Forests face devastation: 5A • Longhorns meet nemesis: 1B • County lands $600,000: 6A payson.com
PAYSON ROUNDUP
Thieves hit food bank by
FRIDAY | OCTOBER 30, 2015 | PAYSON, ARIZONA
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Alexis Bechman
roundup staff reporter
They came for the cookies and left a mess for volunteers to clean up. Last week, someone broke into the Community Presbyterian Church Food Bank storage units, prying open freezers and taking doors off their hinges, all to take food gathered to help the needy. Ironically, the thieves made off with less food than what they would have received had they come in and asked for a food box, said Chuck Proudfoot, the church’s pastor. While the church filed a police report, detectives have no leads on who broke in. Church staff discovered the break-in the morning of Oct. 20. A padlocked freezer outside the church’s kitchen had been broken into, bags of cookies strewn on the ground. Proudfoot said it appears they ate some of the cookies, but did not like the pecan turtles because they left the bag behind. The thieves then got into the dry storage and refrigerated storage units. Again, more open cookie bags were found in dry storage. The thieves opened several cases of food, including pineapple and cranberry, and took several cans from each. Some meat was missing from the freezer along with a Styrofoam cooler. While they don’t know how much they made off with, it was not more than what someone could carry, Proudfoot said. “They took less than what is in a bag of food,” he said, which are handed out to the needy. The church had the storage units repaired and is discussing what other security measures they need to add. That same night, someone tried to break into a shed across the street from the church at Horizon Human Services.
See our 2015 Fall and Winter Guide inside today
House OKs deal by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
The Arizona House of Representatives on Thursday adopted a $3.5 billion, 10-year plan to settle a school funding lawsuit. The measure could boost the budget of the Payson Unified School District by more than $500,000 annually. The Arizona Senate is expected to act today on the package, which would still need voter approval in a May 17 special election. The plan would give schools just over half of the illegally withheld inflation adjustment and allow the Legislature to withhold the inflation adjustment under certain conditions in the future. House Republicans supported the measure unanimously, but Democrats split on the plan to take about 60 percent of the money to fund the deal from the state lands trust. tendent Greg Wyman said that while Payson Superin schools are happy a settlement has been reached, it only solves the problem of past funding — not future funding. “There is still an expectation that our legislators will continue the dialogue on public education funding,” he said.
Payson schools could gain more than $500,000
•
Alexis Bechman
Turns out, he should have stuck with the plea deal. Clayton Sopeland first accepted, then rejected a plea deal after he took 15,000 rounds of scrap ammo from HPR. He had to actually appeal to a higher court to get out of the plea deal that could have resulted in a misdemeanor criminal record and 18 months on probation. Instead, Sopeland insisted he had permission to take the ammo — and took his chance before a jury. Big mistake. On Monday, a jury exonerated him on theft and trafficking stolen property charges. However, the jury found him guilty of fraudulent schemes, a class 2 felony. Now, he faces between three and 12.5 years in prison and up to seven years of probation. Superior Court Judge Gary Scales, who presided over the trial, will sentence Sopeland Dec. 14 at 10 a.m. in Payson. However, Scales could still senTHE WEATHER
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volume 25, no. 85
Sen. Sylvia Allen
District 6
See Legislature, page 2A
Students hang on, as officials bicker by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
The release of national test scores and a “symbolic” move away from national Common Core academic standards this week left Arizona’s school reform movement in a muddle. As lawmakers debated a plan to settle a school funding lawsuit by boosting assistance by about $225 million annually, new developments on test scores continued to spawn confusion. For starters, the State Board of Education voted 6-2 to formerly sever ties with the copyright that came with Arizona’s College and Career Ready Standards — formerly known as Common Core. “This vote did not repeal the standards,” said Brenda Case, Payson Unified School District director of student achievement. “The vote was a technical and political vote. It returned the control of the standards to Arizona.” The vote formalizes the state’s intention to continue making changes in the national standards it has already adopted. In theory, it won’t have any impact at the school level — where districts are already admin-
Sopeland convicted on fraud charges in ammo case roundup staff reporter
“I commend the leadership for pressing to create more funds without it being detrimental to the General Fund or committing future taxpayers to an unsustainable funding level.”
Test debate muddled
Gambled on a trial – and lost by
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tence Sopeland to probation and up to a year in jail. Sopeland initially pleaded guilty to theft, a class 6 undersigned felony in November 2014, admitting he took between 10,000 and 15,000 rounds of scrap ammunition from HPR, his former employer. In a presentencing report dated Nov. 10, probation recommended Sopeland serve no more than 18 months of supervised probation. If he completed probation, the charge likely would have been dropped to a misdemeanor. However, shortly after pleading guilty, Sopeland’s lawyer Art Lloyd asked the court to let Sopeland withdraw that plea and take the case to a jury. Lloyd argued that the Gila County Attorney’s Office had asked for 30 days jail time as a condition of probation in violation of his unwritten agreement with prosecutors. This constituted a “manifest injustice” that justified not going through with the plea bargain. Prosecutor Duncan Rose said
Halloween Costume Contest 5B
Sopeland was having “buyer’s remorse” and the judge should hold him to the plea deal. The GCAO even withdrew the recommendation that Sopeland serve jail time. Superior Court Judge Peter Cahill, who is now retired, denied Sopeland’s request to recant his guilty plea and the matter ultimately made its way to the Arizona Court of Appeals, which granted Sopeland’s request for a trial. That trial started Oct. 16 and lasted through Monday. After four hours of deliberations, the jury returned a guilty verdict for fraud. The Roundup asked Lloyd if Sopeland planned to appeal and in an email was told, “… they are currently in the process of filing the appropriate motion with the court as we speak.” Sopeland can appeal the conviction after he is sentenced. In Arizona, a convicted felon cannot own or carry a firearm. Sopeland
• See Jury, page 2A
See our ad and upcoming events on page 10B
4th Grade Math Arizona 2013 240 2015 238 Arizona 8th Grade Math 2013 280 2015 283 Arizona 4th Grade Reading 2013 213 2015 215 Arizona 8th Grade Reading 2013 260 2015 263 Arizona Proficiency Rates
National 241 240 National 284 281 National 221 221 National 266 264
istering the AzMERIT test based on those national standards. “We will monitor any changes, but currently we continue to move forward with the current standards as our framework for educating students,” said Case. The decision means the Arizona school board may in the future modify the already adopted math and language arts standards. Extensive modifications could cost the state millions in federal funding — but the current rules already allow for state modification. Both Gov. Ducey and Arizona Superintendent of Education Diane Douglas,
• See Test score, page 2A
Michele Nelson/Roundup
A vehicle rolled into the landscaping at Walgreens Wednesday afternoon after its hitch broke, according to the Payson Police Department. A westbound motor home towing the small SUV on State Route 260 was turning south onto the Beeline Highway when the vehicle’s hitch broke as it rounded the corner. The vehicle went into the gravel, landing on its side. No one was injured and no other vehicles were damaged.
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Three scouts, on the eve of their last camp-out, discover the true meaning of friendship when they attempt to save their town from a zombie outbreak.
R • No Passes • 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30
A Chef who destroyed his career with drugs and diva behavior. He cleans up and returns to London, determined to redeem himself by spearheading a top restaurant that can gain three Michelin stars.
R • No Passes • 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30
An American lawyer is recruited by the CIA during the Cold War to help rescue a pilot detained in the Soviet Union.
PG13 • No Passes • 1:00, 4:00, 7:00
An American woman, well-versed in political campaigns, is sent to the war-torn lands of South America to help install a new leader but is threatened to be thwarted by a long-term rival.
R • No Passes • 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30
Businesses getting dumped on by
Alexis Bechman
roundup staff reporter
After someone dumped a bedroom’s worth of furniture in a shopping center dumpster, a property owner is looking for the community’s help. Chuck Jackman, who locally manages the Rim Country Shopping Center for Larsen Baker, said someone Tuesday night dumped several mattresses, a desk, several rolls of carpet, bed frames and other junk in a dumpster area behind PetSmart. It is not the first time someone has illegally dropped off trash in one of the numerous dumpsters behind the center, but one of the most egregious. “It was an abnormal amount of trash,” he said. Piled on top of the furniture were children’s coloring books and toys, suggesting someone had unloaded a household worth of stuff. Earlier in the day, Jackman discovered someone left a sofa in another dumpster. “People don’t understand this is not a city collection,” he said. Because the trash companies will not remove large items like this, Jackman must take the items to the dump.
The last witch hunter is all that stands between humanity and the combined forces of the most horrifying witches in history.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30
During a manned mission to Mars, Astronaut Mark Watney is presumed dead after a fierce storm and left behind by his crew. But Watney has survived and finds himself stranded and alone on the hostile planet. With only meager supplies, he must draw upon his ingenuity, wit and spirit to subsist and find a way to signal to Earth that he is alive.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:00, 4:15, 7:30 (4:15 in 3D) THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL THEATRE!
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household trash “all of the time.” If caught, police will charge for illegal dumping. If you have information about illegal dumping, call the PPD at 928-474-3288.
Legislature tackles school funding lawsuit From page 1A
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The dump is 19 miles north of town and charges $47 per ton of trash. Of the 27 commercial properties Jackman oversees, he said more are deluged with
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Wyman said this part of the agreement still has a major hurdle. “There is no guaranteed money yet,” he said. “If (the proposal for money from the land trust) doesn’t pass we’re back to square one.” The rest of the money would come from the state’s growing budget surplus, expected to reach about $650 million by the end of the current fiscal year in May. Sen. Sylvia Allen (R-Snowflake), who represents Rim Country in the state Senate, hailed the proposal. “I am very pleased to be having a special session to address K-12 education funding and to resolve the lawsuit. I commend the leadership of the governor and the Legislature for pressing to create more funds without it being detrimental to the General Fund or committing future taxpayers to an unsustainable funding level. ‘I feel confident that safeguards have been put in place for protection of our State Land Trust and that there is capacity to increase the funding level. I encourage the school districts to use this money to increase teachers’ salaries and to improve classroom learning for all our children.” The proposal would provide $3.5 billion over the next 10 years and settle a five-yearold lawsuit filed by a coalition of school districts. Courts have ruled repeatedly in favor of the districts after the Legislature cut school funding during the recession, despite a voter-approved 2001 proposition requiring the state to give K-12 schools an annual inflation adjustment. Courts have ordered the state to pay an extra $336 million immediately, but the state
is appealing that ruling. The courts have not yet ruled on some $1.3 billion in back payments. Wyman said the education groups compromised because they knew pushing for the full compensation owed would not work. “As part of the compromise, the education groups essentially have tried to not break the state,” he said. The proposed settlement would increase base level funding by $179 per student, less than the $250 per student the court has ordered already. The plan would also add $50 million annually to K-12 funding for the next five years and $75 million annually for another five years to compensate for the withheld back payments. The proposal would allow the Legislature to withhold the inflation adjustment in the future during an economic downturn. Lawmakers could also stop funding inflation if K-12 spending ever reaches 49 percent of the state’s general fund spending. Currently, K-12 spending accounts for about 42 percent of state general fund spending. “By putting all this money into it, in effect you are taking care of the inflation issue,” said Wyman. “It’s a good start, but there’s so many different qualifiers,” he said. “We’ll have to wait and see.” School groups and the districts involved in the lawsuit generally support the proposed settlement, although it provides about 72 percent of what the courts have already ordered the state to restore. The state would get about 60 percent of the money over the next decade by increasing the distribution from the state land trust from the current, statutory 2.5 percent to 6.9 percent.
That provision has spurred some criticism from State Treasurer Jeff DeWit and others, who argue it will cost schools money in the long run. The state land trust has grown at a rate of close to 7 percent on average in recent years. The law requires a 2.5 percent distribution to schools annually, with the rest of the increase building up the fund balance — which now stands at about $5.2 billion. If the fund continued to grow at the historic average rate, it would grow to $9 billion by 2026. Under the proposed settlement, the fund would instead grow only a little — to an estimated $6 billion in 11 years. That difference would cut the annual distribution to schools from $180 million to $100 million by 2026. Moreover, the extra payments would stop at that time — causing a big drop in school funding. Gov. Doug Ducey originally proposed increasing the distributions from the state land trust to provide new money for schools. But under the latest proposal, it would instead provide only a portion of the illegally withheld inflation adjustment. Still, many education groups supported the proposal as the only politically viable idea to reverse years of decline in K-12 funding. Arizona remains nearly last in per-student funding nationally. Just to reach the national average, the state would have to increase per-student funding by more than $3,000 — more than 10 times the amount in the proposed settlement. Wyman said that’s not good enough. “I think the public is saying we can’t be 50th and 49th and attract business and workforce development,” he said. “We have to change that to move up.”
Test score debate gets more muddled From page 1A however, trumpeted the State Board of Education’s action as a significant reassertion of state control over educational standards. Douglas campaigned almost entirely on a platform calling for the state to scrap the national standards and develop its own gradeby-grade expectations and tests. Gov. Ducey in his campaign advocated a thorough overhaul of the national standards to adapt them to state needs and values. This perplexed Superintendent Greg Wyman. “I’m a little confused because I thought the complaint was that the standards were too high,” he said. The standards have also created political tension in Phoenix. Ducey and Douglas have feuded since taking office. Douglas harshly criticized Ducey for not immediately scrapping the adopted state standards. Meanwhile, Ducey supported the State Board of Education in its confusing and bitter conflict with Douglas about who controls the staff for the state department of education. That conflict has ended up in multiple law-
suits — and spawned a recall effort directed at Douglas. Meanwhile, the release of national test scores also spurred headlines this week. “President Obama also made an announcement regarding standardized testing and an overreliance on testing,” said Case. “This announcement is also political in nature as the federal government does not have the authority to change state or school district testing policies.” Case said the federal government used policies such as Race to the Top and No Child Left Behind to “incentivize” testing policies with states. Wyman agreed with Case saying the federal government has little control over the testing school districts do “The federal government has no authority to regulate testing,” he said. “They can’t mandate the state’s policy to change testing.” Both Case and Wyman said PUSD will continue to monitor the impact of the president’s announcement. The good news is that Arizona students taking the National Assessment of Education Progress Tests didn’t decline in 2015, while
scores nationally dipped significantly. The bad news is that Arizona students remained below the national average in most categories. Douglas hailed the results as great news — especially given the national declines. “It is a testament to the hard work of Arizona teachers and students that NAEP scores have remained stable given the many significant changes to our state’s education system in recent years,” said Douglas in a release. Nonetheless, Arizona students performed below the national average in almost every category. In fourth-grade math, Arizona scored higher than only seven other states. In eighth-grade math, Arizona scored higher than 16 states. In fourth-grade reading, Arizona scored higher than only one other state. In eighthgrade reading, Arizona scored higher than nine states. In most categories, roughly a third of Arizona students scored as “proficient” or higher. Generally, 70 to 79 percent of the state’s students taking the test ranked as “basic” or higher.
Jury convicts man in ammunition theft case From page 1A is a licensed hunting guide, ac cording to a presentence report. In his closing arguments, Rose said, “This is a case where the defendant stole, lied, endangered and he profited.” Rose argued Sopeland stole some 15,000 rounds of ammunition from HPR, taking several hundred at a time over an 18-month period. Rose said Sopeland likely placed the ammo in his backpack while no one was watching. Lloyd argued Sopeland had permission to take the scrap ammo, which HPR did not sell because of various defects.
Lloyd said there is no evidence Sopeland stole the ammo. The case started when Jeff Antich, general manager at Advanced Tactical Armament Concepts, called police after an employee found some of the scrap ammunition had been sold to a friend. That employee brought the boxed ammo to Antich, who called police. Police filed no charges initially, but reopened the case in 2013. Lloyd pointed out that while Antich told police no one had permission to take scrap or blemished ammo from the factory in the Payson Industrial Airpark, plant manager Jeremy Hoff frequently handed out blem-
ished ammo to workers as an incentive. Furthermore, Lloyd asked the jury to consider why Sopeland would take scrap ammunition when he could have taken the “good stuff,” fireable ammunition. Lloyd encouraged the jury to do the right thing and find Sopeland not guilty. He said detectives had lied or “shaded the truth” during the investigation to get sources to confess things, which represented a “slippery slope” for investigators. Rose said Lloyd was just trying to distract the jury and had put out a “red herring.”
He said the ammunition Sopeland took cost 38 to 41 cents per round to manufacture, which put the value of the rounds stolen at $3,800 and $6,150. He said Sopeland sold some of the ammo to friends. Sopeland did not have permission to take the ammo and although HPR did not have a written policy addressing scrap ammo, Sopeland should have known it was wrong, said the prosecutor. In a presentencing report, Sopeland told a probation officer that he is a good man that has never had any legal trouble, not even a speeding ticket. He admitted taking the ammo, but said he had permission.
PAYSON ROUNDUP
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Submissions deadlines: • 10 a.m. Monday for Tuesday issue • 10 a.m. Wednesday for Friday issue
Halloween fun at the library
will take place at The Center (formerly the Payson Senior Center), 514 W. Main St. starting at 9:30 a.m. and running to 2 p.m. At the event 10 local appraisers will provide verbal evaluations on almost all antique items except fine art and furniture. A $5 donation will be asked for each item to be appraised. All donations are for PHP, a 501c3 charity supporting Payson families in crisis. The appraisers are well versed in: gold, silver, gems, jewelry, ceramics, primitives, Native American items, antique fire arms and weapons, clocks and watches, lamps and linens and general shelf, wall and decorator pieces. Food and beverages will be available. Additional parking available at the Community Presbyterian Church with a shuttle bus providing transportation to The Center.
benefit spaghetti dinner
The Payson Public Library’s Halloween celebration is at 4 p.m., Friday, Oct. 30. Guests are encouraged to wear costumes and enjoy games, crafts and stories. The Payson Public Library is at 328 N. McLane Rd. in Rumsey Park.
Fall Festival
The annual Fall Festival at Pine Strawberry School is from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 30 in the gym. The event includes a $4 of dinner of hotdogs or nachos, with a cookie and drink; carnival games; a haunted house; and a costume contest at 7 p.m. Game tickets are three for $1 if bought at the school office in advance or two for $1 at the event.
Tonto Basin Halloween Festival
The Young Irelanders to perform Nov. 8 in Payson
The 32nd Annual Tonto Basin Halloween Festival is from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 30 at the Tonto Basin School near Punkin Center. For those 13 years and older, admission is a can of food. Proceeds go toward the purchase of shade for the pre-school playground. Learn more at www.lcmemorialfund.com.
Visit a haunted house
The Longhorn Horror Story is a scary haunted house at the Payson High School Auditorium, produced by Longhorn Theatre and the PHS Student Government. The haunted house is from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., Friday, Oct. 30 and from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 31. Admission is $3 per person or $2 with a can of food for the local food banks.
Metro Creative Services photo
The children at the Community Child Learning Center of the Community Presbyterian Church are hosting their annual Spaghetti Dinner to help raise money to benefit the less fortunate children and families of Payson at Christmas time. The dinner is from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., Friday, Nov. 6 at the Community Presbyterian Church, 800 W Main St., Payson. The menu includes spaghetti, salad, roll, dessert and drink for just $5. Guests can eat in or get it to go. In addition to the dinner there will be an Angel Themed Craft Sale and Angel Photos.
Brush pit schedule
This coming weekend, the Regional Payson Area Project… for a Fire Wise Rim Country will be staffing free brush drop-off points at the following locations, weather permitting: Saturday, Oct. 31 the Blattner Pit will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Blattner Pit is located at Milepost 259.7 on Highway 260, east of Payson; Sunday, Nov. 1 the Pine Pit will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., the Pine Pit is located .7 of a mile east of Highway 87 on Control Road, south of Pine. The drop-offs are for brush, leaves, pine needles and vegetative materials only. Use by commercial haulers is prohibited.
Hear about Rim folks fishing Alaska
Payson residents Bill and Carolyn Davis, Ric Hinkie and Pine resident Dave Montgomery will show pictures and provide information on their August 2015 trip to Yakutat, Alaska at 9 a.m., Saturday, Oct. 31 for the Payson Flycasters at Tiny’s, 600 E. Highway 260, Payson. After the presentation, local fishing reports will be shared. The Flycasters’ annual holiday gathering will be at Majestic Rim, beginning at 5 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 5. Tickets and information are available from Ric Hinkie, (928) 8484501 or at the Oct. 31 meeting.
Special Needs Support Group Halloween event is Saturday
The Payson Special Needs Support Group is having its annual Halloween costume dance and potluck at the Tonto Apache Gym from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 31. A $5 donation is requested to help pay for the facility rental.
Harvest Block Party
Come join the fun at Mountain Bible Church, 302 E. Rancho Road, Payson from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 31 for a free dinner, free games and free candy. This a safe, fun family night filled with laughter and joy as kids dress in their costumes. Tons of fun is guaranteed at the famous maze, game booths for all ages, the dunk tank, food and tons of candy.
Free GED classes
Free GED classes with a Gila County adult education tutor are held from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. every Monday and Thursday at Rim Country Literacy, 103 E. Aero Dr., behind Pinon Cafe. Classes are ongoing and new students can join any time. For details, call (520) 236-2019, or email sfrank@gilacountyaz.gov.
Elks Lodge community events for fall
The Payson Elks Lodge, 1206 N. Beeline
Friday, October 30, 2015 3A
Highway, is planning several events: SUPERSTARS Duets, Hoop Shoot and a special Veterans Day program.
SUPERSTARS! Duets The Payson Elks Lodge is taking applications until Saturday, Oct. 31 for its New Year’s Eve SUPERSTARS! Duets dinner show. Applications can be picked up at the Lodge. For more information, call the Lodge at (928) 474-2572.
Veterans Day program
For details, please call (928) 472-5110.
Drive to collect a ton of food
The Central Arizona Board of REALTORS® is sponsoring a food drive through the end of October to benefit the area food banks. Fill food collection boxes at real estate offices throughout the region or stop by the Board of REALTORS® Office at 600 E. Highway 260, Suite 12, Payson. The goal is to donate a ton of food. Cash donations are also appreciated.
All veterans and their spouses are invited to join the Elks Wednesday, Nov.11 for a Veterans’ Day Celebration and Dinner. The meal will be roast pork and all veterans eat free. The cost for spouses and guests of veterans is $10 per person. Get your tickets at the Elks Lodge. Seating is limited to 100 people and tickets must be picked up/purchased by Nov. 5. For more information, contact the Elks Lodge at (928) 474-2572.
‘Martin Luther’ appears at Mount Cross Lutheran
Hoop Shoot
Dinner fundraiser to help Navajo School buy propane
The Elks’ Hoop Shoot Contest for boys and girls, ages 8 to 13, is Saturday, Nov. 7 at the Tonto Apache Gym. This is a basketball free throw program. Age is determined as of April 1, 2016. Registration is at noon with the contest following. Winners can advance to district, regional, and national levels. For details, call the Elks at (928) 474-2572.
