School board takes on dress code policy

TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
Tooele runs
away with
the win at
Stansbury
See A10
TOOELE
SERVING
TOOELE COUNTY
SINCE 1894
www.TooeleOnline.com
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
School board
takes on dress
code policy
Vol. 122 No. 31
$1.00
District currently has 16 different
dress codes; officials want just one
by Tim Gillie
STAFF WRITER
Hats, headbands, bandannas
and hairstyles. Tank tops and
visible underwear. T-shirts with
lewd messages and shorts and
skirts that are — too short.
These are a few of the things
the Tooele County School Board
may consider as it drafts a new
district-wide dress code for students.
The board voted at its Sept. 8
meeting to start the process.
The school district’s current
dress code policy leaves the
decision on student appearance
up to each school, according
to Scott Rogers, Tooele County
School District superintendent.
A parent recently asked Rogers
why dress codes vary from school
to school. The question prompted him to review the myriad of
dress codes in the district, he
said.
“Our current policy essentially
says that each school develops
their own policy,” Rogers said.
SEE CODE PAGE A9 ➤
2015 BUSINESS EXPO & TASTE OF TOOELE
Officials seek ways
to boost habitat for
the sage-grouse
by Jessica Henrie
STAFF WRITER
Representatives from several
state and federal agencies came
together in Tooele City last week
to discuss options for boosting a
local population of greater sagegrouse.
While some variation in a
sage-grouse population is normal, state biologists are worried
about a group of birds living in
PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE
the Sheeprock Mountains whose
numbers continue to decline,
said Lorien Belton, the facilitator
of several sage-grouse working
groups, including the local West
Desert working group for Utah
State University’s CommunityBased Conservation Program.
The Sheeprocks are in southeastern Tooele County near
Vernon in Rush Valley, and
SEE HABITAT PAGE A9 ➤
District sees gain in
student enrollment
by Tim Gillie
as of Friday, compared to 13,884
students enrolled on Oct. 1,
2014.
Tooele
County
School
That’s an additional 137 stuDistrict’s fall student enrollment dents, or a 1.0 percent growth
has rebounded from last year’s rate.
1.7 percent drop to a 1 percent
The school district’s enrollincrease this year, according to ment dropped in 2014 by 223
a preliminary enrollment report students in the fall of 2014 as
UV INDEX
released by the district last a new charter school, Scholar
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
week.
Academy, opened its doors,
There were 14,021 students
SEE ENROLLMENT PAGE A3 ➤
enrolled in the school district
STAFF WRITER
W
Th
F
Sa
Su
The 12th annual Business Expo and Taste of Tooele was held Sept.
10 at Tooele City Park. Danny Marz (top) offers samples of the Pit
Stop Coffee Shop’s sugar cookies. Tooele Applied Technology College
student Marina Clarke (above) styles Gwen Salazar’s hair. Bonneville
Brewery manager Wendy Ricci (above right) tells Leah Thayne about
the restaurant’s offerings. Evelyn Hawley (right) with Millennial
Massage gives David Gunderson a free massage in the booth.
M
Tu
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™
number, the greater the need for eye and skin
protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10
Very High; 11+ Extreme
Drug ‘take back’ events to help rid homes of old medications
ALMANAC
Partly sunny and
pleasant
76 56
ATHER
Plenty of sunshine
by79
Steve53
Howe
Abundant sunshine
Statistics for the week ending Sept. 14.
Temperatures
High/Low past week
92/50
82/56
Pharmacy in Tooele City,
71.9
average temp
past week
The Normal
Tooele
City
Police 68.69:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Daily Temperatures
Department
will participateHigh
in Low The second collection
Normal high/low past week
80 57
help youAverage
safely
dispose
temp
past week of it.
STAFF WRITER
If you have any unused medication in your home, prescription drug take back events in
Tooele County this month can
two prescription drug collections in the next coming weeks.
The first event will be held
this Saturday, hosted by Holt’s
Tue Wed Thu
WEATHER
See
complete
forecast
on A9
Dugway
65/49
Lake Point
67/55
Stansbury Park
Erda 67/54
Grantsville
66/53
Pine Canyon
67/54
57/46
Bauer
Tooele
65/52
65/53
Stockton
63/52
Rush Valley
Ophir
64/48
61/48
Fri
Sat
(in inches)
Precipitation
AIR QUALITY
Tuesday
from
will
take place on Sept. 26 at Tooele
Applied Technology College at 88
S. Tooele Blvd. during the Senior
Expo from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The
event coincides with the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Agency’s
semi-annual National Take Back
Day, with drives occurring across
the country.
Tooele City Police Officer Tanya
Turnbow said the drive ensures
medication doesn’t end up in the
wrong hands. There have been
home and vehicle burglaries in
the city where prescription drugs
were stolen, she said.
“We want the public to be
aware of how important it is
to properly use and store and
dispose of their medication,”
Turnbow said.
In addition to drug take back
drives, the Tooele City Police
Sun Mon
INSIDE
Good
Wednesday
Last Normal MonthGood
Normal Year Normal
Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D
Pollen
Index
Thursday
High
Good
Moderate
Source:
Low www.airquality.utah.gov
Absent
Tu W Th F Sa Su
M
Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma
RIVERS AND LAKES
St. Marguerite
Catholic Church
hosts Fall Fest
See B1
Community rallies
for Josh Hinton
after accident
See A2
SEE DRUG PAGE A3 ➤
BULLETIN BOARD
CLASSIFIEDS
HOMETOWN
OBITUARIES
OPEN FORUM
SPORTS
A8
B5
B1
A8
A4
A10
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
A2
Citizens rally to help former
SHS student with neck injury
by Jessica Henrie
STAFF WRITER
Tooele County residents are
rallying around a local family
whose son was seriously injured
while participating in an obstacle course last month.
Joshua
Hinton,
18,
of
Stansbury Park, was crawling
through an obstacle course at
Brigham Young University on
Aug. 29 when he fell on his head,
damaging three vertebrae in his
neck, said Russ Steadman, Josh
Hinton’s uncle. Josh Hinton’s spinal cord was also bruised.
“He told me it was just a onefoot to two-foot drop,” Steadman
said. “I think it was just a little
tube from one place to another.”
Josh Hinton was transported
to the hospital, where doctors
were able to replace the worst
damaged vertebrae and repair
the others. Over the weeks that
followed, he regained control
of his chest muscles and some
mobility in his shoulders, arms
and hands, according to updates
posted on social media by family
members.
Josh Hinton served as student
body president at Stansbury
High School last year. During his
high school career, he also participated in cross country and
worked as a teacher aide at The
Dance Centre.
As news of the accident spread,
many community members have
reached out to him and his family. The “Team Hinton” Facebook
page documents many gestures
of support, including numerous
visitors for Josh Hinton, a social
media campaign #prayforjosh
and fundraisers to help with
medical expenses.
“We just couldn’t ask for a
better community,” said Todd
Hinton, Josh Hinton’s father.
“We’ve been here seven years …
it’s been phenomenal, the support we’ve gotten from different
wards, neighbors, businesses …
Everyone’s been so helpful.”
Rod Lundwall, student government advisor at Stansbury
High, said his students came up
with the idea to make and sell
“Team Hinton” wristbands. Josh
Hinton’s family is also selling
“Team Hinton” T-shirts, Lundwall
TRANSCRIPT
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TUESDAY September 15, 2015
SR-36 RENEWED
PROJECT UPDATE
Motorists should anticipate
delays this week as workers
proceed on several projects as
part of the Utah Department of
Transportation’s reconstruction
of SR-36 from Stansbury through
Tooele City.
All motorists and students are
requested to pay extra attention
on roadways with school back in
session.
Stansbury Parkway to 2000
North
Workers continue removing
asphalt, with paving operations
following behind the asphalt
removal crew the next night.
Work has begun on the west side
shoulder and is moving south
from Stansbury Parkway.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Southbound traffic will be
reduced to one lane from 8 p.m.
to 7 a.m.
COURTESY OF HINTON FAMILY
Josh HInton gets a visit in the hospital from Stacy Smith and Jacey Smith. Members of the community have rallied around Josh
Hinton and his family after the Stansbury High graduate severely injured his neck during an activity at BYU. Gestures of support include numerous visitors, “Team Hinton” Facebook page, “Team Hinton” T-shirts and wristbands, social media campaign
#prayforjosh and fundraisers to help with medical expenses.
added.
This week at Stansbury’s
homecoming football game,
there will be a silent auction of
items and services donated by
members of the community.
Cindy Palmer, a friend of the
family and Stansbury resident,
is organizing the auction with
Heidi Steadman, Josh Hinton’s
aunt. As part of the auction, the
two will also sell tickets to a benefit dinner to be held around Oct.
22. The exact date of the dinner
may be subject to change as the
they finalize their plans, Palmer
said.
“I was looking for an avenue to
help raise funds to help the family,” Palmer said, referring to why
she decided to co-organize the
auction and dinner. “I know the
family. … My children actually
went to school with him [Josh
Hinton] — he was the student
body president.”
For more information about
the auction or dinner, or to
donate an item or service, people
can contact Palmer at 435-2242140 or Heidi Steadman at 435-
882-9021.
At last week’s football game
between Stansbury and Tooele
High schools, student body officers and class officers held a
“Miracle Minute” for Josh Hinton
at half-time. Members of student
government walked through
the packed stands, inviting fans
to donate to the Hinton family. They collected about $1,800,
Steadman said.
“People took money out of
their pockets and gave it to the
kids, in both the Stansbury and
Tooele stands,” he said. “To me,
the biggest thing that’s amazing
and touches my heart is ... there’s
all these good kids that are praying for him and visiting him, and
for lack of a better word, it’s given
them a cause to appreciate how
fragile life is at times.”
After more than two weeks of
visits and prayers, Josh Hinton
will transfer to Craig Hospital in
Colorado on Thursday where he
will continue physical therapy,
Todd Hinton said.
“It’s [the hospital is] one of
the best in the nation for spi-
nal cord injury,” he said. “Every
day he’s getting a little bit better.
Originally, they said ‘he’s paralyzed,’ but now he’s starting to
get motion and movement. He’s
ready to take the next step in getting better.”
Josh Hinton had submitted a
missionary application to The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints and was expecting to receive his call letter less
than a week after the accident,
Steadman said.
After learning of Josh Hinton’s
situation, Elder Dallin H. Oaks of
the Quorum of Twelve Apostles
visited him, letting him know the
church would hold his application while he healed and then
issue him a mission call, according to a Facebook update posted
Sept. 12.
“The doctor actually told him
he’s seen people recover from
this, and he’s seen people not
be in a wheelchair their whole
lives,” Steadman said. “He has
a really great attitude and we’re
praying for a miracle.”
jhenrie@tooeletranscript.com
Railroad viaduct to 1000 North
Crews are continuing the
paving work and will pave from
approximately 1050 North to 700
North. Driveway closures lasting
approximately 15 minutes will
be needed as the paver passes.
Driveways will be reestablished
once the pavement is in place.
