The Wayne & Garfield County Insider March 4, 2021

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The

Insider

Serving Wayne & Garfield Counties, Utah

Loa • Fremont • Lyman • Bicknell • Teasdale • Torrey • Grover • Fruita • Caineville • Hanksville Panguitch • Panguitch Lake • Hatch • Antimony • Bryce • Tropic • Henrieville • Cannonville • Escalante • Boulder

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Turn-About Ranch Faces New Lawsuit

ESCALANTE - TurnAbout Ranch, a residential youth behavioral treatment center based in Escalante, is facing a new lawsuit filed on Wednesday, February 24, 2021 alleging sexual assault by a male staff member on a then 17-year old female student enrolled in the program. The complaint, filed in the Sixth Judicial Court in Garfield County, says that in late 2019, Hannah Archuleta, from El Paso County Colorado, was sexually groped on two separate occasions by the male staff member. The complaint says that a first assault occurred approximately a week after Ms. Archuleta arrived at TurnAbout, and occurred when Ms. Archuleta was alone in the kitchen at Roundy Camp. A second and more physically intrusive assault is said to have occurred about one month after the first, in the kitchen of the Barn. Ms. Archuleta claims that she reported the second assault within approximately 24 hours of its occurrence to three staff members: a Residential Coach, a therapist, and a nurse, but that Turn-About staff failed to take remedial steps and were dismissive and skeptical of her allegations. Lawsuit

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Beautiful View from the Inside Out of an Alcove in the GSENM

Keith Moore

"The Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is home to some of the most incredible geologic formations in the United States. Many of those formations are difficult to access, making them that much more rewarding to find." —Keith Moore Congratulations, Keith Moore. You are the winner of The Insider New Year, New Photo Contest! Thank you everyone for your submissions. We received so many great photos!

Aspire365 Receives Grant for Treatment of Opioid Addiction GARFIELD / WAYNE / KANE / PIUTE COUNTIES - Aspire365 is partnering with the Utah Rural Opioid Healthcare Consortium (UROHC) at Southern Utah University to expand treatment and recovery services for Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) in Garfield, Wayne, Kane and Piute counties. Thanks to this opportunity, Aspire365 will be able to provide treatment for a select

"The Mockingbird" & the Marshal by Steven Lee

Courtesy Steven Lee

The "Elite Theater," where Ben Jarrett is thought to have been able to book a performance after multiple theaters turned down his requests.

B

Garfield County Commission February 22

Panguitch Utah History Black History of Southern Utah Part 2

PANGUITCH - The story you are about to read is the culmination of 18+ months of continuous research and documentation. It is the most challenging history that I have compiled thus far for a number of reasons. The first of which is that after all this time, I still don't quite know how the story ends. y sheer chance alone, I first learned about a series of events in February 1908 that occurred along the icy stretch of rough road leading north from the "Metropolis of Garfield County" to her sister city of Richfield (this road is known today as Highway 89). I was scanning over old newspapers one night, searching for some

Issue # 1399

insiderutah.com

tidbit of information about some other "historical-rabbithole" story that I was chasing at the time. Suddenly, a series of sentences leaped out at me from a small column on the 8th page of a February 10th, 1908 issue of the Salt Lake Herald. The column was titled "Panguitch News Notes," and it read, in part, "... A negro calling himself Cannonball has been lounging around Panguitch for some time trying to have a performance but could not get a place to play in. He finally succeeded in getting the skating rink, and the Marshal had to be present to keep The Boys from harming him...." Panguitch History Cont'd on page 10

REGIONAL WEATHER FORECAST FOR SOME BUT NOT ALL REGIONS REPRESENTED IN OUR NEWSPAPER COVERAGE AREA

number of individuals in these counties who are struggling with opioid addiction at a significantly reduced price. In 2017, 650 Utahns died from drug overdose (or 22.3 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to the U.S. average of 19.8), most of which involved opioids. This outpaces deaths by firearm, homicide, diabetes, or kidney disease. Aspsire365 is partnering with