At the Mazatzal Casino
There’s always something happening at the Mazatzal Hotel & Casino, located on Highway 87 at milepost 251. For more information, call 1-800-777-PLAY (7529). • Football Specials: Sunday, Monday and Thursday in the Apache Spirits Lounge. Beer & Wings and drink specials! • Red Sleigh Giveaway: Double Entry Mondays! See Player’s Club for details. • HallowScream Heroes & Villains Bash Oct. 31: 4x Points Slot Play Bonus 12 p.m. to 12 a.m. Entertainment by DJ Brent. Enter Costume Contest: $1,000 First Place, $500 Second Place, $250 Third Place. Enter at Player’s Club Oct. 19-31.
Trunk or Treat Festival
The Trunk or Treat Festival is from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 31 at the Oxbow Saloon on Historic Main Street. Trunk/booth participants will be set up outside the Oxbow, while inside, the “Super Hero Experience” takes place. The Payson Parks, Recreation and Tourism Department provides the candy to distribute. Trunk or Treat is intended for young children under age 12 to ensure a safe trick or treating experience.
Luther has not been seen for hundreds of years, but someone who looks like him and speaks like him, will be in the chancel of Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Highway 260 Sunday, Nov. 1 — All Saints Sunday. The public is invited to experience Martin Luther at either the 8:30 a.m. or 10:30 a.m. service.
A dinner fundraiser to purchase propane for Navajo School and Mission at Rock Point, Ariz. is planned from 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 1 at Mount Cross Lutheran Church Log Building, 601 E. Highway 260. A dinner of Navajo tostadas, pinto beans and all the rest, plus drinks and dessert for a donation will be served. Additionally, there will be crafts for sale. For more information, call (928) 4742552.
Day of Dead event at library
The Payson Public Library plans a Day of the Dead/Dia de los Muertos celebration from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday, Nov. 2. Participants can enjoy crafts, music, food, games, stories and more. The Payson Public Library is at 328 N. McLane Rd., Payson.
forum will be presented twice, one starting at 3:30 p.m. the other at 5 p.m.
Children plan benefit dinner
The children at the Community Child Learning Center of the Community Presbyterian Church are hosting their annual Spaghetti Dinner to help raise money to benefit the less fortunate children and families of Payson at Christmas time. The dinner is from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., Friday, Nov. 6 at the Community Presbyterian Church, 800 W Main St., Payson. The menu includes spaghetti, salad, roll, dessert and drink for just $5. Guests can eat in or get it to go. In addition to the dinner, there will be an Angel Themed Craft Sale and Angel Photos. The children are making several different “Angel” crafts for purchase and guests can have a picture taken as an “Angel” for just $5.
Organ recital
Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Highway 260, Payson, and the Rodgers Organ Co. present a free organ recital at 7 p.m., Friday, Nov. 6 at the church, featuring Haruhito Miyagi of Salt Lake City, a composer and artist who has performed extensively throughout Europe and the U.S. The evening’s program includes selections by Bach, Franck, Bohm, Barber and Clark.
Payson Ranger District needs volunteers
The Payson Ranger District plans a volunteer orientation from 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Nov. 7 at the office on E. Highway 260. The Forest Service encourages applicants to reserve a spot by coming the district office between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 2 through Friday Nov. 6.
Merry Mall on the way
No Star Valley council meeting
The regular meeting of the Star Valley Town Council for Tuesday, Nov. 3 has been canceled. The next meeting is at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 17.
Health issues survey, forums
The Gila County Health and Emergency Management Division will present a community forum to talk about community health issues and have residents fill out surveys Wednesday, Nov. 4 at the Payson Public Library, 328 N. McLane Rd. Residents can fill out a health survey anytime between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. The
The holiday Merry Mall, sponsored by Payson United Methodist Women, is celebrating more than 15 years of arts, crafts, and homemade treats. Hot baked potatoes from the potato bar or a fresh piece a pie is available for a donation. Come celebrate between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 7 at the Payson United Methodist Church located at 414 N. Easy St. (behind Ace Hardware). All proceeds go toward the church’s mission giving.
Antique appraisal event
This Saturday, Nov. 7 an antique appraisal event, hosted by Payson Helping Payson,
The Young Irelanders — a group of eight — performs at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 8 at the Payson High School Auditorium as part of the 2015-16 season of the Tonto Community Concert Association. The sound the band creates is best described as eclectic, where traditional Irish music, Celtic music, folk music, world music, jazz, country and popular music all come together to give rise to a very unique and multi-faceted sound. Single tickets are $25 and are available at the door. Season tickets for this concert and the upcoming five concerts are also available for $100.
Soroptimists need applicants for financial award
The Soroptimists’ Live Your Dream financial award applications are available now and must be completed and returned by Nov. 15. These awards are for women who are head of household and are attending school to attain a better life for themselves and their children. The local awards are presented in March. Winners receiving the Payson club’s award can move on and compete for the regional and national awards. Contact Candace Conte at (928) 4728891 or (928) 472-1336 for more information. Applications are also available at the Payson campus of Gila Community College.
Veterans Day ceremony
The Town of Payson in concert with the Payson Patriotic Events Committee and the Longhorn Theatre staff and technicians proudly presents Veterans Day 2015 at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Nov. 11. The program will be presented at the Payson High School Auditorium. The theme selected for this year is: “Our American Veterans… they earned our respect and deserve our unwavering support.” After the program and courtesy of the Rim Country Classic Automobile Club, a selected number of veterans will be taken to lunch. The lunch group will be escorted to its destination by members of the Vietnam Legacy Motorcycle Club.
Stellar jazz artist in concert
An amazingly significant jazz music event comes to Payson Sunday, Nov. 15. Howard Alden, a stellar New York City guitarist, will perform in a trio setting at 2 p.m. at the Community Presbyterian Church, 800 W. Main Street, Payson. Only a $5 donation at the door is requested. The Payson Friends of Jazz and the Community Presbyterian Church are hosting Alden’s performance as part of a long-standing monthly jazz series. An RSVP to gerry-Reynolds@Hotmail.com is advised.
LOTTERIES Powerball (Oct. 28) 4 54 56 62 63 (10) Mega Millions (Oct. 27) 9 26 27 29 74 (4) The Pick (Oct. 28) 1 10 18 20 27 42 Fantasy 5 (Oct. 29) 2 15 26 32 40 Pick 3 (Oct. 29) 627 5 Card Cash (Oct. 29) JD JC 10D 10S QH
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Friday • Payson Public Library: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Halloween event 4 p.m. • Pine Library: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Medicare enrollment help, 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. • Fall Festival: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., Pine Strawberry School, $4 dinner; games, etc. • Tonto Basin Halloween Festival, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Tonto Basin School • Haunted house: PHS auditorium, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., $3 admission
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Saturday • Special Needs Support Group Halloween event: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., TAT gym • Harvest Block Party: 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Mountain Bible Church, 302 E. Rancho Rd., Payson, free • Trunk or Treat: Oxbow, W. Main, $3 for Super Hero Experience • Haunted house: PHS auditorium, 8 p.m. to 11 p.m., $3 admission
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Looking ahead
• Mount Cross hosts “Martin Luther”: 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. services • Rim Country Museum: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., 700 Green Valley Pkwy. • Bingo: 1 p.m., Elks Lodge, open to the public • Benefit dinner of Navajo tostadas and fixings, 4 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Hwy. 260, Payson
• Register for Tonto National Forest volunteer orientation at Payson Ranger Station, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., event is Saturday, Nov. 7, 9 a.m. to noon • Payson Public Library: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Day of the Dead event, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. • Rim Country Museum: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 700 Green Valley Pkwy.
• Register for Tonto National Forest volunteer orientation at Payson Ranger Station, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., event is Saturday, Nov. 7, 9 a.m. to noon • Payson Public Library: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Pine Library: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
November 4-6 • Register for Tonto National Forest volunteer orientation at Payson Ranger Station, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., event is Saturday, Nov. 7, 9 a.m. to noon November 6 • Spaghetti Dinner benefit: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., Community Presbyterian Church, $5 per person • Organ recital, 7 p.m., Mount Cross
Sunday
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Tuesday
PAYSON ROUNDUP
OPINION
4A Friday, October 30, 2015
ourview
lookback
At least put on the Band-Aid
• Oct. 30, 1938: Orson Welles, age 23, causes a nationwide panic with his broadcast of “War of the Worlds” — a realistic radio dramatization of a Martian invasion of Earth. “War of the Worlds” was not planned as a radio hoax, and Welles had little inkling of the havoc it would cause. • Nov. 1, 1941: President Franklin Roosevelt announces that the U.S. Coast Guard will be under the direction of the U.S. Navy, a transition of authority usually reserved only for wartime. Five weeks later, Japan would attack the U.S. at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. • Oct. 31, 1957: The Japanese car company Toyota establishes its U.S. headquarters in California to begin selling its inexpensive Toyopet Crown sedans. A sensation in Japan, it flopped in the U.S. The car was too small for many American drivers, guzzled gas and oil, and shook at freeway speeds.
Maybe it’ll all be over by the time you read this. But at this writing, the Arizona House had approved a set of bills to settle a lawsuit by a coalition of school districts caused by lawmakers failure to give K-12 schools enough money to keep up with inflation. The Senate is expected to approve the package today. Voters approved the inflation adjustment in 2001, but lawmakers ignored it during the recession. Courts have found that lawmakers should increase education funding by $331 million annually to make up for the money illegally withheld during the recession. Gov. Doug Ducey helped put together a settlement acceptable to the school districts after years of heartbreaking deadlock and evasion. The settlement would give the schools about 70 percent of what they’re owed — increasing K-12 support by about $225 million annually. The settlement would also write in some exceptions to the inflation adjustment during recessions and major economic downturns. It’s a good deal — so far as it goes. We hope that by the time you read this, lawmakers will have approved the proposal. Voters will then get their chance to approve whatever lawmakers do in a special election on May 17. We hope voters will approve the measure then. Of course, the special session won’t address the core problem caused by years of legislative neglect of our schools. It will most certainly leave Arizona near the bottom when it comes to per-student funding. We’re more than $3,000 per student below even the national average. The settlement will increase the budget by about $225 per student. Moreover, we’re disappointed by the reliance on diverting more money from the state land trust to settle the inflation lawsuit. About 60 percent of the $3.8 billion over 10 years will come from increasing the disbursement from the $5.2 billion state lands trust fund from 2.5 percent to 6.9 percent. This will give schools a boost in the short run — but will cost them money in the long run by permanently reducing the amount of money in the trust fund — to the tune of an estimated $3 billion. When Gov. Ducey originally floated the idea of diverting more money from the state land trust, he said it would represent new money — not a way to replace money illegally withheld in the past. It would make far more sense to restrain state spending on things like prisons, dip more deeply into the projected $650 million surplus and raise income and sales taxes to support our struggling public schools than to eat the seed corn in the land trust. However, we suspect this patched-together settlement represents the best the schools can manage politically — given the composition of the Legislature and the painful memory of the terrible plunge in state revenues during the recession. So we’re hoping that by now lawmakers have taken this urgently needed, bare-minimum step to support our children. And we’re especially happy that our own Sen. Sylvia Allen has said she’ll vote for the settlement. But we hope neither the lawmakers nor the voters will mistake this Band-Aid for a cure for what ails our schools.
Forests at risk Thank goodness for Arizona Forward. They’re so, well, forward thinking. The Valley-based business group recently issued a vital report pointing out that Tucson and Phoenix have a vital stake in whether our forest burns down — taking places like Payson along with it. Now, this has nothing to do with whether they have a place to visit when it’s 115 in the Valley. Nope, it’s about the water. The Arizona Forward report notes that $1 spent on forest restoration can yield $100 in economic benefits — much of it involving protecting downstream reservoirs. The intense crown fires that can all but sterilize the soil in a dense overcrowded forest can easily cause reservoir filling mudslides. The silty rivers and reservoirs can inflict billions of dollars in water treatment and importation costs on metropolitan areas like Phoenix. The Arizona Forward report also offered invaluable lessons for forested communities like Payson. Most notably, the report focused on Flagstaff’s farsighted response to the lethal Schultz Fire. Flagstaff not only adopted a fire-adapted building code — it convinced voters to tax themselves $10 million to accelerate restoration projects. But mostly, the report made the case for protecting distant forested watersheds to places like Phoenix. And that’s vital to the survival of places like Payson, since only the Valley has the political and economic clout to help solve a problem so vast. And that’s why we say, thank goodness for Arizona Forward.
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Budget deal: Epitomizes everything wrong with Congress WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Congressman Paul fiscal victory achieved by Republicans since we A. Gosar, D.D.S. (AZ-04) recently released the fol- took back the House majority. lowing statement after voting against “This terrible bill epitomizes everything wrong with Congress and is anothH.R. 1314, the Bipartisan Budget Act er example of why I have been calling of 2015, as well as the rule for this bill, for new House leadership. We need both of which ultimately passed the more bold conservatives that are fed House by a vote of 266-167: up with the status quo in Washington, “The greatest authority granted to D.C. that will stand with me and others the House of Representatives by the to stop this dysfunction. Other than Constitution is the ‘Power of the Purse.’ one minor tweak to Obamacare, I can’t Yet, you would never know it by looking think of one single victory that conat this bill and by today’s actions. It is servatives got out of this deal. With hard to imagine a worse ‘deal’ than this Paul Gosar Republicans in charge of the House and awful agreement that was negotiated in secret, with no input from rank-and-file mem- Senate, our leadership team should have said NO bers, with no committee hearings and with no Deal.” votes on any amendments. This terrible deal was shoved down our throats in less than 48 hours by Background The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 blows a lame-duck leadership team that worked with Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama to through the Budget Caps established under the get it across the finish line. Once again, the opin- Budget Control Act by increasing discretionions of the American people have been silenced ary defense and nondiscretionary spending by through a broken legislative process that ignores $50 billion above the FY16 level and $30 billion regular order and consolidates power among a above the FY 17 level. According to an analysis by the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, handful of ‘leaders.’ “Among its many failures, this bill suspends “the spending restraint imposed by the Budget the debt ceiling through March 2017 and hands Control Act has reduced spending by $1.3 trillion Washington politicians a blank check that will compared to the levels originally proposed by add more than a trillion dollars to our national the president, an amount equal to $8,980 per debt. It does nothing to solve the current fiscal household. Economist Stephen Moore says that crisis facing our country, shackles future gener- the BCA helped contribute to “the first three-year ations with more unsustainable debt, steals $150 reduction in federal spending since the 1950s.” Pay-fors: This bill spends money now and pays billion from the Social Security Trust Fund and utilizes Washington math and budget gimmicks for it later by writing an IOU promising more than that will never materialize in an attempt to pay $14.047 billion in cuts by the end of 2025. It also for $80 billion in new authorized spending. This pays for spending through pension smoothing deal busts through budget caps established by and by budget gimmicks that move the due date the Budget Control Act (BCA) just a few years for pension payments up one calendar month ago. I fully and vigorously supported the BCA, ($7.65 billion is stolen from people’s pensions). and still do. The BCA is the only successful effort The deal increases the single-employer fixed to reduce spending for three years in a row since premium contribution to the PBGC (essentially World War II. But this deal abandons that one a new tax, $4.05 billion). The deal significant-
ly increases civil monetary penalties to adjust “to inflation,” permanently rescinds $1.5 billion from the Crime Victims Fund and permanently rescinds $746 million from the Department of Justice Civil Asset Forfeiture Fund. The deal also pays for the bill by imposing new audits on partnerships and unincorporated businesses ($11.2 billion from new tax compliance mandates). $3 billion in savings in the deal come from cutting crop insurance, a provision which is strongly opposed by the agriculture community. According to the Republican Study Committee (RSC), “Nearly $30 billion, or 40 percent, of the bill’s offsets come from new revenue, rather than from spending reductions elsewhere in the federal budget.” Debt Ceiling: Attempts to “Restore Congres sional Authority over the Debt limit” but increases the debt ceiling without including a specific amount and allows the government to keep borrowing as much as it needs to till March 2017. CBO states, “Title IX would temporarily suspend the limitation on borrowing by the Treasury through March 15, 2017. On the following day, the current debt limit of $18.113 trillion would be raised by the amount of borrowing above that level during the period in which the limitation was suspended.” The RSC estimates that after this happens America’s national debt will be approximately $19.6 trillion. Other: The budget deal scraps a provision that automatically enrolls full-time employees into Obamacare for companies with 200 employees or more. Diverts $150 billion from the Social Security Trust Fund. Authorizes the sale of $5.05 billion of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). Authorizes the sale of another $2 billion worth of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve for the purposes of modernizing Strategic Petroleum Reserve facilities. Numerous Republicans and Democrats have constantly stated in the past that we shouldn’t be raiding the SPR.
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Editor insults critics Editor: In a Sept. 15, 2015 My View column, Payson Roundup editor Pete Aleshire labeled any questioning of the funding as “gossip,” “conspiracy theories,” “insults and demeaning” and “demonizing” of those behind the project. These labels placed on those who are concerned about their community and home is the real insult. One word that cannot be used against the critics of the construction is “naive.” Most living in Payson have been around long enough to “get it” when large amounts of money are being tossed around. The group behind the development “found” over $4 million for the initial costs. I’d like to know where they “found” this amount so I can go find some for myself. How much of this “found” money will “find” its way back into the hands of the project’s supporters? Those who put up the initial funding are only doing so in anticipation of a financial return on their investment. That is not a conspiracy theory but a simple statement of fact. Here’s the rub for those calling out for a vote or say in the purchase. There is nothing wrong with the way the deal went down — it is the normal function of our capitalistic economy. Big fish eat little fish. Back door deals and secret meetings while put-
ting forth an altruistic front to those most directly impacted is the American way. In this case, the Payson area and current population is about to be pushed aside by those with a different vision on how to profit from what is available. Payson’s population is about to be shoved aside just as the Tonto Apache were displaced before them. The current residents should not expect or demand transparency and disclosure in regards to the college campus. Nor do we get to vote. Greed and mendacity do not operate under those constraints. It is propelled forward under the inertia of the found millions of dollars already invested and will happen regardless of any complaints or protests or public vote that can be mustered by a few vocal residents. Gary Barnes Editor’s note: The more than $4 million to buy the land came mostly from the MHA Foundation, as the Roundup has repeatedly reported. The Roundup has never found any evidence that anyone involved with the MHA Foundation will profit personally from the university project — nor any of the other donors who have so far contributed more than $500,000. That effort to impeach the motives of the people who have supported the project is exactly what I was objecting
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to in the commentary in question. I understand that some people may not want to see Payson grow to the 38,000 residents envisioned in the town’s general plan. Moreover, it’s true that many of the negotiations needed to make the project work have taken place behind closed doors — but the Roundup has reported exhaustively on the project, the funding sources and the plans. It’s also true that residents don’t get to vote directly on the project — but the residents of Star Valley and Payson have voted repeatedly on whether to retain council members who support the plan. Rest assured, if the Roundup ever discovers someone who approved and advanced the project gets rich as a result, we’ll splash it all over the front page. People can and should raise all kinds of legitimate questions about the project and its impact on the community. However, I feel bad when the motives of those working on the project are questioned and demeaned based on nothing but gossip and conspiracy theories.
Additional thanks Editor: We inadvertently left out some important businesses in our show program for “Addict,” recently presented at Payson High School. We would like to add Habitat for Humanity ReStore, Safeway, KMOG Radio 1420AM/103.3FM, KCMA Radio 98.5FM, and KPJM Radio 99.7FM. We send out a special thanks to Pam Newman and Michael Day of KPJM for hosting cast members on the air to talk about the show and important issues with drug addiction. We apologize for the oversight and any hard feelings it might have caused. Kathy Siler, Payson High School theatre instructor
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
Forest ‘vulnerable to destruction’ Report highlights threat of Arizona fires by
Pete Aleshire
roundup editor
Thinning and restoring forest lands can yield about $10 to $100 in benefits for every dollar spent, according to a report issued by Arizona Forward. Forest restoration projects not only protect mountain communities from wildfires, they provide huge benefits in protecting the water supply of all the largest cities in Arizona, concluded the report by the coalition of utility companies, environmental groups and forest advocates. “Some perceive forest health issues are only relevant in Northern Arizona. Too many of us are oblivious to the impact forest ecosystems have on everyone who lives in the Grand Canyon State from Flagstaff to Phoenix and all the way to Tucson and beyond,” said Diane Brossart, president of Arizona Forward. The group composed mostly of Valley business leaders has lately taken up the cause of forest restoration, which remains crucial to protecting the water supply of the Valley. The group includes the Salt River Project and the Arizona Forest Foundation, which have been pushing to convince desert cities to support forest restoration. The groups also support a project to restore the watershed of the C.C. Cragin Reservoir, to which Payson has rights to 3,000 acre-feet annually. The report documented the enormous costs of wildfires — and the benefits of various restoration efforts already underway. Slide Fire: $100 million cost
The report cited the example of the modest Slide Fire, which burned 20,000 acres in Sedona in 2014. The fire had a dramatic impact on the normally booming Sedona tourist economy, although it burned in Oak Creek Canyon miles from Sedona itself. After the fire, Oak Creek ran black with ash and silt. The gate receipts at Slide Rock State Park dropped from $8,000 a day to $200 a day as the number of visitors dropped from 44,000 in June of 2013 to 2,730 in June of 2014. The Sedona Chamber of Commerce put the impact on business at $100 million. The 2010 Schultz Fire in Flagstaff caused an estimated $147 million financial loss, with impacts that linger to this day, the report concluded. The 15,000-acre fire didn’t consume any buildings, but did denude the slopes of the mountain above the town. Monsoon rains caused flooding that damaged homes and killed a 12-year-old girl. Tragically, the Forest Service planned to thin most of the area that burned, but didn’t have the money to undertake the project. Tourists and visitors to Northern Arizona forests spend about $2.5 billion annually, the report concluded. Tourism in Arizona supports 171,500 jobs and generates $2.8 billion in tax revenue. Those examples demonstrate the huge impact of even a modest fire on the regional economy, never mind a monster fire like the 680,000-acre Wallow Fire. Unfortunately, with temperatures rising and droughts deepening the toll of wildfires has grown dramatically. A century of fire suppression, overgrazing and clear-cutting has increased tree densities from 50 per acre to 1,000 per acre, resulting in far more intense and damaging wildfires, concluded the report.
and dredge reservoirs after a modest wildfire there. Later Denver water systems invested about $60 million in an effort to stabilize watersheds to protect treatment plants and reservoir capacity. The report also cited the impact of an 18,000-acre fire near Sunflower in 2012. The fire denuded slopes and subsequent monsoon rains washed sediment into Sycamore Creek, which flows into the Verde River. The sediment forced Salt River Project to shut down canals and water treatment operations, which in turn forced it to increase groundwater pumping and diversions from the Colorado River. By the same token, the Rodeo-Chediski Fire in 2002 caused erosion that caused a worrisome increase in nutrients, sulfates, sediment and heavy metals like arsenic in Roosevelt Lake — which alone accounts for more than half of the region’s water storage. Wallow Fire: $1 billion cost
Studies suggest that the total direct and indirect cost of the Wallow Fire could ultimately reach $1 billion. The report underscored the value of efforts to restore forests before wildfires can inflict damage that can take generations to heal. For instance, the report lauded the Flagstaff Watershed Project, financed by $10 million in bonds approved overwhelmingly by Flagstaff property owners after the Schultz Fire. The project will provide money to partner with the U.S. Forest Service to clear a buffer zone around the town — and to thin the slopes that feed into Lake Mary — the town’s major source of water. An economic impact study estimated the project could provide $100 in benefits for each $1 spent. A study suggested that thinning the project area could produce between $573 million and $1.2 billion in benefits, including saving structures, reducing firefighting costs and protecting everything from the water supply to retail sales. The report praised a variety of ongoing restoration projects, including the effort to restore some 64,000 acres draining into the C.C. Cragin Reservoir. The project stems from an unusual partnership involving Payson, SRP, the National Forest Foundation, the U.S. Forest Service and others to thin the hillsides above the reservoir and reduce the odds a crown fire will cause an increase in erosion that will fill the lake with silt. The report also called attention to the
Salt/Verde watershed vital
The 13,000-square-mile watersheds of the Salt and Verde feed six reservoirs that support some 2 million Valley residents with storage totaling 2.3 million acre-feet. Other cities nationally have made the connection between wildfires and water runoff — and started to invest in projects to protect those watersheds. For instance, New York City has spent $1.5 billion to maintain and restore watersheds that feed into the town’s water supply. That investment allowed the city to avoid construction of a $6 billion water treatment plant — which would have had annual operating costs of $300 million. Moreover, Denver water agencies had to spend $45 million to reduce stream erosion
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The dead trees in the dense forest on the watershed for the C.C. Cragin Reservoir illustrates the danger posed by wildfires on millions of acres.
