The Wayne & Garfield County Insider March 16, 2023

Page 2

Wayne County Commission

Mar. 6, 2023

WAYNE CO. - The first commission meeting for the month of March was held on March 6, 2023. Commissioners Blackburn, Brian and Cook were in attendance. The agenda was revised to add vouchers and a closed session at the end of the meeting. The minutes from the February 21, 2023, Commission meeting were accepted and approved. The first order of business was an update on the Hanksville Diversion Dam and the new contract with Jackson Excavation, which was presented by Garrick Wilden with Jones & DeMille Engineering. In order for the farmers in Hanksville to receive their irrigation water this year, it will again need to be pumped. Last year, Jackson Excavation was the only bidder on the project. Jones and DeMille would like to extend that contract for this year because Jackson knows the pro-

Wayne Commission Cont'd on A5

The 2023 Sterling Scholar Awards will be

Held March 30 at Southern Utah University

Boulder Planning Commission

by Tessa Barkan

March 2023

BOULDER - The March 2023 Boulder Planning Commission (PC) meeting began with a Q&A with the Town Planner on using the Commercial Development Standards Worksheet so that the PC will be able to utilize it smoothly in the future. The purpose of the worksheet is to make clear, defensible decisions based on pre-decided factors that were chosen by the PC. The Zoning Administrator (ZA) first reviews applications, making sure that all necessary boxes are checked and all required materials have been submitted, then they provide a recommendation to the PC. The PC then considers the application, using a rating scale between -2 to +2 on a series of factors.

CEDAR CITY -

Southern Utah University is preparing for the annual Sterling Scholar competition on March 30, 2023.

One hundred and eighty one students from nineteen

Join Capitol Reef N.P. Staff in Fruit Tree Planting Volunteer Service Project; Multiple Dates

Courtesy National Park Service Capitol Reef National Park is seeking volunteers to assist in planting fruit trees to rehabilitate the historic Fruita orchards.

CAPITOLREEF N.P. -

Capitol Reef National

Park is seeking volunteers to assist in planting fruit trees to rehabilitate the historic Fruita orchards. This is part of a multi-year project to preserve the quality and character of the orchards; and ensure they can be enjoyed in the future.

Join park staff in planting fruit trees in the Cook Orchard, located along Utah State Route 24 across the street from the Fruita Schoolhouse.

Volunteers will help plant sweet and sour cherries on March 30th and April 6th.

Several heirloom apple varieties will be planted on April 12th. Volunteers should bring gloves, work-

type boots and clothing, sun protection, food and water. Shovels and other tools for planting will be provided.

The service project will begin at 9 a.m. with an orientation. Afterwards, volunteers and park employees will split into small groups to start planting.

Volunteers are asked to park at the Fruita Schoolhouse, 0.8 mile east of the Capitol Reef Visitor Center along Utah State Route 24. Volunteers will be signed up as single-day volunteers with the National Park Service.

Please contact Angelina Guerra at angelina_guerra@nps.gov or 435-425-4116 with any questions.

—National Park Service

high schools will meet on SUU's campus to complete the final round of judging. The day’s events will include competitive interviews followed by an Awards Program in the

Utah Wildlife Federation Holds First Celebrate Utah Wildlife Contest

UTAH - If you live in Utah, chances are high you have had at least one wildlife encounter. From the bighorn sheep of Zion National Park to the countless shorebirds of the Great Salt Lake to the chickadee in your backyard. No matter how you encounter wildlife in our state, we want to hear about it. And the way you can share that experience can be as varied as the species we hope to hear about.

The Utah Wildlife Federation and mural artist Chris Peterson are holding the first Celebrate Utah Wildlife contest with 63 cash prizes for people ranging from 4 to 104. It is as simple as writing a story, taking a picture or making a video.

“There are a lot of ways to celebrate our experiences with wildlife. We want people from across the state to show us how

Celebrate Wildlife Cont'd on A3

evening. This statewide academic competition recognizes the achievements of Utah’s high school seniors in the following fifteen categories: Agri-

culture Science, Business and Marketing, Computer Technology, Dance, English, Family and Consumer Sterling Scholars

Cont'd on B1

Opinion

A 0 is inapplicable or neutral, a +1 meets the minimum requirements, a +2 is above the requirements, a -1 misses the mark, and a -2 is far from the mark. This provides a means Boulder Planning Cont'd on B3

Don’t Know What You Got, ‘Til It’s Gone

Record (DR) on the Calf Creek Recreation Site (CCRS) Deferred Maintenance and Improvements Project.

Decision

CALF CREEK - Just

so you know, a small group of Escalante and Boulder residents are appealing the BLM/GSENM Decision of Record (DR) on the

Calf Creek Recreation Site (CCRS) Deferred Maintenance and Improvements Project. Our primary reasons for the appeal are that the threefold expansion of

parking areas would literally pave over most of the historical features, designed by acclaimed Utah CCRS DR Appeal Cont'd on A6

BOXHOLDER ALL content for THE WAYNE & GARFIELD COUNTY INSIDER MUST BE submitted by FRIDAY AT NOON to be included in the following Thursday edition of the paper. PRE-SORT STANDARD PAID RICHFIELD, UTAH PERMIT No. 122 St. Patrick’s Day is an enchanted time—a day to begin transforming winter’s dreams into summer’s magic. —Adrienne Cook REGIONAL WEATHER FORECAST FOR SOME BUT NOT ALL REGIONS REPRESENTED IN OUR NEWSPAPER COVERAGE AREA THURS. MAR. 16 - WED. MAR. 22 Snow showers are in the forecast again this week, with a 35-60% chance every day from Sat-Weds. Highs in the 30s; lows in the teens and 20s. Winds variable from 10-17 mph. Thursday, March 16, 2023 Issue # 1504 insiderutah.com UPCOMING EVENTS... St. Patrick's Day 2023 March 17, 2023 **Weather is subject to Change Insider The Serving Wayne & Garfield Counties, Utah Loa • Fremont • Lyman • Bicknell • Teasdale • Torrey • Grover • Fruita • Caineville • Hanksville Panguitch • Panguitch Lake • Hatch • Antimony • Bryce • Tropic • Henrieville • Cannonville • Escalante • Boulder 2023 Panguitch Quilt Walk Registration Opens April 1, 2023 QuiltWalk.org
You
Insider
Escalante and
the BLM/
A small group of
Boulder residents are appealing
GSENM
of
Courtesy Sterling Scholars The 2023 Sterling Scholar award nominees for Panguitch High School are (From L to R Back) Treyson Prince, Krishna Shah, Tucker Chappell, Theron Evans, Spencer Talbot, (From L to Right Front) Alexis Allen, Jaci Draper, Ryley Veater, Addison Finch, and Lexie Palmer.

Goings on...

Meet New Utah State University Associate Professor, Kate Chappell

WAYNE CO. -

Meet Kate Chappell, the new Utah State University Extension Associate Professor and the Create Better Health Ambassador for the Wayne County office. Chappell was raised in rural Utah and lives for all things food related.

Where to See Wild Swans Migrating Through Utah in March

Courtesy Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Chappell earned her first bachelor’s degree at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) in Hyde Park, New York in 2010 studying Culinary Arts and Restaurant Management. Upon graduation, she returned to Utah and worked full time as a chef and caterer until changing careers to spend more time with her children. She then earned her second bachelor’s degree in Nutrition & Dietetics from Utah State University (USU). She is currently working on her master’s degree in Dietetic Administration from USU, and she has 18 credit hours left.

Courtesy Utah State University Extension

Chappell has lived in Wayne County for 13 years and enjoys the small town life. She likes reading books and learning new things. She has worked for the USU Extension office with Create Better Health as a nutrition ambassador. She’s also a social media content creator since 2017. She started a local program in Wayne County called “Buy Dinner for Your Neighbor.” This is a partnership between Royal’s Food Town and the Wayne County Food Bank, and the program has donated over 1,000 pounds of food to the food pantry, which also includes a healthy recipe kit. Her social media work includes a weekly recipe series called “Around the World in 80 Plates,” where the character on her Kids Create Utah blog explores a different country and learns about the foods from that place and physical activates that the local children from that area may be participating in.

Chappell has led an interesting life so far. She’s held a variety of jobs that has allowed her to meet a diverse range of people. Whether she is working in a junkyard, restaurant or fighting wildfires on a helicopter crew, she’s never stopped looking for new things to learn. A couple of fun facts about Chappell are that she was one of the first female high school wrestlers in the state of Utah and that she was a Sterling Scholar in Consumer Science.

Her future plans are to travel around to places that serve delicious food and to eventually rebuild a vintage Volkswagen Beetle to race across Baja, Mexico.

Welcome, Kate Chappell, and good luck in your new position with USU.

New Girl Scout Troop Coming to Wayne County

If you want to see migrating wild swans this time of year, two spots in northern Utah (Salt Creek Waterfowl Management Area and Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge) are great places to see these magnificent birds as they wing their way through the state in March. To celebrate the swans’ return, the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources also held a special event on March 11 at the DWR’s Eccles Wildlife Education Center and Hasenyager Preserve in Farmington, Utah.

UTAH - If you want to see migrating wild swans this time of year, two spots in northern Utah are great places to see these magnificent birds as they wing their way through the state in March.

Both tundra swans and trumpeter swans stop in Utah's wetlands for some much-needed rest and refueling during their migration north in the spring. Their spring migration takes the swans from wintering grounds in California to nesting sites in Canada and Alaska.

“Swans are amazing birds to see in flight,” Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Northern Region Outreach Manager Mark Hadley said. “You’ll have no problem spotting them—they’re huge and almost pure white in color. I encourage you to take the opportunity to get out and see them during their migration this spring!”

Swan viewing at the Salt Creek Waterfowl Management Area

The Compton’s Knoll viewing area—a small hill on the southeast side of the Salt Creek Waterfowl Management Area—is a perfect place to view swans and other birds. The hill places you above the marsh, providing fantastic viewing opportunities for those who have binoculars or spotting scopes. Two bird viewing blinds are also located at the bottom of the hill.

The Salt Creek WMA is about 12 miles northwest of Corinne. Except for Compton’s Knoll, the rest of the WMA is closed until September. Please remain behind closed gates and only view the swans from Compton’s Knoll or the two bird viewing blinds at

the bottom of the hill.

