Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SeeClickFix is an issue reporting platform which allows people to report non-emergency neighborhood issues to local government bodies, [4] [5] assisting city staff. [6] The tool has a free mobile app that maps user comments. Users may add comments, suggest courses of action, or add video and picture documentation.
The organization is having its 15th annual Kid's Christmas Car Show and Toy Drive from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16 at Desert Mountain Park, 22201 S. Hawes Road in Queen Creek.
Our Lady of Guadalupe – The first Catholic Church building in Queen Creek is located on the north side of Ocotillo, 3/8 mile west of Ellsworth Road. Queen Creek Historic Town Hall - was built in 1952 as a meeting house for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which stopped using it in 1988. The Town of Queen Creek bought it in 1991.
Queen Creek is a town in Maricopa and Pinal counties, Arizona, United States. The population was 59,519 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] It is a suburb of Phoenix , located in the far southeast area of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area .
The fast-growing school, housed in a former elementary school with additional portable classroom buildings, [7] was approved in 1999 to move to a new site at Signal Butte and Ocotillo roads [8] The new school opened in 2002 and allowed Queen Creek's middle school to absorb the former high school site. [9]
Queen Creek Unified School District (QCUSD) is a school district in Maricopa County, Arizona, that serves most of the town of Queen Creek and a portion of the city of Mesa. [2] [3] It was formed in 1947 from land once part of the Higley Unified School District (at the time, neither district was unified; Queen Creek High School would not open until 1967).
2021 Old Our Lady of Guadalupe Church from west.jpg. Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, located at 20615 East Ocotillo Road near the intersection of South Ellsworth Loop Road in Queen Creek, Arizona, was the first Roman Catholic Church in the town.
The Queen Creek Tunnel is a 1,217-foot-long (371 m) tunnel on US 60 in the Superstition Mountains, just east of Superior, Arizona. [2] Completed in 1952, the Queen Creek Tunnel links Phoenix with Safford by way of Superior and Globe/Miami. It replaced the smaller Claypool Tunnel that had been built in 1926.