White Mountain Stewardship Project, which thinned 75,000 acres and likely saved Alpine and Springerville from the Wallow Fire before the Forest Service decided it could no longer afford a roughly $800-per-acre subsidy to keep the project going. Much hope for large-scale restoration now focuses on the Four Forest Restoration Initiative. The Forest Service awarded a 10-year, 300,000-acre contract to a private contractor about four years ago. That contractor couldn’t get the project underway and turned over the contract to Good Earth Power AZ. On the original timetable, the contractor would have thinned about 100,000 acres by now, but Good Earth has only cleared a few thousand to date. The Arizona Forward report stressed the urgency of the issue, despite a damp monsoon season that resulted in the first normal fire season in years. “Chronic drought and decades of fire suppression have led to increasingly unhealthy forest conditions across the state. Long-term buildup of forest fuels and high tree densities have caused a dramatic increase in the threat of catastrophic wildfire. Communities throughout Arizona along with animal habitats and watersheds have become vulnerable to destruction.”
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Wildfires increase seven-fold
A 2006 study found that the acreage burned has increased exponentially. Between 1987 and 2003, the acreage burned increased seven-fold compared to the preceding 17 years. Moreover, the number of fires greater than 1,000 acres increased four-fold. In the 1980s, about 85,000 acres on the Salt and Verde watersheds burned in an average year — which made a 5,000- to 10,000-acre fire seem large. In the 1990s, average acres burned grew to 227,000 annually. Since 2000, 2 million acres have burned — with just two massive fires accounting for half of that. The rise in wildfires spewing huge quantities of smoke can have a big impact on human health, said the report. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimates that wildfires in the U.S. emit as much as 2.5 million tons of particulate matter annually. The American Thoracic Society estimates that even a slight increase in soot-like particles over two years will increase the risk of dying by 32 percent for people with diabetes, 28 percent for people with asthma and pneumonia, 27 percent for people with congestive heart failure and 22 percent for people with inflammatory diseases. But the report focused most heavily on the benefits forest restoration projects yield for watersheds — especially the Salt and Verde watershed, which sustains the Valley.
5A
Pete Aleshire/Roundup
Forest restoration projects focus on removing trees smaller than 16 inches in diameter. In this photo, a machine strips branches from small trees.
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4FRI making slow progress by
Pete Aleshire
roundup editor
Good Earth Power continues to report progress in the most massive forest restoration project ever undertaken, as studies underscore the urgency of the effort. The company with a Forest Service contract to thin 300,000 acres of badly overgrown forest in Northern Arizona said it has now purchased additional equipment to increase its capacity to cut and haul 1,000 loads of brush and small trees each week. That should enable it to thin 27,000 acres annually. The project remains roughly two years behind schedule, with a relative handful of acres cut so far. The original contract called for Good Earth to thin about 30,000 acres last year and another 30,000 this year, but the contractors struggled to round up enough trucks and find or build mills that could handle the small-diameter wood has proven challenging. The company in a recent progress report said it now has 65 trailers available to haul brush from the projects it thins. It also has 12 logging trucks, with 12 more on order. Historically, most forest restoration projects have involved a taxpayer subsidy over and above what the timber company can make the selling the wood. In the Four Forest Restoration Initiative, Good Earth gets no subsidy and must also haul away brush and branches — rather than leaving them behind and burning them once the piles dry out. As a result, a 4FRI restoration project requires about three times as many truckloads per acre as a conventional thinning project that leaves the slash behind. Good Earth’s update noted that in the
two years Pioneer Forest Products held the contract, it thinned only 1,000 acres and developed no infrastructure for processing the small diameter wood and biomass. So far, Good Earth has thinned about 5,000 acres, 4,000 of those since January. However, to thin the contracted 300,000 acres in 10 years, the pace will have to accelerate to more than 30,000 annually. The company said it got the contract two years ago, but is now hauling 300 loads per week, which will increase to 750 loads per week as the new equipment goes into service. The mills and biomass projects the company has bought or is building can handle 35 loads per day now and 60 loads a day with extra shifts at existing mills. The company has offered logs for sale to local companies, which have mostly turned down the offers. “We are now two years into our work in Arizona and have made great progress. Many millions of dollars have been invested. No one wants to see 4FRI succeed more than we do,” said the company. The 4FRI project remains the single, large-scale effort to reduce tree densities across wide swaths of overgrown ponderosa pine forests in Arizona. Much smaller-scale efforts have largely relied on taxpayer subsidies. For instance, the White Mountain Stewardship project cleared about 30,000 acres over the period of six or seven years, but that entailed a taxpayer subsidy of about $800 per acre. The fitful Forest Service budget process limited thinning to less than 5,000 acres annually. Nonetheless, the project is credited with saving Alpine and Springerville from the Wallow Fire, by creating cleared buffer zones.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
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County nabs $600,000 grant by
Teresa McQuerrey
roundup staff reporter
Gila County’s health department has more than $200,000 a year for three years to teach low-income residents how to eat healthy and stay active. The Gila County Board of Supervisors accepted a grant award from the state at its Oct. 6 meeting. The money comes from the Arizona Nutrition Network for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance and Education Program (SNAP-Ed) of the state health department. Joshua Beck, with the Gila County Division of Health and Emergency Services, is administering the grant for the county. The grant will provide nutrition education and obesity prevention programs to people on SNAP, the new name for Food Stamps. The programs will include direct education services to citizens — such as offering nutrition classes to students. It will also pay for programs involving Gila County and towns. “We will be working with our (municipal) parks, recreation and trails divisions to make sure our citizens are able to safely access our parks and trails,” Beck said. To win the grant, the Gila County Health Department selected specific strategies based on a 2012-13 community health assessment and community health improvement plan. “These focus areas will include increasing fruit and vegetable purchases at our local farmers markets — especially among our families participating in SNAP and the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) programs; promoting physical activity at our local parks and trails; working with our schools to implement strong local wellness policies that ensure our students are healthy and ready to learn; and focusing on our youngest population by working in preschools and early child-
hood settings to make sure our young children have plenty of opportunities to be physically active and enjoy healthy foods,” Beck said. The assessment took place mostly in Globe, but Beck said the grant will provide services in Payson as well. “The grant actually requires us to provide SNAP-Ed services county-wide. In fact, our food systems strategies will be primarily focused in the Payson area for the first two years. This will include collaborating with the Payson Farmers Market to ensure their great regional produce is available to SNAP families in Payson. Our nutrition education in the Payson area will focus on learning about seasonal fruits and veggies, how to cook with them, and Payson residents will also enjoy some taste testing with healthy foods. We will also be collaborating with the Payson school health advisory council to assist in the implementation of local wellness policies, partner to increase physical activity for our youth, working to encourage the state’s empower plus standards in early child care settings, and offer nutrition education in the classroom. We are looking forward to advancing our SNAP-Ed work with the Payson community,” Beck said. The county will continually evaluate the program and seek input. “The implementation of our program will include ongoing evaluation. We will be frequently asking the community for feedback on what is and is not working,” said Beck. The last community health assessment was completed in 2012. To provide updated feedback, email: gilacommunityhealth@gmail.com. For free healthy recipes and to learn more, visit www.eatwellbewell. org. “We hope to see everyone at our farmers markets or out on our trails,” Beck said.
Disturbing look at teen drug abuse by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
Photos courtesy of DJ Craig
Payson High School drama students staged a bleak look at the impact of drug abuse on teens.
Drug abuse. Never an easy topic to address, but the Payson High School Thespians waded in with courage and gusto hitting every line perfectly to perform a gut-wrenching adaptation of “Addict,” by Jerome McDonough. The play leaves little hope for the audience that drug addicts can reform and move on as every character dies but one, who ends up living with burn scars from freebasing cocaine. The play highlights the dangers of different drugs by focusing on each character. The first story — Marcy’s story — has a popular, extra-busy girl, played by Carly Banning, turning to uppers (amphetamines, cocaine and speed) and downers (opiates, barbiturates and Quaaludes) to handle the stress of her life. She ends up dying trying to withdraw from her habit. Bart, a young man played by Tony Gentless, tries to impress his overbearing judgmental father by tossing back steroids. He ends up dying by overdoing at the gym. Michele, and insecure high schooler played by Crystal Kubby, already has a drinking problem when she attends a party. To please the handsome young man who invited her, she pops the drugs he gives her and falls into a coma that eventually kills
her. Luisa, a brassy girl from the streets played by Naomi Cobos, loves to huff (sniff) anything and everything. Eventually in a stupor, she’s run over by a snowplow. Summer has a bit of a different story. The pregnant teen, played by Tierney Phillips, picked an abusive pothead for a boyfriend who ends up crashing their car on the way to the hospital. Both parents die, but their child lives. Jimmy, a sweet but lost young man played by Christian Teague, finds solace in LSD and babysitting his young neighbor Ben. Unfortunately, a bad trip leads to the death of the child he’s watching — and his own eventual suicide. Cuda, a tough heroin addict on the streets played by Hailey Hamblen, ends up overdosing. Janis, the daughter of a pothead played by Ali Cambier, adds PCP to her mix. Scared straight by serving as a janitor in a psychiatric ward, she nonetheless kills herself during a drug flashback. Woven around all the tragic stories was the story of Kendra Starr, a rock legend played by Zoia Brouwer. But at the height of her fame, she accidentally sets herself on fire freebasing cocaine. The group used the play to spread the word about the services available in Payson from Community Bridges to Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous.
Help make Christmas special by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
Rebecca Acord has visions of fully decorated “Charitrees” lining up in front of the Swiss Village shops with donations of toys and food under their branches. “The goal is to have 25 trees,” said the owner of Country Charm, a fudge, coffee, candy and knickknack shop next to the oldest retail business in town — Payson Candle Factory. But she needs help from the community to reach her dream. “I would like to see one real estate company challenge another and clubs, organizations and families donate and decorate trees,” said Acord. She said the Charitrees have several purposes. The first is to donate a fully decorated Christmas tree (only plastic ones) to families in need. The second, food donations would go to the food bank. Third, toys would go to children in need. And for entertainment, the community votes for their favorite decorated tree. “All donations stay local,” said Acord. The trees need to be up and ready to go by Wednesday, Nov. 25, said Acord. “They will be added to the festivities of the lighting of the Swiss Village,” she said. Another festivity — the LICENSED
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Michele Nelson/Roundup
Country Charm fudge shop owner Rebecca Acord (right) and Payson Candle Factory owner Carol Reed hope businesses will donate “Charitrees” for the holidays. Gingerbread House contest. Acord will put the houses in the windows of her little shop. Those interested in participating must bring their house to the Swiss Village before the Friday after Thanksgiving. That’s when Acord plans on judging them. “We have the contest on Black Friday,” she said.
Acord hopes the Charitrees add to the 37-year-old tradition of lighting up the Christmas lights at the Swiss Village. “I want to have things families can do that don’t cost money,” she said. For information or to sign up to donate a Charitree, please contact Rebecca Acord at (928) 978-0640.
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Payson Roundup Friday, October 30, 2015
7A
PUSD board flips switch on energy savings contract by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
Sometimes, you’ve got to spend money to make money. So the Payson Unified School District board this week agreed to a $43,000 facilities audit — in hopes of saving even more. The board voted to hire McKinstry Essention, LLC to audit the district’s utility bills, looking for savings. Superintendent Greg Wyman said the savings realized would likely pay for the audit. “The point is it’s there to make the savings over time,” he said. “You are
guarding against what you anticipate.” The district could get a loan to undertake projects and pay it off with the savings over time. “It guards against the guaranteed higher utility bills,” said Wyman. Wyman said he went through a similar process at his former school district, Tempe Union High School. In that case, the audit revealed a potential $130 million in energy saving projects, although the district undertook only $12 million worth of projects. Payson undertook a similar effort when it installed solar cells, financed with its savings over time. The district essentially got the solar cells installed
Peering into the past - in 3D Imagine being able to look at a historical site from every angle, measure the smallest details on the interior and identify how to preserve it without ever touching it. Photogrammetry technology combines hundreds of overlapping high-resolution images taken with a digital camera mounted on a pole to create a 3D color virtual model of a site. For an archaeologist, this is the future of documentation and a low-cost alternative to laser technology such as LiDAR. “This is a tremendous increase over our previous efficiency in mapping archaeological sites,” said Chris Downum, an NAU professor who began using photogrammetry last year. “What this technology allows us to do is be better stewards in preserving these places for the future,” Downum said. “We want to document them in as close to their original condition as we can and then use that as a reference point for any further preservation or stabilization.” Downum and his team of students have been documenting sites all over the northern Arizona region, which he said is one of the densest concentrations of archaeological sites anywhere in the world. “We’ve been able to help our students prepare for careers in archaeology and get them equipped with the skills and the technological basis that they’re going to need to work in the 21st
century,” Downum explained. Chris Francis, an archaeology master’s student at NAU, spent his summer interning with the Coconino National Forest to create a 3D model of the Community Room at Elden Pueblo, an ancient Sinagua village located in north Flagstaff off of U.S. Highway 89. “These places have been around for hundreds of years and we want to see them stay around for another hundred years,” Francis said. “This really allows us to go in and make precise measurements without being intrusive.” Downum explained the importance of these sites to several of the region’s Native American tribes who he works closely with during the stabilization process. He said Elden Pueblo specifically is very important to the Hopi and believed to be part of the footprints of their ancestors. Downum’s students also are working on a virtual museum with the National Park Service and the Museum of Northern Arizona that houses 3D models of sites and artifacts. He said the students get to work on their technological skills, collaborate with professional photographers and write interpretive materials. “This gives our students a chance to engage the public in a setting that has a worldwide audience and allows them to interpret archaeology and cultural resources in a real way,” Downum said.
with no up-front cost, while reducing electrical costs over time. Board member Sheila DeSchaaf had questions. “How did we determine which company we would go with for the audit?” she said. Wyman explained that the district subscribes to a co-op that recommends the best fit. “They have already done the lowest bid,” said Wyman. “There have been some issues and concerns … we felt McKinstry was the best to address those.” Then DeSchaaf asked if the district did not see the savings McKinstry predicted, would PUSD have any recourse.
Light it up!
“It depends on what the contract looks like,” said Wyman. He said if the district didn’t follow the recommendations precisely, “you may invalidate the contract,” said Wyman. DeSchaaf then asked if any of the utility companies would help pay for the start-up costs. “Other entities provide assistance in paying for the audit, such as APS,” she said. Daniel Musgrove, the McKinstry representative at the meeting, said his company has alliances with all the major utilities that allow McKinstry to “maximize support” from the utilities. In response to a question from board
member Shirley Dye, McKinstry said the company would try to hire locally — but would give first priority to getting the best bid possible. “No disrespect to anyone in town, but we’re going to make the best decision possible,” agreed Wyman. Wyman noted that the contract could also provide money for capital projects through the savings even though the state has stopped giving school construction and facilities upgrades. “If you put in new equipment and add what the savings could be … it’s a long range way to maximize the program,” said Wyman.
Flagstaff park fees increase Starting on Oct. 1, 2015, the Flagstaff Area National Monuments, including Sunset Crater Volcano, Walnut Canyon and Wupatki, increased entrance fees for visitors in order to fund important maintenance and improvement projects within the parks. In most cases, the fees increased roughly 50 percent. “This increase in fees will allow us to continue to protect, preserve and share the special places at the Flagstaff Area National Monuments with current visitors and future generations,” said Flagstaff Area Monuments Superintendent Kayci Cook Collins. Entrance fees have supported a wide range of projects that improve the park and visitor experiences, including rehabilitating trails and trailhead signs, developing and installing exhibits in visitor centers, improving park water systems, providing ranger-led programs, and improving ADA accessibility. Additional revenue from this fee increase will help to enhance and improve visitor facilities, increase interpretive opportunities and conduct preservation and protection of monument resources. In the fall of 2014, the National Park Service conducted a nationwide review of entrance fees. To solicit public input, the Flagstaff Area National Monuments launched a civic engagement campaign in December 2014. During the public comment period, the park received 18 formal comments. The majority of these were in favor of the fee increase. A few comments opposed fee increases in the current economic climate. Visitor comments also prompted a change from the per person rate to the per vehicle rate for the combined entry to Sunset Crater Volcano and Wupatki National Monuments to reflect the road-based visitor experiences of traveling between visitor centers and use areas.
San Carlos Tribe lands $500,000 federal grant Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently awarded grants across the nation to help support the start-up or expansion of rural small businesses. Nine of the grants went to Arizona rural businesses, including one for $500,000 for the San Carlos Apache Tribe Relending Enterprise. The Enterprise was awarded $100,000 to provide technical assistance to small businesses and an additional $400,000 to be used as part of their relending program. Through this program, small businesses may apply to them for small business loans. As the loans are repaid, the Enterprise replenishes the funds that can then be relended. “In areas where access to capital for local businesses can be hard to come by, USDA Rural Development is a valuable resource,” noted Ernie Wetherbee, Acting State Director for Rural Development following the announcement. “The San Carlos Apache Tribe and Rural Development have had a productive partnership for many years supporting local business ventures,” said USDA RD Business Program Director Gary Mack. “The Tribe Relending Enterprise has helped infuse much needed funding for small businesses in the community.” The other RBDG projects funded in Arizona include revolving loan funds, technical assistance and planning grants.
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Roundup reader Gail Bensen sent us this picture of the new lights going up on Payson’s Kiwanis Field in Rumsey Park. The lights will help more people enjoy the park at night — and also help Payson attract more business-generating sports tournaments. If you’ve got a photo you’d like to share — send it to editor@ payson.com with some information about the photo or event.
WEATHERREPORT Forecast by the National Weather Service
Friday
O B I T U A R Y Betty Patricia Da Costa
1929 - 2015 Betty went to be with her Creator and Savior late October 21st. There will be a memorial service at the Church of the Nazarene on Oct. 29th at 2:00 p.m. She was loved by many.
Jaber Abawi, M.D., M.R.C.P. Internal Medicine & Arthritis
Board Certified Internal Medicine
Accepting New Patients
63/38 Saturday
Sunday
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Sunny
72/39 Monday
Sunny, slight chance for PM rain
68/43 Tuesday
Mostly sunny, slight chance for rain
54/35
Payson, AZ 85541
Payson Premier Dental Grand Opening!
Sunny
70/39
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Mostly cloudy, 20% chance for AM rain
PAYSONREPORT
Weather courtesy of Bruce Rasch, weather.astro50.com
Payson Statistics DATE H Oct. 19 70 Oct. 20 65 Oct. 21 60 Oct. 22 64 Oct. 23 68 Oct. 24 74 Oct. 25 68 Oct. 26 74 Oct. 27 74 Oct. 28 72 Oct. 29 61
L 51 47 40 38 39 44 48 44 39 41 42
PRECIP. 0.02 0.18 0.15 0.01
0.28
Precipitation 2015 thru today 18.03 30-year Average through Oct. 17.97
Oct. 2015 2.40 Oct. Avg. 1.72
Average Payson Precipitation from the office of the State Climatologist at Arizona State University.
PAYSON POLLEN COUNT FORECAST Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
LOW
LOW
MEDIUM
LOW-MED
1.7 0.7 5.1 3.9
Dominant pollen: Ragweed, Grasses, Juniper High: Pollen levels between 9.7 and 12.0 tend to affect most individuals who suffer from the pollen types of the season. Symptoms may become more severe during days with high pollen levels. Medium: Pollen levels between 7.3 and 9.6 will likely cause symptoms for many individuals who suffer from allergies to the predominant pollen types of the season. Low: Pollen levels between 0 and 7.2 tend to affect very few individuals among the allergy-suffering public. Source: pollen.com
8A
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
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Payson makes a splash with water festival Photographer D.J. Craig captured some of the educational fun at the recent Payson Water Festival, part of the town’s ongoing effort to educate kids in the community about where their water comes from — and the importance of not wasting it.
