out our new seasonal section highlighting where locals and visitors can go "Where to Eat": Check to get great food and drink in Garfield and Wayne counties!...B4
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
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Thursday, September 28, 2023
Zions Bank Panguitch Marks 150-Year Milestone with Community Celebration PANGUITCH - In October 1873, at the height of one of the worst banking crises in U.S. history, a pioneer savings bank opened in the Utah Territory. Earlier that year, pioneer leader Brigham Young had become concerned about financial panic sweeping the nation and gathered a group of prominent citizens to organize a savings bank. Over the next 150 years, Zions Savings Bank and Trust Company, its name eventually shortened to Zions Bank, would go on to serve the financial needs of businesses and individuals across the Intermountain West. Zions Bank began operating in Panguitch in 1978 when it acquired First State Bank. Commemorating Zions Bank’s 150th anniversary, the Panguitch branch will host a community
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Issue # 1530
insiderutah.com
Local Efforts Mechanical Failure at Citation Oil Upper Valley Field Leads to Seventeen Mile Spill to Restore Escalante River Get a Funding Boost
Alarm failure led to extensive releases
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The Upper Valley Unit Field Satellite Tank Battery, on Sunday, September 17, 2023. Emergency retention basins are shown filled with an oil and water mixture resulting from mechanical and alarm failures, which in turn spilled oil into Willow Creek Canyon. ESCALANTE - When Devin Cahn took his dogs out for a walk in Alvey Wash near his home on the evening of Thursday, September 14, 2023, he was anticipating a normal evening stroll. Instead, he got a bit of the unexpected. Parked near the Escalante dump road, he’d made his way down into the wash
A "Classic Conversation" with Paul Rolley TORREY - On Octo- Paul is also a big fan of ber 5 at 7 p.m., Paul Rolley the author John Steinbeck. and Don Gomes will en- Travels with Charley: In gage in a Classic Conver- Search of America is a sation at Robbers Roost. During the hour-long conversation, an inperson audience, as well as viewers on Facebook Live, will be able to ask Paul additional questions about his life. Paul began his career at The Salt Lake Tribune in 1973. He covered nearly every beat at the paper, spent some time as an editor, and Courtesy Entrada Institute was a columnist Former Salt Lake Tribune refor more than 25 porter Paul Rolley will join The years. Paul has Entrada Institute for a "Classic abundant stories Conversation" on Thursday, Ocabout govern- tober 5 at 7pm. ment, politics, and the people involved. 1962 travelogue written by He offers advice in his “5 Steinbeck, depicting a road Things to Know About trip that he made around Utah Politics.” the United States in the A graduate of the Uni- company of his standard versity of Utah, Paul is a poodle Charley. Moved by fanatic Ute fan, which, he Steinbeck’s stories, in his says—because of the many final column for the Triheartbreaks through the Paul Rolley years—builds character. Cont'd on A2
REGIONAL WEATHER FORECAST
and found pools of what appeared to be oil collected against embankments and braided across the wash. “I didn’t know what it was at first, and stuck my finger in it. And then my dog started stepping in it and I thought, ‘uh oh,’” said Cahn. He came home and posted a few pictures to a local social media page,
and some commenters suggested it was a natural seep, or maybe remnants from another recent spill. A reported leak of 400 barrels from a broken pipe had occurred on October 29, 2021 from Citation Oil & Gas Corp.’s Upper Valley oil field, and some thought this might be oil from that previous release.
Multiple Utah Cities Set to Use RankedChoice Voting in Next Election
But this oil was fresh. At 7:30 a.m. the prior morning, September 13, employees with Citation Oil & Gas Corp. arrived at work and reported a mechanical failure and resulting spill at the Upper Valley Unit Field Satellite Tank Battery, located in Pet Hollow. Oil Spill
CRESTED BUTTE, COLORADO - Eight years of massive efforts to clean up tributaries to the Colorado River will continue this year with funding from Forever Our Rivers. Thickets of threatening invasive plants—4,988 acres of them—will be destroyed in hopes that native Cottonwood trees and willows can regain their foothold and improve water quality downstream. $169,591 was awarded to groups working in the Escalante, Gila, Dolores and Verde rivers in Utah, Colorado and Arizona respectively. “Investing in rivers is one of the best ways to build climate resilience and improve livability in rural communities," said Ann Johnston, executive director of Forever Our Rivers. Native species, from insects to butterflies, fish, frogs and even larger wildlife such as elk and beavers are reliant on their native food sources and nesting River
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USU Professors Research Adapting Instruction to Indigenous Learning Styles by Marcus Nelson, Utah State University
EPHRAIM - Utah State University professors in the UTAH - Across Utah, Department of Social Work 10 cities will be using have been researching how ranked choice voting in the to adapt university-level ingeneral election in Novem- struction for Indigenous stuber. dents. Julie Stevens, USU In 2018, Utah passed a Southwest clinical assistant bill to establish a pilot pro- professor, collaborated with gram in which cities could Charlie Bayles, USU Blanduse ranked choice voting. ing clinical assistant profesKelleen Potter, ex- sor, on adapting instruction ecutive director of Utah to Indigenous learning styles Ranked Choice Voting, said and perspectives. Right now, the voting method "allows their research is showing voters to express their will that, on occasion, these learnmore fully." She pointed ing styles are not consistent out ranked choice voting with how content is taught. “We started a study also encourages civility, esgroup because we noticed pecially among candidates that social work students that who can work to appeal to are Indigenous were doing more voters when they're well in practical application looking to secure second- and skills in the classroom,” and third-choice support. Stevens said. “But when it "So instead of this 'all came to tests, some struggled or nothing' -- 'they're my to pass the licensing exams. It is believed that the cultural Ranked Choice differences have a part to Cont'd on A2
play in this, along with the English language.” Stevens and Bayles began to look at their course materials through an Indigenous lens. Stevens, who is of Navajo heritage, has personal experience with the challenges of adapting to collegiate coursework, having completed her bachelor’s degree coursework at USU Nephi, and Courtesy USU Southwest later a master’s degree in social work Julie Stevens, USU Southwest from the Uni- clinical assistant professor, who versity of Utah. is of Navajo heritage, is contribWorking together, uting to efforts to look at course Stevens and Bay- instruction through an Indigeles designed a test nous lens. preparation course for students. Indigenous “As we verbally disCont'd on B1
UPCOMING EVENTS... Panguitch Lantern Festival
Hanksville Ring of Fire Eclipse
Oct. 7, 2023
Oct. 13-14, 2023
"Give Light"
hanksvilleutah.gov
FOR SOME BUT NOT ALL REGIONS REPRESENTED IN OUR NEWSPAPER COVERAGE AREA
THURS. SEPT. 28 - WED. OCT. 4
Variable this week. Sunny Thurs/Fri w/highs in upper 70s, dropping to low 70s/60s the rest of the week, with clouds and small chance of showers. Lows in 40s.
**Weather is subject to Change
We are all in this together, by ourselves.
—Lily Tomlin
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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