
If you need help during the season.we will be at the Red Trailer or watching the games. If you ever have any questions or concerns about the baseball program, registration, practices, games, coaches, or any general ease call us at 48.

This is also the place to go for Food, snacks, drinks, snow cones, seeds, candy.Īnd of course the 'Best french fries at any Chandler ball park!' This will be the place to go if you have any questions, need some information, or need to pick up anything from the league ! The Red Trailer will be at Espee Park or Pima Park for games. Just by shopping for your stuff on Amazon!Ĭlick the banner below to help support the league.ĭid you know your purcahses can make a difference? AmazonSmile donates to East Valley Baseball when you do your shoping at /ch/27-1578339. Thank you to all the dedicated coaches, umpires, parents, and fans for making this a fun learning environment for all the kids to play baseball! List of banned bats in East Valley Baseball A storm came through and ripped a light pole off the base! A replacement is projected to arrive in late November or early December. It's not likely the lights will be fixed ahead of time.Įspee Park - no lights. (check the 2nd to last page of the Master Schedule.) If the lights at Espee get repaired before this, we can reschedule the games during the week (check the last page of the Master Schedule.) Please plan for those weekend games. the first playoff games are scheduled for Saturday and Sunday after Thanksgiving. The Red Trailer (concession stand) will be at Pima Tues - Friday and at Espee Saturday & SundayĪt this time. We need to get ready for the major demographic challenge headed our way.”īy 2030, the U.S.Īs Governor Newsom stated in his first State of the State Address, “The Golden State is getting greyer.


Census Bureau has estimated that approximately one in five Californians will be 65 or older. The population aged 60 years and over in California is expected to grow more than three times as fast as the total population in the state. As the population grows, it will also grow diverse, with different populations having different needs. These statistics remind us how important it is to tackle the policy, economic, and health challenges for those with age-related brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s and for those who love and care for them. The purpose of this task force is to present recommendations to the Governor on how local communities, private organizations, businesses, government, and families can prevent and prepare for the rise in the number of cases of Alzheimer’s Disease and all its consequences – and to navigate a path forward to combat this disease in a time of historic demographic change. Maria Shriver is a mother of four, an Emmy and Peabody award-winning journalist, a seven-time New York Times best-selling author, an NBC News Special Anchor and the founder of The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement. A trailblazer for empowering women, Shriver uses her voice and her platforms to advance some of our nation’s most pressing issues affecting women and women’s health. In 2010, she broke new ground when, in partnership with the Alzheimer’s Association, The Shriver Report: A Woman’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s reported for the first time ever that women are at an increased risk for the disease. She also worked tirelessly on behalf of women and families, particularly those living on the brink of poverty, during her time as First Lady of California from 2003-2010. Secretary George Shultz, Strategic Advisor Shriver’s nonprofit The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement leads the way in research, education and fact-based reporting on Alzheimer’s impact on women and their families.

George Shultz has had a distinguished career in government, academia, and business. He is one of two individuals to have held four different federal cabinet posts, he has taught at three of this country’s great universities, and for eight years he was president of a major engineering and construction company.
