S T E A M B O AT
TODAY
MONDAY
JUNE 15, 2009
Steamboat Springs, Colorado
FREE
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Vol. 21, No. 142
RO U T T
C O U N T Y ’ S
DA I LY
N E W S PAP E R
Gas prices Cost of a gallon of regular unleaded fuel on Sunday
Fuel Stop ................... $2.69 West Kum N Go ....... $2.69 7-Eleven ................... $2.66 Western Petro.......... $2.69 Bob’s Conoco ...................... $2.75 Hilltop Sinclair ..................... $2.74 Anglers Kum N Go .............. $2.69 Ski Haus................................ $2.75 Mount Werner Sinclair........... $2.64 Shell ........................................ $2.75 Shop & Hop ............................. $2.64 State Average ................... ...................$2.55 National Average ...............$2.66
S T E A M B O AT S P R I N G S
Search area narrowed Long Lake gate will be closed to slow water in search for missing woman Page 2
SPORTS
MATT STENSLAND/STAFF
Supervisory Forester Andy Cadenhead, right, talks about the logging operations in North Routt County with Rogue Resources owner Mike Miller. Rogue is a Steamboat Springs-based logging company working to remove hazard trees in North Routt County.
Logger lauds stimulus American Recovery and Reinvestment Act helps to clear Routt National Forest Matt Stensland
PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
Meek roast light on jabs Page 25
■ LOTTO
■ INDEX Briefs . . . . . . . . .10 Classifieds . . . . .31 Colorado. . . . . . .15 Comics . . . . . . . .29 Crossword . . . . .29 Happenings . . . . .7
A loud diesel engine spews black smoke into the air as the machine it’s driving carries a bundle of trees down a temporary logging road, with limbs snapping under its tires. Mike Miller operates another machine, gently laying 60-foottall, beetle-killed lodgepole pines on the floor of the Routt National Forest after a circu-
Horoscope . . . . .28 Nation. . . . . . . . .16 Sports. . . . . . . . .25 ViewPoints . . . . . .8 Weather . . . . . . .22 World . . . . . . . . .23
Saturday night’s Cash 5 numbers: 2-11-12-16-17 Drawings are held Monday through Saturday.
lar blade slices through their trunks. These are the sights and sounds of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in Northwest Colorado this summer. “We can now bring some guys that were laid off back to work, and we can hire some new guys,” Miller said June 5. He’s the owner of the Steamboat Springs-based logging company Rogue Resources. “This is just a good deal for us all around.”
■ WEATHER
Afternoon storms. High of 67.
After $2.2 million in federal stimulus money was awarded to the Routt National Forest in April, it was unclear initially how much of the money would stay in Routt County and create jobs locally. A regional office of the U.S. Forest Service awarded stimulus funds to California and Florida logging companies for work in Routt County. The federal government recognized the companies as socially and economically disadvantaged small businesses, which made
it possible to award the contracts quickly, a requirement in order to receive stimulus dollars. Local loggers felt slighted, and they let the U.S. Forest Service know it. Diann Ritschard, a public affairs specialist for the Routt National Forest, contacted Sweat, Inc., the Florida-based company that had been awarded one of the contracts. “I called them and said we’re See Logger, page 14
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LOCAL
2 | Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Search area narrowed
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Long Lake gate will be closed to slow water in search for woman Mike Lawrence and Matt Stensland
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Crews have narrowed the search area for Rebecca Green and are returning this morning to upper Fish Creek Falls, where they hope to locate the Steamboat Springs woman missing since Saturday afternoon. Riley Polumbus, spokeswoman for Routt County Search and Rescue, said local rescuers and crews from Summit County searched high-probability areas at the immediate base of the upper falls “very, very thoroughly” Sunday, but because of rocky, unstable terrain and deep, fast-flowing water, many spots remain unchecked. The 40-year-old Green and her 8-year-old son, Kade, fell into Fish Creek below the upper falls Saturday. Kade was safely carried out by rescuers and released from Yampa Valley Medical Center on Saturday night after treatment for cuts on his head. Green has been missing since about 1 p.m. Saturday. Polumbus said the length of the search has dimmed hopes of a successful rescue.
“At this point, we’re expecting this to be a recovery,” Polumbus said Sunday evening, adding that the Green family understands the situation. “The family has been in touch with us throughout the day.” Decreased water flows could help crews at the scene today. Polumbus said Mount Werner Water and Sanitation District officials agreed to close the water gate at Long Lake, about two miles upstream from the upper falls, to possibly slow the water in the search area. Mount Werner Water operations manager Jeff Peterson said he will close the gate by radio control at 6 a.m. today. The gate was about 30 percent open, he said, and its closing will have “no impact whatsoever” on service for Mount Werner Water customers. Peterson said because of heavy remaining snowpack and strong water flows, the district is “barely using” water flowing from the falls past the filtration plant on Steamboat Boulevard. He said the heavy flows and runoff from other sources also make it difficult to gauge the benefit of closing the Long Lake gate for search crews.
BLAIR SEYMOUR/COURTESY
Rebecca and Kade Green enjoy a Valentine’s Day party in February at Strawberry Park Elementary School, in this photo taken by teacher Lesa Scoppa.
“I don’t know how much that will help them,” Peterson said. “Remotely, I cannot tell how much (closing the gate) will stop the flow.” Polumbus said any decrease could help crews, who estimate Fish Creek could be 20 feet deep in some spots. Polumbus said search crews Sunday found the hat Green was wearing about 300 yards downstream of the point where she was last seen, then they found Green’s two shoes about 150 yards downstream of her hat. The items helped narrow the search area, Polumbus said. Green lives in Steamboat II See Search, page 11
Take time on sidelines with head injuries Riley Polumbus MONDAY MEDICAL
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A broken bone is a clear sign �� � ����� � �� �� ��� � � � �� � � � � � � ���� �� � that you need to take a break from active endeavors. A head � �� � �� � �� �� � � �� � � ���� � � � � injury, though often not as ������������������������������� obvious, should be treated with the same respect. Even if head-injury symptoms seem mild, you may be placing your health at a tremendous risk unless you take some time on the sideline. Often, athletes who “get their bell rung” will feel good enough to continue their activity. However, this decision can have long-lasting or even devastating effects. Remember actress Natasha Richardson, who hit her head on a beginner ski slope in March and later died from an epidural hematoma? She felt fine at first, but within a few hours developed a headache, one of the telltale signs of more serious injury. David Wilkinson, M.D., emergency medicine physician at Yampa Valley Medical Center, said Richardson’s case is a good example of ���������� the importance of having an �������������������� appropriate medical evaluation for a head injury. Signs and symptoms that should prompt a medical exam include changes in mental status or confusion, ������������������������������ protracted headache, nausea or ���� �������� ������� �� ���� ������ �������� �� ��������
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loss of consciousness. “Clearly if they have a loss of consciousness, they need an evaluation,” Wilkinson said. “Concussion,” the most commonly used term for head injury, is defined as: a jarring injury of the brain resulting in disturbance of cerebral function. Wilkinson pointed out that concussion is a bucket term that refers to every injury from a minor bump of the head to sustained unconsciousness. “Any blunt trauma to your head can cause a concussive injury,” Wilkinson said. “Even minor blows can cause concussive force.” According to Wilkinson, the most common cause of head injuries evaluated in YVMC’s emergency department are related to sports or recreation: skiing, mountain biking, motorcycling and ATV riding, to name a few. The second leading cause is motor vehicle accidents. Wilkinson said he has seen a significant decrease in the severity and number of head injuries because of the use of helmets.
Signs of concussion Symptoms of a potentially serious head injury include difficulty concentrating, inappropriate playing behavior, decreased playing ability, inability to perform daily activities, reduced attention, cognitive and memory dysfunction, sleep disturbances, vacant stare, loss of bowel and bladder control. Symptoms of concussion include nausea, dizziness, confusion, fatigue, light headedness, headaches, irritability, disorientation, seeing bright lights or stars, feeling of being stunned, depression.
He also noted that “secondimpact syndrome” could be a factor for some local athletes. This occurs when someone suffers a concussion and then receives a second blow to the head while still suffering from the initial concussion. Although this syndrome could have catastrophic consequences, many people put themselves at risk by returning to activity too soon. “It’s hard in this town because we are so active,” Wilkinson said. “You may bump your head mountain biking and think you are OK to kayak. One should avoid any physical activity after a concussion for 30 to 60 days.” Family physician and longtime Steamboat Springs soccer coach Jim Dudley, M.D., See Monday Medical, page 11
LOCAL
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Monday, June 15, 2009
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Hayden hoopsters recall stellar season Boys basketball team made trip to state for the 1st time 50 years ago Blythe Terrell
On the ’Net
Half a century ago, the town of Hayden was buzzing with excitement about the high school boys basketball team’s first trip to the state tournament. On Saturday, that rekindled excitement flowed at the American Legion hut, where four members of the 1958-59 team gathered to talk about that year in front of cameras and an audience. Lyle Breshears, Jerry Green, Larry Johnson and Bob Ruiz formed the panel of past hoops stars. L.D. Shoffner videotaped the conversation, which will be archived at the Hayden Heritage Center. The interviews coincided with a larger reunion for Hayden High School graduates. This year’s class was the school’s 100th. Green’s wife, Judy, asked most of the questions Saturday. “What I’d like you to do today amongst yourselves is reminisce about the basketball team of 1958-1959,” she said. The Hayden team defeated Granby in the Gore-Yampa League District Tournament to go to state for the first time. They lost to Sanford. “The sad part of it is, we should have gone the year before, but we let Granby beat us,” said Jerry Green, who graduated in 1959. “The sad thing is we should’ve won,” said Ruiz, who also graduated that year. The timing for the talk was appropriate: The Hayden girls basketball team went to state for the first time this year and beat Sanford. It was revenge, Green joked, that arrived 50 years too late. The girls team lost to Paonia in the tournament semifinals. The museum also plans to interview the girls on camera. Breshears and Johnson were juniors when they competed at state in 1959. Johnson was the backup on the team for Jim Rowley. A hand injury put Rowley on the bench, Johnson said. “All of a sudden, I got to play a lot, which is why we lost,” he joked. The Gore-Yampa League included Kremmling, Walden and Oak Creek. Breshears remembered traveling by bus to Walden when Rabbit Ears Pass was closed. The trip required going over Gore Pass and back toward Kremmling and then 30 miles to Walden on a gravel road. “After that first trip, we always rode in cars,” Breshears said. Green recalled playing
See more photos from Saturday’s reunion with this story at www.steamboatpilot.com.
Johnstown, a team of giants. “They were so tall that you could jump, and all you could see was their elbows,” Green said. Breshears remembered playing at Climax, which he said had the highest gymnasium in the world at 11,300 feet. The Tigers feared that the altitude would hamper them, he said. “It wasn’t a problem because there were so many fouls called in the game that we just walked from one end to the other, shooting free throws,” Breshears said. John Harrigan coached the team, and the members said he was popular on the court and in the classroom. The teammates’ experience playing for Hayden and Harrigan had a lasting impact. Green and Johnson coached high school teams, and several of the men were referees. Johnson played a year of college basketball at Western State College of Colorado in Gunnison. The sport has been a huge part of Johnson’s life, he said. He’s passing the passion along to his 2-year-old grandson. “The first thing we gave him was a basketball,” Johnson said. He’s a professor of mathematics at Metropolitan State College of Denver. Green taught school for 12 years and returned to the family ranch near Hayden in 1980. Breshears
BLYTHE TERRELL/STAFF
Hayden’s former basketball stars reminisced merrily Saturday about the 1959 high school team. From left: Jerry Green, Bob Ruiz, Lyle Breshears and Larry Johnson discuss their team on camera at the American Legion hut in Hayden. The team lost to Sanford at state.
was a sales engineer in the air conditioner and ventilation business, and now he’s retired and does home remodeling and repairs. Ruiz has been a cabinet maker for 30 years and lives in Northglenn. “I think that’s how I passed high school,” Ruiz joked. “I always got an ‘A’ in shop.” Other members of the team that competed at state were Jim Benson, Ronnie Bugay, Bob Scott, Chuck Turner and Lynn Whiteman. The audience members commended the four men present on the clear memories they shared about that 1958-59 season. “It’s easier to remember that than what happened yesterday,” Green joked.
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— To reach Blythe Terrell, call 871-4234 or e-mail bterrell@steamboatpilot.com
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Derek Howard, 3, fishes with his father, HJ Howard, on Saturday at Huck Finn day at the city park in Hayden.
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The art of a mesclun mix
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Jane McLeod
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Family fishing
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Imagine being a gatherer — as opposed to a hunter — and having to wait until this great white blanket of snow covering our valley floor melted before those first little edible green shoots poking through the soil could be gathered and eaten. Cravings aside, it’s understandable that, at the earliest opportunity, the hardier spring herbs such as chervil and parsley filled bowls to overflowing and were added to the repast to be eaten by the handful — manners forgotten. Nowadays, of course, we just need to cruise through the produce section to satiate the need for something green. One of these ideal greens is a comparatively new import from France called mesclun. All the rage in the ’90s in restaurants, mesclun eventually made its way to market produce shelves. Mesclun, meaning mixture, is a salad mix of immature or baby
leaf greens. The traditional blend was chervil, arugula, endive and particular lettuces in precise proportions, but now, almost anything goes. The original idea was to touch on all taste and texture sensations — bitter, sweet, crunchy, tangy — combined with a rainbow of greens and bronzy reds for visual appeal. As well as coming in a bag, mesclun is a simple crop that adapts well to our short season and only a few simple rules. Since lettuce forms the backbone of a mesclun mix, start with either a seed packet titled mesclun or a variety of packets of loose leaf lettuce cultivars of your choosing — the end goal being a bouquet of flavors, colors and textures. The seeds germinate at cool temperatures and can be sown in early spring when soil temperatures reach 40 degrees. Loosen soil to 4 inches, sow directly in rich, loamy, composted soil (garden or pot) in a 1/4 inch deep furrow and
In bloom Spring vegetables and flowers now can be found at the Yampa River Botanic Park. Stop by on Saturday from 2 to 5 p.m. for a tour of the park and the grand opening of the new Trillium House, including refreshments, music and a short presentation from the board to the city of Steamboat Springs.
cover lightly. To encourage rapid growth, keep the soil constantly moist, not soggy, while the seeds germinate depending on air and soil temperature, but for two to three weeks on average. Soil too wet or too dry while lettuce grows will create bitter, tough greens. Sow successively in small amounts, at frequent intervals, in order to harvest often at a peak young stage. Scissor cut, don’t pull, as this is a crop which indulges what they call the cut-andcome-again treatment. Cut just above the growing crowns, about 1 inch, when the See McLeod, page 13
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LOCAL
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Monday, June 15, 2009
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Lowen Epstein, left, and Everett Simonsen toss beanbags Sunday near the shores of Stagecoach Reservoir. Historic Routt County staged an event at the lake that featured games, food and an auction to help raise money to preserve the Diamond Window Cabin near the reservoir.
Patching up the past Fundraiser helps to provide money to preserve historic cabin of historic places. Anderson said an annual fundraiser would help the organization’s efforts to restore aging structures like the cabin. Historic Routt County hopes to raise another $10,000 to reach its goal of $20,000. That funding will be dedicated toward stabilizing the foundation, repairing and replacing damaged logs, reconstructing the roof, and re-establishing proper drainage. A couple of years ago, braces were added to the inside of the cabin to help stabilize it through winters after it was added to the county’s register of historic places in 2005. Arianthé Stettner, an adviser to Historic Routt County and its former executive director, said what’s exciting about the project is it will be an educational tool. She said people will be able to learn about homesteading, water conservation efforts near the lake and the nearby elk habitat. See Cabin, page 13
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Historic Routt County officials hope a first-time fundraiser — for Diamond Window Cabin at Stagecoach State Park — on Sunday, will lead to future opportunities to preserve the county’s iconic landmarks. Fixing up the more than 100year-old cabin, a homestead on the Yellow Jacket Pass (now Routt County Road 14), is part of the group’s cultural heritage initiative, said Historic Routt County Executive Director Towny Anderson. He said interest from the pubic to restore Diamond Window Cabin, which is sagging into the hillside on the southern side of the pass, helped prompt the group to hold the fundraiser. “It’s as important to Stagecoach as the Moore barn is to Steamboat,” said Stagecoach resident Wes Hunter, who attended the fundraiser with his wife, Mickey.
The cabin, in a corner of the Morrison Creek Valley, sits overlooking the historic route of a stagecoach line running north from the rail terminal at Wolcott to Steamboat Springs and beyond Hahn’s Peak. Anderson said cultural heritage is one of the fastest-growing segments of local tourism, and the preservation of Diamond Window Cabin was a big part of promoting that in Routt County. “It’s an icon of South Routt,” he said about the cabin. “It’s stood at the head of Stagecoach Lake for more than 100 years now. It’s a landmark. “The idea of the fundraiser is to celebrate our heritage.” The fundraiser also included a barbecue, hiking, biking around the lake, prizes, and silent and live auctions of art depicting the cabin. Historic Routt County has a number of projects like Diamond Window Cabin that it’s working to restore or to get added to the county’s register
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Jack Weinstein
PILOT & TODAY STAFF
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LOCAL
6 | Monday, June 15, 2009
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Board to recognize Friends of Education School officials also could adopt 2009 budget tonight in Centennial Hall meeting Jack Weinstein
PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
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Steamboat Springs School Board members will recognize the 2008-09 Friends of Education before tonight’s meeting. Mary Labor and Fred Gardner will be given plaques and will be thanked for their service to the district in a ceremony beginning just after 6 p.m. in the
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lobby of Centennial Hall. Labor has been active with the district’s spring flower sale since her family moved to Steamboat in 1998, and she has organized the event for the past eight years. Last year, district groups raised between $2,000 and $3,000 to fund things not covered in the budget. Gardner, who moved to town four-and-a-half years ago, spearheaded the 5th Quarter program. It provides drug- and alcohol-free parties for high school students after athletic events and extracurricular activities. The program, which is planned by the high school’s leadership class in conjunction with Gardner’s help, just completed its third year.
If you go
Agenda
What: Steamboat Springs School Board Meeting When: 6 p.m. today Where: Centennial Hall on 10th Street
6:02 p.m. Friends of Education recognition 6:30 p.m. Superintendent Reports 7:00 p.m. Community Comments 7:15 p.m. Action items, including second reading of gift acceptance policy, approval and adoption of 2009 budget and facility master plan update 7:45 p.m. Consent Agenda Items 8:30 p.m. Adjourn
Labor and Gardner were the only two community members nominated for the Friends of Education honor and were unanimously approved by board members two weeks ago. In other scheduled items, the proposed 2009 budget is up for approval and adoption tonight. Board members also will consider the district’s gift acceptance policy and the facility master plan update. Superintendent Shalee Cunningham will present reports,
including one on the district’s logistical plan update. Board members also will consider staff resignations and retirements, employment of personnel and changes to the board’s 200910 meeting calendar. — To reach Jack Weinstein, call 871-4203 or e-mail jweinstein@steamboatpilot.com
COUNTY AGENDA
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Scheduled business of the Routt County Board of Commissioners
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MONDAY Work Session 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. County Manager/ Tom Sullivan ■ Administrative and Commissioners’ Reports/ Helena Bond/ Administrative Updates 11:30 a.m. to noon Legal/John Merrill ■ Updates ■ Discussion of Routt County’s Proof of Claim in the Steamboat Springs Rental and Leasing, Inc. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy ■ Discussion of Routt County’s Proof of Claim and Amended Proof of Claim in the Gateway Companies, Inc. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Road & Bridge/Paul Draper ■ Updates ■ Discussion regarding filling the S. Routt Weed Board positions Merilee Ellis and Tyler Knott ■ Review and discussion of Cattleguard agreement for replacement of cattleguard on C.R. 7C 2:30 to 3 p.m. Media Briefing 3 to 3:30 p.m. Human Services/Vickie Clark ■ Updates ■ Discussion of the agreement between the Colorado Judicial Department by and through the 14th Judicial District Probation Department and Routt County for the hiring and supervising of a Individualized Services and Support Team Facilitator (ISST) in the amount of $12,480 ■ Discussion regarding the Purchase of Service Contracts, Routt County Core Services Program, 2009-2010, for the provision of Day Treatment Alternative Program administered through Northwest Colorado Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) and Intensive Family Treatment Services provided by Colorado West Regional Mental Health through its Steamboat Springs location 4 to 4:30 p.m. Communications/J.P. Harris ■ Updates 4:30 to 5 p.m. Detention Center/Mike Baumann ■ Discussion regarding exempting the
Detention Center positions from the hiring freeze
TUESDAY Action Agenda 9:30 to 9:35 a.m. Call to Order ■ Pledge of Allegiance ■ Approval of Minutes for Regular and Special meetings of the Board of County Commissioners ■ Consideration for approval of accounts payable, manual warrants and payroll ■ Items of note from the previous day’s work sessions ■ Consideration for approval of Corrected Assessments and/or Abatements 9:35 to 9:45 a.m. Public Comment Public Comments will be heard on any item not on the agenda. County Commissioners will take public comment under consideration but will not make any decision nor take action at this time 9:45 to 10 a.m. Human Services/Vickie Clark ■ 1a. Consideration for approval of the State Human Service Electronic Benefit Transfers in the amount of $205,786.66 covering the period through May, 2009 ■ 1b. Consideration for approval of the agreement between the Colorado Judicial Department by and through the 14th Judicial District Probation Department and Routt County for the hiring and supervising of a Individualized Services and Support Team Facilitator (ISST) in the amount of $12,480.00 ■ 1c. Consideration for approval and signature of Purchase of Service Contracts, Routt County Core Services Program, 2009-2010, for the provision of Day Treatment Alternative Program administered through Northwest Colorado Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) and Intensive Family Treatment Services provided by Colorado West Regional Mental Health through its Steamboat Springs location. 10 to 10:10 a.m. Detention Center /Mike Baumann ■ 2a. Consideration for approval to exempt the Detention Center positions from the hiring freeze
See County Agenda, page 13
LOCAL
Monday, June 15, 2009
HAPPENINGS
■ The Kiwanis Club meets at noon in the Alpenglow Room in Willett Hall on the Colorado Mountain College campus. ■ The Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association offers drop-in hours for pneumonia vaccines for uninsured, low-income adults from noon to 4 p.m. at 940 Central Park Drive, Suite 101. Call 879-1632. ■ The Routt County Council on Aging presents Emily Seaver, president of the Yampa River Botanic Park board, who will introduce the new Trillium House and talk about summer at the gardens, at 12:45 p.m. at the Steamboat Springs Community Center. All are welcome. ■ Hayden Public Library holds a kick-off for the Bradley’s Book Buddy Program, a reading and mentoring program for children of all ages, from 5 to 6 p.m. Teen mentors and reading buddies can meet and get to know one another. Refreshments are provided. Call 276-3777. ■ Steamboat Springs women’s rugby is from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Ski Town Fields next to the Tennis Center at Steamboat Springs. No experience is necessary, and all women are invited. Call Anne at 303-859-3784. ■ The Sanctioned Duplicate Bridge Group plays an ACBL sanctioned duplicate game at 6:30 p.m. in Yampa Valley Electric Association conference room on 10th Street. Reservations are requested. Call Elaine at 8791994. ■ Integrated Community’s bilingual conversational group, intercambio, meets from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the CIIC office at 718 Oak St. All are welcome to the free event that fosters English and Spanish language skills. Call 871-4599. ■ Steamboat’s Recreational Poker league plays at 6:30 p.m. at The Tap House. The tournament is free and open to the public. Players must be age 18 or older. Visit www.steamboatpokertour.com. ■ Old Town Hot Springs hosts Flick n’ Float, starting with unlimited waterslide rides from 7:30 to 8:30
THURSDAY
■ Nordic ski jumping is from 8 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday at Howelsen Hill, weather permitting.
■ The Monterey Bay Consulting Group offers free general business consulting and a free cup of coffee from 8 to 10 a.m. at Spill the Beans coffee shop on 13th Street, across the river past the library.
■ Steamboat Springs High School cheerleaders host their annual clinics for kindergartners through eighthgraders from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 9 to 11:30 a.m. June 27 at the high school. Clinics cost $30 each and include a T-shirt and poms. All participants march in the Fourth of July Parade with high school cheerleaders. Call Shannon at 720-2191304. ■ The 1773 Club meets from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at Rex’s American Grill & Bar, next to Holiday Inn on U.S. Highway 40. E-mail info@steamboatinstitute. org for details.
WEDNESDAY ■ Yampatika hosts a free bird hike from 8 to 10 a.m. at Stehley Park. Call 871-9151 to register. ■ A Caregiver’s Toolbox Conference is at the Steamboat Springs Community Center. The free conference provides support and education to local caregivers including family, friends, professionals and volunteers involved in the care of adults. Lunch is included. Call Shelly at 970-879-0633 or Nancy at 970824-5646. ■ Yampa Valley Medical Center sponsors a free program, “Power Against Fraud: Fight Back Against Identity Theft,” at 6 p.m. Wednesday and noon Thursday in the hospital’s Conference Room 1. ■ A First Steps Seminar is from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at Colorado Mountain College’s Bogue Hall, Room 300. The seminar provides resources and information for people interested in starting a small business. Call Noreen at 870-4461. ■ The Yampa Valley Construction Trades Association meets at 7 p.m. in the lower level conference room of Yampa Valley Bank, on the corner
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■ The Colorado Association of Local Public Health Officials offers “Introduction to Public Health in Colorado” programs from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday and 8:30 a.m. to noon Friday at The Haven Community Center, 300 S. Shelton Lane in Hayden. The $40 cost includes all materials, a light breakfast each day, lunch on day one and beverages. Register online at: events.publichealthalliance.org.
RISTORANTE
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■ Colorado Mountain College hosts “Coaching for Performance Improvement” from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. The class focuses on coaching and counseling of employees. The instructor is Karen Goedert, of Resort Recruiters. The cost is $100. Call 870-4444 and reference class 40113 to register, or call Randy at 870-4491 for details. ■ The Grand Mountain Bank Kremmling Days Celebration is Friday through June 21 in Kremmling. The theme is “Keep on Truckin’.” The event includes children’s activities, live music, a barbecue rib dinner, a 5-mile race, a parade, mud race, beer garden and more. Call the local Chamber at 724-3472 or visit www.kremmlingchamber.com/events. ■ The Hayden Farmers Market is from 5 to 8 p.m. in the 100 block of Walnut Street, just south of U.S. 40. Vendor slots filled on a first-come basis. Anyone interested in selling products or produce can call Suzanne at 970-846-0616.
