A crash course in honesty

Driving in Durango the other day, I saw a baby blue Vølkswagen Rabbit. Instantly my brain (and then my mouth) said, somewhat wistfully, “Tricia Kirkland.”

I haven’t thought about Tricia Kirkland in at least 100 years and don’t even know what state she lives in, let alone if she still drives that baby blue Rabbit; although I am guessing the answer on that one is no.

But it got me thinking about some of the more significant cars in my life, most of them not mine, and how years in one vehicle bring few and insignificant memories and a couple of rides in another define an era in my life.

I tried to decide, out of the many memorable autos, which one wins the prize for being the most impactful in my personal history.

(Is “impactful” a real word? Read on – I choose my words carefully.)

Was it the blue Rabbit that four teenage girls drove all over Kingdom Come, off to the Lake Club to go skinny-dipping or scheming to run into John John Kennedy? Was it Jim M’s Honda, the “Da,” one of those tiny, jelly-bean-shaped things into which we could cram at least 12 friends and a couple of cases of beer? Or was it my father’s Mercedes that picked up my friends at 3 a.m. after they broke into someone’s estate and stole, amongst other items, a handmade fisherman’s sweater, reminiscent of Ernest Hemingway?

Important and unforgettable, but not “The One.”

That honor goes to Ricky S’s…?

I have no idea what kind of car it was. It was some non-descript, barf-brown, fourdoor, middle-aged-man type of auto.

My parents traveled a lot, which was why I was able to take out the Mercedes at 3 a.m. One time while they were abroad, my brother’s friends, who I, of course, worshipped, were at our house tossing around the football. My brother was nowhere to be found and was most likely doing something responsible.

I, at the tender age of 14, turned on my feminine charm and convinced Ricky and Steve to teach me to drive.

My driveway alone was treacherous – I don’t remember navigating it, but I obviously did because I eventually ended up about a mile from my house on a winding (New Jersey) mountain road.

Realizing that I was actually hazardous and it was time to get out from behind the wheel, I turned the corner from Mountaintop Road onto Post Road towards home and unfortunately, didn’t turn quite enough.

The telephone pole that I hit split in two, but fortunately the top half landed next to Ricky’s car, not on it. Also fortunately, I was moving so slowly that I really just bent the bumper of Ricky’s car.

Biggest issue: the blood pouring out of my freshly broken nose. How was I going to pretend that wasn’t there? And yes, my parents were due to arrive home the very next day.

In a panic we made it back to my house and of course frantically proceeded to come up with a plausible story to tell our families; we dragged my reluctant brother right into our web of deceit. It being the Brady Bunch era, we looked to the classic Marsha, “Oh, my nose!” got hit with her brothers’ football right before prom, tale. I mean, Ricky and Steve were throwing around the ball right before it happened – it wasn’t a total lie.

My parents came home, they fussed and fawned, I felt properly sorry for myself and was extremely forgiving of Steve and Ricky and we all went on with our lives.

A few years later, after living the lie for so long that I actually began to believe it, I ended up in the surgeon’s office discussing my deviated septum. He posed the simple question, “How did you break your nose?”

@#%$!!!

I glanced at my mother’s compassionate smile and, reassured of her belief in my innocence, told him the story of the football, all the while expecting him to look up my nostrils and declare, “There is no WAY that damage was done with a mere toss of a ball.”

But he didn’t. And I didn’t get my nose fixed. And I snore horribly, but I see that as my penance for the Great Lie.

So one night, at Strazza Family Dinner, about 10 years later, my father declares Amnesty Night. He had broken something of my mother’s and wanted to tell her but was terrified to do it so thought that if we all admitted to a lie, his might not seem so big.

We went around the table. I have absolutely no idea what the others confessed to – I couldn’t hear anything over the blood pounding in my ears.

As they spoke I questioned if I was really going to do this? How long is the statute of limitations on a crime this huge? And then thought, “Would y’all just hurry it up before I have a heart attack over here!”

When it came around to me, my hands shook and I began to hiccup. But once I started, 10 years of pent-up truth spewed out of my mouth, completely unchecked, every single tiny detail of that horrible day.

When I finished, I waited in silence for judge and jury to hand down the sentence. My mother spoke…

“Oh. We knew that. Steve’s mother told us – the day after it happened, as soon as we got home.”

@#%$!!!!!

YEARS. OF. AGONY.

Guilt, remorse, shame, deceit. All for nothing? If I hadn’t lived that lie for as long as I did, hadn’t lived under the tremendous strain of deceit, who knows how my life may have turned out?

So, long story short, I have no idea what kind of car Ricky (and I) drove, but it certainly goes down in Strazza Family lore as the most influential automobile.

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo. She is experiencing a karmic rebate as her 15-year-old learns how to drive. Read her blog, Single in the Southwest, at suzannestrazza.wordpress.com.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

Hijacking the Republican Party

It may seem strange that a Democrat feels compassion for grassroots Republicans, but I do. Their party is being stolen from them; it is no longer the party of great people such as Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt. The GOP (now standing for the Greedy Opulent Party) has been taken over by political strategist Karl Rove and giant multinational corporations.

You think presidential nominee Mitt (Mitt?) Romney will be our next president? Think again. Even if he is elected, he’ll be just a puppet for the real powers behind the throne.

Rove (AKA Bush’s brain) is the guy that gave us George W. Bush – the president who left office with the lowest approval rating of any president after embroiling us in a unnecessary, immoral war that cost us the lives of 6,000 of our young as well as trillions of dollars that was charged to a Chinese credit card.

The grassroots Republicans are decent people, concerned about spending money wisely and preserving personal freedoms. But for them to be so taken in by Rove and his corporate bosses indicates they aren’t as sharp as they could be (or aren’t really paying attention, what with working two or three jobs to keep their kids clothed and roofs over their weary heads.)

The corporations don’t care about finding jobs for the working class that built this country. Why should they? They employ slave labor in virtually every Third World country and are gradually lowering the standard of living here – reducing wages and benefits, gutting the power of unions and eliminating any laws that interfere with these noble (as in re-establishing the kingserf feudal system) goals.

They have worked for years to tear down what past presidents, Democratic and Republican alike, have put in place –national forests and wilderness areas, clean air and water, 40-hour work weeks, a living wage, the chance to own your own home, and the best PUBLIC educational system in the world.

This country has been in some tough times in the past and has overcome them all. We crawled out of a terrible depression and fought a war on two fronts and won in four years. Meanwhile, the women of this nation built planes, with one coming off the line every hour, and put ships in the water at one a day.

This country sent men to the moon and now is exploring Mars. We are the most innovative nation in the world and one of the most generous, always called upon to dig in our pockets to help others abroad and at home. Charity seems to be in our genes.

I ask the grassroots Republicans: Are you willing to turn this over to the likes of Rove and his corporate cohorts? I don’t think you are. If Rove and the multinational corporations take over our country, the national debt will seem as nothing. We will no longer be in control and our children and grandchildren will wonder what the hell we were thinking.

People worry about losing their freedoms to socialism, but they don’t think about the fact that capitalism gone too far can strip our freedoms as well. Think about the days when there were no unions and no regulations reining in the corporations. Adults and children alike worked endless hours under horrible conditions in sweatshops. Mining companies controlled whole towns. Every penny that a man earned went right back to the Company Store. Anyone who dared to complain lost his job and was lucky not to be killed. That’s pure, unfettered capitalism for you!

I for one don’t care to be told where I can live, what job will be provided for me and what my status in life will be, no matter how hard I strive. Don’t laugh; it has happened here in the past and also in many other countries.

This election is not about who is going to be president, it’s about our freedoms. You will be on your own but own nothing if Rove’s cabal has its way

People are concerned about the role of government. The government is our country, not the corporations. Do we want a government controlled by a few with lots of money, or a government by the people, for the people? I prefer the latter.

So here is the question. Do we want a democracy (or a republic as it’s properly called) or a plutocracy ruled by the wealthy? Obama or Karl Rove, take your pick. It may be your last chance to cast a meaningful vote. Just look what is happening in Pennsylvania – 700,000 may be denied their right to vote on the trumped-up excuse of preventing voter fraud where there was none to begin with. Who may be next? You and I?

Galen Larson writes from rural Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Heartburn season

This column may read as though it has been hijacked by the comic strip Non Sequitur’s Obvious Man. Plus, there is inherit hypocrisy in criticizing others for failing to discuss substantive issues instead of, uh, discussing those issues yourself.

But it’s campaign season (again? still?), and I just can’t help it.

We begin with Lou Ann Zelenik and incumbent Diane Black’s fight during a congressional primary race in Tennessee. The level to which Zelenik stooped is sadly familiar, and shows that even members of the same party will turn on one another like rabid wolves when power is at stake. Still, Zelenik hit a new low with her inspired campaign tactic, which boiled down to telling Black: “You’re not bigoted and stupid enough.”

Both women had opposed the building of a mosque in Murfreesboro, Tenn., the opening of which had been delayed after opponents decided to hide their bias behind complaints about the permitting process. Black, who ultimately won this distasteful race, even seemed to espouse monitoring Islamic houses of worship to make sure they aren’t fostering a “jihadist viewpoint.” (Per Reuters, Black said communities have the “right” to ensure no such fostering takes place, but implicit in such statements is that communities automatically have a reason to be concerned. Because who worships in mosques? Muslims! Natch.) According to Zelenik, though, Black was not opposed enough, and were voters to select Black, why then Tennessee would be sliding down a greased chute to theocratic rule under Sharia law!

While the campaign tiff was truly stupid because the mosque in question isn’t even located in the then-contested district, also troubling is Zelenik’s backing. Per Reuters, donor Andrew Miller kicked in $105,000 to “Citizens 4 Ethics in Government,” which unleashed robo-calls to destroy Black’s chances. I guess “ethics in government” means “lie, distract, divide, play upon xenophobia,” even when discussing fellow Americans who happen to be Muslim. Stay classy, Tennessee!

As Tennessee goes, so goes the presidential race. Witness Mitt Romney, the predator capitalist- turned-American workingman’s savior, who demanded Obama’s campaign pack up the “negativity” and ship it back to Chicago.

Obama has been negative, and Joe Biden has unfortunately not been as tongue-tied as he should be. Tactics such as implying that Romney killed a man’s wife by causing her husband to lose his job and hence, his health insurance, are atrocious; Biden suffers from diarrhea of the mouth that is often exceptionally ill-timed.

But there’s no high ground for a Republican party that bows down to the sleazy genius of Karl Rove and Ann Coulter, which fawns over opportunistic thimble-wits such as Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck, and more and more, caters to its most extreme elements. Which party says nothing when others call the president a socialist? Which party hasn’t emphatically disavowed the plain nutty idea that its opponent is not a “real” American?

Perhaps it’s not the slime-coated tactics so much as their effectiveness. Human nature adores an echo chamber; we like to have our biases reinforced. How else could have the take-down of America’s No. 1 threat, Osama bin Laden, be transformed into a blot on President Obama’s record?

After a terror attack that occurred on his predecessor’s watch, after our blood and our treasury were diverted in pursuit of the wrong enemy, Barack Obama took a measured, careful approach to the military’s tracking of bin Laden. He carefully consulted with the top command, heard every proposal, and when the time came, gave the order, as the military’s commander-in-chief. The U.S. Navy SEALS then killed bin Laden in a high-risk, high-stakes mission.

Carrying to a whole new level the myth that Obama is wrongly taking credit for others’ work: The Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund, which in recent propaganda (funded by heaven knows who), posits that Obama deliberately leaked information “to the enemy” and is wrongly taking credit for the SEAL strike on bin Laden.

The group’s claims of nonpartisanship were quickly exposed as false: one representative is a former Bush spokesman; its legal advisor was once chief counsel for the Republican National Committee, who also has represented other Republican-linked groups, and OPSEC’s treasurer was once president of a Republican group “involved in redistricting issues,” reports Reuters. That group had itself received funding from a businessman, since deceased, who had also helped back the Swift Boat Veterans’ vicious and demonstrably false campaign against John Kerry.

We don’t know who all is funding OPSEC. Because it is registered as a “social welfare group,” it can keep its donors secret, according to Reuters.

The Obama administration told Reuters it aggressively prosecutes leaks. Of course leaks make it harder for special ops to do their job — so does, as a friend of mine noted, failing to properly arm and equip service men and women after putting them in harm’s way, as was the case in the Iraq War.

As to “claiming credit for bin Laden,” it’s not as if the president landed a fighter plane on the deck of an aircraft carrier, and grandstanded under a banner which declared a mission that would go on for years was “accomplished,” now is it? (That’s another thing: If Bush gets credit for taking out the blemish on the buttock of humanity that was Saddam Hussein — and even I give him a nod for that — how is it that Obama is not only denied credit for bin Laden, but crucified that it even comes up?)

Because it’s imperative to his opponents’ narrative that Obama be seen as weak and ineffective; like John Kerry before him, he just can’t win.

Not even when Admiral William McRaven, who was in charge of bin Laden’s removal, came right out and said: “At the end of the day, make no mistake about it, it was the president of the United States that shouldered the burden for this operation, that made the hard decisions, that was instrumental in the planning process, because I pitched every plan to him.” (Italics mine.)

In other words, while Obama was not part of the strike force, he deserves some of the credit. And had the mission failed, you can bet your backside critics would lay it at his feet, while howling that he hadn’t thought the mission through enough.

They say Obama is too afraid to run on his record, and yet, the OPSEC group isn’t really attacking that. Instead, its members are falsely painting him as a glory hog in hopes of stirring up emotions. They know the American people, after all: we prefer entertainment to information.

Information would include reminding people that Obama has not closed Gitmo; that we’ve still got boots on the ground in the deserts, that he signed into law the government’s right to detain U.S. citizens, that he, too, has engaged in warrantless wiretapping, and that while he inherited a mess, he and Congress have not turned around the recession.

Informing citizens would also include that fact that his auto bailout worked, that he signed the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, that he has not made ideologically based misogyny part of his platform, that objective science doesn’t send him into a blind panic, that his health-care policy has many positives, not just negatives, and, uh, yeah, Obama did oversee planning and approve the mission that took out bin Laden.

But that’s no fun.

We are dialed in to easy information, braincandy entertainment. Given the choice, for instance, between watching C-Span and a rerun of “Bridezillas,” most would opt for the vanity-fest of unhinged wives-to-be.

America is by now so accustomed to political opponents painting each other as firebreathing, puppy-devouring monsters that it hardly bears mention. That’s too bad, because we deserve better.

But while we claim we don’t want negativity, we sure as hell don’t listen to objectivity. We won’t see better of our candidates until we start demanding it — by doing the hard work of vetting those who would lead us, and listening to the facts, even when they aren’t what we want to hear.

Katharhynn Heidelberg is a journalist in Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

May Day for our public lands

When I parked beside the locked gate at the Cabin Canyon Recreation Site, the hefty entrance sign that had been bolted together out of 4-by-4 lay flat on the gravel, and the solid-steel, forest-green tube where campers are instructed to deposit their fees had an autumn shade of rust spiraling up its trunk. Motorized traffic was prohibited. The welcome sign had been replaced by one that insisted the road was closed.

Such a fine campground, decommissioned like so many others, while public land agencies struggle to rein in their spending, but I locked the truck anyway before climbing over the gate, just in case the ghosts of former campers had taken to haunting the premises.

Five years ago was the last time I’d stayed overnight at this San Juan National Forest facility, but I believed it would always be here, perennial as the wildflowers. Rarely crowded and located only a few miles downstream from the McPhee dam, this recreational campground served as an ideal fishing corridor, family water park, and general pit stop for the contemplation and restoration of the soul. I know, that’s a lot to expect from a park facility, but like much of the public, I spend a considerable amount of time worshipping at the chapel of our national forests.

One feature that always attracted me to this particular spot is a ribbon of concrete that contractors poured beside the river. It runs the entire length of the campground. At the time of its completion more than 15 years ago, I thought, Wow, the tax dollars must be as slippery as the fish, strictly catch-and- release. Now the walkway is bursting at its seams with a greenery that doesn’t resemble money.

Even more impressive is the massive sandstone wall that rises dramatically from the opposite riverbank. An array of gunshots pock and mar its surface, but nothing short of a cataclysmic event could decommission this monolithic feature. It has been built by the kind of pendular upheaval and downsizing bureaucrats will never understand. It requires no budget or maintenance. It’s just here, rock-solid and inspirational.

Every Forest Service campground feature I encountered during this comeback tour qualified as being on the short path to ruin. The slab concrete walls of the toilet had been bulldozed flat, to no one’s relief. The gravel ring-road that serviced the campsites was conscientiously being reclaimed by the weeds. Though the campsites themselves lacked campers and some of the picnic tables remained, all of those cast-iron fire rings gaped at me from the dirt and reminded me of burned-out stars.

It may seem logical that as our public lands budgets are downsized, our access must also be reduced, but logic doesn’t originate in the heart. Collectively known as the public, I may no longer be able to afford visitor centers, museum displays, bookstores, brochures and trail guides, souvenirs, showers, potable water, garbage pickup, interpretive plaques, or rangers. If it all has to go, then let it go. Accessibility, however, is not on the table, even if there are no tables. Just give me a piece of gravel where I can park and a toilet, if possible. I’ll provide my own toilet paper, and enough imagination to appreciate the unimproved natural world. If it’s too expensive to maintain the toilets, well, I can bare that too.

Nothing is more frustrating than austerity, especially after we’ve had it all.

Of course, nature might disagree. The May Day disaster I surveyed upon arriving at this derelict campground also happened to be a glorious Tuesday afternoon, May 1st – another kind of May Day. Everything woody was budding and spreading its leaves, wildflowers speckled the landscape, and the sun poured through the thinly filtered canopy of trees, promising an unusually warm spring and a full-service summer, especially for the serviceberries, chokecherries, and wild raspberries.

I know, maybe the public isn’t sophisticated enough to care for its public lands without a government agency to supervise it. The passes, permits, stickers, and policies in place were never intended to compromise the public’s access, but still, as I circled the campground I couldn’t help asking myself, How much of this stuff do we really need?]

I yawned, a bit like Rip Van Winkle must have felt, without a beard. As I made my way back to the truck, I uncovered the site post from my favorite campsite, uprooted and tossed into the weeds. I picked it up and took it home with me, then pounded it into the ground beside my driveway, just in case anyone who is official needs proof that I have a genuine interest in calling our public lands my home.

David Feela writes from Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in David Feela

Recall issued on Romaine lettuce sold in New Mexico (web only)

Lettuce Already Pulled From NM Stores But Consumers Should Check Labels At Home

The New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) is alerting residents to a nationwide recall that was issued Aug. 19 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration involving Romaine lettuce that was shipped to New Mexico.

Tanimura & Antle Inc. is voluntarily recalling a single lot of romaine lettuce because it may be contaminated with Escherichia coli O157:H7 bacteria (E. Coli O157:H7). The affected product is limited to Tanimura & Antle Field Fresh Wrapped Single Head Romaine. This product is packed in a plastic bag with the UPC number 0-27918-20314-9 and may have a Best Buy date of “08 19 12”. The product was available at retail locations Aug. 2 – Aug. 19, 2012.

NMED has confirmed that 80 cases of the product were sent to the WalMart distribution center in Los Lunas. The product was shipped to any number of 72 WalMart stores in New Mexico, West Texas and Southern Colorado. All stores have been notified and all remaining product (if any) has been pulled.

Residents are asked to check the label of any Tanimura & Antle Field Fresh Wrapped Single Head Romaine that may still be in their household. If the lettuce matches the UPC number and Best Buy date, residents are encouraged not to consume the product.

NO OTHER TANIMURA & ANTLE PRODUCTS ARE BEING RECALLED.

