
3 minute read
Comprehensive cancer care that sets us apart.
day camps for school-aged children, partnership with Evergreen Library.
Madison said the larger space will allow more school groups to visit the center, plus it will o er more adult programming. e nearby Bancroft Meadow will allow the center to offer classes outdoors.
“Even though the warming hut was great, it was not as accessible as the Bancroft House is in terms of parking, ADA accessibility and those kind of things,” she said.
Madison said Evergreen Audubon hopes to have a series of open houses in June so people can see the new space. Details will be provided as the nature center sta gets settled into the new space.
Cory Vander Veen, the Evergreen Park & Recreation District’s executive director, called the Evergreen Nature Center an incredible way for the community to connect with nature and be educated about the area.
“ e displays that had been in the warming hut at Evergreen Lake had touch tables, photos, maps and other displays to connect in unique ways to nature,” he said. “We are ecstatic they have found a good spot to relocate the Nature Center. We are happy to support them in what their future looks like.”
Title lone
CONIFER – Angry and urgent, Husband called JCSO to say that Wife was “trying to steal the car.” Rushing to the scene, deputies spoke with Wife, who hasn’t lived with Husband for at least two months. Wife said the car she was “trying to steal” is her own, being registered in her name only, and that Husband had deliberately disabled it to prevent her from recovering her property. Husband told o cers the vehicle was “the family car” given to the couple by his father, that Wife had registered it in her own name simply because he’d been out of town at the time, and that he’d “removed a fuse” from under the hood to prevent her from removing what he considered communal property. Alas, the law rests upon a rumpled bed of documentation, and after con rming that Wife stood alone on the vehicle’s title, deputies cited Husband for criminal tampering.
Circle jerk
PINE JUNCTION – When an unfamiliar “black Chevy pickup” parked in her driveway bright and early on March 24, she watched with interest. When a man got out and walked entirely around her house, she watched with unease. When he got back in his truck and drove away without touching anything, announcing his presence or reveal- ing his purpose, she picked up the phone. Deputies reviewing home surveillance footage of the enigmatic orbiter found nothing criminal in his behavior, but advised her to let them know if he comes back for a second circuit.
In-come rental
PINE JUNCTION – Tenant called JCSO on the morning of April 3 to put the department on notice. Landlord had trespassed on his rightfully rented space, he said, and the next time she did it he’d be pursuing charges. Armed with a copy of his rental agreement, Tenant testi ed that Landlord had noti ed him of her intention to enter his habitation
WHAT IS SLASH?
and “work on the wood stove.” Tenant had counter-noti ed Landlord that he didn’t want her inside his home unless he was physically in residence. Landlord went in anyway, performing the repairs in his absence. Tenant wanted deputies to take Landlord to task, and to warn her against future unescorted entries. For her part, Landlord told o cers that Tenant has been consistently behind in his rent, and that she’d just begun eviction proceedings against him. Deputies told Landlord that, per the terms of the rental agreement, until Tenant is formally served with eviction papers she can’t enter without his leave.
Sustainable Lands And Safer Homes. Allows residents to dispose of the wildfire fuel on their property, creating defensible space around their home.
WHAT IS SLASH?
Organic debris such as tree limbs and branches, known as slash, contributes to the high risk of fire danger in Jefferson County. All slash is composted.
WHAT IS SLASH?
Sustainable Lands And Safer Homes.
Sustainable Lands And Safer Homes. Allows residents to dispose of the wildfire fuel on their property, creating defensible space around their home.
Allows residents to dispose of the wildfire fuel on their property, creating defensible space around their home.
Organic debris such as tree limbs and pine needles, known as slash, contributes to the high risk of fire danger in Jefferson County. All slash is composted.

Organic debris such as tree limbs and branches, known as slash, contributes to the high risk of fire danger in Jefferson County. All slash is composted.
WHAT IS SLASH?
Woody debris
Tree bark
Pine cones Logs: -Max length: 8 feet
-Max diameter: 6 inches
Household trash
Metal of any kind
Tree stumps
Yard waste/grass clippings
For