How to submit your Happenings The best way to submit Happenings items is to e-mail all relevant information to happenings@steamboatpilot.com. Readers also can visit our interactive Happenings listings at www.steamboatpilot.com or submit written information at the front desk of Steamboat Pilot & Today, 1901 Curve Plaza. Fax to “Attention Happenings” at 879-2888. Preference will be given to nonprofit organizations. Questions? Call 871-4233.
Happenings Online Happenings is updated daily on www.steamboatpilot.com.
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■ Reaching Everyone Preventing Suicide presents Sally Falwell with a discussion about reducing anxiety at 6 p.m. at Yampa Valley Medical Center’s Conference Room 2.
FRIDAY
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■ Steamboat Lake State Park hosts a wildflower walk at 11 a.m., a bird walk at 2 p.m. and a gold-panning activity at 4 p.m.
TUESDAY
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■ Children entering kindergarten through third grade this fall are invited to “Crocodile Dock,” a free vacation Bible school, from 9 to 11 a.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at Steamboat Christian Center.
of Hilltop Parkway and U.S. Highway 40. A guest speaker from the city will discuss sign codes. All are welcome. Visit http://yvcta.org.
Back Pain?
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p.m. “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” screens at 8:30 p.m. The cost is $10 for members and $12 for nonmembers.
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
Comment& Commentary
ViewPoints Steamboat Today • Monday, June 15, 2009
8
COMMENTARY
A silly game of connect-the-dots Jonah Goldberg
TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES
When an abortion provider in Wichita, Kan., was murdered, the predictable chorus pointed fingers at Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly. After all, O’Reilly had said that George Tiller was a “baby killer” and had railed against the doctor’s late-term abortion practice for years. He must be to blame! No one bothered to ask whether Tiller’s accused murderer had ever watched O’Reilly, or to ponder whether a militant pro-life Goldberg extremist really needed a talk-show host to tell him anything he didn’t already know about one of less than a dozen doctors in the country who still performed third-trimester abortions. But, never mind. Such details don’t matter when you’re trying to delegiti-
Thomas L. Friedman
other objections to that nomenclature, if von Brunn is a member of the far right, then it would be helpful and journalistically responsible if the press would start calling Rush Limbaugh, Newt Gingrich, Sean Hannity, et al., moderates and centrists. That won’t happen, because the whole point of these exercises is to paint the right as an undifferentiated blob of evil. Never mind that von Brunn isn’t a member of the far right. Nor is he a member of the far left, as some on the right are claiming. He’s not a member of anything other than the crazy caucus. Von Brunn’s True North is conspiratorial anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. He’s not a member of the Christian Right. In fact, he denounces Christianity — just as Hitler did — as a Jewish plot against paganism and Western vigor. Nor is he a capitalist. Again, just as Hitler did, he See Goldberg, page 9
Winds of change?
NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE
Twenty years ago, I wrote a book about the Middle East, and recently, I was thinking of updating it with a new introduction. It was going to be very simple — just one page, indeed just one line: “Nothing has changed.” It took me two days covering the elections in Beirut, Lebanon, to realize that I was dead wrong. No, something is going on in the Middle East that is very new. Pull up a chair; this is Friedman going to be interesting. What we saw in the Lebanese elections, where the pro-Western March 14 movement won a surprise victory against the pro-Iranian Hezbollah coalition, what we saw in the ferment for change exposed by the election campaign in Iran, and what we saw in the provin-
MALLARD FILLMORE
mize people. Now we have James von Brunn. He is an 88-year-old loon, considered a dangerous nut even within the dangerous-nut community. He took his gun and shot up the Holocaust Museum and murdered a guard. Reporting suggests that von Brunn wanted to fulfill his revenge fantasies against the Jewish-neocon globalist cabal, which apparently outsources much of its work to the Bush family. A 9/11 truther, convinced that the bagel-snarfing, stringpulling Jooooooooooozzz are behind everything, von Brunn is the kind of fanatic the zombies who talk to themselves at the bus station would give a wide berth. But, of course, we have Sarah Palin to thank for von Brunn. So says some genius at the Daily Kos. A competing braniac at the Huffington Post says, “Thank you very much Karl Rove and your minions.” Pretty much the entire media establishment is comfortable labeling von Brunn as a member of the “far right.” Putting aside
cial elections in Iraq, where the big proIranian party got trounced, is the product of four historical forces that have come together to crack open this ossified region. First is the diffusion of technology. The Internet, blogs, YouTube and text messaging via cell phones, particularly among the young — 70 percent of Iranians are younger than 30 — is giving Middle Easterners cheap tools to communicate horizontally, to mobilize politically and to criticize their leaders acerbically, outside of state control. It also is enabling them to monitor vote-rigging by posting observers with cell phone cameras. I knew something had changed when I sat down for coffee on Hamra Street in Beirut last week with my 80-year-old friend and mentor, Kemal Salibi, one of Lebanon’s greatest historians, and he told me about his Facebook group! The evening of Lebanon’s election, I went to the Beirut home of Saad Hariri, the leader of the March 14 coalition, to
interview him. In a big living room, he had a gigantic wall-size television broadcasting the results. And alongside the main TV were 16 smaller flat-screen TVs with electronic maps of Lebanon. Hariri’s own election experts were working on laptops and breaking down every vote from every religious community, village by village, and projecting them on the screens. Second, for real politics to happen you need space. There are a million things to hate about President George W. Bush’s costly and wrenching wars. But the fact is, in ousting Saddam in Iraq in 2003 and mobilizing the U.N. to push Syria out of Lebanon in 2005, he opened space for real democratic politics that had not existed in Iraq or Lebanon for decades. “Bush had a simple idea, that the Arabs could be democratic, and at that particular moment simple ideas were what was needed, even if he was disingenuous,” said See Friedman, page 9 Bruce Tinsley
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WHO TO CALL Suzanne Schlicht, general manager, ext. 224 Brent Boyer, editor, ext. 221 Scott Stanford, sales and marketing director, ext. 202 Steve Balgenorth, circulation director, ext. 232 Meg Boyer, creative services manager, ext. 238 Dan Schuelke, press operations manager, ext. 217 Mike Lawrence, city editor, ext. 233 Allison Miriani, news editor, ext. 207 News line: 871-4233 Classified: 879-1502 Sports line: 871-4209 Distribution: 871-4232 Advertising: 879-1502 Fax line: 879-2888 Steamboat Today is published Monday through Saturday mornings by WorldWest Limited Liability Company, Suzanne Schlicht, general manager, 871-4224. It is available free of charge in Routt County. Limit one copy per reader. No person may, without prior written permission of Steamboat Today, take more than one copy of each issue. Additional copies and back issues are available for $1 at our offices or $2.50 to have a copy mailed. 2006 General Excellence Winner, Colorado Press Association Member of the Colorado Press Association, Newspaper Association of America, Inland Press Association © 2008 Steamboat Today
VIEWPOINTS
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Monday, June 15, 2009
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With Bush gone, problem is re-emerging hails socialism as the solution to the West’s problems. Still, if we are going to play this game where we take the words of politicians and pundits, compare them to the words of murderers and psychopaths, and then assign blame accordingly, then let’s blame the New York Times, Chris Matthews, left-wing blogs everywhere and the academics who penned “The Israel Lobby” (which blames a fifth column of Israel loyalists for our troubles). After all, for years, mainstream liberalism and other outposts of paranoid Bush hatred have portrayed neoconservatives — usually code for conservative Jews and other supporters of Israel — as an alien, pernicious cabal. “They have penetrated the
culture at nearly every level from the halls of academia to the halls of the Pentagon,” observed the New York Times. “... They’ve accumulated the wherewithal financially (and) professionally to broadcast what they think over the airwaves to the masses or over cocktails to those at the highest levels of government.” NBC’s Chris Matthews routinely used the word “neocon” as if it was code for “traitor.” He asked one guest whether White House neocons are “loyal to the Kristol neoconservative movement, or to the president?” Von Brunn may have wondered the same thing, which is why he reportedly had the offices of Bill Kristol’s “Weekly Standard” on his hit list. Unhinged Bush-hater Andrew Sullivan insists that, “The closer you examine it, the clearer it is
that neoconservatism, in large part, is simply about enabling the most irredentist elements in Israel and sustaining a permanent war against anyone or any country who disagrees with the Israeli right.” Leading liberal intellectual Michael Lind warned about the alarming fact that “the foreign policy of the world’s only global power is being made by a small clique” of neoconservative plotters. Even with Bush out of the picture, some see the problem emerging again. Just this week, Jeremiah Wright, the president’s longtime mentor and pastor, whined that, “Them Jews aren’t going to let him talk to me.” Maniacs such as von Brunn connect dots that aren’t there because that’s what paranoid anti-Semites do. What’s the left’s excuse?
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Michael Young, the opinion editor of The Beirut Daily Star. “It was bolstered by the presence of a U.S. Army in the center of the Middle East. It created a sense that change was possible, that things did not always have to be as they were.” When I reported from Beirut in the 1970s and 1980s, I covered coups and wars. I never once stayed up late waiting for an election result. Elections in the Arab world were a joke — literally. They used to tell this story about Syria’s president, Hafez Assad. After a Syrian election, an aide came in and told Assad: “Mr. President, you won 99.8 percent of the votes. It means that only two-tenths of one percent of Syrians didn’t vote for you. What more could ask for?” Assad said: “Their names!” Lebanese, by contrast, just waited up all night for their election results — no one knew what
they’d be. Third, the Bush team opened a hole in the wall of Arab autocracy but did a poor job following through. In the vacuum, the parties most organized to seize power were the Islamists — Hezbollah in Lebanon; pro-al-Qaida forces among Iraqi Sunnis, and the proIranian Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and Mahdi Army among Iraqi Shiites; the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan; Hamas in Gaza. Fortunately, these Islamist groups overplayed their hand by imposing religious lifestyles or by dragging their societies into confrontations the people didn’t want. This alienated and frightened more secular, mainstream Arabs and Muslims and has triggered an “awakening” backlash among moderates from Lebanon to Pakistan to Iran. The New York Times’ Robert Mackey reported that in Tehran “chants of ‘Death to America’” at rallies for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last
week were answered by chants of “Death to the Taliban — in Kabul and Tehran” at a rally for his opponent, Mir Hussein Moussavi. Finally, along came President Barack Hussein Obama. Arab and Muslim regimes found it very useful to run against George W. Bush. The Bush team demonized them, and they demonized the Bush team. Autocratic regimes, such as Iran’s, drew energy and legitimacy from that confrontation, and it made it very easy for them to discredit anyone associated with America. Obama’s soft power has defused a lot of that. As result, “pro-American” is not such an insult anymore. I don’t know how all this shakes out; the forces against change in this region are very powerful — see Iran — and ruthless. But for the first time in a long time, the forces for decency, democracy and pluralism have a little wind at their backs. Good for them.
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Forces of decency have some momentum
LOCAL
10 | Monday, June 15, 2009
News in brief
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Adult day services offered at The Haven in Hayden
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The Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association is offering adult day services at The Haven Assisted Living in Hayden, for any disabled individual older than 18 or any elderly individual who is looking for daily activities where oversight is provided. Services are provided from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Meals, medication administration, activities, assistance with bathing and wellness assessments are available. For more information and to register, contact Diane Girty at 875-1891.
Respite Program needs care providers to help
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The Yampa Valley Autism Program is seeking care providers for its Respite Program. Respite
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Canine Connection seeks 20 new group members Yampa Valley Canine Connection is now accepting applications for 20 new members. The nonprofit group provides a fun, club-style atmosphere for canine agility, Rally-
O, good citizen testing and community giveback. Club areas include Steamboat Springs, Hayden and Craig. Call Cathy at 870-9037, Barb at 871-9080 or Craig members at 824-6364.
VNA offers free screening for breathing problems The Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association is now offering free screenings for people experiencing breathing problems or diagnosed with asthma, COPD or other related respiratory illnesses in Routt, Moffat and Jackson counties. Spirometry testing, pulmonary functions studies, prescription medications and disease management are available at a reduced charge based on income. For details or to schedule a screening, contact Victoria Barron, RN and Community Health Educator, at 970-875-1883.
THE RECORD POLICE, FIRE AND AMBULANCE CALLS
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Program care providers are made available to families of children with autism spectrum disorders and related disabilities, for hire to help as needed. Care providers also can participate in programs such as Kid’s Night Out. The Yampa Valley Autism Program is looking for individuals that have experience with children of special needs. CPR and first aid certifications can be provided if not certified. An hourly rate is provided to all care givers. Call Kristin at 970-870-4263, or e-mail kristinpiro@gmail.com.
SATURDAY, JUNE 13 12:59 a.m. A man reported theft in the 700 block of Yampa Street. 1:02 a.m. A suspicious person was reported on Routt County Road 134 near Oak Creek. 1:35 a.m. Steamboat Springs Police Department officers made a traffic stop at Tamarack Drive and Fish Creek Falls Road. 2:10 a.m. A man reported vandalism in the 2300 block of Mount Werner Circle. 2:24 a.m. A woman reported loud noise in the 500 block of Routt Street. 3:36 a.m. A drunken pedestrian was reported at Dream Island Plaza and U.S. Highway 40. 5:17 a.m. A man reported vandalism in the 2200 block of Village Inn Court. 5:55 a.m. Vandalism was reported in the 300 block of Lincoln Avenue. 8:17 a.m. Theft was reported in the 3600 block of Lincoln Avenue. 10:03 a.m. A man made an animal com-
plaint on 13th Street near the Yampa River. 10:11 a.m. A woman reported theft in the 1800 block of Central Park Drive. 11:25 a.m. A man reported a bear sighting near the Fifth Street Bridge. 1:12 p.m. Search and Rescue crews were dispatched to upper Fish Creek Falls, where a man reported a woman falling into the water. Crews were able to locate and safely rescue the woman’s son, who also fell in and pulled himself out on the far side of the creek. The 40-year-old Steamboat woman still was missing as of Sunday night. 1:35 p.m. A man requested county road and bridge crews on Routt County Road 179 east of Milner. 2:26 p.m. A gas skip was reported in the 2000 block of Curve Plaza. 2:57 p.m. A woman reported trespassing on Moraine Circle. 3:01 p.m. A woman made an animal complaint in Steamboat Springs. 4:42 p.m. Triple AAA was dispatched
Thanks Steamboat for helping us recycle over 20,000 corks!
Crime Stoppers If you have information about any unsolved crime, call Routt County Crime Stoppers at 870-6226. You will remain anonymous and could earn a cash reward.
to Routt County Road 56 for a motorist assist. 4:50 p.m. A man reported theft on Anglers Drive. 6:34 p.m. A juvenile situation was reported in Steamboat Springs. 6:46 p.m. A drunken pedestrian was reported at Eighth and Aspen streets. 7:23 p.m. Police made a traffic stop on Chinook Lane. 7:54 p.m. A woman made an animal complaint in the 200 block of Lincoln Avenue. 8:48 p.m. A juvenile situation was reported in Oak Creek. 9:44 p.m. An ambulance was requested in Steamboat Springs.
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
LOCAL
Monday, June 15, 2009
Fish Creek area will be closed for search the water herself. Kade told Levingston that, after falling into the creek, he was able to grab a branch and pull himself out on the other side. Two rescuers reached Kade at about 2:45 p.m. Crews set up a highline rope system to bring him back across the creek. Kade was safely on the other side of the creek by 5:10 p.m. He was alert and talkative as rescuers brought him down the trail. The Fish Creek area will be closed during the search today.
emphasizes that if someone is the least bit “dingy” with any symptoms at all, he or she needs to sit on the sideline. Rest is critical for preventing second-impact syndrome. “Second-impact syndrome is a real thing,” Dudley said. “People have to understand if you don’t feel 100 percent, you have to steer clear of anything where you could get bumped.” Dudley said there are different guidelines for concussion management in order to prevent this syndrome. Computerized testing is being used by professional athletes and some schools. “But all of them are in agreement, if you have any signs or symptoms, you should sit out,” he said. Dudley recommends that parents keep a close eye on youth
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— To reach Mike Lawrence, call 871-4233 or e-mail mlawrence@steamboatpilot.com
Doctor: Keep a close eye on youth athletes Monday Medical continued from 2
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with her children and husband, Rodney, who was in San Diego with the U.S. Marine Corps when the accident happened. He spent much of Sunday at the Fish Creek trailhead with search crews. United Methodist Church pastor Tim Selbe said the Green family is part of his parish, and he has known them for years. “They are doing as well as can be expected under the circumstances,” Selbe said Sunday evening. “They’re hanging in there.” Paula Huselton lives near
the Green family on Steamboat Drive. She said Rebecca Green is “a very lovely, kind person.” “She’s always really good with her kids,” Huselton said. “She always has a kind word to say.” Darrel Levingston, of Search and Rescue, said Saturday that Green was hiking with Kade, her daughter, Rachel, and her father, who is visiting from Nebraska. Green’s father witnessed at least part of the incident. He said Green was trying to bring Kade back from a rock when Kade slipped and, as she tried to rescue him, Green fell into
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or any worsening, the individuathletes, especially in the first 24 al should be seen by a medical hours. Young athletes may not professional immediately. always tell a coach or a parent Adults need to take the same how they really feel, or may not advice. After suffering a head even realize that they are suffering any symptoms. injury, let someone know. Then However, parents “Second-impact stay around other can test cognitive syndrome is a real people for 24 ability by asking thing. People have hours so they can questions. to understand if you note any change “You know in condition. your kid, ask them don’t feel 100 Take time to questions,” Dudley percent, you have rest from physical said. “You know to steer clear of activity as well as how they would anything where you from other tasks react.” If a child such as work, and is not completely could get bumped.” give your brain back to normal the chance to heal. in thought proJim Dudley cess or in speed Sit out to insure a Family physician and of thought, they safe return. longtime soccer coach should rest. Dudley also Riley Polumbus said an injured person needs to is communications specialist at demonstrate steady improveYampa Valley Medical Center. ment, hour-to-hour and day-to- She can be reached at riley. day. If there is no improvement polumbus@yvmc.org
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Your source for local news
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AGING WELL
12 | Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Conference is ‘one-stop shopping’ for caregivers Tamera Manzanares
SPECIAL TO THE PILOT & TODAY
Deciding the best care and living situation for an elderly loved one can be one of the most difficult decisions a family makes. Finances and the elderly person’s health and desires are among considerations that often can land a spouse, adult child or family member in a role he or she never planned for — that of primary caregiver. Caregiving can involve immense physical and emotional challenges that, particularly in rural areas, are exacerbated by sparse resources and support. Overwhelmed, many caregivers have little time or energy to seek out services that do exist. “You don’t research something like that ahead of time thinking, ‘Someday, I’m going to be a caregiver,’ … you just don’t know where to turn,” explained Shelly Orrell, director of the Routt County Council on Aging. Thankfully, the horizon is brighter for caregivers in Northwest Colorado, where more and more resources and support programs are available, including affordable respite and adult day services, legal aid and support groups providing education and camaraderie. The Caregiver’s Toolbox Conference is a convenient opportunity for caregivers and community members to learn about organizations and programs helping local caregivers cope and plan for the complexities of caring for an aging and ailing loved one. The free event is Wednesday at the Steamboat Springs Community Center. “We’re hoping it will be onestop shopping for people in
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Caregiver conference The Caregiver’s Toolbox Conference is from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Steamboat Springs Community Center. Guests will speak about elder law, preventing senior exploitation and Alzheimer’s disease. Information about caregiver resources such as adult day services and veterans’ services also will be available. The free event includes a light breakfast, lunch and door prizes. RSVP as soon as possible to Shelley Orrell, 879-0633. An additional conference is June 26 in Glenwood Springs. For more information, call Nancy McStay at 824-5646.
Caregiver resources ■ Northwest Colorado Options for Long-term Care provides caregivers financial assistance for respite care and/ or equipment. Eligibility depends on age and patients’ cognitive and physical limitations. Services are available to families (including grandparents who are primary caregivers of grandchildren) in Routt, Moffat, Rio Blanco and Garfield counties. For more information, call Nancy McStay at 824-5646. ■ The Haven Adult Day Center in Hayden is now accepting elderly and/or
a caregiver role,” said Nancy McStay, program manager for Northwest Colorado Options for Long-term Care, which is sponsoring the event with the Routt County Council on Aging. The conference will feature several guest speakers, including Emily Conner, regional director of the Alzheimer’s Association; Cary Steven Johnson, an expert on preventing and recognizing exploitation of older adults; and Kathleen Negri, an elder law attorney with first-hand caregiving experience.
Finding balance Karen Gibson, of Craig, has cared for her 90-year-old father-in-law for about two years. She has experience as a home health nurse, but even
disabled adult clients for half- and full-day programs, Mondays through Fridays. Reservations can be made on an ongoing basis or as caregiver respite is needed. For information, call Diane Girty at 875-1891. ■ Caregivers interested in participating in a caregiver support group at The Haven should call Karen Burley at 8751888. ■ A support group for caregivers and family members of people with Alzheimer’s disease meets monthly in Steamboat Springs. For more information, call Barbara Bronner at 879-8942. ■ The Routt County Council on Aging provides congregate meals, Meals on Wheels and activities in several communities and is a point of reference for learning about programs for caregivers and older adults. For more information, call Shelley Orrell at 879-0633. ■ The Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association offers a variety of services for caregivers and older adults. For information about home health visits, call 879-1632. For information about Aging Well programs, including free exercise classes for all abilities, all-day wellness programs and chronic disease management workshops, call 871-7676.
that didn’t fully prepare her for caregiving challenges. Although her father-in-law is fairly independent, Gibson shuttles him to and from doctors’ appointments and finds comfortable opportunities for him to socialize and enjoy activities outside the home. She also helps him with some daily tasks such as eating, which is almost always a struggle. Her father-in-law’s constant resistance, and her subsequent frustration, has taken a toll on Gibson emotionally. “We think our role as caregivers is reflected in how good our care is,” Gibson said. “So when they don’t cooperate, it sort of reflects on what sort of care we’re giving them.” It helps that she has remained focused on her work — she is a part-time pastor
at United Methodist Church — and dedicates time for herself, such as attending an early morning exercise class. Gibson credits community programs for helping her balance her needs with her fatherin-law’s health and social needs. “Caregiver assistance is one of the bright and shining lights out there,” she said. Gibson recently began working with Northwest Colorado Options for Long-term Care, a local organization sponsored by our regional Area Agency on Aging, which helps caregivers pay for respite care and/or obtain equipment, such as shower chairs, that make their jobs easier. Respite care and home health aids have allowed Gibson, whose husband works out-oftown during the week, to spend more time away from home pursing work and interests. Other helpful programs include Meals on Wheels, community transportation for older adults and Aging Well programs provided by the Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association. Gibson’s father-in-law attends an Aging Well balance class at Sunset Meadows every week, and together, they also attend Wellness Wednesdays, a day of healthy aging activities, including lunch and guest speakers, at the American Legion. “It’s a reason, a purpose, for getting out of the house,” she said.
Support is critical The more resources a person accesses, the easier his or her role as caregiver will be. “They might be able to make it physically, but they need mental health breaks,” McStay
said. “It’s very tedious; it’s very time consuming and very rough.” Respite services, which provide part- or full-day care for elderly and/or disabled adults in the home or in an adult day center, are a critical option for families who, for various reasons, are unable to send their loved ones to long-term living facilities. Adult day programs, which fulfill clients’ essential needs such as meals, bathing, health monitoring and engaging activities, are common in urban areas. Local residents now have access to this important resource: The first adult day center in the region — The Haven Adult Day Center in Hayden — is accepting clients. Another program is planned in the Rollingstone Respite House, currently under construction in Steamboat Springs. Caregivers’ needs are becoming a more and more prominent target of discussion and resources. But before caregivers can seek and access support, they must be open to help. The caregiver conference Wednesday is a convenient and comfortable setting for caregivers to explore their openness to help and the types of help available. “Hopefully it will encourage these people to find support,” McStay said. Tamera Manzanares writes for the Aging Well program and can be reached at tmanzanares@nwcovna.org or 871-7606. Aging Well, a division of Northwest Colorado Visiting Nurse Association, is a community-based program of healthy aging for adults 50 and better. For more information or to view past articles, log onto www.agingwelltoday.com.
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Class will perform cabin preservation work Cabin continued from 5 “You won’t be able to go into it,” she said about when the restoration is complete. “It will be a symbol of how simply life was led at one time.” A number of area residents attended the fundraiser for Diamond Window Cabin. “It’s a great cause to support,” said Jennifer Fernley, who brought her 1-year-old daughter, Hazel, to the fundraiser. “I live right here in Stagecoach. It’s awesome that there’s a gig like this happening right on my doorstep.” The fundraiser also attracted Steamboat resident Sherry Reed and her 18-year-old daughter, Shelby, who were ready to hit
the trails around the reservoir on their bikes. “I ride out here all the time,” Sherry Reed said. “So this is my way of supporting the area and HRC. And it’s a fun way to do it, instead of writing a check.” Anderson said the neat thing about the Diamond Window Cabin preservation was the partnership Historic Routt County formed with Colorado Mountain College’s Alpine Campus, which now offers a two-year associate’s degree in historic preservation. CMC students and community volunteers will be able to take a six-credit hour course this summer with instruction in log structure preservation and reconstruction. They’ll perform the
preservation work on the cabin. Historic Routt County Board Member David Epstein said those new to town don’t know Diamond Window Cabin’s history and significance in the county. He said if it and other structures weren’t saved, future generations wouldn’t know what came before them. And he hopes this year’s fundraiser leads to future efforts to preserve the county’s history. “I think that it was a good opportunity to create a significant fundraiser that we were lacking in,” he said. “… We’re hoping this evolves into an annual fundraiser.” — To reach Jack Weinstein, call 871-4203 or e-mail jweinstein@steamboatpilot.com
Every mouthful will be different, flavorful McLeod continued from 4 leaves reach at least 2 inches tall but not more than 6, dump into a sink of cool water, slosh around gently to remove dust, dirt and any hitchhikers, let the dirt settle, then place on paper towels to drain and pat dry or utilize a salad spinner. The latter will bruise the leaves, which causes limpness, so eat as soon as possible. Dry leaves
are imperative, however, or a dressing light and simple won’t adhere. What will frazzle this crop is hot temperatures, so once summer comes, if you can’t create shade with a shade cloth or golf umbrella, move on to other tasks until early fall and one or two more crops. But back to the mesclun lettuce mix — don’t stop there — toss in some herbs such as lovage, sorrel, chervil, parsley,
fennel or dill fronds, basil — whatever suits your taste buds. Add some young spinach, mustard greens, cresses, or collards. Mild or zesty, simple to complicated, tender to crunchy, high in nutrition — every mouthful will be different and beyond belief tender and flavorful.
