The Wayne & Garfield County Insider November 5, 2020

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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, November 5, 2020

Entrada Institute Launches “Classic Conversations” TORREY - The Entrada Institute will launch winter programming with “Classic Conversations.” The first "Conversation" will be on November 5 at 6 pm with 102-year-old Dee Hatch, longtime Wayne County resident. "Classic Conversations" will focus on dialog with a wide swath of residents and representative residents of Wayne County, UT. From elected officials to activists, poets to crafters, ranchers to dramatists, longtime residents to newcomers— "Classic Conversations" will offer a unique kind of oral history. Traditionally, oral histories are conducted and recorded one-on-one in a private setting. Our plan is to have a neutral setting (Robbers Roost in Torrey) and a limited live, in-person audience who can also converse with the featured person. Each "Classic ConverConversations

Issue # 1383

The New Dog in Town

October 26

Ranch Dog Kitchen is “Next Level” in Dogs

InsIder

Owner Susanne Stadler stands in front of the newly renovated and now open Ranch Dog Kitchen on Escalante's Main Street. Specializing in wild game meat, Ranch Dog Kitchen puts a new spin on the traditional hot dog. ESCALANTE - A long vacant property has received the breath of life and a new incarnation as Escalante’s newest eatery. The little house on the triangle—a sliver of property all by itself and making up its own private block on Main

Street’s east end, has sat empty for decades. It’s now gotten a makeover after many months of work by new owners Susanne Stadler and Ted Levine, and is now home to the cozy Ranch Dog Kitchen. Susanne confesses that she hadn’t really seen a restau-

Report: 260,000 Utahns Lose Health Insurance if SCOTUS Repeals ACA

Fire Restrictions Set to Cease for BLM in Central, Southwest Utah

Cont'd on page 2

Garfield County Commission

by Mark rIChardson, utah neWs ConneCtIon

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The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments Nov. 10 on whether to overturn the Affordable Care Act. The ruling is likely to be announced in June 2021. WEST VALLEY CITY - health and economic crisis all If a lawsuit before the Su- around us. And the Affordable preme Court to repeal the Af- Care Act has done its job," fordable Care Act succeeds, Stanford said. "And to think some 260,000 Utahns would of it being ripped away is relose their health coverage. A ally worrisome." The loss also would hurt new report from the nonpartisan Urban Institute estimates hospitals and other health care that would almost double the providers. Utah's uncompenproportion of Utahns who are sated care costs have fallen by 25% since the ACA was uninsured. Despite the COVID-19 implemented. Stanford said coverage pandemic and a major recession, the Trump Administra- losses also would hit people tion and 18 states, including of color and low-income comUtah, are asking the Supreme munities hardest. She said the Court to strike down the en- ACA has particularly been eftire ACA. Stacy Stanford, fective as a safety net during health policy analyst with the the pandemic and the accomUtah Health Policy Project, panying recession. "We've brought people said losing the program could be a disaster for the state's onto Medicaid expansion. We've covered people through health care system. "It's important to emphaACA size that we are in the middle Cont'd on page 6 of a pandemic, there is still a

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

THURS. NOVEMBER 5 - WED. NOVEMBER 11

Sunny turns to partly cloudy, w/ a chance of snow showers Sat. & Sun. Then, partly cloudy/ sunny for the rest of the week. Highs in 60s, plummet to the 30s and 40s over the weekend and next week; lows in the single digits to the 30s. Chance of precip 30-40%