Workers will also continue to
place concrete sidewalks and
driveways.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Northbound and southbound
traffic is reduced to one lane in
each direction until crews finish
paving from 1050 North to 700
North.
• Flaggers will direct traffic
through the 1000 North intersection on Tuesday from 7 a.m. to
7 p.m.
• Left turns are prohibited at
1000 North.
1000 North to 600 North
Crews continue paving work
and will pave from approximately 1050 North to 700 North.
Driveway closures lasting approximately 15 minutes will be needed as the paver passes. Driveways
will be reestablished once the
pavement is in place. Workers will
also continue to place concrete
sidewalks and driveways.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Northbound and southbound
traffic is reduced to one lane in
each direction.
• Left turns are prohibited at
700 North and 600 North.
600 North to Utah Avenue
Workers continue installing
the storm drain and sewer line.
Driveway access changes will
be coordinated with property
owners. Crews are also preparing to begin to rebuild the road
subgrade.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Northbound and southbound
traffic is reduced to one lane in
each direction.
• Left turns are prohibited at
500 North, 400 North and Utah
Avenue.
Utah Avenue to 520 South
Construction crews continue
installing the storm drain and
sewer line. Driveway access
changes will be coordinated with
property owners. To facilitate
this work, SR-36 will be closed
from Utah Avenue to 520 South
between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. every
night beginning on Wednesday
and ending Sept. 25. Motorists
should use alternate routes during the closure. Residents will be
allowed to access their driveways,
but may experience additional
noise and dust during the night
work.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Northbound and southbound
traffic is reduced to one lane in
each direction.
• SR-36 will be closed from
Utah Avenue to 520 South
between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. every
night beginning on Wednesday
and ending Sept. 25. Residents
will be allowed to access their
driveways during the night work.
• Left turns are prohibited at
Vine Street.
520 South to 3 O’Clock Drive
Crews will begin paving the
northbound lanes from 3 O’Clock
Drive to about 800 South on
Tuesday. Temporary pavement
from about 800 South to 520
South will also be placed on the
west side road shoulder.
Traffic restrictions for this area
include:
• Northbound and southbound
traffic is reduced to one lane in
each direction.
According to UDOT, the SR36 Renewed project is 103 days
into construction. Crews are
slightly behind schedule. All road
users are requested not to move
barrels, signs and other traffic
control devices. If an adjustment
is needed, please call or text 801859-3770.
For more information on
the project, readers can call
or text 801-859-3770, email
sr36@utah.gov, visit www.udot.
utah.gov/go/sr36 or follow
updates from UDOT on Twitter
@UDOTRegionTwo. Readers can
also check in at tooeleonline.com
for breaking news and updates as
the road work progresses.
Thieves that caused lockdown at
Stansbury Elementary charged
by Steve Howe
STAFF WRITER
The two men who allegedly
stole a purse and caused a lockdown at Stansbury Elementary
School in the ensuing police
chase on Sept. 3 were scheduled
to make their first appearance in
court Monday morning.
Brody Kuipers, 18, of Stansbury
Park and Steffen England, 18, of
Erda, were arrested by deputies
from the Tooele County Sheriff’s
Office after they were spotted
rummaging through a purse
behind Kraver’s in Stansbury
Park.
When a deputy arrived, the
two went in separate directions
but were both apprehended after
a foot chase.
England was not present at
the scheduled hearing and a
$10,000 warrant has been issued
for his arrest. Kuipers’ attorney appeared on his behalf for
the initial appearance in Third
District Court.
England has been charged
with three charges of felony
unlawful acquisition, possession
or transfer of a financial transaction card, as well as charges of
failure to stop at the command of
law enforcement, theft, criminal
mischief and criminal trespass,
all misdemeanors.
Kuipers faces charges of failure to stop at the command of
law enforcement, theft by receiving stolen property, possession
of a controlled substance and
possession of drug paraphernalia, all misdemeanors.
Due to its proximity to the elementary school, officials opted
If it happens here,
read about it here.
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
to go into a lockdown during
the chase. Tooele County Sheriff
Paul Wimmer said law enforcement will alert schools to police
activity and the school makes the
Inspiring
Healthy
Lives
Look for it every
month in your
Tooele Transcript
Bulletin
decision on whether to go into
lockdown.
The lockdown lasted approximately one hour.
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
A3
Member of city planning commission steps down
by Jessica Henrie
STAFF WRITER
A member of the Tooele City
Planning Commission resigned
last week.
News of Steve Dale’s resignation
came as fellow commissioner Tom
Poyner called roll at the commis-
Enrollment
sion meeting on Wednesday. Dale
was not present at the meeting.
He had previously submitted a letter of resignation to Mayor Patrick
Dunlavy, said Steve Pruden, who
represents the Tooele City Council
at commission meetings.
“I’ve been on the planning
commission for over 8 years,”
Tooele County School District Enrollment by School
continued from page A1
according to Scott Rogers, Tooele
County School District superintendent.
Enrollment as of Oct. 1 is
used by the state to determine
the growth factor used in school
funding, according to Rogers.
“These numbers are tentative
and will change a little by Oct. 1,”
he said. “But I think we will hold
on to most of that 137.”
The biggest changes in individual school enrollment were
the result of boundary changes
adopted by the school board,
according to Rogers.
Stansbury Park Elementary
School dropped by 154 students
while Copper Canyon Elementary
School’s enrollment had a net
gain of 61 after absorbing the
Stansbury Park students bused
from the Benson Gristmill area.
In the fall of 2014, Stansbury
Park Elementary opened with 127
students over its ideal capacity.
Middle Canyon Elementary
School’s growth of 106 students
was driven in part by a boundary
change that eliminated a jog in
school boundaries that crossed
1000 North at 310 East. The students in that area were moved
from Copper Canyon Elementary
to Middle Canyon Elementary.
Overlake
and
Northlake
Drug
continued from page A1
Department, Grantsville City
Police Department, Wendover
City Police Department and the
Tooele County Sheriff’s Office
have receptacles for prescription
drugs.
Consumers and caregivers should dispose of unused,
unwanted or expired prescription medication as soon as
possible, according to the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration.
Safely disposing of such medication helps prevent it from being
taken in error or intentionally
misused.
If you’re unable to attend any of
the medication take back events
or visit a local law enforcement
agency, there are some ways to
safely dispose of prescription
drugs at home.
One way to get rid of your
medication is to mix it with dirt,
kitty litter or used coffee grounds
and place it in a container like
a sealed plastic bag, according
to the FDA. The combination
Ideal
Capacity
Fall
2015
Percent
Capacity
Fall
2014
Anna Smith
325
287
88%
296
-9
Copper Canyon
650
608
94%
547
61
Dugway
190
61
32%
73
-12
East
600
462
77%
453
9
Grantsville
850
705
83%
757
-52
Harris
625
420
67%
386
34
Ibapah
40
32
80%
25
7
Middle Canyon
675
581
86%
475
106
Northlake
775
532
69%
502
30
Overlake
650
588
90%
536
52
Rose Springs
650
663
102%
751
-88
Settlement Canyon
675
588
87%
587
1
Stansbury
775
757
98%
911
-154
Vernon
50
26
52%
24
2
535
396
74%
375
21
Willow
675
694
103%
697
-3
Grantsville Junior
675
439
65%
410
29
Tooele Junior
600
852
142%
843
9
Clarke Johnsen Junior
825
837
101%
880
-43
Dugway High
265
67
25%
60
7
Grantsville High
978
809
83%
774
35
Wendover High
338
177
52%
198
-21
Tooele High
1,317
1,710
130%
1,645
65
Stansbury High
1,313
1,616
123%
1,574
42
Blue Peak High
115
114
99%
105
9
13,884
137
DISTRICT TOTAL
14,021
Source: Tooele County School District, capacity does not include portables
seven members and two alternate
members to fulfill its duties “to
provide for, promote, and perform municipal planning.” Jim
Bolser, Director of Community
Development and Public Works,
acts as a supervisor for the commission.
The code also dictates that
Elementary schools also swapped
groups of students.
Students from “Middle Erda”
— the part of Erda from 1200
West to SR-36 — were moved
from Northlake Elementary to
Overlake Elementary.
Students in the Gleneagles
community, at roughly 770 North
and 730 West in Tooele City,
now go to Northlake Elementary
instead of Overlake Elementary.
Teachers were moved this
summer to accommodate the
changes in enrollment caused by
boundary changes, according to
Rogers.
The district will wait until Oct.
1 enrollment figures are solid
before they look at hiring additional teachers, Rogers said.
“That may seem a little late,
but we don’t want to hire teachers and then have to let them go
because we don’t have the funding,” he said.
At the high school level, both
Tooele and Stansbury high
schools are over their capacity,
but the number of students that
are released during the day for
either seminary or to parents
reduce the impact on the facilities, according to Rogers.
“The district will continue to
grow,” Rogers said. “That inevitably means new schools and
more boundary changes as those
schools open.”
tgillie@tooeletranscript.com
makes the medication unpalatable but none of the tablets or
capsules should be crushed.
The prescription drug container should be thrown in the
trash as well, but any personal
information or description of the
medication should be scratched
out and made unreadable,
according to the FDA.
Certain medications can also
be disposed of by being flushed
down the toilet. A short list of
prescription drugs on the FDA
website, including oxycontin,
percocets and morphine sulfate,
are recommended for flushing
because they could be harmful or fatal in a single dose and
to ensure they can’t be used by
someone else.
An estimated 52 million
Americans have used prescription drugs non-medically, according to the National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
An Intermountain Healthcare
release from February reported
more Utahns die from prescription medication overdoses than
car crashes.
showe@tooeletranscript.com
and McKell, are 4-years-old.
Bunker and Wall say they see
similarities in how their twins
interact and how they get along,
including how they are protective of each other.
One difference between
Bunker and Wall and their own
twins is that they probably won’t
have to worry about people
not being able to distinguish
between them. Since they are
fraternal twins, they look more
like siblings than identical twins.
Bunker and Wall, on the
other hand, still get people confused. They said the principal
at Timpanogos Academy where
they teach couldn’t tell them
apart when they first started
working there.
Bunker does know what it’s
like to have a single baby: she has
a 2-year-old girl, Sadie, who was
not a twin.
Wall considers it a blessing to
be a twin.
“Truthfully there’s nothing
better than having a best friend
with you all the time,” Wall said.
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TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
Change
West
Utah twins pregnant again
with 2nd set of twins
LINDON, Utah (AP) — Kerri
Bunker and Kelli Wall know a
thing or two about twins.
The two women are identical
twins who already each have one
set of twins. Now, they are getting ready to each have a second
set of twins next spring, KSL-TV
reports.
“To have twins twice is incredible,” Wall said.
The Lindon women both had
their first set of fraternal twins
after using in vitro fertilization
after they struggled to get pregnant. This summer, both found
out they are having twins again.
They are both due two weeks
apart next spring.
“It was like just one shock after
another all summer long,” said
Bunker.
It marked the latest sign that
the two women are destined to
live similar lives. They are both
teachers at the same school, and
they married best friends.
