[ crowd noise ] a fight breaks out at Westwood High School in mesa in the cafeteria. One of the kids just myself off the table and slams his fist into someones head. No word on what started this fight. The school is telling us all the students the i10 back open, shut down earlier tonight because of a police incident. That stretch goes through the heart of the city on a busy friday night. They just opened at about 8 50 this evening. People in buckeye stirl frustrated over mysterious still frustrated over spikes in their water bill. Many reached out to our sr there are nearly two dozen buckeye residents who are being billed for whatever they never used. Thousands of gallons and dollars seeming to go down the drain. One woman says buckeye usually says a leak is to blame. One woman has her own suspicion. She blames water meter error. It spikes then it goes back down. Reporter after a skyhigh her suspicions. A leak does not repair itself reporter according to her meter, she used more than 4
[ crowd noise ] a fight breaks out at Westwood High School in mesa in the cafeteria. One of the kids just myself off the table and slams his fist into someones head. No word on what started this fight. The school is telling us all the students the i10 back open, shut down earlier tonight because of a police incident. That stretch goes through the heart of the city on a busy friday night. They just opened at about 8 50 this evening. People in buckeye stirl frustrated over mysterious still frustrated over spikes in their water bill. Many reached out to our sr there are nearly two dozen buckeye residents who are being billed for whatever they never used. Thousands of gallons and dollars seeming to go down the drain. One woman says buckeye usually says a leak is to blame. One woman has her own suspicion. She blames water meter error. It spikes then it goes back down. Reporter after a skyhigh her suspicions. A leak does not repair itself reporter according to her meter, she used more than 4
Mesa high school students helping families get through pandemic
High school students are helping community members in need through the Working Warriors program.
By: Kailey Latham
and last updated 2021-03-08 07:26:05-05
MESA, AZ â High school students and teachers in Mesa are working to help families make it through the pandemic.
The Working Warriors program at Westwood High School operates as a secret shopper service, allowing families to anonymously receive necessities like laundry detergent, hygiene products, diapers, and more. We re here to help. We re here to let them know that everything is going to be OK, said Luis Nunez, a senior at Westwood and one of 60 students in the Working Warriors program.