Garden District
Neighborhood Association
Grant to Speedway,
Swan to Alvernon
Tucson Police Department

NON - EMERGENCY POLICE
520-791-4444  NOT for crimes in progress.

FRONT DESK AT HARDESTY POLICE STATION 791-4253 8 to 5 pm M - Th Mask required.


LEAD POLICE OFFICERS:
Ofc. Scott Wakefield
520-589-8822

Ofc. Cory Atkinson  
520-306-6430

TPD COMMUNITY RESOURCE OFFICER Renet Martin Neighborhood Watch, share video/photos of criminals, report suspicious activity or on-going crime concerns

HOMELESS OUTREACH TEAM 520.837.7425
tpdhot@tucsonaz.gov






CONTACT GARDEN DISTRICT NA




REPORT CODE VIOLATIONS, ROAD HAZARDS, GRAFFITI, ETC. 792-CITY (2489)


TUSD SECURITY TO OPEN PARK AT WRIGHT SCHOOL IF IT IS LOCKED 520-584-7676
TRASH ONLY THIS WEEK!
BRUSH AND BULKY CURBSIDE PICK UP WILL BE FEB. 7
Please make sure your neighbors are aware Brush and Bulky is FEB. 7. 
The City discontinued the expense of the notification flyers,
so no one will receive a door hanger notifying them.


BRUSH AND BULKY is the appropriate time to get rid of yard waste, unwanted furniture, etc.

There is no way of knowing the route the crew will take so you need to have your items at the curb by FEB. 7. Once they go down your street, they do not come back. Putting stuff curbside after they have picked up your street, will not get them to come back.  
 
Brush and Bulky uses a Bobcat to pick up items to put them in the truck, so make a single pile at the curb in an easily accessible spot. Brush and Bulky will NOT come onto your property to pick up piles.  It must be at the curb. 
.   
Be sure the pile is NOT near a fire hydrant, your mailbox, trees, power poles, your wall, gas meter, etc.  Items in the pile cannot be longer than 5 feet or they will not fit in the truck. 

BOX YOUR CACTUS!!!
NO HAZARDOUS WASTE.
CUT BRANCHES INTO 5 FT LENGTHS.
Channel 9 did a great segment a few years ago on making Brush


Brush & Bulky will collect:
  • Brush, tree trunks, branches and other green waste (up to 5 feet long and 24 inches in diameter)
  • Lumber (up to 5 feet long and stacked in a separate pile)
  • PVC and metal pipes (up to 5 feet long)
  • Railroad ties (limit 5)
  • Furniture, carpet, and doors
  • Lawn mowers with fuel tank and crank case removed
  • Scrap metal (bicycles, swing sets, etc., broken into 5 foot lengths)
  • Cacti (must be contained - up to 25 lbs.)
  • Appliances (remove freezer/refrigerator doors)
  • Car tires (limit of five automobile tires)
  • Metal drums (empty and cut in half)
 
Brush and Bulky will NOT collect:
  • Any excess over the 10 cubic-yard limit
  • Any items other than those listed above, such as
  • Stone/bricks/concrete/aggregates
  • Construction debris
  • Hazardous waste like paint/oil/pesticides/solvents/liquids
  • Glass/mirrors
  • Television and computer monitors
  • Compressed gas/air cylinder(s)
  • Vehicle parts
  • Commercially generated material

AS YOU PRUNE FOR BRUSH AND BULKY
Just because all too often the City, TUSD groundskeepers and untrained landscapers do it, does not mean that it is the best or healthiest pruning for your trees and bushes.
This is an older photo of a tree that was planted and maintained by a resident on Linden who wanted to green and beautify the public face of Wright. The tree also provided shade for parents parking to pick up their kids. The resident dragged his own hose over to water and establish this tree. He has been pruning and caring for it for years so it is not a sight hazard nor would it interfere with parking.
This week a TUSD grounds crew did irreparable damage to this tree by lion tailing it and leaving stubs.

Residents in the SW Quadrant this week were alarmed when a Santa Rita Landscaping came through with pole saws to prune in preparation for the large machinery for paving the streets. The contractor was not doing proper pruning and damaged some of the street trees, liontailing them, leaving stubs, and making them look like Dr. Seuss trees.