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ONE NEIGHBOR AT A TIME. Banner Payson Medical Center is proud to sponsor the 17th Annual Community Health & Care Fair. Join us for this free event for the whole family. Do your part by donating your non-perishable food items. Saturday November 7th • 8am – Noon • Julia Randall Elementary School Free Health Screenings • Featuring “Ask the Doc” with the Banner Payson Emergency Department
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PAYSON ROUNDUP
SPORTS
INSIDE Around the Rim 2B-3B Costume Contest 5B
section
B
Friday, October 30, 2015
When a Playoffs on the line tonight win really Gridders face another big test in finale at No. 2 Show Low isn’t a win by
Keith Morris
roundup sports editor
Winning is still a good thing, right? Well, you wouldn’t know it by the Arizona Interscholastic Association’s Division 4 football power rankings. Payson beat Page 48-8 last week but the Longhorns still dropped from the No. 13 posimore than tion they held a game last week to No. 14 this week. The problem is teams don’t earn many points for beating a struggling team. In fact, the Longhorns Keith Morris actually lost Sports Editor points in beating Page, which is No. 34 this week. Their rating was 4.9702 last week and dropped to 4.7491 this week. The complicated formula is designed to reward schools for playing strong opponents and minimize the importance of succeeding against a bunch of cupcakes. winning, the Despite Longhorns watched both El Mirage Dysart and Tucson Pueblo Magnet shoot right past them. Dysart jumped four spots from No. 17 to No. 13 after beating a Phoenix Bourgade Catholic team ranked No. 24 last week. Pueblo Magnet beat a Tucson Empire squad that’s No. 28 this week and also vaulted four spots from No. 16 to No. 12. Page (1-8) was ranked even lower than Empire. The six section champions and 10 at-large teams based on the power rankings qualify for the 16-team D4 state tournament. The brackets will be revealed at 9 a.m. Saturday at AZPreps365.com. Fortunately, the Longhorns face a Show Low team that’s unbeaten and ranked No. 2 behind only Yuma Catholic. I say fortunately because a loss to a strong team can actually be better for a team than a win over a weak squad. Of course, a win would catapult the Longhorns up the rankings. But the important thing here is that even a loss shouldn’t hurt Payson too much. The Horns will benefit from just playing the mighty Cougars. An indication of how little effect losing to a strong team has on a team comes from Payson’s loss at Snowflake two weeks ago. The Longhorns entered the game at No. 12 and fell only one spot to No. 13. And Snowflake held the No. 3 ranking last week and only slipped two spots to No. 5 after losing to Show Low in a game that decided the Section 1 championship. Now, at No. 14, the Longhorns don’t have much wiggle room. Two spots is all they can afford to fall. Slipping three spots means they’re outside of the playoff picture for a second straight season. Of course, it’s not an exact science. So maybe a loss knocks Payson out. It’s possible. But the Longhorns are 6-4 and would have made the tournament with six wins a year ago but finished 5-5. It doesn’t appear the Longhorns need to worry about a team outside the top 16 winning their section and sliding past Payson for one of the final
• See Football, page 10B
After ending 34 years of frustration at Lakeside Blue Ridge earlier this year, Payson’s football team has an opportunity to make an even bigger statement tonight. A win in the regular-season finale at Show Low would rank as the biggest upset of the season in Division 4 and one of the biggest in Payson history. The Longhorns have lost their last seven games against the Cougars since prevailing 32-21 in Show Low on Oct. 3, 2008. Most of those have been lopsided games, including last year’s 60-29 blowout at Payson that vaulted the Cougars into the playoffs and knocked the Longhorns out. Both teams are better this year. Show Low carries an unbeaten record and stands at No. 2 in the
Division 4 power rankings. Payson is 6-3 and at No. 14. But injuries have plagued the Longhorns this season. They enter this contest again without several key players as they look to build on last week’s 48-8 rout of Page. Show Low (9-0) storms into the game having clinched the Section 1 championship with a 35-27 win over previously unbeaten Snowflake last week. That’s the same Snowflake team that routed Payson 49-7 a couple of weeks ago. The Cougars are averaging 47.7 points a game and surrendering 14.1. Payson, meanwhile, is averaging 32.7 and allowing 19.9. Show Low has won nine of the last 10 meetings in the series and has won the last four games against Payson at Cougar Stadium. The Cougars are averaging a mind-blowing 451 yards of total
offense per game — 269 passing and 182 rushing. Leading the Cougars is head coach Randy Ricedorff’s son, Rhett. The junior quarterback has completed 138 of 199 passes (68 percent) for 2,271 yards and 21 touchdowns, while throwing five interceptions. His favorite target is senior Quentin Clark. The 6-foot-4 190-pound fourthyear varsity standout has caught 47 passes for 937 yards (19.9) and 11 TDs. He’s also averaging 25.3 yards on kick and punt returns. Senior Willie Wyatt (6-2, 205) leads the rushing attack with 744 yards on 88 carries (8.5 avg.). He’s dangerous no matter in what situation he touches the ball. He averages 168 all-purpose yards a game. He’s averaging 38.8 yards on eight punt and kick returns and 26.5 yards on 11 receptions. Junior Jaisen Brown (6-1, 235) leads Show Low with 14 touchdowns.
Keith Morris/Roundup
Sophomore Christian Mann, shown here in last week’s win over Page, is just one of the young players the Longhorns have had to rely on as injuries have decimated the roster this season.
Longhorn spikers keep battling
Keith Morris/Roundup
At left, Abby Schruer goes up high for a serve against Holbrook at Wilson Dome on Tuesday night. Top photo, Emma Creighton digs the ball against the Roadrunners as senior Taryn North looks on. Above, head coach Desirae Burris has some fun during a break in the action.
Payson’s volleyball team battled visiting Holbrook tooth and nail on Tuesday night at Wilson Dome. Each team won a set before the Roadrunners prevailed by winning the next two in a 3-1 triumph. Neither team is heading to the Division 3 state tournament. But that doesn’t mean they both don’t fight for every point every night on the court. They proved that in this contest, diving to keep balls alive, erupting with joy after every success and disappointment at every failure. Payson traveled to Tuba City to play Greyhills Academy on Oct. 22 and posted a convincing 3-0 victory. The Longhorns then competed in the Florence Invitational last weekend, going 0-5 with a loss to Parker and two against both Maricopa and Buckeye Youngker, according to MaxPreps.com. Payson carried a 5-10 record in games counting in the power rankings into its season finale at home against Page on Thursday.
Peterson claims ninth straight Club Championship by
Keith Morris
roundup sports editor
Karen Peterson still reigns as queen of the Payson Women’s Golf Association. Peterson survived a battle with Claudia Thompson to win her ninth consecutive PWGA Club at Championship Payson Golf Course on Karen Peterson Oct. 20. The tournament consists of three rounds. The first two were played on Oct.
6 and 13. She and Thompson found themselves tied through 36 holes with gross scores of 159. But Peterson shot 84 in the final round to finish at 243 and extend her streak in the PWGA’s most prestigious tournament. Peterson was the tournament gross medalist for the first round with 76. She shot 83 for the second round. She said she didn’t even know she’d won until she heard the announcement during lunch following the final round. “I thought Claudia had won,” she said. “I just have to play my own game and block out what they’re doing.”
Peterson said she sometimes envies the competition. “It gets harder and harder the older you get,” she said of keeping her long title run going. “The first day score was good but I’m not happy with the last two rounds. I’m not proud of my performance there at all. “I was like, ‘I’m tired of this. Let somebody else take it. I’ve won enough.’ I feel like I have a target on my back all the time. Sometimes it’s good to be the chaser instead of the chasee.” But her competitive nature trumps those thoughts. “Now that I’ve won nine, I want to go to
10,” Peterson said. “One woman won 11 times, just not in a row. So I want to beat that. I want to get to 12.” Although she came up short for a second straight year in her fight for the Club Championship, Thompson was rewarded for her efforts as she won the A Flight net championship with a 215 score. She was the net medalist for the first round with 67. Judy Mackenzie (213) won the B Flight and Mary Jones (217) the C Flight. Jones left her ball one foot nine inches from the cup on the 14th hole to win the closest-to-the-pin prize on that hole. Marcy Hewlett (29-7) won that award on No. 8.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
2B
aroundthe rim
Fall Festival helps fund year-end trip A spooky good time is sure to be had zona Flight Shooters, Tri-City College by all from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. this evening, Prep and Phoenix Heat competed, along Friday, Oct. 30 at Pine Strawberry School. with a contingent of 31 Pine Strawberry There, students, teachers, parents and School students. For the Buffalos, Caleb Barlow, a community members will gather to celebrate the annual Fall Festival and earn national tournament qualifier last season, money for the year-end trip for the eighth- shined, tallying a team-high score of 274 that included 12 perfect “10” hits. grade class. He was second among the 42 boys The highlight of the evening will be the competing. costume contest set to begin at 7 p.m. Eighth-grader Kendall Brooks was sec“Wear your costumes” says Fall Festival sponsor and sixth-, seventh- and ond on the Buff team with a 260 and seven eighth-grade language arts teacher Skye direct-hit 10 scores. Of the 42 girls competing, she was fifth. McNeeley. A meal of hot dogs or Jordan Wain, a seventh-gradnachos, cookies and drink will rattlin ’ er, posted a 249 to take third be served for $4. Games, which among the local archers. McNeeley calls “awesome,” will the rim Raci Miranda tallied a 231 include fish toss, pie in the face, with four 10s and Joerge Ramirez cake walk, bucking bronco, turned in a 229 scorecard. candy in the hay stack, haunted Emma Paine (228), Emma house and more. Branson (215), Joey Ramirez Tickets are three for $1 if pur(207), Mackenzie Aguon (205), chased at the school today or two Raeanne Ramirez (202) and for $1 at the festival. Cash York (201) all scored 200Because the event will be fun Max Foster plus points. for all and also help the eighthMargaret Johnson and grade class celebrate its proDean Pederson coach the Pine motion, the festival is a win-win Strawberry archers. proposition for all. The NASP program has its roots in Call 928-476-3283 for more information. Kentucky where educators sought to Holiday greetings for seniors & shut-ins develop an outdoor program that would improve students’ attendance, behavior Pine Strawberry Thrift Shop manager and motivation. Rhonda Bossert is gearing up once again Archery was the sport chosen because for the Senior Angel Christmas Tree pro- it helps develop motor ability, listening gram. The tree will be set up by Saturday, and observation skills while remaining Nov. 14 in the thrift shop. fun. The Senior Citizens Affairs Foundation Wildlife conservation groups joined in (SCAF) and PostNet are sponsoring the with Kentucky organizers saying they program. were concerned too many young people As in past years, the tree will be were forgetting outdoor skills to focus adorned with “gift guides” that include on less demanding activities (hint: video the names of local seniors. Among these games). names, may also be seniors that reside in NASP teachers and coaches say they care facilities. are convinced learning archery target “Those who want to brighten a senior’s skills inspires students to spend more day, may choose a card, sign it out with time in the outdoors and helps develop the thrift shop cashier, then have fun sound character and self-reliance. shopping, Bossert said. The program proved to be highly sucWrapped gift for the seniors should be cessful in Kentucky and eventually spread returned to the shop by Saturday, Dec. 5. nationwide, including to Arizona where it “Also, we need help finding seniors in is co-sponsored by the Arizona Game and our community that can use a gift that Fish Department. In Arizona it includes a says, we care for you,” said Bossert. physical education curriculum designed Those wishing to submit a senior name to teach international-style archery in may do so by, calling Bossert at 928-476- grades four through 12. 4633 or stopping by the Pine Strawberry The curriculum includes history, safeThrift Shop, which is open from 9 a.m. to 4 ty, techniques, equipment, mental concenp.m., Wednesday through Saturday. tration and self-improvement. The archery aspects can be integrated Archers again on target into core contents subject areas such as A field of 80 aspiring archers repre- social studies, math and English. senting five teams from around the state While archery is an integral part of the converged on Pine Strawberry School Oct. curriculum at Pine Strawberry School, it 23 to showcase their skills in a National has not spread into the Payson district. Archery in Schools Program (NASP) fun So, if local archers want to continue their career after leaving P/S school they must shoot. Wickenburg Christian Academy, Ari join a club team or compete unattached.
‘BatKid Begins’
The movie, “BatKid Begins” has been called by critics, “profound, moving and incredibly emotional.” That critique should be reason enough for parents to be sure their children attend the next Movie Madness to be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 4 at the Isabelle Hunt Memorial Library. Pine Strawberry School will be dismissed at 11:30 a.m. that day for teacher in-service training. “BatKid Begins” centers on a 5-yearold San Francisco boy who suffers from leukemia and has his wish come true thanks to the Make-a-Wish Foundation. A critic wrote about the movie, “BatKid Begins” is a documentary that takes you back to Nov. 15, 2013, the day San Francisco turned into Gotham City, and the day the Internet was nice. More than a billion people took to social media to cheer on BatKid, even President Obama.” At the library, snacks will be served and children should bring their own pillow so as to be comfortable on the floor. Since fire codes limit the number of children that can be in the library at any given time, it’s best to arrive early. Work on Bearfoot
Photo courtesy of DJ Craig
You never know what clever creations you might see at the Pine Strawberry School’s Fall Festival Friday, Oct. 30. Tellabration plans continue
A goal of the Senior Citizens’ Affair Foundation this year is to host the finest Tellabration in the 16 years the group has been sponsoring them. The event will be held Saturday, Nov. 21 in the Pine Community Cultural Hall. A meet-and-greet with the storytellers begins at 5 p.m., dinner is served at 5:30 p.m. and the show is at 7 p.m. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The menu includes beef stroganoff prepared by Chef George. Storytelling is suitable for ages 10 and older. Since there is limited seating, organizers’ best advice is to purchase dinner and show tickets ($20 each) or show-only tickets ($5) early at the Pine Strawberry Thrift Shop. The P/S Tellabrations are part of a worldwide benefit evening of storytelling designed to create a network of storytelling enthusiasts bonded together in spirit at the same time and on the same weekend. Tellabration originator J.G. Pinkerton envisioned this international event as a means of building community support for storytelling. In 1988 the event was launched by the Connecticut Storytelling Center and has expanded across the
nation, including to Pine and Strawberry. All proceeds from the Tellabration benefit the Pine Strawberry School and the community. SCAF offerings
Senior Citizen Affairs Foundation members are hosting several activities being touted as fun and a way to make new friends. They are: • Mondays and Fridays: Poker is offered from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., call Tom for more information, 928-476-4163. • Tuesdays: Canasta from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., for details, call Ginger, 602-228-3138. • Wednesdays: Hand and Foot, from 9 a.m. to ?, contact Maureen, 928-476-2557; Pinochle, from 1 p.m. to ?, Delores has details, 928-476-2153; Polish Poker, from 1 p.m. to ?, for details call Rosina, 602881-1806. • Thursdays: Stitch in Time, from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., call Margie for more information, 602-690-0132. • Fridays: Bridge, from 1 p.m. to ?, call Joyce, 928-476-4142. • Saturdays: Walkers Club; from 9 a.m. to ? on school track. Also Bingo is played at 1 p.m. the third Thursday of each month.
Pine Strawberry Fuel Reduction Committee volunteers will be doing maintenance on the Bearfoot Trail from the Strawberry side from 8 a.m. to noon tomorrow, Saturday, Oct. 31. Volunteers should meet at milepost 269 and bring their own snacks, lunch and water. The trail was officially opened two years ago during the Pine Strawberry Trails Day celebration. It connects with Pine Canyon Trail No. 26 with Rock Wall Trail No. 608. The trail begins on a small pullout just north of Pine and south of Strawberry and follows a ridgeline above Pine. The trailhead can be tricky to find but the hike is well worth the effort. Lowlanders hiking the trail praise the exceptional views of the Mogollon Rim before it passes by Camp Lomia and connects with the Pine Canyon Trail. The trail is also popular with mountain bikers. Guild’s focus shifts
The Pine Strawberry Arts and Crafts Guild volunteers, who sponsored highly successful holiday craft fairs on Memorial Day, Fourth of July and Labor Day, will now turn their attention to the Christmas season. Plans are to host the Guild’s annual Christmas Boutiques during weekends at the community center. The boutiques have traditionally been open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and sell some very unique and creative Christmas gifts.
A genuinely scary Halloween story Every once in a while someone tries footstool by the door getting a bushel to frighten me with a scary Halloween basket of candy ready for something in tale. Doesn’t work. Even as a kid I did the neighborhood of 650 kids, the first of not respond with shakes and shivers whom would start arriving the instant the sun could reasonably be to stories of ghosts, goblins, or said to have set. other assorted monsters. Why? With an odd look on her Who cares about critters that your turn face, Lolly looked up and said, don’t exist? “Wow!” However, there is one “Wow? What’s that mean?” Halloween story that genuinely shook me up at the time “I just had the worst labor and still does today. Why? You pain I ever felt!” guessed it, Johnny. It’s true! We waited with bated breath The time? Six-thirty in for the next one. It was too long the evening on Thursday, 31 Tom Garrett in coming for us to head for October, 1963 — Halloween the base hospital, but when it night. arrived it was ba-a-a-ad! The place? Our little two-story apartI suggested that we call off the candy ment in an apartment building in NCO hand-out. “You’ve got that right!” Lolly housing on Hill AFB, Utah. said. “Those things feel like a kick in the The opening event? Lolly looked up at stomach with combat boots!” me from where she was sitting on a low Quietly, VERY quietly because the
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sun was rapidly setting in the western sky, we shut the front door, closed the blinds, drew the drapes, clicked off the lights, set the TV to its lowest audible volume, and prepared to wait for the labor pains to come more often. Well they came all right, but not often enough, and Lolly was determined not to go to the hospital until they did. “It’d be just my luck,” she said as another of the tsunami sized pains doubled her up, “that they’d quit just as I walked into the hospital.” “So? It’d be better than you putting up with that pain.” “A lot you know. What do you think they’d do, put a vacuum pump on me and pop out the baby? I’d just be in misery over there instead of here in my own house. Go make us some tea.” I made the tea and brought it back. “Any better?” I asked.
“Same pains. No closer together.” I’ll admit it, when it comes to things that hurt my beloved Lolly I am the biggest baby on the planet. “Maybe I should call and ask them what to do.” “I’ll call,” she told me. “If I don’t do it you’ll worry yourself to death.” She called. They listened, asked a couple of questions, gave her some guidelines, and told her to come right in if anything didn’t seem right to her. So we sat back, relaxed as best we could, and watched TV. Meantime, the voices of the stream of kids pouring by our front door from the hundreds of apartments in the NCO housing area grew louder. Then I heard a creaking sound and saw the brass letter slot cover in the door lift. “Hey!” a kid’s voice hissed. “There’s people in there! Watchin’ TV!” Faster than I had ever before thought
or moved I leapt up, grabbed the black velvet armrest cover off my chair, snatched two thumbtacks out of a drawer, and stuck the cover over the slot. A second after I finished here came that same creak. “Ah, you’re nuts, Charlie. Ain’t nobody in there!” After that, every 30 minutes for the next three hours Charlie and Friend stopped by to check things out and continue their argument. Then, about midnight, after Charlie and friend were no doubt in bed, Lolly and I finally drove to the hospital. I’ll bet you think that’s the end of the scary story. Sorry! That’s just the beginning. Our second child was born on November 2, 1963, after 42 hours of labor — and that’s a story that will scare any woman on the planet! Me too!
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
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the November meeting will be held at The countdown is on everybody, 5:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 12 at stathere is only today left to get your the tion #21 in Star Valley. costume ready, buy the treats for village By the way, please observe the kids (don’t forget yourself) and Veterans Day by flying the American then party. There are so many celebrations going on in Payson that the flag — at the very least. There are kids can really have a great time all ceremonies planned in Payson also; evening. Then it’s party time for the check the Roundup for the places adults. I know by reading the Payson and times. If you spot a veteran, Roundup, adult parties are in abunshake his or her hand and tell them, dance — no matter what fits your “Thank you for your service.” Many Janet idea of fun. have given their lives to help keep us Snyder The Tonto Village residents won’t a free country, they deserve so much have to go very far, the Double D Cafe more, but a thank you will go a long and Saloon will be rocking the Village with way in showing your appreciation for them, the Ron Gibson Band Saturday night. Come in their sacrifice and their loyalty and dedication costumes if at all possible, I gave all of you fair to our country. warning a few weeks ago, that’s enough time to get a costume ready. Some of the planned Birthdays and anniversaries events are a 50/50 raffle, and a possible grand From the looks of it, the first week in prize for the best costume. You won’t go hun- November will be a busy week for anniversagry, munchies will be available and of course, ries. Starting off the first week in November, the cafe would be happy to serve you dinner Clint and Grace Daniels of Tonto Village III or just a hamburger. I hope to enjoy some of will “kick up their heels” after celebrating the entertainment with my camera handy for their 64th wedding anniversary. Well, maybe some great shots of your costumes and fancy that’s a bit of an exaggeration — but what dance moves. a milestone for them. You both deserve an award. Being married for 64 years is a rarity. Bear Flat On Nov. 4, Curt and Kathy Arrants of Tonto I have been told that the big black steer Village I will celebrate 43 years of wedded has finally been removed by the owner. But, bliss. the cattle problem has not been totally solved. The next day, on Nov. 5, Ron and Lonie There are still some cattle in the community. Smith of Ellison Creek Summer Homes, will be They will be watched very closely so that there observing 55 years of marriage. is no more damage to property. Wow! Who said that marriages don’t last? Those three couples can prove that theory Hellsgate Fire Department wrong! If I were writing “How to be Married Notice of a change in the meeting date — Forever” a picture of these three couples Since Veterans Day is Wednesday, Nov. 11, would be on the cover.
Sneaking right in there with a birthday is Hellsgate firefighter Brian Wiggins. He will add another candle to his birthday cake on Nov. 9. Happy birthday to you, Brian.
Lutheran Church
204 W. Airport Rd. Payson, AZ 85541
John 10:9
A football season recipe
Football season has started, so that means get-togethers to watch the games. That also means making some special munchies. I have looked through the Hellsgate Fireflies cookbook and I have found a few suggestions. This recipe is from Firefly Kendra Lewinson. Kendra is famous for her beautiful cakes and cupcakes, but she submitted this recipe, which is a bit different, but sounds delicious. Buffalo Chicken Dip 1 rotisserie chicken 2 packages cream cheese, softened 3 to 4 cups grated cheese 1 bottle buffalo wing sauce 1 bottle ranch dressing Debone chicken, cut up. Set aside. Press softened cream cheese in bottom of pan. Sprinkle one cup of cheese over cream cheese. Spread chicken over cheese. Put ranch dressing over chicken. Put buffalo wing sauce over ranch dressing. Sprinkle all with another layer of cheese. Bake until bubbling, approximately 20-30 minutes at 350 degrees. Serve with veggies, crackers and corn chips. This recipe is adjustable. You can use blue cheese dressing instead of ranch. I can almost guarantee that this dip will be gone in a flash. Enjoy.
