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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2017

mtexpress.com | Volume 43 | Number 5 S U N

County analyzes property tax break Page 7

Hailey considers new housing district

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The Weekender: Events, movies, more Page 9

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Ketchum to review paid parking Paid parking lots started in November By PETER JENSEN Express Staff Writer

After outcry from business owners downtown, the Ketchum City Council has agreed to review the city’s new paid parking system. In November, the city imposed paid parking at two city-owned lots on Leadville Avenue and Washington Avenue. The city charges $1.50 an hour to park in those lots, using a kiosk or smartphone app. The Washington Avenue parking lot is between First and Second streets, while the Leadville Avenue lot is on Sixth Street. During its meeting Monday, the council agreed to review paid parking once new Mayor Neil Bradshaw and new Councilwomen Amanda Breen and Courtney Hamilton take office in January. The council did not take a formal vote; Councilwoman Anne Corrock was absent. Karen Dickens, owner of the Primavera Plants and Flowers shop on Leadville Avenue, told the council that paid parking was hurting retail businesses downtown. She spoke on behalf of 10 business owners in a building on 511 Leadville Ave. “This is more than the city of Los Angeles charges for parking,” Dickens told the council. “Please reconsider your decision. The businesses in this town pay your salary, too. This is going to hurt our local merchants.” Dickens suggested allowing drivers to park their cars in the lots free of charge for the first hour. Ketchum Finance Director Grant Gager said the kiosks could be reconfigured to accommodate that, if the council wished. However, he said it might mislead drivers who would still need to use the kiosk to park their cars. With the first hour free, Gager said, people might walk away without using the kiosk first. Councilman Jim Slanetz agreed that the city needs to review the system. During the meeting, the council displayed See PARKING, Page 13

Express Photo by Willy Cook

Wood River High School AP computer science students Brandon Scott, left, and Steve Lapa help Bill Brand with his iPad on Wednesday at the Senior Connection in Hailey.

The ‘IT’ crowd Students, senior citizens join up for tech help in Hailey By MARK DEE

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Express Staff Writer

n amplified voice climbed over the fizz and crackle of lunch hour at the Senior Connection Wednesday afternoon. “If you’re looking for tech support, the students are here!” said Teresa Beahen Lipman, the executive director. On tables throughout the dining room, iPhones were already out. And then, about a dozen students from Wood River High School’s Advanced Placement Computer Science Principles class spent an hour trying to get them right, led by their teacher, Becky Duncan, who is also a board member at the Senior Connection. That’s how this idea came to her, after a board meeting last year. “When they found out I was the tech teacher at the high school, they kept me here all afternoon,” Duncan said Wednesday. This year, she had the perfect group to help her out. The AP class takes a “global look” at computer science, Duncan said, including the

“It’s my first time doing this here, but I’m cultural, social and individual impacts of used to it,” Lapa said. “Usually, the only peotechnology. “It’s a neat opportunity to get the kids ple I help with tech is my parents.” Lapa’s family lives in Bellevue, though out, and teach them the soft skills they’ll his parents were born in Peru. need,” she said. “And, it’s great That’s one of the many places to combine a couple of different Brand saw during his stint in the generations.” military. Two of her students, senior “I was there years ago, flying Brandon Scott and junior Steve for Truman,” he told Lapa. “I tell Lapa, sat down with former Ketyou what, I’ve seen a lot of this chum Fire Chief Bill Brand, who world, and this,” he added, pointis 92, and his iPad Pro. ing to the earth at his feet, “this is “Now, why do I get these numthe best place in it.” bers when I open FaceTime?” Brand fiddled with someone’s Brand asked. cell phone, set beside his iPad on FaceTime? the table. “Yeah. See Tommy over Becky Duncan “Is that an iPhone, too?” there?” Brand said, pointing to WRHS computer Brand, an Apple devotee with the adjacent table. “He’s 94. I call science teacher and a MacBook Pro at home, asked. him every morning.” board member at The He unholstered his own—larger, Tommy waved Brand off, Senior Connection newer—from a Velcro pouch on intent on finishing lunch. In front of him on the table, where the silverware his belt. Before him—small, medium and might be, was his iPhone, set as square and large—sat the Three Bears of Steve Jobs’ dreams. close-at-hand as a gunslinger’s pistol. “Yeah, it’s like yours—but your screen is Meanwhile, Scott and Lapa ran Brand a lot bigger.” through the problem.

“When they found out I was the tech teacher, they kept me here all afternoon.”


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