An alert resident got the crew to stop and contacted the Ward VI office. Steve Kozachik and his staff contacted the Tucson City Manager, Granite Construction, Santa Rita Landscaping, the City of Tucson Arborist and Landscape Architect, and the Urban Forestry Manager. They intervened and have discussed with Santa Rita Landscaping how to properly prune any street trees in the way of Granite's tall equipment. Trained arborists will be sent in by the City to clean the stubs and other damage caused to some of the trees in the SW Quadrant.
Bad pruning - Do not leave stubs behind. When a stub is left, the plant expends its energy trying to cover the wound, but wound wood cannot grow to cover over the end. The stub will eventually die creating a portal for insects and disease to enter the tree.
Lion tailing is the removal or gutting of the interior branches and foliage of a tree. This excessive, uninformed pruning practice structurally weakens the tree and deprives it of the foliage needed to feed itself.
 
Lion tailing results in sun scald, rapid sucker growth, tree stress/decline, and actually makes branches more susceptible to wind as the force is concentrated on the tips of the branches, thus forming a lever that snaps the branches in the wind. And folks, trees need their leaves to survive.
ONLINE YOU CAN FIND MULTIPLE, EASY TO FOLLOW VIDEOS ON HOW TO PRUNE PROPERLY TO MAINTAIN THE HEALTH, STABILITY AND APPEARANCE OF TREES.
Bad pruning - making cupcake bushes shades the lower branches so the bush eventually becomes bare on the lower section.
MONTHLY AGI CRIME MEETING FEB. 8
Crime Prevention is a Community Commitment
VIRTUAL ZOOM MEETING

Alvernon/Grant Initiative
Crime Meeting with Tucson Police,     
Neighborhoods, and Businesses
surrounding Grant and Alvernon         

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2022
6:00PM

Homeowners, Businesses, students, and tenants are welcome to this monthly meeting with Tucson Police officers to recognize, report, and prevent criminal activity in our neighborhoods.
 
Homeowners, renters, business operators/owners/employees, students are invited to attend this opportunity to talk directly with police officers. Hear about what actions the police have taken and what criminal activity there has been in the past month in our neighborhood. Help determine the priorities the police will target next month.
 
If you cannot attend, but have concerns about suspicious activity in the neighborhood, please send a detailed email to info@thegardendistrict.org If you have concerns and have observed ON-GOING criminal activity, bring as much specific information as you can (addresses, descriptions of vehicles and people, etc.).  

The direct reduction of crime in our neighborhoods is 
OUR responsibility, as well as that of the police.
Crime Prevention is a community commitment.
AS IF WE DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH CONSTRUCTION IN GDNA
REPLACING STOLEN OR DAMAGED TRASH AND RECYCLING CANS
STOLEN TRASH AND RECYCLING CANS - Two homeless men were observed stealing the rolling City trash container from a home on Justin last weekend. They loaded it full of possessions they had been carrying and used the can like a wagon to carry everything. Some residents saw the men wheeling the can west on Justin and then east on Seneca, but not where the men ended up taking it. A Trash Container and a Reycling bin were also reported stolen from the side of a home on Seneca.

This recycling can was abandoned at the bus stop. A dog walker took the initiative to call the number on the bus stop to report it and Sun Tran said they would come and remove it, but not until the beginning of next week probably.

If your trash or recycling can is every stolen, please report it online to police. The link to file an online police report is in every newsletter. You will not hear back from police, but the incident is entered in the system and used to help determine what kind of criminal activity we are having and what police resources are needed in our area.

REQUEST A FREE REPLACEMENT TRASH OR RECYCLING BIN: Does not matter if it was stolen or is damaged, you can quickly and easily request a new trash or recycling can from Environmental Services for no charge. Either use the Recycling Coach app or call ES Customer Service at 520-791-3171 or contact ES online.
Tucson Water Construction on Columbus from Pima north to Blacklidge for next month. Southbound traffic will be directed into the center lane at some times.
DO NOT RECYCLE GLASS IN THE BLUE BIN
FROM COUNCILMEMBER KOZACHIK'S JAN. 24 NEWSLETTER
Glass Reuse Program
Last Friday, I did a story with Perla Shaheen from KGUN on the glass reuse program that’s now about a year old. They wanted to do a follow-up to see how the community was buying in – or not. In the intro, their anchor referred to program ‘failures.’ That’s a mischaracterization of the program. There was one glaring inaccuracy in Perla’s piece, but it was wrong through no fault of hers. If it had been true, the way they characterized the program would have been closer to being right.