Importantly, there are no reported illnesses associated with consumption of this product. E.coli O157:H7 can cause a diarrheal illness, often with bloody stools. Although most healthy adults can recover completely within a week, some people can develop a form of kidney failure called Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS). HUS is most likely to occur in young children and the elderly. The condition can lead to serious kidney damage and even death.

The recall is being conducted in consultation with FDA, and is based on the testing of a single random sample by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

The affected product was shipped in cases packed in either 12 or 18 heads per case. Retailers and Distributors can identify the affected products through a traceability code label affixed to exterior of the case. The traceability code label affixed to the exterior of the case is 5417802151. Tanimura and Antle’s #1 priority is food safety, and in an overabundance of caution we are asking that if any of the above Romaine is in the possession of consumers, retailers or distributors, the product be disposed of and not consumed.

 

Consumers with questions or who would like replacement coupons may call at 877-827-7388, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. PDT, Monday-Friday.

 

http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm316256.htm?source=govdelivery

 

 

Published in August 2012

Pruning the tree of politics

Montezuma County’s elected officials today are all Republicans and mostly conservatives. I know that none of the appointed have signed the pledge that our Congressman Scott Tipton signed to shrink our nation and government to the size Grover Norquist proclaims is his mission. But they have not disavowed his statement, either, so I assume they go along with the idea that smaller is better.

If they believe in shrinking government, I must ask, are they willing to start here in Montezuma County? Where do we start? Do we need three $50,000-a-year county commissioners to govern 26,000 constituents? Shouldn’t an administrator and a small staff be enough?

I strongly support law enforcement but do we need a sheriff at $75,000, plus a city police chief and a Mancos town marshal? Wouldn’t combining all those two forces save money and be more efficient?

And why three school districts with top heavy administrative costs? If we consolidated school districts, that should release some monies for the teachers who are digging into their pockets for school supplies. They are so badly in need that a local group called Montezuma County Loves Its Kids and Teachers has started a drive for private citizens and compassionate businesses to donate money and materials to local educators.

Then look at Cortez. There is a city government and a separate sanitation district. Does that make any sense at all? The city runs the water and the special district operates the sewers. Why not combine them and create greater efficiencies?

Same thing for the fire districts. Why do we need five, all with different chiefs? Let’s have a single district serving the entire county.

And let’s think even bigger. Couldn’t Cortez, Dolores, Mancos and the county all come together and form a home-rule government as Denver has? Of course we are not Denver, nor will we ever be. But if it saves money, as the Republicans claim is their primary concern, it may be worth looking into.

Now I am sure that we will hear myriad excuses as to why this sort of thing can’t be done. I’ve already been told it’s all mandated from the state. But a county so in love with individualism should stand up and demand to go the way of greater cost-cutting.

Yup, I agree, we need smaller government, fewer taxes, no food stamps, no unemployment insurance and definitely no Social Security. Everyone should have pulled themselves up by their bootstraps. Of course, when the soul is gone it does no use to pull on the bootstraps, but never mind. So it’s small government we want. So be it. But let’s start pruning the tree from the top to make the lower branches stronger and more fruitful.

I am anxious to see which one of our elected officials from the party of small government and less spending will step forward and initiate a program to reduce the top-heavy structure of government in Montezuma County. I don’t want to hear “can’t” as a reason. “Can’t” just means someone doesn’t want to, has no idea how to, or hasn’t got an ounce of leadership. Do we really need a thousand employees to govern 26,000 residents? I don’t think so.

Galen Larson writes from Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Honesty, please, in the gun debate

I swore I wasn’t going to do this.

But on July 20, I woke up to again find my state in the headlines. Another coward, another killing spree, more lives needlessly lost, more innocent people injured, physically and otherwise. Columbine, Part II, this time, at a theater in Aurora, where a gunman murdered people who just wanted to see the new Batman flick.

It was inevitable the crime would spark the age-old gun-control debate. I was going to keep my mouth shut. People seem to have their minds made up — and I want to remain welcome at family Thanksgiving.

It is time, though, to be honest. So, here goes.

The National Rifle Association didn’t cause this. The Second Amendment didn’t cause this. The Tea Party didn’t cause this. The Batman franchise didn’t cause this. A gun in and of itself did not cause this — guns are inanimate objects, much like cars, in which thousands die each year.

A person, alleged to be James Holmes, caused this. Law-abiding gun owners and constitutional rights should not suffer because of what he is alleged to have done.

But honesty cuts both ways.

The carnage was greatly facilitated by the choice in weapons. The suspect didn’t use a knife, a crossbow, nunchucks, brass knuckles, a baseball bat or rocks. He criminally misused firearms and tear gas. Law-abiding gun owners should have the decency to acknowledge that fact — and its full implications.

And another bit of honesty: You cannot legislate away psychopathic behavior. The layman usually cannot anticipate when another person is unburdened by the conscience that guides others; neither criminal nor non-criminal psychopaths come labeled for our convenience. You cannot assume, “Wow, Wally, if only we had monitored everyone who shares the same passion as our latest psychopath, we coulda stopped him!”

The idea is absurd on its face, improbable, yet I saw it suggested on a supposedly objective Denver newscast the evening of July 20. An anchor complained that gun-owner registries are illegal in Colorado, and if only there had been one. . .

Also making the rounds: The idea that if theater-goers had been armed, the carnage would have been minimized. In fairness, if I were trapped in a confined space with a madman opening fire, I would feel better if I had a gun in my hand. But what good it would do in a dark theater crammed with panicking people, with tear gas raining down, is another matter. A crack shot, I am not, and I wouldn’t stake my life on anyone else in the room being a marksman in those conditions, either.

If there is such a person, is he single? If this person is a woman, does she need a new BFF? Because that is the person I am going to the movies with. Heck, it’s the person with whom I would go on a walking tour of Pakistan.

My own absurd fantasy is that I would have gone all lioness and made the gunman my gazelle if I had been there. The reality is, I wasn’t there. Had I been, I probably would have proven more ungulate than leonine: a deer in the headlights.

And don’t forget, this man was wearing body armor.

Gun rights and gun control are polarizing issues. The nattering of extremists on either side of the issues should not be allowed to dictate our response to mass shootings. Honesty should drive that response.

• There have been no “gun grabs,” and there’s little to indicate that any are on the horizon, but there has been an uptick in mass shootings.

• Guns facilitate terrible crimes that would not be half as terrible if the criminal had no access to guns. AR-15s are hella fun to shoot, but they wouldn’t be my first choice in any situation other than open warfare.

• Maybe if we policed ourselves through common sense a little more, gun-haters would lay off a little bit. Common sense, in light of the Aurora tragedy, would mean taking a firm stand in support of the victims, ideally in unity with gun-control advocates despite our differences, rather than panicking, or insisting against the face of logic that if only our friends and neighbors had been packing heat, they could have survived.

• It takes a person to pull a trigger; the NRA is right about that.

• Most guns are legal. The Second Amendment plays a key role in preserving the rest of the Bill of Rights, including the right to complain about guns.

• If you wouldn’t dream of a “registry list” for everyone who buys other legal products, such as alcohol (which also is misused and facilitates crimes), stop pushing a gun-owner registry list. And consider what good such a list would do when there is not a law enforcement agency in America with the resources to monitor it. Also carefully consider what right law enforcement has to watch anyone in absence of probable cause.

• People who would spit in the face of God by committing cold-blooded murder won’t be deterred by any gun law. And finally: Mass shootings — though they are horrible, prompt fear, and attract a lot of attention (as they should) — remain comparatively rare events. Honesty and collaboration from all of us can help keep them that way.

Katharhynn Heidelberg is a journalist and gun owner in Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

Suspected rabid bat bites La Plata County man (web only)

A La Plata County resident is undergoing rabies vaccinations due to a bat bite the afternoon of Aug. 5 at the Cundis Park (BMX track) by the Animas River, according to a press release from the San Juan Basin Health Department. Individuals who were at that park on that day and may have had direct contact with a bat are asked to call San Juan Basin Health at 335-2028. While the bat was not available for testing, the bat’s behavior for that time of day is very unusual and regional epidemiologists deemed it highly likely that the bat was rabid. Rabies has a typical incubation period of one to three months. If you have been exposed, rabies vaccinations would be strongly recommended. Signs have been posted at the park.

Rabies is an infectious viral disease that affects the nervous system of humans and other mammals. It is fatal if untreated. People get rabies from the bite of a rabies-infected animal. Any wild mammal, such as raccoon, skunk, fox, coyote or bat can have rabies and transmit it to people through a bite. Bats are by far the most common carriers of rabies in this area. So far this year three bats have tested positive for rabies in our area.

If you think you have been exposed, it’s recommended that you safely capture the suspect bat or animal for testing. San Juan Basin Health usually gets results back within 24 hours and the test is $65 – far less costly than a series of rabies vaccinations. Heavy gloves are recommended. Further instructions are available at: sjbhd.org/rabies. If the suspect animal is not available for testing, the epidemiologist will determine if the preventative rabies vaccination series is prudent. Over the last two years, the health department recommended to 11 individuals that they get the preventative rabies vaccine.

Individuals are urged to keep their pets and livestock current for rabies vaccination to protect them and your family. Please contact your veterinarian for more information.

Learn more: To learn more about rabies and precautions and what to teach your children, visit www.cdc.gov/rabies.

 

Published in August 2012

A dark night for America

Like all good-hearted Americans, I felt real bad for a little while about the recent recordbreaking mass slaughter inside an Aurora movie theater, then just mildly bad when I was reminded of it by the endless TV coverage. Then it sort of faded into the growing mass of other mass killings that makes us all feel terrible for a little while before getting on with our own lives, which, after all, have their own share of worrisome travails.

SLEEPWALKING IN AMERICAAs a special nod to the victims – 12 killed, 51 injured, which is the above-mentioned record- setter in terms of total people damaged – the flag on the U.S. Capitol building, which houses 635 cowardly, money-grubbing asskissing legislators beneath, was lowered to half mast, a special honor usually reserved for dead presidents and other bigwigs.

This led me to wondering just what the cut-off limit was for a mass killing to be deemed worthy of this flag-lowering? Ten casualties, maybe? Certainly not six, the number killed at a recent wedding celebration, and a mere one or two is obviously out of the question, since the flag would be in constant motion, confusing tourists and wearing out the equipment that makes it go up and down.

Perhaps an even dozen is a reasonable criterion, then, for expressing the regrets of the disgustingly petty and unprincipled “lawmakers” who lounge in air-conditioned comfort beneath the dome. “Mr. President and my esteemed colleagues, I rise on this sad occasion to move that we lower our flag to give whatever comfort it might to the grieving family members . . . blah, blah. blah.”

Within a few days, after the suspect’s background had been gone over with a magnifying glass, after the families of the dead and wounded, his classmates and neighbors and the most articulate of the eyewitnesses had been interviewed and the funerals shown from a respectable distance, the coverage lessened, finally being mentioned only when “new developments,” or one more step in the long legal process that will inevitably lead to the suspect’s conviction and sentencing occurred.

What won’t happen is that any form of gun control – even a modest, commonsense measure such as renewing the assaultweapon ban that Congress allowed to expire a few years ago because few wanted to risk the wrath of the NRA – will be proposed in Congress or discussed in any depth during the three staged “debates” between the two candidates for president whose main job is supposed to be protecting all Americans from such random violence.

No, once the flowers at what the media always refer to as the “makeshift memorials” have wilted and the debris has been carted off, and once the interest of the public, whose attention span is about that of gnats, has been diverted by some other sensational crime, the Aurora incident will become just another in an exponentially growing list of such acts – very sad for those who lost loved ones and received grievous wounds, but not really anything that affects anyone’s else’s life in any real way. (“Too bad about that Batman thing” and so on.)

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney opined that no new laws were necessary since some of the stuff the gunman had was already illegal, thus proving that such laws did no good anyway.

In fact, the guns, including the one with the 100-round-capacity magazine that he used to mow down the moviegoers, were perfectly legal and legally obtained, as were the thousands of rounds of ammunition he purchased on the Internet. Nor did Romney want to discuss the assault-weapons ban he signed while governor of Massachusetts or any other topic that might alienate rightwing supporters whose love of guns decides their vote in any election.

What Romney may truly believe in his cynical black heart will remain as private as his income-tax returns (which likely show he paid no taxes some years while he greedily earned money in off-shore accounts and stashed even more away in Swiss banks, apparently for that rainy day when the American economy goes belly-up from powerful businessmen like him shipping jobs out of the country and performing other slick maneuvers that cost Americans their jobs but made him even richer).

And President Obama has not performed noticeably better as far as protecting the public from armed lunatics, confining himself to making speeches about how awful it is and how we should work harder to end all violence, whether gun-related or not.

Those are our lame choices in November, along with Congressional candidates of both parties who are controlled by the NRA and its money.

In the end, of course, it was the American public – that’s you and me, fellow goodhearted but preoccupied citizens – who helped kill and wound those midnight movie buffs and the crowd at the Arizona mall last year where the Congresswoman, a federal judge and other less prominent people were used for target practice by a crazy man with easy access to the means to make himself a shooting star, and all the other similar cases where some guy with an enlarged hair up his ass decides that blasting a few dozen fellow beings is the way to go.

And nothing is going to change – except gun sales will increase and the NRA will recruit new members – until and unless the rotten bastards who get paid far better than those of us who have actual jobs are run out of office and replaced by lawmakers actually motivated by protecting the public interest.

And that is only going to happen when public financing of elections makes it possible for smart, ethical people who are not already rich to tell the public their ideas and philosophy, as the incumbents and filthy rich people are now the only ones who have any shot of being elected to office.

In other words, don’t hold your breath.

David Grant Long writes from Cortez, Colo.

Published in August 2012, David Long

The drain game

When I first learned that the gullies along most county roads in the Southwest are referred to as bar ditches, I thought they were named for the unfortunate drivers who’d had a few too many drinks before heading home and ended up in them. Though I was wrong, ample circumstantial evidence exists to make a case for updating the etymology on the subject.

It seems a bar ditch, also referred to as a barrow pit, is just a channel dug for drainage purposes. Irrigation and runoff water sluices through the cattails and the willows, creating a lush and muddy mess along the way, all of it a wetland wonderland, as long as a person can avoid climbing into one to unclog a culvert.

Before I get around to complaining about my bar ditch, it’s only proper that I take a moment to extol the virtues of the entire rural, Southwestern drainage system. It has, after all, been entrenched in the county for a long, long time.

Habitat is a perk for creatures living near one. Nothing is so picturesque as a gallery of Redwing Blackbirds perched on the cattails, supervising traffic while overseeing the future of their young. And then the foxes, skunks, pheasants, feral kittens and cats, dogs, raccoons, and the occasional pair of ducks all make use of the dense growth prompted by a continuous supply of water to sustain and shelter their wild rural lives.

A bar ditch is also a blessing in the spring when the asparagus rises. Vehicles pull to the side of the road and someone in rubber boots or ragged tennis shoes with a sharp knife swiftly collects the tender shoots. Some of these asparagus beds have been producing so regularly and prolifically over the decades that other people would like to keep these locations for themselves. A distant gunshot or a crescendo of barking dogs is usually reason enough to consider relocating, down the road.

Then there are the plumes of dust that drivers spew, often while traveling 20 mph over the posted speed limit, gravel spitting from their tires like nails from a pneumatic gun. Add a stiff wind from the prevailing direction and it’s possible to relive the Dust Bowl era if you own a house beside a county road.

And add to that the mud coating your vehicle’s lower panels up to the door handles when it rains, and you have a fairly obvious transition to the part about me complaining.

My house is in a peculiar position, given the natural rise and fall of the land. If I were to compare my property to a bathtub, my driveway would start about where the drain is located. A 12-inch culvert, probably installed while all of today’s county commissioners were either attending or complaining about Woodstock, channels the runoff from the bar ditch under the road to the opposite side. That’s the plan, and for most of the year it kinda works.

When it doesn’t, like during a downpour of spring, summer, or autumn rain, a sheet of water rolls across my neighbors’ properties and creates a lake where my yard used to be. I am happy to report that since I’ve lived here the water has never washed out the county road, which is what a bar ditch is supposed to prevent, but once a year a drainage flood backs up toward my house, washes a channel out my driveway, spills over its grade, and turns my septic field into a wading pool. That’s when you’ll find me standing ankle deep in a brown sea, praying my shovel was a biblical staff.

The county has graciously scraped my bar ditch free of all its habitat so the water will flow better. Eventually it might install a shiny new, larger-capacity culvert, one that will help handle the flow at these infrequent but peak runoff periods. What the county can’t do, of course, is move massive quantities of dirt until my house is situated on an engineered plateau, so it overlooks my driveway from a vantage that gives me enough perspective to understand why any sane person would have located the house here in the first place.

Speaking of perspective, now that the gulley has been scraped clean, temporarily eliminating the cattails, the willow, the asparagus, and the weeds, I am suddenly able to notice every beer bottle or can that gets tossed overnight from the window of a moving vehicle, and I’m beginning to reassess my initial interpretation about why it’s called a bar ditch.

David Feela is a retired high-school teacher in Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in David Feela

No containment on Air Park Fire (web only)

The Air Park Fire south of Durango, measured at 514 acres at 7 p.m. Sunday, did not make any significant runs during the night. According to the Durango Interagency Dispatch Center, a very small amount of precipitation fell over the fire last night. The fire has been backing down the ridge towards Basin Creek. There is no containment on the fire.

Approximately 50 firefighters are working the fire this morning and more crews are expected to arrive throughout the day. Two heavy air tankers and a SEAT were expected to be working the fire by Monday afternoon.

One helicopter was assisting firefighters with water drops Monday morning and a larger helicopter was expected this afternoon. Firefighters will be working to keep the fire west of La Posta Road, south of Nighthorse Reservoir, north of Indian Creek and east of Box Canyon.

Crews from Durango Fire & Rescue and Upper Pine Fire will be evaluating structures in Trapper’s Crossing as a precaution. The fire is approximately two miles east of Trapper’s Crossing. All pre-evacuation notices issued Sunday afternoon remain in effect.

Fire managers are evaluating the possibility of conducting a burnout operation in the “bowl” just to the east of Basin Creek Road near Lake Nighthorse. This will allow them to burn up to the fire which is backing down from the ridge. Because of the steep, rugged terrain in the area this will be the best way for firefighters to control the fire on the west side. Notice will be sent to the media if the burnout happens.

Gusty winds and thunderstorms are predicted for late afternoon and early evening. Since fires in pinyon and juniper are typically driven by winds, an increase in fire activity is possible this afternoon. There is a possibility of heavy rain. Wind gusts could reach 18 mph and become erratic with the approach of the thunderstorms.

 

Published in July 2012

Fire near Durango prompts pre-evacuation order (web only)

DURANGO – The Airpark Fire, reported at noon today south of Durango, has grown to an estimated 500 acres as of 7 p.m. Sunday, according to the Durango Interagency Fire Center. A pre-evacuation order has been put in place and reverse 911 call made to 146 residents in Trappers Crossing and areas northwest of the fire. As of Sunday afternoon, the smoke column was quite visible from Durango.

The fire was burning in pinon and juniper on Southern Ute Indian Reservation land. The fire was a lightning holdover, which was reported about noon Sunday about one mile southwest of Animas Airpark. A Type III helicopter was making water drops most of the afternoon, and a heavy air tanker is en route from Southern California. Firefighters and engines on scene have responded from Durango Fire and Rescue, the U.S. Forest Service, Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute Indian Tribes and Jicarilla Apache Indian Tribe. The Durango Interagency Type III Incident Command Team is en route.

A gas well pad threatened earlier by the fire has been shut down by Chevron, and firefighters are working with other gas companies to prepare in the case of other well pads being threatened in the area.

A temporary flight restriction order is in place for Animas Airpark.

For more information, contact Pam Wilson, 970-799-2926 or Ann Bond, 970 799-1210.