Their first sets of twins are
similar in age, as well. Bunker’s
twins, Kole and Hallie, are 3years-old. Wall’s twins, Madison
Dale said. “I’m involved in a lot of
different things in the community
and professionally, and sometimes something’s got to give. ... I
enjoyed my time on the planning
commission, but it’s time to do
something else.”
According to city code, the planning commission should maintain
if one commissioner is absent,
an alternate member is allowed
to act in his/her place. In this
case, where a commissioner has
resigned, the more senior alternate member will be appointed to
take his place, Pruden said.
“It’s not a big deal,” he said.
“One of the alternates will be pro-
moted, if you will.”
Currently, the alternate commissioners are Ray Smart and
Russell Spendlove.
At the end of the year, the
mayor and the city council will
work together to appoint another
alternate member, Pruden said.
jhenrie@tooeletranscript.com
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TUESDAY September 15, 2015
Open Forum
Editor David Bern
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A4
• Editorial
• Guest Opinion
• Letters to the Editor
OUR VIEW
Wildfire respite
Thankfully, it looks like the county may
have dodged big wildfires this summer
What a difference a year or two makes when it comes to wildfires and structure fires in Tooele County. And that difference shows the unpredictability of
one of nature’s most beneficial and destructive forces known to man.
In 2013, there were nearly a dozen structure fires in the county that destroyed
or damaged homes and businesses. Families were displaced and firefighters
barely had time to allow fire hoses to dry before they’d be called out again.
Also that summer, with the county’s outback tinder dry from persistent
drought, the Death Canyon and Wildflower wildfires in the Simpson Mountains
torched approximately 2,000 acres in June and July. But those two blazes were
only a pre-game show to what hit the county a month later.
In August, a lightning strike hit on the southwest side of the Stansbury
Mountains and triggered what became the state’s largest wildfire of 2013. The
Patch Springs Wildfire burned more than 30,000 acres and destroyed the landmark Willow Springs Lodge and other dwellings in that tiny hamlet on the west
side of Johnson’s Pass, displacing affected owners. It also forced the evacuation
of citizens there and in nearby Terra for days.
Although the frequency of structure fires cut back in 2014, the terror of
wildfires did not. On July 16, a wind-driven, arson-caused wildfire swept down
from the foothills east of Stockton and turned tinder-dry grass, sagebrush and
juniper trees into an inferno that destroyed one of the town’s main water tanks,
threatened homes and caused evacuations. It took strategic firefighting from
six agencies to avert a catastrophe.
Next, less than a week after Stockton’s citizens sighed with relief, Pine
Canyon residents suddenly found their community — and their homes — in
the crosshairs. Caused by a lightning strike near Smelter Road and fueled by
wind and drought conditions, the Anaconda Wildfire raged in a northerly
direction and forced a portion of Pine Canyon citizens to evacuate. Just like at
Stockton, firefighters again fought a strategic battle to keep flames away from
homes.
And while firefighters fought to save Pine Canyon, several other wildfires
burned across the county’s west desert outback at the same time.
As this past mild winter gave way to spring a few months ago, and with the
county’s continued high drought status, it appeared wildfires would again
dominate headlines throughout this summer. And for good reason. The
first reported wildfires occurred in February. Yet in June, Tooele County Fire
Marshal Tom Wilson said he anticipated only an “average” fire season, even
though May had seen above-normal precipitation that caused significant vegetation growth.
Thankfully, it looks like Wilson called it right. So far this summer, the big
wildfires of 2013 and 2014 have not occurred. Although new vegetation from
May did turn tinder-dry in July and August, periods of rain have apparently
helped keep new and old growth moist enough at just the right time. Only a
handful of small wildfires have occurred, with the largest in Rush Valley last
month.
All of which is good news. Although sporadic hot and dry conditions may
linger into this fall, it appears the county may have dodged a big wildfire bullet
this summer. This week’s forecasted rain may help keep that bullet away. But
citizens and firefighters know well enough to remain vigilant.
GUEST OPINION
Ben Carson stands for
something different
W
hile Jeb Bush feuds with
Donald Trump and others
kowtow to him, only one
candidate is seriously gaining on
him.
Ben Carson is now tied with
Trump in one Iowa poll and is close
in others. His rise suggests that it’s
possible to catch the populist wave
roiling Republican politics and yet
not be an obnoxious braggart. Ben
Carson is a superior outsider to
Donald Trump.
He is more gentlemanly and more
conservative, with a more compelling life story. He is a man of faith
who, despite his manifest accomplishments, has a quiet dignity and
winsome modesty about him. Ben
Carson is a throwback, whereas
Donald Trump is a boldfaced name
straight out of our swinish celebrity
culture.
What they have in common is
that they are political neophytes
who are memorable communicators
precisely because they speak and
carry themselves so differently from
other candidates. The similarities
stop there.
Carson aced the Fox debate when
in his closing statement he didn’t
puff himself up and attempt to soar
like candidates always do, but gently said a few nice things about his
background as a surgeon, with a
touch of humor. It was a hit.
If you like your outsider not to
favor higher taxes, not to have once
opposed the ban of partial-birth
abortion, not to speak favorably of
socialized medicine and not to have
been an erstwhile booster of Nancy
Pelosi and Hillary Clinton, Ben
Carson (or Carly Fiorina) is a much
better bet than Donald Trump.
And Carson is altogether a more
sympathetic figure. He rose from
nothing; Trump took over the family
real-estate business. Carson’s mom
was one of 24 kids, had a third-grade
education and worked as a domestic; Trump’s father amassed a fortune of $300 million.
Carson is a serious Christian
who has a powerful testimonial
about getting down on his knees as
a young man unable to control his
temper and saying, “Lord, unless
you help me, I’m not going to make
it.”
Trump says he likes “The Art
of the Deal” better than any book
except the Bible, but he appears to
have read just one of them.
Trump is, to say the least, of a different mold. He is a successful creature of our culture of conspicuous
display and tasteless braggadocio.
It’s no accident that he names everything after himself.
Carson has certainly made the
most of his own renown, churning
out best-sellers and raking in the
speaking fees, but it’s impossible to
imagine him engaging in juvenile
insult wars with random targets
of his ire. Or imagine him calling
a female journalist a “bimbo” for
asking unwelcome questions. Or
commenting crudely on women’s
appearances.
Ben Carson stands for something
different. His personal story shows
how true class isn’t about riches, but
about character. Donald Trump has
all the finest things and, I’d hazard
to guess, barely as much class as Ben
Carson’s penniless mother struggling
to raise her sons had in her pinky.
If conservatives want to flirt
with or support an unconventional
candidate, Carson provides the
opportunity to do it without a guilty
conscience.
Lowry is editor of the National
Review.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Joel J. Dunn
Scott C. Dunn
David J. Bern
Publisher Emeritus
President and Publisher
Editor
With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page,
including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin.
GUEST OPINION
What Scouts can learn from Roberts’ ‘sermon’
John Poulson
GUEST OPINION
I
have been uplifted by the articles
that appear in the Transcript
Bulletin’s “Matters of Faith” column,
including those penned by Charlie
Roberts. I hope this paper continues
the practice of allowing people of faith
to write articles that provide “hope,
courage and strength.” And I hope Mr.
Roberts continues to write articles that
contribute to my personal faith and
understanding.
However, Mr. Roberts’ recent column
concerning the LDS Church’s relationship with the Boy Scouts of America
hit a nerve. Like Mr. Roberts, I was the
beneficiary of a vibrant scout troop as
a boy. I have witnessed the influence
of trained scout leaders in my son’s
life and the lives of my grandsons and
nephews. I have seen firsthand how
dedicated leaders in this program can
have such a profound eternal effect on
future husbands and fathers.
Why then do I find myself with a different view of scouting’s relevance in
the 21st century and its relevance within the LDS church than Mr. Roberts’
view? Possibly because I have spent
the past several years associating with
the hundreds of dedicated men and
women in Tooele County who contribute time, talent and means to keep the
scout programs relevant in our local
communities.
What do I say to my fellow scouters as we review Mr. Roberts’ views on
scouting in our time and its relationship with its largest chartered partner?
What can I say about the future of
scouting to the boy who literally shines
with pride as a parent pins on an Arrow
of Light badge? What can I say to the
parent who sees a boy turn into a man
because someone challenged him to
“do his best” at camp this summer?
What can I say to the ward bishop who
sees an active Varsity Scout program
keep his 14- and 15-year-old young
men from straying from the fold? What
can I say to the mission president who
says he can tell a difference when a new
elder comes from a ward where leadership skills were taught (and practiced)
in an active Venturing program?
First, I would say to my colleagues
that Mr. Roberts’ views are not isolated. His views are pervasive among
members of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, as recent polls
indicate. He simply had a forum where
he could write about them. Second,
we should acknowledge that we have
been so engrossed in providing excellent programs for our boys and young
men that we have not taken the time to
explain scouting’s continued relevance
to our constituency. Third, we should
take heart that the First Presidency and
the Quorum of the Twelve, charged as
“watchers on the tower” are not influenced by opinion polls or opinions
written in the Transcript Bulletin. And
finally, we need to acknowledge that
we have not done a very good job of
explaining scouting’s continued relevance in the LDS church and in society
in general.
It seems to me that those who challenge scouting’s relevance make some
of the following arguments:
• There are more exemplary options
for today’s youth to keep them engaged,
fit and challenged.
• Scouting is expensive.
• The typical ward scout night is a
waste of everyone’s time and energy.
• Church youth programs should
be about instilling spirituality and not
about tying knots.
• Funds contributed during the
annual “Friends of Scouting” campaign
are funneled up to the national council,
leaving local units destitute.
There may be others, but this list will
suffice for now.
My fellow scouters, we need to
be more vocal in the community in
defending our program. While some
of us must enjoy the luxury of dealing
directly with our boys and young men
on a weekly basis, others of us need to
speak out as the occasion arises.
We need to explain that while the
mission statements of sports programs
are built around the worthy goals of
instilling skills, teamwork and sportsmanship. That while the mission statement of educational institutions is to
teach and instill a love for learning. The
mission statement of the Boy Scouts of
America is: “... to prepare young people
to make ethical and moral choices over
their lifetimes by instilling in them the
values of the Scout Oath and Scout
Law.” Those values, as any scout can tell
you, are: Trustworthy, Loyal, Helpful,
Friendly, Courteous, Kind, Obedient,
Cheerful, Thrifty, Brave, Clean and
Reverent; to do one’s duty to God, to
country and to others.
Scouting employs several methods in
order to accomplish its mission, including: Adult Association, Advancement,
Ideals, Leadership Development,
Outdoor Activities, the Patrol Method
and Personal Growth. Obtaining the
rank of Eagle Scout is simply one of the
methods — not the ultimate goal — as
some would believe.
Scouting is expensive, but no more
expensive for today’s family than for
families 100 years ago (relatively speaking). Scouting’s costs would be considered a bargain compared to those costs
associated with football uniforms and/
or sports camps.
