The
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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 23, 2023
Garfield County Commission Mar. 13, 2023 GARFIELD CO. Commissioner David Tebbs reported on the nearly completed Tropic senior center, on promotions underway to celebrate Bryce’s Centennial year, and on firefighter training every weekend until the end of May. Seventeen firefighters are participating, all from the west side of the county. Tebbs also reported a problem in one of the county’s oldest housing developments. Units constructed under a previous housing authority included a rent-to-buy agreement after "x" years. When ownership of those units was taken over by another entity, that purchase agreement was changed, resulting in two families receiving notice to vacate if they can’t complete purchase of their units within the next two weeks. Commissioner Taylor will follow up. Commissioner Jerry Taylor: As a board member of the Community Impact Board (CIB), Commissioner Taylor underscored the importance of Garfield Commission Cont'd on B2
National Weather Service Recognizes Two Garfield County Residents
Torrey Town Council
Sharon Dale Marsh of Escalante and Debi Stout of Boulder receive high honors for decades of volunteer weather recording by Ian Marynowski
Ian Marynowski
Sharon Dale Marsh is one of the last people in the state of Utah to collect weather observations with the original equipment. Known as a Cotton Region Shelter, or CRM, the white box contains two mercury thermometers to record high and low temperatures. There are also rulers which aid in measuring snowfall or rain amounts, which are collected in a nearby tube and funnel. The thermometers must be reset after each use by spinning or upending them. Many observers have transitioned to using digital thermometers which can be read from inside, but precipitation amounts must still be read manually outdoors.
ESCALANTE / BOULDER - It’s 5 p.m. After a quick glimpse outside, Escalante local Sharon Dale Marsh slides into his boots,
by Kathy Munthe
Birds Need the Basics Food, Water, Shelter
Debbie Savage
Cedar Waxwings contemplating a piece of fruit. ESCALANTE - Sitting here during a recent winter storm and looking out at my deck, I see my feeders covered with birds vacuuming up seeds. Sometimes, a few will fly up to the edge of the roof to catch the occasional drip of melt water. Periodically, there is a big explosion of birds as everyone heads for the trees and bushes, startled by something. A predator, perhaps, or maybe they’re just practicing.
Issue # 1505
insiderutah.com
These lunchtime observations sum up the basic needs of birds: food, water and shelter. We can help provide these things during tough times such as these. Birds spend a lot of time eating. They need to in order to maintain their high body temperatures and metabolism and to regain the 10% of body weight they lose at night. Many of the birds we have are seed eatBasic Needs
Cont'd on A3
REGIONAL WEATHER FORECAST Partly cloudy with highest chances of snow showers on Thursday, and otherwise low chances throughout. Highs in the 30s and 40s; lows in the single digits and teens. **Weather is subject to Change
TORREY - The March 2023 Torrey Town Council meeting opened with a water connection request for Jaron Potter. The council said they have discussed this request in past meetings and approved the request without much discussion. Then it was on to the Mayor’s Report with the big item being the town residents' water usage. The average Torrey resident uses 8,000 gallons per month, with 14% of residents using more than 30,000 gallons/ month. Additional water use statistics will be provided in the next Torrey Town water bill. Next there was a rather lengthy discussion with Dianna Poulton about the Wayne County Farmers Market. The council had pedestrian traffic concerns, and one council member noted that he has received citizen complaints that it has become too big of an event. Poulton explained how the market is run and what kind of insurance coverage the event has while
has walked at 5 pm most days for the past 42 years. This path takes him past his two cats, who begrudgingly share the Marsh estate, and
AmeriCorps Seniors Can Earn Income While Volunteering
Dollar Store Proposal in Escalante is Met with Local Protest
AmeriCorps Seniors Cont'd on A2
NWS Volunteers Cont'd on B4
Torrey Council Cont'd on B3
Insider
A crowd of over twenty people gathered to protest a proposal by a corporation called Red Root, LLC to build a Family Dollar/Dollar Tree store on Escalante’s Highway 12 at the March 14, 2023, Planning and Zoning meeting. The proposal is slated for the Escalante City’s council meeting agenda on March 21, 2023. ESCALANTE - Escalante City’s planning and zoning commission met on March 14, 2023 to consider just one item: a proposal by a corporation called Red Root, LLC to build a Family Dollar/Dollar Tree store on Escalante’s Highway
UPCOMING EVENTS... 2023 Panguitch Quilt Walk Registration Opens
April 1, 2023 QuiltWalk.org
FOR SOME BUT NOT ALL REGIONS REPRESENTED IN OUR NEWSPAPER COVERAGE AREA
THURS. MAR. 23 - WED. MAR. 29
Mar. 9, 2023
dons a warm jacket and a large, white hat; it’s time to check the weather. He starts down a well trodden path across his yard, one that he
JUAB / MILLARD / PIUTE / SANPETE / SEVIER / WAYNE COS. - If you are 55 years or older and can spare some time, you could qualify as a AmeriCorps Senior Companion. Senior Companions help the elderly by providing social support, respite for caregivers, help with daily activities and transportation to activities such as shopping or appointments. Senior Companion volunteers are 55 years or older and help older adults improve their quality of life. Senior Companions receive benefits such as meal and mileage reimbursement and can earn $400 or more of tax free* monthly income that doesn’t affect their own senior benefits.
towards his small flock of weed-eating, black bellied
by Amiee Maxwell
Spring makes its own statement, so loud and clear that the gardener seems to be only one of the instruments, not the composer.
—Geoffrey B. Charlesworth
12, with a corner address of 145 S. 300 E., just across Highway 12 from the elementary school. Well before the 6pm meeting, a crowd of over twenty people had gathered to protest the proposal, carrying signs such as, “No
Dollar Store on Scenic Byway 12,” “Support Local,” and “No! to $ Store, Keep Hiway 12 Scenic and Local.” “I think we have a Escalante P&Z Cont'd on B2
Bryce Valley High School Presents "Mamma Mia: The Musical"
April 19-22, 2023
Bryce Valley High School Theater 7:00 P.M. ALL content for THE WAYNE & GARFIELD COUNTY INSIDER MUST BE submitted by FRIDAY AT NOON to be included in the following Thursday edition of the paper.
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PRE-SORT STANDARD PAID RICHFIELD, UTAH PERMIT No. 122