November to feature two great musical performances After enjoying the Halloween goodies this weekend, get ready for more treats in November — the musical kind. Between the Tonto Community Concert Association and the Payson Friends of Jazz, the Rim Country will revel in great music over the next couple of weeks. First up, the TCCA brings The Young Irelanders to the Payson High School Auditorium at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 8. The following weekend, the Payson Friends of Jazz present renowned jazz guitarist Howard Alden at 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 15 at the Community Presbyterian Church. The Young Irelanders group is comprised of eight sensational performers who have Irish traditional music, song and dance running through their veins. Although still in their 20s and 30s, these performers have achieved more than most people would aspire to in a lifetime. They have performed for numerous heads of state and have toured as lead performers with Riverdance and Michael Flatley’s Lord of the Dance, been soloists on PBS specials, shared the stage with Bono, and have recorded with Ronnie Wood (Rolling Stones) and been chosen by Sting to perform for his exclusive private parties. The Young Irelanders are: Damien Mullane, accordion and melodeon; Colin Farrell, fiddle, whistles and vocals; Kieran Munnelly, flute, whistles, bodhrán, snare and vocals; Stephen Markham, keyboard, piano, percussion and vocals; Sean O’ Meara, guitar and vocals; Lisa Canny, lead vocals, harp and banjo; Siobhán Manson, dancer; Cathal Keaney, dancer. The Young Irelanders was formed not only to merge the significant creative ideas and talents of a select group of young Irish performers who are unique amongst their peers, but also in the hope that given their combined youthfulness and ability, their existence in the music business would act as a catalyst in attracting more young people to the world of traditional Irish music at home in Ireland and throughout the world. The sound the band creates is best described as eclectic, where traditional Irish music, Celtic music, folk music, world music, jazz music, country music and popular music all come together to give rise to a very unique and multi-faceted sound. The Young Irelanders also sets out to reflect an Ireland of today where many of Ireland’s finest exponents of Irish traditional music are second generation Irish or reside outside of Ireland. Two such musicians and members of the group, Colin Farrell and Damien Mullane,
R
Halloween fun planned in Tonto Village
of Ag k c o
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aroundthe rim
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The Young Irelanders (top photo) perform at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 8 at the PHS Auditorium. Howard Alden (at left) performs at 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 15 at the Community Presbyterian Church. Contributed photos
were born in Britain to Irish emigrant parents and both have gone on to become amongst the most revered Irish traditional musicians in the world while they have also been drawn to these strong Irish roots and have spent many years living in Ireland. If you want to see and hear what Ireland’s traditions of music, song and dance look and sound like in the hands of some of the most talented young performers in the world then don’t miss the opportunity to get to see this sensational act. Single tickets are $25 and are available at the door. Season tickets for this concert and the upcoming five concerts are also available for $100. Children and students under the age of 18 will
be admitted free when accompanied by a ticket-holding adult. To learn more, call 928-4784363 or 928-472-2423. The Tonto Community Concert Association is committed to bringing quality entertainment to the Rim Country through an annual concert series and support of the fine arts in Payson schools. This series is intended as an enriching cultural experience for the people of Payson and those in surrounding communities. Stellar jazz artist in concert
An amazingly significant jazz music event comes to Payson Sunday, Nov. 15. Howard Alden, a stellar New York City guitarist, will perform in a trio set-
ting at 2 p.m. at the Community Presbyterian Church, 800 W. Main St., Payson. Only a $5 donation at the door is requested. The Payson Friends of Jazz and the Community Presbyterian Church are hosting Alden’s performance as part of a long-standing monthly jazz series. An RSVP gerry-reynolds@Hotmail. to com is advised. Howard Alden is one of the greatest jazz guitarists working today. He learned his craft under the legendary Howard Roberts and his jaw-dropping fretwork has graced everything from Hollywood soundtracks to duets with his mentor, George Van Epps. Alden has recorded many albums for Concord Records, including four with Van Epps.
Solution to 10/27 puzzle
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
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Bull
Daisy
Danny
Frog
Tater
Halloween safety tips for four-legged family members Chandra Cushman
and, in severe cases, seizures. • Candy. It’s hard enough for a human to stop at just one piece of So, are all you parents and pet own- candy, so imagine how difficult it is for a ers ready for Halloween? I know I am. pet. Large ingestions of sugary, high-fat Aiden is going as a ninja and Avery will candy can lead to pancreatitis, which be a ladybug. The kids are excited and may not show up for two to four days we are ready to have some spooky fun! after the pet ingests the candy. Pets Every year I like to speak that have ingested candy may about the importance of safeshow signs such as decreased ty during Halloween for pet appetite, vomiting, diarrhea, Humane owners. Whether your child lethargy, abdominal pain, Society is a furry four-legged creaof Central and even kidney failure or Arizona ture, or an active 2-year-old organ damage. with a huge imagination, • Candy wrappers. The we all need to be prepared. ADOPTION candy itself isn’t the only Below I have listed six safety OPTIONS threat. Ingestion of foil and tips to help you be completecellophane wrappers can ly prepared for Oct. 31. cause life-threatening bowel • Chocolate. It is more obstructions, which often poisonous to pets than any other candy. require surgical intervention. Symptoms Chocolate contains methylxanthines, in pets that have ingested candy wrapchemicals similar to caffeine that can pers include vomiting, decreased appequickly sicken dogs. In general, the tite, not defecating, straining to defedarker the chocolate, the more poi- cate, or lethargy. sonous it is. Symptoms in pets that • Raisins. While good-intentioned have ingested chocolate include vom- neighbors may hand out raisins as iting, diarrhea, lethargy or agitation, a healthy alternative to candy, very increased thirst, an elevated heart rate, small amounts of raisins (or grapes) by
humane society of central arizona
Jojo
Lyric
can cause kidney failure in dogs and cats. Some dogs develop idiosyncratic reactions at any dose — in other words, ingesting any amount can cause serious damage. Pets that have ingested raisins may show signs like vomiting, nausea, decreased appetite, abdominal pain, and severe kidney failure. • Glow sticks and jewelry. Pets love to chew on things they’re not sup-
posed to, and cats in particular seem to love these items. Over the past year, 70 percent of Pet Poison Hotline’s calls relating to glow sticks and jewelry involved cats. In addition to the choking hazard, the contents of glow sticks can cause pain and irritation in the mouth. Keep an eye out for mouth pain, as well as profuse drooling and foaming at the mouth.
• Costumes. Though you may love the costume, does your pet? Some costumes can cause discomfort in pets, and any metallic beads, snaps, or other small pieces (particularly those made of zinc or lead) can result in serious poisoning if ingested. Finally, don’t ever dye or apply coloring to a pet’s fur, even if the dye is labeled non-toxic to humans. If you dress your pets in costumes, make sure it doesn’t impair the pet’s vision, movement, or air intake. There you have it folks. Now you can carry on with your scary or fun activities and have peace of mind knowing your pets (and kids) will be protected. Featured pets
Pictured are just a few of the many wonderful animals available for adoption at the HSCAZ shelter, 605 W. Wilson Ct. (just south of Main Street and west of McLane Road). Hours are Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. All pets are already spayed or neutered and current on vaccinations. To learn more, call (928) 474-5590 or visit www.humanesocietycentralaz.org.
CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Trail work schedule
Volunteers with the Pine Strawberry Fuel Reduction Committee will be doing maintenance on the Bearfoot Trail from the Strawberry side during October. In case of inclement weather, work will be rescheduled. • Saturday, Oct. 31, 8 a.m. to noon: Meet at milepost 269; bring own lunch/snacks/water.
Payson Walkers
The Payson Walkers now depart at 8:30 a.m. for daily walks which are about an hour in length on pavement. Departure points are: Saturday - end of Longhorn Road Sunday - Town Hall parking lot Monday - Payson Elks Tuesday - Green Valley Park, Parks and Recreation Office Wednesday - Walgreens Thursday- Payson Library Friday - Home Depot parking lot, (south end).
Tai Chi and Qigong
Tai Chi and Qigong classes are offered at 9 a.m. Saturdays at Rim Country Health, 807 W. Longhorn Rd., Payson. The program is especially de signed for seniors 50 or older, but is beneficial for all ages. There is no charge. For details, call (928) 478-6032.
Radio control car/truck enthusiasts wanted
If you are a r/c (radio control) car or truck enthusiast then you are invited to a get-together at 3 p.m. this and every Sunday at the Payson Multi Event Center, north side of the warm-up arena. Meet fellow enthusiasts and try your skills and your rig’s ability on one of several courses that will be set. Being there will answer most questions, but if you have them, call (928) 978-2365.
Write Your Story
This is a group of people who want to get their life story written for their family. The group meets from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Mondays at 215 N. Beeline Highway, the home of Banner High Country Seniors. Members share a little of what they have written as an incentive to keep writing.
Overeaters Anonymous
Overeaters Anonymous meets from 2 p.m. Mondays at Shepherd of the Pines Lutheran Church, 507 W. Wade Lane, Payson. There are no fees or dues. The only membership requirement is a desire to not compulsively overeat anymore. Call the following members for more information: Denise, (928) 9783706; Mary Jo, (928) 978-4663; Ted,
(928-) 951-3362; Alice at (602) 8280917 or (928) 478-4361.
winter gardens, greenhouses
Order of the Eastern Star
The Ponderosa Chapter #64 O.E.S. meets at 7 p.m. the first and third Mondays at the Sy Harrison Masonic Lodge, 200 E. Rancho Rd., Payson. All Eastern Star members are invited to attend. Master Masons and all ladies with any Masonic affiliation or family members in Freemasonry are encouraged to join the group. In addition to the meetings, the ladies gather at 10 a.m. every Wednesday for a fun game of O.E.S. Canasta. For more information, contact Marjorie Winemiller, secretary, at (928) 468-0790.
Rim Country Classic Auto Club
The Rim Country Classic Auto Club (RCCAC) holds its monthly meetings at 6:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month at Tiny’s Family Restaurant, 600 E. Highway 260 in Payson. For information, call Steve Fowler at (928) 478-6676.
Arizona Cactus Navy luncheon
TOPS in Pine
The TOPS 412 (Take off Pounds Sensibly) Pine group meets Tuesdays at the LDS chapel in Pine. Weigh-in is at 7:50 a.m., the meeting is from 8:10 a.m. to 9 a.m. All ages welcome. The group is for men and women looking for a support group and accountability in losing weight. For more information, call Barbara at (928) 476-5955 or Charlotte at (928) 978-3640.
Senior Singles with Spirit
The Senior Singles with Spirit group is composed of men and women who are young in spirit and have an enthusiasm for life. The purpose of this group is to build lasting friendships, share ideas, have fun, and enjoy activities with like-minded people. The choices are many and varied and all up to you. Come check us out. The group meets at 8:45 a.m. every Tuesday for breakfast at Tiny’s Restaurant, 600 E. Highway 260, Payson. For more information, call Paula at (480) 695-2786.
Friendship Bible Class
Friendship Bible Class, a non-denominational Bible study for women, meets at 1 p.m. every Tuesday at Majestic Rim. All women in the community are invited. For information, call Marilyn at (928) 474-6712.
Ukulele fun
Play a ukulele? A new group of players is forming and participation is free. All skill levels welcome. For more information, call (928) 5952086. If you have a ukulele you would like to donate or sell, call the above number.
Moose Lodge events
The Women of the Moose meet at 5:30 p.m. the first and third Tuesday of each month. The Loyal Order of the Moose meetings are at 6 p.m. the second and fourth Tuesday of each month.The lodge has a Thursday
the Payson Senior Center), 514 W. Main St. Area residents and guests are welcome. Please call Betty Mashl at (928) 478-2013 for reservations and information.
Tim Parkinson photo
The High Country Garden Club hosts Master Gardener Fred Jimenez of Globe at its 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 5 meeting at Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Highway 260, Payson. He will be discussing winter gardens — what, when and where to plant. He will also talk about greenhouses.
Fish Fry from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. and weekly dinner specials are available. The lodge is open to members and their guests. The Moose Lodge is located on E. Hwy. 260 in Star Valley. For more information, call (928) 474-6212.
ested in joining will be welcomed. You do not need to know how to play, the members will be happy to teach the game. Please contact Queen Mum AnnMarie at (928) 468-8585; please leave a message if there’s no answer.
Veterans of Foreign Wars Alzheimer’s caregivers The Veterans of Foreign Wars support groups of the United States of America will meet at 6 p.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at the Grizzly Bar, 5079 Highway 87, Strawberry, Ariz. We would like to invite all members to join us. For more information, contact Post 9829 Commander John Puttman, (602) 329-8686.
Special Masons’ meeting The Sy Harrison Masonic Lodge #70, located at 200 E. Rancho Road in Payson, will have an EA Exemplification Degree on Tuesday, Nov. 3. Any Mason with a current dues card is invited and encouraged to attend. The Degree will begin at 7 p.m. For additional information, contact the Secretary of the Lodge, Bill Herzig at (928) 951-2662.
Card players wanted The Saving Graces of Payson — a Canasta card-playing group — is looking for a few ladies who enjoy fun, laughter and friendship. This Red Hat group meets at 10 a.m. the first Wednesday of every month at the Crosswinds Restaurant patio room. There is a break for lunch around noon and play and resumes after lunch. Anyone inter-
The Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group invites caregivers, families, service providers and members of the community to attend any or all of the following: • First and third Wednesdays of the month from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Senior Center. For more details, call Mary, (928) 474-3560. The Payson Senior Center is located at 514 W. Main St.
Mothers of Preschoolers
The Mothers of Preschoolers (MOPS) group is now meeting from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. the first and third Wednesdays at the Payson First Church of the Nazarene, 200 E. Tyler Parkway. Childcare is provided. For more information, contact Dixie Neal, (619) 990-2025.
Bridge results
Winners at Ladies Tuesday Bridge Oct. 27 were: Connie Gyde, first; Mary Spencer, second; Marilyn Castleman, third. The group needs more players, so if you want to have some fun join members at 12:30 p.m. every Tuesday at The Center (formerly
An informal get-together of Navy and Coast Guard veterans in the Payson area is held on the first Thursday of each month at La Sierra restaurant on north AZ 87 at Forest Dr. in Payson. The group meets for coffee or lunch at 11 a.m. to share stories and camaraderie among fellow vets of World War II, Korea, Vietnam, other conflicts, and peacetime naval service. For questions please call (928) 970-0066.
Learn about resources for genealogy research
Renee Durfee will make a presentation at the Northern Gila County Genealogy Society and discuss how to use your ancestors’ Family, Associates and Neighbors to identify relationships. The public is invited to attend this free program at 1:30 p.m. The Genealogy Society library, located at 302 E. Bonita, is open Fridays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Its collection includes videos, microfiche and microfilm, cemetery records and miscellaneous magazines, state books, biographies, pedigree charts of NGCGS members and maps. The collection also includes “How To” references and military records. Check out its web page at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry. com/~azngcgs/.
High Country Garden Club meetings
The High Country Garden Club meets at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 5 at Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Highway 260. The speaker will be Master Gardener Fred Jimenez from Globe. He will be discussing winter gardens — what, when and where to plant. He will also talk about greenhouses. A short business meeting and refreshments will be after the presentation and all gardeners and would-be gardeners are invited to attend. Please remember to bring a non-perishable food item for the Payson Food Bank. For more information, contact Sallie at (928) 468-
6102.
Parkinson’s Disease Support meeting
The Payson Parkinson’s Disease Support group will host a program on neuroplasticity and how it promotes brain health and repair from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Friday, Nov. 6 at the community room of Rim Country Health, 809 W. Longhorn Rd., Payson. Valerie Carter, PT, DPT, NCS, will discuss the topic and demonstrate techniques that promote brain health and repair. The presentation is free and open to anyone with an interest in brain health. For more information or directions call (928) 472-7450.
Computer Club
The next meeting of the Payson Area Computer Club is at 6:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 6 in the Payson Public Library meeting room, 328 N. McLane Rd. All members and guests are invited. Members of the Payson High School FBLA (Future Business Leaders of America) will explain what they have accomplished and what classes PHS offers to the students. The students participate in various competitions concerning network designs, programming, and other computer related activities. For more information regarding the Payson Computer Club, please visit the website at www.pacaonline. net.
Antique appraisals for Payson Helping Payson
As the needs of families and individuals in the community continue to increase, Payson Helping Payson is initiating another fund-raising event. Along with its extremely successful 5 Church Garage Sale and Bingo every Friday afternoon at The Center (formerly the Payson Senior Center), on Saturday, Nov. 7 PHP is going to host an antique appraisal. Bring that treasure down to The Center, 514 W. Main St. between 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. for a verbal evaluation from one of 10 qualified appraisers. A $5 donation will be asked for each item to be appraised.
Optimist Club
Rim Country Optimist Club meets at 5:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 10 at the Cedar Ridge Restaurant of the Mazatzal Hotel & Casino. The speaker is Richard Erskine. He will be talking about his very interesting background, the current culinary program and what he plans for the program in the future. As always, visitors of all ages are welcome. For further information about the club or future events, contact Joan Young at (928) 472-2264. The website is http://www.rimcountryoptimist.com.
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 30, 2015
5B
Roundup Halloween Costume Contest AGES 0-3
AGES 4-7
AGES 8-10
1ST PLACE
1ST PLACE
1ST PLACE
Kody VanBuskirk
Nyleigha Lupercio
AGES 0-3
Hanna Halsey
Hunter Novak
Aiden Vickers
Blu VanBuskirk
Scarlett Vickers
Sofia Eskew
Avery Brown
Wyatt VanBuskirk
AGES 4-7
AGES 8-10
Zoe Johnson
Kloe Smith
Kent Prather
Rayne Hinton
Aiden Brown
Cordella Prather
6B
Payson Roundup Friday, October 30, 2015
Rim Country Church Directory Aglow International Crossroads Church, 114 E. Cedar Lane. The Aglow Bible Study is held each Tuesday at the Crossroads Fellowship Hall. Prayer and Praise 9 a.m. to 9:45 a.m.; Bible study 9:45 a.m. to 11 a.m. Call 474-6933 for more information. Baha’i Faith Payson For location and information, call (928) 951-4404 or (928) 978-6519. Calvary Chapel Payson 1103 N. Beeline Hwy. at Sherwood Dr.; (928) 468-0801, Email: office@ calvarypayson.com, web: calvarypayson.com. Sunday: Services at 8:30 & 10:30 a.m.; Sunday Night Devotion & Prayer at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday: Men’s & Women’s Discipleship at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday: Fellowship Dinner at 5 p.m.; Adult Bible Study, Youth Groups & Children’s Ministry at 6:30 p.m. Thursday: Christ-Centered Recovery Study using the One Step To Freedom program at 6:30 p.m. Faith-based discipleship program for those dealing with strongholds in their lives such as substance abuse, eating disorders, gambling, etc.; Young Adult Fellowship 6:30 p.m. Childcare is provided for all of the above services. Friday: Friday Fellowship at the Friday’s at 6:30 p.m. – a fun night for the whole family! Games, snacks, followed by worship and a short Bible study and prayer, 111 W. Rancho Rd. Catholic Church of the Holy Nativity A Roman Catholic Church under the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter. 1414 N. Easy St.(corner of Easy Street & Bradley Dr.), Payson, AZ 85541, (928) 478-6988, wwwholynativitypayson.com. The Rev. Fr. Lowell E. Andrews, Pastor. Sunday: Mass 10 a.m. Wednesday: Low Mass & Holy Unction 10 a.m. First Wednesday of the month: Benediction & Chaplet of Divine Mercy 5:30 p.m. followed by potluck supper. High Holy Days: Mass 10 a.m. Christopher Creek Bible Fellowship - I.F.C.A. Hwy. 260, Christopher Creek, first driveway past fire station on left. Pastor Ed Hepworth, 478-4857 (church), 478-4310 (home). 10:30 a.m. Worship Service and Children’s Sunday School (nursery provided). Thursday Bible Study. For more information, call Pastor Ed. Church at Powell Place 806 W. Longhorn Rd. Payson, (928) 474-6249. Non-Denominational Sunday Services beginning at 10:30 a.m. Church for the Nations Payson (CFTN Payson) meeting at 901 S. Westerly Road in the Chapel at Messinger’s. Sunday service 10 a.m. Pastors Nevin and Dina Hershberger invite you to come to join dynamic praise and worship with uplifting prophetic teaching. Contact Pastor Nevin at (602) 757-3778 or Pastor Dina at (602) 757-3830. Like us on Facebook. Church of Christ 306 E. Aero. Sunday Bible classes 10 a.m., Worship 11 a.m. For Bible studies any day of the week, call Bob Nichols, 468-0134. By understanding and living the principles taught in the New Testament, we attempt to accomplish the spiritual mission of the church, rather than being a social or recreational institution. Church of Christ in Payson 401 E. Tyler Parkway, (928) 474-5149. Sunday: Bible classes for all ages 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:25 a.m. and 6 p.m., A-Capella singing, song practice 5:30 p.m. Tuesday: Ladies Bible Class 9:30 a.m. Wednesday: Bible study 6:30 p.m. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints MOGOLLON WARD: Aero Drive and 913 S. Ponderosa; Sunday Services 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.; Sacrament Meeting 9 a.m., 474-6367, 468-8157, Missionaries (928) 863-5396, 468-8886. MANZANITA WARD: Aero Drive and 913 S. Ponderosa; Sunday Services 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.; Sacrament Meeting 11 a.m., 474-3788, 472-2266, Missionaries (928) 863-5396, 468-8886. PONDEROSA WARD: Aero Drive and 913 S. Ponderosa; Sunday Services 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sacrament Meeting 1 p.m., 472-8709, 474-6367 or 4681103, Missionaries 472-7956. FAMILY HISTORY CENTER: Aero Drive and 913 S. Ponderosa, 468-0249; Open Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and by appointment: V. Green (928) 474-4181. PINE WARD: Highway 87; Sunday Services 9 a.m. to noon; Sacrament meeting 9 a.m. (928) 476-3118. Missionaries at (928) 600-7546. TONTO BASIN SERVICES: Sunday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Sacrament meeting 10 a.m. 479-2484. CHRISTOPHER CREEK SERVICES: Sunday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Sacrament meeting 10 a.m. followed by Sunday School, Priesthood and Relief Society. 4784608. SPANISH BRANCH: Aero Drive and 913 S. Ponderosa; Sunday Services 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Sacrament meeting 9 a.m. YOUNG BRANCH: Sunday 9:30 a.m. Priesthood/Relief Society; 10:30 a.m. Sunday School; 11:20 a.m. Sacrament meeting. 462-3326 or 462-3388. BLUE RIDGE BRANCH: Sunday 10 a.m. Sacrament meeting; 10:50 a.m. Sunday School; 11:25 a.m. Priesthood/Relief Society. (928) 477-2138. Church on Randall Place, SBC (in Pine) Pastor John Lake. All are welcome! 6338 W. Randall Place (turn west on Randall Place road near the Thrift Store) Sunday Morning Prayer: 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m., Sunday Adult Bible Enrichment 8:45 a.m. to 9:40 a.m., Sunday Worship Celebration: 10 a.m. Sunday Communion 2nd Sunday of the month. Sunday Fellowship Meal every 3rd Sunday of the month. Women of CORP Ministries and Bible studies lead by Simone Lake. Other various Connection Groups available throughout week. For more information, contact: 1-928-476-4249 (ch), 1-928-472-6439 (pastor’s hm) 1-928-970-4249 (pastor’s cell), Email: pinerandallchurch@hotmail.com Website: http://churchonrandallplace.org Online Sermons: www.sermon.net/CORP Community Christian Church An independent, undenominational fellowship. Meets every Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the chapel at Majestic Rim Retirement Living, 310 E. Tyler Parkway. Open Communion served every Sunday. Community Presbyterian Church 800 W. Main Street, Rev. Charles Proudfoot, Pastor. Sundays: SON Risers Adult Bible Class at 8:30 a.m.; Hymn Sing at 10:15 a.m. followed by Morning Worship at 10:30 a.m. Bible Time and nursery care for children provided. Office hours are weekdays 9 a.m. to noon; 474-2059 office, 474-0624 fax, E-mail: cpcgen@yahoo.com, Website: cpcpayson.org. Crossroads Foursquare Church We invite you to join us Sunday mornings, 10 a.m. Find us at www.crossroads4square.com, on Facebook or at 114 E. Cedar Lane, Payson. Desert Community Christian Fellowship, SB Pastor Eric Woods, (928) 479-2216, 173 Stephen’s Way, Tonto Basin. Sunday School 9:15 a.m. Sunday services 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. Wednesday worship 6 p.m. East Verde Baptist Church Houston Mesa Road at Whispering Pines Control Road, 474-9385. Sunday Morning Bible Study, 9:15 a.m., Worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Evening Bible Study, 7 p.m. Eckankar: the religion of the light and sound of God Why are we here? We are here to learn by experiences, to grow spiritually. Pay attention to your feelings, intuition. God loves each one of us and he’s everywhere. For more information, call 877-300-4945. Expedition Church 301 S. Colcord Road (two blocks west of Hwy. 87, just north of Bonita). Expedition is a non-denominational church whose mission is to “make disciples who love God and people.” Sunday services are at 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. For more information, go to www.discoverexpedition.com, Facebook at ExpeditionChurchPayson, or call (928) 474-9128. We look forward to having you join us on our journey! First Baptist Church (Independent/Fundamental) 303 W. Main St., 474-3530. Sunday School for all ages, 9:45 a.m.; Worship Service, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. (nursery provided); Wednesday Prayer Meeting, 6:30 p.m.