LDS ward scout nights might be
considered a waste of time, but only
for those wards whose leaders have not
taken the time to understand the aims
and methods of scouting. Right here in
Tooele Valley, on any given scout night,
thousands of boys (under the guidance of trained leaders) are engaged
in activities that will help them make
moral and ethical choices the rest of
their lives and have incredible fun while
doing so.
Scouting contributes to the spiritual growth of young men in countless
ways, including performing service,
sharing thoughts around a campfire as
the embers begin to glow, and kneeling
in prayer and listening as a scoutmaster
prays to his God and mentions each
boy by name, giving thanks for their
friendship and association.
FOS funds do not go anywhere. They
stay in our local council; for Tooele,
this means the Great Salt Lake Council,
encompassing parts of Davis County
and all of Salt Lake, Tooele and Summit
counties. Such funds have gone into
our local scout camps, not only providing ongoing maintenance, but allowing improvements such as the new
dining hall and activity center at The
Bear Lake Aquatics Camp, a new water
treatment plant at the Hinckley Scout
Camp and beginning the construction
of the Monson Training Lodge. New
improvements are scheduled for the
Cub Scout camps at Camp Tracy and
major improvements are coming to
Camp Steiner.
To my friend Charlie Roberts, let me
simply say lunch is on me — but we’ll
have to talk Scouting!
Poulson is a Stansbury Park resident
and former chairman of the Deseret
Peak District, Great Salt Lake Council,
Boy Scouts of America.
GUEST OPINION
A reasonable immigration policy that works
U
nfortunately, but not surprisingly, Donald Trump has made
the issue of illegal immigration
a major theme of the 2016 presidential
campaign. Of course, illegal immigration has its problems, but I don’t think
it should be a deciding issue in this
campaign.
With certain precautions in place,
our only concern about immigration (legal or not) is keeping the flow
manageable so that our economic
culture and institutions — the very
reason immigrants want to come here,
whether they admit it or not — are not
overrun. Recent immigrants need to be
given time to responsibly assimilate the
culture and qualities they have to offer
John Hamilton
GUEST COLUMNIST
into the dominate American way of life.
Recognizing that we are all immigrants, including Native Americans
— we don’t know how many “natives”
the “natives” that the Europeans first
encountered wiped out before they
became the “natives” — I am tempted
to just say, “Let ‘em come! The last ones
standing get to be the new ‘natives.’”
However, just as the pilgrims would
not have survived their first winter in
America without the help of “socially
responsible” Indians, we have the duty,
as the current “natives,” to help immigrants adjust well into the economic
environment and opportunities available to them here — hopefully without
suffering the same fate as the Indians.
I propose we can do this in three easy
steps (and, yes, they really are easy):
Step One: Privatize border security. It
costs the taxpayers $4 million a year to
secure just one mile of border and quite
frankly we’re not getting our money’s
worth. Now for a quarter of that, you
can lease out each mile of the border
to a private security firm or individual.
SEE HAMILTON PAGE A6 ➤
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
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A5
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A6
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
GUEST OPINION
COULD THIS GET RID OF SCIATICA, BULGING Flowers for Hillary as
DISCS, AND LEG PAIN ONCE AND FOR ALL? email questions roll on
DO YOU HAVE ANY OF
THE FOLLOWING
CONDITIONS?
W
• Sharp Pains in the
Back of the Leg
• Lower Back Pain
• Herniated/Bulging
Discs
• Numbness in Your Arms
or Legs
• Shooting Hip or Thigh
Pain
• Muscle Spasm, Sprains &
Strains
If you’ve suffered from any of these
annoying conditions, you may have
“Sciatica”.
Sciatica is a compression of the sciatic
nerve, usually by an L4 or L5 disc herniations. As you know, sciatica can be a very
painful problem, even crippling at times.
Nothing’s worse than feeling great
mentally, but physically feeling held
back from life because your back or
sciatica hurts and the pain just won’t go
away!
Fortunately, if you are suffering from
any of these problems, they may be
relieved or eliminated by non-surgical
spinal decompression combined with
cold laser therapy.
“What’s The Chance This Will
Work For Me?”
A medical study found patients went
from moderately painful to almost no
pain with decompression treatments.
Those that took pain pills improved less
than 5%. – Am Society of Anesthesiologist, 2006 Chicago, IL
Another study presented at the American Academy of Pain Management in
2007 showed…
“Patients reported a mean 88.9% improvement in back pain and better function…
No patient required any invasive therapies
(e.g. epidural injections, surgery).”
These are just two studies out of a dozen
done in the last few years, all showing
promising results.
Finally, You Have An Option
Other Than Drugs or Surgery
New research in a treatment called low
level laser therapy, or cold laser, is having
a profound effect on patients suffering
with pain. Unlike the cutting type of
laser seen in movies and used in medical
procedures, cold laser penetrates the
surface of the skin with no heating effect
or damage.
Cold laser therapy has been tested for
40 years, had over 2000 papers published
on it, and been shown to aid in damaged
tissue regeneration, decrease inflammation, relieve pain and boost the immune
system. This means that there is a good
chance cold laser therapy could be your
pain solution, allowing you to live a more
active lifestyle.
Here’s the point of all these studies…
spinal decompression combined with
cold laser therapy has a high success rate
with helping disc herniations, sciatica, and
back pain.
This means in just a matter of weeks
you could be back on the golf course,
enjoying your love life, or traveling again.
• A thorough analysis of your exam
and x-ray findings so we can start mapping out your plan to being pain free.
• You’ll get to see everything first hand
and find out if this amazing treatment will
be your pain solution, like it has been for
so many other patients.
I’ll answer all your most probing question about our pain free sciatica and back
pain evaluation and what it can do for
you.
The appointment will not take long at
all and you won’t be sitting in a waiting
room all day either.
And the best part about it is...
No Dangerous Drugs, No
Invasive Procedures, and No
Painful Exercises
Spinal decompression treatments
combined with cold laser therapy are
very gentle. In fact, I even catch a few
patients sleeping during sessions every
once and awhile.
“But I feel fine – as long as I
take my pain pills.”
There’s a time to use pain medications,
BUT not before seeking a natural way to
correct the CAUSE of the problem!
Spinal decompression combined
with cold laser therapy just may be the
answer that you’ve been looking for. Ask
yourself … after taking all these pain
medications and playing the ‘wait and
see game’, maybe for years…are you any
better off?
Here’s What Our Patients Say...
“When I came to see Dr Brown I could hardly
walk. I had horrible nerve pain down my leg.
I had been in pain for 3 years and was so bad
I could no longer mow the lawn. I had tried
physical to get rid of the pain but nothing helped.
Since seeing Dr. Brown my pain is gone. I have
never been treated so wonderfully as I was by
the staff at Oquirrh Ridge Chiropractic. I highly
recommend brokerage chiropractic.” -Frank
Call and tell the receptionist you’d like
to come in for the Special Decompression & Cold Laser Evaluation. Available
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Our office is called Oquirrh Ridge
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I look forward to helping you get rid
of your pain so you can start living a
healthier, more joyful life.
Sincerely,
Dr. Dev Brown, D.C.
The Single Most Important
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hat’s happening to
Hillary Clinton with
this continuing email
scandal of hers is pitiful, indeed.
It’s heartbreaking, like that
story we read in high school,
“Flowers for Algernon” about the
laboratory mouse and the kindly
and simple janitor in a bakery.
The janitor becomes brilliant
through scientific means, only
to lose his newfound intelligence forever.
I’m certain many of you read
it, and stayed up late and wondered about it. I did.
And now, sadly, years after
high school and Mr. Judycki’s
English class, we have Flowers
for Hillary.
It is equally depressing. But
she’s not a simple janitor. She’s
reaching for the presidency of
the United States.
And she’s playing dumb, for
the entire world to see.
Mrs. Clinton has been
reduced to this as a political
survival exercise, with the New
York Times reporting her private email server contained top
secret information, including
information about North Korea.
Asked if she wiped her private
email server, the one she used as
secretary of State for her public
and private email, she said:
“Like with a cloth or something?”
And late last week — before
her likely Democratic presidential challenger Vice President
Joe Biden ran, literally ran down
the street in a Labor Day parade
— Clinton said this:
“I was not thinking a lot when
I got in. There was so much
work to be done,” she told NBC.
“We had so many problems
around the world. I didn’t really
stop and think what kind of
email system will there be.”
Wiping with a cloth? And she
really didn’t stop and think?
She didn’t consider that carrying secret government email on
a private server could compromise not only her presidential
ambitions but her country’s
national security?
Oh, Hillary, Hillary, Hillary.
What have you done to that
steely mind of yours?
When I was a boy, the most
terrifying story I’d ever read was
that short story — and subse-
Hamilton
continued from page A4
If an illegal immigrant makes
it through their mile, they lose
their contract. For $1 million a
year, I can pretty much guarantee not a fly will get across the
line.
Step Two: This must come
after the border is secure.
Instigate a “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”
policy at all immigration offices.
Call all immigrants in, legal or
not, and administer the following questions:
1. Do you have employment
sufficient to support yourself
and your dependents without
direct financial aid from the government?
2. Do you have a clean criminal record (no felonies) both
here and in your home country?
3. Do you wish no harm to
United States citizens or property (you are not a terrorist)?
4. If you are under 40 years of
age, do you agree to learn functional English?
If the immigrant answers yes
to these four questions, we get
their contact information, stamp
a green card and let them stay
as long as they continue to meet
these requirements or become
a U.S. citizen. As a condition of
permanent residency they must
agree to be checked up on periodically to ensure they remain
qualified. Of course once they
become a citizen (if they desire
such) they will then be exempt
from any further checks.
John Kass
GUEST COLUMNIST
quent novel — by Daniel Keyes
about Algernon, the intelligent
white laboratory mouse. The
janitor was played in the movie
“Charly” by Cliff Robertson.
Yeah, you remember now.
The mouse becomes a brilliant
mouse. And the janitor becomes
a brilliant man through the
same scientific experiment.
Then it all goes sour. Algernon
dies. And Charly knows what is
happening and there’s nothing
he can do to stop it.
He doesn’t exactly get to be
president, does he?
And now, it looks as if neither
will she.
But watching Hillary play
dumb isn’t compelling. It
is depressing and pathetic,
because it’s an act.
She is no mouse or simpleton.
She’s acutely self-aware, and certainly she must see this happening to her, too, and there’s nothing she can do about it either.
It was all supposed to be quite
different.
She was Madam Ruthless,
tempered by the crucible of Bill
Clinton, his promise and his
wicked appetites and his bimbo
eruptions.
She told us she wasn’t about
to endure all that pain just to
play Tammy Wynette and stand
by her man, though that’s exactly what she did. And still, she
was a serious woman of accomplishment in the dangerous craft
of politics and intrigue.
And if we put her in a room
alone to have a quiet tea with
Vladimir Putin, this is what
America was led to expect:
That she’d emerge with a
butter-knife and half his heart
in her hand, wrapped neatly in
a linen napkin. The other half
would have been served on
white bread — buttered, rolled
in chives, not a drop of blood
upon her lips.
What frightened many of the
Hillary haters wasn’t her irritating, cackling laugh, or her eagerness to use Southern accents.