Swan viewing at the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge

Managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the refuge—and its Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge Auto Tour Route—is another great place to see migrating swans this spring. It is located about 12 miles west of Brigham City.

To reach the auto tour route, exit I-15 at exit 363, and travel west on West Forest Street until you come to a large parking area with an observation tower. Stop at the tower to look for swans in the marsh to the north. You can then drive along the 12-mile auto tour route. The route will take you on a journey through the heart of the refuge. You could see thousands of swans in the wetlands along the driving route.

Swan event at the DWR’s Eccles Wildlife Education Center

The DWR’s George S. and Dolores Dore’ Eccles Wildlife Education Center and Hasenyager Preserve held an event on March 11 at 1157 S. Waterfowl Way in Farmington, where attendees could learn more about these birds, participate in fun activities and go on a nature walk.

The DWR’s Eccles Wildlife Education Center is part of the Farmington Bay Waterfowl Management Area. The WMA is closed to vehicle traffic from March 1 until September, but the education center is open Tuesday to Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

—Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Correction:

Name Correction

In our March 9, 2023, issue, in the article "WHS Girls Basketball Team Wins at 1A Region 20," we ran the name of one of the players as "Kate Taylor."

Her name is in fact Kate Torgerson.

Apologies to Kate Torgerson for the mistake, and congrats to you on your win.

WAYNE CO. - A new Girl Scout troop is coming to Wayne County, with their first meeting having taken place on Wednesday, March 15th at the Loa Civic Center.

Dani May and MaKayla Barton are the troop leaders and are excited that they have 15 girls signed up already. They will meet twice a month from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Wednesdays. The girls who have signed up so far range in age form Kindergarten to 4th grade. Dani May would like to expand the age range up to include those girls who are in 5th through 7th grades.

Girl Scouting builds girls of courage, confidence and character—the three C's—who make the world a better place. There are four pillars of Girl Scouting, and they include the "Go-Getter," "the Innovator," the "Risk-taker" and the "Leader." Girl Scouting helps transform these ideas into action, and turns the girls' questions into adventure and grows their confidence through practice. Girls can earn badges and, best of all, they sell cookies, which can be purchased now. You can find a QR code that can be scanned to purchase cookies—and Troop #1647 will get credit for this years' sales—if you are out visiting the following businesses: Royal’s Marinia’s, Ellett’s, Loa Builders and the Sweetgrass. Dani May will also have cookies to purchase later in the spring, but varieties will be limited. With more than 60 million Girl Scouts and alumnae,

cheer this new troop on.

—Lisa Jeppson

Publisher: Erica Walz

Layout & Graphic Design: Emily Leach

Reporter: Tessa Barkan

Reporter: Amiee Maxwell Reporter: Kadi Franson

Reporter: Lisa Jeppson

Reporter: Ian Marynowski

Payroll: Trudy Stowe

-

Insider is a weekly community newspaper delivered each Thursday to households in Wayne and Garfield counties, Utah. The entire contents of this newspaper are © 2022 The Insider/Snapshot Multimedia, LLC. The Insider reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement or submitted content items. Articles submitted by independent writers may or may not be the opinion of The Insider. Please feel free to contact us for advertising rates and with any questions regarding content submissions. We prefer content and ads submitted by email to snapshot@live.com but we will accept your information any way you can get it to us. Subscriptions to The Insider are available outside of Wayne and Garfield counties for $35 for 26 weeks, $60 per year. Content and ad deadline: Friday at Noon Have a news tip or story idea? Email us at snapshot@live.com or call us at 435-826-4400 P.O. Box 105 Escalante, UT 84726 435-826-4400 email snapshot@live.com TheInsider A2 The Insider March 16, 2023
Local columnists: Mack Oetting
FYI Panguitch The
Kate Chappell is the new Utah State University Extension Associate Professor and the Create Better Health Ambassador for the Wayne County office. let’s Courtesy Girl Scout Troop #1647 Troop #1647 in Wayne County meets twice a month at the Loa Civic Center on Wednesdays from 3-5 p.m.
—Insider

Local Playwright will be Keynote Speaker for Upcoming Lit Jam Event at Escalante High School on March 21

ESCALANTE - Ray-

mond King Shurtz has deep roots in southern Utah, with generations of family ties in the beautiful rural town of Boulder and having graduated from Escalante High School. During his teen years, he grew up in Phoenix and spent summers on the family farm with cousins and grandparents. Shurtz will be the keynote speaker for an upcoming Lit Jam event at Escalante High School on March 21, 2023.

Raymond’s website biography states:

"I am a playwright and performer. During my twenties, I was a gymnastics coach, and practiced theatre when I could. From there, I opened a theatre called 'Playwright's Workshop Theatre,' and was the artistic director for twelve years. During my tenure, I managed to produce about eighty new plays. The

plays I produced were always new plays, cultivated out of a program I called 'The Edge Project'. I also taught acting, playwriting, and facilitated a directing program. I was also able to produce my own plays, several of them now published. I also acted when I could, and lived a bohemian lifestyle, as living the life of a playwright and artistic director often becomes. At the end of Playwright's Workshop Theatre, I got a job teaching theatre and film in an arts high school for the arts. I taught at Metro Arts for ten years, which brought me full circle back to performing and producing again. I just finished my show, 'Bohemian Cowboy' in Los Angeles, and am heading back home to Boulder, (Utah not Colorado)." In 2009, Shurtz produced and performed his one man show, "Bohemian Cowboy" at The Elephant

Theatre, which was the "pick of the week" in LA Weekly. He subsequently performed it approximately seventy-five times in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, southern Utah, and twenty-three shows in Austin, Texas.

Shurtz was described by a theater critic as a maverick with a quirky sense of drama and a flair for the unexpected, who then added, “few people in Phoenix have bigger hearts or more compassionate natures. He loves people and thrives on bringing out creativity in others. In addition to founding theater companies, writing plays, composing music and songs, he is a mentor to young people.”

We feel truly fortunate to have Raymond King Shurtz to share his vast theatrical and literary experiences and talents with our local students.

Celebrate Wildlife:

There are a lot of ways to celebrate our experiences with wildlife. We want people from across the state to show us how the wild inhabitants of our state inspire you or your family. Entries from this contest will become part of an exhibit that will go on tour across the state. It’s all meant to show how we connect with wildlife in Utah.

Celebrate Wildlife

Cont'd from A1

the wild inhabitants of our state inspire you or your family,” said Chris Peterson, an artist working to get wildlife murals up in all 29 counties in Utah as part of the Utah Wildlife Walls Project. “Entries from this contest will become part of an exhibit that will go on tour across the state. It’s all meant to show how we connect with wildlife in Utah.”

More than $10,000 in cash prizes will handed out in the form of $250 awards for first-place and dozens more for the best submissions across three age groups: children, teens and adults. Submissions can include wildlife-related art, writing, photography, video, digital art, digital storytelling and music. Entries must be submitted by May 10, 2023 to be considered.

The Celebrate Utah Wildlife contest is made possible, in part, with funding from the Hansen Sisters Foundation, and the Utah STEM Action Center. The digital art and digital storytelling categories are funded through a Community Impact grant from the Center.

Utah Wildlife Walls will be at the International Sportsmen’s Expo March 16-19 talking to people about their wildlife expe-

The

first Celebrate Utah Wildlife contest with 63 cash prizes for people ranging from 4 to 104.

riences, painting wildlife cutouts, and helping people submit to the contest. Harvey the Storybus will on hand Saturday and Sunday mornings for people to record their wildlife stories and create an entry for the contest. Visit www.CelebrateUtahWildlife.org for more information on the contest and Utah Wildlife Walls project.

“Utah’s wild creatures need to be celebrated for all the wonder, awe and smiles they bring to our faces,” said Brett Prettyman, chair of the Utah Wildlife Federation board. “We hope by seeing how others celebrate our wildlife that more people will be inspired to get out and create their own experiences.”

The goal of the Utah

Wildlife Federation is to bring the many diverse voices of this unique state together to fashion a collaborative spirit in securing the future of wildlife and outdoor recreation, while providing the best practices to steward our natural resources for generations to come.

—Utah Wildlife Federation

A3 March 16, 2023 The Insider
Courtesy Utah Wildlife Federation Utah Wildlife Federation and mural artist Chris Peterson are holding the Courtesy Karen Munson Local playwright Raymond King Shurtz will be the keynote speaker for an upcoming Lit Jam event at Escalante High School (EHS) on March 21, 2023. Shurtz has deep roots in southern Utah and himself graduated from EHS.

Wills, Trusts, and More

How Do I Disinherit a Family Member?

tHe lAuGhiNg pOiNt!!

Line Dance

Deciding who gets your assets after you die is difficult enough, but what if you want to make sure someone IS NOT included? Even though the word “disinherit” may conjure up images of family discord, there are many reasons one may wish to do it. Perhaps one of your children is a wealthy entrepreneur and another has special needs, or perhaps you are in a second marriage and want to provide for your children from a previous marriage—but not your ex-spouse. Disinheriting anyone other than members of your nuclear family is easy—just leave them out of your will. But states have special protections for spouses and children.

Spouses. If you live or have lived in a community property state like Arizona and Nevada, the law assumes that your spouse automatically owns half of everything you both earned during your marriage. There are ways to define money that is yours, separate from the community property, to make sure it goes where you want when you die. However, in order to do that, both spouses must sign a written agreement that explains which assets belong to each partner separately. There are rules that may apply when attempting to separate commingled funds, that is, funds of each spouse that have been deposited into a joint account. Therefore, it is important to consult an attorney to make sure

that there is no question or misunderstanding that may cause conflict when you least expect or need it.

Other states give your spouse the right to claim a prescribed portion of your estate, no matter what your will provides, or even if you have a will at all. In these cases, it is impossible to completely disinherit a spouse, unless your spouse is willing to sign a marital agreement waiving his or her right to your estate.

Ex-spouses. Your exspouse has no claim to the assets of your estate, unless he or she has some claim against your estate before you die, such as a court order that has awarded a portion of a retirement benefit or pension. It would depend on how the assets were separated at the time of the divorce. Significantly, insurance policies with an exspouse inadvertently left as beneficiary take precedence over a will that leaves those same assets to another.