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M o n d ay Monday Morning Blues
Tue s d ay We dne s day
2 for 1 Breakfast*
*Order 2 entrees & 1/2 Price 2 drinks & 1 Mimosas & Bloody Marys entree is free!
Waffle Wednesday
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Downtown bet ween 6th & 7th Open Everyday 7am - 3pm
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Jane McLeod is a Master Gardener with the CSU Extension Routt County.
County Agenda continued from 6 10:40 to 11 a.m. YVRA/Dave Ruppel ■ 4a. Consideration for approval of the second amendment to the Main Terminal Building Gift and Souvenir Concessions Agreement between Roksolana and Brian McFadden and Routt County to activate the final two year extension in the agreement 11 to 11:05 a.m. Road & Bridge/Paul Draper ■ 5a. Consideration for approval to fill the
S. Routt Weed Board positions — Tyler Knott and Merilee Ellis ■ 5b. Consideration for approval of Cattleguard agreement for replacement of cattleguard on CR 7C 11:05 to 11:20 a.m. Legal/John Merrill ■ 6a. Confirmation of signing a Proof of Claim in the Steamboat Springs Rental and Leasing, Inc. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy ■ 6b. Confirmation of signing a Proof of Claim in the Gateway Companies, Inc. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy ■ 6c. Consideration for signing an Amended Proof of Claim in the Gateway
Companies, Inc. Chapter 11 Bankruptcy 11:50 to noon Public Comment Public Comments will be heard on any item not on the agenda. County Commissioners will take public comment under consideration but will not make any decision nor take action at this time 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Legal/John Merrill ■ 7a. Docket & pending matter review. Executive Session to be requested under C.R.S. 24-6-402 (4)(b) — discussion with county attorney concerning specific legal matters
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LOCAL
14 | Monday, June 15, 2009
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Rogue Resource owner Mike Miller uses a Timbco to cut down a tree June 5 at the Seedhouse Campground in North Routt County.
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Cara A Marrs, RD,CPT Sarah Coleman, CPT
Six-Week Session Starts 6/16/2009 �� Beginning Trail Running �� Outdoor Fitness Classes �� Cool Hikes �� Nutrition Tips ���������������������������
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getting a lot of flack,” Ritschard said. Bill Blind, project manager for Sweat, said the company was prepared to do all the work themselves, but after hearing feedback from Ritschard, Sweat decided to reach out to local companies. “We did all we could to keep as much local as we could,” Blind said. He estimated between 70 to 90 percent of hazard tree removal will be subcontracted to Rogue and Walden-based Forest Products, Inc. “A substantial amount of money is going to stay local,” Miller said. “It’s not all going to Florida.” Sweat, Inc., will focus on the tree removal that is in environmentally sensitive areas where trees need to be cut with a hand crew using chainsaws, Blind said. The work this summer will concentrate on fire mitigation
Dead lodgepole pine trees are and removing roadside hazard trees from Forest Road 100, bountiful in Routt County, but Forest Road 550, Forest Road it is a matter of getting someone 80 and Forest Roads 681, 689 to pay to have them removed. “Nobody is spending any and 600 in the Big Creek Lakes money,” Miller area near Walden. said. “We don’t Supervisory Fore“A substantial ster Andy Cadenhave the work that head estimated we did last year.” amount of money 20,000 to 30,000 A substantial is going to stay trees will be cut amount of Rogue’s local. It’s not all down along the business was with going to Florida.” 20 miles of road private landowners. Jobs Miller between Columhad lined up vanbine and the ColMike Miller Owner of Rogue Resources ished. orado-Wyoming “People that border. About had 1,000 trees to 2,000 trees are being removed from Seedhouse take out only want to take out Campground, which will allow 50,” he said. Rogue’s work force shrunk it to open by July 4. Cadenhead said trees are this year from 85 to 25 employbeing stacked, and the Forest ees. Miller said it is hard to say Service will sell the timber by what business would be like if the truckload later this summer. there was no work in the nationMore tree removal projects are al forest. slated for this summer, as well. “We’re just happy to have “We anticipate more work,” work,” he said. Cadenhead said. “Mike (Miller) and others can get in on the bid— To reach Matt Stensland, call 871-4247 or e-mail mstensland@steamboatpilot.com ding for that additional work.”
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COLORADO
Records show misconduct
Colorado Springs police officers disciplined during 2-year span COLORADO SPRINGS
Colorado Springs police officers were disciplined during a two-year span for transgressions that included sexual harassment, shooting at a hawk after a bird attacked an officer, and oversleeping and missing a court case. Those details were released to The Colorado Springs Gazette after an open records request of the police department’s Internal Affairs documents. The reports are from 2007 and most of 2008, the newspaper said Sunday. Police noted that the percentage of complaints against officers is small and that misconduct is punished or handled with additional training. “I’m very proud that this department doesn’t have any systematic problems. When we do have a problem with an officer, it’s dealt with,” Lt. Kirk Wilson, a supervisor in the Internal Affairs unit, told the newspaper.
Police would not reveal the details of discipline against officers, saying that it would be against state law to do so. The Gazette said that none of the officers cited in the Internal Affairs reports returned the newspaper’s calls for comment. In one report, school resource officer Gary Partnow was accused in 2008 of sexually harassing three women at the middle school where he was assigned. The women claimed he made inappropriate comments to them and asked one about her sex life. Partnow said the allegations were false, but the principal requested that he be moved to another school. Another report detailed how officer Kirk Montgomery violated department policy by leaving a drug suspect unsupervised at a hospital in July. The suspect was supposed to receive treatment before being taken to the jail, but he fled. He was arrested weeks later. The newspaper reported that
the officer who overslept, Eric Reed, failed to testify in the case of a child abuse suspect who was later found not guilty. Reed’s supervisor wrote that “some charges were dropped due to his absence and ultimately the jury found the defendant not guilty.” Officer Dan Mork, a threeyear veteran, got in trouble for shooting at a hawk moments after a bird flew down and attacked a sergeant’s forehead in August 2008. The report says Mork approached a hawk feeding on carrion, and he claimed to have fired in self-defense at another hawk diving in his direction. Police faulted Mork for approaching the hawk while it was feeding, saying he put himself in danger, but concluded that Mork was not motivated by revenge when he walked up to the bird. Mork also was disciplined a year earlier for an improper search of a residence in which drugs were seized but no one was arrested.
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see why alcohol is legal but pot isn’t. “The main issue is marijuana is safer than alcohol,” said Sensible Breckenridge’s Josh Kappel. Marijuana possession is currently a misdemeanor in Breckenridge.
Woman’s body in apple orchard was dismembered GLENWOOD SPRINGS
Authorities say a body found under apple trees in an orchard near the highway was not a young girl but a woman who had been dismembered. The Garfield County Sheriff’s office said Sunday the victim is a Caucasian woman who was between 20 and 35. Sheriff’s spokeswoman Holly Hopple said authorities have not recovered all of the woman’s remains. She has yet to be identified. Hopple said the woman had extensive dental work, had mul-
Boat flips, kills Colorado man, injures 3 others OGALLALA, NEB.
Investigators are trying to determine what caused a speedboat to flip at Lake McConaughy, killing a Colorado man and injuring his family. The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission’s Dennis Thompson says the 28-foot boat was speeding across the center of the Western Nebraska reservoir when the accident happened Saturday afternoon. Four people in the boat were ejected when it flipped and broke into pieces.
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Marijuana laws could be coming up for a public vote in Breckenridge. A marijuana advocacy group is gathering signatures to put pot laws to voters in municipal elections this fall. The group wants to see an ordinance to remove all criminal penalties from the town code for the private use of marijuana, under 1 ounce, by adults 21 and older. Smoking in public and drugged driving would remain illegal. The proposal has the support of some town officials. Breckenridge Town Councilman Jeffrey Bergeron joined an affidavit filed in support of the ballot initiative. “It’s a cause I believe in, and I think the initiative reflects the will of the people of Breck,” Bergeron said. “I don’t think there’s any public safety concerns in regards to an adult possessing less than one ounce of marijuana.” Local police, though, oppose the initiative. “I worry about the collateral affect of the youth of the community,” Breckenridge Police chief told the Summit Daily News. Holman pointed out that even if the initiative were passed, marijuana still would be illegal under state and federal law. The group pushing the initiative, called Sensible Breckenridge, says they don’t
AROUND COLORADO
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tiple tattoos, and had brown hair with blonde highlights. A worker found her body Friday morning in an apple orchard about a quarter mile from Interstate 70 near Glenwood Springs. Hopple said it’s possible she may have been dumped there after she was killed somewhere else.
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Pot laws could be on Breckenridge ballots THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Monday, June 15, 2009
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
NATION
16 | Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT TODAY
American Indians struggle with health care For some tribes, government’s promise of free care on reservations has not been kept Editor’s note: An occasional look at government promises and how well they are kept.
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Mary Clare Jalonick THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Ta’Shon Rain Little Light, a happy little girl who loved to dance and dress up in traditional American Indian clothes, had stopped eating and walking. She complained constantly to her mother that her stomach hurt. When Stephanie Little Light took her daughter to the Indian Health Service clinic in this wind-swept and remote corner
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of Montana, they told her the 5- a 1787 agreement between tribes year-old was depressed. and the government, to provide Ta’Shon’s pain rapidly wors- American Indians with free health ened and she visited the clinic care on reservations. But that about 10 more times during sev- promise has not been kept. About eral months, before one-third more is her lung collapsed spent per capita on “It is heartbreaking and she was airlifted health care for felto imagine that ons in federal pristo a children’s hospiour leaders in tal in Denver. There on, according to she was diagnosed 2005 data from the Washington do with terminal canhealth service. not care, so I must cer, confirming the In Washington, believe that they do suspicions of family a few lawmakers not know.” members. have tried to bring A few weeks attention to the later, a charity sent broken system as Joe Garcia President of the the whole family to Congress attempts National Congress Disney World so to improve health of American Indians Ta’Shon could see care for millions of Cinderella’s Castle. other Americans. She never got to see the castle, But tightening budgets and though. She died in her hotel bed the relatively small size of the soon after the family arrived in American Indian population have Florida. worked against them. “Maybe it would have been “It is heartbreaking to imagine treatable,”says her great-aunt, Ada that our leaders in Washington White, as she stoically recounts do not care, so I must believe the last few months of Ta’Shon’s that they do not know,” Joe short life. Stephanie Little Light Garcia, president of the National cries as she recalls how she once Congress of American Indians, forced her daughter to walk when said in his annual state of Indian she was in pain because the doc- nations address in February. tors told her it was all in the little When it comes to health and girl’s head. disease in Indian country, the staTa’Shon’s story is not unique tistics are staggering. American Indians have an in the Indian Health Service system, which serves almost 2 million infant death rate that is 40 percent American Indians in 35 states. higher than the rate for whites. On some reservations, the oft- They are twice as likely to die quoted refrain is, “don’t get sick from diabetes, 60 percent more after June,” when the federal dol- likely to have a stroke, 30 percent lars run out. It’s a sick joke, and more likely to have high blood a sad one because it is sometimes pressure and 20 percent more true. Officials say they have about likely to have heart disease. half of what they need to operate, American Indian health clinics and patients know they must be often are ill-equipped to deal with dying or about to lose a limb to such high rates of disease, and get serious care. poor clinics do not have enough Wealthier tribes can supple- money to focus on preventive ment the federal health service care. American Indian programs budget with their own dollars. are not a priority for Congress, But poorer tribes, often those which provided the agency with on the most remote reservations, $3.6 billion this budget year. far away from city hospitals, are Officials at the Indian Health stuck with grossly substandard Service say they can’t legally comcare. The agency itself describes a ment on specific cases such as Ta’Shon’s. But they say they are “rationed health care system.” The sad fact is an old fact. The doing the best they can with the U.S. has an obligation, based on money they have — about 54
WOMEN’S ONLY 3-DAY RIDING CLINIC
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On the ’Net Indian Health Service: www.ihs.gov/ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Department’s office of minority health: http://tinyurl.com/ l9qzuq National Congress of American Indians’ health care issues: http:// tinyurl.com/krs986 Senate Indian Affairs Committee: http://indian.senate.gov GAO reports: http://tinyurl.com/ljq6fb, http://tinyurl.com/n7kdpa
cents on the dollar they need. One of the problems is that many clinics must “buy” health care from larger medical facilities outside the health service because they are not equipped to handle more serious medical conditions. The money that Congress provides for those contract health care services rarely is sufficient, forcing many clinics to make “life or limb” decisions that leave lowerpriority patients in the cold. “The picture is much bigger than what the Indian Health Service can do,” says Doni Wilder, an official at the agency’s headquarters in Rockville, Md., and the former director of the Northwestern region. “Doctors every day in our organization are making decisions about people not getting cataracts removed, gall bladders fixed.” On the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota, residents were eager to share stories about substandard care. Rhonda Sandland says she couldn’t get help for her frostbite until she threatened to kill herself because of the pain — several months after her first appointment. The same clinic failed to diagnose Victor Brave Thunder with congestive heart failure, giving him Tylenol and cough syrup when he told a doctor he was uncomfortable and had not slept for several days. Brave Thunder, 54, died in April while waiting for a heart transplant. “You can talk to anyone on the reservation and they all have a story,” says Tracey Castaway, whose sister, Marcella Buckley, said she was in $40,000 of debt because of treatment for cancer. The growing political clout of some remote reservations may bring some attention to health care woes. Last year’s Democratic primary played out in part in the Dakotas and Montana, where both Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton became the first presidential candidates to aggressively campaign on Indian reservations there. Both promised better health care. Obama’s budget for 2010 includes an increase of $454 million, or about 13 percent, more than this year. The stimulus bill he signed this year provided for construction and improvements to clinics.
NATION
Monday, June 15, 2009
Diplomacy with Iran unclear WASHINGTON
Obama eyes tighter controls on banks President ready to overhaul rules for financial system, Wall Street Jim Kuhnhenn
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama is ready to roll out an overhaul of the intricate rules and systems that govern America’s troubled financial institutions, proposing the most ambitious revision since the Great Depression. The goal is to prevent a recurrence of the economic crisis that erupted in the United States and exploded in the fall with devastating consequences still reverberating around the world. Unlike the government’s temporary ownership stake in automakers and major financial companies, the regula-
tory changes set to be announced Wednesday are designed to be permanent. They could result in a major realignment of Obama power and authority among government agencies that set the rules for banking, lending and investing and touch American lives through daily transactions, from credit cards to mortgages and mutual funds. The proposals already are the source of a spirited debate in Congress about whether Obama’s measures will prove too timid or place too heavy a hand on the levers of capitalism.
At issue is a 21st century system of high-stakes swaps and trades, bets and losses where trillions of dollars worth of investment products have grown too intricate for a 20th century regulatory structure. Imagine today’s financial transactions as an athletic contest where the referees have lost their vantage point. Plays occur out of their sight and fouls go undetected. Some referees halt play while others let it go on. Even the players have had enough. “On a macro-basis, we’re very supportive of reform,” said Tim Ryan, president and chief executive of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.
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The re-election of Iran’s hard-line president amid charges of ballot fraud has put the Obama administration in a tougher spot as it tries to draw theocratic Tehran into nuclear diplomacy without appearing to accept suppression of dissent. Vice President Joe Biden said Sunday that efforts to engage Tehran, with the central goal of stopping it from getting nuclear weapons, will continue. But the disputed election outcome and the official crackdown on opposition protests appears to be a major setback, at least in the short run, for the new U.S. administration, which has made engagement with Iran
sein Mousavi, has no intention of abandoning its Iran policy. Obama has put Iran at the center of his policy of extending an open hand to adversaries; the Iranians so far have responded mainly with silence. The administration is trying to understand whether Friday’s vote accurately reflected Iranians’ response to Obama’s effort to end the nearly 30-year diplomatic estrangement from the Islamic Republic, Biden said during an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “That’s the question,” Biden said, adding: “Is this the result of the Iranian people’s wishes? The hope is that the Iranian people, all their votes have been counted, they’ve been counted fairly. But look, we just don’t know enough” since the voting.
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one of its sigFor more nature foreign Ahmadinejad policies. protests Obama alcontinue ready is under See page 23 renewed political pressure at home to stiffen U.S. policy. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, the Connecticut independent, said Sunday the Iranian rulers had stolen the election and made a mockery of democracy. He urged Obama to “protest” and to speak out in defense of silenced Iranian demonstrators, but he offered no concrete steps to strengthen the U.S. case. Biden made clear that the administration, while uncertain of the implications of the announced electoral victory of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad against his reformist opponent, Mir Hos-
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US ties become more complicated with disputed election results
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
18 | Monday, June 15, 2009
NATION
STEAMBOAT TODAY
National Summit arrives in rough times Jeff Karoub
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT
The country’s economic troubles already were brewing when organizers announced in September that business and other leaders would gather here to craft a plan for keeping the U.S. competitive in manufacturing, energy, technology and environmental efforts. But few predicted the plunge to follow: Banks failed, stocks tanked, homes foreclosed and two once-mighty U.S. automakers landed in bankruptcy court. Congress has poured billions into hopeful fixes, and the new president has made it a personal mission to right the nation’s ship. So, where does that leave the three-day National Summit, which starts Monday and brings more than 90 leaders from the public and private sectors to the especially hard-hit Motor City? The answer: scaled back but no less determined to do something. “The need is more crucial now,” said Tom Dekar, a vice chairman of accounting and consulting firm Deloitte LLP, which helped create the conference. “I think we may be where we are because we did not have the right policy set in each of those topic areas,” he said. “Had we had a better set of policies in the industrial sector, had we looked at automotive market as a market ... we might not be where we are today.” Conference organizers initially hoped to draw as many as 5,000 to Ford Field, home of the NFL’s Detroit Lions, but to cut costs, they moved it to the Detroit Marriott Renaissance Center. Nearly 3,000 are expected to attend. The summit is being convened by the Detroit Economic Club. Still, the vision hasn’t changed: assemble leaders from business, government and academia to discuss issues facing the four sectors and come up with recommendations for increasing the nation’s competitiveness. Organizers hope the summit’s nonpartisan approach offers credibility to the ideas among policy-makers.
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
Monday, June 15, 2009
| 21
$AVE MONEY �������������������� ������������������� ��������������������������������� �������������������������������� ����������������������������� �������������������������������� ��������������������������������� ������������������������������������
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Today City Hi Lo W Aspen 64 40 t Boulder 77 52 t Colorado Spgs 76 50 pc Craig 70 43 c Denver 77 52 t Durango 76 44 c Eagle 69 43 t Fort Collins 77 51 t Grand Junction 79 56 c Glenwood Spgs 74 47 t Leadville 57 33 t
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Tue. Hi Lo W 72 43 t 84 55 t 82 53 t 75 44 t 84 55 t 83 44 s 77 43 t 82 53 t 85 57 pc 80 46 t 65 36 t
REGIONAL CITIES City Meeker Montrose Pueblo Rifle Vail Salt Lake City Vernal Casper Cheyenne Jackson Rock Springs
Today Hi Lo W 72 42 t 77 50 c 87 51 pc 74 48 t 59 34 t 75 57 c 75 48 c 75 47 t 74 49 t 61 39 t 68 46 t
Tue. Hi Lo W 76 45 t 84 53 pc 92 55 t 82 48 pc 65 36 t 80 58 pc 80 51 t 80 47 t 78 51 t 68 41 t 73 46 t
NATIONAL CITIES
Today Today City Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Albuquerque 88 61 s Miami 89 77 t Atlanta 87 71 t Minneapolis 79 60 pc Boston 64 53 c New York City 73 58 t Chicago 78 55 pc Oklahoma City 95 73 pc Dallas 97 76 s Philadelphia 78 59 t Detroit 79 57 pc Phoenix 97 75 pc Houston 96 77 s Reno 80 55 pc Kansas City 80 68 r San Francisco 71 56 c Las Vegas 93 69 s Seattle 74 54 pc Los Angeles 71 61 r Washington, D.C. 79 64 c Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
67
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ACCUWEATHER 5-DAY FORECAST FOR STEAMBOAT SPRINGS ®
Today
Tuesday
An afternoon thunderstorm
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RF: 72
40
Wednesday
Partly sunny, a t-storm in the p.m.
71
RF: 77
An afternoon thunderstorm possible
47
74
RF: 72
47
Thursday
A p.m. thundershower possible
73
RF: 72
Friday
46
Temperature:
High Low Month-to-date high Month-to-date low
An afternoon thunderstorm possible
75
RF: 76
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Month to date Year to date
47
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REGIONAL WEATHER Jackson 61/39
Salt Lake City 75/57
Moab 84/56
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Casper 75/47
Steamboat Springs 67/40
Grand Junction 79/56 Durango 76/44
Cheyenne 74/49
Denver 77/52 Colorado Springs 76/50 Pueblo 87/51
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0.05" 1.48" 13.45"
Source: SteamboatWeather.com
Sun and Moon:
Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today
ROUTT COUNTY FORECAST
Today: Mostly cloudy with a thunderstorm in the afternoon. Highs 58 to 67. New Snow: (5,000 ft to 7,000 ft) 0" Tonight: A t-storm in spots early; otherwise, partly cloudy. Lows 38 to 42. New Snow: (5,000 ft to 7,000 ft) 0" Tomorrow: Partly sunny with a thunderstorm in the afternoon. Highs 63 to 71. New Snow: (5,000 ft to 7,000 ft) 0"
69 42 72 32
Precipitation:
RF: The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, cloudiness, sunshine intenisty, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body. Shown is the highest temperature for each day
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ALMANAC
Steamboat through 5 p.m. yesterday
(7,000 ft to 9,000 ft)
0"
(7,000 ft to 9,000 ft)
0"
(7,000 ft to 9,000 ft)
0"
5:36 a.m. 8:39 p.m. 12:45 a.m. 1:02 p.m.
Last
New
June 15
June 22
First
Full
June 29
July 7
ACCUWEATHER UV INDEX TODAY TM
Higher index numbers indicate greater eye and skin exposure to ultraviolet rays.
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0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme
Area Flow Level Boulder Creek .............252 ............low Clear Ck/Golden .........643 ..........med. S. Platte/Bailey ............249 ............low Lower Poudre.............1100 ........med.
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STREAM FLOWS
Area Flow Level Brown's Canyon .........1590 ........med. Gore Canyon..............3200..........high Yampa R./Steamboat .1580 ........med. Green R./Green R.....13600 ........high
WEATHER TRIVIATM
What only happens between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn?
A: Twice each year, the sun is directly overhead.
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
WORLD
Monday, June 15, 2009
| 23
Ahmadinejad protests continue �������������������������
Opposition groups clash with police; Mousavi aides detained some foreign journalists who were in Iran to cover the elections to prepare to leave. Nabil Khatib, executive news editor for Dubai-based news network Al Arabiya, said the station’s correspondent in Tehran was given a verbal order Sunday from Iranian authorities that the office will be closed for one week. No reason was given for the order, but the station was warned several times Saturday that they need to be careful in reporting “chaos” accurately.