Before we changed policy and requested that you no longer put glass into the blue barrels, we ended up with about 5,300 tons of glass at the Material Recycle Facility (MRF.) By the way, if you saw the story, the MRF is in Tucson. That’s where the city delivers the recyclable material. We never drove our recyclables “121 miles” to Phoenix. Republic Services might depending on market conditions, but that misquote was on her. Anyway, back to the tonnage.

KGUN had this graphic on their story. It was intended to show how much we picked up before the program went into effect vs how much is showing up in the 21 purple glass recycle bins that are scattered around town. If 600 tons had been accurate they’d have been right in saying the program didn’t have public buy-in.

In doing some prep for the story, I asked our Environmental Services folks how much glass is piled at the landfill waiting to be crushed and processed. We had a communication flub – the 600 tons is what they told me but neglected to add in the other amounts that come from the weekly pick-ups of the purple bins. Here’s the correct data.

Before the program started, we took about 5,300 tons of glass to the MRF annually. In the year since the program has been in effect, we’ve collected roughly 2,300 tons from the purple bins. That’s still a drop-off compared to when people just tossed glass into the blue bin, but it’s not the “90%” drop-off that KGUN reported. Their report was accurate as far as they knew – I gave them bad information based on my communication glitch with E.S.

So the program is not a ‘failure.’ We’d love to see more people using the purple bins and increase the tonnage we have to reuse. What’s troubling is that Republic Services still found over 2,400 tons of glass in the blue barrel material we delivered to the MRF. None of that should be in the blue bins.

Please do not put glass into the blue bin. Take it to one of the 21 purple bins that are placed around the city. We have a large one here at the ward office. Use this link to find all of the locations.

HOW NOT TO RECYCLE
NO GLASS
NO PLASTIC BAGS'
NO STYROFOAM
One final note on recycling. The contamination rates for what’s delivered to the recycle facility are above 25%.

That is costing us money every month – which is factored into the rates people pay for trash and recycling service.

Do not recycle many of the things you see in this picture I took of a neighbor’s recycle bin – don't put plastic bags, styrofoam cups, food waste...You can find the do’s and don’t’s of what goes into the recycle bin at the City of Tucson Environmental Services

TEP OFFERS COST-SAVING REBATE AND DISCOUNT PROGRAMS
The virtual TEP Home Energizer Workshop last week had some great tips for energy savings around your home. We will probably join with TEP to offer it again in a few months. If you attended you will receive an email by tomorrow telling you where in the neighborhood to pick up your free kit with sink and shower low flow aerators. light bulbs, and night light.. Incidentally, TEP is mailing 6 free LED lightbuls to homes in Garden District.

Incentives and rebates from Tucson Electric Power can help you make smart investments now that pay long-term dividends through more efficient energy use.
“If you need to replace a major energy appliance or you can afford to invest in energy efficiency measures right now, these incentives can lower your immediate and longer-term energy costs,” said Francisco Castro, TEP Manager of Energy Programs. “Many times these energy efficiency upgrades will pay for themselves in a fairly short amount of time.”

Here are eight smart incentives that can help reduce your overall energy costs while contributing to a more comfortable and sustainable lifestyle.

If your old or inefficient air conditioning won’t make it through another sizzling Arizona summer, consider replacing it with an ENERGY STAR® AC/heat pump unit to quality for an instant rebate of up to $900. The average lifespan of an air conditioning system in Arizona is 12-15 years – compared to 20 or more in cooler climates – because of the intense and prolonged summer heat.

AC Tune-ups – Up to $205
To keep your air conditioning system working efficiently throughout Arizona’s hot summers, have your system inspected and tuned-up annually. TEP offers rebates of up to $205 for refrigerant charging, coil cleaning and the installation of a Western Cooling Control™, a device that improves the cooling performance of your air conditioning system. A tune-up will make your system work more efficiently so that you use less energy and save money on cooling costs.

Duct Sealing – Up to $300
Leaky ducts in your home’s heating and cooling system can reduce efficiency by as much as 20 percent. Sealing those leaks improves the comfort and indoor air quality of your home and saves you money. By using a TEP approved contractor, you can receive an instant rebate of up to $300.

An advanced programmable thermostat is called “smart” for a reason: It adapts to your heating and cooling patterns and automatically adjusts the temperature when you’re home or away. Customers who make the most of their smart thermostats can save between 10-15 percent on their heating and cooling bills. Get a $35 credit on your electric bill from TEP for an online or in-store purchase of any qualifying smart thermostat.