 

 

Published in July 2012

The really important person in the economic equation

With all the talk about taxes, one-percenters, 99-percenters, and so on, not much has been said about how we got into this mess. Our memory is short, but let me try to refresh it. Two unnecessary unfunded wars, financed on borrowed money. Then the uncontrolled, barely regulated banks playing roulette with other people’s money and hedge funds and homes. You can only gamble so long before the table turns against you.

Then a Congress led by three downright evil representatives and one senator, whose only game was to defeat a multi-racial president. That was not their job – that belongs to the voters. These are members of the group that committed an act of treason. When sworn in, they pledged to uphold the Constitution. Later, they made a pledge to an unelected individual who fully and with no reservations stated he wants to bring down this government.

Isn’t that what bin Laden was trying to do? We have arrested people who were trying to blow up planes and Times Square. How is Grover Norquist any different?

He states he wants to bring down this government. You, I and any of our friends could go to jail if we voiced any plan to destroy this nation. Why is Norquist the exception? He is just a citizen, appointed to an office but never elected. Now he heads up a group who blatantly state they are set on destroying our government of 200 years. Their stupid chant, “no new taxes,” is akin to saying, “no new equipment” or “no new schools” or “no new roads.” I wonder if they have the guts to refuse their salary if elected. Isn’t it our tax money that pays those salaries and perks?

But enough about these jerks. Let’s talk about the good guys that can really bring us out of this recession. Not the wily bankers, those that President Bush and Secretary Paulson bailed out with TARP money coming from the good ol’ taxpayer, which they promptly used to give themselves huge bonuses.

Let’s get to who can save this country – the 99 percenters – commonly called consumers. If the consumer does not have a meaningful job, he cannot purchase the items manufactured by big and small entrepreneurs. No demand, no profit, no growth.

Not much is said about these most important persons. But knowledgeable businesses spend millions trying to please them. For without the consumer, nothing moves and decline is inevitable. He is as necessary to business as water is to fish. From the beginning of time the consumer has held the cards; whether using barter or cash, he is king. The only other economic system is slave labor and gruel – no need for taxes, just your life, wife and the children produced by that union for more slaves.

The consumer started the union, which gave us 40-hour weeks, a meaningful wage and time to spend it. The consumer started education, as he rightfully knew that it was needed to become a better producer and to climb the ladder of success. The consumer provided the will to push for better products, merchandise, food supplies and a better life for those that followed. Inventors, entrepreneurs, banks, and commerce – are all the result of the consumer wanting to better his world. To do this the consumer needs jobs.

Think about a grain of wheat. Follow that grain from farmer to consumer and see how much taxes it produces. The farmer will only plant as much grain as the consumer is capable of purchasing. If there is too much wheat, the price goes down; too little, the price is too high and the consumer won’t buy. The whole system depends and relies on that great person, the consumer.

It isn’t the investors, bankers, no-tax onepercenters, big business, or small business, it is the proud, hard-working, taxpaying, even union-joining consumer that turns the wheel that grinds the wheat that makes the flour that goes to the baker who buys the coal to heat the ovens to bake the bread. I can’t remember the rest of the rhyme but you get the picture. Consumers – without them, nothing.

Even the ladies of the night know if you give great service the consumer will stay with you even when getting screwed.

Galen Larson writes from Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in Galen Larson

Fire restrictions eased on public lands (web only)

Effective Friday, July 13, 2012, fire restrictions will be lifted at higher elevations and eased at lower elevations of the San Juan National Forest in southwestern Colorado. Updated maps, which show specific boundaries for the specific zones considered higher and lower elevation under the revised restrictions, will be available beginning tomorrow at National Forest offices in Pagosa Springs, Bayfield, Durango, Dolores and Silverton, and posted online at: www.fs.usda.gov/sanjuan

Fire restrictions for higher elevations of the San Juan National Forest (Zone 2), which have been receiving more moisture, are hereby lifted; however, visitors are still asked to remain safety-conscious in these areas.

Lower elevations of the San Juan National Forest (Zone 1) have received less moisture, so fire restrictions will be eased but remain in effect, as follows:

· Building, maintaining, attending or using a fire, campfire or stove fire is limited to permanent fire rings or grates within developed campgrounds (Exceptions: petroleum-fueled stoves, lanterns or heating devices);

· Smoking is limited to an enclosed vehicle or building, or within a 3-foot-wide area cleared of vegetation;

· Chainsaws and other internal-combustion engines must have approved, working spark arresters;

· Welding or use of acetylene and other torches with an open flame is prohibited;

· Use of explosives is prohibited (including fireworks, blasting caps or any incendiary device, which may result in the ignition of flammable material).

These changes pertain ONLY to the San Juan National Forest. For more information, contact the San Juan Public Lands Center at 970 247-4874.

 

Published in July 2012

Big Gulp? I’ll drink to that!

Soda has no nutritional value. The substance, hilariously described in one radio ad that pimped a car with larger cupholders as “bubbling … tooth-rot,” has many nutritional deficits. It should not be the only option in school vending machines that serve highly captive audiences.

I think most of us can agree on these points, and that soda is one of those things we should enjoy “in moderation.” The honest among us can probably also agree that, for many palates, soda is delicious.

But soda, long the bane of public-health scolds, apparently is now also a cup of contention for New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and even our guv, John Hickenlooper. To varying degrees, these two do not think that Americans and Coloradans can be trusted to decide for themselves how much soda to drink, or to deal with the possible consequences of drinking too much.

Bloomberg’s genius idea was to propose banning the sale of sodas in containers larger than 16 ounces at certain venues. There was nothing in his proposal that would have precluded people from buying two 16-ouncers, or more, or from buying sodas from multiple vendors. The idea was to “make them think” about how much fizzy drink they were consuming. Never mind that it’s not New York’s job to think for individuals, and nobody asked for New York’s help with that — there are fat people among us! Fat people are gross, er, I mean, they are a gross burden on society, especially when it comes to health-care costs! We gotta do something!

Hick didn’t necessarily endorse a largesoda ban, but he was quick to at least chase after the passing bandwagon, telling state media that we have to look at all options to preserve people’s health. Apparently, the egregious nannyism of Bloomberg’s proposal did not faze our governor. Or at least, he sees the proposal as an acceptable level of governmental interference in personal choices.

It’s enough to make a girl want to head somewhere for a “sip-in” protest.

Bloomberg is not the first to get in a tizzy about the sizes of our fizzy. An Associated Press piece in 2011 purported to look at the history of weight loss. It read more like a history of our obsession with the absurd, and offered the head-bang-onto-desk conclusion that there are loads of diets that “work”; we just have to try harder.

But I digress. The article quoted the incoming president of something called “The Obesity Society,” which I am sure is a totally objective source with no vested interest in pills, diets or policies that punish fat people. The man, Patrick O’Niell, offered this rhetorical question:

“Should it be socially desirable to walk down the street with a 30-ounce Big Gulp?”

Well, Patrick, I don’t know. Pondering whether the law-abiding conduct of a stranger who is minding his own business is “desirable” isn’t really on my list of things to do. I’ve got hobbies, an’ all. My question is whether it is socially desirable that control freaks feel the need to monitor the behavior of others. It sounds kinda pathological to me.

Of course, a stupid policy is nothing without obligatory surveys, and Bloomberg’s proposal has resulted in one showing that 70 percent of 977 respondents say the ban amounts to government overreach, even though a majority of respondents also said they would change their own soda-consumption habits.

The expert conclusion? That the results “show a disconnect among Americans about the link between what they consume and the larger health impact,” per Reuters, summarizing nutrition professor Marion Nestle. Her exact quote is that the public doesn’t understand “that what we eat is already governed by government policy” — notice no drawing of a distinction between what we eat and how much, which is what Bloomberg’s ban would do — “and that larger soft drinks have more calories.”

Excuse me, learned professor? I believe even my cat knows that the larger the portion of anything, the more calories it is going to have. We’re none of us that stupid.

The Reuters piece also irritatingly tries to suggest public opposition to the soda-sale ban is just as wrongheaded as initial opposition to smoking bans. Newsflash: Smoking is a behavior; fat is not. And soda, while not healthful, is a far cry from a cigarette.

Apart from the obvious problems and absurdities of banning the sale of certain-sized drinks, Bloomberg’s proposal presupposes, not only that excess weight is automatically and universally unhealthy, but that:

1. Soda is a primary culprit.

2. Soda’s only negative effect is the potential for excess weight.

3. Intervening in soda consumption is going to meaningfully change the nation’s waistline. The best way to address our nation’s weight problem is to understand that the problem is largely sheer ignorance — blended in with puritanical smugness — about large bodies. You can be fat and metabolically healthy, with normal blood pressure, normal blood sugar and normal cholesterol readings. You can be thin and in very poor health. Weight is not a lifestyle choice. Lifestyle can have bearing on weight, but weight is as heritable as height. Soda is a junk beverage (see above), and while excess sugar consumption can contribute to weight gain, weight is not purely a matter of calories in – calories out. As far as calories and low nutritional content go, there is plenty of other food and drink on the list.

Banning the sale of large sodas sounds ridiculous precisely because it is. We need to nip this sort of overreach in the bud, before the Nanny State tires of the carrot and goes for a bigger stick than Bloomberg has.

Katharhynn Heidelberg is a journalist in Montrose, Colo.

Published in Katharhynn Heidelberg

A judge overturns a license for the Piñon Ridge uranium mill

A key permit required for the Piñon Ridge uranium mill in Montrose County, Colo., to move forward has been revoked by a Colorado court citing a flawed public hearing process.

On June 13, Denver District Judge John McMullen invalidated Energy Fuel’s radioactive- materials license, which was approved by the Colorado Department of Health and Environment last year.

“The court concludes that CDPHE acted contrary to law and not in accord with procedures in failing to provide a hearing. Therefore the court sets aside CDPHE’s action in issuing the license,” wrote McMullen in his ruling.

Energy Fuels is planning to construct a $150 million uranium mill in Paradox Valley, located west of Naturita, Colo. (Free Press Jan. 2012) Sheep Mountain Alliance, a Telluride- based environmental group, sued the CDPHE for numerous violations, including failure to allow public testimony on stateissued reports regarding the plant’s safety.

In his ruling, McMullen agreed with Sheep Mountain’s claims of insufficient public process, cancelled the permit and ordered a new public hearing on the matter.

“It is undisputed that neither of the public meetings was an adjudicatory hearing. It is further undisputed that at neither of the meetings was there an opportunity for cross examination,” McMullen wrote.

“CDPHE interpretation (of hearing procedures) significantly limit(s) the opportunity for public participation in the licensing process. This is inconsistent with legislative declaration in the Radiation Control Act recognizing that uranium mill tailings at mill operations pose a significant health hazard and the need to control such tailings to minimize their environmental impact.”

Jennifer Thurston, a campaign coordinator with Sheep Mountain, welcomed the ruling.

“That was the issue of our lawsuit — that we did not have the opportunity to examine the state’s environmental report on hydrology and geology regarding the mill,” she said in a phone interview. “Energy Fuels no longer has a radioactive materials license to operate a mill in Colorado.”

Thurston said CDPHE’s error occurred when they issued their environmental report on the mill without opportunity for cross-examination and witness statements by opponents of the mill. The permit was approved shortly after the report was issued, leading to the lawsuit.

“A new hearing will allow for a more fair public process and allow information, evidence and testimony to be put on the record regarding the mill’s environmental safety,” Thurston said. “The problems with uranium mills in Colorado have been significant and the environmental issues for this mill have not been adequately reviewed.”

CDHPE could appeal the decision but had not as of press time. The new public hearing is expected to take place in the fall.

Published in July 2012 Tagged

Low-altitude flights to undergo new impact study

The U.S. Air Force has for now backed off its controversial proposal to conduct nighttime, low-altitude training missions over the deserts, mountains and towns of the Four Corners region.

Cannon Air Force Base had proposed flying sorties of the C-130J transport plane and crash-plagued Osprey, a helicopter/plane hybrid, in an expanded range that includes southwest Colorado and northern New Mexico. (Free Press Nov. 2011)

The plan called for up to three missions per night throughout the year with planes flying between 300 and 3,000 feet altitude. Training would include in-flight refueling between two aircraft, low-altitude formations, use of night goggles and simulated drops.

Cannon AFB conducted 17 public meetings on the Low Altitude Training Area proposal, with hundreds showing up to oppose the plan in Durango and a more supportive reaction in Farmington, N.M.

After conducting an environmental assessment of the plan, the Air Force initially concluded a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI), a regulatory hurdle it needed to proceed.

But public criticism, especially in Colorado, that the plan lacked proper environmental review, and had public-safety issues, has apparently caused the Air Force to consider a more rigorous environmental impact study on the flyovers.

“After careful evaluation it became clear that a Finding of No Significant Impact could not be reached for this EA and still accomplish all of the training critical for our special operations forces,” said Brig. Gen. Michael Kingsley, in a press release from Cannon Air Force Base, near Clovis, N.M.

The public-affairs office stated that the current EA action on the training proposal “will be terminated and the Air Force will conduct a deeper analysis on a broader scope that may lead to preparation of an EIS.”

The plan had strong opposition from elected Colorado officials, pilots, environmentalists and residents who believed the flyovers would disrupt rural life, become a hazard in aviation corridors, stress wildlife and domestic animals, and be an avalanche danger.

The plan could be revived, however, a decision Cannon AFB said will be made early next year.

“We still need to conduct flying training missions,” said Col. Buck Elton, of Cannon AFB. “We operate nine different types of aircraft, each with unique training requirements, including low altitude flying.”

The Osprey, which can alternate between a helicopter and a fixed wing airplane midair, has been plagued with malfunctions and accidents.

Since testing began in 1991 the tilt-rotor aircraft has crashed seven times with a total of 36 fatalities. It was first deployed to Iraq in 2007 after 18 years in development at a cost of $20 billion.

On June 13 this year, an Osprey CV22 crashed near a military base in Florida, injuring five crew members.

Published in July 2012

Primary voters lean toward the middle

Victors in Montezuma County commission races are viewed as moderate

Montezuma County voters stuck to the middle of the Republican road in the June 26 primary, choosing two county-commissioner candidates who were widely viewed as more moderate than some of their competitors and favoring a former Democrat in the 22nd Judicial District Attorney’s race.

Keenan Ertel glided to victory in the three-way race for the commission seat from District 2 (Cortez). The owner and president of Ertel Funeral Home garnered more votes than his two opponents, Creston “Bud” Garner and Pat DeGagne-Rule, combined. No Democratic or unaffiliated candidates have come forth to challenge him in the general election.

In the commission race in District 3 (Mancos), former Commissioner Dewayne Findley had a solid win over builder Casey McClellan with a 60-40 percent margin. He will face two unaffiliated opponents, Larry Don Suckla and Greg Kemp, in the general election.

And in the DA’s race, Will Furse was clinging to a 9-vote lead over incumbent DA Russell Wasley as voters waited to see whether some 60 outstanding ballots in Montezuma and Dolores counties – some awaiting signatures, others from military members – would affect the outcome.

Furse, a former public defender, had been backed by an unusual coalition including many 9-12 supporters, members of the lawenforcement community, and some Democrats. He had sharply criticized Wasley for numerous violations of discovery (the legal requirement that the prosecution reveal its evidence to the defense) during his two years in office. Wasley and his supporters lambasted

Furse for his recent switch to the Republican Party and for a misdemeanor drug conviction in his record. Their contest sparked a barrage of angry letters to the editor in the Cortez Journal.

For longtime political observer Kevin Cook, former chair of the Montezuma County Democrats, the results came as a relief – particularly because the two most vocal supporters of the local 9-12 Project/Tea Party, McClellan and Garner, were defeated.

“I’m not one of those people that believes the voters always get it right, but I believe they did this time, and overwhelmingly, too,” he said.

“I think the voters really chose ideologically anchored, thoughtful men of good temperament.”

That was the general view from the left. “I thought the results were surprising and kind of encouraging,” agreed Curtis Heeter, co-chair of the Southwest Colorado Greens.

The voting in the commission races appeared to show that citizens wanted the board to continue along the same path followed by the current board. Incumbents Gerald Koppenhafer and Larrie Rule (who are both term-limited) and current Chair Steve Chappell have, particularly in the past few years, followed policies that are conservative but also measured and thoughtful. On the hot-button topic of public-lands access and relations with the local Forest Service and BLM, they have chosen to press for changes through negotiations with the agencies rather than antagonism and litigation.

Garner and McClellan had been vocal in urging a more confrontational approach toward the federal agencies and had additionally been very critical of the county’s landuse regulations, saying they needed to be trimmed back.

Dismayed by the absence of Democratic contenders in the November election, many Dems and Greens changed their party affiliation in order to vote, although County Clerk Carol Tullis said it was not an unusually high number this year.

The candidates themselves were cautious about drawing conclusions about the election.

Ertel said he is not enough of a political pundit to see a particular trend.

“What the numbers told me, at least on the Republican-primary side of things, is that people were looking for some leadership, some stability of thought, people that were fairly stable in their careers and professions and lifestyles,” he said. “Dewayne and I were kind of symbolic of that. We’re not youngsters and we’re not ancient – call us well-matured.

“But I don’t know how to read the tea leaves. I hope people voted for people they thought had values and principles and conscience and a desire to do the right thing for our communities.”

Ertel said he’s looking forward to serving, and he plans to go into the job with an open mind. He will be “diligent” about attending commission meetings now so he can get current on what the board is doing.

He said there are a couple of issues he wants to focus on initially, one of which is public lands.

“We have some tremendous people, Casey McClellan included, who have been watching this for many years,” he said. “He and [planning-commission member] Dennis Atwater – they are just an encyclopedia of what I believe to be the history of the wrong turns the BLM and Forest Service have taken. I plan to use those people.”

The other issue is economic growth and development, he said, “whether oil and gas or business promotion and recruiting. Whatever we can do to better our economic situation. I don’t know how much I’ll be able to do but I’ll keep my eyes open,” he said.

Findley said he was struck by the contrast between the civil tone in the commission races and the vitriol in the DA’s race.

“There was so much animosity in that one,” he said. “I was around all the commissioner candidates, obviously, and we all got along well. We visited with each other; we all wanted the same things. The races were more about issues, while the other one seemed to deteriorate into name-calling, especially among some of the supporters.”

Findley said he appreciated McClellan “not turning our race into sign wars” and taking a low-key approach to advertising. “Keenan Ertel had so many signs, it was mind-boggling,” Findley laughed. “He doesn’t do anything halfway.”

Findley said he was not surprised by Ertel’s landslide win because of his standing in the community and the fact that he knows so many people through his family’s funeral home. “Everyone in the community has had some dealings with them and has seen how they grieve with you and care for the bereaved,” Findley said. “They’re very well thought-of. I’m just glad I didn’t have to run against Keenan. He was a juggernaut and I think he will make a very good commissioner.”

Unlike Ertel, Findley isn’t yet assured of his seat, but he in a comfortable position going into the general election. Most observers view him as the centrist candidate of the three that will be on the ballot, and he agreed. “I would place myself probably midway between Greg on my left and Larry Don on my extreme right,” Findley said.

Garner – the former emcee of the local 9-12 Project, who had campaigned on a platform of liberty and limited regulations – said nothing really surprised him about the results, adding, “The Lord raises up the rulers according to his will and his purposes and I dare not argue with it.”

He did say he thought the heated race between the DA candidates drew attention from the commissioners’ races. “Nobody was really interested in anything else.”

McClellan likewise said the election held no big surprises. “I couldn’t really tell where it was going to go between Dewayne and me,” he said. “I knew there was a lot of support out there for me and hoped it was enough to win the primary.”

He said he wasn’t able to get out and meet as many people as he would have liked because his job kept him busy. “I don’t think I slapped as many backs and kissed as many babies as Dewayne. I just didn’t have time for it. My whole hope was that my message got out.”