Nor was it those ridiculous
In this way many already here
can become legal residents and
we will have a way to track them
and ensure they and their children are given every opportunity
to be fully integrated into the
American community.
Step Three: Once a certain
percentage (as close to 100
percent as possible) of current
immigrants are registered in
this way, or deported if they
don’t meet these requirements,
we can then reopen the border
for more immigrants using the
same four requirements.
The biggest hurdle in these
cases would be the requirement
that they have gainful employment when they don’t yet reside
here. This can be solved by
having a potential employer
sponsor them or by admitting
them on a strict temporary
and trackable visa giving them
a limited time to find proper
employment. We would need to
limit the number of immigrants
to about 100,000 or so a year in
order to adequately track them
and to keep their numbers low
enough to be assimilated into
the American culture.
“Assimilation,” though it
sounds threatening, is important to ensure against divisive
elements being developed within our society when two equally
dominant cultures within a
given community clash. You can
be reassured by the fact that
assimilation goes both ways;
the American society will be all
the more richer (as it always has
been) with the continual input
of other cultures.
stories she’d tell about the “vast
right-wing conspiracies” that
put turtles on the tops of fence
posts. I just loved her turtles-onfence-posts bit. Yes, that was an
act, too, but well done, devilish,
with just the hint of Arkansas
sass from that mouth from Park
Ridge, Illinois, and Yale Law
School.
And what frightened the
Hillary haters wasn’t even that
Bill would lurk about in her
White House as First Laddie,
like some oafish country squire
in a Fielding novel, jumping the
milk-maids.
It wasn’t even her profound
ability to lie.
What bothered her opponents
was her intelligence.
That’s what allowed her to
lie so well and get away with it,
with just the hint of a smirk so
that her legions would know
there was nothing her enemies
could do about it.
That was Hillary Indomitable,
the Hillary who would roll to the
Democratic presidential nomination without a pause.
But now Biden, crazy as he is,
flirts with a run, and Democrats,
panicked as they are, seek his
protection as Hillary plummets
in the polls.
And what’s next for Hillary,
now playing dumb?
She’ll try a reboot with
soft appearances on Ellen
DeGeneres’ show. “Oh, men!!”
you can almost hear her giggling
with her new girlfriend. And
later on with Jimmy Fallon, she’ll
give him an “Oh, Jimmy!!” and
laugh some more.
But eventually she’ll have
to appear before Congress to
address that server, the one she
wiped clean, destroying 30,000
emails she didn’t want Congress
to see.
And when they remind her of
her “Like with a cloth or something?” remark, listen carefully.
You’ll hear the echoes of
Algernon, the little white mouse,
scratching and scratching,
trapped in the maze with no
way out.
Kass is a columnist for the
Chicago Tribune. His e-mail
address is jskass@tribune.com,
and his Twitter handle is @john_
kass.
Of course, if immigrants
don’t wish to assimilate, they
are certainly welcome to return
to their home country. Nothing
bewilders me more than willing
immigrants trying to change
their new country into the
oppressive or corrupt one from
which they just fled.
It’s okay to challenge assumptions and offer new ideas, but
just because I’m of British
descent that does not mean I
should insist on having a king or
that we all start driving on the
left side of the road. Keep the
best of your culture and share it
with the rest of us, but take time
to accommodate the society that
is dominate here — the culture
and attitudes that created the
economic environment that
attracted you here in the first
place.
With these three simple
steps: secure the border, make
residency requirements simple
and reasonable, and manage
the inflow of new immigrants
on the basis of those same reasonable requirements, we can
assure a fairly smooth immigration policy and alleviate fears of
being overrun with immigrants
that may not fully appreciate or
share our values. Most Native
Americans would probably
agree.
Hamilton is a resident of
Tooele City and is the creative
director for Transcript Bulletin
Publishing. His comments are his
own and don’t necessarily reflect
the opinions of management.
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A7
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Dory Lane
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801.673.5626
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Lucerne Place
Cou
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Broken Arrow
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36 N. MAIN • TOOELE
833-0404
1929 Aaron Dr, Suite L
435-843-3859
MW Family Practice BC 17612.qxd:MW Family Practice BC
TOOELE MEDICAL GROUP PROVIDER REFERRAL
LINE: 435-775-9973
TOOELE VALLEY
SALES & SERVICE
1162 N. MAIN • TOOELE
843-8270
398 N. Main
Tooele • 882-8180
We’re Part of the Solution
Assistant 2356Physican
N. 400 E.,
Suite 201, Tooele
CERTIFIED
Clar’s Auto
Center
www.steadmans.net
916 N. Main • Tooele
435-882-3565
Thermostats
Tune-Up and
Maintenance
Fire Places
Heat Pumps
Ductless Systems
Gas Lines
Melinda435-882-2350
Choate, PA-C, MPAS
614 N Main • Tooele • 435-882-1873
64 EAST VINE, TOOELE
882-0371
Phone: 435-882-2350 • Fax: 435-882-2039
2356 N. 400 East Suite 201, Tooele, UT 84074
Bargain
Buggy’s
“The Local Boys”
426 E. Cimmaron • Erda
882-7711
www.aireexpresso.com
435-843-4482
Fully Licensed and Insured
All major
credit cards accepted
We service and sell
Financinleg
Availab
Clayton Towers
7 South Main, Suite 100
Tooele, Utah 84074
BIG STUFF
TAXIDERMY
82 W.Cimmarron Way • Erda
801-635-6871
8740 N STATE HWY 36, LAKEPOINT
(801) 250-0118
235 E Main • Grantsville
435.228.6350
58 N. MAIN • TOOELE
882-0050
NEXT TO GAME STOP
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Lakeside Drive
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Peter Ventura, MD
2376 N 400 E #202
(435) 833-9600
Tooele • Grantsville • Stansbury
TOOELE GRANTSVILLE
493 N. Main
882.7775
213 E. Main
884.9990
STANSBURY
6727 N. Hwy 36
882.8880
855 N. MAIN • TOOELE
882-4061
Ivy Nails
Nail
Ivy Nails
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435.882.5555 • 245 N MAIN
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1244 N. Main, Ste #201 • 882-3968
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Birch Family Pharmacy
435-882-1120
123 West Vine St
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ORTHOPEDICS & SPORTS MEDICINE
Air Conditioning
Furnace
Air Filtration
365 N. MAIN • TOOELE
435.882.5010
Calais Lane
275 S. MAIN • 833-0977
Clermont Lane
Porter
Family
Chiropractic
Cherbourg Lane
351 N. Main • Tooele • 882-0669
230 E. Main • Grantsville • 884-4408
Heidleburg Place
2356 N. 400 E, #103,
Bldg. B, Tooele
435-882-1674
Interlochen Lane
351 N. MAIN • TOOELE
882-0669
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156 E 2000 N # 200 • TOOELE
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Village Blvd
Strasbourg Lane
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Scarsborough Way
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Heather Way
1041-1141 N. MAIN
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435.882.0099 • 181 W Vine • Tooele
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Misty Brook Ln
Gentle Breeze Ct
Aberdeen Lane
213 E. Main • Grantsville • 884-5531
6727 North Hwy 6 • Stansbury
Re
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Lanyard Lane
Streams Edge Way
Gascony Lane
Meadow Brook Lane
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Helm Lane
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HOMECOMING PARADE – 5PM
FOOTBALL GAME – 7PM SHS VS JUDGE
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Ketch Lane
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FRIDAY SEPT 18 BLACK OUT DAY
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Mast Lane
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WEDNESDAY SEPT 16 PREP DAY
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435.833.9200
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610 N. Main St • Tooele
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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
A8
OBITUARIES
Attorney at Law
Julie Skidmore Skeem
FREE
Consultation
for
Our beloved wife, mother,
grandmother, great-grandmother, sister and friend returned
peacefully to our Heavenly
Father on Sept. 14, 2015, after
a brief battle with cancer. She
was born on July 6, 1947, to Evan
Justin Skidmore and Eleanor
Lyman Skidmore in Delta, Utah,
and raised on her father’s farm
in Sutherland, Utah. She was
the 10th of 11 children. She is a
descendant of Utah Pioneers and
loved learning about her ancestors. She attended her first six
years of school in a four-room
schoolhouse in Sutherland, Utah.
Her next three years were spent
at Delta Junior High School. She
completed her last three years
at Delta High School where
she was elected Modell editor
(school newspaper). She was
very accomplished in her writing abilities and graduated with
honors. She married Reed E.
Skeem in Ely, Nevada, on July 6,
1965, a marriage later solemnized
in the Salt Lake Temple on May
17, 1973. Together, they raised
a loving family of six children
Wills &
Trusts
493 W. 400 N. Tooele
882-4800
www.tooelelawoffice.com
THE PIANO
WORKSHOP
Serving Tooele County
Call today to schedule your
complimentary evaluation
435-830-5345
• free piano evaluation and a free cost
estimate for any work requested
• tuning and voicing
• replacement of broken or chipped keys
• repair or replacement of missing or
broken strings
• any other needed mechanical repairs
or adjustments
Mathew Arbshay
Born Nov. 16, 1942 in Qom, Iran.
Graduated with a Masters Degree
in Engineering from Tehran
University. Spoke fluent English,
French, Persian, and Arabic.
Married Narges Akbarnejad from
Sari, Iran, on March 28, 1966
(later divorced). Survived by two
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in Grantsville, Utah. Julie was a
talented seamstress and quilter,
winning various crafting awards.
She gave away many handcrafted
quilts that will always be treasured. She sewed everything from
blessing dresses, clothing and
treasures for her grandchildren.
Her creations were a blessing to
many. Julie loved people and was
a friend to all she met. She always
made time for her family and
friends and enjoyed a good visit.
She cherished her time as a loving
wife, mother and grandmother.
sons, Dr. Bobek Arabshahi (wife
Laura) and Mazdak Arabshahi
(wife Fatimah). Bobek lives with
his family in Gilbert, Arizona.
Mazdak lives with his family in
Sari, Iran. Mathew escaped Iran’s
Ayatollah regime and immigrated to the United States in 1982,
living in Texas and California
prior to moving to Tooele, Utah,
in 1992. Mathew built numerous
successful businesses in Tooele,
including Designer Cabinets,
Rancho Tooele Development,
Endeavor Business Park, Cyrus
Land Investments, and Central
School LLC. As a real estate
developer and home builder,
Mathew developed more than
400 lots for new housing. Mathew
played a key role in transitioning the closed portions of the
Tooele Army Depot (1,700 acres
and more than 2 million square
feet of buildings) into a thriving industrial park, infusing the
local economy with many millions of needed dollars. Mathew
met Cindy Miller in 1996; they
were close friends and dear companions for the last 20 years. He
was an important father figure to
her three children, Paige Lloyd
Smith (husband Joshua), Eris S.
Miller, and Nicole M. Mehalich,
as well as Cindy’s grandchildren
Braedon, Ian, lllias, and Ava Adore.