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many were released Sunday after being held overnight. Iran’s deputy police chief, TEHRAN, IRAN Ahmad Reza Radan, told the Protesters battled police official Islamic Republic News and shouted their opposition Agency that about 170 people from the rooftops Sunday, have been arrested. It was not but President Mahmoud known how many remained in Ahmadinejad dismissed the custody. unrest as little Mousavi has more than “pas“Some believed they urged his supportsions after a socwould win, and then ers to channel their cer match” and into peacethey got angry. It has anger brought huge ful acts of dissent. crowds to a rally no legal credibility. It But the official to defend his landclampdown on is like the passions slide re-election. the Internet links after a soccer match. Just after sunblunted the reach ... The margin down, cries of of the message. “death to the dictabetween my votes At the same time, tor”echoed through and the others is too Mousavi went to Tehran as thouthe pinnacle of much and no one sands of backers power to try to can question it.” for Ahmadinejad’s reverse the election rival, Mir Hossein decision. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Mousavi, heeded a In a letter to Iranian president call to bellow from the Guardian the roofs and balCouncil — a powconies. The deeply erful 12-member clerical body symbolic act recalled the shouts closely allied to Supreme Leader of “Allahu Akbar,” or God Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — he is Great, to show opposition claimed “fraud is evident.” to the Western-backed monThe letter, posted on archy before the 1979 Islamic Mousavi’s Web site that is accesRevolution. sible outside Iran, didn’t specThe scenes summed up the ify his allegations but claimed showdown about the disputed that his envoys were unfairly elections: an outwardly confi- blocked from monitoring polldent Ahmadinejad exerted con- ing stations. Iran does not allow trol, while Mousavi showed no outside or independent elecsign of backing down and could tion observers. The Guardian be staking out a new role as Council must certify all election powerful opposition voice. counts. His charges that Friday’s vote Mousavi later met Khamenei was riddled by fraud brought — who has almost limitless sympathetic statements from power — to press his appeal, Vice President Joe Biden and said Shahab Tabatabaei, a other leaders. Mousavi made a prominent activist in Mousavi’s direct appeal with Iran’s rul- pro-reform camp. ing clerics to annul the result, It was likely a long-shot misbut the chances were considered sion by Mousavi, 67, who served remote. as prime minister in the 1980s. With his wide network of Khamenei has already given his young and middle-class backblessing to the election outcome ers, Mousavi could emerge as and it would be extraordinary a leader for Iran’s liberal ranks for him to publicly change his and bring internal pressure on position. Ahmadinejad and Iran’s theocIn a news conference, Ahracy to take less confrontational madinejad called the level of policies toward the West. violence “not important from But the struggle Sunday was my point of view” and likened on the streets in the worst unrest it to the intensity after a soccer in Tehran since student-led progame. tests 10 years ago. “Some believed they would Demonstrators were back on win, and then they got angry,” the streets with the same tactics: torching bank facades and he said. “It has no legal credtrash bins, smashing store win- ibility. It is like the passions after dows and hurling rocks at anti- a soccer match. ... The margin riots squads in Tehran. Police between my votes and the othresponded with baton-wielding ers is too much and no one can sweeps — sometimes targeting question it.” “In Iran, the election was a bystanders — and the regime shut down text messaging sys- real and free one,” he told a tems and pro-reform Internet room packed with Iranian and foreign media. sites. But Ahmadinejad also There was no official word on accused international media of casualties. Authorities detained top launching a “psychological war” Mousavi aides, including the against the country. head of his Web campaign, but Iranian authorities have asked THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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WORLD
24 | Monday, June 15, 2009
North Korea warns of nuclear war
AFFORDABLE FLOORING WAREHOUSE
South Korean president tells top security officials to deal with new threats Vijay Joshi
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
South Korea’s president ordered his top security officials Sunday to deal “resolutely and squarely” with new North Korean warnings of a nuclear war on the eve of his U.S. visit. In Washington, Vice President Joe Biden said “God only knows” what North Korea wants from the latest showdown. President Lee Myung-bak travels to Washington today for talks with President Barack Obama that are expected to focus on the North’s rogue nuclear and missile programs. The trip comes after North Korea’s Foreign Ministry threatened war with any country that stops its ships on the high seas under new sanctions approved by the U.N. Security Council in response to its May 25 nuclear test. It also vowed Saturday to “weaponize” all its plutonium and acknowledged a long-suspected uranium enrichment
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program for the first time. ing the Cold War. Plutonium and uranium are key President Lee summoned his ingredients of atomic bombs. top security ministers Sunday A commentary published and ordered them to “resoluteSaturday in the North’s state- ly and squarely cope” with the North’s threats, run Tongil Sinbo his office said. weekly claimed the “God only knows The Unification U.S. was deploying what he wants. Ministry, respona vast number of There’s all kinds sible for ties with nuclear weapons in the North, issued a South Korea and of discussions. statement demandJapan. Whether this is ing that it stop North Korea “is about succession, inflaming tension completely within wanting his son and resume talks the range of U.S. with the South. nuclear attack, and to succeed him. ... “North Korea the Korean peninWe can’t guess his sula is becoming should give up its motives.” an area where the nuclear program ... chances of a nucleand stop any kind Joe Biden ar war are the highof military threat,” U.S. vice president est in the world,” it it said. “We urge said. North Korea to Kim Yong-kyu, respond in a sina spokesman at the U.S. mili- cere dialogue to improve Southtary command in Seoul, denied North Korean relations.” the allegation, saying the U.S. The new U.N. sanctions no longer has nuclear bombs approved Friday are aimed in South Korea. U.S. tactical at depriving the North of the nuclear weapons were removed financing used to build its nuclefrom South Korea in 1991 as ar program. They also authorize part of arms reductions follow- searches of North Korean ships
Argentine glacier continues advance Despite increasing global temperatures, ice field constantly grows Jeannette Neumann THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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suspected of transporting illicit ballistic missile and nuclear materials. Biden told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that it’s crucial that the U.S. and other nations “make sure those sanctions stick.” North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Il, reportedly had a stroke 10 months ago and analysts think there may be a plan in place to name his inexperienced 26-year-old son, Kim Jong Un, as the future leader. “God only knows what he wants,” Biden said of Kim. “There’s all kinds of discussions. Whether this is about succession, wanting his son to succeed him. Whether or not he’s looking for respect. Whether or not he really wants a nuclear capability to threaten the region. ... We can’t guess his motives. “We just have to deal with the reality that a North Korea that is either proliferating weapons and or missiles, or a North Korea that is using those weapons ... is a serious danger and threat to the world, and particularly East Asia,” the vice president said.
Argentina’s Perito Moreno glacier is one of only a few ice fields worldwide that have withstood rising global temperatures.
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Nourished by Andean snow- Moreno expands enough to melt, the glacier constantly touch a point of land across grows even as it spawns icebergs Lake Argentina, cutting the the size of apartment buildings nation’s largest freshwater lake into a frigid lake, maintaining a in half and forming an ice dam nearly perfect equias it presses against librium since meathe shore. “We’re not sure surements began The water on why this happens. more than a cenone side of the But not all glaciers tury ago. dam surges against “We’re not sure the glacier, as respond equally to why this happens,” many as 200 feet climate change.” said Andres Rivera, (60 meters) above a glacialist with the lake level, until it Andres Rivera Center for Scientific breaks the ice wall Glacialist for Scientific Studies in Valdivia, with a thunderous Studies in Valdivia, Chile Chile. “But not all crash, drowning glaciers respond the applause of equally to climate change.” hundreds of tourists. Viewed at a safe distance “It’s like a massive building on cruise boats or the wooden falling all of the sudden,” said observation deck just beyond park ranger Javier D’Angelo, the glacier’s leading edge, Perito who experienced the rupture in Moreno’s jagged surface radiates 2008 and 1998. a brilliant white in the strong The rupture is a reminder that Patagonian sun. Submerged sec- while Perito Moreno appears tions glow deep blue. to be a vast, 19-mile-long (30 And when the wind blows in kilometer) frozen river, it’s a a cloud cover, the 3-mile-wide (5 dynamic icescape that moves kilometer) glacier seems to glow and cracks unexpectedly. from within as the surround“The glacier has a lot of life,” ing mountains and water turn a said Luli Gavina, who leads meditative gray. mini-treks across the glacier’s Every few years, Perito snow fields.
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To Report Scores: ■ Call Sports Editor John F. Russell at 871-4209 during the day. ■ Call the News Desk at 871-4246 at night.
SPORTS
MLB Torrealba reunited with son after kidnapping incident
Page 27
Steamboat Today • Monday, June 15, 2009
25
Lakers claim title No. 15
MLB
Rockies make it 10 wins in a row
LA beats Orlando, 4-1, in NBA Finals
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DENVER
Nothing can slow down the streaking Colorado Rockies — not even tornadoes. Garrett Atkins and Todd Helton had three hits each, and the Colorado Rockies beat the Seattle Mariners, 7-1, on Sunday, matching the franchise record SUNDAY’S with their 11th GAME: straight win. Rockies 7 C o l o r a d o ’s Mariners 1 starters have won 10 times during the streak. Jason Hammel said he felt strong, but a 55-minute rain delay in the top of the sixth, which also included a tornado warning for the Denver area, kept him from pitching deeper into the game. “I saw at least seven for sure,” Hammel said. “I’ve never had to deal with tornadoes. I’ve never found the other team being Mother Nature.” Brad Hawpe doubled twice, and Clint Barmes had two hits for Colorado, which has swept three straight series and is 134 under interim manager Jim Tracy. “Every day we walk out on the field, we expect to win,” Helton said. “In the big leagues you’re facing good teams, and sometimes it doesn’t happen, and that’s why you don’t get too down when things go bad because you can always turn them around.” The Rockies won 11 straight from Sept. 16 to 27, 2007, when they surged to the National League wild card. They won 14 of their last 15 that season, including a one-game playoff against San Diego to win the wild card. Colorado then won seven straight playoff games, sweeping Philadelphia in the NL Divisional playoff and Arizona in the NLCS before being swept by Boston in the World Series. On Sunday, they finished off See Rockies, page 27
Tom Withers
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ORLANDO, FLA.
brawl between coaching staffs seemed imminent. “Remember that bulldog you had?” Meek hollered out Saturday, interrupting Mortensen. He quickly launched into his own version of events. “Kelly,” Mortensen said with a sigh. “Can I at least finish my story?” Kelly Meek was a track and basketball coach at Steamboat Springs High School for more than 30 years, compiling 44 league, district or regional titles and 540 wins. According
Kobe Bryant pulled Phil Jackson close, embracing his coach and looking him straight in the eyes. After all they’d been through, this was their moment, their championship, their time. This was the one to top all the others. The one without Shaq. The one to pass Red. Bryant’s seven-year chase of a coveted championship is finally over. He’s got his fourth title, and Jackson his record 10th. One year after failing in the finals, Bryant and the Lakers have redemption and all the rewards that go with it. The Lakers earned their 15th title Sunday night as Bryant scored 30 points and Pau Gasol added 14 and 15 rebounds in a 99-86 Game 5 win against the Orlando Magic, who ran out of comebacks. It took longer than Bryant expected, but he has stepped out of former teammate Shaquille O’Neal’s enormous shadow — at last. His fourth championship secured a strong case can be made for Bryant being the league’s best player since Michael Jordan hung up his sneakers. Bryant, who averaged 32.4 points and was named finals MVP, said the can-he-win-without-Shaq talk annoyed him. “It was like Chinese water torture,” he said. “I would cringe every time. I was just like, it’s a challenge I’m just going to have to accept because there’s no way I’m going to argue it. You can say it until you’re blue in the face and rationalize it until you’re blue in the face, but it’s not going anywhere until you do something about it. “I think we, as a team, answered the call because they understood the challenge that I had, and we all embraced it.”
See Meek, page 26
See Lakers, page 27
JOEL REICHENBERGER/STAFF
Kelly Meek adjusts his cap after Moffat County basketball coach Craig Mortensen “awarded” him a doctorate in B.S. on Saturday as Meek was roasted at Steamboat Springs High School.
Roast light on jabs Kelly Meek emerges from honorary event unscathed Joel Reichenberger PILOT & TODAY STAFF
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
There were a number of basic problems with the roast of Kelly Meek, which took place Saturday in the Steamboat Springs High School gymnasium that witnessed so many of his great seasons, great teams and great wins. The first problem pertains to Meek’s memory. A long line of speakers rose to duel the legendary Sailors boys basketball and track coach, but nearly every story they started was greeted with a knowing roll of
the eyes and a chuckle from the event’s guest of honor. Midway through the ceremony, which drew more than 150 of Meek’s friends, family members, players and foes, one of his chief rivals, former Moffat County boys basketball coach Craig Mortensen, began to recall one of the most heated battles between the Sailors and the Bulldogs. Mortensen explained how one of his athletes absorbed heckling from the Steamboat bench after having slid across the court and into the chairs. The situation escalated quickly to the point that an all-out
SPORTS
26 | Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Locals fare well in tournament
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Seniors tennis competition draws about 100 to Steamboat
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Joel Reichenberger
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Steamboat Springs resident Ed Mooney looks to return a ball Sunday during the Intermountain Tennis Association’s Senior Sectional Tennis Championships at The Tennis Center at Steamboat Springs.
a part of a team that won the women’s 65-year-old doubles division. Ed Mooney, meanwhile, played with Ken Sawer from Aspen. Mooney wrapped up the Men’s 55 doubles bracket by winning his final service game,
putting the finishing touches on a two-set victory. “It was a fantastic tournament,” Mooney said. “I always play this one. It was really nice this year.” — To reach Joel Reichenberger, call 871-4253 or e-mail jreichenberger@steamboatpilot.com
Meek’s influence noticeable in speakers’ words
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It almost was as if someone upstairs was listening. Stacy Swiggart, director of the Intermountain Tennis Association’s Senior Sectional Tennis Championships, expressed her joy about having dodged nearly all of the often-predicted thunderstorms during the weekend tournament at The Tennis Center at Steamboat Springs. Minutes later, as the final matches of the tournament took the court Sunday, the skies opened up with rain and hail. No worries. There was plenty of room on the inside courts and after a few minutes of scrambling, the tournament concluded without a problem. “It went really well,” Swiggart said. “Mother Nature was very nice to us all weekend.” The seniors tournament drew about 100 players from a sixstate area, though most hailed from Utah and Colorado. Swiggart said a large Denver tournament kept this year’s numbers slightly smaller than those of years past, but she said there still was plenty of good tennis. She should know — she was one of a few locals to win a division in the three-day affair. Swiggart won the 45-year old women’s classification. Sue Swain and Susie Allen teamed up to win the women’s 50-yearold doubles. Kathi Skytta was
to his protagonists Saturday, through that entire Hall of Fame career he was a know-itall who, according to one speaker, “would talk at the drop of a pause.” He always was ripe fodder for pranks — massive ones involving moving the entire contents of his house onto his front lawn, and small ones that led to desperately unwanted 4 a.m. hotel wakeup calls on team road trips. He was a tough coach who was merciless in making athletes run wind sprints, a man who was bilingual — speaking “both English and profanity” — and an often-struggling golfer. He threw elbows in pickup basketball games, all the better to “toughen kids up,” and would pretend his best player was injured in the weeks leading up to a big game just to gain an advantage. “I’d like to say it was all coaching,” quipped Cliff Nor-
dyke, a prominent member of successful basketball teams and Steamboat’s state champ track squads in 1979, 1980 and 1981. “But, I know it was all our talent.” Meek welcomed nearly every speaker to the stage and sent each away with a barrage of tidbits about that person’s life — the points-per-game while playing at Steamboat, time and place in a state track meet event, stats from college and often current profession. Still, the problems with roasting Kelly Meek didn’t all center around his remarkable memory. A much larger factor was that people simply didn’t seem to be able to find many bad things to say. Players spanning Meek’s years in Steamboat traveled from across the country for the event. Anthony Barrett graduated from Steamboat in 1992, then played basketball for four years at the Air Force Academy. He
opted to return to Steamboat and speak about Meek instead of attending a party celebrating his safe return from Iraq. “I would have never been able to do what I did without you,” he said. Jon Baskin graduated in 1986 and now coaches high school basketball in Denver. “You always gave us a place to play,” he said. “It seemed like the gym was always open.” Given a chance to crack back at what blows came his way, Meek couldn’t find much to say, either. “We’re 62,” he said, gesturing to his wife, Karen, who sat by him throughout the afternoon. “It’s just amazing to see how good we look compared to most of you. “Really, it was great to see so many people here from young to old. It was great so many people were able to come back.” — To reach Joel Reichenberger, call 871-4253 or e-mail jreichenberger@steamboatpilot.com
SPORTS
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Monday, June 15, 2009
| 27
Torrealba reunited with son Rockies catcher talks about kidnapping ordeal for 1st time
Rockies tie Red Sox for longest streak Rockies continued from 25 a sweep of a team that was playing well. The Mariners had won four straight series and 9 of 13 games overall entering the weekend series. “We came in here on a roll,” first baseman Russell Branyan said. “They got the best of us.” The Rockies tied the Red Sox for the longest win streak in the majors this year. The Red Sox won 11 in a row from April 15 to 27. The streak began after losing three in a row at Houston. Colorado salvaged the final game of that series before sweeping four games in St. Louis
and three more in Milwaukee. “We played great baseball in the first two games in St. Louis, and you could see an easiness to the group by game three in St. Louis,” Tracy said. “Then when we got to Milwaukee, I saw belief.” Hammel (4-3) gave up one run on five hits in 5 1/3 innings. He struck out six and didn’t walk a batter to earn his fourth straight win. Seattle starter Jason Vargas (2-2) gave up seven runs and 12 hits, walked two and struck out four in 4 2/3 innings. “I thought I had things going when I struck out the side in the third,” Vargas said. “I just got
off track in the fifth and they really opened up the game.” Ichiro Suzuki had two hits for Seattle. Ahead, 2-1, after four, the Rockies blew it open in the fifth. Helton and Atkins started the inning with singles, and Hawpe doubled to left to drive in Helton. One out later, Troy Tulowitzki was intentionally walked, and Chris Iannetta drove a double to the wall in left-center to clear the bases. After Hammel grounded out, rookie Dexter Fowler doubled home Iannetta to make it 7-1. “A huge three-run double by Iannetta, a big double by Brad Hawpe,” Tracy said.
Jackson: Kobe has learned to be a leader Lakers continued from 25 O’Neal, now with the Phoenix Suns, was glad to see Bryant win another title. “Congratulations kobe, u deserve it,” O’Neal said on his Twitter page. “You played great. Enjoy it my man enjoy it.” Bryant’s coach now stands alone. Jackson, the chilled-out, bow-legged Zen Master who won six league titles in the 1990s with Jordan in Chicago, now has won four with Los Angeles and broke a tie with legendary Boston coach Red Auerbach as the winningest coach in finals history. “I’ll smoke the cigar tonight
in memory of Red,” Jackson said. “He was a great guy.” Bryant and Jackson, whose relationship strained and briefly snapped under the weight of success, again are at the top of their games. Together. Jackson, who once called Bryant “a selfish player” now sees the 30-year-old in a far different light. “He’s learned how to become a leader in a way in which people want to follow him,” Jackson said. “That’s really important for him to have learned that because he knew that he had to give to get back in return, and so he’s become a giver rather than just a guy that a demand-
ing leader. That’s been great for him and great to watch.” Nothing was going to stop Bryant, who spent the postseason scowling, snarling, baring his teeth and all but breathing fire at anything in his path. For weeks, the All-Star has worn his game face. His daughters called him Grumpy. Only when the victory was his in the final seconds did he allow himself to smile. “I was just completely locked in,” he said. “I was grumpy for a while, and now, I’m just ecstatic, like a kid in a candy store.” After the final horn, Bryant leaped into the air and was quickly engulfed by his teammates, who bounced around the floor of Amway Arena.
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Colorado Rockies catcher Yorvit Torrealba felt the fear cut through him. His 11-yearold son was in the hands of kidnappers, and he thought the boy was going to die. Torrealba sat by the phone in Venezuela, listening to his wife negotiate with the kidnappers. It was thought best that Torrealba Torrealba not do the talking. “It’s something I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy,” he said. “For three days I couldn’t sleep, I couldn’t drink water. I felt like my hands were tied, and I couldn’t do anything.” Torrealba spoke about his ordeal Sunday, the first time he has done so since Yorvit Eduardo was released by his abductors. Now, nearly two weeks later, his son is fine and with him in Denver.
“Overall, he’s happy, he’s good,” Torrealba said before the Rockies played Seattle. “When we were in Miami, I took him to the park, to the mall just to have a normal life again. He’s doing really good.” His son saw a doctor twice while in Miami. “The first time he saw the doctor, all he talked about was what happened,” Torrealba said. “The second time, he was talking about stuff we were doing. He’s doing better. He’s making progress.” Torrealba’s son will be at Coors Field on Tuesday when the Rockies open a three-game series against Tampa Bay. He said he and his wife will stay in the U.S. “They’ll stay here in the States for a while,” he said. “We’re looking for a school for my son down in Miami.” Torrealba said the kidnapping began June 2 when a car
pulled in front of the car taking his son to school. His son was with Daniel Antonio Alvarez Morales, Torrealba’s 31-yearold brother-in-law, and Agrey Alexander Marquez, a 27-yearold brother-in-law of the boy’s mother. “Three guys with guns put them in the back seat and just drove away to a big hill,” Torrealba said. “They covered their faces, and a half-hour later, one of the guys called my wife and told his mother they were kidnapping her son,” Torrealba said. “It took about two days. They spent the night on the hill, and all day the next day. Then around eight o’clock, they let them go. ... For whatever reason, they let him go before they got the money. They ran to the closest house and asked if they could use the phone. He called my wife and let her know he was fine. This house was a half hour away from my house, so right away we found someone over there to get him.”
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SPORTS
28 | Monday, June 15, 2009
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Sports Scoreboard
NBA FINALS The Associated Press All times MDT NBA FINALS (Best-of-7) Orlando vs. L.A. Lakers Thursday, June 4: L.A. Lakers 100, Orlando 75 Sunday, June 7: L.A. Lakers 101, Orlando 96, OT Tuesday, June 9: Orlando 108, L.A. Lakers 104 Thursday, June 11: L.A. Lakers 99, Orlando 91, OT Sunday, June 14: L.A. Lakers 99, Orlando 86, L.A. Lakers win series 4-1
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GB — 7 10 1/2 13 15
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W Philadelphia 36 New York 32 Florida 32 Atlanta 30 Washington 16 Central Division W Milwaukee 34 St. Louis 34 Cincinnati 31 Chicago 30 Pittsburgh 30 Houston 29 West Division W Los Angeles 42 San Francisco 34 Colorado 31 San Diego 28 Arizona 27
___ Saturday’s Games Minnesota 2, Chicago Cubs 0 Florida 6, Toronto 5 Chicago White Sox 7, Milwaukee 1 N.Y. Mets 6, N.Y. Yankees 2 St. Louis 3, Cleveland 1 Tampa Bay 8, Washington 3 Baltimore 8, Atlanta 4 Boston 11, Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh 9, Detroit 3 Kansas City 7, Cincinnati 4 L.A. Dodgers 3, Texas 1 Colorado 5, Seattle 3 L.A. Angels 9, San Diego 1 San Francisco 5, Oakland 2 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 15, N.Y. Mets 0 Florida 11, Toronto 3 Baltimore 11, Atlanta 2 Philadelphia 11, Boston 6 Pittsburgh 6, Detroit 3 Tampa Bay 5, Washington 4 Chicago White Sox 5, Milwaukee 4 Kansas City 7, Cincinnati 1 Chicago Cubs 3, Minnesota 2 L.A. Dodgers 6, Texas 3 Colorado 7, Seattle 1 L.A. Angels 6, San Diego 0 San Francisco 7, Oakland 1 Cleveland 3, St. Louis 0 Monday’s Games Milwaukee (Bush 3-3) at Cleveland (Pavano 6-5), 5:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Lackey 1-2) at San Francisco (Zito 3-6), 8:15 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m. Toronto at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Yankees, 5:05 p.m. Florida at Boston, 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 6:05 p.m. Houston at Texas, 6:05 p.m. Arizona at Kansas City, 6:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m. Detroit at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Tampa Bay at Colorado, 6:40 p.m. Seattle at San Diego, 8:05 p.m. Oakland at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at San Francisco, 8:15 p.m.
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GOLF Nationwide-Knoxville Open Scores x-Kevin Johnson, $94,500 67-65-68-68 Bradley Iles, $56,700 67-68-70-63 Blake Adams, $30,450 63-70-71-65 David McKenzie, $30,450 65-65-67-72 Tjaart van der Walt, $19,950 65-68-71-66 Jason Schultz, $19,950 69-70-65-66 Dustin Risdon, $17,588 67-64-73-68 Alex Prugh, $15,225 67-68-73-65 Esteban Toledo, $15,225 68-69-68-68 Brian Stuard, $15,225 69-69-66-69 Keoke Cotner, $10,763 72-67-70-65 Ryan Armour, $10,763 67-69-72-66
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Kobe stands alone
JACOB LANGSTON/ORLANDO SENTINEL
Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant pumps his fists in the closing seconds of a 99-86 victory in Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Orlando Magic at the Amway Arena in Orlando, Fla., on Sunday. Cameron Percy, $10,763 67-70-70-67 Chris Nallen, $10,763 70-66-70-68 John Riegger, $10,763 70-65-70-69 David Morland IV, $10,763 66-69-70-69 Tom Scherrer, $7,613 65-70-71-69 Scott Dunlap, $7,613 66-73-67-69 Craig Bowden, $7,613 69-67-67-72 Alex Aragon, $7,613 69-65-69-72 Marco Dawson, $5,130 67-67-75-67 Jeff Gove, $5,130 67-70-72-67 Tom Gillis, $5,130 68-66-74-68 Henrik Bjornstad, $5,130 67-71-70-68 Dave Schultz, $5,130 69-70-69-68 Josh Teater, $5,130 69-69-69-69 Gary Christian, $5,130 67-65-73-71 Bubba Dickerson, $3,570 72-66-71-68 Chris Kirk, $3,570 68-69-71-69 Brenden Pappas, $3,570 71-68-69-69 Jeff Gallagher, $3,570 70-69-69-69 Paul Claxton, $3,570 68-68-71-70 Tom Byrum, $3,570 67-69-71-70 Steve Wheatcroft, $2,888 67-71-73-67 Willie Wood, $2,888 70-69-71-68 Brent Delahoussaye, $2,888 66-73-70-69 Paul Gow, $2,888 70-69-70-69 Zoran Zorkic, $2,888 72-65-69-72 Jonas Blixt, $2,888 70-64-71-73 Hunter Haas, $2,158 69-69-73-68 Andre Stolz, $2,158 69-69-73-68 Garrett Willis, $2,158 68-71-72-68 Ron Whittaker, $2,158 69-70-71-69 Jason Enloe, $2,158 68-71-70-70 Dustin White, $2,158 66-71-71-71 David Peoples, $2,158 70-69-69-71 Martin Piller, $2,158 71-67-69-72 Tommy Tolles, $2,158 67-65-74-73 Brian Smock, $1,798 71-67-74-68 Jeff Corr, $1,798 66-73-72-69 Justin Smith, $1,798 71-68-72-69 Bob Burns, $1,798 69-69-70-72 Jason Knutzon, $1,798 68-70-70-72 Chip Sullivan, $1,798 73-66-67-74 Chris Baryla, $1,693 66-68-77-70 Geoffrey Sisk, $1,693 71-68-72-70 Trevor Dodds, $1,654 71-68-74-70 Mark Hensby, $1,628 65-74-74-71
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Ryan Hietala, $1,601 Steve Friesen, $1,549 Tee McCabe, $1,549 Jeff Curl, $1,549 Steven Bowditch, $1,496
71-68-74-72 68-70-76-72 71-68-73-74 67-72-72-75 69-70-75-74
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TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Placed OF Coco Crisp on the 15-day DL. Recalled UT Tug Hulett from Omaha (PCL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Activated OF Travis Buck from the 15-day DL and optioned him to Sacramento (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS—Placed RHP Jason Isringhausen on the 60-day DL. Purchased the contract of RHP Winston Abreu from Durham (IL). TEXAS RANGERS—Placed RHP Frank Francisco on the 15-day DL, retroactive to June 4. Recalled RHP Warner Madrigal from Oklahoma City (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Agreed to terms with LHP Egan Smith, 3B Bryson Mamba, RHP Matthew Morgal, 1B Lance Durham, RHP David Sever, SS Kevin Nolan, RHP Matt Fields, OF Brad Glenn, SS Matt Nuzzo, LHP Sam Strickland, RHP Lance Loftin, RHP Brian Justice, RHP Zach Anderson, C John Murphy, RHP Ryan Shopshire, SS Jonathan Fernandez, LHP Evan Teague, LHP Alex Pepe, RHP Shawn Griffith and 1B Yudelmis Hernandez. National League CHICAGO CUBS—Fired hitting coach Gerald Perry. Named Von Joshua hitting coach. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Agreed to terms with RHP Eric Arnett, SS Joshua Prince, RHP Hiram Burgos, LHP Jonathan Pokorny, RHP Andre Lamontagne, OF Scott Krieger, 2B Peter Fatse, OF Chris Ellington and 3B Kyle Dhanani and assigned them to Helena (Pioneer). Agreed to terms with OF Maxwell Walla, C Tyler Roberts, 1B Sean Halton, 2B Mike Brownstein, RHP Tyler Cravy, LHP Caleb Thielbar, OF Franklin Romero, RHP Michael Fiers, RHP Ryan Platt, LHP Matt Costello, RHP Mitch Miller and SS Connor Lind and assigned them to the Brewers (Arizona). Agreed to terms with 2B Brandon Sizemore.