Children. In most cases, you can disinherit a child or grandchild simply by stating so in your will. However, simply omitting to mention a child does not automatically disinherit a child. The omitted child can contest the will if you do not make your wishes clear. Most states have laws that protect against accidental disinheritance; for example, if a child was born after you drafted your will. Again, unless you specifically state that the child is disinherited, the child will be legally entitled to the same share as the other children.

PANGUITCH OFFICE AT 46 NORTH MAIN STREET TO SERVE CLIENTS IN AND AROUND GARFIELD COUNTY.

Jeffery J. McKenna is a local attorney whose practice has been focused on Estate Planning for over 20 years. He is licensed and serves clients in Utah, Arizona and Nevada. He is a shareholder at the law firm of Barney, McKenna and Olmstead.

If you have questions you would like addressed in these articles, please feel free to contact him at 435 628-1711 or jmckenna@barney-mckenna.com or visit the firm’s website at WWW.BARNEYMCKENNA.COM, he would enjoy hearing from you.

Disinheritance is a personal issue. One who wishes to disinherit a family member may find that there are other effective options, such as putting assets in a trust for that heir, with a trustee making the decisions of what the money can, and can not, be used for. It is wise to consult an estate planning attorney before making decisions that affect the distribution of your estate and the harmony of your family, once you are gone.

A guy asks a girl to go to a dance. She agrees, and he decides to rent a suit. The rental has a long line, so he waits and waits, and finally he gets his suit.

He decides to buy flowers, so he goes to the flower shop. The flower shop has a long line, so he waits and waits, until he finally buys flowers. He picks up the girl and they go to the dance. There is a long line into the dance, so they wait and wait.

Finally, they get into the dance, and the guy offers to get the girl a drink. She asks for punch, so he goes to the drink table, and there is no punch line.

Vet Office

A man takes his sick Chihuahua to the veterinarian. They’re immediately taken back to a room.

Soon, a Labrador walks in, sniffs the Chihuahua for 10 minutes and leaves. Then a cat comes in, stares at the Chihuahua for 10 minutes and leaves. Finally, the doctor comes in, prescribes some medicine and hands the man a $250 bill.

“This must be a mistake,” the man says. “I’ve been here only 20 minutes!”

“No mistake,” the doctor says. “It’s $100 for the lab test, $100 for the cat scan and $50 for the medicine.”

THEME:

Rain, Rain, Go Away

“Oh, no!” the kangaroo groaned to her friend, the rabbit. “The forecast calls for rain.”

“What’s the problem with that?” asked the rabbit. “We could use some rain.”

“Sure,” the kangaroo said. “But that means my kids will have to play inside all day!”

Shower Thought

When we're young, we sneak out of our houses to go to parties. When we're old, we sneak out of parties to go home.

PUNishment

A bear walks into a restaurant and says, “I want a grilled…cheese.” The waiter says “Why the big pause?” The bear replies, “I don’t know. I was born with them.”

sudoku

To Play: Complete the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9

This week's answers on B5

Santa ____, Orange County

24. Multicolored horse

25. *Rand Paul's title, abbr.

28. Youngster

30. *Type of spinner popular in the late 2010s

35. Between duet and quartet

37. Newspaper piece

39. Pope's court

40. Bohemian

41. *Tonya and Harley Quinn to Margot Robbie, e.g.

43. *Like Millie Bobby Brown and friends in "Stranger Things"

44. Prows

46. Vaulting prop

47. Fencer's blade

48. *Animated story of Elsa and Anna

50. Greek salad ingredient

1. Having the means

2. Land of Israel

3. *____-cutting, broadcast TV phenomenon

4. Opposite of alpha

5. Not owner 6. Something ____

Frame job

45. Not often

49. *Amal Clooney ____ Alamuddin

51. Naturally footless 54. Japanese cartoon art

56. Expressionless

57. Junk e-mail

58. Hindu serpent deity

59. Singer-songwriter Redding

60. Item on Santa's list

61. Acidic kind of apple

62. A fan of 63. *Plant in Zach Galifianakis' 2019 movie

64. Those not opposed

67. *Popular meme move

A4 The Insider March 16, 2023
The 2010s ACROSS 1. Necktie alternative 6. Finish line 9. Show of appreciation 13. Biotic community 14. Hula dancer's necklace 15. House duty 16. Sofia Costanza Brigida Villani Scicolone's stage last name 17. International distress signal 18. Hogwarts professor, part werewolf 19. *"Avengers: ____," second-highest grossing movie of all time 21. *Annexed Black Sea peninsula 23.
52.
53.
55. Good times 57.
whistle-blower 61.
streamer 65. BBQ
66.
(2 words) 68. Beneficiary 69. Anti-seniors sentiment 70. Ides mo. 71. Bone hollow 72. Prepare potatoes 73. Tide's backward flow 74. City in France DOWN
Make #26 Down
Look through a book
*Global surveillance
*Swedish audio
spot
Words at the altar
Night Fever" music
Operatic
12.
15. Healthcare facility 20. *Bill de Blasio, e.g. 22. England's airforce 24. Recite rapidly (2 words)
Walking stick 26. Fielding mistake 27. Part of TNT 29. *BTS' genre
7. Opposite of paleo 8. "Saturday
9. Pal 10. Between trot and gallop 11.
solo
Actor Sean
25.
Devils,
ners
opener
31. *Home to Blue
2015 NCAA win-
32. Complain 33. Downy duck 34. Policeman's shocker 36. Court of law
38. Mark for omission 42.
on B5
Solution

Weddings

Dasse- Stephenson

Old man Winter is sure doing his best to let the country know who is boss. All over the country, with all of the snow, there has been a lot of damage due to flooding. California is suffering the most of it, with storm after storm going through the state and no letup in sight. California’s 20-year drought is easing but at a big cost, with all of the flooding that is going on. Even Panguitch is under flood watch; the 5 o’clock news showed flooding here. Pat and I drove around looking for damage but couldn’t find any, but the river is up more than we have seen. Near our home, we looked at that stream, which is usually dry, and it has quite a bit flowing in it. It looks like the city has built up the banks so that if there is flooding, it will flow into the fields. We drove down the River Lane, and I have never seen that water so high. It will go a long way in filling the Piute Reservoir.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day. It is tomorrow, but better early than late. Salt Lake City had their St. Patrick’s Day parade last Saturday. I guess it is because the day falls on a Friday. Chicago puts green dye in their river water to celebrate.

I am writing this week’s letter in the daylight. Daylight saving time is finally here. It has been a long four months of seeing it getting dark at 5 o’clock. Yesterday, sunset was at 6:30, and tonight, it is at 7:30. Utah is one of 27 states that wants to stay on daylight saving time, but you have to have all of the states that surround you that want to change before it can happen. We moved all of our clocks ahead on Saturday morning and went to bed an hour earlier, and it made it easy to get up on Sunday morning.

Winter is having its last fling because on Monday the 20th, it will be spring. Hopefully, it will get a little warmer, and the wind won’t blow.

Believe it or not but the committee that sets the sewing classes for the Quilt Walk Festival have already done their work. The classes will be available for signing up within the next week or so [registration begins April 1]. Now is the time to sign up for classes; they will fill up fast. Pioneer home tours are also part of the Quilt Walk Festival entertainment. The charge for the home tour is $5.00 per person, and all the money still goes to the Sub for Santa fund. Those of you who have red brick, pioneer homes you would like to share, please contact Pat Oetting at 676-2418 and volunteer. It is a lot of work, but the satisfaction you will get will be worth it! Besides, it is a springtime

house cleaning activity and a great fundraiser.

Easter is in April this year, and on Saturday the 8th, it will be the 26th annual Easter Egg Hunt. If the weather permits, it will be held at the City Park Pavilion. If not, it will be moved inside somewhere. There will be plenty of candy, money and fuzzy animals for all. The Easter Bunny will again be brought in on the big red fire engine. Be sure to be on time because the egg-hunters are fast and make a clean sweep of the egg hunt.

On that same day, it will be the annual car show down in Hurricane. We go down to the show after the Egg Hunt and go through Zion and get there about 2:00, when most of the crowd is gone. There are hundreds of cars there so bring your camera. We like to go into St. George for dinner, and it makes for a fun day.

The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints is having a food drive this Saturday, and there will be pickups at your doors. If no one shows up, take your donations to the Care and Share center. There will be a change in the scheduling of services; the Stake Conference will come before the General Conference and will be on the 26th, and the General Conference will be the next week on April 1st and 2nd. The Cedar City Temple will be closed

for cleaning for two weeks starting on the 10th.

The Feds met again and said that they will raise the interest rate, depending on the new jobs reports. Well, it wasn’t good; there were 310,000 new jobs created, and the unemployment is still below 4% for 14 months in a row. This really hurt the stock market for the week. Auto stocks are going down because it costs too much interest to buy one. Raising the interest rate also increases the national debt because we were paying 1% and now it is above 5%. So far raising the interest rate has done nothing to cut inflation. The object is to put people out of work, and that will cut inflation. Wouldn’t it be better to go with great job growth and prosperity, than go into a depression?

Senator Lee has more of his friends falling in line to do away with Social Security. Many don’t understand Social Security and how it is funded. I believe that you are now issued a Social Security number upon birth. When you go to work, you pay, I believe, 8% into Society Security, and your employer also pays the same amount into the system. The one real big problem with the system is that it is part of the national budget. When there weren't many who qualified for benefits, instead of building up the system, they then switched it into the budget

to pay bills. I believe that three trillion of the national debt is owed to the retirees.

With five railroad trains derailing in the last month, it makes for a bad way to transport freight. The last president rolled back safety rules on trains carrying hazardous and flammable materials. In the terrible crash in East Palestine, the train company, Norfolk Southern, is taking all responsibility for the wreck instead of FEMA. It seems that all trains carrying flammable materials were supposed to have brakes, where if one system fails, all of the cars' brakes come on. They are trying to transport all of the contaminated dirt out of the area, but none of the states want it either. This is not a random accident; there are over 1,000 train derailments each year.

Former President Jimmy Carter is having hospice care at home. President Carter is well known for all of his efforts after he left office. He won the Nobel Peace Prize and was widely celebrated for helping build more than 4,000 homes with his Habitat for Humanity foundation, which he founded. He continued to work till 2020. President Carter is the oldest living president at the age of 98. He still lives in a modest home with his wife, Rosalynn, in Plains, Georgia. Mack O.