Mathew was close to his cousins
and other extended family, as
well as many friends. Mathew’s
grandchildren Diba and Zachary
(Bobak) and Arash and Nastaran
(Mazdak) love him and will miss
him. Mathew’s parents and siblings all preceded him in death.
While Mathew was regarded by
many as a shrewd businessman,
yet he possessed a gentle soul.
He once donated $5,000 toward
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She loved reading the scriptures
and cherished her testimony.
Fifteen years ago, she overcame
the physical challenges of a stroke
showcasing her determination in
both spirit and strength. Those
who knew her consider her one of
the toughest women they knew.
She dedicated the blessings of
overcoming the challenges by
spending the following time
employed with assisted living and
care centers. Julie is preceded in
death by her parents, daughter
Teresa Sandberg, two brothers
and one sister. Survived by her
husband of 50 years, her children:
Kendall & Annette Sandberg,
Russell (Andria), Mike (Derri),
Travis, Jennifer (Josh), Amanda
(Justin), 24 grandchildren, four
great-grandchildren, three brothers and four sisters. Viewing services will be held Wednesday,
Sept. 16, 2015, from 6-8 p.m.
at the LDS meetinghouse at 81
Church Street, Grantsville, Utah.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday, Sept. 17 at 1 p.m. at the
same meetinghouse with a viewing prior from 11:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. Condolences may be made
at www.daltonhoopes.com.
a new playground at Harris
Elementary School. He donated
the land for Rancho Tooele Park.
He quietly paid university tuition
expenses for several local youth,
and performed many other
unknown acts of local service.
Mathew dreamed big. He purchased the abandoned Central
School, saving the architectural
icon from ruin, and transformed
it into 34 beautiful apartments.
Mathew embodied class in his
dress and in his deportment,
courtesies, and presentation.
Even while pursuing the rewards
of enterprise, he always kept the
interests of his home, Tooele,
in the fore. One’s goodness is
the measure of one’s greatness.
To summarize the feelings of so
many, Mathew was such a good
man, and we were blessed to
have known him. Services will be
at Tate Mortuary, 110 South Main
Street, Tooele, Utah. Gathering
on Sept. 20, 2015, at 3:30 p.m.
Funeral service on Sept. 20, 2015,
at 4:30 p.m. Burial on Sept. 21,
2015, at 9:30 a.m. at the Tooele
City Cemetery.
Emma Aragon
Emma Aragon, age 81, passed
away on Sept. 4, 2015, at her home
in Salt Lake City. She was born in
Ranchos De Taos, New Mexico.
Scott Alan Davis
Scott was born in Burlington,
Iowa on April 8, 1969, and died
in Tooele, Utah, Sept. 11, 2015.
Scott is survived by his wife, Kim;
three children: Jake, Stetson,
and Kasey of Tooele, Utah; one
grandson Dakoda of Tooele,
Utah; his parents Jim and Lela
Davis of Harrison, Arkansas; one
brother Jimmy and wife Sharon
of Rogers, Arkansas; one nephew
JC and wife Shelley of Harrison,
Arkansas, one niece Katie
Williams and husband Justin of
Prairie Grove, Arkansas; three
great-nephews and two greatnieces. Scott served his country
honorably including two tours
overseas; first in Desert Storm
in 1991 followed by Afghanistan
(Operation Enduring Freedom)
in 2009. Scott loved Kim, his
children and his grandson more
than anything. He was a rebel
of the best kind. He wasn’t conventional, but he was kind. His
world away from work was the
mountains, big trucks and guns.
He was one of a kind and will
be greatly missed. Scott will
receive military honors at Tate
Mortuary, 110 S. Main St., Tooele,
on Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, at
5:30 p.m., followed by a visitation, also at Tate Mortuary, from
6-8 p.m. In accordance to Scott’s
wishes, he will then be cremated
and his ashes will be scattered on
Compton Mountain in Arkansas
at a later date.
Henry Calvin “Bike”
Russell
Henry Calvin “Bike” Russell
passed away on Sept. 13, 2015.
He was born on May 12, 1920, in
Lincoln, Utah, to William Martell
Sr. and Margaret Harris. He married Afton Williams on Nov. 5,
1947. They later divorced. He
married Odessa E. Tolman Smith
on Dec. 31, 1985. She passed
away in January 2005. He retired
from Dugway Proving Ground,
where he was as a heavy duty
mechanic. He is survived by his
three daughters, Janet Wyman,
Rush Valley; Susan (Bryan)
Allred, Fountain Green; Peggy
(Ken) Proctor, Tooele; daughter-in-law, Suzanne Russell,
Midway; 13 grandchildren; 33
great-grandchildren (with two
on the way); stepchildren Linda
(Mike) Stratton, Terri (Kelly)
Thomas, Texas; Dennis (Sheila)
and Jeff Smith, Tooele; a brother,
LaMar (Marlyn) Russell, Tooele;
and a sister, Ann (Jack) Moser,
California. He is preceded in
death by his parents; son, Larry
Calvin; grandson Joseph Allred;
brothers Bill, Dan and Melvin;
and stepdaughters Susan Garrett
and Sharon Beasley. Services will
be Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015 in the
Rush Valley LDS Church, beginning at 11 a.m. with a viewing
from 9:30–10:30 a.m. Burial will
be in the Rush Valley Cemetery.
Richard C. Rania
Richard C. Rania passed away
Sept. 12, 2015. A WWII vet, he
served proudly all over the world
for his country. Until going blind
in 2008, Richard loved to play golf
and read mystery novels. Shown
in the picture is Richard with one
of his great-grandchildren. He
has two great-great-grandchildren and seven grandchildren.
He was a father of five children.
Richard lived a long life at 90
years old. He saw things like the
Great Depression, the invention
of the television, the rise and the
fall of the Berlin Wall and the first
Turbo jet. He saw many firsts in
his lifetime between 1925 and
2015. He was married 60 years to
wife Barbara Rania, who passed
away in February 2015. He will
be missed dearly. We love you.
She is survived by her husband of
64 years, Jose C. Aragon; her children, Toby (LeeAnna) Aragon,
Cathy (Allen) Anderson, Floyd
Aragon, Geraldine Hoffman and
Yvette (Bobby) Sullivan; she is
also survived by many grandchildren, great-grandchildren
and one great-great grandson. A
mass will be held in her memory
on Sept. 17, 2015, at 11 a.m. at St.
Marguerite Church.
NOTE OF APPRECIATION
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The family of Arthur Clovis
Vialpando would like to express
our sincere appreciation for all
the visits, kind words, food, flowers and cards. We would especially like to thank St. Marguerite
Parish and all the faith-filled
denominations who prayed for
Art and the Vialpando family
from the very beginning. We are
also grateful for all those in the
medical profession who reached
out to Art during his illness.
We would specifically like to
The History of Tooele County
I
n September 1846 the Donner-Reed Party, while trying a shortcut to
California, passed through the what would become Tooele County
and nearly perished in the Great Salt Lake Desert. Three years later,
a handful of Mormon pioneer families left Salt Lake Valley and built
a meager encampment in Settlement Canyon above today’s Tooele
City. Soon, others followed, and a community emerged on the edge
of the Great Basin frontier that was populated by individualistic and
energetic settlers who managed to thrive in an environment fraught
with hardship. Their story, and many others, are found inside this History
of Utah’s Tooele County. Learn about how the pioneers ingeniously
built their lives in the wilderness; the wild mining days in Ophir, Mercur
and Jacob City; the Pony Express Trail; the glorious beaches and resorts
along the southern shore of the Great Salt Lake, and more.
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Single players welcome.
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acknowledge Harmony Hospice
Care for the professional service
and ministry they provided Art
and the whole family every step
of the way.
Thank you!
•
•
•
•
•
Nearly 500 pages
Large 8.5 x 11 size pages
Hardcover with dust jacket
More than 500 photos
More than 700 pioneer $
biographies
Get Your Copy Today at the Tooele
Transcript-Bulletin
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
3995
58 N. Main • Tooele
Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 5:30 • Closed Sat. and Sun.
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
SUN AND MOON
The Sun
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
The Moon
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Rise
7:10 a.m.
7:11 a.m.
7:12 a.m.
7:13 a.m.
7:14 a.m.
7:15 a.m.
7:16 a.m.
Rise
10:16 a.m.
11:12 a.m.
12:08 p.m.
1:04 p.m.
1:58 p.m.
2:51 p.m.
3:41 p.m.
Set
7:37 p.m.
7:35 p.m.
7:34 p.m.
7:32 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
7:29 p.m.
7:27 p.m.
Set
9:27 p.m.
10:01 p.m.
10:39 p.m.
11:21 p.m.
none
12:09 a.m.
1:03 a.m.
First
Full
Last
New
Sep 21
Sep 27
Oct 4
Oct 12
SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELE
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
A9
SUNDAY
MONDAY
UV INDEX
TUESDAY
W
Th
F
Sa
Su
M
Tu
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™
number, the greater the need for eye and skin
protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10
Very High; 11+ Extreme
ALMANAC
Rather cloudy with a
shower or t-storm
Sunshine and patchy
clouds
65 53
66 45
Partly sunny
Mostly sunny and
pleasant
Partly sunny and
pleasant
Plenty of sunshine
65 43
69 49
76 56
TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER
Abundant sunshine
79 53
80 57
Shown is Wednesday’s
weather. Temperatures are
Wednesday’s highs and
Wednesday night’s lows.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Statistics for the week ending Sept. 14.
Temperatures
High/Low past week
92/50
Normal high/low past week
82/56
Average temp past week
71.9
Normal average temp past week
68.6
Daily Temperatures
High
Low
UTAH WEATHER
Tue Wed Thu
Logan
59/38
Grouse
Creek
59/40
Wendover
65/49
Knolls
63/48
Clive
63/48
Lake Point
67/55
Stansbury Park
Erda 67/54
Grantsville
66/53
Pine Canyon
67/54
57/46
Bauer
Tooele
65/52
65/53
Stockton
63/52
Rush Valley
Ophir
64/48
61/48
Ogden
62/49
Vernal
68/45
Salt Lake City
64/52
Tooele
65/53
Provo
66/47
Nephi
69/46
Delta
71/51
Manti
71/45
Richfield
74/43
Beaver
70/45
Cedar City
St. George 71/47
Kanab
84/59
73/47
Roosevelt
69/45
Price
69/47
Green River
81/52
Hanksville
80/53
Moab
79/57
Blanding
75/53
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Students at Stansbury High School sign yearbooks near the end of the last school year. Officials from the Tooele County
School District is drafting a new, district-wide dress code for students.
Habitat
The map below shows the sage-grouse management area encircled in red, with
known leks marked in black. Biologists discussed the possibility of removing piñonjuniper trees near the leks to increase the quality and quantity of habitat available to
the birds. Map provided by Avery Cook of the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.
continued from page A1
extend into northeastern Juab
County.
The working group, with
representatives
from
the
Utah Division of Wildlife
Resources, U.S. Bureau of
Land Management, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Services, and U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
organized four separate initiatives during the meeting at the
USU extension classroom in the
Tooele County Health Building.