He said he wished there had been more candidate forums, because there were just two major ones, with about 175 attendees all told. “That’s not a lot of people,” he said.

“I felt like Bud Garner was gaining some momentum toward the end. He could have benefited from some more forums, if he could have gotten his message out of liberty and freedom and following the Constitution.”

McClellan said he will stay involved with the Public Lands Coordination Commission and Southwest Public Lands Commission. “Running really was a last-minute decision for me,” he said. “I’m passionate about the issues and I’ll stick with those things.”

He also said he might like to serve on a group to suggest changes to the county land-use code to benefit business and industry. “There are some things in the code that aren’t conducive to business development,” he said. “I’ve been a victim of some of those.”

McClellan said he is glad to have run. “It gave me an opportunity to get those issues out that I feel are important, and I still feel they’re important. I wouldn’t change my message at all, of economic growth and public-lands issues. I certainly have no shortage of things to do. When it was all over I felt like the next day I could just kick back and relax.”

But, he said, the experience was fun. “I really enjoyed it. I also recognized that I’m really not much of a politician.”

One of the issues raised by the results is the question of why more women do not hold major political offices in Montezuma County. Only Helen McClellan, a Democrat, has ever served on the county commission (1993 to 1997), and she lost her bid for reelection. Cheryl Baker, also a Democrat, ran and lost in 2004. DeGagne-Rule, the longtime chair of the local Republican Party until she launched her campaign, initially appeared to be a strong candidate for the commission, but got just 515 votes.

Findley said he believes her weak showing was more attributable to a feeling among some voters that she shouldn’t be elected just as her husband was coming off the board. Local voters have consistently turned down measures that would eliminate the two-term limit for commissioners.

“I just heard it stated by some people that, ‘We’re tired of Rule rule,’” Findley said. “Pat has done a good job for the Republican party and I hope she goes back and does that.” M.B. McAfee, chair of the board of directors

of the Bridge Emergency Shelter in Cortez, said the absence of female commissioners is probably attributable both to societal sexism and the fact that few women are choosing to run.

“I think it would be a steeper hill to climb for a woman to get elected in this county than other counties,” she said. “It may have something to do with traditional values. And it might be hard to find women to run.”

She said she hasn’t spoken to any local women who said they were thinking of running but decided not to, so the interest may not be there. McAfee said she herself has toyed with the idea, but decided not to. “If I were 10 years younger, maybe,” she said.

Regarding DeGagne-Rule’s failed bid, she agreed with Findley that there might have been a perception on the part of the public that there was too much of a “family dynasty” issue.

McAfee said she sees a crop of young leaders – “by that I mean people in their 40s” – who are active in the community in different non-profits and agencies, and some of them might produce female leaders who could run for the commission.

“Young women that are mothers – they’re probably working, too, and if they’ve got two young kids, they’re just busy. But in 10 years they’re not going to be so busy, and maybe they could run.”

Published in July 2012

The debate over a Navajo-Hopi water settlement rages on

While people everywhere in the drought-stricken Southwest pray for rain, powerful energy and mining corporations, politicians, grassroots citizens and tribal-government leaders are praying for their share of water from the Little Colorado River.

Katherine Benally, Navajo Nation Council delegate representing Dennehotso, Chinchilbeto and Kayenta, speaks before officials representing 18 chapters of the Western Navajo Agency Council. At the June meeting in Luepp, Ariz., they discussed the Navajo Hopi Little Colorado Water Settlement Act 2109 but did not vote on it. Photo by Sonja Horoshko

But no one can agree on who should get how much, and the latest proposed settlement remains hugely controversial.

After 33 years of litigation, the Navajo and Hopi tribes are being asked to approve an agreement that would settle their indigenous claims to water rights on the river. So far, neither tribe has granted that approval.

Arizona Sen. John Kyl set off a firestorm of debate when he introduced the Navajo Hopi Little Colorado Water Settlement Act, SB 2109, in Congress on Feb. 14. It has been the focus of intense analysis ever since, partly due to the efforts of grassroots organizations.

The settlement act, which is linked to the Navajo Hopi Little Colorado Water Settlement Agreement, has been brought to the two tribes for approval by Kyl and Arizona Sen. John McCain, along with 30 parties to the settlement and 3,000 water-users with Arizona ties.

The act cannot move forward in Congress unless the agreement is approved by the Hopis and Navajos.

Navajo President Ben Shelley has committed his support to the agreement and the act (and its companion bill, HR 4067), saying the measures will improve the quality of life for Navajo people. He envisions Navajo families raising their children and grandchildren with running water in their homes.

“Securing our water rights is essential to making this vision a reality,” he said in a press release.

But Shelley has been under fire at recent public forums presented by him, the Navajo water commissioners, and Stanley Pollack, assistant attorney with the Water Rights Unit of the Navajo Department of Justice and the lead litigation attorney. Despite the promise of future infrastructure and unlimited water use from the Little Colorado River Basin, support for the agreement was slim while opposition grew stronger at each meeting.

Grassroots organizations and community members opposing the settlement say it favors Arizona corporations such as the Salt River Project and Central Arizona Project, both linked to the Navajo Generating Station, over the needs and rights of the tribes. Indigenous water rights are governed by federal law, treaty obligations and the landmark 1908 Winters Doctrine, which says that Indian tribes have the right to enough water to fulfill the purposes of their reservations, and that their water right dates from the establishment of the reservation.

The Navajo-Hopi settlement provides infrastructure to deliver water through two pipelines on reservation land, reaching communities with no current access to delivered water. It also, according to Pollack, gives the tribes “all the water that falls on it [reservation land], rises up from it and flows through the LCR river basin.”

In Shelley’s statement of support he warned the people, “If we don’t support the LCR settlement, we continue our 33-year litigation in court without an end in sight. And when we do finally reach that end after spending a great deal of money and time, we may be left with a fraction of the water proposed in the LCR settlement. Besides having less water, money for valuable water infrastructure would be lost, making usage of our water rights claims difficult. Without this settlement, we leave the LCR issue to be resolved by our children and grandchildren.”

Carrots in the pipelines

Although the 2012 water settlement resembles the 2010 water settlement passed by the 21st Navajo Nation Council late that year, a significant piece is missing. The 2010 version included a third pipeline that would have brought water to the western reservation. Cameron, Gap Bode Way, Coalmine – all of which are Bennett Freeze chapters and uranium-mining communities – would have received much-needed watering points.

But after the 21st council delegates voted to support it, Kyl dropped the $800 million project. According to Pollack, “Kyle didn’t even try to get it funded. He said it was too expensive and withdrew the bill.”

Now, in 2012, the western pipeline has cut out of the settlement act, replaced with a promise to fund a feasibility study and fill the pipeline with reserved water from the main Colorado River if the funding is found someday to build it.

One sticking point for many citizen is the fact that the 2012 settlement act requires the tribes to give Peabody Western Coal Company, the Salt River Project and other owners of the Navajo Generating Station tens of thousands of acre-feet of tribal water annually, without compensation.

A bone-dry stock pond near Gray Mountain in the Navajo Nation. The promise of a feasibility study for a third pipeline in the Navajo Hopi Little Colorado Water Settlement Act could get the pipeline built if federal funds become available in the future if the settlement agreement is passed by both tribes. Photo by Sonja Horoshko

It also requires the tribes to extend the Peabody and NGS leases to 2044 without regard for past and continuing impacts to health, water supplies, water quality and damage to the Navajo Aquifer (N-Aquifer), as a condition for receiving the two domestic water pipelines and the feasibility study for a third.

Eighty percent of the power created at the Navajo Generating Station in Page, Ariz., is used to pump water from Lake Havasu to Tuscon agribusiness. Peabody Coal is located on Black Mesa in northernmost Arizona, above the N-Aquifer, which supplies the water used to wash the coal.

Complicated votes

Speaker Johnny Naize introduced the legislation to begin the formal process of discussing the water-settlement agreement so that, “the supporting and opposing individuals and parties can be brought to the table for a healthy dialogue,” he said in a press release. “As the Speaker of the Navajo Nation I feel it is my responsibility to introduce this legislation so that the Nation can decide on the water-rights settlement.”

Assuring the Diné citizens that the process will be transparent and fair, he wrote, “The conversation has taken many forms, positive and negative, but … it has been healthy and now, should move to the next step.”

The language in the legislative process meanders like flowing water in a riverbed. One piece of legislation opposes the settlement act, while another was introduced to approve the settlement agreement. The Diné people have been tracking the information on social networks and in group emails. They work to understand the nuances, stay vigilant about voicing their positions, and share facts and research with each other as well as their own central government.

On June 15 Katherine Benally introduced legislation to the Navajo Nation’s 22nd Council Naa’bik’iyati’ Committee opposing the settlement act. The NABI committee, composed of all 24 council delegates, voted 13-0 to approve the measure opposing SB 2109 and HR 4067, with 11 absent.

Delegates listed several reasons to oppose the act, including the extension of leases to the Navajo Generating Station, the unclear waiver of water rights, the limitation on the Navajo Nation’s ability to put lands into trust, and the limitation on the nation’s ability to market or lease its water.

One week later, the Council Resources and Development Committee unanimously voted to reject Speaker Naize’s legislation approving the Navajo Hopi LCR Agreement.

The following day, June 22, the NABI committee met again, voting 15-3 to reject Naize’s legislation approving the agreement. Those opposed included Naize voting against his own legislation. The three delegates supporting the agreement, George Apachito, LoRenzo Bates and Danny Simpson, all represent chapters in the eastern part of the reservation. Five delegates were absent during the vote.

The council chambers were packed with Diné people, most opposing the legislation. Their campaign resulted in hundred of comments, 350 pages of petitions signed by Navajo citizens opposing the legislation, and a statement by the Navajo Human Rights Commission urging leaders to comply with the United Nations standard of “free, prior and informed consent” and to hold a referendum on the agreement.

Also in the audience were former Chairman Peter MacDonald, former President Milton Bluehouse, former President Peter son Zah, and former Chairman Leonard Haskie.

Debating the value

Jack Utter, a professor of Indian water law at Northern Arizona University and an expert in forest-resource and wild-river management, came to speak at the NABI committee meeting. He is a widely-known Indian-Country author, educator and lecturer and works for the Navajo Nation. He is married to a Navajo woman.

In an email to the Free Press, Utter said the Resources Committee requested that he present before council, if the speaker requested it, which Naize did in writing. The speaker allowed him the full two hours he needed for his presentation.

In his introduction he clearly states that he was presenting on behalf of his family, his in-laws and clans, elders and future generations, and not in his capacity as an employee of Navajo Water Code Administration.

His presentation highlighted additional scientific and legal facts designed to help the tribe understand exactly what they will and won’t get if they agree to the settlement.

Pollack (Free Press, May 2012) says that the tribes will have unlimited use of all the water in the C-Aquifer, located in the southwest corner of the reservation. But according to Utter’s documentation, “The Arizona Department of Water Resources says on its website that north of the LCR, the C-Aquifer is too deep to be economically useful, or is unsuitable for most uses because of its high concentrations of total dissolved solids. For the most part, that’s the portion that overlaps the Navajo Nation.”

Fleshing out corporate use of the LCR water, Utter showed the Central Arizona Project canal running 336 miles from Lake Havasu through Phoenix to Tucson and beyond. It is powered by NGS.

“It is not ‘Navajo’ either in ownership or who uses the power. NGS uses 34,100 acrefeet per year, which is 34 to 44 million dollars’ worth of water for free, worth $1 billion to date,” Utter said at the committee meeting.

Most of the audience appeared surprised to learn about the Arizona Water Banking Authority, which builds water banks by sinking water into the desert for later use, trading, selling or leasing. “Now there are seven banks along the 200 miles of the CAP canal … creating a hundred-year supply for 200,000 new home lots for maintaining Arizona’s economic growth,” Utter told the audience.

The Diné Water Committee, present during the entire meeting, posted the proceedings throughout the presentations and the vote on their websites. At the close of the meeting it was announced that the final decision on the water settlement would be made on June 27 in a special session called by Speaker Naize.

Dispute over Hopi decision

Meanwhile, the Hopis were also scrutinizing the settlement. It is unclear at this time whether they passed the settlement.

The Tucson Sentinel reported on June 22 that “Hopi lawmakers gave new life to a congressional plan to settle the tribe’s water claims, voting 8-7, with Chairman [Le- Roy] Shingoitewa casting the deciding vote, to work with Congress to pursue Hopi water rights and build pipelines to reservation communities in exchange for the tribes waiving their claims to the river water.”

But a press release dated June 25, from former Hopi Chairmen Ben Nuvamsa, Ivan Sidney and Vernon Masayesva, describes their reaction to reports from Shingoitewa that the Hopi passed the settlement act.

According to the former chairmen, “Hopi Tribal Chairman LeRoy Shingoitewa and Council Representative George Mase have been giving out false information that the Hopi Tribe approved Senate Bill 2109, the Navajo-Hopi Little Colorado River Water Rights Settlement Act of 2012, when in fact, the Hopi Tribal Council, by a vote of 11 for, 4 against, and 0 abstentions, rejected the Kyl bill on June 15, 2012. Over 100 tribal members witnessed this historic event.”

The chairmen allege that Shingoitewa refused to sign this resolution, forcing the former elected tribal leaders to file a formal complaint to the Hopi Tribal Council demanding Shingoitewa’s immediate removal.

“Shingoitewa convened an illegal tribal council meeting on June 21, 2012, to force passage of a council resolution to ‘endorse’ Senate Bill 2109. This he did out of total disrespect for the Hopi and Tewa people’s rejection of the Senate bill. Upon hearing of this action, many tribal members are angered and are demanding immediate removal of Hopi Chairman Shingoitewa and George Mase.”

Kyl and McCain have not responded to Free Press email inquiries regarding which Hopi vote they will accept as the official position of the Hopi Tribe. The Free Press left a message with Chairman Shingwetewa’s staff asking if Kyl and McCain have endorsed the June 21 council vote. As of press time there has been no reply.

Special session

Speaker Naize in a last-minute announcement cancelled the June 27 special session in which the Navajo council was to make the final decision on the water settlement because there was not the required number of council delegates’ signatures needed to schedule the special session.

“I apologize for the late cancellation of the special session but the Navajo Nation Code is the law of the Navajo Nation and it cannot be circumvented despite the fact that the water-rights settlement is a high profile issue,” Naize stated.

Naize apologized to Diné citizens who had made plans to attend the special session and encouraged citizens to continue their participation in all matters related to the water-rights settlement.

Naize was trying to reschedule the special session to vote on the water settlement for Thursday, July 5, at 10 a.m., in council chambers in Window Rock, if 13 delegates sign a petition for the session. The next week-long council session is scheduled July 18.

Published in July 2012

Locals’ views differ on warming theory

Local citizens tend to view climate change through the lens of their political viewpoint, with progressives accepting it as a fact and conservatives regarding it with skepticism or downright scorn.

Curtis Heeter, co-chair of the Southwest Colorado Greens, said he has been convinced for years that climate change is occurring.

“I first heard of it about 1972. I read some stuff by Roger Revelle of Harvard, the professor that Al Gore was associated with. I firmly believed it then and I believe everything he said back in the late ’60s and ’70s is true. He predicted what would happen and it’s happening.”

Heeter said while critics argue that warming isn’t happening everywhere or all the time, “just because it gets colder in a certain area doesn’t mean that’s not part of the phenomenon.” “It’s not a year-to-year change, it’s a trend, and the trend has been going on quite clearly for years,” Heeter said.

Bud Garner, former emcee of the local 9-12 Project, disagrees. “They’re wrong,” he said of Gore and climate-change believers. “They have been caught in their lies. It is political and it is a money-maker for them.”

Garner said it’s absurd to say the world is “hotter now than it’s ever been” when records only date back to the 1870s. “These are the same people who believe in a 14-billionyear- old planet, so we’re taking 140 years of record-keeping and saying it’s the worst of all time. I find that a stretch.”

Garner discussed the inherent problems involved in extrapolating global trends from local observations. For instance, old-timers say the Four Corners used to have heavier snowfalls and longer winters. “Those stories can be true and not have any relationship to the global weather system,” he said. “For every place where less snow is falling, I can find you a place where they never had snow and now they’re getting two-foot drifts. They had a record winter in Europe last year.”

Garner said he doesn’t trust the accuracy of weather data and that computer modeling doesn’t account for clouds and water vapor, which are cooling agents. But if the earth is warming, he said, the main issue is whether it’s human-caused, and “it absolutely is not.”

Anyway, he added, “What’s wrong with a longer growing season?”

The two victors in the county’s Republican primary commission races fall somewhere in the middle. Dewayne Findley, winner of the primary in District 3 (Mancos), said the climate is changing locally at least, but he isn’t convinced that human-caused global warming is a fact.

“There’s obviously climate change on a smaller scale,” Findley said. “All you have to do is look 10 years back and we had much heavier snows. There’s a lot more wind now and a lot less moisture this year. It’s climate change but I’m not sure it’s man-caused.

“It’s an interesting discussion to have, because I don’t think anyone would deny we’re seeing a substantially different climate than anybody’s been used to. When the loggers are praying for rain you know it’s dry.”

Keenan Ertel, the victory in District 2 (Cortez), said he does believe humanity can affect the weather. “I know that mankind is having a continuing and ongoing effect on our globe,” he said. “Things have to be affected just by the sheer volume of people on this planet and the things we consume and the things we produce. I do think some of the science that backs that is very valid.

“Watching the polar ice cap shrink is one of the things that has made me know the climate is changing, although it may not be something we’re directly causing.”

However, he said many things are cyclical. “Look back a thousand years or so,” he said. “Weather change forced the Anasazi people to leave this country. I’m a believer in the cyclical nature of things. This may be part of a hundred-year or two-hundred-year cycle that may have come about regardless, but I do believe the human population has a definite effect on this planet.”

Published in July 2012

Is climate change to blame? Researchers predict future years will bring more wildfires, heat waves

As wildfires sweep through swaths of the West, turning forests, grasslands and even homes into charred ruins, many scientists say the destructive blazes are linked to climate change.

And, they say, things are only going to get worse unless carbon emissions are reduced.

“The frequency of hot days and hot periods has already increased and will increase further,” said Michael Oppenheimer, professor of geosciences and international affairs at Princeton University, during a conference call June 28 with media members.

The call was timed to coincide with the release of a report called, “Heat Waves and Climate Change.” The peer-reviewed report, which summarizes work by numerous researchers, was produced by Climate Communication, a non-profit funded by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Climate- Works Foundation.

Oppenheimer was one of three researchers featured in the call who made the case that the world is growing warmer, and humans are the cause.

“What we’re seeing is a window into what global warming looks like,” Oppenheimer said. “It looks like extreme heat. It looks like fires. It looks like this type of environmental disaster.”

The conference call came on the same day that fire managers in Colorado Springs, Colo., announced that 346 homes had been burned during the catastrophic Waldo Canyon Fire on that city’s western edge.

On that same day, 42 large, active wildfires were burning in the West, according to the National Interagency Fire Center – including eight in Colorado, five in Utah, and three in New Mexico. A total of more than 800,000 acres was involved.

The fire center increased its national preparedness level, a measure of the seriousness of wildfire activity, to PL 4 that day – only the third time in 22 years it had been at PL 4 in June. The other years were 2002 and 2008.

Having a heat wave

The researchers on the panel predicted that in coming decades in the United States, heat waves will be more frequent and wildfires will be more common – so much so that ecosystems may be changed.

“We are seeing a big increase in the number of days over 100 and that’s expected to continue, especially if business-as-usual emissions continue,” said Susan Joy Hassol, director at Climate Communication, who moderated the panel.

During the last week in June, much of the nation baked in a suffocating heat wave that shattered records.

Colorado Springs, Colo., hit an all-time record high of 101 degrees on June 26, according to the Weather Channel, and Denver set an all-time high of 105 that same day. Both cities have records that date back to the late 1800s.

