The Wayne & Garfield County Insider November 19, 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 19, 2020

Boulder Town Planning Commission

Issue # 1385

Tropic Town Holds Public Meeting to Discuss Restoration of the Tropic Scout House by emily leACh, the insdier

November by tessA BArkAn

BOULDER - The November Boulder Town Planning Commission meeting took place over Zoom. Town Planner Lee Nellis introduced an example of an imagined project proposal, in order to demonstrate how Boulder Town will eventually work through a real project proposal, using the Commercial Standards Review Worksheet. These standards are based on the updates they have been working on in the Boulder Zoning Ordinance. Going through the example proposal, a bean growing/ processing/retail business, brought up additional changes that could be made to the standards, including encouraging local processing of products, and considering the number of allowable parking spaces. Nellis will provide Boulder Planning Cont'd on page 3

elAinA PurCell

The Tropic Town Scout House under construction in 1936 (right) versus present day (above).

Courtesy troPiC town

TROPIC - On November 12, 2020, Tropic Town held a public meeting to discuss what is to be done with the Scout House, a historical building constructed in 1936. Originally used as the former seminary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and for old city council meetings, “now it

Torrey Town Council November 12

New water policy regarding overages and expansions goes into effect this month by Amiee mAxwell Concerning expansions, residents must make requests for upgrades and expansions in front of the town council. If this procedure is not followed, residents may be subjected to a $500 fine. Next, the last meetinsider ing’s minutes were apTorrey Town Council meetings are held on the 2nd Thursday of proved and a motion to every month at 7:00 p.m. June- approve the town’s bills Oct. and 6:30 p.m Nov.-May—un- was made. A brief disless otherwise noted. cussion then followed regarding how to use TORREY - The No- the remaining CARES Act vember 2020 Torrey Town (coronavirus relief) funding. Council meeting was held There was talk about returning in-person with some council a handheld sanitizer sprayer members and community par- already purchased and piggyticipants joining over Zoom. backing with the neighboring The first item on the towns on a power washer. agenda was a vote on new Several water requests water policies concerning were then made including a overages and expansions. The request by Cheryl Thompson policy was approved by the for a possible water conneccouncil and goes into effect tion outside the water district November 2020. The new considering her land is located policy states that the town both within and outside the will determine if they are li- service boundaries. The counable for water overages or cil determined that a survey is inaccurate readings. If it is needed to define where exactly determined the resident is li- the service district line is. Pat able, the first month of over- Kearney then requested relief age charges may be excused if of her $1,100 water bill. A the problem is fixed. If there is deer apparently kicked off a no attempt to fix the problem, spigot, and she put a lock on it the resident will be responTorrey Council sible for the entire overage. Cont'd on page 3

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

THURS. NOVEMBER 19 - WED. NOVEMBER 25

Sunny, with some clouds and a 10% chance of rain scattered throughout the weekend and into next week. Highs in the 40s and 50s; lows in the teens and 20s. Winds variable from 9 to 12 mph. Chance of precip. Friday, Saturday, and Tuesday.

just kind of sits,” says Elaina Purcell, Tropic Town Treasurer. “It has really started to deteriorate over the last fifteen years.” According to Purcell, there are still individuals in town that remember it being built and are very interested in seeing it be restored. “My grandpa is one of them,” states

Garfield County Commission November

GARFIELD COUNTY First, a correction to The Insider report on Commissioner David Tebbs’ statement at the October 26 Garfield County Commission meeting: He said a burn restriction would be effect for Garfield County through the end of November, not February as reported (weather depending.) Tebbs was not present at the November 9 Commission meeting for an update. Commissioner Jerry Taylor mentioned several meetings he has been attending: a rural housing subcommittee of the statewide Commission on Housing; a talk with BLM Director Greg Sheehan; a phone conversation with Five County Association of Governments' Nate Wyberg regarding COVID funding; and possibly a Utah Association of Counties meeting this week. Regarding the COVID funding, Taylor noted the $94K that was available in “Round 1,” the $157K for “Round 2,” and the possibility of a “Round 3” yet to come. He’s received calls from “everybody” on the poor state of Hole-inthe-Rock Road. And he was approached by Piute County Commissioner Bush-man requesting financial help— maybe $1500—for a kiosk denoting Butch Cassidy’s boyhood home. Commissioner Leland Pollock repeated the status Garfield Commission Cont'd on page 10