Pool Pumps – $195
With pool season here, now is the time to upgrade your single-speed pool pump to an ENERGY STAR certified variable-speed pump. You can reduce your pool pump energy costs by about $400 a year while saving $195 off the price of the pump with TEP’s rebate when you purchase a qualified model from one of TEP’s approved pool partners. The new pump could pay for itself in energy cost savings in as little as two years.

Residential EV owners who install a Level 2 EV charger or higher can claim a rebate of up to $500 that covers up to 75 percent of the purchase and installation cost. To qualify for the rebate, homeowners must provide a copy of the EV registration, use a licensed installerensure the project is properly permitted, and use a Time-of-Use pricing plan for at least two years.

Shade Trees – $5 per tree (up to three trees)
Shade trees help keep your home cooler by reducing radiant heat absorbed by your home, walls and pavement. Residential customers can order up to three 5-gallon trees for the discounted price of just $5 each. This year, the Trees for You program is open all year long.

Water Heaters – $400
Water heaters are the second highest energy user in a typical home (along with pool pumps). Heat pump water heaters are more than twice as efficient as standard electric tank water heaters. If you have an old, inefficient electric water heater, you might consider upgrading to an ENERGY STAR heat pump water heater. You can start saving money on water heating today and for years to come – and get a $400 rebate from TEP.
Visit our website for more information on energy saving tips and rebates.

$5 TREES FROM TEP'S "TREES FOR YOU"
Shade your home for cool energy savings.
TEP’s Trees for You program offers customers a wide selection of shade trees at a discounted price through our partnership with Civano Nursery and other local nurseries. Trees are available on a first-come, first-served basis, while supplies last.
This program encourages homeowners, schools, businesses and community groups to plant shade trees to help them save energy and beautify their neighborhoods. TEP has distributed more than 140,000 shade trees across metropolitan Tucson since 1992.

Shade Tree Benefits
Shade trees create a beautiful canopy, enhancing the local landscape. They provide a natural habitat for wildlife, reduce erosion and water runoff, and purify the air by absorbing carbon dioxide.
Trees also help TEP customers conserve energy by keeping homes and businesses cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter. They reduce urban heat created by the radiant energy absorbed by structures, walls and pavement.

Order Your Trees
TEP residential customers may order up to three 5-gallon shade trees for a discounted price of $5 each by logging into My Account. Please be certain of your selections as orders cannot be changed once placed and there are no exchanges.
Depending on availability, customers may choose from a variety of seasonal, year-round and deciduous trees such as:
  • Mulga
  • Sweet Acacia
  • Desert Willow
  • Chitalpa
  • Arizona Ash
  • Native Mesquite
  • Pomegranate
  • Southern Live Oak
  • Chinese Elm
  • Cold Hardy Mulga
  • Mexican Bird of Paradise
  • Desert Hackberry

TEP will notify you by email when your order is ready for pickup at one of these five participating nurseries:
  • Harlow Gardens, serving central and downtown Tucson (CLOSEST PICK UP SITE)
  • 5620 E. Pima St., Tucson, AZ
  • Tucson Cactus & Koi, serving northwest Tucson and Oro Valley
  • 7810 N. Oracle Rd., Oro Valley, AZ
  • Civano Nursery, serving eastern Tucson
  • 5301 S. Houghton Road, Tucson, AZ
  • EcoGro, LLC, serving downtown and central Tucson
  • 657 W. St. Mary’s Road, Tucson, AZ 85701
  • Native Gardens of Green Valley
  • 20 N. La Canada Drive, Green Valley, AZ
CELEBRATE VALENTINE'S DAY EARLY WITH TUCSON PARKS & REC
CELEBRATE VALENTINE'S DAY EARLY WITH TUCSON PARKS AND RECREATION - Tucson Parks and Recreation is hosting "Sweethearts in Reid Park" on Friday, Feb. 11, from 4:30-8:30 p.m. This event, for adults 18 and older, will be a fun date night at the park as Valentine's Day approaches. Couples can enjoy a night out with their significant other, with exclusive access to Reid Park Zoo, entertainment, games, food, hot drinks, and a movie in the park ("50 First Dates"). The cost is $25 per couple and includes entrance to the zoo, all activities, a blanket for the movie, popcorn, charcuterie box, and hot drinks. The event is limited to the first 100 couples to register and pay. The deadline to register is Feb. 4. For more information and to register, visit the website below.
VIRTUAL COLLEGE & CAREER WORKSHOP
Join us for this two-part discussion and learn how crucial it is to connect your interests with the right major with the right college or university.