First Baptist Church of Pine 4039 N. Highway 87, 476-3552, Website: www.fbcpine.com. Sundays: Sunday School 9:15 a.m., Morning Worship Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Fellowship 6 p.m. Communion service the first Sunday during Morning Worship. Men’s Fellowship Breakfast 8 a.m. first Saturday of each month. Women’s Bible Study 9:15 Tuesday mornings. AWANA program on Mondays as follows: Sparks for K-2nd 2:30-4 p.m.; TNT, Trek and Journey 6-8 p.m. All other activities, please contact the church office Wednesday 10 a.m. to noon or Friday 9 a.m. to noon. Forest Lakes Community Church A non-denominational church meeting in the school district/library building at 417 Old Rim Road in Forest Lakes. Worship is Sundays at 10 a.m. All are welcome to join us in the pines! Gisela Community Church Tatum Trail, Gisela; Pastor Ted Tatum. Sunday Morning Worship 9:30 a.m., Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m. Gospel Meetings All are invited to come and hear the simple teachings and doctrine of Christ. The gospel of Christ still provides an anchor for the soul in a turbulent world. These meetings present the gospel story simply and freely. Tuesday from 7-8 p.m., Mogollon Health Alliance, 308 E. Aero Dr., Payson. Iglesia La Roca 302 E. Rancho Rd. Nuestro proposito es que usted encuentre una relacion personal con Dios y pueda experimentar la hermosura de su presencia en cada uno de nuestros servicios: Miercoles 6:30pm Ensayo del Ministerio de Alabanza, Jueves 6:30pm Estudios Biblicos, Domingos 12:30 Tiempo de Celebracion y Adoracion, para mayor informacion comunicarse con los Pastores Carmelo y Ruth Andujar. Dr. Carmelo Andujar, Pastor (928) 2380240, Ruth Andujar (407) 341-9775, Secretaria de La Roca (928) 595-0874. Te invitamos a vistitar nuestra pagina web: www.iglesialarocapayson.com. “Visitenos, Sera un placer tenerles en nuestra Iglesia” Jehovah’s Witnesses North Payson Congregation, 1616 N. McLane, 474-7867, 474-2750: Public Discourse, 10 a.m., Sunday; Watchtower Study, 10:40 a.m., Sunday; Tuesday Congregation Bible Study, 7 p.m., Ministry School, 7:30 p.m., Service Meeting, 8 p.m. South Payson Congregation, 474-7867, 474-8346: Public Discourse, 1 p.m., Sunday; Watchtower Study, 1:40 p.m., Sunday; Thursday, Congregation Bible Study, 7 p.m., Ministry School, 7:30 p.m., Service Meeting, 8 p.m. Congregation Espanol de Testieos de Jehovah, 472-7867, 474-8763: Discurso publico, Domingo, 4 p.m.; Estudio del Atalaya, Domingo, 4:40 p.m.; Estudio de Biblia, Lunas, 7 p.m., Escuela del Minitero, 7:30 p.m., Reunion de Servicio Miercoles 8 p.m. Kriya Meditation Learn Kriya Meditation Tuesday nights, 7:15 to 8:15 p.m. in Payson. By donation. For location and info, please call Zuné at (928) 472-7654. Mount Cross Lutheran Church (ELCA) 601 E. Highway 260 (across from Tiny’s Restaurant), 474-2552. Ken Lentz, Interim Pastor. Sunday Worship Schedule: 8:30 a.m. Traditional Service; 10:30 a.m. Praise Service. Holy Communion is celebrated on the 1st & 3rd Sundays of each month. Visit our website atwww.mountcross.org. Church office hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Mount Cross is a warm, loving church community that extends itself to others and welcomes everyone with joy. Mountain Bible Church Our Mission at Mountain Bible is quite simple: Loving God…Loving People. It is our desire before God to develop and offer ministries, inside and outside our church, that further this important cause. Are we succeeding? We invite you to be our guest this weekend and see for yourself! Located at 302 E. Rancho Road in Payson, we offer two opportunities to worship on Sunday mornings: 8:45 and 10:30 a.m. Many children and student ministries are available on Sundays and throughout the week. More details are available through our office (928) 472-7800 and on our website (www.mountainbible. org). Please let us answer any further questions you may have about our church…and we hope to meet you soon! New Life Foundation Hwy. 87 (next to Windmill Corner Inn), Strawberry, 476-3224. Services: Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Saturday & Sunday, 9 a.m. Payson First Assembly of God We invite you to come worship with us as we celebrate Christ Jesus’ total victory for us on the Cross! Sunday mornings we have an adult Bible class at 9 a.m.; a Pre-Service Prayer time at 10 a.m., and our Celebration and Worship Service at 10:30 a.m. Sunday evenings we now have an informal “Family Gathering” meeting from 5:30 to 7 p.m. with child care provided. Wednesday evenings we offer classes for children, ages Preschool - 5th grade and our Middle School/High School age youth meet on Thursday’s at 6:30 p.m. We are located at 1100 W. Lake Drive, (the church at Green Valley Park). For more information call, (928) 474-2302. Payson First Church of the Nazarene Come join us for a time of fellowship and worship as we praise the Lord! 200 E. Tyler Parkway (928) 474-5890. Sundays: Morning Worship Service 9:30 am; Sunday School for all ages 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. Monday- Friday: Safe Haven Childcare Center 7 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Lighthouse Club 2:30-5:30 p.m. Tuesdays: Prayer and Praise 6 p.m.; Wednesdays: Women’s Bible Study 1-2 p.m.; Children’s Quizzing 3-6th grades 1:30-4:30 p.m.; Thursdays: Youth Night 6:30 p.m.; Last Saturday of each month: Men’s Fellowship Breakfast 8 a.m.; Senior Activities each month. For more information on locations, times and topics contact the church office. Office hours: 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Payson Living Word Bible Church 208 S. McLane Road (across from the High School). Services Sundays starting at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. with Kids Church and nursery provided. PLW is a Spirit Filled Contemporary Church based on Faith; we believe speaking the Word of God will move mountains in our lives. We have a mission here at PLWBC: Love, Win, Build and Change. There are many activities at the church so come out and be a part of our family. The Lord is doing great things. If you have any questions, the church number is (928) 474-8606. Payson United Methodist Church 414 N. Easy Street (between Zurich St. and Malibu St., behind ACE Hardware), 474-0485; Pastor Carl Peterson. A growing, multi-generational faith community where our hearts, minds, and doors are open to all people. We invite you to worship with us Sunday at 8:30 a.m. (Contemporary) or at 11 a.m. (Traditional). Kid’s Church along with free and safe nursery care is provided. Please call the church for information on additional programs, ministries and our mission to the community. Payson United Pentecostal Church - The First Church Meet at Mesa del Caballo Clubhouse (8119 E. Mescalero). Kids’ Church at 1 p.m. and Worship & Word Service at 2:30 p.m. each Sunday. Family Bible Study at 7 p.m. on Wednesdays. We are a Book of Acts church, preaching the original salvation message first preached to the church on the Day of Pentecost. We baptize in Jesus’ Name for the remission of sins and rejoice in the experience of the gift of the Holy Ghost. All are welcome to join us in worshipping Jesus in Spirit and in Truth. Pastor Dale Lewallen (928) 4742455. Website: www.paysonupc.com Pleasant Valley Community Church Young Public School Cafeteria on Hwy 288 & Baker Ranch Road. A non-denominational service every Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Come early for refreshments and fellowship. Ponderosa Bible Church 1800 N. Beeline Hwy., (928) 474-9279. “Preparing God’s people for works of service so that the body of Christ may be built up.” Dr. Joe Falkner, Sr. Pastor; Curtis Fahrlender, Pastor of Student Ministries; Allen Mann, Part-time Associate Pastor. Sunday: Traditional Worship Service 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.; Contemporary Service 11 a.m. to 12 noon; Youth Bible Study (Grades 7-12) 9:30 a.m.; BLAST I (Bible Learning And Sharing Together) Grades K-6 9:30 a.m.; BLAST II, Grades K-4, 11 a.m.; Adult Bible Study 9:30 a.m. and 11
a.m.; Student Ministries (grades 7-12) 6-7:30 p.m. Nursery and Pre-Primary available for morning worship services. Wednesday: Legacy Singles (55+ years of age) coffee at 9 a.m., please call 474-9279 as locations vary. Adult Prayer and Bible Study 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Nursery available. Thursday: Men’s Bible Study 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. (in recess for the summer); Payson Women’s Bible Study 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. (in recess for the summer). Pioneer Clubs (Grades 1-5), 2:45 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Thursdays when school is in session. Visit our website www.pbcpayson.org. Rim Country Cowboy Church The Rim Country Cowboy Church is now meeting at the Payson Living Word Bible Church, 202 S. McLane Rd. (across the street from the High School), Wed. at 6 p.m. All are welcome. For more information, call Bob Neff (307) 254-5533. Rock of Ages Evangelical Lutheran Church (WELS) At Rock of Ages you will find a worship service designed to praise God and enrich faith. Our purpose is to serve all people in God’s world with the Gospel of Jesus Christ on the basis of the Holy Bible. We are a friendly, family oriented church. All are welcome! Rock of Ages Lutheran Church is located at 204 W. Airport Road (corner of Airport Rd and North McLane). Pastor David Sweet, (928) 970-7606 or (928) 474-2098. Sunday Worship Service is at 9 a.m.; Sunday School and Adult Bible Class at 10:15 a.m.; Holy communion is celebrated at the 2nd and 4th Sunday of the month. Adult Bible class is held on Tuesdays at 1 p.m., Thursdays at 9 a.m. and Saturdays at 9 a.m. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church WE Welcome Everyone. 1000 N. Easy St. (Corner of Sherwood & Easy St.). 928-474-3834. The Rev. Daniel F. Tantimonaco, Rector. St. Paul’s parishioners and Father Dan invite you to join us as WE participate in worship, Christian education, outreach and fellowship activities. Sunday: Holy Eucharist Services are at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. The 10 a.m. service includes traditional and contemporary music. Child care is provided. Our Praise Band leads us with contemporary music on the last Sunday of the month. Christian Education programs offer Children’s Sunday School at 10 a.m. and Sunday Adult Group Study at 9 a.m. Wednesday: We celebrate the Service of Healing & Holy Eucharist at 9 a.m. Quarterly: Taizé, a Service of contemplation and music, is held quarterly on a Sunday evening at 5:30 p.m. (Call for dates). We have very active Women’s, Men’s and Bible Study groups. A Film Review group and Book Club are just some of our other regular programs. (Call Church for dates and times). Visit our Website: www.stpaulspayson. org. Email: stpaulspayson@gmail.com WE Welcome Everyone. St. Philip the Apostle Catholic Church 511 S. St. Phillips Street, 474-2392. Daily Masses Monday-Friday 8 a.m, Sat. 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m. and 11 a.m., Spanish 12:30 p.m.; Confession at 2 to 3 p.m. Saturday. Call Mrs. Catherine Trudell, Religious Education office, (928) 474-1269 for Catholic education classes and programs for children and adults. Seventh-day Adventist Church 700 E. Wade Lane, Payson; Pastor Steven Salsberry; Elder Sharon Judd. Saturday services: Sabbath School/Bible Study 9:30a.m.; Worship Hour 11 a.m. We welcome all visitors. Come and join us for uplifting fellowship. Call 928-474-9209 for Prayer Meeting times and location, and for coming local events, or visit our website: http://payson.adventistfaith.org. Shepherd of the Pines Ev. Lutheran Church (LC-MS) 507 W. Wade Lane; (928) 474-5440, Pastor: Steve DeSanto. Sunday: Adult Bible Study 8:30 a.m., Sunday School, 8:30 a.m., Worship Service 10 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of every month. Adult Bible Study, Monday evenings 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Thursdays 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. A community breakfast is hosted on the second Friday of every month at 8 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. Visit Shepherd of the Pines on our website: www. shepherdofthepineslutheran.com. Shepherd of the Pines United Methodist Church - Overgaard 3015 Highway 277, Overgaard, (928) 535-5208. Pastor Noni Dye. Worship service 9 a.m. w/childcare. Adult Sunday School 7:30 a.m. Children’s Sunday School 9 a.m. Shiloh Christian Fellowship 501 E. Rancho Road (across the street from Payson Elementary School), 474-3138. Non-denominational church teaching verse by verse and chapter by chapter through the Bible. Contemporary Worship and family oriented, children’s ministries and nursery provided. Sunday Worship Service at 10:45 a.m. Bible Study on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Star Valley Southern Baptist Church 4180 E. Highway 260, 4 miles east of Payson, (928) 474-5557. Sunday Bible Study, 9:30 a.m. and the Worship Service is at 10:50 a.m. The Sunday Evening Service begins at 6 p.m. Wednesday features the Rim Country Cowboy Church Service at 6 p.m. Music is by the Country Gospel Misfits. Come join us! Strawberry Chapel in the Pines Fossil Creek Road, Strawberry, 476-3893. Sunday School 9 a.m., Worship 10 a.m., Wed. Bible study 7 p.m. Tonto Basin Bible Church Hwy. 188 off Dryer Dr., Tonto Basin, Pastor Robert Melotti, (928) 479-2299. Sunday School for all ages 9:30 a.m., worship service 10:45 a.m., Children’s Church 10:45 a.m., no Sunday eve. service. Wednesday Night Bible Study Fellowship 7 p.m. Potluck every third Sunday at noon following the worship service. Tonto Creek Shores/Tonto Valley Bible Church Lots 240-241 Valley View Road, Gisela, 474-1360. Tonto Valley Bible Church Valley View Drive, Gisela; Pastor Ted Tatum. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Sunday Morning Worship 11 a.m., Sunday Evening Service 6 p.m. (combined service with both churches). Tonto Village Chapel Tonto Village Chapel exists to serve, love and uplift the Lord Jesus Christ. Our mission is to operate in the community as a light House through fulfilling the great commission as found in Matthew 28:18-20. We welcome an opportunity to worship with you on Sunday mornings at 9:30 a.m. with Sunday school/Bible study at 10:45 a.m. for adults, children and youth, or Tuesday evening Bible study and prayer meeting at 5 p.m. For questions or information please call the Church at (928) 478-5076. Unity Church of Payson Spiritual leader Dr. Lynnette Brouwer, Licensed Unity Teacher. Our mission is to inspire and awaken one another to a greater experience of God and life through the practical application of spiritual principles. Sunday services at 10 a.m., 600 E. Highway 260, #14 (Board of Realtors Conference Room, back of Tiny’s parking lot). The 1st Sunday of each month is our inter-generational service and we celebrate birthdays and bring non-perishables for the foodbank. The 2nd Sunday browse the Unity of Payson library, 3rd Sunday pot luck, 4th Sunday power prayer follows service, 4th Tuesday Chili’s give-back day, 4th Friday 4 p.m. hiway cleanup, on-going noon Faithlift 1st and 3rd Wed. To find out more:www.unityofpayson.org. 928-478-8515. The Way of Adidam The Way of Adidam, based on the spiritual teachings of Adi Da Samraj, is offering free tours of the Da Love Ananda Botanical Gardens. Water conservation techniques will be discussed. Also, beginning in July, tours will include seven meditation sites surrounding Lake Love Ananda. In addition, we are offering area study group meetings. For further information, telephone 928-472-4700 and ask for Pat Rollins. For worldwide information, go online to www.adidam.org. Young Baptist Church (928) 462-3476. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.; Services, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Wednesday prayer service, 6 p.m.
PAYSON ROUNDUP FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2015
7B
Classifieds More ways than ever to publish and pay for your classified ad!
Call 928-474-5251 • Online at PaysonClassifiedsNow.com • Email ClassAds@payson.com DEADLINES: 10AM Monday for Tuesday issue • 10AM Wednesday for Friday issue
MERCHANDISE
Order: 10078106 Cust: -Town of Payson / HR Keywords: PT Office Clerk III art#: 20129869 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 2.00
Town of Payson Part-Time Office Clerk III $12.48-$18.71/hr. plus benefits.
Obtain required application by calling (928)472-5012; pick one up at Town Hall; or download at www.paysonaz.gov. Human Resources, 303 N. Beeline Hwy., Payson, AZ 85541, must receive applications no later than 4PM MST, 11/05/15. EOE
Order: 10078198 Cust: -Rim Country Health Keywords: Human Resource Manager art#: 20129999 Class: Administrative/Professional Size: 2.00 HUMAN X 3.00 RESOURCE
ANIMALS Dog Nail Clipping in the comfort and convenience of your home by Tracy. Local professional groomer of 24 years. $12.00 928-978-4959
FIREWOOD FIREWOOD “BEST PRICES IN TOWN AND FRIENDLY SERVICE” Also BACKHOE SERVICE & YARD CLEANING Tree-Trimming, Brush Removal with Hauling Service
MANAGER
Rim Country Health, Gila Counties’ only Full-Service Health Care Campus is in need of a HR Manager. Some of the attributes needed are: • High Service mentality. Must love to help employees with their concerns. • Very good on the computer. SOME CORE RESPONSIBILITIES; • Maintain and enforce HR policies in a high ethical way. • Process payroll accurately. • Maintain proper and accurate HR records. • Administer Employee Recognition programs. • Coordinate and support the employee recruitment process. • Work with Loss Control on the Worker’s Comp program. EXPERIENCE/COMPENSATION; • Prefer 3+ years Supervising or working in a HR Department. • Good salary and benefit package. **Please submit resume to: hpelovsky@rimcountryhealth.com Or deliver to 807 W. Longhorn Rd., Payson, AZ. NO phone calls please.
Order: 10073430 Cust: -McDonalds Keywords: Help Wanted art#: 20123185 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 4.00
Join our friendly Team
928-951-6590 or 928-978-5473 FIREWOOD Firewise, Lot Clean-ups Landscaping Ray Smith 928-970-0132 or 928-363-1014 FIREWOOD OAK 1/2 Cord, $160. Free Delivery (Christopher Creek to Payson) Kindling included Weekends only. Call Jeff 602-224-6023. Leave message. FIREWOOD. JUNIPER OR PINE AND MIXES SOLD IN BUNDLES TO FULL MEASURED CORDS, WE DELIVER.ALSO TREE STUMP AND SMALL TREE REMOVAL. TRENCHING. 928-468-1309 FIREWOOD: Oak and Pine, Discount for Seniors. 928-476-3819 or 480-266-4471 HOUSTON MESA GENERAL STORE AND FUEL WOODS
WE BUY FIREWOOD Call 928-474-9859 ASK FOR STEVE
McDonald’s invites you to join our professional, friendly and dedicated team. McDonald’s is committed to outstanding customer service, people development and professional growth. The McDonald’s Team offers Part-Time and Full Time employment with wages starting at $8.10 per hour. Flexible hours, training, advancement opportunities, management development, employee retirement benefits, insurance, performance reviews and raises, and many other benefits. McDonald’s rewards outstanding performance.
PAYSON Please pick-up an application and learn of the opportunities available at your McDonald’s today.
To apply online visit www.mcarizona.com Order: 10078269 Cust: -Arizona Mentor Keywords: EMPLOYMENT AD art#: 20130105 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 5.00
Exceptional Exceptional People People Wanted! Wanted!
Looking for a career opportunity in a rewarding field? If you have proven success in a If you want make management roletosupporting a difference in the lives individuals with disabilities, of individuals a job as a with
FURNITURE Beautiful Italian Made Leather Sofa, Light Brown, Excellent Condition, $495. 928-474-4225 Matching Table (Marble Top) w/4 chairs and Oak Hutch, One year old, Good Condition, $375. 602-328-0191 Mother-In-Law Moved Out! Multi House Furniture Items: Lighted Curio Cabinet, Twin Mattress Set, Dresser and Assorted Furniture. Call 928-978-5901
GUNS/KNIVES Winchester 20 gauge pump, model 1300 XTR, Complete w/Case and 15 Boxes of Ammo. $325. 602-469-3422
MISCELLANEOUS I BUY ESTATES! (928) 474-5105 PAINT BALL EQUIPMENT: 5 Variety sized paint guns, 2BB guns, 9canister belt, 2canister pouch, 1-no finger glove, 1-soft 6500 6mm Plastic red BB’s 12 grams, 3- 9ozCo2 cylinder, 120ozCo2 Cylinder, 1- scope, 1-cleaning rod, 1-extra BB clip, All items as is: Asking $275.00 / Make Offer. GRABER BICYCLE RACK: Trailer hitch mount type of rack Asking $45.00 / Make Offer U-HAUL MINI REFRIGERATOR: 3ft. and brown in color Asking $35.00 / Make Offer Call 480-201-9697 THE BLIND DOCTOR Broken Blinds? Saggy Shades? Droopy Drapes? WE CAN FIX THAT! Dani 928-595-2968 BLINDS & DESIGNS Repairs, Sales, Shade Screens & More!
POOLS/SPAS
MUSICIANS WANTED: - Shiloh Christian Fellowship; we are looking for Muscians/Vocalists to join our Praise Team. If interested, Call Frank 928-978-2512
YARD SALES/ AUCTIONS YARD SALES 1. 8248 Mescalero Rd. (Mesa Del), Fri. Oct. 30 from 8am to 3pm & Sat. Oct. 31 from 8am to 2pm: Large Yard Sale! 2. 1501 W. Country Club Dr. (Accross from Payson Golf Course) Sat. Oct. 31 from 7:30 to 2pm: HUGE SALE: Decorator Items, Skinny Christmas Trees and Christmas Goodies, Large Women’s Clothing, Pedistal Sink, Work Bench, Storage Cabinets, Lots of Fun Items, Don’t Miss Out! 3. 404 E. Evergreen, (Payson); Saturday Only Oct. 31. from 8am to 2pm: Misc. Houshold Goods, Lamps, Table, Puzzles, Games and More!
AUTOS/VEHICLES ATVS Like New 2014 Polaris Ranger XP-900 w/10 hours, Hard Top, Glass Windshields Front/Rear, Mirrors, Horn, Turn Indicators and 4 year Extended Warranty, $13,500. Jim 928-554-5163
MISCELLANEOUS *CANCER CASES* www.cancerbenefits.com Call 800-414-4328.