SOUTHWESTERN UTAH - On Sunday at 8:00 a.m., the Bureau of Land Management’s Color Country and Paria River districts rescinded the fire bans put in place months ago across BLM public lands in Piute, Sanpete, Sevier, Wayne, Washington, Iron, Beaver, Garfield and Kane counties. “While we had an unheard of number of human caused fires this year, we also had an enormous amount of support and conscientious recreationists who checked Utah Fire Info’s website or called ahead before visiting,” said acting Color Country District Manager Paul Briggs. “Just as most people did their part, we will continue to do ours, by working with our partners in the Utah Watershed Restoration Initiative to help restore habitats to a state that are naturally more fire resistant.” Statewide, Utah has experienced a very active 2020 wildfire season and even though fire restrictions are being reduced across both the Color Country and Paria River Districts, fire managers cautiously emphasize that the potential for large and rapidgrowing fires is still present. “This has been an unprecedented wildfire season both locally and across our nation,” said District Acting Fire ManFire Restrictions Cont'd on page 2

rant in her future. When she moved to Escalante, one of her plans was to work less. Her plan was to spend time with her horses and enjoy time out on the landscape. So what was the inspiraRanch Dog Cont'd on page 10

GARFIELD COUNTY Fire restrictions have been extended to the end of February, as reported by Commissioner David Tebbs at the Oct. 26 Garfield County Commission meeting. A permit would be required for any burning, with the ban being lifted only if the county gets adequate precipitation. Tebbs also reported that preliminary designs and cost estimates for the Cannonville cell tower are expected during the week. Commissioner Jerry Taylor recognized the recent passing of two former Garfield County Commissioners: Maloy Dodds and Dell Lefevre. Dodds served as commissioner for 16 years as well as serving as Panguitch mayor, councilperson, and school board member. He was a teacher for 28 years. Lefevre served on the commission for several terms after also being a school board member. Clerk Camille Moore, who worked with both men, commented on Dodds’ achievements. She said during his terms, the county finished its airport project, bonded for and built the jail (and paid off the bond), took ownership of the hospital, built Triple C Arena, and procured the plans and funding the major court-

house renovation, and still leaving the county debt-free. Taylor remembered being told by Lefevre that “you get more things done at the legislature out in the hallway.” He said, “Dell could get in any door. He just had that knack.” Moore remembered Dodds telling her, “Always error on the side of kindness.” Commissioner Leland Pollock was absent again from this meeting but was reached by phone for his report: He has been working with officials from other Utah counties and municipalities to quash a prospective state Senate bill that, if passed, would allow Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) exemption from smaller counties’ zoning restrictions and setbacks. Pollock said such a bill eliminates the rights of individual counties to establish their own zoning practices. He believes the efforts to stop this bill will be successful. Next, he’s work-ing with legislators to ensure the Constitutional Defense Council will continue into the next gubernatorial administration. Finally, he said he’s trying to establish Garfield County’s ability to make improvements

Garfield Commission Cont'd on page 8

DWR Seeking Information After 2 Bull Elk Illegally Killed in Sevier County

Utah Division of Wildlife Resources conservation officers are asking for information regarding two bulk elk that were illegally killed and left to waste in Sevier County. CEDAR CITY - Utah Division of Wildlife Resources conservation officers are seeking information after two bull elk were illegally killed in Sevier County. The two bull elk were illegally shot and left to waste on the Fishlake Mountain during the general spike bull elk hunt. One elk was shot in early October in Sheep Valley, and the second elk was shot in the middle of October near Daniel's Pass.

Silent gratitude isn't much use to anyone. —Gertrude Stein

Courtesy utah dIvIsIon of WIldlIfe resourCes

“If anyone has any information of who illegally shot and wasted these elk, please contact us,” DWR Conservation Officer Eric Bond said. Anyone with information regarding the illegal killing of these elk, or any other wildlife, is encouraged to contact the UTiP Hotline at 800-6623337. You can also report any illegal wildlife activity on the DWR website. If you have information about this specific case, you can also contact

DWR Officer Eric Bond at 435-287-8427. Rewards are available, and requests for confidentiality are respected. Every year Utah conservation officers conduct numerous investigations into the illegal killing of wildlife. In 2019, officers confirmed that over 1,000 animals were illegally killed, with a total value of over $408,000. —Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

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.

BOXHOLDER

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


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