Zions Bank Aims to Bring More Diverse Businesses to Its Supply Chain SALT LAKE CITY - Zions Bank has launched a supplier diversity program aimed at bringing more diverse businesses to its supply chain. The program helps identify businesses as owned by people in traditionally underrepresented groups—including minorities, women, LGBTQIA individuals, veterans, and people with disabilities—that may be able to offer products and services needed by the bank. “Banking is a local business, and to be successful we must be representative of the communities we serve,” said Zions Bank president and CEO Scott Anderson. “This program levels the playing field so more businesses can successfully compete for Zions Bank procurement opportunities.” To be included in the program, businesses must complete an online registration and company profile. Qualifying businesses are then added to a supplier database, which is made available to supply chain managers. The database raises the visibility of diverse vendors—including existing vendors like Salt Lake City-based catering company LUX Catering & Events. Because LUX is more than 51% owned and operated by individuals who identify as LGBTQIA, it qualifies to participate in Zions’ supplier diversity program. LUX managing partner Chris Sanchez, who identifies both as gay and LatinX, says support for supplier diversity Diversity Program Cont'd on page 8

your local health organizations—Garfield Memorial Hospital, Kane County Hospital and Wayne Community Health Center—to provide a 12-month, in-home treatment program through in-person and telemedicine visits to those in your community. The Aspire365 program is the culmination of multiple years of development, in coordination with Yale Univer-

Addiction Treatment Cont'd on page 10

Garfield Commission Cont'd on page 6

Falcons: Fighter Jets of the Bird World

Emily Leach

American Kestrel—our smallest and most common falcon. ESCALANTE - Faster than a speeding bullet! Well, not quite. Falcons are very fast and powerful fliers and, with streamlined bodies and long pointed wings, very agile. A Falcon surprises its target prey animal with speed, knocking it or grabbing it out of the air or off the ground with sharp-clawed feet, then using its specially-adapted notched beak to sever the prey’s neck. Terrifying, I’m sure, but quick. The prey for most Falcons are other bird species, but many will take appropriately-sized rodents or large insects. Extensive DNA work over the last few decades has turned many of our ideas about bird relationships on

THURS. MARCH 4 - WED. MARCH 10

Snow showers start off the week, with 44% of precip on Thursday. Sunny to partly cloudy for the rest of the week, with the next highest chance of precip being on Wednesday at 24%. Highs in the 40s and low 50s; lows in the 20s. Winds from 9 to 17 mph.

sity School of Medicine and the D.E.A., to better address SUD (substance use disorders) as a chronic condition. We deliver treatment to patients in the privacy of their own home over a 12-month period. The lengthened treatment schedule allows for consistent implementation of the

GARFIELD COUNTY A busy Feb. 22 meeting, with Commissioner David Tebbs excused, began with Commissioners’ board reports: Commissioner Jerry Taylor said he’s hoping the county might obtain some state funding for upfront costs of affordable housing projects. He said Panguitch City is now working on six units, coordinating with the Beaver Housing Authority, plus the four units in Escalante and two in Tropic. He said Rural Co-Working Innovation Centers were featured on the last County Seat show. Panguitch will be opening their Innovation Center on April 1, and Escalante is starting their renovation soon. Taylor said with $750K potential in grants and two Centers in the works, Garfield County is probably leading RCIC efforts. Commissioner Leland Pollock said the latest on the CAFO bill seems to be better news for Garfield but maybe not for neighboring counties. The small percentage of private land in Garfield County may exempt it from the bill’s

For most of history, Anonymous was a woman. —Virginia Woolf

their heads. Traditionally, Falcons have been allied closely with Hawks and Eagles because they are all raptors. Now we know that Falcons are much more closely related to Parrots, of all things, and that both Falcons and Parrots share a common ancestor with Songbirds! The Falcon Family (Falconidae) has a world-wide distribution and includes over 60 species. These can be grouped into three subfamilies: “typical” Falcons, which are most commonly seen; Forest Falcons, confined to the tropics and not discussed here; and the very unfalcon-like Caracaras. There are six typical Fal-

con species regularly recorded in the U.S. and Canada. At the extreme northern and southern ends of the continent live Gyrfalcons and Aplomado Falcons, respectively. Rare and beautiful, Gyrfalcons are our largest, at 22” long. They inhabit tundra areas of the far north, nesting on nearby cliffs and pursuing ground birds like Ptarmigan. I was privileged to see one in Alaska years ago. I have seen our southernmost Falcon, the Aplomado, only in Mexico, but they once nested regularly in desert grasslands from Arizona to Texas. They were

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Falcons

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PRE-SORT STANDARD PAID RICHFIELD, UTAH PERMIT No. 122


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