Wayne Commission:

An update on the Hanksville Diversion Dam and the new contract with Jackson Excavation, an initiative for Remote Work Certification classes, the approval of the Economic Development Board and projects that received monies for capital improvement projects in 2022, a food truck business proposal, and a new Girl Scout troop in Wayne County discussed.

Wayne Commission Cont'd from A1

cedures and how the river works. Last year, 2022, the cost to pump the water was $386,695. That figure has increased to $519,735 for the year of 2023. This year, there is an extra charge of $70,000 to have a pump on stand-by. The rain storms that Wayne County received last summer deposited so much sand and silt that the pumps shut down, and there was a lag time to get a replacement pump trucked in. “By having a pump on site to replace a clogged pump will save time and money,” stated Wilden. This was accepted and approved.

Wilden also presented an update on the Diversion Dam. Design for the new dam should be ready for submission to the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) this week. It may take the NRCS four to five months to approve the design. “Hopefully by this time next year Wayne County should have an answer on the Diversion Dam,” stated Wilden.

Next was Trenton Willson, who is the Program Coordinator with Utah State University, with a presentation of an initiative for Remote Work Certification classes. This initiative is to help bring online jobs to rural Utah. The courses will include a leadership course, remote activities course and a remote work practice course. The cost of the course is $40 and lasts for four weeks, and students must be available each Thursday either at 1 p.m. or 6 p.m.

Market Star has guaranteed an interview for those students who complete the

course.

Jenna Draper was out due to illness, so Commissioner Brian presented the approval of the Economic Development Board. Board members are Greg Pace, April Torgerson, Brian with Work Force Services and Commissioner Roger Brian. The Economic and Development Board oversees the economic Development for Wayne County with monies provided through the State of Utah. During the year 2022, the following projects received monies for capital improvements: Cainville received $1,000,000 for water system improvemnts, Hanksville received $2,000,000 for sewer lagoon improvements, Lyman received $75,000 for a mini excavator, Bicknell received $50,000 for a planning grant and Torrey had two projects approved—a walking path for $150,000 and $300,000 for the Torrey Town office remodel (Author's note: This information was obtained from www.waynecountyutah. org/economic.).

Megan Mattingly presented a business proposal to open a food truck that serves soda. It would be a mobile location and would move around. The commissioners advised her that she would need to obtain a business permit from each town or city and also one from Wayne county if she is going to be parking in unincorporated Wayne County locations. The commissioners wished her luck with her endeavor.

Dani May, who lives in Fremont, presented a new Girl Scout Troop #1647. She was looking for a location to hold the Girl Scout meetings. The Loa

Civic Center was agreed upon. This was accepted and approved.

Other Business:

B & C Road Funding, which is being funded by SB0175, is offering $40 million dollars for road improvements throughout the state. Wayne County must adopt one of the five public road taxes. A public hearing will be held within the next 30 days for public input. A replacement for Justice Court Judge Brown has been found and hired. The Administration of Courts (AOC) has approved the appointment of Judge Mark McIff, J.D. He currently serves as Justice Court judge for Sevier County, Piute County, Spring City, Moroni, Ephriam City, Gunnison, Manti and Mt. Pleasant. He received a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Southern Utah University in 1995 and a Juris Doctorate in 1998 from Gonzaga University. For a time, he served as the Attorney for Wayne County.

• Vouchers were accepted and approved. The commissioners then went into a closed session.

The next Wayne County Commission meeting will be held on Monday, March 20, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. in the Wayne County Courthouse. You may also listen to the minutes from this or any past meeting at pmn@utah.gov.

The Wayne County Commission meets the first and third Monday of every month at the Wayne County Courthouse in Loa.

A5 March 16, 2023 The Insider
FYI PanguItch
Michael and Kenra Stephenson, along with Duane and Jessie Dasse and Mark Donnafield and Angela Glass, would like to invite you to celebrate the wedding of Zachary Dasse and Kenna Stephenson at a reception held in their honor on Friday, March 24, 2023 from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Bicknell Community Center

CCRS

CCRS DR Appeal

Cont'd from A1

landscape architect Delmar Price, that make this wonderful place eligible to be recognized on the National Register of Historic Places.

Many of our local neighbors have shared their concerns with us about BLM’s proposed plans, so we feel confident that we represent others with our appeal, as well.

In preparing to write our appeal, I was up after midnight, reviewing the 84-page CCRS Environmental Analysis document and its FONSI (Finding of No Significant Impact) and DR (Record of Decision), a task that would normally lead to unconsciousness, but their plans are so disturbing that they keep me up at night. By their nature, Environmental Assessments are organized in manner that is brutally difficult to follow; they are redundantly redundant and then they repeat themselves again and again. It’s like trying to read a book in House of Mirrors. Not to mention the wonderful assortment of bureaucratic acronyms: DOI, BLM, GSENM, CCRS, EA, FONSI, DR, NRHP, SHPO, ISA, WSA, FOIA that cause one to think “WTF” & “BS”! (You guess.)

The BLM/GSENM considered only two alternatives—deferred maintenance and maximization of parking. The CCRS documents were particularly difficult to comprehend because they are so incredibly biased. Their proposed “improvement” project takes care of all the problems (identified in their purpose and need), whereas dealing with deferred maintenance issues goes no farther than propping up collapsing retaining walls and patching potholes. In his comments and separate appeal, Dan Rice points out that many of the repairs included in the “improvements” alternative could be done as a part of the deferred maintenance project (replacing retaining walls, repairing the swimming hole, renovating campsites and picnic areas, repaving road and parking areas...).

In the CCRS EA, the historical features might be titled “Old and In the Way” and the planned “improvements” are basically “Pave Paradise and Put up a Parking Lot.” Let’s consider these alternatives.

Old and In the Way

Our goal is conserving the historical character, and scale, of the Calf Creek Recreation Site, where so many local folks have childhood memories. Sadly, the BLM plan is to destroy most of the historically significant features that make the CCRS so special. Only two of nine historically significant features recognized are not going to be destroyed and replaced, the pedestrian bridge over Calf Creek and adjacent stone outhouse. In discussing alternatives, they state that “construction-related disturbance” (that is removal of seven historically significant features) would negatively impact the site’s eligibility for the NHRP. In their MOA with SHPO, they state that the features will be “adversely impacted”

(which is an alternate way of saying removed or destroyed). Their proposed mitigation strategy is to map and photograph each feature before it is destroyed, study the history of this historic campground, and later install interpretive signs that show what was lost! The BLM did not even try to find alternative solutions that might preserve any of these features. For local citizens who have fond memories of family reunions, the Group Picnic Area is the most important single feature on the chopping block. The BLM stated, “The picnic area in the oak stand would be removed to allow for reconfiguring and expanding the main parking area.” Might there be some way to design parking that would preserve this historic feature, including the old oak trees that provide shade for both people and wildlife?

The BLM claims that the charming historic arch bridge over Calf Creek, where visitors enter the CCRS, has maintenance issues, so it must be destroyed (thereby negatively impacting the site’s eligibility for the NHRP); it would be replaced with a prefabricated steel beam bridge with no aesthetic appeal. The BLM sites a 2019 engineering report that said this bridge is in poor overall condition. In the CCRS Final EA, it says “patching the damage to the concrete base to extend its life and prevent its failure would directly affect this historic feature—patching this historic feature could result in a loss to site integrity and negatively impact the site’s eligibility for the NHRP”. However, we examined the bridge with a local contractor who stated that the bridge is in good shape overall and that the minor degradation on a small part of the foundation could be easily repaired in a manner that does not detract from the historical character and would be significantly less costly, by orders of magnitude, than replacing the bridge. Tearing out and replacing the old bridge, which might cost a million bucks, clearly has a much larger impact on the historical character than patching the foundation.

Pave Paradise and Put Up a Parking Lot

BLM’s proposed improvements are primarily designed around providing additional parking for more tourists. Plans to increase the existing parking area from 30 to 45 spaces, and also to add another 15 spaces along the access road and build a new 40-space parking lot near the highway—an increase from the present 30 to 100 designated parking spaces is more than a threefold increase. The impact of this huge increase in parking areas would dwarf the existing historic character of the Calf Creek Recreation Site.

To accommodate this increased traffic, the roads will be widened by an undesignated amount. Getting rid of the existing bridge eliminates this narrow impasse.

In addition, new parking would be established for up to four new campsites. Cramming these additional campsites in between existing campsites is not in keeping with the historical BLM campground that originally had

seven campsites and has been since expanded to thirteen spaces. One of the proposed new campsites is to be located inside the turnaround circle at the end of the campground road; a prime campsite if you like to be encircled by other cars and trucks moving about the campground—basically “camped” in the center of a roundabout.

The lack of any specific plans makes it impossible to know what the overall impacts will be. Their conceptual site plan in the EA is so generalized as to be nearly useless, so we fear that the existing parking area will be a total makeover. When I asked the project lead, Allysia Angus, if she had “any plans (even sketches) for their renovation of the existing trailhead parking lot,” she replied that “BLM has not begun detailed design for... the project, so there are no plans to share at this time.” Yet their plans can specify that the new parking area will accommodate up to 15 additional cars. They must have a more detailed conceptual plan that they refuse to share with us. We are trying to force them to provide us with this information with a FOIA request.

In our appeal, we are suggesting a remedy that will allow the BLM to proceed with those aspects of the project that are considered deferred maintenance. Their $1.4 million grant from the Great America Outdoor Act can be used for deferred maintenance, so this should not be a problem. We recommend that the existing landscape block walls be replaced with rock walls that enhance the historical character, and that all new buildings and campsite renovation should be done with a “Parkitecture” theme. Ideally, this would incorporate collaborative efforts involving folks from Boulder and Escalante who love Calf Creek Campground and have already offered to provide expertise and elbow grease to help repair the park’s elements in keeping with its historical nature.

The CCRS should be nominated for the National Register of Historic Places recognition and protected as a unique example of one the BLM’s first recreation sites/campgrounds. Plans for any additional parking areas should wait until the carrying capacity of the Calf Creek Falls trail has been fully analyzed and the new Monument Management Plan is in place. The BLM stated that this project will be done in phases. Let the first phase be the preservation and enhancement of the existing Calf Creek Recreation Site.