STEAMBOAT TODAY
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ACROSS Clutch Covers Rosary piece Nook Lie next to For all times “Jack and Jill went up a hill to fetch __...” Part of a wedding cake Being nothing more than Wood-eating insects Handsome guy 1109 in old Rome Pittsburgh team Tropical fig tree Clergyman “__ Maria” Approaches Ride a bicycle Appear Malice Word on a banana Typo Stadium fixtures Pasture Western movie Rush Sufferings Isn’t able to Eat like a mouse Thought about Palm or oak Broad ditch Identical “__ Wonderful Life” Border Burdened One of Noah’s sons Ruby & Sandra Tiny beginnings
DOWN 1 Small fly 2 Like a juicy plum 3 Enterprise Rent-__
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Monday, June 15, 2009
4 Descend a pole 5 Louisiana’s state bird 6 Rubber tree product 7 Wading bird 8 Payable 9 Exert to the utmost 10 Lamented 11 Happening 12 Eagle’s nest 13 Gown 21 Fork parts 23 Let fall 25 Noodles 26 Foundation 27 State positively 28 At no time, to a poet 29 Weeper 32 Domed projections 34 Numskull 35 Toward shelter 36 Skinny 38 Night light 40 Folk hero Allen 43 Metal bar
Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
45 Open shoes 48 Abounded 50 Engraved stone slabs 51 “Nay” voters 52 Circumference 53 Way too big 54 Shelters for doves
56 Summon electronically 57 Roller coaster, for one 58 __ out a living; got by 59 Scout groups 62 “__ on a Grecian Urn”
30 | Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT TODAY
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M & M Auto will buy your junker. If your junk car is complete, we’ll haul it away and give you $$$. Call 970-879-8178. ‘97 Subaru Special Edition Outback, 2 sets of tires, great condition! $4,000 OBO. Call Julia at 819-5999
READY TO SELL MAKE OFFER! 2004 CRF-250X Honda & 2006 Yamaha TTR-250, low miles, like new. Dirt, street ready. See at Extreme Power Sports 970-879-9175/970-276-4821
93 Grand Cherokee Limited 4.0L, Auto, 4x4, Navy Blue, Gray Leather Interior, New Radiator. $1200 Call 970-367-5150
2008 Scooter 150cc, Red, 2 - seater, 80 + MPG, 360 miles, Ready for Summer! $1500. Call 970-819-7816
2003 Audi A4, Black, 47k, many upgrades, garage kept, Adult owner, Porche Brakes, Excellent Condition. $16,500. Call 970-819-5957
2006 Triumph Speed Triple. Excellent condition. Low mileage. $6300. 2001 CR500R. For Trails. Excellent condition. $3100 (or MAKE OFFER) (970)846-2648
FINANCING / WORKING PEOPLE! $750.00 MINIMUM DOWNPAYMENT. NO CREDITCHECK. Tom Reuter, Dealer, 875-0700. “Working Cars / Working People - 24,000 Mile Warranties! www.checkpointautosales.com
2007 KX 250F, garage kept, barely ridden. $3500 OBO. (970)734-6618
2003 Jaguar X-Type 55k, AWD, like new. $9500 Call 846-1250 MUST SELL! Only 1, ‘94 Toyota Camry LE V6, 110K, or ‘08 Toyota Corolla CE, under warrenty, 17K, automatic 879-9031
2008 Yamaha YFZ 450 Sport ATV. Showroom condition. 5 speed. Ridden less than 10 hours. $5,200 OBO Call 824-7737
02 Polaris Sportsman 500 HO, 700miles, excellent condition, $3,700. 970-629-0355
21ft Searay open bow. 1988 kept like new, don’t pay $52,000. V-8 stern drive, custom aluminum tower. Lots of extras, included 2 axle trailer. $9000 846-2889 day, 879-7889 eve. Sale! Skies, wakeboards, tubes, vests, wet suits, 14 - 22’ fishing, sking & Pontoon boats, Garmin, Minkota, G3 Marine dealer, 824-6544 Boat Special, $5000 off MSRP, New G3 V175FS, Fish & ski, 150hp, Bimini, 24v trolling motor, Dealer. 824-6544
1991 Catalina Coronado, C-15, Racing Sailboat. perfect for mountain lakes, needs work, with trailer $1000, OBO 819.5640
2001 Goldwing 1800, 18,000 miles, Great Condition. Beautiful Bike. Call 734-8762
2002 Subaru Impreza, WRX, Turbo, 78K, Silver, Black Interior, $9,000 OBO, Call Danny 846.4838 1999 SAAB 9-5 Fully Loaded, Turbo. 144k miles runs great. Thule rack. $3,999 call kyle (603)969-3050. 85 Subaru GL Wagon, 162K, Runs, but will need clutch, $500 303-912-2329 CHEVY AVEO, 06, 44K, Great gas mileage, 39 mpg, Silver, Great Shape, Commuter car, $8,500 360-561-9704 1993, 500SL, Mercedes, 49K miles, 2 tops $13,000 871-6386 1998 Honda Civic, Sweet! 2006 Ford Focus, 46k/miles! 2001 Buick Century 69k/miles! Tom Reuter, Dealer, 875-0700. www.checkpointautosales.com 60 vehicles available! 2008 BMW 335 XI for sale. 60 Black on black fully loaded. 13,000 miles. Paid $4700 - now $36,000. Call 970-629-1388.
2005 Honda CRF50f, Youth Motorcycle, Excellent condition, runs great! $875 871-9405 846-6635 2002 KTM 520 MX in great condition. $2,900 OBO Ron 846-7500
2007 KLR 650, 60 MPG, 3200 miles, garage kept, many extras including armor jacket, 2 helmets, $4800. Call Steve 879-7413 1988 Honda NX 250 Awesome bike! street legal, 1000 bucks and its yours (201) 410-0077 SUMMER FUN! 2003 Yamaha V-Star 1100, 1400 miles, saddle bags, perfect condition, below blue book, LOTS of Chrome $4,400. 970-846-3762 2006 KTM 450exc lights off road ready $4,000 OBO 970-846-5358. YZ250F for Sale, 02, $2,000. PW50, 05, $650. Both run Great! 871-9873 1969 BSA, 650cc, Firebird Scrambler, basket case, $950, 871-1381 2004 Yamaha Vmax-1200 cc motorcycle, 1100 original miles like new! $6100.00 OBO call 824-7029 for more info. 2005 TTR 125. In good shape. $1400 (970)846-2312 Kawasaki KDX50 great kids bike, runs well $750.00 OBO, YAMAHA XS-650 Twin, Race Bike $1,200 OBO Call 846-2045 or 870-9028. 02” 49cc Yamaha Vino Scooter. Great Condition. $1,400 - (720) 299-1887
10’ Vintage ‘73 Cardinal Camper Trailer. Restorer’s dream! Fridge, heater, Dinette converts to King Size Bed, single loft. $650, 819-1515. 2005 YAMAHA BANSHEE $3200. 2003 SKI DOO 800 $2600. 2001 ARTIC CAT 600 SNO PRO $1400. 1998 ARTIC CAT 500 ZL $600. 2001 GREEN MOUNTAIN CAT 800 BROKE CRANK $500. RECESSION SUX. CALL KEITH 846-6969
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Trailer Specials, 24’ - 30’ GN dovetails, 14’ Dumps. 3horse Slant, 2 place enclosed, UT Carhaulers, CM flatbeds, dealer, 824-6544 08’ Raptor RV, 37ft, sleeps 12, Master has pillor top mattress. TV, solar panel with inverter, generator, loaded $37,500 819-0986
2008 Ford Escape, 4WD, 19,500 miles. Excellent condition, 24-26 mpg, with four Blizzak snows, roof rack. $18,000 970-879-1625 2004 VW TOUAREG, gorgeous, well maintained, loaded, V8, snow tires, ski rack, heated seat and steering wheel, $15,000 call 970-723-3277 1996 GMC SUBURBAN K15, new factory reman trans, radiator, brakes, u-joints, alt., battery, tune up. 135k miles, very clean. $6,500 Advanced Auto and Truck Repair. 970-870-3357 2004 Chevy Suburban, 114K miles, Yampa Valley Bank taking bids through Friday, June 26. 875-1606 1979 Golden Eagle Jeep, 77k miles $3,500, 1983 Jeep Scrambler, 36k miles $5,500, Both in good shape and run well 879-3019 1994 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited, dkgreen, 4x4 great in snow! 129k, leaving town, priced below blue book. Only $2,450. 970-846-5315
8’ Pick-up bed turned into Utility Trailer W/ Overhead rack $400 OBO 879-0843
1999 Chevy S-10, 4x4, ladder rack & topper, 90k, ok condition. Asking $2500 OBO Call Matt 819-2993
01,0. 3/4 Ton Dodge ext. cab cummins pipe and chip goodyear mtr tires. 141K miles. Great truck. $11,000 call after 7p.m. 736-1213
(12) Trucks from $500 Down! 1989 Ranger Pickup, $2,250. #2479 (3) Toyota Tacomas, WoW! Tom Reuter, Dealer, 875-0700. www.checkpointautosales.com. Warranties!
2003 Silverado Ext. Cab Z71, 5.3 V8, 58K miles, matching topper, 5” lift, new tires, alloy wheels. Excellent Condition. $16,000 OBO. 846-7379
1991 Dodge 3/4 ton 2 wheel drive diesel, automatic in good condition. $3800.00 OBO call 824-7029 for more info.
2001 Jeep Wrangler Sport, 90k miles, exc condition, 1 owner, soft top, 2” susp, lots of extras, $9500 OBO, 970-846-6431
1999 Ford F-350 Dually, 4x4, supercab with Powerstroke. 1994 Ford F-250 4x4 flat bed with diesel engine. 824-4575 or 326-6675
****(4) 1999-05 Jeep Wranglers, Outstanding! (2) Honda Passports, Sharp! (3) Jeep Grand Cherokees, Very Nice! Tom Reuter, Dealer, 875-0700. www.tomreuter.com
2002 F-250 Lariat crew-cab, diesel, auto, 125K, $12,000 obo, 2002 Travel-a-long four horse slant 5th Wheel Trailer $4,500 obo 736-2325
(30) Subaru Outbacks, Foresters, and Imprezas, from $1,500 / $15,000! 2002 Dodge AWD Caravan, 60/k/miles! Tom Reuter, Dealer, 875-0700. www.checkpointautosales.com. Warranties! 2003 Subaru Forester AWD, Excellent condition, 56k, good tires. $8500 Call 846-1575 2001 Chevy Tahoe LT - 86,000 miles well maintained, loaded, $10,000 OBO. Call 970846-1620 2000 Ford Expl XLT, $3,450 air, cruise, remot strt, New tires, windshield, 145k. 970-302-7158 2000 Chevy Tracker, dark blue, 4 door, manual, excellent condition, good tires, 75k miles. $4,750. Call (970) 826-9724 970-701-9438
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Topper - Fits 1999 - 2007 Ford F-250 & F-350. White $1100 New $700 OBO 970-846-3432
2001 Dodge Ram Extended Cab, 40k miles, pipe rack and full cover, super chipped with K&N filter. Electric brakes, excellent condition, 879-3876
1999 Chevy Astro Van, AWD, 8 passenger, LT package with leather seats. Rear AC, 36k miles on Jasper rebuilt engine. Includes spair set of four wheels and tires with trailer hitch. Clean and running well. $3,200 970-870-1710 970-871-0021
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CLASSIFIEDS
32 | Monday, June 15, 2009
Pearl Isumi Select Versa Biking shorts, Baggy with Mesh liner & Chamois. New with tags Sz L $50 846-8469
PC COMPUTER SERVICES HALF PRICE Residential Computer Repair, located in Steamboat. Microsoft Certified Professional. Tune Ups, Troubleshooting, Repairs and Installations. Cell:(818)426-9095 chill333@live.com.
FoxFire: 736-2745 Natural Resource Protection. Low Impact, Light Equipment Tree Removal. Precise Tree Falling. SAVE 50% Up To $2,500!
2 Hank Swivel Rockers, Free for pick up. 819-0342 Free firewood and logs. Back right up and haul away! 637 Pahwintah across from the new Soda Creek Elementary. Remodeling our kitchen = free appliances for you! Refrigerator:white, top freezer, 80 cu ft, 32 in wide. Stove: off-white, electric, self-cleaning oven, 30 in wide. Dishwasher: off-white, under counter, 22 in tall. Email:rocketgurl@yahoo.com FREE: Will haul away your working reasonably good refrigerator to my garage. Save your recycle Fees! 846-4680
Steamboat Must See! 1930’s Sheep Herders Wagon with all the trimmings! Would make a great “spare” room for sleepovers. Put it on the acreage and call it the “Honeymoon Suite”. Serious inquiries only. 505-983-7165 505-692-5756
Tune-ups, Troubleshooting & Repairs All Computer & Laptop Brands New & Used PCs, Laptops & Parts, Virus Removal & Prevention, Wireless Networking, DELL Registered Partner 970-879-8890 DaveGlantz@ComputerCures.biz
DEERFOOT AUCTION SERVICE is now scheduling estate farm and ranch and business auctions, contact Mike to schedule your sale today! 970-629-0321
FREE: Firewood - cut to 16” length. You must split. You Haul 970-870-0310 2 Tables, 3x5 Quicksilver Roxy table for snowboards, 2x4 wooden hinged table. 879-6929 Free towing of unwanted & abandoned vehicles. 879-1065
Whirlpool Heavy Duty White Washer, Super Capacity Plus Dryer Gas - LP, Xtra Large Capacity. Both Run Great $50.00 each OBO 970-879-2391
AUCTION: June 20th, 10am, Main Street, Baggs, WY, Cars, Boats, Recreational Vehicles, trailers (camp, flatbed and horse), tractors (5525 John Deer, only 475 hours), office furniture, fire arms, saddles and tack. For more information call 307-380-6000, 307-383-2093
FREE: Heavy Duty set of 3 drawers, misc shelving units. You Haul. 970-870-2980
Having trouble getting the computer help you need? Ask a local where they go for help... We have been helping Steamboat use computers since 1985! Whether it’s your home or business, we are the locals choice for anything computer related. Andy, Marcus, Royce and Kenneth. 970-870-7984 www.ComputerSupportGuys.com 2130 Resort Drive, Suite 100
Free Cat to good home-Sniff is a friendly and loving, 8yr old, spayed female who is looking for a new family. Tabby-mainly indoor. Needs calm environment, preferably without dogs or young children. Please call Jeanne @ 879-5866 with your questions. FREE: Toshiba VHS player; Minolta Tall copier; 2 Satellite Dish’s. Call to pick up 871-1799 Free kittens to a good home. Litter trained and weaned. Very cute! Call 846-1853 to take a look. FREE: 1700 Gal Metal Water Tank, 12’x5’ round. 3 Mobilehome axle, wheels & tires. Call 970-276-2597
Structural Pipe for Sale. Most sizes available. Great for fencing, coral’s, arenas, ect. Truckload discounts. Please call (970) 352-4330.
2x twin mattresses with frame & headbrds; full size mattress set with frame; moving, file & magazine boxes; 6’ X-mas tree. 879-5144
Jotul Heating Stove. Converted to Propane. $500 OBO 970-819-2440
Free - Iguanas (2) less than a year. 819-9268 FREE Horse Manure for your gardens 879-5811 Sony 35’ TV with stand. Uhaul. 736-8524
STEAMBOAT TODAY
HIRE ME! Bookkeeping and Errand Services 970-819-1118 Payroll Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable Monthly and Quarterly Taxes, Miscellaneous Office Needs, Errands. GET RID OF YOUR OLD HOT TUB for little or no $,: Pasture for two horses, live water - 7 miles south of Hayden 970-276-3148 ALL STEEL PORTABLE STORAGE CONTAINERS. Strong, secure, weather & rodent proof. Great for business, home, ranch, oil field & more. 8x8x20ft in stock. 8x8x40ft. available. 970-824-3256. Lopi Berkshire high efficiency free standing gas stove. New $4,700, will sell stove, hearth and piping for $2250. Call 303-324-2346 Need Top Soil? Call 970-879-0655 Bush Hog 2101 post hole auger with 9” bit. 540 pto drive, 3pt mount, in good condition. Asking $450. 970-879-4974 Large commerical awning for storefront, restaurant or professional business. $400 or best offer. Original price $1000. Boutique racks $50-$75. 846-4330. LIQUIDATION SALE - FIXTURES AND EQUIPMENT Rounders, Displays, label makers, shelving, cash register, filing cabinets, Centennial Mall Suite 112 Offering Hay hauling! Specializing in hay, lumber, small equipment, etc... Call for info: (970) 629-3936 Rob. Antique Jeep Auction June 21st 17 Jeeps 1946 - 1961 www.sdauctions.com 605-463-2410 WOW! Yampa Valley Feeds just received a huge order of Sullivan Show Supplies for all your 4H livestock project needs. Horse; Steer; Lamb; Pig and Goat—we have what you need for 4H Expo & Fair. Plus Moon River Garden’s roses, shrubs & flowers galore. Be local & buy local. Open Mon-Sat 9am-5:30pm, visit www.yampavalleyfeeds.com or 276-4250. Smithy Supershop: All tools for wood and small metal. Good to make furniture. Pd $4,600, $3,600 or make cash offer! SAME AS NEW! 824-6459
Create your own Waterfront Property...
Need to get rid of logs? Mingle Wood Timbers Inc. will pick them up for free. (970)871-9238 Hardy Siding: 110 pieces, 6 1/4x144 inches, primed. Retail $6.70 each. 50% off $3.35 each. See example 143 Logan, 846-5411 MENSWEAR: Tall Sizes. Extreme Quality from my Closet Sale. Pants (34” waist), Sweaters (LG) and Outerwear. Good Father’s Day ideas! 846-3124 2 door True reach in refrigerator, 2 stainless steel tables, slicer, table top deep fryer. Call 846-7882
Stand out in the crowd! Call 970-871-4255 to add an attention getter to your advertisement.
80hp Belarus 4x4 Tractor with 8’ snowblower. $5500 John 970-879-6764 Discounts Totaling $5000 off MSRP, 57hp 4WD, Cab, Loader, big scoop bucket, Montana Tractor #0752, Dealer 824-6544
9AM-4PM, Driving range open 9AM-6PM. Call for details 970-846-5647 - www.3qc.net. Painting crew for hire. No job too big or small. Call 846-1044 Ask me how you can save 30% up to $1500 off of replacement widows. Local 15 years-Big Horn Exteriors. Call 276-4555 leave message. Craftsman table saw $150, Floor Drill press $100, 9H Honda snowblower $275; 371 XP Husky Chainshaw $300. Call 970-276-2572, 970-590-5913 TOOLS! Dewalt 12” Slide Miter; 12” Tile saw; Rigid pipe threader, Transits, nail guns, compressor, much more. Fairview 303-349-5926
Free moving boxes at 1103 Lincoln, back of building entrance faces 11th Street. 970-870-6087 Appendix Quarter Horse Throughbred cross, 23 yrs gelding, needs loving home, great companion horse, possible light riding, 481-2130
Swather for sale. 1992 Self propelled McDom 12’ Cummins Diesel. $5,000 970-824-6434
Vermeer 605H Baler, NH 499 Swather, Meadow drags, Heavy Steel Gates, Ph. 846-1191 day, 879-3624 evening WOW! Free 16’ Big Tex Trailer (#11030) with purchase of 36 HP 4WD Montana Tractor (#36218), loader $22,451, Dealer 824-6544
STEAMBOAT’S MATTRESS HEADQUARTERS Mountain Mattress and furniture, Queen sets from $299. All natural, memory foam, 22 models on floor (970)879-8116 Furniture Sale at The Hampton Inn & Suites of Steamboat: Armoire, Mirrors, Art Work and Other Miscellaneous items. 10 am to 5 pm daily- Monday through Friday. 970-871-8900 Gold Oak Wooden Blinds, Excellent Condition! 5 @ $25 each. Call 871-1095 for sizes
CONCEALED CARRY CLASS. Saturday and Sunday, June 13 & 14, Hayden. Call Steve 9 7 0 . 8 4 6 . 7 0 4 1 , o r www.tdsguntraining.com. Only 2 positions remaining.
Jeans a little tight? Try something that works. Take it off keep it off. Get ready for Spring! 970-824-9284
Remington 700 Varmit Synthetic 22-250 $600; 700 Sendero Stainless 300 ultra mag $800; Jewel Triggers Leupold 8.5x25 $500 970-590-3450
Gas portable generator 8500, Diesel portable generator 7500, Commercial dual tank air compressor, Commercial pressure washer, Commercial trash pump 3” Call 970-846-8693
Now accepting antique consignments. Hayden Artisans’ Marketplace. Call 276-2019. Open Tues-Sat, 10a-6p Sleigh crib $175, Kelty child carrier backpack $50, chest freezer $150, hearth gate $75, mountain boy bambino sled, $80 879-8091 TOP SOIL! TOP SOIL! TOP SOIL! Kimco 879-6898 6 panel solid wood doors: 3’x5’ architectural drafting table $175; 21” 3-tier skutt kiln-new; whirlpool oven 4 burner $100.00. 870-1781
CHILDCARE OFFERED
Energetic, Responsible, Young Lady looking to provide part time child care for children 3 and older. Available for daytime, after school care, and weekends. Specializing in Arts & Crafts, and Outdoor Activities! Please call Lauren at 540-908-0150 Mobile Welding, Fabricating and Mechanic. 20 years experience. Call Mark at 970-276-4906 Scooter, Schwinn 49cc’s, no drivers license required. Pink and white. 229 miles, garage kept. Like new, 100mpg $995.00 Call 970-846-5077 Automotive Cherry Picker & engine stand still in box $175 for both. 846-2889 day, 879-7889 eve. NEED TUTORING SERVICES? Friendly, effective tutor available for your child or teen, in my home or yours. Most subjects available. Please call 846.0613 if interested. THE CLEAN UP COMMITTEE- Parking Lot maintenance, Seal Coating, Chuckhole Patching, Stripping, Vacuuming, Crack Filling, Pace ice melt, Propellant 49, Environmental Hot Water Pressure Washer, (Zero Water Run Off), George May, Owner 970-824-2131 DE VRIES FARM MARKET Open for another successful season! See you on Wednesday!
BUYING GOLD, SILVER AND PLATINUM BULLION AND COINS. Call (970)-824-5807 or Cell (970)-326-8170.
Call to sign up. Randall Salky, Attorney at Law McGill Professional Law 970-879-6200 ext. 13
JD post hole auger, 500 gal. fuel tank, hay sled runners, hay wagon running gear, grain auger. 970-846-1191 day, 970-879-3624 evening
SPORTING CLAYS
LEGAL HAPPY HOUR Free legal advice
GrandKids Child Care Center Has rare openings in preschool for children 31/2 to 5 years for summer and fall. Quality early education including intergenerational activities with seniors at Doak Walker Care Center, hot lunches, nutritious snacks. Where fun, loving and learning go hand in hand. Minimum 2 days a week. 870-1140.
Specializing in construction, maintenance and repair of water gardens, koi ponds, and pondless waterfalls. Call James, your local Pond guy! 970-879-7665 www.steamboatponds.com
Manny’s Handyman Service: Minor remodels, electrical, swamp cooler start up, yard clean up, drywall, etc.... Free estimates! 970-620-1760
IntExt LLC
Call us for all your remodeling needs! Licensed & Insured. 970-819-4991 Water Damage Specialist
SAT & ACT TUTORING FOR 2010
General tutoring also available. All subjects, all ages. Ivy League School Junior, former SSHS valedictorian offering tutoring. Call Max 970-879-9057 Newly rebuilt Rolair Pancake Compressor $150, Emglo Gas Wheelbarrow dual Tank 6.5 hp Honda (New) Rebuilt Pump $250, Champion 4500 Gen Barely used $300. 970-819-6139
Individual and Group Health Insurance PPO, ALL-PROVIDER. Emergency room, RX. Rates guaranteed. Replace expensive COBRA Plans. www.LoneEagleInsurance.com (970)879-1101
2004 John Deere 240 Series II Skidsteer. 1300hrs, 4 in Stock. $9,750 each. Byrne Equipment Sales, Craig 826-0051 2008 46,000 lbs Tag trailer $25,000; 1995 International Dump truck $22,000 Call 736-8396 Dump trailer, Heavy Duty Tandem Axle, hydraulic lift, 10’x6’x6’ 2 years old, $4500 Call Chuck 846-5633
Help the Youth Community of Steamboat, The Boys and Girls Club of Steamboat needs Volunteers, donations including games equipment, furniture, tvs, etc. Call Heather Martyn if interested 846-7710
Skidsteer, Case1835B diesel, oldie but goodie, perfect farm or landscape machine. Excellent condition. $6500 846-2889 day, 879-7889 eve.
CLASSIFIEDS
STEAMBOAT TODAY
STANDING AT STUD reduced fee for 2009 $400. AQHA Palomino - Dash for Cash, ShawnaBug bloodlines. APHA Sorrel Tobiano Cherookee Indian Native Dancer. Showing, Performance, Racing. Check out our Stalions! Horses For sale, horse breaking, 970-824-5219 970-620-3449 REGISTERED ANGUS BULLS: PAP tested, ultrasounded for carcass data, fertility tested, EPDs and performance data available. Call to come see them anytime. Don night: 879-7632 day:734-7322 Horses for Sale: Excellent Bred Mares from 2 to 13 years old, Great Brood Mare prospects. 970-846-1220
For Sale: English Bulldog Puppies. AKC Registered. Sherrod Ranch 970-879-3920 3 Teacup poodles. 1 male ready to go now. Other 2 ready on 6-16. Call for details (970)653-4494.