10ft, 20ft, 30ft. and 40ft. Shipping Containters, Call 928-537-3257
Chrome Diamond plate Truck Toolbox, $100. 100pd Weights, Bars, & Bench, $70. 20” Color TV, $30. 36” Sliding Screen door $20. 928-474-5377 Order: 10076605 Cust: -Gila County Personnel art#: 20127705 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 2.00
CAREGIVER
2004 Saab 9-5 2.3 Turbo, 43K Miles, Very Clean, $7850. 2005 Hyundai Tucson 4x4 SUV, 111K Miles, Great Family SUV $5995. 2005 Chevy Monte Carlo, Nice Sporty Car, $5995. WE BUY CARS!
CARS 1995 Jeep Cherokee Sport, 4x4, 147K Miles, New Tires, New Battery, New Windshield, Runs Great, $2,250.obo 602-697-7848
RVS
2002 Winnebago Industries, Inc. Winnebago Adventurer, 30 foot 2 slides 20,700 miles original owner always garaged like new condition with every option new batteries new michelins. $48,000.928-978-0926 dodachek@yahoo.com.
TRAILERS 1995 Braco Trailer, 6’wx12’lx7’h, Rear Ramp Door, 205/75 P15 Tires + Spare, 6 Prong + Ground, 2” Ball, Roof/Trailer in Good Condition, Currently Licensed, Payson,$2000. 623-694-0274
EMPLOYMENT CONSTRUCTION Installation Trainee position open Local Company, Four day week. Travel, Tool Knowledge, detail-oriented, clean MVD, background/drug tests. 928-474-1727
DRIVERS Habitat for Humanity Restore Looking for Donation Ambassador Must be outgoing, Self-starter, Able to lift 75lbs, Pass Background check & Blood test Apply at: 425 N.Beeline Hwy Payson or call: 928-474-4247.
If you are passionate about impacting patient & family care and enjoy working out in the field, a clinical position with our company may be the perfect opportunity for you! We have great benefits and competitive pay.
To apply online and learn more about an exciting opportunity to work for Hospice Compassus: Pease visit our website at www.hospicecompassus.com Email to Mary.Rogers@hospicecom.com
Health Care Aid Needed Urgently Looking for healthcare aid to take care of elderly MAN and WOMAN, CNA optional, $950 per week, send resume to aberaroha@yahoo.com for more details... aberaroha@yahoo.com
HIRING:
Medical Typest: Excel & Word. Pay-D.O.Experience Send Resume & References Required: Speciality Clinic PO Box 1463, Payson, 85547
Automotive Heavy line mechanicAUTOMOTIVE Full time, R&R Mechanic HEAVY for transmissions LINE and engines must have own tools. MECHANIC Apply in person WANTED! at Southwest Transmission, 212 W. R&R Aero, Full-Time Position, Payson, AZ for transmisMechanic
sions and engines must have own tools Apply in person at SOUTHWEST TRANSMISSION, 212 W. Aero Drive between 8am and 5pm
RESTAURANTS Waitress
Diamond Point Shadows is now accepting applications for waitress. Please apply in person, Tuesday-Friday after 3:00 928-474-4848
SERVICES MISCELLANEOUS Ad on server COMPARE & SAVE!
Medicare Supplements Dental Plans
Advantage • Part D Rx Annual Enrollment Oct 15-Dec 7
EDUCATION IMMEDIATE OPENING
part-time custodial, part-time maintenance positions, or a full-time combination position of custodial/maintenance. Responsibilities will entail maintenance of school buildings and grounds to provide a safe, comfortable, and clean work and educational environment. Please stop by or contact the school for an application at 928-479-2277. Application deadline Friday, October 30, 2015.
Horizon Health and Wellness 600 E. HWY 260 #8 Payson, AZ 85547 928-474-4917 fax 928-474-7094 ines.tarango@hhwaz.org AA/EOE/M/F D/V
Small Pets Product Company seeks dependable self starter, w/attention to detail, for Shipping and Production Duties, $10.hr Send Resume to: rimgroupllc@gmail.com
HEALTH CARE CPES Is Hiring! PT positions $9.25hrly Up to 25 hours per week Working with adults with Special Needs Days, evenings and weekends available No experience required Ask about our full time openings! For more information call: 928-595-1886
HANDYMAN
HOMES FOR SALE
JIMMY’S ALLTRADES Residential Repairs Since 1993 FREE ESTIMATES Plumbing, Electrical, Sun Screens, Dryer Vent Cleaning, Gutters Cleaned 928-474-6482 not licensed Tile,Carpet and Wood Installer 35 years Exp. Repairs/Custom Showers Local References if needed Realters Welcome 928-951-2823 Robin H.
HAULING
HOME INSPECTIONS AZ and ASHI Certified Home Inspector 14 years Experience Payson License #PO0049 www.inspectaz.com Dan Harris 928-970-1187
MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE Park Model, Handicapped Accessible, 2Br, Shed w/W&D, $35,000. Call 928-595-1595
MOBILES FOR SALE
Home Repair Lawn Care Hauling CD 2015
HOME REPAIRS
Lawn Care
HAULING
Diversified Services IOWA BOY - HONEST, DEPENDABLE
(Inexpensive) Not a Licensed Contractor
Foreclosures: 30 Homes, both New and PreOwned to Choose From, Free Delivery, Call Bronco Homes, 1-800-487-0712 REPOS: 2, 3, & 4 Bedrooms, Starting from $9,989. Call Bronco Homes: 1-800-487-0712
RENTALS APARTMENTS FOR RENT
JOE - 970-1873
2BR 1BA, Apt 201 E Jura Cir Payson 700 sq ft, refurbished $700 mo $700 dep keyless entry new flooring blinds 480-628-4465 pine4rest@gmail.com.
HOME SERVICES
Apartments For Rent
Call The Cheaper Sweeper
Call The Cheaper Sweeper You’ve tried the rest, now try the best!
This Fall make ASPEN COVE Your New Home
Windows to Walls, Baseboards to Ceiling Fans WE CLEAN IT ALL!
Units Available! Apply Today!
Gift Certificates Available
APARTMENTS FEATURING:
Call The Cheaper Sweeper for a free estimate: (928) 472-9897
HOUSEKEEPING HOUSE/OFFICE CLEANING! REASONABLE RATES & FREE ESTIMATES Call: Ashley @ 928-970-2400
HOUSEKEEPING ETC. Cleaning Services, Regular Schedulled Cleanings, Organizing and Move-Outs! Call Shari for a Quote! 928-951-1807
LANDSCAPING landscape services-pick up 2014 Yard Maintenance Ɣ Clean Ups Weeds Ɣ Trimming Ɣ Hauling Quality Work…Affordable Prices!
928-951-0859 FREE Estimates/SENIOR Discounts
2)) Your 1st Service 2))
Mario & Mario Landscaping and Masonry Complete Landscaping & Irrigation, Tree Service and Removal. Rock, Retaining Walls, Block Fencing Walls, Wrought Iron Fences. Flagstone & Concrete Driveways, Pavers and Sidewalks. Licensed, Bonded and Insured. Home Maitenance Available. Call 928-282-3118 Mention this add and get 10% Off!
• 2 Bedrooms/2 Baths • 2 Bedrooms/ 1.5 Baths • Washers & Dryers • Covered Parking • Pet Friendly
ASPEN COVE
801 E. FRONTIER ST. #46, PAYSON, AZ 85541
(928) 474-8042
Cornerstone Property Services www.cornerstone-mgt.com Apartments for Rent
Warm & Cozy Community nestled in the Pines!
Forest Hills Condominiums
333 N. McLane Large 1-2 Bedrooms WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE WASHER & DRYER COVERED PARKING PET FRIENDLY CLOSE TO RUMSEY PARK & LIBRARY
Call Caroline 928-472-6055
Positively Payson
Tonto Oaks Apts. & Mobile Homes
120 S. Tonto St. Come live next to the BEST tenants in Payson! Beautiful, Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments w/storage room Call Cindy for availability (928) 472-9238 or email tontooaksapts@yahoo.com Rentals CD
Tonto Basin Elementary School is looking to fill
Generous benefit package. Submit application/resume to:
Hospice Aide IPU Hospice Aide Registered Nurse Case Manager
Need Medical Experience? PhysAssist Scribes is Interviewing/Hiring/Training Medical Scribes to work at Payson Regional Medical Center. Hourly Compensation, Healthcare Benefits and 401(k) offered. Work in the ER with Physicians and document medical records. Apply Online at www.iamscribe.com or email your resume to Cole.Swiney@iamscribe.com.
MECHANICAL
Min requirements: HS/GED; AZ driver license with good driving record; 21 years of age or older, must pass DPS fingerprint clearance.
Serving Rim Country for 20 years!
ER Medical Scribe
IMS Primary Care is hiring for Front Office and experienced Back Office Medical Assistants in Payson. Submit resumes to: Cynthia.richardson@imsaz.com
Full-time position; providing support services for children, families and adults in office/ home.
You’ll remember why you do what you do, when you join the fabulous care team at Hospice Compassus!
Call Mary Jane Rogers at 928.472.6340
2010 Kia Forte, Clean Economy Car, 59K Miles, $8995.
Behavioral Health Paraprofessional
The opportunity to make a difference Comprehensive rewards & benefits Professional development Supportive & collaborative teams Innovative health & wellness options Employee recognition programs
Hiring in the Payson, AZ office:
2006 Land Rover LR3 4x4, 93K Miles, Luxury at your Command, $10,795.
GENERAL
To apply, visit us at http://jobs.thementornetwork.com/ arizona call 602-567-4970 602-567-4970 ororcall
Order: 10078308 Cust: -Hospice Compassus Keywords: Employment Ad- attached art#: 20129660 Class: Healthcare Size: 4.00 X 4.00
Ray’s Auto Exchange, 615 W. Main,Payson 928-978-8375
PERSONALS
at Arizona Arizona MENTOR MENTOR at may be right for you! you! may be right for
Why join our team?
HEALTH CARE
Hot Springs Spa: 5 Seater, Must Move, Excellent Condition, $700. Call 928-978-8207
disabilities, a job as a Program Director
CARS
Get the best results!
OakLeaf Yardworks
Ruth Rand
Agent with Tom Russell & Associates (Behind Fargo’s Steakhouse) Call for appointment
978-9108 Document Preparation Get your personal and legal documents prepared by Christina Furlong. 615 West Main Street. Office: 928.232.9270 Cell: 928.951.2219
Paralegal Services Legal Document Prep. Affordable Legal Document Preparation and Notary Services. LLC Formation, Wills & Trusts,Probate, Divorce/Legal Separation, Custody, Deeds, Bankruptcy & More I offer mobile services & free quotes. 928-978-2005 katie_meredith@outlook.com
CONSTRUCTION Debco Construction
New Homes,Remodels,Decks, Painting, Garages, Wood/Tile Floors, Affordable Prices, Don 928-978-1996, Lic. & Bonded, Res. Lic.#ROC185345 Commercial Lic.#ROC182282 In Payson Area 35 years
HANDYMAN DHW Home Services Decks/Porches Sheds Drywall Texture Matching Paint Remodeling 928-595-1555 Credit Cards Accepted not a licensed contractor
Don’s Handyman Home Repairs, Mobile Home Roofs, Backhoe Work, Drains, Driveway, Landscaping, Yardwork Tree Trimming, Hauling! Senior Discount: 928-478-6139
Yard Maintenance Minor landscaping and tree trimming. All work affordable. Call:Dennis 928-595-0477 not a licensed contractor
LEGAL SERVICES ad attached
REVOCABLE LIVING TRUSTS WILLS LIVING WILLS FINANCIAL POWERS OF ATTORNEY MEDICAL POWERS OF ATTORNEY DEEDS
Patricia Rockwell AZ Certified Legal Document Preparer/ Paralegal
Now Renting!
Green Valley Apartments 905 S. McLane Road Payson, AZ 85541 INCOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY Newer apartments located off historic Main Street and just down the road from beautiful Green Valley Park. 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartment Homes Bright, open layouts Onsite laundry facility Playground area Community room Satellite ready
See Manager for details Phone (928) 472-4639 Hearing Impaired TDD# 800-545-1833 x298
928-476-6539 AZCLDP #81438
REAL ESTATE HOMES FOR SALE F.S.B.O. Very Cute Single Family Home, 920sf 2Br/1Ba, Kitchen, LR, DR, New Appliances, Range, Fridge, WD, New Pellet Stove, Fenced in Corner Lot, 1/3 Acre, Mature Trees, Shade, Privacy, Detached 2 Car Garage, Storage Shed, Perfect Weekend Get-a-way, or Year-Round Living, For more info call 928-474-2934 Home for Sale on 1 acre w/water rights F.S.B.O. in Gisela, for apt call 928-951-4513.
Studio and One Bedroom Apartments Starting at $615. with All Utilities Weekly Light Housekeeping Included Small Pet OK with Deposit Meal Service Available Call Angie M-F 8-5 928-474-1120
COMMERCIAL FOR RENT Office or Retail Space Lowest Rates In Payson Private Bath,500 sq.ft. On Upgraded Remodeled Units, 1 Month Rent Free 602-616-3558
OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE Order: 10078395 Cust: -Berkshire Hathaway Realty/Tim Keywords: 602 N Snead Drive/Open House Payson, AZ, 85541 o art#: 20130300 Class: Homes For Sale Size: 2.00 X 2.00 Like new 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom home that was completely rebuilt in 2014. Upgraded cabinetry, appliances. Top of the line flooring. Large lot totally landscaped. Completely fenced. A MUST SEE! $229,500
OPEN HOUSE - Sat. 10-31 9am to 1pm 602 N. Snead Drive, Payson
Call Carolyn Stanley 928-970-0337 Or Tim Ehrhardt 602-478-9655
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES ADVANTAGE REALTY
PAYSON ROUNDUP
8B HOMES FOR RENT 1Br/1Ba Overlooks GV Lake 704 S.Oak, Stove,Refrig, Trash Included, Large Wood Stove,AC,W/D Hook-ups, Gated Yard,Covered Carport, $610.mo 928-978-4773 or 928-474-3453
HOMES FOR RENT Prudential Pine
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HomeServices Advantage Realty PO Box 329, 3640 Hwy 87, Pine, AZ 85544
928-476-3279
UNFURNISHED RENTAL HOMES NEEDED 2Br/1Ba Mobile In Town, Private Lot, Freshly Painted Interior w/New Light Fixtures, Large Fenced Back Yard w/New Trees. Large Living Room, Dining w/Built-ins, Heating/Cooling, W/D Hook-ups, Double-Pane Windows, $750.p/m + Yard Maintanence included in Rent: 928-288-2440 2Br/2Ba W/D, D/W, Wood FP, Pool, Store Shed, Deck, Smoking/Pets-No, Avail. Now $750.p/m First/Last + $375 Dep. 928-468-8204
3Br/2Ba, Rent $950. No Smoking, No Pets, 306 S. Colcord. Avail. Now. Call 928-978-6633 3Br/2Ba.Fresh paint and carpet.Private fenced yard with trees,garden and back facing the woods.Raised balcony,2 car garage.$1300 Pets OK. Bob 615-772-5910. Beautiful Luxurious Tri-level Town House on Green Valley Lakes, Very Quiet, Over 2100sf, Good Credit & References Required, Small Pet-Ok, Non-Smoking, $1200.mo 901 W. Madera Lane, Call 928-951-4320 Cute! Cute! 1Br/1Ba Very Clean, New Flooring, Carpet, Bathroom, W/D, Fenced Back Yard, Storage Shed, Pellet Stove, No-Smoking, Small Pet-Ok w/Deposit. 1213 N. Ponderosa Circle 520-403-6164 Immaculate 3Br/2Ba Open Plan in Lovely Woodhills, Granite Counters, New Carpet, All Appliances, Covered Porch and Charming Gazebo, Take McLane to Sherwood, Boulder Ridge to 705 N. Foxhill Dr. $1,200.mo 602-499-3031 Location Plus! Walk to PHS from this Charming 3Br/2Ba Home. All Appliances, Lovely Deck overlooks Large Lot, Solar Panels mean low Electric Bills. $1300.mo 809 W. Overland 602-499-3031 Mobile for Rent in Houston Creek, 750. 3Br/2Ba Park Model 1Br in Round Valley, 650. All Utilities paid. 928-474-9110 after 3pm Dep. Required on both
PAYSON TRAILER RANCH 1 & 2 Bdrms Starting at $425.00 Spaces starting at $310. 1st Mo + Deposit! All Include Cable/Water/Sewer/Trash Calll 928-517-1368
Pine Prudential Rentals x3 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY
HomeServices Advantage Realty PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
609 S. BEELINE HWY. PAYSON, AZ 85541 474-5276
www.paysonrentals.com RESIDENTIAL RENTALS
602 N. Boulder Ridge, 3BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . $1295 1103 N. Camelot, 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . $1200 1406 N. Sunset, 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1100 1009 W. Rim View Rd., 3BD, 2BA . . . . . . . $1075 604 E. Coronado Way, 3BD, 1.5BA . . . . . . . $975 906 S. Lakeview, 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . . $950 1006 N. Gila Dr., 2BD, 1.5BA . . . . . . . . . . . . $920 703 W. Saddle Ln., 3BD, 2BA. . . . . . . . . . . . $895 1101 N. Carefree Cir., 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . . . . $850 905 N. Beeline Hwy. #10, 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . $850 1106 N. William Tell Cir., 2BD, 2BA . . . . . . . . . . $800 607 S. Beeline Hwy. Sp#5, 1BD, 1BA . . . . . . . . $550 607 S. Beeline Hwy. C5, Studio 1BA. . . . . . . . . $425 607 S. Beeline Hwy. C4, Studio 1BA. . . . . . . . . $400 607 S. Beeline Hwy. C6, Studio,1BA . . . . . . . . . $400
COMMERCIAL LEASE SPACE 1500 Bravo Taxiway 601 N. Beeline 408 W. Main St., Suite 8 & Suite 11 708 E. Hwy 260 C1, A, B & E 708 E. Hwy 260 C2 1322 W. Red Baron Rd. #A
RV/MOTOR HOME SPACE Independently Owned & Operated
Independently Owned & Operated
HORSE PROPERTY FOR RENT 2 BR, 2 BA, 1344 SF, 288 E Buckboard Trail, Gisela, AZ, 85541, 12 months lease, Yard maintenance included, $ 930, Chuck Olinger 602-881-8736.
MOBILES FOR RENT 2 BR, 1 BA, Mobile Home, 29 B N Milky Way, Star Valley, AZ, 12 months lease, Really Cute!, $550.00, Call Jason at 602-459-1414. LARGE 1BR on 1/3 ACRE w/GREAT VIEW (STRAWBERRY) SMOKING/PETS-NO. $475.mo w/$500.dep REFERENCE REQUIRED. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. 928-476-4238 or is 602-799-3545 Mobile for Rent: $585.mo + $555.dep. 1Br/1Ba, Yard, min. 6mo Lease, 1001 S. Goodfellow #16 928-951-6137
MOBILE/RV SPACES RYE RV PARK 1Br/1Ba, (Furnished) $350.mo & Up; Free Laundry On-site, Utility Dep. Water/Trash Included, Spaces $200.mo 602-502-0020
MOBILES/RVS FOR RENT Mountain Shadows R.V. & Mobile Home Park, Nice quiet family park, RV Spaces $256.55 mo, with onsite Manager, Laundry, Shower, Game room, and Wifi, Call Shawn at 928-474-2406
ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMMATE WANTED! Mature, Responsible Person to share my Beautiful Mountain View Home! W/D, Cable, Own Bathroom & Views! $375.mo + Utilities: 928-474-2106 or 480-242-5812
WANTED TO RENT RETIRED MAN SEEKING A MOBILE HOME TO MOVE INTO. WOULD LIKE A RENT TO OWN OPTION FROM OWNER. CALL DALE @ (704)-477-9293.
LEGAL NOTICES 15853: 7/17, 7/21, 7/24/2015 NOTICE (for publication) ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION FOR I. Name: Tiney LLC File No. L19927138 II. The address of the known place of business is: 615 W. Main St., Payson, AZ 85541. III. The name and street address of the Statutory Agent is: Jo Ellen Vork, 615 W. Main St., Payson, AZ 85541. (A) Management of the limited liability company is reserved to the members. The names and addresses of each person who is a member are: Melissa Sotelo, (x) member, 521 South 4th Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85701. 15954: 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/6/2015; DCS’S NOTICE OF HEARING ON DEPENDENCY PETITION NO. JD-529273 (Honorable Shellie Smith) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF MARICOPA In the Matter of: AMANDA ANNABEL KAY ANN WATERMAN d.o.b. 12/03/1998 CHAZ MICHAEL LYMAN PRASHAW d.o.b. 02/01/2003 Person(s) under 18 years of age.