A “Petition to Conserve the Historical Calf Creek Campground” has been circulated within the communities and online, and we have gotten ~700 signatures so far! If you would like to join us, sign the online petition at change.org (a petition-toconserve-the-historicalcalf-creek-campground: chng.it/HZRBbfxzYh).

Keith Watts and Sage Sorenson are both members of the Calf Creek Conservation Corps. Watts is a resident of Boulder, and Sorenson is a resident of Escalante.

March 20 - 26

There are two bright “major” planets in the sky tonight, and they’re trivial to see, plus one “minor” planet that you can see with a pair of binoculars (which every stargazer must have!) or any telescope and add it to your list of solar system conquests. Here’s how to find them.

The two major planets are Venus and Mars, goddess of love and god of war. The planet Venus is indeed pretty, and the goddess of love is an important goddess, so one can imagine how that association came about, while the red color of Mars reminded people of blood and hence of war.

Venus is brilliant in the west for almost three hours after sunset. How soon can you see it as the sky is growing dark? You can see it in the daytime if you know where to look. Venus is passing through the constellation Aries, but Aries has no bright stars to compete with it. Not until mid-April, when it moves through Taurus, will there be bright stars—and a bright star cluster—in the background.

Mars is high overhead in Taurus and then Gemini amid the many bright stars of the winter Milky Way. An alert for people with

binoculars or telescopes: it passes near the bright star cluster M35 late this week and next.

The brightest “minor planet” in the evening sky tonight is Ceres, and you can easily see it with any pair of binoculars as a moderately bright 7th-magnitude “star” in the constellation Coma Berenices, or Bernice’s Hair. You will need star-charting software (which I strongly recommend that you own) or a good printed star chart. On the 21st, Ceres is at opposition, opposite the sun, when it rises at sunset and looks like any other 7th-magnitude star.

Ceres is 149 million miles from earth (14% farther than Mars), and it’s only 580 miles in diameter, so it looks starlike (hence the term “asteroid”). Google “Ceres” for tons of information on this interesting little world that was visited by a NASA spacecraft in 2015; that spacecraft is still in orbit around Ceres, although it’s no longer functioning.

If you need a finding chart you can create and print a great one at “in-the-sky.org” (https:// in-the-sky.org). Start here if your target is Ceres and your location is Kanab, but

you can easily change it (for Ceres your location doesn’t matter much): https://in-the-sky.org/findercharts.php?id=11&latitu de=37+2+8&longitude=112+31+52&timezone=07%3A00. You’ll have to learn to use the website, but it’s useful for many things, so bookmark it for future reference, and this is really my opportunity to introduce you to it. Note that Ceres passes in front of the bright galaxy M100 for several hours on the evening of March 26th in a highly unusual event that people with a telescope will not want to miss. There are hundreds of thousands of asteroids in the sky. A few dozen are within the range of a backyard telescope, and you could spend many hours hunting them down.

John Mosley was Program Supervisor of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles for 27 years and is the author of “Stargazing for Beginners” and “Stargazing with Binoculars and Telescopes.” He and his wife live in St. George, where he continues to stargaze from his retirement home while serving on the advisory committee for Stellar Vista Observatory.

A6 The Insider March 16, 2023
The Sky Report is presented as a public service by the Stellar Vista Observatory, a nonprofit organization based in Kanab, Utah, which provides opportunities for people to observe, appreciate, and comprehend our starry night sky. Additional information is at www.stellarvistaobservatory.org. Send questions and comments to John@StargazingAdventures.org. Courtesy NASA NASA’s Dawn spacecraft orbited Ceres in 2015, and Google can guide you to all that it learned.
DR Appeal : The CCRS should be nominated for the National Register of Historic Places recognition and protected as a unique example of one the BLM’s first recreation sites/campgrounds.

Schools and Sports

Garfield County School District Teacher Highlight

Jordan Cottam - Escalante High School

PHS Sports Sidelines

both our boys and girls teams are really loaded.

Basketball season is over and up next is track season. The track meets are all over the state, and it makes it hard to follow them, but

One thing I always leave out is the cheerleading squad. They put in so many mornings working on their routines that are different for each game, and they are perfect, with each girl making the right moves. Next week, I will have their names. Sorry, girls, you are the best.

BVES Presents 'Mamma Mia' April 19-22

through 11th grades in English Language Arts, Spanish I, Spanish II, and Creative Writing for three years at Escalante High School. Cottam uses a CS/Tech tool called Meta-Quest 2 Oculus, which she uses with the students in her Spanish courses. The photo above shows Cottam's students receiving a Spanish lesson before using the Oculus glasses.

ESCALANTE - Jordan Cottam has been an amazing addition to the staff at Escalante High School since moving to Escalante in 2020. This is her third year teaching 7th through 11th grades in English Language Arts, Spanish I, Spanish II, and Creative Writing. Cottam grew up in Panguitch and loves all of the adventures she can have with her fam

ily living in Garfield Coun

ty. Cottam’s favorite re

source for computer science/technology is Canvas, an online learning management system. “I love that I’m able to create an online classroom that is available to my students whether they are in class, or elsewhere,” says Cottam. “I am also able to create quizzes, selfchecks, assignments, and informational pages to help build my lessons. We enjoy navigating Canvas on the Smart TV, where the whole class gets involved in learning,” she adds.

Another valuable CS/ Tech teaching tool in her classroom is the MetaQuest 2 Oculus. Students in her Spanish courses use the Oculus to experience an interactive video visiting different parts of Spain. It also allows them the opportunity to practice Spanish phrases and learn about the cultural aspects of the country.

“I love that the Computer Science program allows me to bring technology into my classroom that I wouldn’t have been able

to otherwise… Technology that students may or may not have had the opportunity of using in life. I love how excited they get when we have Oculus days,” said Cottam.

Cottam hopes her students will remember how much their learning was enhanced with CS/tech tools that they were able to use in the classroom. “I hope it allows them to navigate the technological world and gives them confidence in learning new things!”

Bryce Valley Elementary will present "Mamma Mia" for four performaces from April 19-22, 2023.

BRYCE - “Mamma

Mia!,” the smash-hit musical based on the songs by the mega-selling, 1970s Swedish pop group ABBA, is presented at Bryce Valley High School for four performances from April 1922, 2023.

Southern Utah University is preparing for the annual Sterling Scholar competition on March 30, 2023. One hundred and eighty one students from nineteen high schools will meet on SUU's campus to complete the final round of judging. The day’s events will include competitive interviews followed by an Awards Program in the evening.

Sterling Scholars:

Sciences, General Scholarship, Mathematics, Music, Science, Social Science, Speech and Drama, Skilled and Technical Science Education, Visual Arts and World Languages.

Each of the 181 finalists will be interviewed by judges and given time to explain their personal achievements and awards compiled in their digital portfolios. The winners will be chosen based on their experience and skills in scholarship, leadership, and citizenship. A winner and two runners-up in

each of the categories will be chosen.

These deserving scholars will receive a scholarship and a Sterling Scholar pin. Finalists from each high school will also receive a Sterling Scholar Certificate. The three judges in each category come from local communities, Utah Tech University and Southern Utah University.

Many colleges and universities in Utah offer scholarships to both the winners and the runnersup to help these students in achieving their goals.

Some of these scholarships include cash amounts up to $2500 or full tuition waivers. The support from the higher educational institu-

tions in the state is much appreciated and utilized by Sterling Scholar recipients.

Since its inception, the program has expanded from its origins in Salt Lake City to include five region-wide competitions throughout the state that continue to publicly recognize outstanding seniors and encourage academic excellence. The program began in the early 1960s, when Steve Hale, a Deseret News columnist; Lavor Chaffin, an education reporter at the Desert News; and Keith West, the Deseret News’ director of marketing realized that while their newspaper had been recognizing outstanding athletes for years, there was no mechanism in place

to recognize outstanding scholars. Together with the Utah Board of Education, they developed the Sterling Scholars program.

We applaud all those who labor to make this program a reality each year.

The parents and teachers of all nominees have dedicated untold hours to ensure the success of these students. We give a heartfelt thanks to all that have donated so much time and energy into providing this opportunity for the best and brightest in Utah.

Congratulations to all the finalists and we wish you the best in all your future endeavors.

—Sterling Scholar Awards

The show, written by ABBA members Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus, tells the story of Sophie’s quest to find the identity of her father so he can walk her down the aisle. Over the course of 24 chaotic, magical hours, new love blooms and old romances rekindle on a lush island full of possibilities.

Inspired by ABBA’s songs—from “Dancing

Queen” and “S.O.S.” to “Money, Money, Money” and “Take a Chance on Me”—“Mamma Mia!” is a celebration of mothers and daughters, old friends and new family found. Bryce Valley High School performances for “Mamma Mia!” are at 7:00 p.m. from April 19-22.

The Bryce Valley Prevention Coalition is sponsoring a “Family Night” April 21. Dinner and tickets are paid for. Tickets are $8 for adults and $5 for students 12 and under and seniors 60 and older.

—Bryce Valley Elementary

B1 March 16, 2023 The Insider
Courtesy Sterling Scholars The 2023 Sterling Scholar award nominee for Escalante High School is Nadia Griffin (left). The nominees for Bryce Valley High School are Brooke Willis, Speech & Drama, and Jaxon Brinkerhoff, Agricultural Science (right). Courtesy Bryce Valley Elementary School Courtesy Shawn Caine Courtesy Escalante High School Jordan Cottam (left) has taught 7th
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Courtesy Sterling Scholars Sterling Scholars Cont'd from A1

Schools and Sports

True Grit:

The Chief Medical Officer at Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital Teaches Strength and Character as His High School Wrestling Team Wins Four State Championships in a Row

PANGUITCH - For eight years now, Dr. Colin Marshall, DO in Family Medicine at Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital and Clinic, has taken on one of the toughest jobs he’s ever loved: coaching high school wrestling. “In a rural community you get to wear a lot of hats,” says Coach Marshall. “I’ve always wanted to be involved with the youth, and impact their health in a positive way, while teaching them life skills, too.”

His success in teaching these critical skills of hard work, sacrifice, dedication, and service paid off; as the Panguitch Bobcats High School Boys Wrestling Team has once again this year taken the 1A State Championship, four years in a row.