Horse Pasture for Lease. 35 Acres in South Routt. Smooth Wire Fence. Water and Small Loafing Shed. $80 head. 846-3839. Yearling Registered Black Angus Bulls. PAP & Fertility Tested. Call 970-276-3323.
Fabulous Border Collie puppies, Ready to go, full bred, Great Parents $150. 970-276-4291.
Registered Angus Bulls by AI sires. Fertility, Trich & PAP tested, BVD-PI negative. Aric, 970-824-3341 or Stacy, 970-824-6702.
DACHSHUNDS Puppies, all males, $250 970 826-2610
120 acres standing dryland grass hay for sale, will consider custom haying offers. Located in Craig. Call 970-824-1085. Leave message. Schedule early for CUSTOM HAYING! Small square bales. Call 970-629-9299, leave message. Excellent Horse Hay, $6.00 per 65 lb bale. Wiley 970-778-2439 1400 # grass hay round bales. Been covered. $75 per bale. 276 4446
APR REG. toy poodle puppies 2 black 1 phantom all female. 970-589-1058 German Shorthair Pointer Puppies, Champion Bloodline, AKC Registered litter, 5 Females - 4 Males $400 each 970-276-4238 Tropical Rockies Red Tag Sale up to 65% off store wide. Plus, see us at FREE Family Fun Fest, June 20th 970-879-1909 Sale ends 6/23/09. Bar Lazy U Registered Border Collie, black and white female, smooth coat, vaccinated, house broke, very sweet, Renee 970-276-4807 SUMMER CITY DOG CLASS Family Dog Training Advanced Class Contact Laura Tyler 629-1507 Sandra Kruczek 824-4189 www.totalteamworktraining.com Chocolate Lab Puppies for Sale in Craig, avail 7/4/09. Male and Female $300. Call 661-886-2864
WEEDS
Your best pasture improvement is weed control. Acreage only, no residential please. 970-879-3920 Evenings.
COUNTRY JAM TICKETS, www.countryjam.com 2 VIP, 4 campsites, $200 under my cost. 870-3493
Found: Gold earrings at the Tennis courts.. Call to identify 307-760-0584
STEAMBOAT:Caretakers apartment in luxury home available. $1200 monthly includes utilities. (970)879-8089 STEAMBOAT: 2BD, 1BA Garden Level apartment 4 miles from town. $900 monthly + utilities. (970) 734-8261
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Heavy silver cross necklace found on Huckleberry call 303-618-4311 to identify
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STEAMBOAT: Wonderful, furnished apartment on the mountain. $1,350 monthly includes WD, utilities, wireless, patio, NS, NP, Available 6/15/09 970-846-8257 OAK CREEK: 2BD, 1BA apartment, all appliances, NS, pets negotiable, 1st & security. $850 per month includes all utilities. Joe 846-3542
Stand out in the crowd! Call 970-871-4255 to add an attention getter to your advertisement.
AKC Corgi also Yorkie mini Dachshund, Shihtzu & Shihpoo all from Top USDA Licensed Breeders. Baker Drive Pets 970-824-3933
There are funds available for uninsured and underinsured local women to pay for annual wellness exams, mammograms and breast cancer treatment costs. Don’t compromise your health we can help! Call the Yampa Valley Breast Cancer Awareness Project to learn how to apply for funds. 846-4554.
CRAIG:Remodeled 2BA, 1BA apartments with Travertine, slate, oak, and alder finishes, Economy apartments, or 2BD, 2BA Townhomes that allow pets. 970-824-9251
STEAMBOAT:Private home garden Apt, quiet, sunny 2bd walk-out WD, DW, NS, NP $1150-Utilities, wireless Inc 1st Dep 846-0261
STEAMBOAT: 3BD, 2.5BA, partially furnished, 1 garage, 1 out door space, WD, hardwood floors, premium appliances, close to down town, responsible couples and families preferred. $1,850 month + partial utilities. Or 2BD apartment $1,300 monthy plus utilities. Call Russ 203-253-6509
City of Steamboat Springs, Animal Shelter, Phone: 879-0621 - 760 Critter Court, 6/12/09, Found in Hayden: young female calico cat.
STEAMBOAT:850 Sq Ft studio apartment, Available Now, NS, $925 a month plus deposit. WD, Dish, Utilities included. Pets Negotiable 970-819-1600 YAMPA:1BD upstairs apatrtment, wood floors, propane heat. Outside deck, NP, Year lease, 1st Last, Damage $500 plus utilities. 970-638-4455, 970-638-4264
CRAIG: DOWNTOWN Large 2 to 3 Bedroom Apartments.Furnished, parking, laundry facilities. All electric kitchens including DW, disposals. Small pets ok. Call (970)824-7120
LOST:Pocket book with Snaffle bit handle, last seen at ACE on Sat 06/06. Wallet with Corgie Dog on it, many irreplaceable sentimental contents. Please call 879-6303 or bring to Pilot Newspaper office.
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STEAMBOAT:Newly furnished Ridgecrest! 2BD, 2BA, bus, ski, mountain views, deck, hottubs, WD, NS, NP, utilities, internet, garage, storage, $1750. 719-648-5789 STEAMBOAT: 2BD, 2BA + loft Furnished Condo, on mountain, WD, NP, NS, HT, Pool, bus route. $1550 879-1982 STEAMBOAT:Magnificent 1BD condo, Storm Meadows on Mountain. Fully furnished. $1,190 month to month. All inclusive, NS, NP. Ron @ 970-620-5918 STEAMBOAT:SKI IN SKI OUT, 2BD, 2BA Storm Meadows, $1750 +Electric, NS, NP, Yr lease negotiable. 846-8284.
STEAMBOAT:DOGS WELCOME! Fenced Yard, 3 bd, 1.5 bath, walk to town. Gas fireplace. $1,500. First, last, deposit. July 1st. 970-846-3859
STEAMBOAT: DOWNTOWN Unfurnished 2BR, 1BA, cosy, clean, bright, low utilities. No Pets - limited parking. $1000 734-4919
FOUND: Black wire rim glasses in Safeway parking lot 06/08 in the PM. Call 879-5953
CRAIG:Large 2 bedroom basement apartment, NP, NS, utilities included, Background check required $750 plus deposit, 699 Russell St, Craig 276-4144
STEAMBOAT: Fish Creek area 1BD, garage pets ok, WD, utilities included. Month to month possible. $850 month Call 819-1164
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FOUND: Nintendo DS game found Please Call 879-2700 Val or Alison to identify
STEAMBOAT:Cabin for rent, 1BD + loft at River Bend. 1 pet ok. Low utilities. Available July 1. $900 monthly 970-846-9340
STEAMBOAT:Available NOW! Downtown 2bd, 1ba with wd, np, $1250 call 846-8247, long term rental, view online @ steamboat living.com
City of Steamboat SpringsAnimal Shelter, Phone: 879-0621, www.petfinder.com DATE: 6-7-09, Dogs for Adoption:Koal- Adult male Golden Retriever, Black Lab-Very affectionate! Baxter- Young male Border Collie mix-Friendly smallish-size boy! Braveheart-2-3 year old Lab, Newfoundland Mix-Happy and good spirited! BeeBee- Young female Heeler Mix-Total lover! Sam-8 year old Purebred Yellow Lab-AKC! Blossom-Female Heeler puppy-Spunky little girl! Munchkin-Young male Pomeranian-Playful! Cats for Adoption Just received more cats!-$30 each! Lots of kittens! K-9 Gentle Dental will be at Mt. Werner Veterinary Hospital for the June Hygiene Clinic. June 11th, 25th. No anesthesia required. Call Angel for appointment 619-370-5956.
Standing at stud AQHA Capitol Class -Black Bay. Hollywoods Shining -Red Dun. Get ‘em Dun -Palomino. APHA Tuff N Tru -Bay Homozygous Tobiano. Foundation breeding, great dispositions, versatile. Call 970-824-4145 or 970-629-0190
professional couple seeking condo, townhome, apartment or mobile home management position. experience in commercial and move out cleanings, plumbing, maintenance and customer service. 15-year locals with excellent yampa valley references. 846-4330
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Flashy Red 10 yr old Quarter Horse Gelding, trail horse MUST SEE! Call 970-736-8258
Tropical Rockies Red Tag Sale up to 65% off store wide. Plus, see us at FREE Family Fun Fest, June 20th 970-879-1909 Sale ends 6/23/09.
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ARCHERY 2007 Fred Bear Instinct, $800 new, $500 obo, 3 pin fiberoptic, 4 arrow quiver, 5 arrows, 720-323-2823
Monday, June 15, 2009
STEAMBOAT: HUGE studio on Hillside Drive. 1-2 people. Dog OK. Large bath. Fenced yard. Private Drive. W/D. Furnished. $1000 month includes utilities. Call Central Park Management at 879-3294 STEAMBOAT:Studio apartment in luxury home available. $1200 monthly includes utilities. (970)879-8089
STEAMBOAT:Great Downtown Location. Large 2BD, 1BA, Very private, Extra storage room, WD, NS, NP. Avail 6/15 $1150. 970-879-4924 Cell 303-501-3981 OAK CREEK: AFFORDABLE 1 & 2 BEDROOM hardwood floors, high ceilings, Dish TV, good location. Quiet building. Must See! 970-879-4784 STEAMBOAT:Furnished Apartment, 2BD, 1BA, 4 miles from ski mountain, Dishwasher, WD, $875 month. NS, NP. 1st, last. 871-4800, ext.100, 970-393-0906
STEAMBOAT: Views! 2 BD 1BA nicely furnished Villas @ Walton Creek, garage FP WD deck NS NP $1,250mo lesliefiji@frii.com 970-879-0080 STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA on mountain, beautiful views,very quiet environment!! Fully furnished, cable, gas, water, and trash included. $1,100 per month. Call Drew 970-291-9101 STEAMBOAT:Newly furnished 3BD, 2BA Sunray Meadows. 2 car stacked garage. 1,163 square feet, WD, NS, NP. $1,500-$1,600 month. Available June 8, Axis West Realty 970-879-8171 or www.AxisWestRealty.com STEAMBOAT:Furnished 2BD, 1BA, Heated oversized garage, WD, FP, new carpet. On bus route, walk to gondola, M2M $1495, year $1350. Central Park Management 970-879-3294. STEAMBOAT:Sunny corner unit, 2bd, 2bath, Available NOW, walkout patio to pool, tennis. 1st, last, NS, NP, partially furnished $1200. 303-717-7450 STEAMBOAT:WALTON VILLAGE 1BD, 1BA LOWER CORNER UNIT, WD, NP, NS, HOT TUB, POOL, TENNIS COURTS. FIRST, LAST, DEPOSIT $800 879-7746 STEAMBOAT:Shadow Run 2BD, 2BA, furnished, hot tub, pool, on bus route. 2 blocks from ski mountain. $1250 monthly (610) 945-7281 STEAMBOAT:Contemporary upper floor 2br, 2ba Sunray, high-end finishes, wood floors, stainless, FP, decks, garage, WD, NS. $1600 includes Heat, Cable, Water. 7/1. 970-846-7379 STEAMBOAT: 1 and 2 bedrooms. Furn. On Mt. and Bus. Avail immed. Lease. No Pets. 970-879-8161
STEAMBOAT:Advocates Building Peaceful Communities’ caretaker unit: 2BD, 1BA, WD, NS. Reduced rent in exchange for services. Must have interest in victim advocacy. 879-2034.
STEAMBOAT:Completely remodeled 2BD, 1BA. NS, NP, $1,150 + utility. Close to bus route, on site laundry facility. Susan Ross 970-819-2300
STEAMBOAT:Cabin for rent, 1BD + loft at River Bend. 1 pet ok. Low utilities. Available July 1. $900 monthly 970-846-9340
STEAMBOAT:Mountain, 1 bedroom+ loft, 1 bathroom. Quiet, backs to National Forest, Available July 1, $1,100, includes cable and utilities, NP, 303-324-4072
STEAMBOAT:New 1 Bedroom on Mountain near bike path and bus. Furnished. Utilities, Wi-Fi, Satellite included. WD, NS, NP $900. 970.734.7933 STEAMBOAT: Very nice studio apartment available. utilities, cable, and internet included. NP, WD, First, last, security. References required. $725 monthly. (970)871-9918 or (970)846-5358
STEAMBOAT:1BD, 2BA, Top corner, GFP, WD, Pool, HT, Updated, Creek views. NP NS References required. $1000. 1st, last, deposits 879-3788 STEAMBOAT:Snowbird Perfect, Beautifully furnished, centrally located, 2+2, WD, FP, Garage, Utilities and Cable included, $1,500 mo. NS, NP, Kym 879-2149
STEAMBOAT:1 Bedroom studio apartment on the mountain. Walking distance from Gondola. Pet’s welcome. $800 monthly, 1st, last, deposit. (605)354-1825
STAGECOACH:Immaculate remodel, 3BD, 2BA, stainless steel appliances, granite, WD. $1200 month. First, Last & Security, NS, NP. Available 09/01/09. 970-736-8199
STEAMBOAT:Furnished mountain, 2 bed, 1 bath apartment. NS, pets allowed, WD, cable, internet, utilities included. 6 months. $1000 month. 970-819-5160.
STEAMBOAT:Walton Village, 1bd, 1ba, furnished, upper level, NS, NP, WD, $875 mo. 846-0714, 846-7217 STEAMBOAT:1BD, 1BA, NS, NP, Downtown, partially furnished, $1000 utilities included, 846-5698.
STEAMBOAT:Newer 2 BR, 2 BA Sundance Creek Condo with FP, deck, WD & garage. Quality finishes, excellent location & views. NS, NP. $1,495 includes most utilities. Nelson 970-846-8338
STEAMBOAT:Downtown. NS, NP, 1BR, fully furnished, parking. WD, DW, includes utilities except electric. 730 Yampa, $975+ deposit. References. 970-846-7879 Available 6/15.
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STEAMBOAT:Storm Meadows, fully furnished 2BD, 2BA, Sweet! $1,150 month, plus electric and deposit. Available now until end of November. 970-819-0720 STEAMBOAT:Families wanted for 2 and 3 bedroom condo’s. Fully furnished on mountain with garages. Sorry no pets, no smoking. (970)871-6762 STEAMBOAT: 2BD, 2BA Shadow Run, bus-route. Available July 1st. WD, storage. High speed internet included. NS, NP. $1200 First,last. 819-4301 STEAMBOAT:Bright 1-BD, 1-BA condo. Walk downtown, WD, DW, NS, NP, good storage, views of sunset, cable included $900. (970) 846-6786. STEAMBOAT:1BD, fully remodeled Timbers Condo. New floors, granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, great views, MUST SEE! $950, Available 07/01 802-310-1135 STEAMBOAT:3bd Meadowlark condo. Clean, nice, affordable. 1st, last, sec., NS, NP. $1000 mo. Call 819-2751 STEAMBOAT:Sundance Creek 2BD + Den, includeds trash, snow plow, gas, water, sewer & most heat $1445 NP, NS. Call 846-5551
STEAMBOAT: 2BD, 2BA partially Furnished, Internet, Cable Included, bus-route, WD, Hot-Tub, mountain. NS, NP $1100 1st, Last, Security. 970-871-7921 STEAMBOAT:1BD, 2BA Nicely Furnished. Fireplace, WD, Fully equipped kitchen, Cable, Pool, Hot Tub, Very Clean, Mountain views. NS, NP References required. $900 1st, last, dep. Call 879-6189 STEAMBOAT:Sunny, clean-new carpet, paint, Villas, 2bd 1ba, heated garage, vaulted ceilings. NS, NP, WD, FP, most utilities, $1,300 mo. 846-3471 STEAMBOAT: Scandinavian Lodge 2BD, 1.5BA, Ski - In Ski - Out, furnished, including utilities, WD, FP, Pool, NP. $1450 846-8907 STEAMBOAT:Cool and Cozy 1BD, totally furnished, Walton Village, NP, NS, Pool, 6 mo or 1 yr lease. $825 mo 210-332-8611 STAGECOACH:2BD, 1BA, Wagon Wheel Condo, Very clean, furnished NS, NP, First, Last, Deposit $850 monthly + utilities. Available 7/1/09. 970-819-1511 STEAMBOAT:2BR, 2BA Walton Creek, Lease Negotiable, Pool, Hot Tub, partially furnished, storage. Available 07/01 $1150 1st,last,security NS, NP, WD. 970-846-7587
STEAMBOAT:*ONE MONTH FREE!* Clean 2 bd, mountain views, unfurnished, WD, cable, utilities, garage, NP, Lease, FP, $1,395 (317)695-3426
STEAMBOAT:Spring Meadows Condo 2BD, 1BA, unfurnished, close to mountain. $900 monthly plus S.D. NS, NP. (970)879-2373
STEAMBOAT:Furnished Ski Time Square, 2BD, 2BA, WD. Covered parking, hot tub, sauna, NS, NP. First, last, security, year lease. $1250 mo 970-846-8559
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STEAMBOAT:Fish Creek falls condo, 2BR 2BA, spacious living room. Low utilities, great view of downtown and west. NS, NP. $1250 per month. 970-456-3739
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STEAMBOAT:3 Bed, 3 ba, Clocktower Sq. $2000 incl util. Fully furnished, hot tub, BBQ, WD. 6 month lease. Jen 415-350-7726
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STEAMBOAT:1BD, 1BA, utilities included, hot tub, easy access to hiking and biking trails large porche, yard area, 6 month lease, fully furnished $950 per month. 1-800-733-7060 STEAMBOAT:Shadow Run, 2BD, 2BTH, 2nd floor, remodeled, new carpet and appliances, bus route & WD. References. $1250 month. NP. (970)879-7086 STEAMBOAT:Mustang Run. Spacious & immaculate 3 bdrm., 2ba. on bus route. Garage, furnished, all utilities (including cable) $2,100 mo., 1 year. NP, NS. 1st, last, security deposit. 303-987-2287 or RickGowins@qwest.net STEAMBOAT:Sunray 2BD, 2BA, on bus, vaulted ceiling, WD, 1 car heated garage, included heat water & cable. Call Mike 846-8692
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STEAMBOAT:1BD, 1BA furnished Pines Condo, new remodel, WD, NS, mtn views, bus route, $975. 970.217.1503
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����������������������� STEAMBOAT: SPACIOUS, 2BD, 2BA, Furnished, Mountain, Bus, Grill, Garage, Fireplace, NS, NP, WD, UTILITIES INCLUDED, Flexible Term, $1535, Karen 970-819-9051. STEAMBOAT:Large top floor 2BD, 2BA Rockies Condo. Furnished, hardwood, deck, storage, bus route, pool, hottubs, golf; utilities included. $1400 month Lindsay 508-789-1910 or http://www.2433rockiesway.com/, STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA, Condo, Fully furnished, WD, on bus route, NS, NP $1,250 plus utilities, First, Last, Security (719)338-4763
STEAMBOAT:THE LODGE, 2BD, 2BA furnished Pool, hottubs, deck, cable, gas, internet, shuttle. NS, NP. $1,600, 200yds to Gondola 440-666-6008 STEAMBOAT:1BD, 1BA furnished, remodeled, top corner unit, mountain views. wood floors, WD, HT & pool, NS, NP. $1095 monthly (970)736-1204 STEAMBOAT: Condo on mountain. 2BD, 1BA. Cute, clean, great karma! (970) 846-2631
STEAMBOAT:Huge 2BD, 2BA private preserve.10 minutes to town. Pet considered. Garage. NS, $1400 mo+ utilities. Lease. First, Last, Security 970-870-9815
STEAMBOAT:2bd, loft, 1ba, furnished or unfurnished, utilities included. On the mountain, bus, $1500 month. NP, NS. Call Bill at 879-2854. STEAMBOAT:2BD, 1BA plus loft, wood burning stove, WD, on Yampa river, quiet, 3 miles from Steamboat on Highway 131. $1500. 970-846-0200 STEAMBOAT:New 3bdm, 2.5ba; Between town and Mountain, 2 car garage, Great Views of Emerald, Mt Werner AND down valley, NS, Pets negotiable. $2,200 970-819-1890
STEAMBOAT TODAY
STEAMBOAT:3 bdrm log cabin in Downtown. $1,700 month includes utilities. No dogs. Contact 824-1703. STEAMBOAT:3BD, 2BA, Fairview, New kitchen, Granite, Wood floors, Gas fireplace, Large decks Beautiful Private backyard, WD, Furnished, NP. $2200 970-870-6277
STEAMBOAT: 3BD, 3.5BA Custom home on Anglers Drive. This home has everything! $3,750 monthly, see more details at tntpropertiesonline.com or Call 970-846-6767
STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA, mountain, 1600 sqft, WD, NS, Pets okay. Available 06/16. $1,500 + utilities & deposit. 9 7 0 - 3 9 3 - 0 9 8 0 http://www.condosnaps.com/duplex STEAMBOAT:Chinook Lane, 2BD, 2BA on bus route. Furnished, WD, NS, lease. 1st, last, deposit $1500 month + utilities. Call 970-222-0913 STEAMBOAT:Duplex, 3BD, 2BA, Riverside, fenced yard, new carpet - paint. DW, WD, NS, NP, bus. Available now. $1,500 mo. 1st, Last, Security. References. Possible Sale or Rent2Own. 970-276-9151 STEAMBOAT:3BD, 2BA, 3-story, nice, clean, 2300 sf, fully furnished or unfurnished, private town setting, great mountain views. NS $1,900 970-819-7684 STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA, Furnished, garage, WD, views, fenced yard, pets negotiable, NS. $1500+utilities, First, last, security. Long term. 846-3111. Details www.westworks.us/rental STEAMBOAT:Sunny, Spacious, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, bus route, walk to town. Laundry & mud room, heated garage, low utilities. (970)871-0961 STEAMBOAT:3BD, 1BA, garden level, fenced yard. Off Tamarack. Bus, 1-car garage, WD, NS. $1500. Pets ok, Available Now 970-879-5507, (970)879-8584 STEAMBOAT:3BD, 1BA Utilities paid, furnished, in town, not on bus, private, clean, 1700sq.ft., 2-vehicle maximum, full laundry $1800 (970)879-6702 OAK CREEK:Brand New 1/2 Duplex for Rent 3BD, 2BA, 2-car garage, all appliances included + central vacuum. NS, Pet negotiable. Sierra View, $1495 monthly + utilities. Call Joe 846-3542 STEAMBOAT:2BD 1BA cozy, quiet, downtown. Great yard. WD, NP, NS. Lease, references First, Last, Security $1200 month + utilities. 970-879-9038 STEAMBOAT:2BD, 1BA, 3357 Apres Ski Way, WD. Walking distance to Gondola. NP, $1100 monthly + deposit & utilities. 970-846-9589 STEAMBOAT:GREAT VIEWS unfurnished 2BR 1.5BA double garages, yard, low utilities, WD woodstove, pet considered. 8/1 $1,350 734-4919. STEAMBOAT:3,4 Bdrm, 3.5+ Ba luxury Cherry Dr. garage, decks, views, WD, FP, family rm, open floor plan, storage, NS, pets, $2,400. 970.846.3868
HAYDEN:near High School and Town Park, 2BD, 1BA, WD, 2 car garage, yard, Pets negotiable. $1,100 month. Available July 1. 406-570-2031 STEAMBOAT:Will trade 4BD, 4BA contemporary house on ICW (Hobe Sound FL), Large pool, Pontoon boat for comparable Ski In -Out mountain home. Late Feb early March 2010. 561-312-1567 STEAMBOAT:1bd, 1 ba separate unit in lower part of house on upper mountain -val’disere, views, pet OK $925 +utilites 846-8145
STEAMBOAT:Live & Work Downtown, 1,200 sqft apartment, new bathroom, 1,000 sqft garage, 10ft door. $1,500 mo 846-9753
STEAMBOAT:Cute Old Town home. 3BD, 1BA Hardwood floors, gas stove, WD, Pets considered. $1700 month plus utilities. Available immediately. 871.1749 STEAMBOAT:Beautifully restored cottage, 9th & Oak Street, downtown. 1BD, 1BA, WD, NS. First, last, security utilities. Available 07/01 $1300. 879-1453.
HAYDEN:Spectacular home in Hayden for rent. 4BDR 3BATH, 3000 sq ft with att dbl gar. Open floor plan, in-flr heat, 500 sq ft custom log deck, two laundries, oversized kitchen with dbl ovens, custom closets, undgr sprinkler. We are looking for neat, clean, responsible renters ONLY! Lease and deposit required. $2000 mo. Call Amy 846-7044. STEAMBOAT:3BD, 2BA Large Downtown House, furnished, free bus, yard, river, decks, vaulted ceiling, gas fireplace, WD, NS, NP $2200 month 970-870-6277 STEAMBOAT:1 BD, 1 BA, WD, 3 miles from town on HWY131 on Yampa River, River Frontage, $1,200 mo.970-846-0200 MILNER:Quirky 2bd, 1ba house on great 1/2 acre lot. Dogs welcome. Must allow showings. $850 1st, last, security. biffs97722@mypacks.net 541-497-3572
STEAMBOAT:3BD, 2BA newer-home. 2 car garage, spacious kitchen, FP, WD. Mountain, bus route, landscaped, Jacuzzi tub. $2150 month. 970-846-5004, 870-6410
STEAMBOAT: 1300 Sq Ft house in Fairview, fenced yard, garage 2BD, 1BA, 2 attic rooms that could be used as an office. $1,550 (970)846-1760
STEAMBOAT:AVAILABLE NOW, 2 bedroom plus loft, 1 bath home, pets, close to bus, skiing. Large deck, views. $1,350 monthly, 970-819-6930
STEAMBOAT: Spectacular ski area views from this 4BD, 3BA Tree Haus home. Just 2 miles from both downtown and the ski area. Close to everything Steamboat has to offer! Fully furnished with landscaped yard, large deck, hot tub and 2-car garage. Long-term lease $2750 monthly + utilities. Pets welcome. Call 970-390-5244. STEAMBOAT:1 BD COTTAGE, 502 1/2 Pine Street, includes water and trash, $800 mo. Available now. NP, NS, 719-576-9930 STEAMBOAT: Spectacular views in Soda Creek Highlands. Hike from house. 3BD, 3.5BA, den, 3000 sq. ft., 2 fireplaces, great decks, 2 car garage. 7 acres. Available August 1 with lease. 1st, last, security. $2200 mo. See details at http://sodacreekhouse.blogspot.com/. Call 401-423-0055.
