. Production dropped from an average of 42 million gallons a day the few days preceding the storm, to an average of 37 million gallons a day—a savings of about 5 million gallons of water a day. Even though that storm didn’t deliver the anticipated rainfall, a lot of you figured you could keep those controllers off given the cloudiness and moisture that remained in your soil from the previous storm.
The final story in this water production data picture is that when it rained again on September 27th, you overwhelmingly responded. Water production dropped even lower, from an average of 43 million gallons a day preceding that rain event to an average of 35 million gallons per day. Another bulk water savings, this time of 8 million gallons of water a day.
In total, all that amounts to a cumulative water savings of 239,052,000 gallons for the month of September, or an 18 percent drop in water demand from last September.
This is a testament to your keen eye on conservation. You care. It matters. We can continue to improve on this trend by doing things such as adjusting our controllers monthly, checking for leaks inside and outside the home, and paying attention tohow much water we should be putting out on the landscape.
All of your individual actions add up to collective water savings.
The majority of water use is outdoors. That’s why we focus on it so much here in the monthly blogs. If you are bamboozled by your watering system, give us a call (480-503-6098) or email and we can set up a time to go through your system with you and offer you tips for savings.
If you ever want to see how much rain fell near your house, visit rainlog.org. If 0.5 or more inches of rain fell near you, that’s your cue to turn off the controller. When you can no longer easily stick a long screwdriver 8 inches into the soil, that’s when you will want to turn your controller back on.
Thanks for helping to do your part to save water here in Gilbert!

 

 

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