“I’ve got such great kids, hardworking, put in so much effort,” says Coach Marshall. “I'm biased of course, but wrestling is an extremely tough sport. Of course, there’s some enjoyment along the way, but there’s no replacement for hard work. These kids are just outstanding.”

What is Dr. Marshall’s coaching philosophy? “In life I think there's two things that you can control and that's your attitude and your effort,” says Coach Marshall. “That's really what I try to teach these kids; that attitude and effort is what will allow them to be successful. I hope that translates to success in the wrestling room, but if not, it should translate to success in life.”

DeAnn Brown, Garfield Memorial Hospital Administrator, says Coach Marshall’s ability to in-

spire and teach are exceptional. “After the first day of the state tournament, the wrestling boys had not done as well as expected,” says DeAnn. “To rally them, Coach Marshall asked the team to make sure to be there at each other’s matches to cheer each other on. It made a real difference. He coached my son a few years back, and really has coaching figured out.”

Gen Houston, whose son, Cael, was named as an individual champion and received the outstanding wrestler award, says “Colin is coach that turns wrestlers into men. Wrestling is a great sport, but these coaches are teaching the boy’s life lessons as well.”

One of those lessons is character. It’s been said that “character is who you are when no one’s looking,” and Russell Torgersen,

Dr. Colin Marshall is a DO in Family Medicine at Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital and Clinic and coach of the Panguitch Bobcats High School Boys Wrestling Team (left). This year, this team (above) has once again taken the 1A State Wrestling Championship, which makes four years in a row.

Principal of Panguitch High School, says that it is true character that Coach Marshall and his coaching staff are teaching the team, sharing an email that was sent him by Brenan Jackson, the Director of Wrestling for the Utah High School Activities Association:

“Good Afternoon, I just wanted to send an email to your school to say thank you for all your help! When I needed help at the state wrestles this past weekend, Panguitch High School was the first team to step up and volunteer to help move, roll-up, and clean mats. Your wrestlers made a very demanding job for me so much easier.

Why is it that the same team who wins the state championship is also the same team, not only this year, but last year too, that volunteers to help? It's called leadership from your coaching staff! Your coaches have instilled in your wrestlers that there

is a bigger picture to life than just winning championships! They are teaching your young men how to be champions in LIFE!

Thank you, Coach Marshall and the other coaches, for always setting the gold standard of behavior, sportsmanship, dedication, hard work, and teaching young men the attributes of a successful life!

Sincerely, Brenan Jackson, Director of Wrestling UHSAA” Cade Harland, Lab Manager at Garfield Memorial, whose son Cole won the state championship in his division, says “From stitching our kids up in hotel rooms, to him and his wife helping the wrestlers with their homework to stay eligible to wrestle, Dr. Marshall cares about each of them and their success on and off the mat. The first day of practice he called all the parents and kids together and told them he would not tolerate any

Charlotte Snyder Named to Dean's List at Biola University

ANTIMONY - Char-

lotte Snyder was named to Biola University's Dean's List for academic excellence.

Snyder, an English major from Antimony, UT, was one of approximately 1,700 students who were named to the dean's list in fall 2022. Biola students are placed on the dean's list to honor those with a GPA of 3.6 or higher while enrolled in 12 or more credits and whose cumulative GPA is at least 3.2.

form of hazing or bullying. Coach told us that the wrestling room is a place he wants his wife and little kids to feel comfortable if they walk in, so he will not tolerate any swearing. Dr. Marshall creates a safe welcoming environment for the kids to grow and be the best form of themselves. And he doesn’t make it easy. My son will be the first to tell you that wrestling is hard. But Dr. Marshall gets in there and works right with the boys and they will do anything he asks. My son became the heavyweight state champion this year, and he knew nothing about wrestling when he walked into the wrestling room as a freshman. Dr. Marshall and his team of coaches are amazing.”

“One of the cool things about wrestling is there's an individual component, so you know you have to compete on your own, and also then there's a team component that's a part of it as well,” says Coach Marshall. “You get both of those aspects in wrestling, and so these kids really get to see what their individual efforts do to impact the team. I think this principle is true on any team; that we need to give our best individual effort and when we do, our whole team is impacted in a positive way.”

—Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital

"Inclusion in Biola University's Dean's List is reserved for students who demonstrate exceptional performance in their academic studies. This honor signifies hard work, engagement, and investment in scholarship," said Dr. Tamara Anderson, associate provost of academic effectiveness and administration. "These attributes are the building blocks of continued success, not only in the classroom, but in the workplace and in the student's personal lives. We celebrate these students and their achievement, looking forward to their future accomplishments."

Biola University is a nationally ranked Christian university in the heart of Southern California. It was recently recognized as one of America's best colleges, earning a spot in the top tier of the "best national universities" category of U.S. News and World Report's Best Colleges 2023 rankings. Founded in 1908, Biola is committed to the mission of biblically centered education, scholarship and service. With more than 6,000 students at its Southern California campus and around the world, Biola's nine schools offer more than 150 academic programs at the bachelor's, master's and doctoral levels. For more information, visit biola.edu or call (562) 777-4061.

—Merit Page News

Activities and Event Schedule 2023

MARCH

• The coalition will be trained to facilitate a QPR suicide prevention class for the community.

• Guiding Good Choices parenting class - March 8, 15, 22 & 29 and April 5

APRIL

• Resiliency Town Hall with Jennie Taylor, guest speaker - April 6th, 1:50 pm for students, 5:30 for parents

• Easter Egg Hunt dates and Family kits - time is TBD

MAY

• Community QPR training, suicide prevention training - TBD

JUNE

• Splash Pad open day - June 2nd at the City Park

• Southwest Youth Summit (Beaver) (youth training)

• Utah Youth Summit in Bryce Canyon (youth training)

JULY

• Scavenger Hunt - date and time is TBD

• CADCA mid-year youth training institute in Dallas TX (coalition member and youth training)

AUGUST

• Soap box derby, Family game night - August 19th

SEPTEMBER

• Community QPR training, suicide prevention training - TBD

OCTOBER

• Take Back Drug Day and Community Town Hall take back day - TBD

NOVEMBER

• Community QPR training, suicide prevention training - TBD

DECEMBER

• Ginger Bread family kits (Elementary Christmas play)

*Check Escalante Prevention Coalition's Facebook page for dates times and details on events and activities

B2 The Insider March 16, 2023
Courtesy Garfield Memorial Hospital Courtesy Garfield Memorial Hospital

Boulder Planning: The Commercial Development Standards Worksheet, language corrections to the subdivision ordinance, housing group updates, streets, Bylaws 15-22, the Zoning Administrator report, and Planning Commission priorities discussed.

Boulder Planning

Cont'd from A1

of making a more defensible decision. Formatting changes were discussed to try to make the standards easier to use. The standards could be given to the applicant so that they could show the ways in which they comply. Once the standards have been used a number of times, the town will have a history to look back on, which will help in making new decisions. A full training on the standards will be scheduled.

A PC member presented on language corrections to the subdivision ordinance. The goals are to make it internally consistent, clearer, and make the text match administrative procedures. This would not change subdivision policy at this time, however, it was also suggested that the ordinance itself be revised in the future, including making changes that would encourage attainable housing, as the current method of doing this through the clustering ordinance hasn’t proved successful. Types of changes include ensuring that standards are consistent, for example between town codes and state or national codes that are adopted by reference; and ensuring that all requirements regarding a topic can be found in one place, not spread out in different ordi

nances. At the next meeting recommended changes will be presented. A draft would then be created, and a public hearing would follow. The Town Planner brought up the relationship between the bylaws and the ordinances and that procedures could either be listed in the bylaws or codified in the ordinances. Some information could also be listed in administrative documents. Benefits of this include that they would not be legally binding and they could be written in layman’s terms.

Housing group updates were provided. A survey has been put out about housing needs. Feedback from potential housing providers includes if RV parks could be used for employee housing and where attainable housing makes the most sense, for example in cluster lots or subdivisions similar to King Estates. A representative of the Vision group pointed to progress occurring in town, including the potential housing at the school.

Streets were discussed.

A Transportation Improvement Plan was created in 2012, which could be used as a basis. At the next Town Council (TC) meeting, the PC should present about street issues so that the PC has permission to move forward. Town streets and streets that should become town streets could then be identified. This is complicated because most of the transportation routes in

Garfield County are created by proscriptive use rather than being platted. It will likely require funding and litigation and will be a large and complicated project. The biggest issue is Lower Boulder Road, which sits largely on private property. Creating a map that identifies platted and unplatted sections would be a good step. Street issues include unplatted roads, platted roads that have never been opened, platted roads that do not match the location of the actual road, and unplatted roads used by neighbors without legal access. Labeling these on a map would be interesting to consider but would probably bring up disputes. The town attorney could provide advice on what issues they could tackle. Bylaws 15-22 were discussed. A PC member commented that usually bylaws are procedural, while the substance is provided in ordinances and informational handouts. Bylaws generally define how a public body operates, not information for applicants. Bylaws 15-22 focus on information that would better be presented in handouts. Members were in agreement. These bylaws could also be combined and simplified to provide information about what responsibilities the ZA holds. Bylaws from other towns will be considered and discussed next meeting.

The ZA report followed. It was asked that any business over email between PC members include both the ZA and the PC Secretary. A quorum of PC members are allowed to communicate via email as long as they are only providing information, not engaging in discussion or decision making. The Boulder Mountain Guest Ranch

CUP should be on the agenda for April. A request for leasing additional antennas on the tower on Thompson Lane was received. According to the original CUP, the tower may have up to four antennas and currently only has two. No height or width changes to the footprint will occur. That tower can host four different services. A new CUP will not be required.

PC priorities were discussed. A training workshop on the standards worksheet will be scheduled. PC members will listen to the recordings of the sessions that explain the standards before having to use the worksheets for the CUP in the next meeting, as the training won’t happen before the meeting. Following this, a work meeting could be held to discuss possible changes. The PC will meet one hour early next month, at 6pm, for training for those who can attend.

Public comments followed. A member of the public stated that, in regards to the housing groups, discussions should be taking place on issues not just surveys. Additionally, current five acre zoning and the cluster ordinance may have issues, but they are still useful. Clustering doesn’t have to be the only way to encourage attainable housing, but it is a good way.

Upcoming business includes the Guest Ranch CUP, more information regarding language consistencies, discussion on performance based standards for subdivisions, reviewing the last section of the bylaws, and reports on bylaw samples.

