The Wayne & Garfield County Insider June 3, 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, June 3, 2021

Ready, Set, Give!

2021 Give Wayne County Event on June 12 Includes Celebration Party at Teasdale Rock Hall

WAYNE COUNTY Spring is calling, and Wayne County nonprofit organizations are gathering for Give Wayne County, a celebration of community support. Participating nonprofits will be live online and on site at the Teasdale Rock Hall in Teasdale from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 12, for a party, and everyone’s invited. The Entrada Institute, Color Country Animal Welfare, Teasdale Historical Society, Torrey Dark Skies, Two Arrows Zen, and Torrey House Press are all located in and directly serve our community. Wayne County is so lucky to have these wonderful nonprofit organizations working to enhance culture, service, and beauty in our communities. Your Give Wayne County donation will make a difference right here at home. To celebrate this giving campaign, these nonprofits invite the public to a celebration party at the Teasdale Rock Hall at 73 Main Street, Teasdale, Utah 84773, on Saturday, June 12. Feel free to drop in any time from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. for live music and entertainment. Be sure to join us for terrific in-person prize drawings donated by the nonGive Wayne County Cont'd on page 3

Issue # 1412

insiderutah.com

Highway 12 Music Festival to Bring Eclectic Musical Performers to Three Towns Situated Along The Famous Namesake Roadway

Courtesy Ted Hinckley

For its inaugural year, the Highway 12 Music Festival will be playing Tropic, Escalante, and Boulder on June 18 and 19. Acts include rock group Cardinal Bloom (above) and Angie and Nick Petty (right), and musical performance genres will range from Jazz, to Cowboy and classical. Courtesy Ted Hinckley

BOULDER / ESCALANTE / TROPIC - The Highway 12 Music Festival is embarking on its inaugural year in 2021. Created to feature amazing music on one of America’s most stunning highways, this year's festival will feature a variety of music from various genres. This year, there will be performances in Boulder at Boulder Mountain Guest Ranch, near Salt Gulch (also where Sweetwater Kitchen

BES Students Present on What Makes Their School "Awesome" at 2021 Graduation by Tessa Barkan ing tools including math riddles and games, individualized spelling lists, and monthly presentations; the Boulder BookA-Roo; morning meeting and closing circle, which give students time to start out and end the day all together; the four-day school week; and their pride in successfully wearing masks this year. Following this, students who wanted to share work that they had written during the year Courtesy Tessa Barkan were able to present it. Student Wiley Williams enjoys Some of the first, second a snow cone on the last day of and third graders shared school. "Guess Who" animal haiBOULDER - Boulder kus and poems about dreams. Elementary School’s end of Fourth, fifth and sixth gradyear celebration took place ers then shared some of their on May 27. Students began poems, including “blackout by speaking on different as- poems,” where students took a pects of what makes BES page of a book and blacked out special, a presentation they words, making a poem out of titled "What Makes Boulder what was left, and “sandwich Elementary School Awe- poems,” in which they used some." They came up with the first and last lines of an the ideas themselves, brain- existing poem, creating their storming and collaborating to own middle. Principal Elizabeth Judecide what they wanted to share. Students talked about lian then gave out a number of the recently implemented awards and recognitions. All "Morning Mile" program; the students who participated in benefits of multi-age learnBES Graduation ing; community involveCont'd on page 2 ment with the school; learn-

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

THURS. JUNE 3 - WED. JUNE 9

Memorial Day is the unofficial start of summer, and this week will be mostly sunny and warm. Highs in the high 70s to mid 80s; lows range from the low 40s to low 50s. Low and scattered chances of precipitation, with variable winds from 11 to 17 mph.

is located), in Tropic at the Tropic City Park located at 220 West Center Street, and in Escalante at Ranch Dog Kitchen (280 East Main Street) and Escalante City Park (located at 100 North Center Street). Headlining the festival will be Wasatch Front performing legend Kurt Bestor. Known for his thirty plus years of successful Christmas concerts, Kurt is looking forward to bringing his brand of music and entertainment to such a

