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Mayor Chip Wilson highlights growth, parks and a $44 million wash project in Apache Junction State of the City

March 03, 2026 | Apache Junction, Pinal County, Arizona


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Mayor Chip Wilson highlights growth, parks and a $44 million wash project in Apache Junction State of the City
Mayor Chip Wilson used his 2026 State of the City address to frame Apache Junction’s expansion as "controlled and responsible growth," touting recent industrial projects, park improvements and a major regional flood-control effort.

Wilson told attendees the city had four groundbreaking events this year and cited recent private development including WW Clyde’s 38,000-square-foot regional headquarters and a 25,000-square-foot speculative industrial building. He said a separately approved larger industrial project is expected to bring roughly 100 new jobs to the community.

The mayor also asked the crowd to consider the city’s investments in public amenities. "We just opened in the last year our newest park, Painted Sky Park," Wilson said, and added that Prospector Park is receiving new shade and that the city will add 10 new pickleball courts in May to meet rising local demand.

On infrastructure and water, Wilson described a multi-year flood-control effort for a major wash that runs from the northeast of town through the city. "A few years ago, we received a $44,000,000 grant to help us start this in earnest," he said, adding the city is finishing design with engineers and coordinating with partners including SRP, the State Land Department and the Bureau of Land Management.

Public safety was a central theme. City speakers described gains in police staffing and new equipment, including a command van and a police training center. The city’s public-safety representative honored Officer Gabriel Fazio, saying, "He was murdered in the line of duty," and praised the broader community’s support for the family and department.

Wilson highlighted other service improvements and recognition: the finance team earned a Government Finance Officers Association certificate for excellence in budgeting; parks and recreation programs won state awards; and the library’s outreach, including the bookmobile and a makerspace, reached about 13,500 residents last year.

Acknowledging the costs of maintaining roads, Wilson said the city maintains more than 500 lane miles. He told the audience that resurfacing a one-mile single-lane section now costs a little over $750,000 versus about $500,000 in 2020, and noted that chip-seal prices have increased substantially (figures given in the speech as rising from $1,500 to over $25,000 per lane-mile).

The mayor closed by thanking staff, volunteers and regional partners and recognizing his wife. Aaron McDermott, the event host, noted this would be the last time Mayor Wilson delivers the State of the City from the podium.

The address focused on the city’s recent awards, capital projects and partnerships; officials said design work continues on the wash project and no new formal council action on it was announced at the event.

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