The Boulder Planning Commission meets on the second Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. The April meeting will begin at 6 p.m.

Atli Blevins

PANGUITCH - Atli Blevins was reunited with her mom on March 3, 2023, after a hard fought battle with cancer. She was born on May 10, 2006, in Panguitch to Marnie and John Blevins.

She attended Panguitch elementary, middle, and high school. Atli Blevins was a loving daughter, sister, and granddaughter who loved her family more than she loved fashion.

Atli was a cheerleader for Panguitch High School where she loved to support not only the sports teams but the entire student body. Anywhere Atli went she managed to put smiles on everyone's face. With her bright personality and quick wit, Atli had a special talent for befriending anyone she met.

There’s not enough words to describe the kind of person Atli was but one word that might fit her best is loving. Atli had a love for people. Always looking to make someone else smile even when she was going through the hardest times of her life. Bringing light and joy selflessly and happily. Atli made an impact anywhere she went. From the community she grew up with to the amazing medical family she made during her fight with cancer.

We are so thankful for all the love, prayers, and support we have been given in these challenging times.

She is survived by her father John; siblings: Arik and Abbey Blevins; grandmother, Randi Miller; and many other relatives.

Preceded in death by her mother, Marnie; grandparents: Kenny Miller, John Willard Blevins, Stiennun Blevins.

Memorial services were held on Monday, March 13, 2023 at 1:00 p.m. in the Panguitch Stake Center where friends called from 11:30 to 12:45. Cremation services were held in the Magleby Mortuary Crematory.

Online guestbook at www.maglebymortuary.com

Atli wanted a celebration of her life. We ask everyone attending to wear bright colors so we can do our best to honor her wishes.

Petition Seeks Protection for Pygmy Rabbits Across West

by Alex Gonzalez, Utah News Connection

UTAH - Conservation groups in Utah and across the western United States are requesting protection for the pygmy rabbit under the Endangered Species Act.

A petition sent to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said the world's smallest rabbit is at risk of extinction because of habitat loss and disease.

Allison Jones, a conservation biologist, said the pygmy rabbit population has been on the decline for many years, with Utah for example having alarmingly low occupancy rates between seven and 13% in areas outside the northern portions of Utah. Jones pointed out the small mammals are not likely to bounce back because of the continued degradation and fragmentation of the Sagebrush Sea.

"The pygmy rabbit as an obligate of healthy, functioning Sagebrush ecosystem is kind of a canary in the coal mine for the intermountain West sagebrush ecosystem, and the ecosystem is in big trouble," Jones asserted.

Jones explained the loss of the pygmy rabbit's habitat is being threatened by more intense fires, invasive plant species, climate change and drought as well as development and extrac-

tive practices. She called the confounding effects the "perfect storm," which could lead to the disappearance of the pygmy rabbit in portions of the Sagebrush Sea.

Vera Smith, senior federal land policy analyst for Defenders of Wildlife, said in addition to habitat loss, a new virus has also heavily affected wild rabbit populations, with the pygmy rabbit being no exception.

Smith added if the Fish and Wildlife Service concurs the pygmy rabbit population data is alarming, groups like hers would like to see a "coordinated strategy" across the Western U.S. to enable the tiny rabbits to recover.

"For us, one of the very important things that the recovery strategy would hopefully point to is that we need to be more deliberate about protecting habitat and connecting habitat across the Sagebrush Sea," Smith emphasized.

Smith argued the Endangered Species Act listing would offer the best chance at protecting not only the small rabbit, but also its rapidly vanishing habitat, which she called vital for the recovery of the species.

B3 March 16, 2023 The Insider Obituaries
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Calassified ds

NOTICE OF PROPOSED ZONING CHANGE

WAYNE COUNTY

PROPOSED CHANGE FROM: RESORT RECREATION WITH A CONDITIONAL USE PERMIT

TO: RESIDENTIAL/AGRICULTURAL

INTENDED USE: RESIDENTIAL/ AGRICULTURAL no longer used in conjunction with existing approved RV/ CAMPGROUND ZONING CHANGE RE-

QUESTED BY: STUART & HEIDI DOBSON

A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD PRIOR TO THE PLANNING & ZONING MEETING ON MARCH 22, 2023 @ 7 PM WAYNE COUNTY COURTHOUSE LEGAL DES: PARCEL 01-0085-0578 / O-569 THE N3/4 OF SE1/4NW1/4 SEC 20 T28S R10E SLB&M CONT 30 AC

Location: Approx 8580 E SR 24 Caineville, UT Between mile marker 107 and 108

Published in The Wayne and Garfield County Insider on MARCH 9 & 16, 2023

LEGAL NOTICE OF OPPORTUNITY TO OBJECT

GARFIELD COUNTY, UTAH

The Powell Ranger District has completed the Final Environmental Assessment (EA) and Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) and the Draft Decision Notice (DN) for the Showalter Ranger Water Improvement Project. The decision in the draft DN would authorize the proposed action, which is described in the EA.

The Responsible Official is Christopher Wehrli, District Ranger and the Objection Reviewing Officer is Kevin Wright, Forest Supervisor. The Final EA, FONSI, and draft DN are available at https://www.fs.usda.gov/ project/?project=63260. For additional information, contact Zachary Orton, Range Specialist, zachary.orton@ usda.gov.

This action is subject to the predecisional administrative review process outlined in Title 36 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Part 218, Subparts A and B. A final decision will not be made until after the requirements of 36 CFR 218.12, Timing of Project Decision, have been met.

Eligibility to File Objections

Objections can be accepted only from individuals and entities who have submitted timely, specific written comments regarding a proposed project or activity subject to these regulations during any designated opportunity for public comment, per the regulations at 36 CFR 218.5(a). Additional eligibilities are established in 36 CFR 218.5(b) through (f). Issues raised in objections must be based on previously submitted timely, specific, written comments regarding the proposed project unless based on new information arising after designated opportunities for comment. A connection to previous comments must be demonstrated in the objection.

Individual members of organizations must have submitted their own comments to meet the requirements of eligibility as an individual. Objections received on behalf of an organization are considered as those of the organization only. If an objection is submitted on behalf of a number of individuals or organizations, each individual or organization listed must meet the eligibility requirement of having previously submitted comments on the project (36 CFR 218.7). Names and addresses of objectors will become part of the public record.

Contents of an Objection

Incorporation of documents by reference in the objection is permitted only as provided for at 36 CFR 218.8(b). Minimum content requirements of an objection as identified in 36 CFR 218.8(d) include:

• Objector’s name and address with a telephone number if available; with signature or other verification of authorship supplied upon request;

Identification of the lead objector when multiple names are listed, along with verification upon request; Name of project, name and title of the responsible official, national forest/ranger district where project is located, and

• Sufficient narrative description of those aspects of the proposed project objected to, specific issues related to the project, how environmental law, regulation, or policy would be violated, and suggested remedies which would resolve the objection.

• Statement demonstrating the connection between prior specific written comments on this project and the content of the objection unless the objection issue arose after the designated opportunities for comment.

Filing an Objection Objections must be postmarked (if sent via postal mail), faxed, or submitted electronically via the project webpage at https://www.fs.usda.gov/ project/?project=63260 or email to objections-intermtn-regional-office@usda.gov within 45 days following publication of this legal notice. Mailed objections should be sent to Objection Reviewing Officer, USFS Intermountain Regional Office, 324 25th Street, Ogden, UT 84401. Objections may be faxed to 801-625-5365. Electronic objections must be submitted in a format such as an email message, pdf, plain text (.txt), rich text format (.rtf), or Word (.doc or .docx). Hand delivery of written objections can be made during normal working hours to the Intermountain Regional Office, Hansen Federal Building, Room 4016, 324 25th Street, Ogden, UT 84401. It is the responsibility of objectors to ensure their objection is received in a timely manner (36 CFR 218.9).

The publication date in The Insider, newspaper of record, is the exclusive means for calculating the time to file an objection to this project. Those wishing to object to the draft EA and FONSI should not rely upon dates or timeframe information provided by any other source.

Published March 16, 2023

Legal No.

Published in The Wayne and Garfield County Insider

MARCH 16, 2023

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

TORREY TOWN

DOCUMENT 001113

Torrey Town (Owner) is requesting Bids for the construction of the following Project: Torrey Town 500,000 Gallon Tank Project Number SU1228O

Bids for the construction of the Project will be re

ceived at the Torrey Town Hall P.O. Box 750027, 75 East 100 North, Torrey, Utah 84775 at 3:00 PM local time on Tuesday April 11th, 2023

The Project includes the following Work: Construction of a 500,000-gallon cast-in-place concrete tank and pertinent utility installation.

Obtaining the Bidding Documents

Information and Bidding Documents for the Project can be found at the following designated website: https:// www.ensignutah.com/bid-access/ or www.questcdn. com

Bidding Documents may be downloaded from the designated website. Prospective Bidders are urged to register with the designated website as a plan holder, even if Bidding Documents are obtained from a plan room or source other than the designated website in either electronic or paper format. The designated website will be updated periodically with addenda, lists of registered plan holders, reports, and other information relevant to submitting a Bid for the Project. All official notifications, addenda, and other Bidding Documents will be offered only through the designated website. Neither Owner nor Engineer will be responsible for Bidding Documents, including addenda, if any, obtained from sources other than the designated website. The Issuing Office for the Bidding Documents is: Ensign Engineering and Land Surveying

225 North 100 East Richfield, Utah 84701

Printed copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained from the Issuing Office by paying a deposit of $100 for each set, no part of which will be refunded. Make deposit checks for Bidding Documents payable to Ensign Engineering and Land Surveying.

Pre-bid Conference

A non-mandatory pre-bid conference for the Project will be held at the project site, near Torrey on Wednesday March 29th at 3:00 PM. Attendance is strongly encouraged. The last day for questions shall be April 5th, 2023 at 5:00 PM.

For all further requirements regarding bid submittal, qualifications, procedures, and contract award, refer to the Instructions to Bidders that are included in the Bidding Documents.