Workforce Services Partners with Utah Colleges For Virtual Career Fair

SALT LAKE CITY - The Utah Department of Workforce Services is partnering with the Utah Association of Colleges and Employers to host Utah’s Statewide Virtual Career Fair today, June 3. Utah’s 11 colleges and universities have collaborated with Workforce Services to register approximately 250 employers with over 5,000 open positions for the fair. “We are excited to combine efforts with Utah’s colleges and universities to provide the largest virtual career fair of the year,” said Loggins Merrill, Workforce Development Division director. “Whether you have a college degree or not, employers are ready to hire and help meet your career goals.” The virtual fair has expanded this month to include five pavilions: • General pavilion – All employers registered for the fair looking to hire job seekers with or without college degrees • College graduate pavilion – Businesses with job openings for both recent graduates and experienced alumni • Teleworking pavilion – Companies that offer employment with the flexibility of teleworking • Government jobs pavilion Virtual Career Fair Cont'd on page 8

beautiful area of the state. Other acts will be rock group Cardinal Bloom and soul singer Angie Petty, just to name a few. There really will be something for everyone including Jazz, Cowboy, and Classical. Please check our website www.highway12musicfestival.com or find our Instagram or Facebook pages to keep up with all of the inMusic Festival Cont'd on page 2

Garfield County Commission May 24

CIB grant application submission for 50% of renovation costs of GMH OR and pharmacy approved GARFIELD COUNTY May 24 Garfield County Commission business started with a closed session for commissioners to discuss potential litigation and personnel issues. Commissioner activity reports were skipped. Public Works, Dave Dodds: Commissioners discussed chipsealing Henrieville’s Loop Road. Commissioner David Tebbs suggested working with affected landowners at the end of that road to establish sufficient easement to create a serviceable road. Dodds estimated the chipseal cost at $200K. He said he’d like to present a road project priority list at the next meeting. However, the Commission decided to move forward with this project immediately. Planning, Kaden Figgins: Building inspections for short-term rentals: Panguitch’s STR ordinance now requires inspection before issuing a STR permit. Panguitch Mayor Soper wanted to establish a process for the county handling these added inspections. It was decided to apply the same process as regular inspections, whereby the city approves the initial building application, then submits it to the county to schedule inspections. The same fee of $150 would be charged. The Commission approved this suggestion, indicating all mayors would be made aware of the new guideline. Zone change to Commercial approved for David Wright, who wants to develop rental cabins/office and RV

park at the Bryce Valley junction, just off John’s Valley Road, contingent on water access and septic. The Commission approved a zone change from Ag to Forest Recreation for the 640-acre Sky Valley section. Figgins described factors leading to the rezone: For several decades, the owner has recorded new lots without submitting plats for review or following any of the subdivision process. This situation resulted in many lots with no water, infrastructure, not conforming to minimum Ag zone acreage, and not septic-compliant due to slope or soils. The matter came to light when two individuals submitted variance requests. Figgins said rezoning will address most of the nonconforming-noncomplying issues for all property owners, such as lot size, setbacks, and other standards. Business licenses were approved for Sagebrush Farms LLC, in Escalante, and Lake Powell Bullfrog House in Ticaboo. The Commission approved Hatch’s new 5-member Cemetery Board, which will include the maintenance person and either mayor or a council member. Following a public hearing, the Commission approved submitting an application for a CIB grant asking for 50 percent of the estimated $2.2M to renovate Garfield MemoGarfield Commission Cont'd on page 3

Entrada Citizen Science Dark Sky Spring 2021 Monitoring Event Promotes Understanding of Issues Related to Light Pollution by Barb Walkush

Courtesy Barb Walkush

Entrada Institute's deep space telescope from Elliott and Mary Ward (above) was unveiled on May 8, 2021. TORREY - The Entrada Institute’s Citizen Science Dark Sky Spring 2021 Monitoring Event was a success, with many new faces joining the group. The AmeriCorps Pacific Region Team Purple 5 also helped with the monitoring. Barb Walkush and Gary Pankow welcomed the group. Mary Bedingfieldsmith gave a brief talk on the importance of lighting to preserve the dark sky for nocturnal migrations and even for human sleep patterns. Prior to the monitoring, Mickey Wright brought

Now go, and make interesting mistakes, make amazing mistakes, make glorious and fantastic mistakes. Break rules. Leave the world more interesting for you being here. —Neil Gaiman

his telescope and pointed out many stars and galaxies. The skies cooperated that evening and the stars looked spectacular; the dark sky enthusiasts successfully completed the monitoring. Monitoring results are reported to the International Dark Sky Association. According to the International Dark Sky Association, an important part of solving the problem of light pollution is to have a thorough understanding of its magnitude. Biannual monitoring helps

us with that understanding. Monitoring also helps us see how efforts to shield lights are impacting the night sky we attempt to preserve. In addition, in order to maintain Dark Sky designation, we are required to include monitoring information in an annual report that is submitted each October. Thank you to all the dedicated volunteers that make this event a success each year. Monitoring Event

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


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