Newly remodeled 5Bed, 3Bath, familyroom, 2 woodstoves, 800 sqft.shop, 3-acres, 8-miles from town, horses OK, Pets neg. LEASE TO OWN, $2100 Mo, 970-734-5045
STEAMBOAT:Downtown by High School. Great views. Unfurnished, 4bedroom, 2bath, 2 car garage. 1,726 sq. ft. , pet considered, available July, lease,ns. $2,000-2,500 monthly. Axis West Realty 970879.8171or www.AxisWestRealty.com STEAMBOAT:3bd, 2ba Heritage Park home. Avail mid July - Aug 1st. $1700, water incl. pets negot, NS. 871-1851 CLARK:Charming Cabins for lease 17 miles North of Steamboat: 1BD’s start at $650 monthly, 2BD’s $1,000 monthly plus utilities. NS, NP. Horse boarding available. 1st, Last, Security. 970-879-6220. HAYDEN: Charming Downtown 3BD, 2BA, 1 car garage, WD, NS, pet negotiable. $1200 month + utilities. Call Amy 846-8601
STEAMBOAT:Blacktail, 3bd, 2ba, WD, heated garage, CLOSE to town, 10 acres, NS, dogs negotiable, $1,650 month. 415-868-9675 or 415-860-9663 HAYDEN:Horse property, 3BD, 2BA, large barn. 35 acres. 3 miles outside town. $1,700 monthly. NS. Available immediately. Call (720)339-8938 CLARK: Right on The Elk River, 3BD, 2BA, WD, NS, pets neg., $1350 month 879-3253 STEAMBOAT:3br 2 bath in the heart of downtown, Partially furnished, ns, np security $1800 includes utilities 970-379-8704 HAYDEN:Furnished one bedroom guesthouse. $675 per month. Matching Security. Call Kristy (970)846-3805. STEAMBOAT:4 + bedroom old town home, big fenced yard, pets okay. Furnished, $3,000 includes utilities. Flexible terms, call for appointment. (970)871-6898
STEAMBOAT:Never-lived-in, brand new home, 5 minutes from downtown. 4bd, 3.5ba, views, decks, school bus route, nice yard, private. NP, NS. $3,500 month + utilities. Corey 970-846-3782 Email: bryna@organic-marketing.com.
STEAMBOAT:Old Town Home, 3BD, 2BA, Gas fireplace, WD, NS, Pets OK, 1st and security. $1700 month, 846-4705
STEAMBOAT:Tamarack Point, 3bd, 2.5ba, one car garage. Huge unfinished basement. Nice family neighborhood. Available 07/01, flexible lease. $2100 MONTH 736-2315.
STEAMBOAT:5BD, 3BA, bus route, On Golf Course, WD, NS, 2-car garage, pets considered. $2,395 + utilities. Great home. Call 970-846-5551
STEAMBOAT:Strawberry Park Home, 5 Bedrooms, 3 Bath, remodeled 04’. 5 minutes from town $3000 monthly. 846-9783
STEAMBOAT:Log Home Blacktail Estates 3BD, 2.5BA, 2 car garage, 5 acres, office & family room. $1,500 - $2,000 Depending 805-748-7258
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CRAIG:Quaint 2BD, 1.5BA mobile home-6 lots, above city park, secluded, new paint, furnace, garage, yard, views, pets possible. $850 monthly (970)824-7957
STEAMBOAT:Clean, Sunny, Bright unfurnished 3BR, 2BA. 2 garages, gas heat, hot water, low utilities, pet considered, mountain views. $1,400 734-4919
STEAMBOAT:Private Room, Bath in Furnished Townhome Overlooking Valley, WD, DW, WiFi. $750 includes utilities. Available Now! Lease or Monthly. 970-846-0440
STEAMBOAT: Unfurnished 1 bedroom 1 bath Mobile Home located in Dream Island MHC, $875 monthly, $900 deposit, Call (970) 879-0261
STEAMBOAT:Bright, Sunny, & Clean 2BD, 1BA corner unit available immediately, fully furnished, mountain, bus route, recently update, pool, hot tub, NS, NP, 1st, last security. $1200 some utilities included. 970-846-4965
STEAMBOAT:2BD, 1BA, Fully furnished, on bus route, NS, walk to mountain. (970)846-8280
STEAMBOAT:3BD, 1.5BA, bike path & bus route. Cable, Water, WD, Gas Stove, Pet? Available 07/01. $1500. First, Last, Deposit. 846-4633 STEAMBOAT:3BD, 2BA Mountain Vista,furnished townhome,1 car garage end unit. On bus route. Fireplace, WD, Cable, Trash, Pets considered, NS. $1,700. (970) 871-8027 STEAMBOAT: Beautiful 4BD, 3.5BA, 1 car garage, between mountain and town, bus route, WD, NS, NP. $1950 monthly. 970-846-6423.
STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA on mountain, bus route. WD, DW, pet negotiable, NS. $1,300 month. First, Last, Deposit, June 1st. Tim 846-1605 STEAMBOAT:2BD 2 story sunny corner unit. Ski area, furnished & fully equipped, WD, pool, hot tub. NS, NP. $1295 month. Cable, monthly house keeping included. 303-503-8100. STEAMBOAT:Townhome, 3 Bedroom. Furn. On Mt. and Bus. Avail. immed. Lease. No Pets. 970-879-8161 STEAMBOAT:EARN FREE RENT 1 SEQUOIA, 2 bed corner unit, lots of light, just remodeled brand new floors & walls, updated appliances, pool, hottub, $1200 negotiable 970-846-6943 HAYDEN:Valleyview Work OR Live. Large 1150 sqft 2BD, 2BA + 1150 sqft heated storage with overhead door. Great views! New construction. $1500 month. 819-1788 or 870-0169
STEAMBOAT:FOR LEASE - AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 4 BD, 3BA townhome on mountain, Ski-in, Ski-out, Fully furnished, 6-12 month lease, $3500 month, Suraya 303-601-3621, suraya@suraya.com
STEAMBOAT:Luxury Duplex, incredible views, 3 BD, 2.5 BA, leasing now with flexible terms, high end furnishings included, $2,700 month, 2 car garage, no smoking (303)904-2377 STEAMBOAT:2BD, 1.5BA Whistler Townhome. WD, deck, pool, hot tub, NS, NP. $1200 month includes most utilities. 1st, last, security. 846-2451. HAYDEN RENTAL-2BD, 1Ba, NP, NS, First, Last, and security, Rent with option to buy. $750 mo Billie 970-620-0655
HAYDEN:2BD, 1.5BA, fireplace, heated garage, WD, NS $1100 month, 1st & Security. (970) 756-6298 STEAMBOAT:3BR, 2B Townhome great location near hospital, golf course, skiing; perfect for family or 2 couples. Hot tub, deck, wood fireplace, garage. Unfurnished, available July 1 $2100 month exclusive utilities; references required call Bob 970-846-4907. STEAMBOAT:JUNE FREE!! 2bd 1ba Whistler Unit. Recent partial renovation. Last, deposit only. Includes several utilities and amenities. $1300 month (970)596-9884
HAYDEN:Rooms available in Hayden. Long-term rentals $400 per month plus utilities, NS, NP. 970-276-4545 or 970-276-2079
STEAMBOAT:Walton Village 2BD, 2- 1/2BA Remodeled, WD, NS, cable, water, trash included, Pool Hot tub, mtn, bus. $1300 +dep. 846-6113
STEAMBOAT:Sunny room, private bath, Stylish, clean, townhome, Quiet, private! Garage, WD, dishwasher, Fireplace, decks, NS, NP, $650 month includes cable, hi-speed internet, 846-2294
STEAMBOAT:Furnished Herbage Townhome, 3bd, 3ba. On mountain on bus route. $1,800 monthly includes heat, water, cable. NS, NP. Available 6-1. 303-525-9102
STEAMBOAT:Mature housemate needed for 4bd, 3.5ba home. 6 miles North of Steamboat. $625 plus utilities, pets and lease term negotiable. (303)673-0727.
STEAMBOAT:3 bd, 2 ba, Mountain Vista Townhome, garage, WD, $1,800. 970-871-1839
STEAMBOAT: Furnished bedrooms, quiet, downtown guesthouse. Share kitchenette, living room, patio. Cable, WiFi, NP, NS. $500 + electric, heat. 879-8793
STEAMBOAT:Newly remodeled Woodbridge townhome, 3 bdr 2.5 bth, 2 decks and a garage. WD, fully furnished, NS, NP, on bus route. available July 1st. $1,800+ utilities, call 9 7 0 - 8 4 6 - 7 6 9 5 www.steamboataerials.com/gallery/thumbnails.p hp?album=35. STEAMBOAT: 3bed, 3bath Walton Village Townhome for rent. Sunny, corner unit with valley views. Fully furnished. $1500/month. NS, NP 970.846.9449 STEAMBOAT:2BD, 2BA, furnished, WD, on mountain, deck, Hot tub, cable, on bus route. $1,250 + deposit, NS (970)870-9997 STEAMBOAT:Recently renovated Whistler 2bd, 1ba, sunny end unit, beautiful views. New tile, carpet, paint throughout, maple cabinets, granite counters! Deck, WD, pool, hot tub, bus line. NS, NP, no partiers! Available 07/01. $1300, year lease. (970)879-5141, 846-4240. STEAMBOAT:Whistler Townhome. Furnished, Turn Key End Unit. Mountain views, pool, HT, ammenities building. Long term, NP, NS. $1350 monthly. 970-879-1834
STEAMBOAT:Roommate wanted to share nice home. Close to bus route and bike path, great views. NP, NS. $500.00 a month plus utilities. Available 7/1. Call 970-819-6128.
STEAMBOAT:Warehouse: Live or Work 2,000 sq.ft. 3 phase power, fire alarm, sprinkler, large swing and overhead doors, internet, passive solar. Tenant finish, built to suite. This is an excellent property with great neighbors. 970-879-6667 STEAMBOAT:High visibility, high traffic, 3rd and Oak location. 211 3rd Street. 1800 sq.ft. total. 1450 sq.ft. finished, 350 sq.ft. storage. 2 bathrooms. Live-Work potential. $17 sq.ft. NNN 5 year lease. Call Tom 970-734-5977
STEAMBOAT:Looking for 1 roommate to share 3BD, 2BA house with one other, WD, pets neg. $625 includes utilities. (970) 846-8890
STEAMBOAT: Office space singles to 5 room suites. Historic building 737 Lincoln and Mountain location. Private parking both locations. 970-870-3473
STEAMBOAT:Bedroom on mountain, cable, wireless, WD, bus route, bike path. NS, NP, $550 monthly includes utilities. First, last, deposit. 846-7230
STEAMBOAT:30% Discount. Low CAM. Parking. Great office setting in central location with views. Office and Storefront. 255SF to 6000SF. 879.9133
STEAMBOAT:WESTEND, Mature, responsible quiet, adult to share 2 bd condo, NS, ND, WD, Balcony, $625 mo+ utilities. Avail. 6/15, 871-6763
STEAMBOAT:Furnished room available. On bus route, WD, internet, cable. $700 includes utilities. No lease or deposits required. Laura 871-7638, 870-1430.
STEAMBOAT: Copper Ridge Office / Warehouse for rent. Approx 900 sqft 303-350-9436 STEAMBOAT:1107 Lincoln Avenue. Three-room suite. Discrete private parking, all utilities, DSL, conference room, kitchen. Ideal for insurance, real estate, professional, or construction offices. 879-6200, Ext. 16. STEAMBOAT:Small Office space available on the Yampa River Downtown. Bathroom & waiting room, Deck overlooking the River. (970)879-3088 STEAMBOAT:Ace @ the Curve Plaza has 3 retail spaces available. 850 sqf, 1200 sqf. or 1800 sqf. High traffice anchor tenant, short, or long term. Sign now & we’ll pay 1 year or CAMs. 970.819.5169
HAHN’S PEAK:Mature, Fun person wanted for Furnished room with views! Couple considered, Dog possible. $475 month, utilities included. 970-846-7316 STEAMBOAT:1bd in 3bd, 2ba nice townhome. Hotub, NP, NS, Tamarack area. Quiet, responsible. $700 includes utilities, Wi-Fi. First, Last. (970)846-4312 STEAMBOAT:Room for Rent. $500 monthly. Utilities included except gas. Cable, internet, phone, free LD, WD. Pets negot. (970)879-4202, (340)998-8240
STEAMBOAT: RETAIL: Center of Downtown 1,200-3,500sqft Boutique Retail, Food Service Restaurant? Flexible Terms. OFFICE: Prestigious location center of Downtown 700-1400sqft, Tenant finish allowance, Call Jon Sanders 970.870.0552 STEAMBOAT:1,500SF shop with large, well appointed office. Knotty pine built-in cabinets and workstations. 10’x10’ garage door, 14’ ceilings. $1,580NNN.. 879.9133 STEAMBOAT:Entrepreneurs seeking office space for new - growing business check out Bogue Enterprise Center at CMC. Great rates, one year leases, copy center, meeting rooms, SCORE counseling available. Call 870-4491
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������������������������ MILNER:3360 sqft warehouse, 12x14, and 12x12 doors +man doors, 14’5” ceiling, concrete floor, gas heat, bathroom, electricity. $2,400 month 970-846-0423 STEAMBOAT:Pentagon West Office spaces available starting at $375 month + cam. Garage Bay with office. $600 month + cam. 970-846-4267 STEAMBOAT: BEAR RIVER CENTERBeautiful 2nd floor space available immediately! Perfect for salon, spa, gallery, or office space. Small 114 SF unit and large 960 SF unit. Call Central Park Management today for more information. 970-879-3294
CHIEFTAIN EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITES
STEAMBOAT:Office Suites Available for Immediate Occupancy. Conference room accessible. Long/short term available. Starting at $400 per month. All inclusive Call Bruce 846-0262 STEAMBOAT: Office space singles to 5 room suites. Historic building 737 Lincoln and Mountain location. Private parking both locations. 970-870-3473 STEAMBOAT: Office or Retail 5th and Yampa. 750-1700sqft. Terms negotiable, Month to Month? Ample parking, great signage. Jon Sanders (970)870-0552
STEAMBOAT:Rooms for rent in beautiful 4BD Townhome, NS, NP. $650 monthly per room includes all utilities & internet, on bus route, between downtown and mountain. (970)846-6423
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STEAMBOAT:?????????Dogs o.k. $450 single, $600 couple. Large bedroom, private bath. Includes utilities. Beautiful location. 13 miles from Steamboat. 870-1636, 879-1556 STEAMBOAT:Pets negotiable, furnished, single-family-home, Close to Old Town, 2 rooms available, $600 per month + utilities. $1200 deposit. 303-459-0316
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STEAMBOAT:1107 Lincoln Avenue. Three-room suite. Discrete private parking, all utilities, DSL, conference room, kitchen. Ideal for insurance, real estate, professional, or construction offices. 879-6200, Ext. 16. STEAMBOAT:RIVERSIDE PLACE AGGRESSIVELY PRICED STARTING AT $10 FT. Several square foot age options available for retail, office, restaurant space. Jim Hansen (970)846-4109 Thaine Mahanna (970)846-5336 Old Town Realty HAYDEN: 3100 sq ft warehouse with office and full bath/shower – 2 12X14 foot truck doors and man doors on either side. Could divide. New, landscaped and ready to lease @ $10.80 per foot ($2800mo). Valley View Industrial Park, a great midpoint location between Craig and Steamboat. Call Dutch (970) 846-1676.
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
STEAMBOAT:Executive Office Suites Available at the Historic Old Pilot Building Great downtown location with full amenities: Phone System, Wireless Internet, Cable TV, Conference Room, and Kitchen. Contact Rhianna at (970)875-0999 STEAMBOAT: Rent all or Part of A+ Professional Office Building. Features: Reception, conference, windows & kitchen. MOSER & ASSOC. 970-879-2839 STEAMBOAT: Prime Downtown Location in Historic Professional Office Building! 1,050 sf first class finished space including 3 offices and 5 work stations located at 141 9th Street. Call Ryan at 970-819-2742 CRAIG:up to 2,500 sq ft @ $10 per sq ft, including shop, utilities included, high traffic location with good parking. call Bobbie Jo (970)824-7000 STEAMBOAT:First month free. Professional suites and individual offices available at 1205 Hilltop Pkwy from $600. Lofted ceilings, AC, security, plenty of parking, great views from every office. Call Jules 879-5242 STEAMBOAT:Next to Yacht Club, 8th and Yampa on the river. Huge yard, Parking, flexible terms, price negotiable. Jon Sanders 970-870-0552 STEAMBOAT: 427 Oak St. Available Immediately, 1850 Sq Ft. For further info Call Janet 879-0642 or 846-6962
SAVE A $1,000 A MONTH IN RENT!
STEAMBOAT:AVAILABLE NOW! New Riverfront commercial unit, Below Market Rent. 1400sf with two large internet ready offices with windows, warehse, garage, storage, receiving bay, good signage, parking, kitchen, bathroom, riverside patio, near bikepath. 970-846-3289 kath@evodesign.biz
CLASSIFIEDS
STEAMBOAT: Hwy 40 Frontage, Logger’s Lane Commercial Center, 2480sf Finished retail, industrial space, overhead garage door, Central AC & Heat Call 970-846-5099
STEAMBOAT: Handyman willing to do any work for partial rent payment, Responsible Pet owner (6yr female lab) Call Mike 636-295-0017 STEAMBOAT:WANTED to lease: 1 bdr apt near bus route from Nov ‘09 thru April ‘10. 58yo, NS, NP. adaplant@bellsouth.net 228-326-6693
STEAMBOAT: Need more office space?? Hilltop Document Storage is the perfect solution for storing sensitive and confidential documents. Call (970)879-5242
STEAMBOAT: THE VICTORIA 10th & Lincoln RETAIL AND OFFICE SPACE FOR SALE OR LEASE Hal Unruh - Prudential Steamboat Realty 970-875-2413
Discover the benefits of owning your office space. Office and storefront from 845sf to 6000SF.Central location with parking. 879.9133
SKI TIME SQUARE
HELP-U-SELL! SHADOW RUN , SECOND FLOOR, 2BED, 2BATH, CLEAN, AFFORDABLE. LOWEST PRICED UNIT IN COMPLEX. ONLY $244,500 DWIGHT 9 7 0 - 8 4 6 - 9 9 7 0 WWW.HUSALPINEPROPERTIES.COM
Just steps from Steamboat’s slopes! Private entry, fireplace, 3 levels, 1.5 bath, patio on the lawn! $275,000. Patricia Dulan , Broker. 970.870.6373
������������� The Value of slopeside living. Beautiful 1BD, 1BA, fully furnished, great starter home or rental. Owners pets allowed. Reduced to rock bottom price of $255,000! MLS#124596 Valerie Lish RE/MAX STEAMBOAT 970-846-1082
HAYDEN/STEAMBOAT: Airport Garages, Spring Special! Own a heated 12’ x 22’ storage unit for cars, home or business. $39,900 now $24,900 on a limited # of units. On site shuttle/clubhouse and manager. Rentals also available. AirportGarages.com (970)879-4440 ��������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ ��������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������
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STEAMBOAT:Summer rental in new custom timber frame home near Whistler Park & open space. Top quality finishes, 3BR, 2BA, Garage, huge patio & views. Pics at www.vrbo.com listing #249226. $1,495 wk $3,250 mo. Nelson 970-846-8338
Remodeled 2 Bedroom Unit at the Pines Was $355,000, Now $274,900! #124394 Over 20% of price reduction! This unit has just undergone an extensive remodel including new slate tile, hardwood floors, paint, appliances and countertops. This unit is sunny and brightwith a delightful patio opening up to the grassy courtyard. The Pines complex offers extremely low dues and is ideally located near shopping. Great value,won’t last long. Call Cheryl Foote at ( 9 7 0 ) 8 4 6 - 6 4 4 4 www.SteamboatMountainProperties.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
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Successful year round guest ranch business for lease or option to buy. Owner financing may be available. Great growth potential! Call 970-879-6220
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STEAMBOAT Shadow Run, 1bd, 2nd floor, new bathroom, clean, $210,000, 970-819-2233
OWNER FINANCING! Walton Creek Condominiums, 2bd, 2ba, $249,000, 1020 sqft. Why wait? Roy Powell 846-1661, RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT
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Best condo Value Under $250K on the Mountain Offered at $249,500 #125295 This cozy 2 bedroom/2 bath unit is a fully furnished turn key unit with ski mountain views. Solid management program with Mountain Resorts. Building recently renovated and paid for! Call Bob Bomeisl at (970)846-3046 Prudential Steamboat Realty STEAMBOAT: Work - Live 1700 SqFt end unit, Custom finishes, Owner Finc. 3% APR. $350,000 970-734-8265
$169,900 LOCAL STARTER OR INVESTOR CONDO MLS#124806 One Bedroom, dogs allowed. Low dues. Washer/dryer. Tour: www.PropertyPanorama.com/57622
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Value with Quality Offered at $765,500 #125109 Incredible value for the dollar - $206 per sq ft. Listed under year-end appraisal. Well thought out home. Like new condition, 4 bed, 4 bath, great open floor plan with vaulted ceilings, easy access to three car garage and mudroom off main floor, lots of cabinet space with soft-close on drawer, granite counter tops, walk-in-pantry, solid pine doors and trim, lower level activity room, two laundry areas, huge fenced backyard, large 30 x 12 deck off dining room, fabulous views of Flattops and open space. Easy access to walking trails. Call Cindy MacGray at (970)875-2442 or (970)846-0342 Prudential Steamboat Realty
$8000 TAX CREDIT Cash for buyers who haven’t owned in last 3 yrs. Must close by Dec.1,2009. Single family homes in Stmbt starting at $149,000. Call Lisa Olson or Beth Bishop at 970-875-0555 or see virtual tours & top deals at www.SteamboatBestBuys.com
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CONSIDER: 2660 s.f. A+ building. Lots of light and parking. Rent possible. For price: MOSER & ASSOC. 970-879-2839
Large Industrial zoned location close to downtown. 3.08 acres. House, shop, 26 units self storage. Many existing uses. Water rights and more! 970-879-5036
Own, Don’t Rent! Offered at $198,500 #125028 Own! Don’t rent! Very cute, top floor, corner unit with lots of light over looking the green space with views of the ski area. Bedroom has windows on two sides, one bath, washer/dryer, wood stove, new appliances and kitchen. Nice beams and T & G ceilings. Easy access to parking area, free bus and the recreational amenities. Nice upgrades and quality finishes. Call Cindy MacGray at (970)875-2442 or (970)846-0342 Prudential Steamboat Realty
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Multi-million Dollar Company offering business opportunity to self motivated person. No franchise fees or products. For details call Steve (970)629-0272
Remodeled 2 Bedroom Close to Ski Area Offered at $249,000 #125356 Nicest unit at Shadow Run and best price! Gondola views from both bedrooms and the living room. Upgrades include new kitchen cabinets, counters and tile backsplash, new flooring, paint, and more. Enjoy the outdoor pool and hot tubs, and the convenience of living close to the slopes on the free city bus route. Owners are allowed to have pets. Short and long term rentals allowed. Call Stephanie Fairchild at (970)819-1131 or Cam Boyd at (970)846-8100 www.SteamboatAgent.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
Ski Town Realty, Bruce Tormey, Realtor BruceT34@yahoo.com (970)846-8867
Views, Views, Views! Offered at $3,595,000, #122380 Possibly the best views of the mountain can be seen from this 5 bedroom/ 7 bath home. The master suite is on the main level with its own office and walk out to a private hot tub. A large family room, wine cellar, great storage and incredible craftsmanship can be found in this luxury home. Call for an appointment. Completion in August of ‘08. Call Marc Small at (970)879-8100 or (970)846-8815 www.ForSaleSteamboat.com Prudential Steamboat Realty FSBO:Own a piece of Routt County History. Updated 1730sqft 4BD, 2.5BA home on .3acres. 15 miles South of Steamboat on Highway 131. $235,000 846-8630 or 846-1558
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STEAMBOAT:SUNDANCE @ FISHCREEK, 1st Floor, Prime Retail Space, Large Windows, 2nd Floor, Office Space, Recently Remodeled. Lots of Natural Light, Bob Larson: 871-4992 or 846-6899
STEAMBOAT TODAY
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Quail Run, All utilities included in Homeowners dues, except Elec. 2bd, 2ba, with garage, BEST PRICE! $369,000. Call Roy Powell, RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT 970-846-1661
New Price on this Fabulous Home w/Caretaker unit Offered at $849,000 #124387 “This home sits on a large lot in one of Fishcreek Falls finest subdivisions, Margarite Ridge. Enjoy all that this single family home has to offer with beautiful back yard, large open living area and great views. There are four large bedrooms and three and half baths with the master suite resting on its own level. The caretaker unit is a large one bedroom with kitchenette, full bath and its own entrance. Truly a remarkable home. Priced to sell. Call Cheryl Foote at (970)846-6444 www.SteamboatMountainProperties.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
Price Reduced! New home, 2BA, 3BD, 2 Car garage on large lot! Gain instant equity! 980 E 9th, Craig. 970-629-5427
$499,900 MOVE IN READY! MLS#125821 Newly remodeled bathrooms and kitchen. Open and modern, privacy, views, 1/3 acre, master suite, three car garage. Tour: www.PropertyPanorama.com/67633
Ski Town Realty, Bruce Tormey, Realtor BruceT34@yahoo.com (970)846-8867
Log Home on Five Acres
4BD, 1.75BA, 2300sf, new appliances, new carpet, horse corral, Hay shed, good water, great views! Mid $200’s. See web site for full description: http://ricks-place-online.net or call 970-629-5397 Huge $124,000 Price Reduction! Offered at $1,175,000. #124825. Great opportunity for 3500+ sq ft, 4 bed, 3.5 bath on quiet location. Open floor plan with lots of sunlight and spacious bedrooms. Quality finishes and incredible amounts of storage. Like new condition. Views of the ski area and Flattops. Just minutes from the gondola. Call Cindy MacGray at (970)875-2442 or (970)846-0342 Prudential Steamboat Realty
HELP-U-SELL! TIMBERS VILLAGE CUSTOM HOME. 5BED, 3BATH, 2 CAR GARAGE CUSTOM FINISHES, COUNTRY BUT CLOSE TO TOWN, NATIONAL FOREST ACCESS. ONLY $729,000 DWIGHT 9 7 0 - 8 4 6 - 9 9 7 0 WWW.HUSALPINEPROPERTIES.COM
STEAMBOAT:River Place Home, 2 bed, 2.5 bath, 1 car garage. Great neighborhood, rec-guest house, access to Core Trail, river, bus and ski area. 879-2825
Paonia Retirement - Clark Homestead offers energy conscious homes for elegant living, two bedroom units, with oversized garage. www.clarkhomesteadpaonia.com
CLASSIFIEDS
Luxury Home in the Sanctuary Offered at $3,979,000, #122392 This home overlooks the Sheraton Golf Course with amazing views of the mountain and valley. This 5 bedroom/ 7 bath including a 1 bed caretakers unit home & backs up to 38 acres of green space.The master suite has a private deck, fireplace and oversized his and her closets. A gourmet kitchen, covered deck and media room top off this amazing home. Call for an appointment. Call Marc Small at (970)879-8100 or (970)846-8815 www.ForSaleSteamboat.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
Brand new Custom Home 3 BD, 2.5 BA, 2 car garage, 2500 sq ft. OPEN HOUSE Sunday June 14th 1-4 pm, 38835 Main St, Milner. MLS#123639 Call 970-846-8949
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FEATURED LISTING - 3BR, 2BA, North Routt. Privacy on .93ac. $435,000.00 MLS 125641. I list and sell properties for a low set fee saving my clients thousands$$$., Call Harley, 970-846-6355, H e l p - U - S e l l www.husalpineproperties.com Reasonable Remodeling! Hand textured walls, Improve your home to sell. Call PDC Construction 30 years experience. 970-736-0890 or 970-846-1525 Back on the Market with a $20,000 price reduction! Offered at $759,000 #125547 Immaculate Single Family Home offering the ultimate location close to Whistler Park, minutes from the Ski Area, and easy access to the Core Trail. Interior offers a great open floor plan with vaulted T&G wood ceilings. Home is warm and charming with luxury appointments that include new appliances, hickory cabinetry, slate flooring, slate shower surrounds, and beautifully landscaped yard. Filled with brand new mountain furnishings and accessories. Offered turn-key. Truly a MUST SEE residence. Call Kim Kreissig at (970)870-7872 or (970)846-4250 Prudential Steamboat Realty FSBO, exceptionally nice, updated home, 1860 sq ft, 4 BD, 2 BA. All new windows, new kitchen, family room, A/C, 2 car garage, Large, fenced yard, sprinkler system, two storage sheds. Spacious decks. 1281 Crest Drive, Craig. $244,900 Brokers welcome = 3% 970-824-6804, 970-629-8739
Picket Fence & Amazing Views! Offered at $549,000 #125431 This large cottage style 3 bedroom, 3 bath home sits on one of the nicest lots in West End Village. It offers gracious open living with almost 2000 square feet...the perfect sized home! All of the extra large bedrooms have bathrooms and great views. Laundry is on top floor near bedrooms. Overlooking the valley this super cute home offers value, space and privacy! Call The Hibbard Team at (970)846-8247 or (970)846-8536 www.steamboatliving.com Prudential Steamboat Realty NEW HOME Energy Efficient 3bdrm, 2bath, 2 car garage. Good time to buy with a price to sell! 275 Bilsing St. Craig 970-629-5427 or westernslopefsbo.com
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Steamboat County, 12 miles on 20-Mile Rd. Large 2+ bd, 1 ba, WD. On school bus route. Pets Neg. NS. $1250 + Dep. 879-2868.