Register now and you'll receive a Zoom link approximately 24 hours before the workshop.
FERAL CATS
TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN) — The Humane Society of Southern Arizona is trying to tackle feral cat overpopulation in the Tucson area.
It’s getting a big boost from a growing group of volunteers gathering for ‘Trapping Thursdays.’
The weekly meet-ups started last fall, bringing volunteers and a few Humane Society staff members together to humanely trap feral cats, bring them in overnight to get vaccinated and spayed or neutered, then returned to the same place the next day.

The practice prevents the population from growing out of control and keeps the cats from passing on disease.

A select few who embrace human attention can be put up for adoption. It’s part of the Humane Society’s ‘Trap, Neuter, Return’ program.

“We get dozens of calls a day asking for our assistance for trapping, for pet food… they need them spayed and neutered and they don’t know what to do,” said Angéline Fahey, the Humane Society’s Community Cat Program manager Fahey says cats generally like the desert weather and there are tens of thousands of feral outdoor cats in Pima County.

The group has gathered at El Molino mobile home park over the last four weeks. Mobile home parks are often places where feral cat colonies thrive, according to Fahey. “They can find cool air underneath [the homes] during the summer and in the winter it gets warm from there,” she said. ‘Trapping Thursdays’ can sometimes save a cat’s life.

“Last week we had a cat that had to be rushed to the emergency room as soon as we got it,” Fahey said. “So we do face a lot of those problems, and cruelty as well.”

The community of people gathering for ‘Trapping Thursdays’ has grown over the past few weeks.
“Many of us have experienced trapping alone out in the middle of the night, or when it’s dark in an alley or not so great areas of town by ourselves,” said volunteer Kristen Kiernan, who has been caring for cats in her area for years. “We’ve all commented like the first couple times we went out together how great it was to be part of a group and not be alone.”

Fahey says the Humane Society is always ready to help community members with questions and is looking for more volunteers.

TO VIEW THE KGUN 9 STORY, CLICK HERE.
COVID-19 EMERGENCY RENTAL AND UTILITY ASSISTANCE
COVID-19 Emergency Rental and Utility Assistance
Funding requests for unpaid rent and utilities are available for up to 12 months in arrears and three months in advance. Those without internet access can call (520) 447-4423 to apply, and bilingual case managers are available. Go to this site for more information.
DO NOT PUT GLASS IN YOUR BLUE BIN
Recycle bottles and CLEAN jars, but NOT in your blue bin. Rinse bottles and containers before recycling.
Take glass to one of the glass recycling sites near us. The two closest sites to Garden District are the Ward VI office and McCormick Park on Columbus, north of Glenn. Look for the purple recycling containers.
Wine and drinking glasses and ceramic mugs have a different chemical composition and melting point than container glass. Mixing the two together can cause fracture points and abnormalities in newly recycled glass.

If drinking glasses are undamaged, donate to a charity or thrift shop. If the glass is broken, it is requested you wrap the broken pieces in paper before disposing of in your garbage can.
WHAT IS RECYCLABLE IN THE BLUE BIN?
Plastic bottles, jugs, and containers 
Paper  
Cardboard 
Aluminum/steel cans
WARD VI NEWSLETTER FROM STEVE KOZACHIK
Read the Ward VI newsletter by clicking here:
Date: 01/24/2022
Topics in This Issue:
  • Home Sharing
  • Saguaro Rehab
  • Genna
  • PFAS Update
  • Judge Ahmad
  • Flu Season
  • Glass Reuse Program
  • Sunshine Mile
  • Andrew Street Bike Boulevard
  • Verizon/AT&T 5G Poles
  • COVID Case Counts
  • Harvard Global Health Institute


Council Member Steve Kozachik
3202 E 1st Street
Tucson, AZ 85716
Ph: 520.791.4601
Ward VI Councilperson Steve Kozachik
FREE WATER HARVESTING CLASSES AND REBATE INFORMATION
SUPPORT THE BUSINESSES THAT HAVE SUPPORTED GARDEN DISTRICT
BE SURE TO LET THE BUSINESS KNOW YOU ARE FROM GARDEN DISTRICT AND
WHERE YOU READ ABOUT THEM!
Thank you to the following Garden District businesses for donating to our neighborhood identification signs. We appreciate their partnership and support of our neighborhood. When you visit these businesses, please be sure to tell them you are a Garden District resident and you read about them in our email newsletter.