The heat wave stretched from the Rockies across the Midwest to the East and South. June 29 was the hottest June day ever in Washington, D.C., which hit 104. Atlanta’s high of 106 on June 30 was an all-time record for the state of Georgia.

Over two dozen cities across 10 states set or tied all-time record highs on June 29 and 30.

“Since 1950 the number of heat waves worldwide has increased, and heat waves have become longer,” states the report.

The report also says:

• The hottest days and nights have become hotter and more frequent.

• In the past several years, the global area hit by extremely unusual hot summertime temperatures has increased 50-fold.

• In the contiguous United States, new record-high temperatures over the past decade have outnumbered new record lows by a ratio of 2 to 1.

But scientists admit that a single heat wave doesn’t equate to a trend.

“Can we say this heat wave is a smoking gun for climate change? No,” Glen Mac- Donald, the director of the UCLA Institute of Environment and Sustainability, said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “But … it’s consistent with what we would anticipate.”

More red on the map

Most climate and weather scientists worldwide believe that climate change is occurring and that it is at least partially caused by a human- driven increase in carbon-dioxide emissions. Ninety-seven percent of scientists agreed “greenhouse gases have been responsible for most of the unequivocal warming of the Earth’s average global temperature in the second half of the twentieth century,” a 2010 report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal found.

But climate-change skeptics are numerous. They say the data on which the globalwarming theory relies are questionable and don’t go back far enough. They say the urban “heat island” effect is what’s causing cities to warm, as asphalt and concrete retain heat at night. They point out that there have been severe hot spells and droughts in the past, such as the one in the late 1920s and early 1930s in Oklahoma, Texas, and neighboring states.

Nearly half of Americans believe “the seriousness of global warming is exaggerated,” according to a recent Gallup poll.

However, scientists say computer models are growing ever more reliable, and they indicate that warm seasons are growing longer, droughts are becoming more common and minimum temperatures are rising.

The panelists agreed. Certainly there have been heat waves in the past, they said, such as the searing drought and high temperatures of the Dust Bowl. And it’s true that not every part of the world is seeing record highs.

But, Oppenheimer said, the different temperatures are like dots on a map, or pixels in a photograph. Different things happen in different pixels.

The global average offers a less-dramatic picture than individual pixels, “but we’re seeing a gradual change as more and more of the pixels get redder, and this is a pretty red one. This is an example of the sort of thing that happens as the global-warming trend continues.”

Added Hassol, “What we’re seeing now when we look at the global temperatures is, more of the map is red. Back in 1934 when the U.S. was having a tremendous heat wave and it was the Dust Bowl, there was a bright red spot over the U.S. and Russia, and the rest was blue.”

According to “Heat Waves and Climate Change,” statistical analysis of the Russian heat wave of 2010 shows there was “an approximate 80% probability” that the record heat would not have occurred without climate change, “or alternatively the probability increased by a factor of five.”

The report also states, “Globally, extremely warm nights that used to come once in 20 years now occur every 10 years. And extremely hot summers, those more than three standard deviations above the historic average, are now observed in about 10% of the global land area, compared to 0.1 to 0.2% for the period 1951 – 1980.

“These trends cannot be explained by natural variation alone. Only with the inclusion of human influences can computer models of the climate reproduce the observed changes.”

Staying cool

A warming earth would have benefits. Last winter’s mild temperatures, for instance, meant lower heating costs throughout much of the United States.

The down side of global warming would be considerable, however. Parts of the planet now occupied might become uninhabitable if summer days and nights stay hotter longer, the researchers said.

“Respite from the heat is very helpful in coping, even just for a few hours,” said Howard Frumkin, dean of the School of Public Health at the University of Washington, during the conference call.

“That low temperature is the key way people are able to cope, and as the minimum temperatures rise, people lose the ability to get respite during the evening hours. . . When the ambient heat around a person becomes significantly higher than body temperature, it becomes difficult to dissipate heat.”

Poorer regions of the globe will have more trouble adapting to a warmer climate,

Frumkin said. “It depends on resources and other factors. Places with air-conditioning are going to be more resilient to extreme heat than paces like Delhi [in India].”

A fuels build-up

While the veracity, causes and possible impacts of climate change are hotly debated, of particular concern in the West is the effects a continuous warming trend could have on wildfires.

Colorado is seeing its worst fire season since the drought year of 2002. New Mexico is recovering from two record fires — one that burned 465 square miles and another that destroyed more than 240 homes.

Experts say the number of major wildfires and the length of the fire season has increased over the past 25 years, according to the Associated Press.

“There’s some evidence that the forestfire frequency has increased in the West, even where humans aren’t the direct factor in terms of ignition,” Oppenheimer said.

As summer temperatures go up, evaporation increases, said Steven Running, director of the Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group at the University of Montana Department of Ecosystem Sciences.

“A couple degrees of increased temperature increases evaporation,” he said. “It also lengthens the fire season. We are having major wildfires and it’s not even the season yet.”

Asked whether a fuels build-up in Western forests is also to blame, Running said it is certainly a factor.

“It’s a combination of decades of fire suppression, less active fire management and reduced harvesting,” he said.” We have a lot of forests in the West that have a lot of fuel built up.

“In the East, a dead tree rots away. In the West it doesn’t rot away. You find fence posts that are 100 years old. Dead trees literally sit there until a fire comes along.

“When you add accelerating tree mortality from the pine-beetle epidemic you have millions of dead trees standing there. You certainly can’t have a fire without fuel.”

But the experts said climate change is a factor as well in recent catastrophic wildfires. For one thing, warmer winter temperatures are allowing more pine-beetle larvae to survive into spring.

“That means those beetle populations wake up in the spring and can start the attack that much sooner and that much more aggressively, which provides that many more dead trees,” Running said.

Various types of bark beetles have devastated an estimated 40 million acres of forest nationwide.

Warmer nights exacerbate fire behavior as well. “Our night temperatures typically have been low in the Mountain West,” Running said, “and we now have night temperatures that will stay above 60 and even 70 sometimes. That really gives the fire energy through the night. It used to really lay down when it got dark and cold.”

He said firefighters and fire managers have told him they are seeing dynamics they’ve never seen, such as fires moving rapidly downhill and flaring up at night.

“I think it definitely starts with having so much more dead fuel and dead trees than we have ever had before,” Running said. “Across whole landscapes we have areas where threequarters of the trees are dead. I think that’s part of the differing dynamic.

“With the warmer temperatures at night and more evaporation, you have fuels that are just drier. A couple [less] percent of moisture content in wood makes the flammability go up.”

But Running and the other panelists refused to give a numerical estimate about how big a factor climate change is in wildfires. “It would be really dangerous to lob out a number,” Running said. “It wouldn’t be based on the kind of analysis and statistical rigor we wanted to put out.”

“Most of the scientists I talked to say it’s a contributing factor and that’s all we can say,” Hassol agreed.

Ecosystems transformed

A 2011 study by researchers at the University of California, Merced, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that global warming will likely cause more severe forest fires in the future. By 2050, years without major conflagrations will be rare, the researchers predicted, and forest fires are likely to cause “a major shift in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.”

The conference-call panelists agreed that wildfires and warmer temperatures could transform ecosystems.

“I think we’re going to see a fair bit of the Western landscape change in composition,” Running predicted.

“As these fires burn off large areas of landscape, something different is going to grow back. Areas of forest cover may return as sagebrush or chaparral shrub.”

Also of concern is the cost of future “superfires,” as they have been dubbed.

The percentage of the Forest Service’s budget devoted to firefighting has risen from 13 percent in 1991 to 48 percent in 2009, according to the Denver Post. That year it was nearly $2 billion.

“They can spend a couple million dollars a day on the size of fires we’re seeing in Colorado,” Running said.

Wildfires have many other costs in terms of homes destroyed, impacts to health from smoke and soot, and emotional impacts, the panelists said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimated the total costs associated with heat, drought and wildfire last summer at $12 billion, Hassol said.

“Climate change is already affecting extreme weather,” the “Heat Waves” report concludes. “The National Academy of Sciences reports that the hottest days are now hotter. And the fingerprint of global warming behind this change has been firmly identified.”

Published in July 2012

Life with Singers: An exhibit at The Farm showcases the family’s artistry

Clockwise from top left: Detail of hand-made leather chinks chaps by Marvin Singer; painting of a woman spinning wool, by Jeremy Singer, “Two Sheeps,” pen and ink, by Ed Singer. All are included in “Singer and Family,” which is on display at the Farm Bistro through Aug. 18. The Farm is at 34 W. Main in downtown Cortez, Colo.

Sometimes a genome just gets stronger, better and bolder as it passes into the next generation. So it is with the artistic skill emerging in three generations of the Singer family who are native to Gray Mountain, a vast monocline spreading across the western side of the Navajo Reservation between Flagstaff and the Grand Canyon. There, in the skirts of the rocky escarpment, is where Isabelle Singer, now 94, raised nine artistic children and a large flock of churro sheep.

She stills lives at home, and takes commissions for the weavings she has done since childhood. Many of her children and grandchidren have inherited her artistic talent, exhibiting throughout the United States and Europe. An avid fan of her family of artists, she often shows up at their feature art events and exhibits in border towns around the reservation.

Regional art patrons recognize Ed Singer, father, brother and uncle to the other artists in the exhibit. He shows frequently in the Four Corners region. His paintings and drawings grace many galleries and collections in Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, throughout the U.S., and in France and Spain.

“My parents always encouraged me to draw and paint,” says Singer. “When I wasn’t drawing on the large flat rocks by my home, my father would take me to the construction site with him and let me use left-over sheet rock. There was no limit to the size I wanted to draw when I was young.”

That fearless approach to subject matter allows him the freedom to paint large muralscale work when it fits his subject. One of the largest he’s done recently hangs in Pepperhead Restaurant on Main Street in Cortez. The commissioned portrait of his home, Gray Mountain, is on temporary loan for the benefit of the people of Cortez, where he lives and works part-time.

Monty Singer, Ed’s son, lives in Los Lunas, N.M. He is nationally recognized, an awardwinning figurative and landscape artist. His realist technique challenges the viewer to get close, consider how he, or any artist, can articulate surfaces as diverse as slick rock and supple skin with the delicate nuance of a medium as loose as dry pastel. For the family exhibit he sends a recent New Mexico plein-air landscape and drawings from a master class he attends every week. They will be hung in the second three weeks of the show.

A fine arts graduate of the University of Arizona, Jeremy Singer, Monty’s cousin, lives and paints in Tucson, Ariz. He has exhibited in numerous galleries in Santa Fe and Albuquerque and most summers you will find him in a booth at the Santa Fe Indian Market. He submitted a portrait of a woman spinning wool. Her hands, the spindle and the raw fiber beside her whirl before the canvas where he deconstructs the passive gaze of the viewer by offering, instead, a refreshing plastic visual energy in place of stagnant stereotypes. His constructivist approach breaks away from conventional treatment of traditional subject matter.

Marvin Singer, Ed’s brother, is a master leather-worker and a working cowboy. He understands the value of functional design and aesthetic construction. He worked more than a year building, by hand, the traditional chink chaps on exhibit in the family show. The combination of hand sewing, rawhide lacing, stamped and carved leather, silver conchos, fringe and rich quality of two-tone leather makes this a singular work of exceptional traditional Western art premiering in the exhibit.

Employing the vitality of bold colors and high contrast increases the visual movement in Michelle Tanaka’s oil painting, “Kurunda Falls.” She began the study for it while on a train ride into the rainforest near the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. The region is sister city to Flagstaff, where Tanaka lives. She describes her approach to painting as a fusion of cultural styles reflecting her Navajo, Japanese and European heritage. She is niece to Ed and Marvin Singer and a fine arts graduate of Coconino Community College. Her cousin, Jerrel Singer, paints at the forefront of weather patterns and earth elements, the rhythm of time and influence of natural color in the reservation landscape. He renders a deep sense of place, and the human fitness in the world he knows so well. A prolific painter and exhibitor, his work is showcased in many contemporary gallery exhibits. He lives in Flagstaff near his home on the rez.

There are nine more painters currently preparing for summer exhibits. They are scheduled to contribute work to the Singer Family show during the two-month exhibit period.

Published in July 2012

Firefighters complete burnout operations in Weber Fire (web only)

After two days of burnout operations on the northern perimeter of the Weber Fire, operations were effectively completed Saturday. That activity removed a significant portion of the remaining heavy fuels that were of concern to fire officials.

Officials report the fire size at 10,133 acres (15.8 square miles) and containment at 65 percent.  Acreage by ownership is:  BLM – 7,435 acres, Colorado State – 901 acres, and private property 1,797 acres.
Motorists along U.S. Highway 160 east of Mancos are advised to use caution on roadways, as visibility may be limited. Persons with asthma or other breathing difficulties are encouraged to stay indoors or temporarily leave the area until smoke diminishes.
This evening and for the next couple of days, firefighters will continue to mop up and patrol the fire perimeter.
Excess fire personnel will begin the process of re-assignment to other incidents or demobilization tomorrow.
Road closures and evacuation information can be obtained from the Montezuma County Sheriff’s Office at (970) 564-4999 or (970) 564-4996.
Information about this and other fires can be found at www.inciweb.org. Follow us on Twitter @weberfireinfo.

Published in June 2012

Ornamental livestock

I was sitting in a comfortable chair one evening, reading a chapter from a vintage Western, when I glanced out the window to see a horse cropping the grass along my driveway. I don’t own a horse. I don’t want a horse. Too many neighbors breed horses only to hang them like silhouettes against the horizon.

I went out to the porch for a better look, thinking I’d encounter a part-time cowboy wandering along the road. I called out to the empty horizon: Yoo-hoo! I thought I heard a snicker. It was only the nicker of a horse.

Acres of print have examined the plight of wild horses in the West, often referred to as mustangs, and I don’t mean to suggest the problem deserves any less attention. Finicky horse advocates will argue that the term “wild mustangs” is erroneous, because such horses aren’t wild, just feral, having been introduced by the Spanish centuries ago from domesticated stock.

But whether these horses fairly or unfairly compete for forage on public grazing lands or whether they are a native or invasive species is beside the point. The horse in my driveway had ribs I could have played like a xylophone and she was not wild, just worn out. A hungry horse should not have to canvas the neighborhood for a meal.

She politely glanced up, allowed me to approach, then went on with her business of cropping the grass. As I ran my hand along her neck and flanks, it was obvious my guest horse hadn’t missed just a meal or two. She’d been systematically ignored until her mere presence must have chided her owners into turning her out.

Wild horses may be scattered all across the West, but it’s the domestic stock being “set free” to find their destinies that worries me. Horse owners down on their economic luck think they can save bales of cash by letting their charges wander. The notion that horses, like feral dogs and cats, will find their own way is absurd. The notion that dogs and cats will find their own way is also absurd, but for now I’d like to discuss horses.

In the literature children are fed, the image of equine hug-ability is over-emphasized. “Black Beauty” and “My Friend Flicka,” to name a few, are stories that tug at the heartstrings and make every child want to hold a plastic replica of a dream they one day hope is transformed into flesh and blood. I don’t know how many youngsters actually receive ponies for their birthdays, but based on my own informal gallop poll, to many adults all across the West have not been able to rein in their urge to own a horse.

In Alice Walker’s book, the horses that are said to make the landscape more beautiful are not the ones strung for miles along our rural fence lines, pulling up the grass by the roots until paradise is reduced to an acre of bare dirt.

I found a plastic pail in the garage and filled it with oatmeal, then took a rope off a nail. One mouthful of oats and my mystery horse would have followed me anywhere. I followed the trail of horse apples along the road, all the way up to the highway and back again. Every neighbor’s horse rushed across their allotted pasture to shinny up to the wire, whinny and snort, as if gossiping about this stranger from the east side of oblivion.

We ended up back in my driveway, a poor excuse for a refuge, because my property is not fenced to contain a horse, not even a well-behaved one. Though my grass could have used a little more clipping, I remembered a neighbor who once visited my house to collect his truant bull. We get quite a parade of wandering livestock through our property for the simple reason that we don’t fence them out.

He said no, it wasn’t his horse. He offered to put her into a small pasture he’d loaned to his neighbor for quartering three of his horses until they’d cleaned up the grass. A sort of weed and feed negotiation.

As he worked at undoing the gate chain, I removed the rope from around my horse’s neck. I say “my horse,” but really she wasn’t anyone’s horse, not any more. She leaned her long head against my shoulder and held it there for a ponderous moment before I urged her into the company of strangers.

Back at home, I swore I’d get my gun if any pigs showed up. One week later — I swear it’s true — two young pigs hoofed it through our yard while I sat in the same chair reading a paperback novel.

I wouldn’t have believed it had there been three.

David Feela is a retired educator in rural Montezuma County, Colo.

Published in David Feela

Juvenile is suspect in fire start (web only)

An unidentified juvenile is a suspect in starting the Weber Fire near Mancos. The Montezuma County Sheriff’s Office has issued a press release stating that the investigation into the cause of the fire near Mancos, conducted by the BLM and sheriff’s office, “has revealed a juvenile as a person of interest.” The brief release said no further information would be forthcoming at this time.

Published in June 2012

Unsigned ballots could play role in DA’s race (web only)

With unofficial results showing challenger Will Furse ahead of incumbent District Attorney Russell Wasley by just 9 votes, the unsigned ballots sitting in the county clerk’s office could play a role in deciding the outcome.

Montezuma County Clerk Carol Tullis said Tuesday night there were 30 to 40 of the ballots in this mail-in election that came in unsigned. Those voters are contacted by the clerk’s office and have until July 5 to come in and sign the envelopes holding their ballots in order to have them counted. They would have the potential to change the outcome if those voters favored Wasley heavily.

Tullis said 4,632 ballots were counted Tuesday, a turnout of 44.5 percent. She said there was not an unusual number of people changing party affiliations to vote in the Republican primary, which had by far the most races, but there were many unaffiliated voters who declared a Republican affiliation in order to vote.

Unofficial results in the DA’s race, which includes both Montezuma and Dolores counties, had Furse at 1,917 votes and Wasley at 1,908.

In one of the other two races, Keenan Ertel trounced his two opponents to win the county commission seat in District 2. He nabbed 61 percent of the vote, while the other two candidates managed 39 percent between them. Creston “Bud” Garner of the 9-12 Project had 25 percent and Pat DeGagne-Rule, former chair of the local Republican Party, had 14 percent.

In District 3, former commissioner Dewayne Findley defeated 9-12 Project favorite Casey McClellan 59 to 41 percent.

 

Published in June 2012

Ertel, Findley are unofficial winners; Furse holds edge in DA’s race (web only)

Unofficial results from the June 26 primary in Montezuma County are:

County Commissioner, District 2

Keenan Ertel, 2271 votes, 60.74%

Bud Garner, 953, 25.49%

Pat DeGagne-Rule, 515, 13.77%

 

County Commissioner, District 3

Dewayne Findley, 2119, 59.27 %

Casey McClellan, 1456, 40.73%

 

DA:

Will Furse, Montezuma County, 1835 votes

Will Furse, Dolores County, 82 votes

Total for Furse:  1917 votes

Russell Wasley, Montezuma County 1792 votes

Russell Wasley, Dolores County, 116 votes

Total for Wasley:  1908 votes

Published in June 2012

Spruell calls report about fire’s cause ‘balderdash’ (web only)

Montezuma County Sheriff Dennis Spruell called a report that the Weber Fire was known to have been started by recreational target-shooters “nothing but balderdash.”

Monday evening in Mancos, Spruell told the Free Press that quoted remarks by La Plata County’s Butch Knowlton, director of emergency management, on the Durango Herald web site were premature.

Knowlton was reported to have told the La Plata County commissioners that the fire had been started by people target-shooting on public lands near Mancos. He was quoted as saying that bullets had ricocheted into dry grass, setting off the blaze.