This Advertisement is issued by:

Owner: Torrey Town

Title: Mayor

Published in The Wayne and Garfield County Insider on MARCH 16, 23 & 30 and APRIL 6, 2023

NOTICE TO WATER USERS

The applications below were filed with the Division of Water Rights in Wayne County. These are informal proceedings per Rule 655-6-2. Protests concerning an appli

cation must be legibly written or typed, contain the name and mailing address of the protesting party, STATE THE APPLICATION NUMBER PROTESTED, CITE REASONS FOR THE PROTEST, and REQUEST A HEARING, if desired. Also, A $15 FEE MUST BE INCLUDED FOR EACH APPLICATION PROTESTED. Protests must be filed with the Division of Water Rights on or before Apr. 12, 2023 either electronically using the Division`s on-line Protest of Application form, by hand delivery to a Division office, or by mail at PO Box 146300, Salt Lake City, UT 84114-6300. Please visit waterrights.utah.gov or call (801)538-7240 for additional information.

GARFIELD COUNTY

NEW APPLICATION(S)

97-2506 (A83687): John Reedy propose(s) using 1.73 ac-ft. from groundwater (4 miles SE of Boulder) for DOMESTIC; IRRIGATION.

CHANGE APPLICATION(S)

97-716 (a49990): USA Forest Service propose(s) using 0.015 cfs from the Water Canyon Spring (15 mi SW of Escalante, Utah) for STOCKWATERING.

EXTENSION(S)

61-1451 (a15500): Craig Kacskos, Cody Cook and Salena Lopez is/are filing an extension for 0.055 cfs from the South Fork Sevier River (9 miles north of Panguitch) for IRRIGATION.

NONUSE APPLICATION(S)

97-1113: Dennis and Jean Bramble Living Trust is/ are seeking a nonuse period for 1.484 ac-ft. (Near Henerieville) for STOCKWATERING.

IRON COUNTY

CHANGE APPLICATION(S)

61-3292 (a50014): Robert Brennan and Kaley Brennan propose(s) using 0.0037 cfs AND 0.25 ac-ft. from groundwater (2-miles East of Cedar Breaks) for DOMESTIC.

WAYNE COUNTY

NEW APPLICATION(S)

95-5488 (A83676): Brinkerhoff Family Trust Dated August 2, 2021 propose(s) using 0.015 cfs OR 1.48 ac-ft. from groundwater (1/2 mile east of Lyman) for DOMESTIC; IRRIGATION; STOCKWATERING.

Teresa Wilhelmsen, P.E.

State Engineer

Published in The Wayne and Garfield County Insider on MARCH 16 & 23, 2023

Announcement of Positions

Wayne School District is accepting applications for the following positions:

Elementary Teacher Loa Elementary — Full time benefitted position. Grade level to be determined. This position will start in August for the 2023-24 School Year.

Candidates must have a Bachelor’s Degree and Utah Elementary Teaching License or be working toward these credentials. Candidates seeking an intern position will be considered. Salary will be based on qualifications and Wayne School District teacher salary schedule.

A current resume, a university transcript showing all course work, a copy of applicant’s teaching license, and two letters of recommendation should accompany the application

Social & Emotional Wellness Teaching Assistant

Wayne School District is seeking a part-time Teaching Assistant who will work alongside our Social & Emotional Coordinators. This person will work at all of our schools to teach students to develop social & emotional wellness skills. Candidates must have the following skills: good communication, conflict resolution, professionalism, and the ability to maintain confidentiality. Preference will be given to individuals who have or are seeking a social science degree.

This position is for 20-27 hours a week, with no benefits. The starting wage for this position is $16.41 per hour

Interested individuals may fill out a written application at Wayne School District Office, or found online at the district website www.waynesd.org Applications for any positions may be submitted in person or electronically to tyler.newton@waynesd. org and/or randy.shelley@waynesd.org

Applications will be accepted until these positions are filled.

Wayne School District is an equal opportunity employer and reserves the right to reject any or all applications.

We are looking for friendly, hardworking professionals who enjoy the hospitality industry and interaction with guests.

POSITIONS AVAILABLE:

Front Desk Agents Laundry Services

Housekeepers Maintenance Bellmen

Positions to start April 1st through October 31st At Capitol Reef Resort we promote from within. Please stop by in person to complete an application. We are located at 2600 E SR 24, Torrey, UT 84775 435-425-3761

Weed Specialist

Panguitch

Garfield County is accepting applications for a Weed Specialist in Panguitch and other areas of Garfield County.

The position is part-time from April to September. The successful candidate will be required to obtain Utah Commercial Pesticide Applicator License. Applications are available at the Garfield County Clerk’s Office, 55 South Main, Panguitch or at www.garfield.utah.gov and will be accepted until 5:00 p.m., Friday, March 17, 2023.

Garfield County reserves the right to accept or reject any or all applications. Garfield County is an equal opportunity employer.

Legal Notices

ACCEPTING BIDS PANGUITCH CITY

Panguitch City is accepting bids for the installation of a chain link backstop structure at the softball field located at the Panguitch Elementary School. Engineering drawings are available at the Panguitch City Office. Bids needs to include permanent chain link fence on a mow strip along two sides of the field and a temporary outfield fence. Engineering drawings on the fence are also available at the Panguitch City Office. This project will need to be completed in the spring of 2023. Bids will be received until March 23, 2023 at 5:00pm at the Panguitch City Office, 25 South 200 East, PO Box 75, Panguitch, UT 84759. Panguitch City reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids.

Panguitch City is accepting separate bids for the construction of two dugouts at the softball field located at the Panguitch Elementary School. Engineering drawings are available at the Panguitch City Office. This project will need to be completed in the spring of 2023. Bids will be received until March 23, 2023 at 5:00pm at the Panguitch City Office, 25 South 200 East, PO Box 75, Panguitch, UT 84759. Panguitch City reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids.

MARCH 9 & 16, 2023

HELP WANTED
B4 The Insider March 16, 2023
Legal Notices
Published in The Wayne and Garfield County Insider on
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SHOWALTER RANGE WATER IMPROVEMENT PROJECT USDA FOREST SERVICE DIXIE NATIONAL FOREST
on

C lassified a ds

To place your ad, call 435-826-4400 or email snapshot@live.com

Classified ads start at just $7.50 per week for 25 words or less.

HELP WANTED

Housekeepers Wanted

Bryce Glamp and Camp

We are looking for hardworking, detail-oriented housekeepers! Ability to work into front desk desired. Full-time and part-time position available GREAT PAY. Housing accommodations may be available for those who live far. For inquiries, please call (725) 270-9383. To apply, please visit our office, which is open from 10am-7pm daily. Located at 555 West Yellow Creek Road, Cannonville, UT 84718.

MEETINGS

TROPIC AA MEETING

Wednesday at 6 PM. Tropic Heritage Center. All meetings are closed discussion.

LDS ADDICTION

PANGUITCH The

Addiction Recovery Program meets every Wednesday at 7pm at the Panguitch Stake Center, 550 S. 100 W Panguitch. Call 559-908-1498 for information. SERVICES

When in Need, There are Resources in Wayne & Garfield Counties

Position Announcements

POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Garfield County School District is hiring the following positions. For a description of each, please see the district website www. garfk12.org

Kindergarten Teacher at Bryce Valley Elementary

Math Teacher at Escalante High

Drama/Music Teacher at Panguitch Middle/High Head & Assistant Track Coach at Bryce Valley High Substitute/Activity Bus Drivers in Escalante

Para-Professionals at All Schools

Substitutes for Teachers, Custodians, and Food Service Workers

SALARY: Please see 2022-2023 Garfield County School Districts Classified Salary Schedule and Certified Salary Schedule.

QUALIFICATIONS: Applicants must be fingerprinted and satisfactorily pass an employment background check. Applicant must work well with children. See the job description for additional requirements.

APPLICATION: Interested individuals should submit a Garfield County School District classified or certified application.

Please direct questions to:

AES Head Teacher Robin Gibbs (435-624-3221)

BES Head Teacher Elizabeth Julian (435-335-7322)

BVES Principal Pete Peterson (435-679-8619)

BVHS Principal Jeff Brinkerhoff (435-679-8835)

EES/EHS Principal Peter Baksis (435-826-4205)

PES Principal Lisa Breinholt (435-676-8847)

PMS/PHS Principal Russ Torgersen (435-676-8805)

Superintendent John Dodds (435-676-8821)

Online application available: www.garfk12.org

Applications will be screened and the most qualified candidates will be granted interviews.

DEADLINE: See the district website for closing date of each position. Garfield County School District is an equal opportunity employer. Garfield County School District reserves the right to accept or reject any or all applications.

ISO RENTAL/LEASE

Seeking a Long-term Rental/Lease in the Torrey/ Teasdale/Grover/Loa Area.

We are building a home near Grover and would like a place to stay while we do it.

Older couple, no pets. Relatively small space is fine. Call or text Jack at 808-345-9229. Thank you.

sudoku Answers for this week

SENIOR CENTER MENUS

Escalante Senior Citizens Menu

Tues. Mar. 21st Wild Rice & Chicken Soup, Salad Bar, Cheesy Bread, Peaches, Oatmeal Raisin Cookie

Wed. Mar. 22nd Meatloaf, Baked Potato, Roll / Green Beans, Pineapple, Wearingo' Green Cake

Thurs. Mar. 23rd Mexican Casserole, Rice / Beans / Corn, Salad Bar, Pears Left Over Dessert

All meals are served with milk or juice. If you would like a meal, please call us by 10:00 am. 826-4317. Suggested donation for seniors over 60 $3.00, and under 60 is $7.00

CROSSWORD SOLUTION

B5 March 16, 2023 The Insider
RECOVERY PROGRAM
LDS
Canyon
Emergency
435-865-7443 Mobile Team 435-233-5732 New Horizons Crisis Center 145 East 100 North, Richfield Office Hours 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Shelter is open 24 hrs, 7 days a week Phone Number 435-896-9294 Counseling Services Central Utah Counseling Richfield Office 255 S Main Street, Richfield Office Hours 435-896-8236 24 Hour Emergency Service 877-469-2822 Southwest Behavioral Health Center 601 E Center Street, Panguitch 435-676-8176 24 Hour Emergency Service 800-574-6763 Wayne Community Health Center 128 South 300 West Bicknell, 84715 435-425-3744 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline 1-800-273-8255
For Victims of Domestic Violence, Rape, and Sexual Assault
Creek Services
Safehouse
B6 The Insider March 16, 2023

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