Purcell. “We have funding, currently, to fix [it],” states Purcell, “but we were more wondering if the community is interested in saving it and had ideas for its use once it was restored.“ Purcell continues, Scout House Cont'd on page 7

Mindy Peterson Named 2020 Garfield Memorial Nurse Excellence Winner

PANGUITCH - Mindy Peterson, RN, Medical/Surgical Nurse, is this year’s winner of the 2020 Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital Nurse Excellence Award. This award is given to one nurse in the year that demonstrates the highest of ideals in nursing, patient care, and support of the hospital and community. Her coworkers and hospital leaders nominated Mindy for this award, saying, “Mindy is a great patient advocate, very invested in the care of our patients and is willing to do whatever it takes to make her patients feel safe. She continually seeks to provide best patient care possible. Mindy is a great leader and teacher to her peers and to her patients, and supportive of those in leadership positions, always seeking to help her coworkers with their patients wherever she is needed.” DeAnn Brown, Nurse Administrator at Garfield Memorial, says, “Mindy always goes out of her way to empower not only her peers, but patients as well. She continuously inspires and motivates her coworkers and is always doing what she can to encourage independence, motivation, and strength

Courtesy BeCki Bronson

Mindy Peterson, this year’s winner of the 2020 Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital Nurse Excellence Award

with her patients. Mindy is the prime definition of a patient advocate. I am always amazed at how she goes out of her way to meet patient’s needs, and she is fearless when it comes to doing what’s in the patient’s best interest. Mindy is always focused on the patient’s needs above her own. Her compassionate care is an incredible example to the rest of our care team.” —Intermountain Garfield Memorial Hospital

A Message from Dixie Regional’s Doctors “We’re moving in the wrong direction, and we have the opportunity to turn this around” When Utah Governor Gary Herbert issued new guidelines, including a mask mandate, on November 9, Dixie Regional Medical Center applauded the mask mandate and other new COVID management measures and held a press conference to discuss hospital capacity and surge planning at Dixie Regional. Following is a transcription of their messages. Edited mildly for clarity. cy care. Contingency care is how we provide care when we’re short on staff or short on hospital space or short on supplies and this is the phase that we’ve been in and out of multiple times at Dixie Regional intermountAin dixie regionAl mediCAl Center Medical Center Dr. Patrick Carroll, Intermountain for the last sevHealthcare Dixie Regional Medical Di- eral weeks. That rector. includes opening up a surge ICU. Dr. Patrick Carroll, In- That includes bringing in travtermountain Healthcare Dixie eling nurses to help out. That includes moving patients from Regional Medical Director: location to location to best fit I’d like people to under- what staff we have to care for stand some of the concerns we the patient and make sure evhave and understand where erybody’s getting the best poswe’re at as a healthcare pro- sible care that we’re able to vider and as a community. provide. We have national experts, we have local experts, including Dr. Blodgett from the health department, who has emphasized that transmission happens most likely when people are within six feet of one another, without a mask, for fifteen minutes. This is something that we can control. This is something that we’re able to avoid. —Dr. Patrick Carroll Let’s describe the three phases of healthcare. Normally we live in the first phase. The first phase is conventional care, which is where we are when there’s not a pandemic, when there’s not a significant strain on the system. The second is contingen-

This is the moment to protect those that we love. —Dr. Deborah Birx, White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator

The third phase, crisis care, is how we provide care when we’re critically overwhelmed. And we really need the help of every individual to keep us from getting to this phase. Crisis care is what we would provide if we needed to occupy the tent that was put up several months ago on the hos-

pital campus. Crisis care is the care that we saw early in the pandemic that was provided in New York. It’s what we want to and can avoid with the help of everyone in the community together. In order to avoid this, there are several things we can do. We have national experts, we have local experts, including Dr. Blodgett from the health department, who has emphasized that transmission happens most likely when people are within six feet of one another, without a mask, for fifteen minutes. This is something that we can control. This is something that we’re able to avoid. It has disrupted our lives and it will continue to disrupt our lives by doing these things. But the disruption that will take place or that can take place if we don’t do these things are even greater than the disruption that we may have already felt. We’re moving in the wrong direction and we have the opportunity to turn this around. But the good news is by doing the things that the governor has outlined, we have the opportunity to do just that—to turn things around. We’re completely supportive of the governor’s actions and look forward to seeing a different direction as we take these actions seriously. I’d especially like to Doctors' Messages

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Cont'd on page 7

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


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