LEGAL NOTICES TO: LINDA ANN GREEN aka LINDA HOUSE, LEONARD JOHN WATERMAN and REGINALD BRUCE PRASHAW JR, parents and/or guardians of the above-named children. 1. The Department of Child Safety has filed a Dependency Petition pursuant to Title 8, of the Arizona Revised Statutes, Rules 4.1 and 4.2 of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure and Rule 48(D) of the Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court. 2. The Court has set a Publication hearing on the 8th day of January, 2016 at 10:00 a.m., at the Maricopa County Superior Court, 1810 South Lewis, Mesa Arizona 85210, before the Honorable Shellie Smith for the purpose of determining whether any parent or guardian named herein is contesting the allegations in the Petition. 3. You and your children are entitled to have an attorney present at the hearing. You may hire your own attorney or, if you cannot afford an attorney and want to be represented by an attorney, one may be appointed by the Court. 4. You have a right to appear as a party in this proceeding. You are advised that your failure to personally appear in court at the initial hearing, pretrial conference, status conference or dependency adjudication, without good cause shown, may result in a finding that you have waived your legal rights and have admitted the allegations in the Petition. In addition, if you fail to appear, without good cause, the hearing may go forward in your absence and may result in an adjudication of dependency, termination of your parental rights or the establishment of a permanent guardianship based upon the record and the evidence presented to the court, as well as an order of paternity, custody, or change of custody in a consolidated family law matter and an order for child support if paternity has been established. 5. If you are receiving this Notice by publication, you may obtain a copy of the Dependency Petition, Notice of Hearing, and Temporary Orders by submitting a written request to: LAUREN RICHTER, Office of the Attorney General, 120 W. 1st Ave., Mesa, Arizona 85210. The assigned case manager is Dawn Bradford and may be reached by telephone at 480-415-2629. 6. Requests for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the court by parties at least three working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding and can be made by calling (602) 506-2544. 7. You have the right to make a request or motion prior to any hearing that the hearing be closed to the public. DATED this 8th day of October, 2015. MARK BRNOVICH Attorney General LAUREN RICHTER Assistant Attorney General 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/6/15 CNS-2804374 15956: 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/6/2015; NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of the sale under that certain Deed of Trust recorded October 23, 2009 in Fee No. 2009-012787, in the office of the County Recorder in Gila County, Arizona, at the main (front) entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 East Ash Street, Globe, Arizona 85501 on January 7, 2016, at 11:00 o’clock a.m. of said day. Notice! If you believe there is a defense to the trustee sale or if you have an objection to the trustee sale, you must file an action and obtain a court order pursuant to rule 65, Arizona rules of civil procedure, stopping the sale no later than 5:00 p.m. mountain standard time of the last business day before the scheduled date of the sale, or you may have waived any defenses or objections to the sale. Unless you obtain an order, the sale will be final. The street address and identifiable location of the subject trust property is purported through the records of the Gila County Assessor, to be: 808 West A Cross Road Tonto Springs, AZ 85553 The legal description of the trust property is: Parcels A and B, as shown on Record of Survey/Minor Land Division, recorded as Survey Map No. 4153, records of Gila County, Ari-
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2015
LEGAL NOTICES zona, being a portion of Sections I and 2, Township 4 North Range 13 East, of the Gila and Salt River Base and Meridian, Gila County, The tax parcel numbers are purported to be: 204-01-001C and 204-01-001D Original principal $935,333.50
balance:
Name and address of original Beneficiary: MARSHALL & ILSLEY TRUST COMPANY, N.A., Successor Trustee of the Revocable Living Trust Agreement for Pryor F. Sanborn and Lillian Marvalene Sanborn, dated March 11, 2003, as to an undivided 29.6% interest, and MARSHALL & ILSLEY TRUST COMPANY, N.A., Successor Trustee of the Sanborn Family Charitable Remainder Trust, dated March 11, 2003, as to an undivided 29.6% interest, and Sanborn Land and Cattle Company Limited Partnership, an Arizona limited partnership, an undivided 40.8% interest Address in care of: Attn: Thomas D. Kettler, V.P. Real Estate Department M & I Wealth Management 111 East Kilbourn Avenue, Suite 900, Milwaukee, WI 53202 Name and address of original Trustee: Larry C. Schafer, a Member of the State Bar of Arizona, Warner Angle Hallam Jackson & Formanek PLC, 3550 N. Central Avenue, Suite 1500, Phoenix, AZ 85012 Names and address of original Trustors: Keith D. Spaulding and Karen D. Spaulding, his wife, 2166 Saddle Butte, 85219 Names and address of Successor Trustee: James Valletta, Esq., a Member of the State Bar of Arizona, Warner Angle Hallam Jackson & Formanek PLC, 2555 East Camelback Road, Suite 800, Phoenix, AZ 85016 Name and address of Current Beneficiary Contact: Matthew Woyak, Officer, CVA, BMO Harris Bank N.A., 111 E. Kilbourn Ave., Suite 900, Milwaukee, WI 53202, Phone: 414-287-7030 Name, address and telephone number of persons to contract regarding the Trustee’s Sale: James Valletta, Esq. or James R. Gough, Paralegal, Warner Angle Hallam Jackson & Formanek PLC 2555 East Camelback Road, Suite 800, Phoenix, AZ 85016 Phone: 602-264-7101 Fax: 602-234-0419 Manner of Trustee Qualification: A member of the State Bar of Arizona Name of Trustee’s Regulator: State Bar of Arizona DATED this 7th day of October, 2015. /s/ James Valletta James Valletta, Esq. State of Arizona)) County of Maricopa) On this 7th day of October, 2015, before me personally appeared James Valletta, Successor Trustee, whose identity was proved to me on the basis of satisfactory evidence to be the person whose name is subscribed to this document, and who acknowledged that he signed the above document. /s/ James R. Gough, JAMES R. GOUGH Notary Public - Maricopa County My Commission Expires March 4, 2016 15962: 10/23, 10/30, 11/6, 11/13/2015; DCS’S NOTICE OF HEARING ON MOTION FOR APPOINTMENT OF A PERMANENT GUARDIAN OF A MINOR CHILD NO. JD 201400039 (Honorable Gary V. Scales) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF GILA In the Matter of: NIZHONI LAKOTA BEGAY d.o.b. 01-28-2014
LEGAL NOTICES Person(s) under 18 years of age. TO: COLYNN CAMILL BEGAY, BRANDON METHETH aka METHEHC, and JOHN DOE (a fictitious name), parents and/or guardians of the above-named child. 1. The Department of Child Safety, (DCS or the Department), by and through undersigned counsel, has filed a Motion for Appointment of a Permanent Guardian pursuant to Title 8, of the Arizona Revised Statutes, Rules 4.1, 4.2, and 5 of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure and Rule 61 of the Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court. 2. The Court has set a Publication hearing on the 3rd day of December, 2015 at 1:15 p.m., at the Gila County Superior Court, 714 S. Beeline Hwy., #104, Payson, AZ 85541, before the Honorable Gary V. Scales for the purpose of determining whether any parent or guardian named herein is contesting the allegations in the motion. 3. You and your child are entitled to have an attorney present at the hearing. You may hire your own attorney or, if you cannot afford an attorney and want to be represented by an attorney, one may be appointed by the Court. 4. You have a right to appear as a party in this proceeding. You are advised that your failure to personally appear in court at the initial hearing, pretrial conference, status conference or dependency adjudication, without good cause shown, may result in a finding that you have waived your legal rights and have admitted the allegations in the Motion. In addition, if you fail to appear, without good cause, the hearing may go forward in your absence and may result in an adjudication of dependency, termination of your parental rights or the establishment of a permanent guardianship based upon the record and the evidence presented to the court. 5. If you are receiving this Notice by publication, you may obtain a copy of the Motion for Appointment of a Permanent Guardian and Notice of Hearing by submitting a written request to: TRACEY L. HEINRICK, Office of the Attorney General, 120 W. 1st Ave., 2nd Floor, Mesa, AZ 85210. The assigned case manager is Matthew Milone and may be reached by telephone at 928-468-9803. 6. Requests for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the court by parties at least three working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding and can be made by calling 928-474-3978. 7. You have the right to make a request or motion prior to any hearing that the hearing be closed to the public. DATED this __ day of October, 2015. MARK BRNOVICH Attorney General TRACEY L. HEINRICK Assistant Attorney General 10/23, 10/30, 11/6, 11/13/15 CNS-2805 15963: 10/23, 10/27, 10/30/2015 NOTICE (for publication) ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION FOR I. Name: BAILEY’S CHIMNEY CLEANING LLC File No. L-2033288-5 II. The address of the known place of business is: 614 E. Luke Drive, Payson, AZ 85541. III. The name and street address of the Statutory Agent is: William N. Bailey, 614 E. Luke Drive, Payson, AZ 85541. (A) Management of the limited liability company is reserved to the members. The names and addresses of each person who is a member are: William N. Bailey, (x) member, 614 E. Luke Drive, Payson, AZ 85541. 15965: 10/30, 11/3, 11/6/2015 NOTICE OF FILING ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION OF STUDIO 114, LLC An Arizona Limited Liability Company Pursuant to A.R.S. §29-635(C), Notice is hereby given that the Articles of Organization of STUDIO 114, LLC, An Arizona Limited Liability Company, were filed in the Office of the Arizona Corporation Commission for: 1. Name: STUDIO 114, LLC. 2. Registered Office Address: 114 N. Parkwood Lane, Payson, AZ 85541. 3. Statutory Agent: VIRGINIA L. HALL, 114 N. Parkway Lane, Payson, AZ 85541. 4. Management: The management of the Limited Liability Company is reserved to its members. The names and addresses of each per-
LEGAL NOTICES son who is a member are as follows: VIRGINIA L. HALL 114 N. Parkway Lane Payson, AZ 85541 10/30, 11/3, 11/6/15 CNS-2809224# 15967: 10/30 11/10/2015 Solitude Trails Domestic Water Improvement District, P.O. Box 1883, Pine, AZ 85544; (928) 978-0719 NOTICE OF BUDGET AND RATE HEARING FOR MEMBERS OF THE SOLITUDE TRAILS DOMESTIC WATER IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT At this hearing any district member may appear in person or by telephone and be heard in favor or against any proposed revenues, rates, fees, taxes, or proposed expenditures. Date: Saturday November 14 Time: 1:05 P.M. Place: Pine-Strawberry Fire Station Training Room, 6198 W. Hardscrabble Road, Pine, Arizona To Join the Meeting Telephonically, call Teleconference Number 1-877-594-8353 Participant Passcode 20932491# Proposed Budget for 7-1-15 through 6-30-16* Beginning Cash Resources: Cash-Operating Account $11,793 Cash Reserves-Capital Projects and Contingencies $57,731 Total Beginning Cash Available $69,524 Operating Revenues: Solitude Trails Water Sales $32,562 Pine/Strawberry Water Improvement District Water Sales $3,840 Impact Fee $3,000 Late Fees $90 Total Operating Revenues $39,492 Operating Expenses: Water Operation Expenses: Chemicals/Supplies $200 Contract Services-Outsider/Shaffer $280 Depreciation-Water System $10,540 Electricity $1,750 Facility Maintenance $200 Operator-Hours-Above Retainer $450 Operator-Meter Reading $880 Operator-Monitoring/Repairs/Retainer $2,476 Parts for Infrastructure-Water $600 Testing Lab/Regulatory Fees H20 $870 Total Water Operation Expenses $18,246 Board of Director Expenses: Accountant/Annual Review (start in 2016-2017) -0- Elections $300 Insurance-Public Officials Liability $900 Legal Fees $9,871 Total Board of Director Expenses $11,071 Administration Expenses: Administrative Assistant $6,744 Administrative Accounting Conversion $4,000 Computers/ Software/Maintenance $100 Depreciation-Administrative $720 Consulting Services Non- Accounting $2,773 Consulting Services Administrative/ Accounting $6,804 District Manager/ Retainer $21,000 District Manager/ Excess Over Retainer-Req. Bd. OK $6,000 Equipment FacilitiesShared Costs $900 InsuranceGeneral $4,800 Miscellaneous/ Travel $100 Postage $671 Supplies/ Printing- Administrative $677 Website $450 Total Administration Expenses $55,739 Total Operating Expenses $85,056 Net Ordinary Income (Loss) from Operations ($45,564) Other Income/Expense: Interest Income $12 Net Income (loss) ($45,552) Non-Cash Expenses (Depreciation from Above) $11,260 Net-Cash Available Before Depreciation, Capital Expenses, and Carryover Cash to 2016-2017 ($35,232) Capital Expenses: Deep Well Project $3,978 Computer/ Software/File Cabinets/Etc. $4,000 Tank Recoating-interior (do in winter of 2016-2017) -0Total Capital Expenses ($7,978) Targeted Carryover Cash to start of 2016-2017: Cash-Operating Account +$7,254 Cash ReservesCapital Projects and Contingencies +$20,000 SOLITUDE TRAILS DOMESTIC WATER IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT RATES AND FEES SCHEDULE 2015-2016 I Terms “ Billing for month occurs as of the last day of the month “ Payments due the 25th day of the following month “ Late fees will be charged after the due date “ Customer is responsible for payment of all charges by the due date even if a bill is not received via US Mail “ Base charges for water will be applied to all lots with installed im-
LEGAL NOTICES provements II Connection Fees A. Residential Connection $3,000 per unit B. Commercial Connection $6,000 per unit III Availability/Water Usage Fee(s) A. District Residents and use within the District i. Up to 3000 gallons $4.00 Base Charge ii. 3001 to 4000 gallons $4.00 per 1,000 gallons iii. 4001 to 5000 gallons $8.00 per 1,000 gallons iv. 5001 to 6000 gallons $11.00 per 1,000 gallons v. 6001 gallons and over $14.00 per 1,000 gallons B. For use outside the District and for sale to residential haulers i. Up to 3000 gallons $70.00 Base Charge ii. 3001 to 4000 gallons $4.00 per 1,000 gallons iii. 4001 to 5000 gallons $8.00 per 1,000 gallons iv. 5001 to 6000 gallons $10.50 per 1,000 gallons v. 6001 gallons and over $14.00 per 1,000 gallons IV Other I. Account Establishment Fee $100.00 II. Turn Off Due to Delinquency or Customer Request $50.00 III. Turn On After Delinquency of Customer Request $100.00 IV. Meter Re-Read $50.00 V. Security Deposit of Renter (refundable) $200.00 VI. NSF Checks $50.00 Notes: Meter Removal and Test - for a meter removed at the request of the customer to be tested for accuracy: $50 plus actual charge for the operator and test facility if found to be within 3% of the correct reading. Water for non-residential uses (road construction, soil compaction, dust control, etc.) and for assistance of other water short customers or communities may be made available by the Board of Directors at negotiated bulk prices, but may be restricted depending on drought and aquifer conditions. Late Fees-payments received after due date: $15 minimum or 10% of the TOTAL outstanding balance of the account at each month end for a period of four months of delinquency, at which time a lien is filed on the property. Thereafter a later fee of 2% will be charged on the outstanding balance at the end of each monthly billing period. If after four months, the account balance exceeds the lien amount or if a reasonable payment plan is not agreed to by the District Manager, the water meter will be shut off (NOTE: Monthly charges based on the rate schedule will continue as long as a water meter is connected to the property improvements). Revised 8/28/15 1596l: 10/23, 10/30, 11/6, 11/13/2015; TS/File 406112.10192 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust recorded on JANUARY 13, 2010, in INSTRUMENT NO. 2010-000349 in the Office of the County Recorder of GILA County, Arizona - NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF PIONEER TITLE AGENCY, INC., 421 S. BEELINE HWY, PAYSON, ARIZONA on DECEMBER 15, 2015 at 10:00 A.M. of said day: That portion of Block 46, of GLOBE TOWNSITE, according to the plat of record in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, recorded in Map No. 63, described as follows: Beginning at the Northeast corner of Block 46; THENCE Westerly along the Southerly side of North Street, 37 ½ feet; THENCE Southerly parallel with Deveraux Street, 112 ½ feet; THENCE Easterly parallel with North Street 37 ½ feet to the Westerly side of Deveraux Street; THENCE Northerly along the Westerly side of Deveraux Street 112 ½ feet to the Place of Beginn-
LEGAL NOTICES ing. EXCEPT title to any mine of gold, silver, cinnabar or copper or to any valid claim or possession held under the existing laws of Congress. Purported Property Address: 340 NORTH ST., GLOBE, AZ. Tax Parcel Number: 208-02-317. Original Principal Balance: $48,500.00 Original/Current Beneficiary: DEBBIE L. EVANS, 8211 E. ALBANY RD., MESA, AZ 85207. Original/Current Trustor: RICKIE R. BARELA and DORINA L. FLORES, 1185 N. GLOBE ST., GLOBE, AZ 85501. Said Trustee’s Sale will be held without covenant or warranty express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the unpaid principal balance of $37,680.04 plus monies due as provided under the terms of said Deed of Trust, plus fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trust created by said Deed of Trust. Dated: SEPTEMBER 2, 2015. Current Trustee: Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation. 580 East Wilcox Drive, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635. (520) 458-3500 Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation, as Trustee. By: /s/ Shannon E. Copp, Assistant Secretary. Manner of Trustee Qualification: Escrow Agent. Name of Regulating Agency: Arizona Department of Financial Institutions. STATE OF ARIZONA, COUNTY OF MARICOPA. The foregoing instrument was acknowledged before me on September 11, 2015, by Shannon E. Copp, Assistant Secretary of Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation. By: /s/ Erin C. Klabough, Notary Public. My Commission Expires: January 7, 2018.
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of housing discrimination call the Arizona Attorney General’s Office
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Sell it fast!
You’ll find a receptive audience for sales with an ad in the Payson Roundup classifieds!
CALL THE PAYSON ROUNDUP at 474-5251 or drop in 708 N. BEELINE
PAYSON ROUNDUP
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2015
9B
YARD SALE GUIDE Weekend of October 30 - November 1 1. 8248 Mescalero Rd. (Mesa Del), Fri. Oct. 30 from 8am to 3pm & Sat. Oct. 31 from 8am to 2pm: LARGE YARD SALE! 2. 1501 W. Country Club Dr. (Accross from Payson Golf Course) Sat. Oct. 31 from 7:30 to 2pm:
HUGE SALE:
Decorator Items, Skinny Christmas Trees and Christmas Goodies, Large Women’s Clothing, Pedestal Sink, Work Bench, Storage Cabinets, LOTS OF FUN ITEMS, DON’T MISS OUT! 3. 404 E. Evergreen, (Payson); Saturday Only Oct. 31. from 8am to 2pm: Misc. Houshold Goods, Lamps, Table, Puzzles, Games and More!
TELL
‘EM YOU SAW IT IN THE ROUNDUP!
1
3
2
Payson Roundup SPORTS Friday, October 30, 2015
10B
Family teams up for a successful antelope hunt The Arizona big game hunting seasons are well underway with the archery and rifle antelope hunts throughout the state having been completed. The central corridor of Arizona from Kingman on the west to Springerville on the east is the geographic area that contains the majority of these fleet footed mammals that roam the high plains of the West. The hunting units in this area have a very limited population that makes drawing a tag very diffi-
cult in the lottery drawing. It is possible to wait 20 years to be drawn in some of the more popular units, which have true trophy animals. Twelve-year-old, Logan Plain, received his permit by a unique statute in the Arizona Game and Fish regulations that allows for a direct relative to legally sign over a tag to a youth hunter within the family. His mother, Jessica, drew a tag for Unit 3A the previous year and harvested a great antelope. Defying all odds, Jessica
Division 4 Football Power Rankings The top 25 (of 42) teams in the Arizona Interscholastic Association Division 4 high school football rankings with Keith Morris’ opinion on their chances of making the playoffs. The six section champions and 10 at-large teams based on the power rankings earn berths in the 16-team state tournament, which begins Nov. 7.
Locks
Rating 1. Yuma Catholic 20.0090 2. Show Low 19.1018 3. Pusch Ridge 13.7063 4. Lake Havasu 13.6850 5. Snowflake 12.9083 6. NW Christian 12.1255 7. Estrella Foothills 11.1573 8. Flowing Wells 9.0949 9. River Valley 9.0523 10. Casa Grande 7.3318
Avg. Opp. W-L Rating Tonight’s Opponent 9-0 3.8280 at No. 25 Youngker 9-0 3.8651 No. 14 Payson 8-1 3.0893 at No. 29 Rio Rico 9-0 -2.4956 No. 9 River Valley 8-1 0.7247 at No. 16 Winslow 8-1 0.5165 No. 7 Estrella Foothills 8-1 -0.4269 at No. 6 NW Christian 8-1 -2.1414 at No. 24 Walden Grove 8-1 -1.7795 at No. 4 Lake Havasu 8-1 -3.8923 at No. 30 Coolidge
Likely In 11. Blue Ridge 12. Pueblo Magnet 13. Dysart 14. Payson
6.9465 5.0954 4.9498 4.7491
6-3 6-3 6-3 6-3
4.3954 0.1279 0.1405 0.4375
at No. 34 Page at No. 41 Santa Rita No. 22 Glendale at No. 2 Show Low
On the Bubble 15. Coronado 16. Winslow 17. Combs 18. Mohave 19. Thatcher
4.1237 3.9094 3.7368 0.9927 0.9243
7-2 5-4 4-5 4-5 6-3
-3.1013 3.4285 6.1140 3.4665 -4.1448
No. 20 Florence No. 5 Snowflake No. 33 Fountain Hills at No. 36 Kingman Acad. No. 35 Douglas
Longshots 20. Florence 21. Sahuarita 22. Glendale 23. Wickenburg 24. Walden Grove 25. Youngker
0.5177 0.1353 -0.0662 -0.2763 -1.2736 -1.3451
4-5 4-5 4-5 4-5 4-5 3-6
2.9373 1.4887 1.9941 1.2548 1.2086 2.6316
at No. 15 Coronado at No. 42 Catalina Magnet at No. 13 Dysart at No. 38 Kingman No. 8 Flowing Wells No. 1 Yuma Catholic
Football finale tonight From page 1B berths. None of the six sections has a team outside the top 16 entering the final game that has a chance of winning its section. What’s interesting is that two teams that beat Payson are ranked below the Longhorns. Winslow is No. 16 and San Tan Valley Combs No. 17. And a team that Payson beat, Blue Ridge, has the same record as the Longhorns and is ranked ahead of them. Combs hosts No. 33 Fountain Hills tonight. The Falcons are just one spot ahead of Page, the team Payson just beat. So don’t expect them to benefit much from a win. Winslow hosts Snowflake. No. 15 Scottsdale Coronado (7-2) hosts No. 20 Florence (4-5). All that’s certain is that a win at Show Low would be a
huge upset and guarantee the Longhorns a return to the state tournament. A loss and they’re still likely in. But it’s all just an educated guess. I won’t be shocked at whatever happens with the rankings. If the playoffs began this week, Payson would be at Pusch Ridge for a first-round game next week. Other possible first-round opponents include Show Low, No. 4 Lake Havasu, Snowflake and Yuma Catholic. All four rounds of playoff games are scheduled for Saturdays. The first two rounds are at 6 p.m. at the high seed. The semifinals are at 2 and 6 p.m. Nov. 21 at Phoenix Arcadia High. The championship game is set for 6 p.m. Nov. 28 at Scottsdale Chaparral High.
Smith wins in men’s golf Jessie Smith shot a net 65 to win the A Flight crown in the Payson Men’s Golf Association’s Individual Low Net Tournament at Payson Golf Course on Oct. 21. Jim Kennedy (68) was the runner-up and Terry Lindsey (69) third. Jim Dalgleish won a scorecard tiebreaker with Lou Crabtree for
the B Flight crown. Both finished with net 67s. Dave Rutter (69) finished third. Herb Sherman was closest to the pin on both holes 8 (13 feet 5 inches) and 17 (8-5 1/2). The other closest-to-the-pin winners were: Tim Ernst (No. 2, 20-0), Lou Mangiello (No. 5, 16-6) and Rutter (No. 14, 7-5).
same valley. Logan and drew the same tag again his father stalked withthis year and signed the outdoors in 300 yards where he paperwork so that her under the rim made a clean shot and son could have the permit. downed his antelope, Logan had plenty of which turned out to be help from his parents, even bigger than the one his mom harvested the Jeremy and Jessica Plain, both grandfathers previous year. Ernie Meeske and Glenn His rifle was a 7 MM Plain, also accompanied magnum that is a famby his younger brother Dennis Pirch ily heirloom that had been handed down in Trevor on many preseason scouting trips the Plain family for five to the unit attempting to locate generations and no doubt will some of the trophy antelope that be used again on many other big roam the high plains north of the game hunts. Mogollon Rim. Logan is a graduate of the Again, as it is with many who Arizona Game and Fish hunter live in the Rim Country, big game education program that teachhunting is a family event where es gun safety and fair chase everyone gets involved with the hunting tactics. With the certifiscouting, glassing, camping and cate 10-year-olds are allowed to legally hunt big game in Arizona. the actual hunt. This was the 10th big game On opening day, they spotted the buck they had seen on animal Logan has harvested a previous scouting trip in the since graduating from the class.
Logan Plain with the antelope he shot. For further information on the gun safety programs available, go to the Web and type in azgfd. gov. Hunting and fishing trips in the outdoors can be a valuable
Submitted photo
family experience with a chance for lessons and memories to be made that will last a lifetime. This weekend enjoy the Arizona outdoors, God’s creation.