Spruell said it’s possible the fire started that way, but that he had not been told that the cause was officially known. He said the report was “just a rumor.”

Late Monday evening, the BLM issued a press release stating, “The Weber Fire remains under investigation by the Bureau of Land Management Law Enforcement Officers and a special investigation team.
“An earlier announcement indicated the fire was human caused, but it is still under investigation and no official report has been released.”
The press release quoted BLM Tres Rios Field Manager Connie Clementson as saying, “When the investigation is complete an official announcement will be made by the Bureau of Land Management. We ask that our communities have patience as we complete our investigation.”

At the Monday evening fire briefing in Mancos, officials said the fire was 10 percent contained and that it had been quieter that day.

However, Spruell warned, “we don’t want to get lulled into feeling everything is OK.”

He praised firefighters’ efforts, saying, “We can’t give them enough kudos.”

Other developments:

▪ Road construction between Mancos and Cortez has been halted. Spruell said he called the construction company and its officials were extremely cooperative and agreed to stop operations for the moment.

▪ More than 200 people are now working the fire, Clementson said, up from 164 on Monday morning.

▪ Mancos Rural Water is still experiencing some outages because of high demand and excessive usage, Brandon Bell of the water company said. “We can only filter it so fast and send it down the pipes,” he said. “We are asking people to be a little bit conservative so we can keep people in water – not just in volume, but safe drinking water.”

▪ Firefighters will conduct burning operations at night to reduce fuels in the fire’s possible path. Incident Commander Joe Lowe said the firefighters will save pasture if possible, but that for the most part, they cannot engage the fire directly during the day because the flames are 8 to 60 feet high. “Firefighters can’t stand next to that. You have to burn the intervening fuels out of the advancing fire front.”

▪ One shed was said to have burned, but no homes.

▪ The fire has not jumped Highway 160.

▪ Firefighters continue to be concerned about communications towers in the fire’s path and are working to protect them.

▪ Weather for the next few days is expected to be hot and dry, with some possible dry lightning.

 

Published in June 2012

Tips from a California evacuee (web only)

By Cindy McCombe Spindler

Today, I have had a hard time doing anything other than watch the media coverage of the fires in Colorado. It is hard to see my home state get hit so hard. I have been thinking much of the two times where I was forced to evacuate my home in San Diego County.  During both times, I had young children with me.

If you are ready before the evacuation notice is put in place, you will be able to get out of your neighborhood before there are traffic jams. Before you get started, fill up your car or cars with gas.

The biggest lessons I learned is this – you are not your possessions. You have items that may mean a lot to you, but you would be able to create a very meaningful life if you and your family lost every physical possession you own. It might be hard to imagine, but it is true. I actually watched some people do this in San Diego.

I have a few lessons that I learned that I would like to share. Here they are:

 

1)     Don’t wait until you have an evacuation order to start thinking through your evacuation plan.  You are not being an alarmist by doing so. You are being pro-active. You can easily pack up your car, and then unpack it if you need to. That is not wasted time.

2)     Take pictures of every room in your house. Make a record of all the possessions you have by taking digital pictures. This will help for insurance purposes, but it will also give you peace of mind that you aren’t abandoning the life you have created.

3)     Get your paperwork in order. Grab all of your vital documents. Get your birth certificates, social security cards, medical insurance cards, house deed, marriage license, vaccination records, animal medical records, and all of your insurance information in line.

4)     Pack your short-term bags. Make a plan to pack enough possessions to get you through a few days. Pack your suitcase like you are taking a weekend trip. Unless you are really different than I am, clothing is easy to replace. Take a bit of laundry detergent with you. You will probably wash your clothes a few times before you return home. Have these bags easy to get in and out of your car.

5)     Get your medications in order. If you have time, refill your medication and pack what you have. You will not want to be scrambling to do this when you are out of your house. Prescription medications and prescription eyeglasses are two items that are more difficult to replace.

6)     Grab a sheet of paper and sit down for 10 minutes. Take your time and think back over your life. Think about what your possessions really mean to you. Only grab what you cannot replace. I have two examples for you – I have a collection of magnets that I have bought from every place I have visited for the last 20 years. I also have spent considerable time collecting Christmas ornaments that I am truly attached to.

7)     Grab your photos. Your photos document your life. You will want to have these. You can gather new possessions, but you can’t recapture photographic memories form your life.  I started my career at Kodak and truly know the value of photography.

8)     Organize your electronics. Most of us have a ton of information in our computers. I packed my computer both times, and I was happy I did so. It is easy to forget things like cell phone chargers. You can put the essentials you need to get by for the next few day sin your short-term bags.

9)     Get your animal cages ready. If you have animals, you should get everything out and ready. That includes food, medicine, leashes, water bowls, etc. When the evacuation order comes in, you should simply have to put your animal in the cage and go.

10) Acknowledge that you are going through an emergency situation. I heard stories in San Diego about people thinking they could not miss work or reschedule appointments. When disasters hit, allow yourself to be flexible with your schedule. This will pass. If you are used to being highly responsible, it might feel strange not to make all your daily commitments.

 

Those are my personal recommendations. Here is a list I found on the Internet that gives more information: http://www.phantomranch.net/comunity/evaclist.htm.

 

 

 

Published in June 2012

Self-discovery

This has been the year of discovering myself.

I spent 15 years losing any sense of myself in a bad marriage. By the time it ended, all I could say for certain was that I was a person who cried a lot. Not what I wanted to be when I grew up.

Then I became the person who mistakenly thought she was in love, and shortly thereafter, I became the person with the broken heart. Then I was a terrible, neglectful mother and lousy employee.

Even lousier friend.

So, when I finally got my feet back under me, it was like starting with an almost-clean slate. I was none of those people any more, yet I had no idea of who I was, so it was time to start figuring that out.

A few things remained: mother, boater, writer, and still the person who cries a lot.

So I’ve spent this time trying new things, seeing what fits and what doesn’t.

I tried socializing. I tried to drink wine. Tried to be outgoing.

Didn’t suit me – although now I can say that within the last 25 years, I have stayed up past midnight.

Once.

I’ve gone to the desert, a lot, alone. Put that on my list of things that do suit me.

I have become (once again) a runner. Love that.

I embraced “single-mother”; that’s really working for me – except for the part when I actually have to admit that there is another parent involved.

Discovered that I am probably not a skier any more, given that after five months, my head is still pounding.

I love my friends, love being with them, but can’t tolerate craziness any more. So one for the list of “Who I am” and one for “Who I am not.”

Apparently I am also a cold-hearted killer.

Slaughtering sheep, skinning, degutting, butchering, bagging, eating. All without batting an eye.

Then there are the prairie dogs. I could justify the sheep as “sustenance,” but shooting cute little pop-guts? Not so easily justified.

The first time I went, the first time I killed, I could write it off as, “One more piece in the exploration of self.” The second time I had to admit that I had explored and embraced.

Except I didn’t kill anything that second day.

Might be because I was tired after a day of branding; trying on “ranch hand” for size.

One piece of myself that I can easily say I didn’t lose during the marriage years was my extremely soft heart – especially when it came to innocent, highly discriminatedagainst little creatures like prairie dogs.

That vanished after the divorce, the nervous breakdown and the recovery.

I explored celibacy and cougarhood. Both of which have their pluses and minuses.

Someone said to me last night, “You’re not a mountain person – you just tried that because that’s what you thought you were supposed to be.”

At first I tried to deny it – but guess what, he’s right. I realize that besides the bits of me that got lost in the fray, there have been many things that I tried to be for so many years.

I have figured out that “wife” doesn’t really work for me, especially if you attach the word “house” to that.

I like to be comfortable – no more living in garages or tents; I want floors, roofs and walls. And electricity and plumbing.

I can actually be a decent employee when I am not rushing into work, late, after yet another major blow-up at home.

I prefer being funny to being mean, but I can say that I gave “biting” a really good effort.

I tried really hard to be the person who likes power-struggles but have since discovered that that’s not really me either.

They say that short of having a lobotomy, people don’t really change. So maybe I haven’t; maybe this is just the stuff that’s been stuffed coming out. Maybe it’s springcleaning for the things I am not.

Who knows? All I can say is that I am still a desert-lover, writer, single mom, killer, I don’t cry nearly as much and I am a for-shit housewife.

Suzanne Strazza writes from Mancos, Colo.

Published in Suzanne Strazza

Greg Kemp makes ballot (web only)

Greg Kemp, a longtime advocate of land-use planning, has successfully petitioned onto the Nov. 6 general-election ballot as an unaffiliated candidate for Montezuma County commissioner in District 3, the Mancos area.

Kemp will face another unaffiliated candidate, Larry Don Suckla, along with the winner of the June 26 Republican primary. No Democratic candidate has entered the race.

The Republican primary in District 3 features former county commissioner Dewayne Findley and developer Casey McClellan, a favorite of the local 9-12 Project/Tea Party.

Kemp told the Free Press he was notified by County Clerk Carol Tullis on June 8 that he had 280 valid signatures on his petitions, well over the 217 needed to qualify.

Published in June 2012

Going dry: Warm weather, early snowmelt raise fears of another drought like 2002

Colorado appears to be heading into a severe drought similar to the one in 2002 that brought raging wildfires and extreme water shortages across the state.

A weak winter snowpack combined with windy, hot weather during March, April and May have forecasters, firefighters and reservoir managers concerned.

“Current conditions are correlating with the 2002 drought,” confirmed Mike Chamberlain, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Grand Junction. “We had a light snow year, it all melted off a month early, followed by a persistent dry trend.

“One difference this year is that we’ve had some wet years leading up to where we are now, so that helps reservoir storage, whereas 2002 was preceded by several drought years.”

As a result in 2002, Colorado was hit by major wildfires, including the Missionary Ridge fire near Durango that consumed 73,000 acres; the Hayman Fire, Colorado’s largest, that scorched 138,000 acres; the Coal Seam fire near Glenwood Springs that burned 12,000 acres and the Long Mesa Fire at Mesa Verde National Park that torched 2,600 acres and threatened major structures.

In May there were several wildfires in Southwest Colorado and New Mexico. As of June 1, the Little Sand Fire near Pagosa Springs had burned 4,200 acres and the Sunrise Mine wildfire north of Paradox, Colo., had consumed more than 6,000 acres.

Meanwhile, in May of this year New Mexico experienced its worst wildfire on record. As of June 1, a massive lightning-sparked blaze in the Gila National Forest had grown to 200,000 acres, equal to 300 square miles.

Here in the Four Corners, the moisture content of wood fuels on BLM and Forest Service land is below normal, an indicator of drought conditions, reports Brad Pietruszka, a firefighter and engine captain with the BLM.

In the piñon-juniper forests of Phil’s World east of Cortez, moisture content for deadfall is at 4 percent, and at the trailhead of Boggy Draw north of Dolores, the moisture content for fuels is at 6 percent, half the normal amount for this time of year.

“We usually don’t see it this dry until the end of June, so we are about a month ahead,” Pietruszka said. “The likelihood for larger fires is greater than in the last few years.” He noted that recent frosts have killed off oak brush in the forest, adding potential fuel for wildland fires.

Reservoirs, rafting at risk

Just how bad the drought of 2002 really was is difficult to measure objectively. In a 2004 paper entitled, “Drought 2002 in Colorado – An Unprecedented Drought or a Routine Drought?”, researchers with the University of Colorado, NOAA and others wrote:

“In the historical perspective, the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s were more severe over parts of the eastern plains of Colorado, while the northern Front Range of Colorado was drier in the mid 1950s. Based on the instrumental record, however, observed statewide precipitation anomalies in 2001-02 were among the most severe of the last century.”

Droughts can be devastating to farmers and ranchers. In the early 2000s, irrigators dependent on McPhee reservoir suffered shortages due to the drought, as the water level in the lake sank to unprecedented lows. Ranchers saw grazing permits cut back or suspended.

The impacts to wildlife can be equally severe. Some warmwater nativefish populations and sport fisheries as well as mule-deer herds are only now beginning to return to levels seen pre-2002.

Recreationists likewise were hard hit by the low-water years. The Dolores River below the dam did not see a whitewater release for four seasons between 2001 and 2004 until the drought broke in 2005, finally allowing a boating season in the lower canyons.

The positive difference this year is that preceding years were much wetter. McPhee Reservoir has been refilling nicely over the last few years, and thanks to the carryover storage from 2011, there will be no shortages this irrigation season, reports Vern Harrell, Bureau of Reclamation liaison for the Dolores Project.

“It is extremely dry and looking a little like 2002,” he said. “Last winter we were 16,000 acre-feet higher than average, so that helped tremendously for this year’s storage.”

Peak irrigation demand, coupled with below- average inflow from the Dolores River, has drawn down the reservoir by 10 feet in elevation.

“We’ll have to have a good winter to make up the difference for next year,” Harrell said.

McPhee irrigators suffered shortages in 2002 and 2003, said Ken Curtis, an engineer with the Dolores Water Conservancy District.

However, this year looks better because “2002 had half of the Dolores inflow we have this season,” Curtis said. “But we will end up low this year and may have to go into shortage next year,” he added.

Years of relatively wet winters followed by sudden drought conditions this spring caught managers by surprise. To ensure full delivery of water shares, a previously announced whitewater boating release for Memorial Day weekend was quickly cancelled when the effects of hot weather and high winds on marginal snowpack were realized.

‘Conditions deteriorate’

The data comparisons between 2002 and 2012 are troubling, agrees Jim Andrus, a meteorologist and Cortez weather observer for the National Weather Service.

“This is the driest start since 2002, but not quite as nasty,” he said. “Those high winds act like a blowtorch on our snowpack.”

In 2002, March, April and May saw 54 percent, 14 percent, and 11 percent of normal precipitation, respectively.

For 2012, precipitation levels were 19 percent in March, 44 percent for April and just 3 percent of normal for May.

The first five months of 2002 brought in just 0.98 inches of precipitation, Andrus said. This year is at 2.5 inches thanks to an above-average February snowfall, but it is still way below the normal range.

The ocean-climate phenomenon known as La Niña/El Niño originates in the Pacific off the coast of Peru and has an influence on weather in the Southwest. When the waters in that part of the Pacific cool down, the phenomenon is known as La Niña, which has a tendency to bring dry weather to the Four Corners, the current trend.

Climatologists report a lingering La Niña condition, which is typically followed by El Niño, a warming of the Pacific that usually brings wetter weather to the Southwest. Currently 95 percent of Colorado is experiencing some level of drought, reports

Wendy Ryan, a climatologist with the Climate Center at Colorado State University. Statewide snowpack on April 1, which is generally used as a benchmark for water supply, was a mere 52 percent of normal. In 2002 at this time it was 53 percent of normal.

Droughts are rated on a scale from 0, which is mild, to 4, extremely severe.

“We’ve gone from an abnormally dry condition (D0) to a moderate drought (D1) and we expect conditions to continue to deteriorate,” Ryan told the Free Press. “New Mexico is experiencing a D2 or severe drought.”

Ryan said the one-month outlook for the Southwest shows below-average precipitation, and the three-month outlook for temperatures predicts hotter-than-normal levels.

“We hope to see a full transition into El Niño where the chances are better for wetter weather,” she said.

“Cooler temperatures and a good monsoon season, which favors southern Colorado, is our best hope as well.”

Published in June 2012

‘Reel’ Natives: A film festival comes to Shiprock

Native filmmakers share the spotlight

In 1939, film audiences watched as John Wayne jumped on a horse and galloped through Monument Valley in “The Searchers.” The film introduced beautiful red-rock Navajo land as the quintessential background for the Hollywood Western.

NANOBAH BECKER

Filmmaker Nanobah Becker shoots “6th World” in Monument Valley, Ariz. The film was selected for the third season of Futurestates television and for screening in the Rock with Wings Film Festival in Shiprock, N.M. Courtesy photo.

Seventy-three years later, Diné filmmakers have taken control of that presentation from behind the camera lens. Contemporary auteurs of the independent cinema industry, they are the youthful indigenous cadre of artists who write, act, produce, direct, teach, market and distribute their own work.

Native American film artists and their movies are in the spotlight at film festivals from NYC at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian to the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

Now, this summer, the Phil L. Thomas Performing Arts Center will host the first “Rocks With Wings” Film Festival in Shiprock, N.M.

“The Phil,” opens its doors June 7, 8, and 9 to rez film aficionados finally able to watch indigenous film in a Dinetah venue.

Graham Beyale, founder of the sponsoring group, Northern Diné Youth Committee, says he has wanted to make a festival since he participated in a film workshop at Shiprock High School. He was a sophomore then when he met Melissa Henry and Nanobah Becker. The filmmakers explained the power of movies as a vehicle for telling your own story.

Beyale volunteered throughout high school at The Phil, learning digital videography while recording all the performances there. He began to envision himself as a filmmaker.

He attended UNM to study media arts. “It was wonderful, but when I came back to Shiprock I decided to stay a few years to do something that would bring about some positive change in my home town. I thought I could do a film festival because that’s what interests me. But I found it was pretty difficult to do on my own and, well, the needs in my community were bigger than just a film festival.”

Instead he formed NDYC with a group of friends. The committee has grown into a major community organization, offering projects that empower youths between 19 and 29 to be leaders who serve and inspire pride in the nine chapters of the Northern Navajo Agency.

In Shiprock, NDYC has built a community garden, cleaned up a vacant lot and provided seating and picnic areas in the shade under their “Chei Cottonwood Tree.” They build volleyball courts and sponsor dodgeball tournaments, hold art workshops and provide activities for youth during school breaks. When they need money NDYC members sell pizza and Navajo tacos from a roadside stand.

After collaborating with the Healthy Native Community Partnership program and a digital storytelling workshop, they went out into nearby schools teaching the technology to the students. They do all of this through volunteer commitment and organizational meetings every Monday night at the Dropn Center without fail. No excuses.

Last winter the group built a drive-in theater in Nizhoni Park, across the highway from their headquarters. Navajo Tribal Utility Authority provided salvage electrical poles, but the group dug the holes, placed the poles upright and stretched two huge canvas drop cloths between them.

“We let people know on Facebook when we’re screening a movie. People just drive in and park. The admission is free, but we charge a little bit for the hot chocolate.”

The group became the vehicle to launch the first film festival. “We are ready to tackle the project,” Beyale said. “We feel there’s nothing we can’t do.”

Giddy-up

Hi Ho Silver, Mr. Ed and Trigger, meet Ross, the Navajo-speaking horse and lead actor of the enchanting short narrative, “Horse You See,” produced by Red Ant Films. In the movie Ross explains what it is to be a Navajo horse. Filmmakers Melissa Henry and Alfredo Perez, recent winners of the PBS Online Film Festival, are screening “Horse You See” at Rocks With Wings.

In a PBS interview, Perez advises hopeful media artists to tell their own story, not to copy what they’ve seen. “Post-modernism has its limits. Eventually you run out of movies to quote and pay homage to, and your audience is exhausted, hungry for new and different things. So just go with your own idea and make your own movie.”

Henry says that technology is a critical influence in the increasing strength of Native film. She recently received an artist residency at the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe, to work on “Mosi Lizhini” (Black Cat), the story of a Navajo cat who saves the universe. It will be Red Ant Films’ first feature movie.

Namesake

Producer-director Rick Derby began his movie about the Shiprock High School Lady Chieftains basketball team in 1989. It was a 13-year process to get it finished. But when it was released in 2002, “Rocks With Wings,” the film-festival namesake, screened in film festivals throughout the U.S. and Canada, garnering awards and recognition for the film and the players.

It began as a simple documentary of the remarkable story of the Shiprock High School championship seasons. But, Derby said in a telephone interview, “I thought I was shooting a movie about a successful basketball team. Instead it became a study of transformation, overcoming barriers.”

