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NOTES

Notes for January 2008

Annual Report

City sees major improvements in 2007
Major Accomplishments
Awards

City sees major improvements in 2007

Phoenix is on the move.

And never has it been more evident than in 2007.

There were major improvements just about everywhere - downtown where the skyline began taking on a new design, in neighborhoods where residents pitched in to make their areas a better place in which to live and in the far reaches of the city where new homes, businesses, offices and recreational facilities were built.

Among the highlights downtown were Arizona State University growing its campus, opening of the University of Arizona Medical School and the Arizona Biomedical Collaborative, and the start of construction of CityScape, a $950 million mixed-use development of hotels, restaurants, offices, apartments and shops.

Construction also continued on the Convention Center, Sheraton Hotel, light rail and several high-rise condominiums and other residential properties.

Much went on outside of the central business district as Fight Back organizations and other neighborhood groups worked closely with the city to improve their areas by reducing burglaries, assaults, robberies and other crimes, solving serious traffic problems, wiping out graffiti and eliminating blight.

There were big-time developments throughout the community, too, some that impacted the entire city and others that were significant to neighborhoods and specific sections of the city.

Notable among them were the revitalization of Christown Spectrum Mall at 19th Avenue and Bethany Home Road, the opening of about 1 million square feet of retail space at 35th and Southern avenues, the development of West Gate Plaza at 35th Avenue and Bethany Home Road, the opening of the Maryvale YMCA at 67th Avenue and Indian School Road, completion of the largest outdoor soccer facility in the state at Reach 11 on Deer Valley Road and start of construction of a baseball spring training facility at 107th Avenue and Camelback Road that will host the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago White Sox.

Other improvements were the opening of the Pecos Park Community Center, a 38,000-square-foot facility that offers multiple municipal services ranging from recreation facilities to renewing business licenses to paying city utility bills. The city also accelerated the development process for two police precincts, one in west Phoenix and the other on the northeast side of the city and introduced a long-awaited bus route on Greenway Road.

The mayor and City Council also moved swiftly to head off potential problems by strengthening the city's prostitution laws, making it a crime to send text messages while driving a car and providing funding for homeless programs year round.

They had their eye on the future, too, and adopted a five-year economic development plan designed to keep the city on the move. The plan emphasizes creating and retaining high-quality jobs, fostering an environment for entrepreneurial growth, revitalizing urban areas, expanding the city's revenue base, developing and retaining qualified talent, enhancing the quality of life of residents, improving foundations of economic vitality and planning and strategizing for the future.

All in all, it was a pretty busy and pretty successful year for the city and its 1.5 million residents.

Browse through this report and read in more detail some of the hundreds of improvements and developments that helped make 2007 an extremely successful and exciting year for everyone in the city of Phoenix.

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Major Accomplishments

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Awards

The Rio Salado Habitat Restoration Area won honors from several national and local organizations. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gave the project its Planning Team of the Year award, while the Maricopa Association of Governments gave it its Desert Peaks Award for Public Partnership. Also, the project won the Environmental Excellence President's Award and two Crescordia awards from Valley Forward; an Environmental Stewardship Award from the Salt River Project; and the President's Medal for Social Embeddedness from Arizona State University.

For the 17th consecutive year, the city's budget won the Distinguished Budget Presentation Award from the Government Finance Officers Association. The budget books were reviewed by a panel of judges from around the country.

Phoenix received the International City/County Management Association's Certificate of Distinction for the sixth year in a row.

The Burton Barr Central Library won the Distinguished Organization Award from the Arizona Humanities Council; Cesar Chavez Library won a Distinguished Organization Award from the Arizona Humanities Council; Cholla Library won a Design Excellence Award from the American Society of Interior Designers; Cesar Chavez Library earned Design Excellence and Best of Show awards from the International Interior Design Association; Desert Broom Library won a LEED-Certified rating from the U.S. Green Building Council; and Palo Verde Library received the Architectural Innovation Award from the Western Maricopa Coalition and the Arizona Republic.

PHX 11 won nine Telly Awards, which honor the best local and regional cable television programs, commercials and video and film productions. Two PHX 11 productions also were nominated for Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards.

The city won the Governor's Preservation Award for its converting of the former Phoenix Union High School to the University of Arizona Medical School.

The Convention Center won a Bronze Adrian Award from the Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International for promotional advertising.

The Housing Department received four awards in housing and community development from the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials.

To read about other awards the city has won, visit phoenix.gov and click on City Recognition on the left side of the page.

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Last Modified on02/11/2008 09:47:39