CONSERVATORY STUDENTS LEARN THOUGH LEADERSHIP | S TYLE 1E
$1.00
DELIVERY COSTS UP shops, Flower sh joints pizza joi inch up fees
SAYING FAREWELL
BUSINESS 1B
Triple Crown ends slow low pitch SPORTS 1D
SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2008
VOLUME 121, NUMBER 51 • STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, COLORADO • www.steamboatpilot.com
Victorian hats turn heads Tread of Pioneers staff wears period styles at party Zach Fridell
PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
Sporting Victorian hats and dresses that looked as though they were plucked from a Jane Austen novel, the staff at the Tread of Pioneers Museum turned heads and received compliments from the large crowd at the Pioneer Day Block Party on Friday. Candice Lombardo, execu-
tive director at the museum, said the staff chose outfits from that time period to accompany the time period of the museum, itself a Victorian-era two-story house. “If the museum staff can’t be counted on to dress up in Victorian costumes for the Fourth (of July), then who can be?” she said as she handed out toys to children at the block party, an annual event
at Eighth and Oak streets. “We looked at the pictures and tried to replicate what we see.” Crowds at the block party, when not complimenting Lombardo, enjoyed “Routt beer floats” sold by the museum, lemonade and ice cream sold by the United Methodist Church, and free hot dogs distributed by the Lowell Whiteman School and St Paul’s See Pioneer, page 14A
ZACH FRIDELL/STAFF
Candice Lombardo, executive director of the Tread of Pioneers Museum, gave away toys to children during the Pioneer Day Block Party on Friday.
Index gauges Routt County
A
Molly’s love for her bunny led to fateful morning
Study puts figures to quality of living Blythe Terrell
PILOT & TODAY STAFF
W
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
At first blush, the factors measured by the Routt County Livability Index may seem random. Charitable giving falls under the same heading as voter turnout. Traffic congestion is a page away from water quality. But there’s a method here, project leaders pledge. The livability index was about a year in the making as four groups analyzed factors in four categories: civic, economic, environmental and social livability. The teams used existing data and compared Routt with nine other Colorado counties. The results include yards of data and provide a starting point for years of research. “The entire idea behind this was to create measurements instead of anecdotes about quality of life,” said Noreen Moore, business resource director at the Routt County Economic Development Cooperative, which spearheaded the study. The cooperative solicited volunteers from across the county for each committee. The volunteers listed the key issues of their category, figured out what to measure and how, then found and quantified the data. The groups weighted each issue in their category. The result was an overall livability ranking for Routt among the counties, as well as a ranking in each category. In those rankings, Routt was given a value of 1 to establish a baseline. The idea was to create a study that can be replicated annually, Project Manager Roger Good said. See Livability, page 14A PAGE DESIGNED BY NICOLE MILLER
Girlher &Boy
MATT STENSLAND/STAFF
Four-year-old Molly Look holds her bunny, Boy, last month at her North Routt County home. A trip to see her bunny Jan. 17, 2007, in sub-zero temperatures, quickly became a life-threating situation.
ith two turkeys, four dogs, 11 puppies, five cats, six kittens and eight hermit crabs, the Look household can be a busy place. “We’re downsizing,” says Yvette Look, the mother of four A look at Molly children, three of whom live at the ■ In the first installment Look home near of a two-part series, the Steamboat Pilot & Today Fly Gulch in the takes a look at what hapElk River Valley. pened to Molly Look of There is also North Routt on Jan. 17, Boy the bunny, who 2007 — when Molly, 4-year-old Molly then 3, walked outside of her family’s house in sub- holds on a June afternoon while zero temperatures to visit a turkey gobbles her pet bunny. ■ Next Sunday, the Pilot behind her in the & Today will tell the story family’s barn. of Molly’s recovery. On Jan. 17, 2007, Molly took an early-morning trip outside the house to visit Boy. The visit turned into a life-threatening situation when Molly found herself along a county road, her legs numb from subzero temperatures. See Molly Look, page 8A
Fires cause finale fizzle Technical problems, blazes shorten show Melinda Dudley PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
Technical issues and a few small fires interrupted Friday night’s fireworks finale at Howelsen Hill in Steamboat Springs. “I’m clearly disappointed,” organizer Tim Borden said. “Decent show, and terrible finale.” Borden and his son Scott were excited for Friday’s show, billed as Steamboat’s largest ever, in which 576 fireworks were scheduled to go off at the same time during the finale. But after hundreds of pyrotechnics lit up the night skies over Howelsen, a muted, erratic finale left many spectators wondering what cut the display short. The fireworks are set off electronically. Borden said he is unsure exactly what went wrong Friday, but that when the finale was cued, the fireworks just didn’t go off. Small fires at Mile Run, one of the four launch sites during Friday night’s fireworks show, also prevented some fireworks from firing correctly — and the flames themselves set off additional fireworks out of sequence, Borden said. The fireworks at two other launch sites failed to go off at all during the finale, Borden said. “Most people that know the kind of show we put on realized there was a problem,” Borden said. “I pretty much prided myself in having a great finale, and this pretty much was not.” See Fireworks, page 12A
High school going wireless Upgrades bringing podcasts, students’ laptops, district server Zach Fridell PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
In previous years, Steamboat Springs School District technology staff had to travel to schools and touch each computer to update software. Now, thanks to a serverbased model implemented this summer, updates need only occur at one central location and will be applied to every computer on the district’s
INSIDE Classifieds . . . . . . . Crossword . . . . . . . Environment . . . . . Happenings . . . . . . Horoscope . . . . . . .
ROUTT
3B 5E 6A 2A 5E
Milestones . . . . . . . Obituaries . . . . . . . South Routt . . . . . . Television . . . . . . . . Viewpoints . . . . . . .
COUNTY’S
3E 3A 7A 5E 4A
server space. By placing the software on the servers, students also will be able to access the programs they need from home. Additional technology updates this summer will bring the district to the forefront of American schools in the way technology is delivered, with classes available by podcast, server-based programs and wireless Internet at Steamboat Springs High School. The creation of a wireless network throughout the high
school will allow students to bring their laptops to school and connect to their files stored on district servers. “Since I’ve come to town the question that I’ve been asked all the time is, ‘When can I bring my child’s laptop to school?’” said Tim Miles, the district’s technology director. To ensure security of the disZACH FRIDELL/STAFF trict’s servers, students will enter Steamboat Springs School District Technology Director Tim Miles, back left, the network through a district speaks with Senior Network Systems Engineer Dave Holloway as students prepare computers for server-based software. See Upgrades, page 12A
OUTSIDE
VIEWPOINTS
Afternoon thunderstorms. High of 78.
LAST WEEK: Will widening the vehicle lanes and narrowing the shoulders by one foot make Routt County Road 36 safer for all users? Results/5A
To report home delivery problems, please call (970) 871-4250 on Sunday from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Missed papers will be delivered by 10:30 a.m.
THIS WEEK: Should the city expand its urban growth boundary to enable development on the north side of Emerald Mountain?
www.steamboatpilot.com
Page 2A
NEWSPAPER
OF
RECORD
SINCE
DELIVERY PROBLEM?
1885
��������������� �����������������