4BD, 3BA in Beautiful Stagecouch area, with 9x15 swim spa. Lease to own option by owner. $600,000 Please Call 736-8396
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Family home on a great lot at the mountain, 1770 Meadow Ln. Three-plus bedrooms, two bath, family room, 1800sqft. One block to school bus and free city bus to ski area. Two blocks to large city park. Large deck gets full sun in winter, shady by dinner time in summers. Great place to raise children and pets. $550,000. 970-846-8650.
Perfect Home for the First Time Buyer Offered at $317,000 #125010 Cute home in Oak Creek. Wood floors, updated bathrooms and beautiful personal touches throughout the home. Garden areas and storage shed outside. This home is in great condition and one of the nicest area! Call The Hibbard Team at (970)846-8247 or (970)846-8536 www.steamboatliving.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
IMMACULATE
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Economical, wonderful, in town; beautiful mature grounds; minute’s walk to river, downtown. 2bd, 2ba home plus detached guesthouse. MLS 124942.www.steamboathomeforsale.com. 970-734-7113.
Move-in Ready, 3BD, 2BA, 1-car home located within walking distance of downtown Steamboat. Master bath with Whirpool tub and double sink vanity, gas-fireplace 2-decks, extra parking, corner lot, mature landscaping, sprinkler system, on bus-route, bike-path, great views! Pioneer Village $430,000 Directions: HWY-40, 1/2 mile west of 13th St, Across from new Community Center, Rt on Conestoga Circle top of hill, brown house on left, 1467 (970)871-4880 (970)819-0347 4 + bedroom old town home, big fenced yard, & furnished. $790,000 Call for appointment. (970)871-6898
FSBO:4BD, 3BA Home in Tree Haus, 2300 sqft, 2 car garage, permanent siding, new roof, granite countertops & new tile, Offered at $45,000 below May appraisal. $690,000. 970-879-6294
STEAMBOAT:NEWEST TOWNHOME, 2br, 2ba 1152 sqft Westend Village, great finishes, sunny end unit. FSBO Brokers welcome $289,000 coreykopischke.com/house 846-2141
Outstanding Hayden Home - Very well-kept home on a great lot with professional landscaping! 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms and attached 2-car garage. Sunset views from the large wrap-around deck overlooking green belt. Extras include honeycomb blinds throughout, sprinkler system, pet access doors, concrete drive, brick retaining wall and huge walk-in closet in master. 1-year HSA (Home Security of America) Home Warranty is included. Offered at $290,000. Call Dutch Elting at 970-846-5569 dutch@dutchelting.com
STEAMBOAT:2BR, 1BA Riverside Duplex unit, New roof, carpet, paint. Nice yard, No HOA This home qualifies for a USDA Rural Direct Loan with possible interest rate to 1%. $265,000. (970)879-2025
DOWNTOWN SPECIAL $369,000! 2BD, 1BA home plus 2nd unit 1BD, 1BA, Trees. Great location. Owner, Broker Call Roy Powell RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT (970)846-1661
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Stagecoach 3BD, 2.5BA, garage, 2300 sqft, stream in back, Beautiful Views. $419,000. Call 970-846-1525 Overlook Drive Oasis Offered at $2,175,000, #122522 This 4 bedroom / 4 ½ bath home has panoramic views from the valley to downtown. The house overlooks the Rollingstone Golf Course (formerly the Sheraton) and comes with a transferable golf membership. Easy living with a main floor master and his & her walk in closets. Eat-in country kitchen has a sitting area and fireplace. Three bedrooms on the lower level have access to a covered deck and large family room with wet bar. Great storage, 1000+ square feet of unfinished space, fenced in dog yard, water features, and a spacious office with a private bath complete this special home. Call Marc Small at (970)879-8100 or (970)846-8815 www.ForSaleSteamboat.com Prudential Steamboat Realty Like New Home in Hayden Offered at $395,000 #125319 Very nice home in like-new condition, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, covered porch and large open trex deck. Views of the Hayden valley. Beautiful kitchen cabinets and lot of counter space, spacious open living room and dining room, direct access from garage to kitchen, storage space over garage and in crawl space under home, solid wood doors, high efficiency water system, close to neighborhood park and school bus pick-up nearby. Call Cindy MacGray at (970)875-2442 or (970)846-0342 Prudential Steamboat Realty Walk to the Slopes! Offered at $1,190,000 #123431. Excellent location and ski area views from this single-family home in desirable Landings neighborhood located just two blocks from the Gondola. Gorgeously decorated five bedroom, four bath home featuring vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, wood-burning fireplace and 2 spacious decks with outstanding views. The HOA takes care of the exterior maintenance so you can enjoy life! Call Colleen de Jong at (970)846-5569 Colleen @ PrudentialSteamboatRealty.com Prudential Steamboat Realty $163.00 PER SQFT! SilverSpur 4BD, 3.5BA home. LOWEST PRICE - SQFT ON THE MARKET. Immaculate, 4600+ sqft custom finishes. Call Roy Powell at RE/MAX STEAMBOAT (970) 846-1661. $755,000.
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FSBO, Steamboat, 2,500 Sq feet, 3 bd, 3ba+ loft office and gameroom. New carpet, new everything! Great Deal for the square footage. $419,000, 30K below market value (970)-819-8777
Downtown Steamboat OWNER FINANCING, $470,000, 2BD, 1BA home on huge .79 acre lot. Owner, Broker Call Roy Powell RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT 970-846-1661
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LOG HOME & CABIN PACKAGE - 1757sqft $60,900.00; 615sqft - $31,900. Many other models available. 719-686-0404 or visit www.highcountryloghomes.NET
MUST SELL! MOVING
LARGE FAMILY HOME 1.7 acres 4BD, 4BA two separate living units, decks, oversized garage. ONLY $540,000. Roy Powell REMAX/STEAMBOAT 846-1661
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Live In / Live OUT! Offered at $995,000 #125347 Tucked away on a private drive and surrounded by an aspen grove, this lovely 3 bedroom home on 3 levels has recent upgrades. Enjoy solid cherry custom wood cabinetry, travertine marble countertops, hand-set tile backsplash in the kitchen and large picture windows in the living room. This property is topped with quality finishes, infinite views, a quiet neighborhood with no through-traffic and large adjoining parcels. Call Cam Boyd at (970)879-8100 ext. 416 or (970)846-8100 www.SteamboatAgent.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
Monday, June 15, 2009
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STEAMBOAT TODAY
Chateau at Bear Creek Back on the Market! WOW! Was $1,100,000 NOW $899,000! Beautifully remodeled 5 bedroom, 3 1/2 bath townhome located on a pond and a short distance to the base of the ski area. Enjoy exceptional views of Mount Werner from your large wrap around deck. Like new with high-end finishes throughout including granite slab counters, stainless steel appliances, natural stone and travertine bathrooms, wet bar with wine fridge and copper sink... New carpet, paint... the works!! Southern exposure provides excellent light throughout the home. Beautifully landscaped yard with mature garden. Priced to sell!! Call Kim Kreissig at (970)870-7872 or (970)846-4250 Prudential Steamboat Realty
MUST SELL! MOVING DiscountModularHomes.com 866-828-0200 West Acres 2bd, 1ba, updated and clean! Tile, laminate floors, new furnace, wood stove, 2 sheds, all appliances incl WD, large deck, fenced yard! $38,500 819-0929 or 819-4377 RENT TO OWN! Willow Hill MH Park, Oak Creek! Remodeled 1400 sq.ft., 4 Bedroom doublewide $950 month. 875-0700. Beautiful fenced yard! 2BR mobile with all appliances & plenty of storage in Milner MHP. $40,000. Joyce Hartless 291-9289. Colorado Group Realty.
FSBO, Steamboat, 2,500 Sq feet, 3 bd, 3ba+ loft office and gameroom. New carpet, new everything! Great Deal for the square footage. $419,000, 30K below market value (970)-819-8777 Townhome in Hayden. Offered at $165,000 #124225. No HOA Fees!!! 2 Bedrooms, 1.5 Bathrooms with big fenced in back yard for family dog, overzised 1-car garage. Great location! Call Billie Vreeman at (970)620-0655 Prudential Steamboat Realty
NATIONAL FOREST ACCESS. 5.2 acres. Hahn’s Peak views. $219,000! Another excellent buy! Roy Powell RE/MAX STEAMBOAT (970)846-1661 40 acres with older motorhome in 64x40’ barn 2 miles east of Craig. $325,000. Owner financing with $15,000 down at 6.5% interest at $1,959.41 monthly. Leveled building site, teriffic views. Waterwell, electricity, phone, septic, one reservoir, one spring. 970-640-8723.
WOW!
Dream Island 3BD, 1BA, completely remodeled, new cabinets, appliances, carpet, storm windows, roof, wood trim, 12x16’ storage shed. 100% financing to qualified buyers. $37,500 Don Kotowski Rocky Mountain Real estate 846-8081 or 846-7522 Sleepy Bear #36 Reduced to $24,000 Owner Finance with Down Payment. Call 734-6208
New Listing! 125 acres, NF boundary, aspens, meadows, fantastic Steamboat Lake views. $1,295,000. Christy Belton, Prudential Steamboat Realty. 970-734-7885-cell Ski Area and Trout Creek Views! Secluded 40 acres. Great value 10 miles from town. $339,000. Roy Powell RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT (970)846-1661 CRAIG MIGRATION ACRES:35 Acres with Well, $120,000, 38.6 Acres $100,000, 39.8 Acres with Well $110,000, $5,000 Down 7% interest, OWC, 824.4256 40 ACRES East North CRAIG $100,000, Owner finance 6.5% with $5000 down, $673.95 mo, elec and roads, 970-640-8723
HELP-U-SELL! BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED WEST END TOWNHOME. 2BED, 2BATH, CLEAN AND COMFORTABLE ONLY $265,000 (DEED RESTRICTED) DWIGHT 9 7 0 - 8 4 6 - 9 9 7 0 WWW.HUSALPINEPROPERTIES.COM
Affordable Building site Phippsburg $57,500 with Tap fees Paid. Call Troy Brookshire Colorado Group Realty 846-2356
CLASSIFIEDS
38 | Monday, June 15, 2009
Cheap Building site Phippsburg $52,500 with Tap fees Paid. Call Troy Brookshire Colorado Group Realty 846-2356 Steamboat Lake. Priced to sell FAST @ $65,000 OBO. Great Views & location, ALL utilities Brokers welcome. Call 970-846-4742 Strawberry Park Paradise Offered at $799,000 #125397 This premier Strawberry Park location is just minutes from downtown, a half mile from natural hot springs and adjoins National Forest for endless beauty. This property has multiple building sites to choose from and would be a prime hunting property or quiet retreat. The cozy cabin is true “green living” with solar power, gravity fed spring water and a wood burning stove. Outbuildings include a hay barn, tack shed & horse shelter. Call Cam Boyd at (970)879-8100 ext. 416 or (970)846-8100 www.SteamboatAgent.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
OLD TOWN LOT
2 lots with permit ready plans for unique 4000sqft homes. $995,000 Owner 619-977-6606
SUMMER JOB
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Rodeo / Ballfield concessions. Earn extra income, have fun, 10 weekends mid June thru August and Labor Day. All ages over 18, full availability only please! 970-879-9678 Steamboat Springs School District Teachers 2009-2010. Elementary: Special Education, PE/Health PT, Music, Elem. Teachers, PT Reading, Middle: Math/Science Teachers, High: ELL, Industrial Arts (Part-time), Charter: 6-8 All Subjects, PE Teacher/Outdoor Ed (Part-time). CO Teacher License with appropriate endorsement required. Salary: $32,910 - $52,636 DOQ for FT positions. Questions? 970-871-3199 Please complete district application at https://apps.winocular.com/steamboat/apply/ EOE
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Heavenly View Offered at $795,000 #125493 You will absolutely fall in love with this exceptional homesite that has superb views and includes an active Rollingstone Ranch Golf Club membership. This 1.65 acre parcel within the exclusive Sanctuary subdivision is the perfect retreat for anyone with discerning tastes and a love of the great wide open. With a wonderful central location to town, shopping, dining, skiing and other activities you can save your driving for the fairways! Call Cam Boyd at (970)846-8100 or Pam Vanatta at (970)291-8100 www.SteamboatAgent.com or www.SteamboatEstates.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
Expansive Ski Area Views Offered at $745,000 #125398 Fantastic price for premier lot with jaw-dropping views of the Steamboat Ski Area and Flat Tops. Upscale neighborhood, expansive views and a flat building site with aspens and scrub oak. Build your luxury dream home on this perfect and private .68 acre lot. Best lot on the market at this price. Call Colleen de Jong at ( 9 7 0 ) 8 4 6 - 5 5 6 9 Colleen@PrudentialSteamboatRealty.com Prudential Steamboat Realty
CONTINENTAL DIVIDE VIEWS!!! Aspen Tree Covered, Ready to build. Steamboat Lake. $125,000 OR TRADE! Call Roy Powell RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT 970-846-1661
ASPEN TREE COVERED site on cul-de-sac. 1/2 acre, ALL UTILITIES TO LOT. $98,000 Call Roy Powell RE/MAX/STEAMBOAT (970) 846-1661
Cheapest lot in SS city limits, 1.89 acres, Zoned Residential, Subdivision Potential. JV-Subordinate-Trade $189,000, Ron Wendler CGR 875-2914
GrandKids ChildCare Center Preschool Teacher - FT (32 hours/week) Responsible for the planning and execution of an age appropriate curriculum. Provides a safe, nurturing and stimulating environment for the children. Maintains an effective relationship and open communication with other staff, parents and departments. Must be Group Leader qualified and have a strong knowledge and understanding of young children with at least 2 years of verified teaching experience in a child care setting. A minimum 2 years of college education with at least 1 college class in child development is required. Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, or Child Psychology degree preferred. We offer great benefits including health insurance, paid time off, professional staff, ski passes, 403(b) retirement plan and more! Apply at Yampa Valley Medical Center Human Resources 1024 Central Park Drive Steamboat Springs, CO or fax resume to 871-2337 or e-mail to: careers@yvmc.org
3 Old Town Lots in Steamboat Springs Flat, easy build, fenced with views of Sleeping Giant. $300,000 970-826-0307
NEEDED: 12 Heavy equipment operators - mechanics. Will train the right people. FT or PT work. Call Sergeant Holloway 970-986-9206
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS! FT or PT Child care $40 per day. Please call Summer @ 819-4174
Laurel Street School and Family Center is looking for an energetic, flexible, creatvie individual to work with our preschool and pre-k age children. Please contact Kim at 879-7776 or email resume to laurel@springsips.com
Magnificent Large Lot on Ridge Road Offered at $750,000 #124724 1.3 Acre on the Mountain with views of Mountain and Valley. Water, sewer, electric, gas, phone and driveway to lot. Call Marc Small at (970)879-8100 or (970)846-8815 www.ForSaleSteamboat.com Prudential Steamboat Reality
PAINTERS: 5 yrs experience in commercial painting. Work in Steamboat & Craig. Drug test. EOE, Ins., 401k Contact Walter (888)947-2559.
SPEECH COACH (or Co-coaches) SSHS. Please complete district classified application at https://apps.winocular.com/steamboat/apply/ Questions: 970-871-3199. EOE
WORK 3 DAYS MAKE $700
The Steamboat Pilot & Today is seeking one responsible individual to deliver the Thursday, Friday and Saturday Steamboat Today newspaper to East Steamboat, Oak Creek, Yampa and Phippsburg. This route will pay approximately $710.00+ per month for three days a week delivery; route takes approximately 3 to 3 1/2 hours. Only SERIOUS APPLICANTS are asked to apply. This route will be excellent for anyone who lives in Oak Creek or Yampa. This is early morning work and you must have dependable transportation and vehicle insurance. A pick-up truck or large SUV is required. This is an outstanding opportunity for supplemental monthly income. Hurry this route won’t be available long. If this is something that interests you, please stop by the Steamboat Pilot & Today office building at 1901 Curve Plaza and ask for Juli Schons or call 871-4252. You may also e-mail jschons@steamboatpilot.com.
Mortgage Loan Originator - Colorado mortgage banking company seeking loan originator. Guaranteed salary plus commission. Excellent technology. Fax resume 970-242-6285, Ken@pmlgmac.com
BEST PAINTING
Seeking qualified applicant for the position of Automotive Technology Adjunct Instructor for fall semester. ASE certified preferred. Years of experience in occupation considered. Must have or be qualified for Colorado Vocational instructor credentials. Morning position 8:00 - 10:00, four days per week for intro level students. To apply or for more information call 970-824-6108 or 970-824-1111.
STAGECOACH: Rock Point Trail, ready to build, no assessments, W-S taps paid, soils test, plans, utilities. $190,000. Call 638-4496
STEAMBOAT TODAY
Fulltime temporary seasonal position (approximately July through September) available for an Information Receptionist at the Hahns Peak/Bears Ears District of the Medicine Bow-Routt National Forests, located at 925 Weiss Drive, Steamboat Springs, CO. Tour will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Salary is $13.18 per hour. Duties include greeting forest visitors at the front desk, answering a variety of questions pertaining to activities available on the forest, answering phone inquiries, selling items related to forest activities such as firewood permits, maps, forest passes. Apply at www.usajobs.opm.gov to announcement number TEMP-OCR-304-4-INFO and BE SURE to specify Steamboat Springs, Colorado as the location. Closes 6/19/09
29 People Needed Get paid $ $ for lbs and inches you will lose in 30 days. www.pursuemyhealthyfuture.com Dr. recommended
JOB # 5312356 4 FT positions available in Steamboat, CO. $18.80 hour 40hrs week; NO OT. Paint new & existing homes, while managing a crew of painters. Coordinates delivery of supplies. Resumes ONLY to: 303.487.1610 attn: Debbie. Must include JOB# 5312356 on fax cover sheet. DO NOT CONTACT EMPLOYER DIRECTLY!
Is looking for a Personable, energetic applicant who adds strength & value to an innovative, established company Plumbing & Heating Service Technician. Excellent wages, benefits & training! GrandLakePlumbing.com 970-879.1504 x206
Moffat County-Seeking applicants for the position of Temporary Fulltime Pest Management Technician. For complete job description, contact Colorado Workforce Center (970) 824-3246. Moffat County is an EEO Employer
Moffat County Social Services, Craig, CO, seeking Caseworker. Starting annual salary $35,506. Excellent benefits. Requires behavioral science BA. Obtain information regarding application from Workforce Center, 480 Barclay, Craig, CO, 81625, 970-824-3246. Submit resume and certified transcripts to same address by June 30, 2009. Written test required. More information: 970-824-8282.Moffat County is an EEO Employer. Moffat County-Seeking applicants for the position of Part-time on-call Crisis Intervention Specialist(2 positions). For complete job description, contact Colorado Workforce Center (970) 824-3246. Moffat County is an EEO Employer. Moffat County Social Services seeking full time Self Sufficiency Case Manager. Position requires contact with public & case management skills. Minimum qualifications: high school diploma or GED & 2 years clerical or extensive public contact; substitute qualifications AA or BA in business or behavioral science. Starting salary $15.12/hour. Certificate of typing test administered by the Colorado Workforce Center, 480 Barclay, Craig, CO 81625, (970) 824-3246 must be submitted to the same address by June 26, 2009. Qualified applicants are required to take a written test on July 2 at 1:00 p.m. at Social Services. Moffat County is an EEO Employer.
Perry-Mansfield Performing Arts School and Camp is hiring a Camp Nurse for the summer. Available immediately through August 16. Must be either an RN or EMT with certification to dispense medicine. The Camp Nurse ensures that a nurse is available 24 hours each session. Responsible for student and staff medical needs, administering meds to students, stocking and maintaining first aid kits and Infirmary supplies, and processing all insurance paper work. Salary plus room and board. For more information call 879-7125.
Want a more relaxing summer? Let an experienced Bookeeper and Office Manager lighten your load. References, experience, with Quickbooks pro, Microsoft office, BS in Accounting. Kimberly, 846-6313 The Holiday Inn of Craig is now hiring for Bartenders and Cocktail Servers. Full time & Part time positions available. For more information please contact Gayle Henderson-Haas at 970.824.4000 X 419.
Recently opened position for Hair Stylist. One chair now available. Downtown Salon. (970) 846-3030
Multi-Million Dollar Debt Free 12 year old company seeking professionals that would like to own their own business. Call Mike 303-229-3211.
CLASSIFIEDS Tugboat Grill & Pub
Will be accepting applications beginning May 26th for Kitchen staff. Apply @1860 Ski Time Square. SLOPESIDE GRILL is looking for experienced line cooks. Email resume to suzydemusis@comcast.net
Graphic Designer Become a member of our award-winning design team. The Steamboat Pilot & Today has an opening for an experienced graphic designer. This is a full-time position with benefits. Qualified applicants must have working knowledge of InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. The ideal candidate will be creative, deadline oriented and have the ability to multi-task. Send your resume and samples of your work to mboyer@steamboatpilot.com. 970-871-4218
PS Homecare, a leading National respiratory company seeks friendly, attentive Customer Service Representative. Phone skills that provide warm customer interactions a must. Maintain patient files, process doctors’ orders, manage computer data and filing. Growth opportunities are excellent. Drug-free workplace. EOE. Fax Resume to 970-879-9695
Vacation Resorts International is seeking Part-time Housekeepers. Qualified applicants must be detail oriented and be responsible. This position is for Saturdays only. Please stop by and fill out an application at Thunder Mountain, 2030 Walton Creek Rd. Or call 970-879-9634.
Steamboat Lake Outfitters is now hiring for Waitstaff, Breakfast cooks, line cooks, & Pizza cooks. Call 970-879-4404, apply online www.steamboatlakeoutfitters.com
Sales Assistant and owner’s assistant needed Help with customers and support the sales staff Light bookkeeping and office work. Computer skills a must. Send resumes via e-mail to bill@affordableflooringwarehouse.com No phone calls please. Come grow with us - Flooring Covering Sales experienced, energetic and team player. Fulltime- Some Saturdays Compensation based on experience. Send resume via e-mail to bill@affordableflooringwarehouse.com No phone calls please.
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Monday, June 15, 2009
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The Village At Steamboat is hiring for the following positions:
Full time- Year round employment. Benefits include: Health, Dental, Vision, PTO, 401k, Potential Tuition Reimbursement, Discounted hotel room rates at Wyndham core properties. Apply in person at 900 Pine Grove Circle (Across from the Tennis Bubble) EOE, VETERANS, DV, M, F
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