Tooele County Commissioner
Wade Bitner was also present to
represent the county.
The initiatives discussed
included removing piñonjuniper trees encroaching on
sage-grouse habitat, increasing predator control, introducing more birds from a different
population, and better educating people on the rules for recreation.
Boyd White, a farm bill
biologist from DWR, agreed
to take charge of the piñonjuniper removal. Together
with several coworkers, White
has already created a map of
the Sheeprocks area, detailing
where the trees are growing as
well as the locations of current sage-grouse leks — places
where sage-grouse gather to
find mates during the mating
season.
White’s team then identified
a few priority areas for piñonjuniper removal. The focus
areas currently total just over
90,000 acres and are located in
both Tooele and Juab counties.
The team is currently in the
process of narrowing the focus
areas and identifying landowners who will be affected.
High
Moderate
Low
Absent
F
Sa Su
In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday
Eureka
63/44
“So what we really have is 16 different policies. We need to adopt
a consistent and uniform policy
throughout the entire district.”
School board members voted
unanimously to have the superintendent draft a dress code policy for discussion.
“We will need to involve students and parents as we work on
this,” Rogers said. “But an initial
draft will give people something
they can line out things on, or
make suggestions for changes or
additions.”
According to Rogers, there are
two questions that must guide
the elements of any dress code:
“Is it disruptive to the educational environment?” and “Is it
safe?”
Policies that get outside of
those two questions may violate
student’s constitutional rights,
according to Rogers.
“However, no matter how the
policy is written, it ends up subjective,” he said. “For example
when you say ‘no extreme hairstyles’ what is extreme?”
Pollen Index
M
RIVERS AND LAKES
Ibapah
64/41
continued from page A1
Sun Mon
Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma
Vernon
65/46
Code
Sat
Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal
Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D
Tu W Th
Dugway
65/49
Gold Hill
60/46
Fri
Precipitation (in inches)
Rogers presented the board
with a packet that included dress
code policies from around a halfdozen Utah school districts.
The Davis School District
dress code is less than one half
page in length. Among four numbered points is one that reads,
“Students shall not wear extreme
clothing, including baggy pants
or shorts, inappropriately short,
tight, or revealing shorts, skirts,
or dresses, tank tops or clothing
that exposes bare midriffs and
undergarments.”
The Jordan School District
dress code is found among three
pages of policy language titled
“Student Conduct and Dress.”
The Jordan District policy
offers “short shorts, mini skirts,
bare midriffs, halter tops, spaghetti straps, tank shirts, and
similar clothing” as examples
of immodest clothing not to be
worn by students.
Vernon Creek
at Vernon
South Willow Creek
at Grantsville
Stage
24-hour
Change
1.01
none
1.34
Great Salt Lake
at Saltair Boat Harbor
none
Elevation
4190.93
Rogers asked board members
to review the sample policies
and email him comments and
suggestions to include in a draft
dress code policy.
“We need to get on the same
page with the dress code,” Rogers
said. “It will be less confusing for
students and parents when kids
change schools.”
A consistent policy will also
make it easier for the district to
support principals on enforcement and consequences, Rogers
said.
Tooele County students may
not be the only ones looking at a
new dress code policy. Separate
from the student dress code
policy, Rogers also asked board
members to look at a dress code
policy for school employees.
The draft student dress code
policy may be ready for the Oct.
13 school board meeting.
tgillie@tooeletranscript.com
For All the Great
Events in Life
Let Everyone
Know!
Place a Notice in the Transcript Bulletin!
Weddings • Birthdays • Graduations • Retirement
Military • Missionaries • Honors & Awards
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
Vernon
435-882-0050
58 N. Main, Tooele
8:30 to 5:30 Mon-Fri (closed Sat & Sun)
BY RICHARD CROSSLEY
State biologists are worried about a
population of greater sage-grouse
living in the Sheeprock Mountains
whose numbers continue to decline.
Representatives from several state and
federal agencies met in Tooele City last
week to discuss ways they could help
the birds.
The team is also taking into
account the movement of the
sage-grouse population within
the Sheeprocks, White said.
“This is an adaptive thing,”
he said. “Next year, our focus
[areas] could change.”
Chris Perkins represented the
USDA during the discussion
about increasing predator control on ravens and red foxes. He
said the department would be
willing to work with the group,
but wasn’t sure where the funding would come from.
“We’re being pulled in all
directions,” he said. “Every
county in the state wants our
help in predator control. ...
We’re spread thin, to be honest. It’d almost have to be a
separate contract or we’d have
to augment the existing one,
depending on how hard predator funding is to come by.”
Increased predator control
would ideally come before the
working group moved ahead
with its plans to translocate
10 male and 30 female sagegrouse from a population in
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Box Elder County in the spring,
Belton said.
Avery Cook, upland game
project leader from DWR,
will organize the translocation, pending approval from
the Utah Wildlife Board and
Regional Advisory Council. The
board may not address the idea
until its January meeting, Cook
said.
In the meantime, Chris
Bryan of the BLM Salt Lake
Field Office reported the agency has made the Sheeprocks its
highest priority as it works to
update its travel management
plan. At the meeting, Bryan
also accepted suggestions from
other officials about different
methods of informing people
of the rules for recreation in the
Sheeprocks.
After the FWS named the
greater sage-grouse a can-
didate for listing under the
Endangered Species Act in 2010,
U.S. Secretary of the Interior
Ken Salazar invited Utah and
10 other states in which the
bird lives to create state-specific plans to conserve the sagegrouse, thus avoiding the need
for federal protection.
In response, Utah updated its
conservation plan in 2013, hoping to avoid a listing, according
to a Feb. 10 post on blog.governor.utah.gov.
“A listing would limit many
activities on Utah’s sagebrush
lands and would be devastating to the state’s economy,” the
post added.
The FWS is under court order
to decide whether the sagegrouse should be listed under
the Act by Sept. 30.
jhenrie@tooeletranscript.com
End of Season
CLEARANCE
Monday-Saturday 9-6, Sunday 10-2
Great Selection of shade and ornamental trees, fruit and nut trees,
shrubs, roses, perennials, and more.
425 E. CIMMARRON WAY • ERDA
2 miles north of Tooele on Highway 36
435.843.5959
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
A10
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
Sports
SPORTS WRAP
Dugway volleyball at Merit Prep
Dugway beat Merit College
Preparatory Academy 3-0 on
Thursday, with set scores of 2522, 25-18 and 25-21. Junior Kate
Thackeray had a team-high 12
kills on 35 attempts while senior
Kassidy Christensen chipped in
another nine on 23 attempts.
Senior Victoria Sosa served
four aces, while senior Julianna
Kirschner, sophomore Madison
Noftell and Thackeray each served
two. Sophomore Emma Wood had
the only two blocks for the visiting team. Christensen had eight
digs. Senior Cynthia Kimler had 22
assists. The win brings Duway to 40 with wins over Summit Academy,
Rockwell and Wendover. The next
matches will be at Intermountain
Christian on Tuesday and at home
to St. Joseph on Thursday.
DAKOTA CLEGG/TTB PHOTO
Tooele running back Demetrius “Pete” Smith (19) sidesteps Stansbury junior defensive back Mitch McIntyre during Friday’s rivalry game and 3AA North region opener.
Buffaloes stampede over Stallions
by Darren Vaughan
COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR
With an 11-point lead and
5:40 left in the fourth quarter,
Tooele’s football team wasn’t
content to merely hold off a
potential comeback attempt
from archrival Stansbury in the
Class 3AA North region opener on Friday night at Stallion
Stadium.
The Buffaloes wanted to prevent the Stallions from ever having a chance. Thus, as Tooele
coach Kyle Brady tried to send
on his punt team on fourthand-1 from the Buffs’ 47-yard
line, the pleas of his offense led
him to change his mind.
“We’re a good football team
this year,” Kyle Brady said.
“Somewhere in the game, something’s going to happen where
we need to make a play.”
After a timeout to figure out
the right play, Tooele quarterback Carver Jaramillo handed the ball to junior Lincoln
Powers. The Buffs needed one
yard for a first down. Powers
gained two, extending a drive
that eventually lasted 15 plays
and consumed the final 8:21 of
game time to preserve Tooele’s
27-16 victory.
“We were very confident —
we’d been talking about this all
week,” Powers said. “With this
win and our homecoming [this]
week, we’ve got the most confidence we’ve ever had.”
Running back Ryan Brady
gained 17 yards on the next
two plays, followed by a pair
of carries by Powers. After
Ryan Brady failed to gain anything on third-and-6 from the
Stansbury 30, the Buffs (3-1,
1-0 3AA North) faced another
opportunity to keep the ball
away from the Stallions (3-1,
0-1). Ryan Brady responded
with a nine-yard run that gave
Tooele another first down and
allowed the Buffs to run out the
clock.
“We just play hard until that
last whistle blows,” said Ryan
Brady, who ran for 108 yards
and a third-quarter touchdown.
It was the perfect finish to a
masterful performance by the
Buffaloes, whose defense limited Stansbury to just 146 yards
on the ground and forced three
turnovers.
“Tooele’s got a veteran team,
we’ve got a young bunch
and our kids never backed
down,” Stansbury coach Clint
Christiansen said. “Hats off
to Kyle Brady and his bunch
— he’s got a good team out
there.”
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Stansbury’s Gavin Skogg (4) catches a
pass in the 27-16 loss to rival Tooele at
home on Friday.
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Tooele quarterback Carver Jaramillo (1) powers into the end zone to score a touchdown for the Buffs.
SHS FOOTBALL
Stansbury’s first two turnovers of the game proved
especially costly. Late in the
first quarter, Tooele senior Ty
Allred stripped the ball from
Stallion quarterback Colton
Christiansen, giving the Buffs
the ball at the Stansbury 6-yard
line. Jaramillo scored two plays
later to give Tooele a 6-0 lead.
After a field goal by Tarl Lewis
cut the lead to 6-3, Stansbury’s
next possession ended on an
interception by Powers, giving Tooele the ball on the 7yard line. Once again, it took
Jaramillo just two plays to find
the end zone, putting the Buffs
up 13-3.
“We put ourselves in a lot of
bad spots controlling the football,” Clint Christiansen said.
“You can’t do that against a good
team like that. Our defense was
buried deep numerous times.”
The Buffs made it 20-3 on
Brady’s TD run on fourth-andgoal from the 1-yard line with
7:12 left in the third.
Stansbury bounced back
with an 11-play, 83-yard drive
that resulted in a 3-yard TD run
by Colton Christiansen with
2:26 left in the third quarter
to pull within 11 points. That
momentum was short-lived, as
Powers ripped off a 75-yard run
“Tooele’s got
a veteran team,
we’ve got a young
bunch and our
kids never backed
down. Hats off to
Kyle Brady and
his bunch — he’s
got a good team
out there.”
Clint Christiansen
Stansbury head coach
THS FOOTBALL
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
on the first play of the fourth
quarter. That led to Powers’ 7yard scoring run with 11:07 left
in regulation to make it 27-9.