Coach Jerry Richardson landed his first teaching job in 1980 at Shiprock, at that time a depressed Navajo community that he thought had little to offer an African-American man. But the universe had a plan for Richardson. After three months on the job, he survived a near-fatal car accident, chose to stay and was handed the losing women’s basketball team.

The film won four awards in 2002, including the HBO Documentary Feature Prize at the the Urban World Film Festival, second place at the Rigoberta Menchu Tum Awards, second place at the First People’s Festival of Montreal, the Jury Award for Best Feature Film, and Visionary Award from The Native American Film & Television Alliance Film Festival.

As Beyale clicks on the YouTube trailer for the film, he says, “I don’t know if I can get through this without the same emotional response I always have. The lessons in the story are so powerful. It’s timeless inspiration and why we named the film festival after the movie. We’ll play it every year.”

Even though the story portrays a message of optimism about layered issues of race, culture, gender, and economic class, Derby admits it received some backlash in a rejection from Sundance that year.

“It is a film about a Navajo community made by a Biligaana (white person). But the racial discrimination in the movie is crosscultural,” he explains.

The movie will screen on Saturday evening during the festival.

Real role models

The 90-minute documentary, “Run to the East,” from Moxie Pictures and directed by Henry Lu, opens the festival on Friday night. It recently won Best Sports Film at the Red Nation Film Festival in L.A. It follows three Native American high-school runners throughout their senior year. The students run to earn scholarships that will take them off the reservation.

Dillon Shije, Sandia Prep High School and Zia Pueblo, Chantel “Tails” Hunt and Thomas Martinez, both from Navajo Pines High, are real. “Watching Tails, Thomas and Dillon’s story gives the kids on the rez role models and a chance to share their dreams,” says Lu.

Filmmaker Nanobah Becker is living her dream, working in Los Angeles most of the time now, but she grew up in the Eastern Navajo Agency. Her festival submission, “6th World,” is currently showing on television in “Futurestates,” a science-fiction series that highlights the works of seven cutting-edge indie filmmakers in its third season. The online site is also hosting a viewer voting competition for the audience award.

In Becker’s episode, Navajo Astronaut Tazbah Redhouse is a pilot on the first spaceship sent to colonize Mars. A mysterious dream the night before her departure indicates there may be more to her mission than she understands.

“There definitely are a growing number of Navajo filmmakers,” Becker said in an email, “and our audience is ever growing as well. It’s great to have a festival like this on the reservation so that our films are accessible to our Navajo audience.”

Eyes on Shiprock

Opal doesn’t take no for an answer. She’s the character in Ramona Emerson’s movie who is beaten up by the town bully and then takes matters into her own hands with the help of her girlfriend.

One of four writer-filmmakers selected to participate in the Sundance Film Festival’s Native Filmmakers 2010, Emerson worked with industry professionals in a five-day intensive workshop. Now she intends to bring Opal into the fold of the feature film.

Emerson’s awards and recognition are many, but, she says, “Right now in the world of cinema and media, while many strides are being made, there are still huge obstacles to overcome for the roles and images of women. Opal is an extension of my upbringing with my grandmother, mother, aunts and cousins, their strength.”

She is one of 30 writers selected to work with The Milagro at Los Luceros, in northern New Mexico, where she is finding the support to finish the feature-length script and fully realize the character of Opal and the two worlds that she lives in.

“The inaugural Rocks with Wings Film Festival is an exceptional concept,” she says. “In fact, the NDYC group is showing our leaders in Navajo government what they should be doing. Our leaders forgot about the people, they forgot about us and are more concerned about their own political careers and how many sheep they have.”

Emerson also sent the festival a selection of films co-produced with her husband, Kelly Byars, through their company, Reel Indian Pictures. “I told Graham he could show whatever of mine he wants. It’s the first year and we want it to grow into a major festival.”

Beyale is already planning for 2013. He posted a call for submissions for the “N8V Youth Film Comp!”, an awards competition at the Rocks With Wings Film Festival, next year.

“Film is not just entertainment,” he writes, “it is one of the most powerful vehicles to the human mind. … You have talent, but what messages are you are going to deliver to people?”

Published in June 2012

Ex-attorney turns to life of crime (writing, that is)

Local writer Chuck Greaves’ new mystery novel, “Hush Money,” is not to be missed. Greaves has created a feisty and fun main character in Jack MacTaggart.

CHUCK GREAVES

Local author Chuck Greaves

“They say when writing your first book to write what you know. I know law and horses, so I knew I wanted a mystery combining the two,” said Greaves.

MacTaggart, a young lawyer practicing in Pasadena, Calif., is asked to handle an insurance case for a client of a fellow lawyer at his law firm who is vacationing. The case involves the death of a champion show horse named Hush Puppy.

His initial investigation takes MacTaggart to the Los Angeles Equestrian Center (a place where Greaves has spent much time).

Did Hush Puppy’s owner, Sidney Everett, kill her horse in order to collect the substantial insurance pay-off, or did Hush Puppy simply die of an unfortunate exposure to halicephalobus deletrix?

In attempting to answer this question, MacTaggart uncovers a dirty blackmail scheme, finds himself a possible suspect in a murder, and entwines himself in a romance.

The twists and turns of “Hush Money” will leave readers delightfully surprised and the ending will leave them wondering when the next installment, “Green-eyed Lady,” will hit the bookstores.

Greaves is currently in discussions with an agency in Los Angeles to sell MacTaggart to a TV series. “I thought at first their intention was to turn ‘Hush Money’ into a series, but they actually just want to buy the character.”

“Green-eyed Lady” is another mystery starring, of course, Jack MacTaggart. It will be out next year.

Greaves had been practicing law himself in Pasadena for 25 years when he turned 50 and hit his version of a midlife crises.

“I asked myself if I wanted to practice law for another 25 years or do something I’ve always wanted to do, which is write a book,” he said.

After the two years it took him to write ‘Hush Money’ and after about 30 form rejection letters from possible agents, he began to doubt he would ever see his book published.

“I decided to set ‘Hush Money’ aside and write another book.”

So he wrote ‘Hard Twisted,’ a historical Depression-era true-crime saga that will be hitting bookstores in November.

“Hard Twisted” was inspired by the discovery of two skulls by Greaves and his wife while hiking in a remote region of Southern Utah.

It tells the true tale of a homeless man and his 13-year-old daughter in Oklahoma who begin hanging out with a Texas drifter just released from the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan. The father disappears, and the drifter flees with the daughter, whom he holds captive for a year. They wind up in Blanding, Utah, in the midst of a range war. The saga includes four killings in Utah and Palmer’s eventual murder trial in 1935.

Greaves decided to enter both books in the 2010 SouthWest Writers International Contest.

“Hard Twisted” won first place in the Best Historical Novel category, and “Hush Money” took first in the Mystery/Suspense/ Thriller/Adventure category. “Hush Money” went on to win the grand prize of the whole contest, the Storyteller Award.

“Suddenly I had agents calling me!” Greaves said.

Now he is pleased with his decision to retire from law and become a writer.

After a six-year stint in Santa Fe, he and his wife are happy to be residing in Montezuma County. The two live in McElmo Canyon, have two horses, and enjoy hiking, especially in Canyons of the Ancients.

Published in June 2012

Italian group’s upscale proposal raises water worries

Controversy has also greeted plans for a different proposed commercial development, just south of the Grand Canyon.

That development, slated for the Grand Canyon gateway community of Tusayan, Ariz., is a project of the Italian Stilo Development Group. It includes 3 million square feet of commercial space – featuring highend stores, fancy hotels, condos, a concert pavilion, spa, a Western dude ranch and Native American cultural fair – along with hundreds of homes at a mix of prices, meant partly for local workers.

Some of the strongest opposition has come from a highly active contingent of Tusayan-based activists. A March 13 recall election was directed against the Tusayan mayor and a city-council member accused of improper ties with the Italian company that’s behind it; they both kept their seats. Attorneys for a Tusayan citizens’ group fought unsuccessfully to keep a referendum on the ballot in May that could have reversed the city-council zoning approvals that paved the way for the development.

Officials at Grand Canyon National Park have also gone public with their wariness about potential impacts to Grand Canyon’s South Rim, just six miles away. And members of the Havasupai Tribe living in the bottom of the Grand Canyon – and downstream of the proposed development – say they’re opposed because of potential impacts to their water supply.

Havasupai water comes from the Colorado River, wells sunk into the Redwall-Muav aquifer, and seeps and springs that also flow out of the aquifer. It’s a huge aquifer, which supplies wells in Tusayan and other communities bordering the South Rim, as well as several uranium mines.

A 2004 USGS study of seeps and springs emanating from the Redwall-Muav aquifer suggests that any groundwater withdrawals at Tusayan will diminish spring and seep flows at some level and at some time, but it couldn’t nail down specifics due to the aquifer’s complexity.

For Havasupai Tribal Chairman Don E. Watahomigie, any threat to springs is unacceptable. He worries that the development will “deplete the springs that wildlife need. It would deplete the water that flows through the village down here.”

Matthew Putesoy Sr., the tribal vice chairman, added that water flowing from springs is used ceremoniously for purification during sweat lodges, as well as traditionally for irrigation.

And tribal council member Eva Kissoon pointed out that water from the Redwall aquifer helps feed the five picturesque waterfalls are the mainstay of tourism in Havasupai Canyon.

“This is our main economic force for our survival down here,” she said.

Tom DePaolo, director of North American operations for the Stilo Group, says the process to place a development in Tusayan actually began in 1991, with the original concept of Canyon Forest Village. “All through the 1990s, there was an amazingly comprehensive Environmental Impact Statement with the Forest Service, the park, the county and other stakeholders. There were nine environmental groups.”

At the time, the Stilo group had arranged for contracts to withdraw water from the Central Arizona Project – a pipeline that carries Colorado River Water to southern Arizona – and transport it by train from Phoenix to Tusayan.

“We spent nine years working with the environmental community, agencies and tribes,” he said. “We had letters of support from 21 chapters on the Navajo Nation. I probably hiked down to Supai 25 times, and we had a letter from them endorsing the project.”

Regardless, when a handful of Tusayan residents and business owners rallied to defeat the proposal – and won – everything stopped, DePaolo said. Without local approval, approximately $10 million spent on outreach and partnership-building went down the tubes.

So this time around, the Stilo Group has held off on public relations until later in the game.

Earlier this year, the Stilo group sued to keep the referendum off the ballot; they argued that the referenda were flawed because opponents did not properly register their political committee. A Coconino County Superior Court Judge agreed with them. The opponents appealed, but the appeals court sided with Stilo in late March.

Only now, following the judge’s March decision, is DePaolo restarting talks with his former allies.

In May, he said, his group held a meeting with the Forest Service to kick off environmental review. They’re interviewing environmental consultants. And they’re within days of forming a limited liability corporation with a company that specializes in water-resource development.

“We’re still working on the pipeline alternative,” DePaolo said. “I don’t think we’re near where we need to be to say we’re absolutely gong to be able to do it. We are committed to an alternative that doesn’t involve groundwater.”

Published in June 2012

Two Indian nations disagree on a development at Grand Canyon

When Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly went public earlier this year with a plan to develop the East Rim of the Grand Canyon for tourism, the backlash was swift and strong — especially from the neighboring Hopi Tribe.

GRAND CANYON EAST RIM

The East Rim of the Grand Canyon overlooks the confluence of the Little Colorado and Colorado rivers. A proposal for a major development on Navajo Nation land at the site has sparked controversy. Photo courtesy of the National Park Service.

“It can’t happen,” said Leigh Kuwanwisiwma, Hopi cultural preservation officer. “That’s all I can say to the Navajo Nation: you can’t do it.”

Shelly signed a memorandum of understanding on Feb. 17 with the Phoenix-based development group Confluence Partners, LLC, formerly Fulcrum, LLC. Early plans include a resort hotel, a restaurant, a tramway leading to a gondola and an RV park. The development would be set within sight of the place where the Little Colorado River flows into the Colorado River, an area known as the confluence and considered sacred to the Hopi, the Navajo and other tribes.

“It’s beautiful,” Shelly said of the proposed development, in late March. “It’s beautiful if we can get it done. It’s going to bring money, and it’s going to bring visitors here. It’s going to be something to see, something to visit.”

Shelly promised that “a lot of collaboration” would happen in the coming months and years, as plans for the tourist park move forward. But that might be a tall order. The unveiling of the plan elicited a guarded response from Grand Canyon National Park spokesperson Maureen Oltrogge, and concern from an annual gathering of Grand Canyon river runners in the weeks that followed. Since then, no new celebratory announcements have come out about the plan.

Place of emergence

Some of the strongest concerns about the development plans have come from the Hopi Tribe. With the help of the National Park Service, the Hopi maintain, use and protect a Hopi Salt Trail leading to the Colorado in the vicinity of the proposed resort. The Confluence is also the site of their Sipapuni, or place of emergence.

“Sipapuni and the Confluence are some of the most sacred areas to the Hopi people,” said Kuwanwisiwma. “The tramway goes right into the heart of the Hopi Nation.”

Kuwanwisiwma said the development proposal has been a topic of discussion in both the Hopi villages and during session last week of the Hopi tribal council.

“The council is supporting the religious leaders,” he said. “They’re opposed to it. Clearly the Hopi people and the government are united.”

But so far, he added, the discussions have been among the Hopi people – not between the Hopis and the Navajos.

“We found out through the media, like everybody else,” he said. “There was never any consultation with the Hopi people. It’s surprising that they never raised an eyebrow to consider Hopi interest in the area.”

And Kuwanwisiwma said part of the sentiment at Hopi includes dismay at what he called a “political irony” on the heels of vehement public protests by the Navajo and other tribes against snowmaking for a recreational ski area on sacred mountains near Flagstaff, Ariz.

“On one hand, the Navajo Nation is very visible in trying to protect the San Francisco Peaks, saying it’s sacred land,” he said. “On the other hand, they should consider this area very important.”

Balancing sacred and sovereign?

Shelly laments that the Navajo Nation depends on federal dollars for so much of its operations. “We need revenue,” he said. “We need to create revenue for ourselves, and be independent.”

He pointed out that billions of dollars are spent “when Grand Canyon tourists go through our homeland. We receive very little of it.”

The East Rim development, as it’s proposed, would bring 2,000 jobs for Navajo people and yield $70 million a year in gross receipts, he said.

“I want to make sure that our Navajo Nation sovereignty is intact,” Shelly added. “The National Park Service has been there for years. It’s our turn.”

Shelly said he suspects Grand Canyon National Park staffers may be opposed to the development if they fear it would draw business away from the popular South Rim. But so far, that concern isn’t coming up.

Oltrogge said Grand Canyon National Park hasn’t yet been involved in talks about the proposed development – officials there also got wind of the plans through the news media – but at this stage, that’s not so unusual.

“I would anticipate that they would be contacting us soon,” she said, “and we would look forward to having a dialogue with the Navajos about what they’re proposing and lay out any concerns we have.”

Save the Confluence

Shelly said the next stage of planning the East Rim development is to sit down with all neighbors of the proposal.

“A lot of study needs to be done,” he said, “a lot of collaboration. The people who reside on that land, the park, the Hopi, we need to sit down. We’re not forcing ourselves on this land. We want everyone to take part.”

Shelly might have the hardest time discussing the plans with some of his own people – the residents of the area where the development is slated to take place.

A news item on the web site of a local activist group called Save the Confluence reports that the Navajo Nation’s Bodaway/Gap Chapter, which borders the proposed development, recently voted 42 to 0 to reject it.

Navajo Nation spokesman Erny Zah pointed out that the report has appeared nowhere else; emails to Save the Confluence asking for confirmation were not answered by press time.

Francis Martin, a member of Save the Confluence, is a Navajo tribal member who grew up in the area of the Confluence.

“That’s where we were raised, right on the east side of the Grand Canyon,” Martin said. “To us it’s like our back yard. We have our livestock out there. We don’t want anybody to disturb that area. It’s a nice place. Some of the areas there are sacred.”

The area slated for development was once part of the Bennett Freeze, disputed land where the Hopis and Navajos both claimed ownership. Until the freeze was lifted in 2009, people couldn’t even build homes. Now, residents are starting to move back into the area – only to find there are developers eying the land alongside them.

Several of them, Martin included, have banded together in Save the Confluence, which opposes the commercial development. The group hosted a visit last year by President Shelly, and they say they feel betrayed at his apparent shift in stance about development in their back yards.

“We took him out there,” Martin said. “We took him out to the edge of the cliff where they wanted to start the development. I think he did a little prayer and he even sprinkled some of his corn pollen.”

Martin said Shelly at that time agreed that the area is sacred, and promised to oppose any development – so now they’re baffled that he’s signed an agreement paving the way.

Shelly said his earlier position was misunderstood – that he never promised there would be no development. He believes the Confluence residents are misguided in thinking that development would start right away. In reality, he says, it could take years.

“I’m going to hold a meeting with them and show them the process,” he said. “They think the construction is going to start tomorrow. But there’s a lot of work that needs to be done.”

Published in June 2012

‘Pooped out’ at the Grand Canyon: Should hikers have to pack ‘it’ out?

Park staff considers requiring backcountry hikers to pack out their waste

Zack Summit, from Prescott, Ariz., and a couple of his friends went backpacking in the Grand Canyon in early April. Overall they had a pleasant time. But Summit isn’t likely to forget his one early-morning surprise.

GRAND CANYON

Impacts to the national park’s backcountry from human waste and campsites are increasing, threatening the ecosystem, park staffers say. Photo courtesy of the National Park Service

“Actually when I went out in the morning at Granite Rapids to dig my hole and do my business, I picked a great spot and, lo and behold, a couple inches down, there was toilet paper,” Summit recalled. “So I had to move on. That’s what you get for going for a toilet with a view in Grand Canyon.”

The scenario is increasingly common, particularly in remote areas where backcountry toilets don’t exist and where sandy soils are less than ideal for human-waste disposal. And so, as Grand Canyon National Park moves through the lengthy process of revamping its backcountry management plan, staffers are considering one proposal that could cause quite a stink: In some remote areas, backpackers could be asked to bag it up, and pack it out.

Disproportionate impacts

Vanya Pryputniewicz is an outdoor-recreation planner at Grand Canyon who has worked most recently on the park’s rivermanagement plan, an effort separate from the backcountry-management plan that has recently gone through the revision process.

As part of her job, Pryputniewicz monitors the impacts of the regulations that govern the behaviors of river runners, mostly, and makes recommendations to tweak them if unwanted impacts show up on the land.

Researchers at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff and Prescott College, a little father south, have been analyzing the monitoring data that Pryputniewicz and her team have been collecting. And they’ve noticed an interesting trend.

“The backcountry access sites that are shared between backpackers and river runners are the ones where we see most of the impacts,” Pryputniewicz said. “We see far greater incidences of improperly-disposedof human waste, ground fires, and sometimes … unwanted campsites in sensitive areas.”

On the surface, it looks like visitation in Grand Canyon is comparable between backpackers and river runners. In 2010, for example, there were 37,000 backpackers with overnight permits and 22,500 river runners. But river runners’ trips are generally longer, so by far they spend more “user nights” in the canyon – about 10 times as many as backpackers.

Still, their impacts pale compared to those of backpackers. That’s due partly to the fact that river trips carry toilets with them as they travel through the corridor; they don’t leave their poop, or their toilet paper, behind.

Not so in the backcountry. And the more one gets off the beaten trails, the more it’s likely to be a problem.

“In the corridor we have conceded to a higher level of visitation and have managed appropriately by providing trails, rangers, ranger stations and toilets,” Pryputniewicz said. “At places like Hance, Cardenas, South Canyon and Granite, we don’t have toilets and we don’t have a big ranger presence. And that’s where we see the problems.”

Of all people in the park, Pryputniewicz may well know the most about the issue of human waste. She likes to joke she has an imaginary degree that’s not highly coveted.