The Garden District Dairy Queen coming summer, 2022 at Alvernon and Lee.
1725 N. Swan every day 10-5
letsplay@mildredanddildred.com
Free local delivery our neighborhood: orders $30 or more!
Voted "Best Toy Store" in Tucson Weekly 2021
520.326.9363
3719 E Speedway
Arizona's got the sun.
We've got the skill.
You get the power.
520-207-4053
2130 N Alvernon Way
(520) 303-3945
A Journey into the Spirit of Japan
3959 E. Mabel St.
520.477.9324
1225 N. Catalina Ave.
520-299-1582 TTY 711
Charming, quiet, garden-style "all studio" apartment community with pool
Servicing vehicles of all makes.
4373 E Speedway Blvd
(520)477-0582
Opening of new facility at 4585 E Speedway
expected Spring, 2022
Call Us: (520) 327-4505
Tellurian Eco Design: Stephen Monroe
(520) 342 9761
Designing With Nature: Rainwater, Greywater, and Stormwater Harvesting, Passive Solar Landscape Integration, Design+Build, Consultations
Qualify for up to $2000 with City Rebates
SIGN A NEIGHBOR UP FOR THE NEWSLETTER
Logo Garden District
Please forward and share this e-newsletter with neighbors. Communication and making connections with each other -- that is what will turn us from a collection of houses and apartments into a neighborhood, from strangers into neighbors. We only have a small portion of the neighborhood on this email list.  
 
To sign up, you can either reply to a newsletter or sign up on our neighborhood website. thegardendistrict.org  

YOU CAN ALWAYS CONTACT THE NEIGHBORHOOD BY HITTING REPLY TO A NEWSLETTER OR GOING TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD WEBSITE thegardendistrict.org Complete the Online Form.
GARDEN DISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION
DEPENDS ON YOUR GENEROSITY TO FUND NEIGHBORHOOD PROJECTS
Garden District Neighborhood Association does not charge dues and has no means other than fundraisers or your generous donations for raising funds for GDNA's many different projects in the neighborhood. We are a registered 501(C)3 for your tax deductible donations.  

Make checks payable to "Garden District" and mail to. 
GDNA
c/o Lois Pawlak
P.O. Box 32384 
Tucson, AZ 85751

When you shop at smile.amazon.com, Amazon donates 0.5% of your eligible purchases - at no cost to you.Designate “Garden District” in Tucson as your charity and support your favorite neighborhood!
Garden District Location: Tucson, AZ
Support Garden District at no extra cost when you shop at smile.amazon.com.
Garden District Neighborhood
Association Information
Logo Garden District

AGI (Alvernon/Grant Initiative) Crime Meeting with Tucson Police and  
Neighborhoods and Businesses surrounding Grant and Alvernon 
2nd Tuesday of EVERY month, 6:00PM 
Location and whether in person or Zoom will be announced in this newsletter.

Garden District Neighborhood Association Quarterly Meetings - Time and date will be announced in this newsletter.
President: Lois Pawlak 
Vice President:   Deborah Bicksler
Treasurer: Lisa Maher
Secretary and E-Newsletter:  Meg Johnson

QUADRANT LEADERS:
NW (PIma to Grant, Alvernon to Columbus) - Lois Pawlak 325-7611                      
NE (PIma to Grant, Swan to Columbus) - Juan (JP) Jorquera   981-3746 
SW (Pima to Speedway, Alvernon to Columbus) - Phyllis Montgomery 248-9915                  
SE (Pima to Speedway, Swan to Columbus) - Judy Ostermeyer 326-1517

YOU CAN ALWAYS CONTACT THE NEIGHBORHOOD BY HITTING REPLY TO A NEWSLETTER OR GOING TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD WEBSITE thegardendistrict.org AND COMPLETING THE ONLINE FORM.
"TAKE A BOOK. LEAVE A BOOK"
GARDEN DISTRICT'S LITTLE FREE LIBRARIES
Little Free Library NW 1 - Justin and Lester
Little Free Library NW 2 - North St. between Isabel and Marion
Little Free Library SW 1 - Bryant and Fairmount
Little Free Library SW 2 - 4044 E. Pima