“In my widely varied and checkered career past,” she says, “my greatest achievement may be earning a master of fecal arts as a result of nearly a decade of maintaining backcountry toilets at Grand Canyon.”

Pryputniewicz says there are several ways to tackle the waste problem: the park could build more toilets, or backpackers could bag their waste and pack it out.

The former idea has Zack Summit’s vote.

“The idea of adding 10 pounds of fecal matter to my backpack and walking out with it in 70-degree heat really would affect my experience,” he said. “It would really make it less pleasant to be here, and so I think maybe more composting toilets down in the backcountry would be a really excellent solution.”

But Pryputniewicz says adding infrastructure like toilets can impede the wilderness quality of backcountry areas. And then there’s the intrusion and the staggering expense of river trips, hiking trips or helicopter flights to rid those toilets of the accumulated waste.

Besides, if climbing out of the Grand Canyon with a 10-pound bag of your own poop sounds distasteful, imagine being the staffer charged with emptying the backcountry toilets. At the ever-popular Indian Gardens, for example, Pryputniewicz once cleared out 22,000 pounds of human waste.

“You do that one with mules,” she explained. “You get your mules together and ride down the trail … and then you get on your Tyvek suit and booties and a mask and goggles and big rubber gloves, and you open up the bottom of the toilet, get a shovel and start digging out the waste. And there’s a lot of handling involved. And it’s very intimate.”

Time to think

A mandate to pack out your poop in the backcountry isn’t unheard of: Mount Rainier and Denali national parks, Mount Whitney, the U.S. Forest Service’s Mount Shasta and Mount Hood, and even the BLM’s Paria Canyon near the Arizona/Utah border all require people to pack out their poop.

In fact, it’s such a popular requirement that there are three manufacturers of human- waste removal systems, commonly called “WAG bags” after one of the companies. The others are ReStop and Biffy Bags.

Even if the pack-it-out rule does reach Grand Canyon’s backcountry, visitors will have time to warm up to the idea. The park expects to come out with a draft of the backcountry-management plan in spring 2013, and the public will get ample chance to comment on whatever waste-management strategies staffers end up recommending.

Meanwhile, Pryputniewicz hopes Grand Canyon’s backcountry users will consider what they’re willing to do to preserve their wilderness experience – and the beauty of an incomparable area.

Published in June 2012

Garner touts liberty, limited regulations

CRESTON "BUD" GARNER

Creston "Bud" Garner

Creston “Bud” Garner is ready to hit the ground running if elected as the Montezuma County commissioner from District 2 (Cortez). Two and a half years of faithfully sitting through the commission’s Monday meetings have prepared him for the job, he says.

“The other candidates would come for a specific agenda item and leave,” he said. “I’ve stayed for the whole meeting for almost three years. During lulls I ask questions. I think I have a good general feel for the behind-the-scenes stuff. I will have zero learning curve.”

Garner said he has been surprised to see “the way neighbors get crossways of each other and use provisions in the land-use code as a weapon.”

In the past, he said, people used to go and talk to their neighbor and try to work conflicts out. “Now we have to have committees and commissions and boards to do that for us. “

Garner is facing Keenan Ertel and Pat DeGagne-Rule in the June 26 Republican primary. The winner is essentially assured a seat on the commission, as no Democratic or unaffiliated opponents have come forth for the general election.

Garner, the emcee of the local Tea Party/ 9-12 Project chapter until he stepped down to run for office, is retired after working in the telephone business and as a co-owner of a gourmet bakery and deli. He is a staunch advocate of small government and freedom from most regulations and taxes. In his campaign literature he describes himself as “Christian, constitutional, conservative and pro-life — period.”

He acknowledged that there is somewhat of a paradox involved when a vocal critic of government seeks to join the government that he criticizes. But he said it makes sense.

“If somebody holds my general view of things, that the government has a very limited role in its function and its authorities, and sees how it’s being expanded and expanded, shouldn’t someone like me try to put brakes on that a bit?”

If elected, Garner

would be careful about spending taxpayer money, even the sort that comes as grants. Generally, commissioners have accepted such funding with no qualms, but Garner said he would look closely to the source of and need for the grant.

“That doesn’t mean I wouldn’t vote for some of them. There are certain funds, both state and federal, that are dedicated funds set aside for specific purposes to local governments. I would still look at those carefully.”

For example, he would oppose accepting certain law-enforcement grants such as the COPS (Community Oriented Policing Services) grants designed to put more officers on the ground around the country. The grants provided 100 percent funding for new officers for three years, but at the end of that period, the officers had to be retained and

paid for by the local government. “At the end of this period, you either cut your budget in other areas or raise taxes to pay for the policeman, so it comes with more problems than solutions,” Garner said.

He said Sheriff Dennis Spruell has applied for numerous grants, but few have been taxpayer-funded. Many are private, he said, and many others come from the state gaming fund. “People that go to casinos do so voluntarily and part of that goes to the state in the form of taxes, so it’s a voluntary contribution.” He has no problem with privately funded grants.

Garner also would take a hard look at regulations, existing or new.

He said he would not try to get rid of the current land-use code in its entirety, but, “I want to make it work.” The laws should have a reasonable relationship to health and safety, he said.

One thing he would like to change involves the private parcels that were called “unzoned” until they were renamed as “historic-use zone” under recently adopted changes to the land-use code. Such tracts are essentially locked into the existing land use unless the owner comes to the county for permission to change uses.

“You are allowed one use as of 1998, when the code was adopted,” Garner said. “There is no reasonable relationship of that type of zoning code to health and safety. It has taken your basically unfettered right that you had prior to the passage of that code, and you are restricted to one use. So that needs to go away.”

Garner said he is troubled by the way the county’s Landowner-Initiated Zoning system has changed over time.

“LIZ was envisioned as a totally voluntary system. There is now a clause [adopted in May with other changes] that the commissioners may designate a zoning code. It took us 14 years to go from totally voluntary to ‘may designate.’ How long will it be before the commissioners say, ‘shall’? That’s a natural progression of things and it will happen, but it won’t happen with my vote.”

Garner said he does support keeping the current requirement that commercial and industrial structures adhere to a building code. “I think that’s completely appropriate because the unsuspecting public has a reasonable expectation of safety.”

But private residences don’t need the UBC, he said, because they already must meet strict standards regarding septic systems, plumbing and electrical wiring. “Why apply the building code to somebody building a house? The prospective buyer can hire an inspector.” He compared the situation to buying a used car. “You take it to your me chanic, right? The alternative is an oppressive and micro-managing government, and I don’t want to go there.

“A community has a duty to see to the health and safety of its members and no more.”

Garner likewise was skeptical of the need for a dog-at-large ordinance, something the commissioners adopted in 2010 as an amendment to a previous ordinance. The ordinance requires dogs to be either physically restricted to their property or in the presence of their owner.

“Leash laws are largely unenforceable,” he said. “I think I would not have voted for that. Responsible owners didn’t need the leash law, and irresponsible owners won’t follow it unless there’s a complaint.

“We have a national misconception of law enforcement. It does not prevent crime. It solves crimes.”

Asked his view of the performance of the current board, Garner said, “They have been human commissioners.” He praised their management of the budget but said, “When it comes to dealing with the public-lands issues, I think they have been misguided.”

Garner has been among those pressing the commissioners to take an aggressive stance in pursuing claims to roads across public lands under an old statute called RS 2477 and to try to make the Forest Service and BLM follow county procedures when they want to close any road on public lands.

Asked how much money he would be wiling to spend to go to court to press road claims, Garner said, “Your question contains an erroneous assumption. We do not need to go to court. We already have the legal authority to control those roads. They do not have the legal authority. Let them take us to court.”

He added, “The phrasing of your question is reflective of the view of the current commission. Our state law already describes what is a road and describes who may close it and it’s only a municipality or a county,” except in emergencies.

Garner and others cite Colorado Revised Statutes in support of their view. One law provides that anyone “other than a governing body of a municipality or county” who closes “any public highway. . . that extends to any public land, including public land belonging to the federal government, . . .without good cause therefor, commits a class 1 misdemeanor. . .” Public highways are defined as, among other things, “All roads over the public domain, whether agricultural or mineral.”

“That’s what the law says in the state of Colorado and we should enforce it,” Garner said, “and if the federal government doesn’t like it, let them do what they need to do.”

Garner said he is not calling for the county to take over maintenance of Forest Service roads, nor is he saying all roads on public lands must stay open. He just believes the county commissioners should have the final say about closures on federal lands. Old logging routes, for instance, may need to be closed after a timber sale is finished, but the county should decide that, he believes. “All I ask is that it be done through the legal process.”

Garner said the ultimate goal of the federal agencies is to shut down all access to public lands and preserve the areas as wilderness. “The intent is to shut public land down to all use. No use at all, even hikers. That will be the ultimate goal. Let’s shut the mines out this year, let’s shut the cattlemen out, then the motorcycles. That’s the progression. That’s the goal.”

If elected, Garner said, he will adhere to his personal principles as described in his campaign literature. His brochure says he believes “in personal liberty and responsibility from the bottom up, not oppressive government from the top down.”

It also describes him as “a Republican who believes in, and will uphold and defend, our founding principle of liberty — first, last, always.”

Published in June 2012

Ertel advocates principle, personal responsibility

KEENAN ERTEL

Keenan Ertel

As president of Ertel Funeral Home in Cortez, Keenan Ertel often becomes acquainted with people under the worst of circumstances. Nevertheless, he is a popular figure in the county – something he attributes to his efforts to make sure the grieving families served through his business are treated with respect and kindness.

“People don’t come to us because they want to, but hopefully the relationships we have formed have been positive, not negative.” Ertel, who has been with the funeral home since 1978 (he and his wife bought it from his father in 1993), said he has learned much from his experiences.

“In my job I’m brought into contact with all strata of life here. I’ve gotten to know a lot of different people, and I’ve learned from them.”

Now he hopes to take those acquaintanceships and lessons and use them to help him serve as county commissioner. Ertel is vying with Pat DeGagne-Rule and Creston “Bud” Garner for the District 2 commission seat. All three are Republicans; the winner of the June 26 primary is virtually guaranteed the seat, as no general-election opponents have come forth.

If elected, Ertel will leave the family business, letting his daughter and son-in-law take over. “I was going to retire in January 2014, so if elected I will move that to 2013,” he said.

He said the complexity and magnitude of the commissioners’ job is such that he isn’t sure he could juggle it along with his other position. ”I will feel much better about serving the community if I can devote my full attention to this job,” he said.

However, he stopped short of saying the position should be a full-time one; he believes other commissioners have managed to serve well even while running businesses.

Ertel said he likes the fact that the current commission has been very fiscally responsible and praised their purchase of the former First National Bank building as “one of the buys of the century,” but admitted he hasn’t been to enough meetings yet to evaluate them on most of their other decisions.

One of the issues he would most like to work on is business growth and development. He is dismayed by the number of people who are struggling to get by in Montezuma County.

He realizes the commission’s ability to promote economic growth is limited but wants to pursue whatever opportunities there may be.

“If there are venues available to me as a commissioner to promote business and economic activity to maybe free people from social services, or to allow our young people to come back here and bring up a family and do well economically, I want to help. I don’t know how the commissioners can help, but that will be something I will certainly investigate.”

Ertel would like to work with the private Montezuma County Economic Development Association. “That council has some very talented businesspeople on it. Maybe they can work with the commissioners and locate economic opportunities.”

Ertel was born and raised in the county and has lived here all his life except for a few years out of the area when he was pursuing his education. He has a B.A. from the University of Colorado and a mortuary-science degree from the Dallas Institute of Mortuary Science in 1980; he was class valedictorian.

He served on the Cortez City Council from about 1986 to 1990 (he hasn’t lived in the city since then), has served on the board of the Cortez Fire Protection District about 15 years (not all in sequence), and has been on the board of Citizens State Bank since 1988.

He makes no bones about the fact that he has some catching-up to do on the issues, but he is eager to learn and receptive to different ideas.

He has attended meetings of the local Tea Party/9-12 Project and the Southwest Public Lands Commission, a recreationalaccess advocacy group, to learn about public-lands issues. “There are some very vocal people in those organizations. I’m getting a pretty good education on what some of the issues are. There are some very dedicated and capable people.”

Ertel described himself as “probably a bit more of a conservative Republican,” but said he prefers not to be labeled. “I would like to be a Republican that’s based in principle and value.

“I try and base everything I do on some kind of principle.”

One issue various commissions have wrestled with over the years is how much weight to place on the comments of people who come to public hearings, frequently to speak against proposed developments, as opposed to the “silent majority” that doesn’t show up.

Ertel said in considering any proposal, it’s important to first consider the people who will be most directly affected. “Their concerns have to be weighed, along with, will this gravel pit or whatever it is be an overall beneficial activity for the county of Montezuma? Will it help alleviate some of the high cost of gravel? Increase competition? Employ people?

“Weigh the pros and cons, then make the best decision you can possibly make on what is overall the best for the county. I’m sure it will be fraught with difficulty.”

And, of course, the decision has to be made in alignment with the state and U.S. constitutions, he said.

Ertel is receptive to the idea of having some commission meetings or public hearings in the evenings. “Maybe you could have part of the meeting during the day and then have an evening session. I think that would give more access to more people.”

Asked about the fact that the county has no sales tax, Ertel said he would have to think long and hard before ever proposing that it seek one. “Sales tax is the most equitable tax there is. Not that I am necessarily in favor of taxation, but of all the taxes – property, use excise – the sales tax is the most equitable. If the county were to implement a sales tax maybe we would need to alleviate some taxes in different areas.”

Any new tax would probably be for a specific purpose, he said, such as adding to the jail. But, he said, “Here we are talking about expanding our jail and we can’t expand our schools! There’s something wrong there!”

Ertel said his philosophy strongly favors personal responsibility, “which we as a country have forgotten about. It starts from our government trying to write laws to govern everything. You can’t legislate morality, ethics, values, personal responsibility.

“Let me make myself clear. I am a person that is in favor of less government, not more. I will do whatever I can to reduce the intrusion of government regulation in people’s lives.”

And, he added, he wants to serve the county.

“I think whoever runs for the seat of commissioner — hopefully they are running because they want to be an effective person in the county and want to do things for the benefit of the county, not necessarily benefiting themselves,” he said. “I hope we are all for the betterment and the promotion and advancement of the county rather than advancement and personal recognition.”

Published in June 2012

DeGagne-Rule offers experience, knowledge

PAT DEGAGNE-RULE

Pat Degagne-Rule

Pat DeGagne-Rule isn’t one for sitting on the sidelines.

She is a member of the Cortez Cemetery District board, a member and former treasurer of the Southwestern Cowbelles, a former member of the Cortez Cultural Center board, a member and former president of the Republican Women’s Club, and a member of Kiwanis.

She served one term on the Cortez Fire Protection District board – she lost her bid for re-election in May –and was chair of the local Republican Party Central Committee until she stepped down to run for county commissioner in District 2 (the Cortez area). She faces Keenan Ertel (profiled on Page 7) and Creston “Bud” Garner (profiled on Page 8) in the Republican primary June 26.

“All these organizations are important for our area,” she said. “And being involved in them has let me know more about the community. I can see the community as a whole, because I’ve been involved in it – not just a sliver.”

Being on so many boards has given her experience working with budgets and managing money, she said, and she’s also familiar with “what a road is and how to maintain it” through her years of involvement in Mancos Redi-Mix and Diesel Technology, businesses she and her husband owned but later sold.

But DeGagne-Rule faces some obstacles in her quest for the commission seat.

One is the fact that the seat she’s seeking is being vacated by her husband, Larrie Rule, who is term-limited. That has led to talk of a Rule family “dynasty” and an effort to circumvent the wishes of local voters, who have repeatedly rejected measures that would have lifted term limits for county commissioners.

DeGagne-Rule is finding that she has to keep repeating that she isn’t a carbon copy of her husband. “I am running after my husband, but I didn’t agree with everything that he did. The voters are not getting another four years of Larrie. We are two totally different people. I really hope they do look at me seriously.”

Her husband’s position did help her understand the job, she said – as well as its limitations. She said other candidates sometimes “step out of bounds and talk about things the commissioners don’t have power to do” and promise things that a commissioner can’t deliver.

“People think commissioners can do anything they want” – for example, firing workers in county departments or getting someone’s road paved. “The commissioners don’t hire and fire people – they have two people [the county manager and attorney] they have control over,” she said. “Even if they did, it takes two commissioners to vote for something.”

She said it hurts her campaign when other candidates say such things, “because I won’t tell an untruth and say I can do something I can’t.”

Another obstacle DeGagne-Rule faces is that she is a woman seeking a job that has belonged solely to males throughout Montezuma County’s history, with one exception: Helen McClellan, who served a single term in the 1990s. Cheryl Baker, the only other woman to run for commission in the county, lost to Rule in 2004.

DeGagne-Rule said she has been asked whether she wouldn’t be better off running for clerk or treasurer.

“We haven’t had very many women run here, and I’m not sure why. I did some research and statewide, 24 percent of the commissioners are women. People should look at the person, not what sex they are. You have to look at the person’s qualifications.”

DeGagne-Rule said she has no special issues or set agendas. She thinks the county has been run well of late and wants to continue that.

She likes the recently adopted changes to the landuse code that included renaming unzoned parcels “historic-use zone” to better reflect how they are actually managed and waiving the $500 fee for owners of historic-use parcels to come in and choose a zone during a specific time frame.

There was a common misperception because of the name “unzoned” that people in that category could do whatever they wanted on their land, and it was not true, she said.

“I think a lot of people stayed in the unzoned category because they thought they were exempt from regulations, and it was, ‘No, you’re in a category’.”

Land-use policy is one of the county’s most controversial issues. DeGagne-Rule said when it comes to subdivisions or commercial- industrial proposals, she will weigh all the arguments. A common conundrum for commissioners is how much weight to give to the comments of people who show up at public hearings.

“You have to give respect to the ones who show up, but you still govern by the law and if that proposal is within the scope of the law.”

She would like to encourage more people to comment on proposals by sending letters, perhaps by having a drop-off box in the county courthouse or a link on the county’s web site.

She emphasized that the commissioners should “look to the county as a whole and make decisions for the entire county, not just a handful of people.”

Some people have called for the county to have meetings, or at least public hearings, at night. Rule said that isn’t as easy as it sounds.

“You have to bring mikes, staff – you have people working after hours. During the day you have access to records.”

However, having public hearings at night might be feasible because they involve just one subject and a variety of records wouldn’t be needed. “I’m not inclined to do it for other stuff because of the extra cost.”

DeGagne-Rule describes herself as a conservative Republican but said party doesn’t matter much in the job. “Once in office you represent everybody. I will treat everybody the same. The party is forgotten.”

She attends meetings of the local 9-12 Project. “I believe in a lot of what they say. I’m with the Constitution 100 percent. But I think they get a little radical sometimes.”

One of the issues on which the 9-12ers have been most outspoken is motorized access to federal public lands. DeGagne-Rule said turnover within the BLM and Forest Service has harmed relationships recently. “Managers for the Forest Service were coming and going like a revolving door. The BLM and Forest Service split up [separating some functions that they had been doing jointly]. We don’t have consistency.

“How many times have we started over with a new [Dolores District] manager? That’s not good for the Forest Service or for us or for the people that are forcing things to happen. When you go to the table to talk to them, you want to see the same people.

“Now we’re going to have two new commissioners. Until we have the players in place and sit down at the table and know we’re not going to change personnel for six months or more, you’re not going to get anywhere.”

DeGagne-Rule said she hopes voters will give the candidates a thorough vetting before making their decision.

“I would hope people would really look at the candidates. We are different. I’m not a household name but I think I would be the best for the job. I’m more level-headed, conservative, believe in the Constitution, and I will look to the county as a whole, not just a part of it. I’m very passionate about this place.”

Published in June 2012