Stansbury needed less than
three minutes to complete a
nine-play, 79-yard drive that
culminated in Casey Roberts’
33-yard touchdown reception,
but the Stallions never saw the
ball again.
Stansbury faces a crucial
Stansbury’s Casey Roberts (22) gets a first down.
region test in its homecoming game Friday night against
Judge Memorial, with the loser
falling to 0-2 in region play. The
Bulldogs (0-4, 0-1) were routed
in their region opener against
Logan.
Tooele gets a break from
region play on Friday, but not a
break from tough competition
as they welcome Class 4A foe
Maple Mountain to town.
“These games against 4A
schools are going to make us a
better team come playoff time,”
Kyle Brady said. “Our goal is to
come out, compete and play
our best, and that’s all we can
ask for.”
dvaughan@tooeletranscript.com
Stephen Wade Invitational
Grantsville’s tennis team won the
Stephen Wade Invitational in St.
George over the weekend with a
low score of nine, which was five
better than Murray’s second-place
score of 14. In all, 12 teams competed. Sophomore Kayla Johnson
defeated Fremont 8-5 in the first
round of the first singles bracket, Cedar City 8-2 in the second,
Spanish Fork 8-4 in the third and
Mountain Crest 8-4 in the fourth
before falling to Murray 6-3, 6-0
in the fifth. Junior Baile Sandberg
defeated a Fremont girl 8-0 in the
first round of the second singles
bracket, Cedar 8-0 in the second,
Spanish Fork 8-0 in the third, lost
to Sky View 8-6 in the fourth and
defeated Mountain Crest 6-2, 61 in the fifth. In third singles,
senior Morgan Matthews defeated
Fremont 8-3 in the first round,
Cedar 8-0 in the second, Spanish
Fork 8-2 in the third, Desert Hills
8-1 in the fourth and lost to Murray
6-0, 6-3 in the fifth. In first doubles, seniors Whitney Castagno
and Lexi Jackson defeated Fremont
8-1 in the first round, Cedar 80 in the second, Spanish Fork
8-5 in the third, Sky View 8-1 in
the fourth and Spanish Fork 7-5,
6-3 in the fifth. Competing in second doubles, senior Becca Toone
and sophomore Marissa Linares
defeated Fremont 8-3 in the first
round, Cedar 8-6 in the second,
Spanish Fork 8-4 in the third, Sky
View 8-3 in the fourth and Desert
Hills 6-1, 6-3 in the fifth.
Wall of fame
Tooele High School will hold the
Annual Athletic Wall of Fame
Induction Ceremony on Sept. 18.
This year’s inductees are Trent
Pratt and Andrew Hochstrasser.
Hochstrasser was a wrestler at
Tooele who compiled a record of
182-8. Seven of those eight losses
occurred out of state — four of
them during his sophomore season. He was the 10th wrestler in
Utah history to become a four-time
Utah high school champion, and
he set records in wins, pins, tech
falls and points scored for his
team as he helped Tooele win a
pair of region championships. He
received the Dave Shultz Memorial
Award as one the top high school
wrestlers in the country during his
junior and senior years. Graduating
from Tooele in 2004, he wrestled
at the 125-pound position at Boise
State and took third in the Pac-10
championships, securing a bid for
the 2005 NCAA championship and
receiving Freshman of the Year
conference honors. During two
of the next three years after his
mission for the LDS church, he
became Pac-12 Wrestler of the
Year and was a two-time NCAA
All-American. Pratt was a TPX AllAmerican high school baseball
player and Gatorade Player of the
Year in 1998, a year after helping
the Buffs win a state championship. He was drafted three times,
but chose to pursue his education at Arizona State and Auburn
universities, where he earned All
Freshman honors in the Pac-10
and Second-Team All-SEC honors,
respectively. Upon finishing his
professional baseball career, Pratt
became the lead assistant at Dixie
State College, where he coached
for five years. He was later named
lead assistant at BYU where he
presently coaches.
Tooele volleyball at Rocky
Mountain Classic
The Buffaloes lost to Morgan,
Davis and Sky View with scores of
2-0 in the Rocky Mountain Classic
at Lone Peak and American Fork
high schools over the weekend,
and the Buffs beat Fremont 2-1
with set scores of 26-24, 19-25
and 15-12.
FBS top 25
Three Southeastern Conference
teams fell out of the AP Top 25 and
Auburn dropped 12 spots Sunday
after the league that set a record
for most teams in the college
SEE WRAP PAGE 12 ➤
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
A11
Tooele too much for Cowboys
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Tooele’s Bobbie Jo Meyer gets one in the net past the hands of Grantsville’s goalkeeper Mickayla Silcox during Thursday’s 5-1 Tooele win.
Grantsville can’t stop Tooele scoring, falls 5-1 on road
by Darren Vaughan
COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR
Less than 48 hours after a
thrilling 5-4 loss in the Region 10
opener to Stansbury, it was only
natural for the Tooele girls soccer
team to have a bit of a letdown in
Thursday’s home match against
Grantsville.
Fortunately for the Buffaloes,
it wasn’t enough to cost them a
loss, as they beat the Cowboys
5-1 despite a lackluster-at-times
effort.
“Today was just — it was the
win that counts, not the performance, because the performance wasn’t great,” Tooele
coach Stephen Duggan said.
Tooele (3-3-1, 1-1 Region 10)
struggled to find the kind of
offensive chemistry that helped
the Buffs go toe-to-toe with
Stansbury just two days earlier.
Grantsville (3-2, 1-1), brimming
with confidence after beating
Union 1-0 earlier in the week in
its region opener, also threw a
wrench in the Tooele attack with
an aggressive effort.
“I’m happy with the effort,”
Cowboys coach Travis Lowry
said. “It’s an evolution for our
team. A game like that in years
past would have been way more
lopsided. I think we played well
and did a lot of good things in
the game.”
Tooele nearly jumped ahead in
the eighth minute when Madelyn
Tate’s shot from the right side just
missed the top-left corner, skimming across the top of the goal
after going over the crossbar.
Grantsville had an opportunity of its own in the 10th minute off a corner kick, only to
have it foiled by Tooele goalkeeper Trista Fackrell, and the
Buffaloes responded a minute
GHS SOCCER
PRETTY KITTY!
THS SOCCER
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Your Chest?
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(it’s good therapy).
P.O. Box 390
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tbp@tooeletranscript.com
For more info. on animalsTooele County
Animal Shelter 882-1051
Tooele City
Animal Shelter 882-8900
Grantsville
Animal Shelter 884-6881
Adoption Procedure
Local shelter adoption requires
vaccination payment, licensing
and possible shelter fee.
Shelters are required to
hold animals for 5 business
days before euthanization.
Brought to you by Joe H. Roundy, D.V.M.
Tooele Veterinary Clinic
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FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Grantsville keeper Mickayla Silcox stops a drive by Tooele’s Ciara Stewart.
later as Bobbi Jo Meyer collected
a rebound and beat Cowboys
keeper Mickayla Silcox for a 1-0
advantage.
Tooele made it 2-0 in the 31st
minute as senior Ciara Stewart’s
trademark flip throw-in found
teammate Abby Webber for an
open shot.
However, Grantsville wasn’t
deterred by the early two-goal
deficit, as a miscommunication by the Buffs’ defense left
Cowboys sophomore Ashley
SEE SOCCER PAGE 12 ➤
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TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Grantsville’s Sarah Ellett (24) battles with Tooele’s Codi Christensen (4) for the ball during the Region 10 match at Grantsville
on Thursday. The Buffaloes outscored the Cowboys 5-1.
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TOOELE
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
A12
Grantsville miscues are undoing against foe
Bear River in could-have, should-have game
by Tavin Stucki
SPORTS EDITOR
Farmers Market
Saturday’s 9am-2pm, through October
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928 N 100 E • TOOELE
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
Grantsville head coach Curtis
Ware knows all too well that
little mistakes have been his
young team’s worst enemy this
season.
“When we fix them, the rest
of this region better watch
out,” he told his team following
Grantsville’s 16-12 loss at Bear
River on Friday. “There’s no
doubt in my mind we can’t go to
Union and take care of business
if we fix our mistakes.”
The Cowboys were blocked
on a point-after attempt, stuffed
in the end zone for a safety
twice, had a number of mishandled snaps and still had a
very good chance to spoil Bear
River’s homecoming game.
Instead, the Cowboys rode
the bus home two hours in the
probable silence that usually
plagues a losing team’s attitude.
“It’s just one mistake,” said
Grantsville junior Riley Smith.
“You know, one play, one block
just takes us down. We just need
to keep fighting, keep moving
forward… We just kept quitting.”
The easiest flaws to point
out were the safeties, for if the
Bears hadn’t earned those two
extra possessions and the two
points that came with each, the
game would have been, at least,
forced into overtime or, at most,
won by Grantsville in regulation.
“Their punter is a dang good
punter,” said lineman Colton
“I mean you
look at the scoreboard and four
points, two safeties. If you get
rid of those two
safeties we’re still
playing
right
now.”
Colton Adams
Grantsville football player
“Crash” Adams. “I mean, they
got two down on the 1-yard line,
three. We’ve got to be able to
make, to get yardage on those
short — you know, where it’s [a]
life-or-death situation. I mean
you look at the scoreboard and
four points, two safeties. If you
get rid of those two safeties
we’re still playing right now.”
Offensively the Cowboys
struggled. Sophomore quarterback Coy Johnson, who seemed
to have gained some moxie in
the close game against Juab
two weeks ago, seemed also to
have lost that in the Stansbury
blowout. Johnson went 5-for-15
passing for just 58 yards and
threw two interceptions.
The former backup was
pulled in the fourth quarter for
concussion-like symptoms and
replaced by Smith, who went 3-
GHS FOOTBALL
for-4 and 69 yards. Smith found
junior star receiver Gavin Eyre
in the end zone on a diving
catch to make it 16-12 late in
the game.
“Gavin’s always Gavin,”
Adams said. “He worked so hard
in the offseason and everything
else. You throw the ball to him,
he’s going to catch it. I think we
need to utilize him a little more.
I mean, you saw it: There’s no
one in the state that can oneon-one defend him. If he gets
the throw, he’s going to make
the catch.”
Defensively, Adams had
a game-high 12 tackles, 10 of
which were solo, and a sack.
Smith and sophomore Jake
Paxton had eight total tackles
each, and Smith added another
two sacks. Sophomore Brady
Arbon intercepted a pass and
returned it 45 yards to the Bear
River 11-yard line, which set
up the first-half rushing touchdown by junior back Andrew
Floyd.
As a whole, the defense held
a team from a higher classification to just 62 yards passing and
16 points — 12 if you take away
the defensive scores.
“The good thing, those first
four games don’t matter,” Ware
said. “I was proud as hell of
that defense tonight. I mean, it
was time and time again their
back got put up against the
wall and they made stand after
“It’s getting to
the point now
[that] if we have
to make personnel changes, let’s
make personnel
changes.”
Curtis Ware
Grantsville football coach
stand after stand. Offense just
couldn’t get anything going.”
“It’s getting to the point now,”
he continued, “if we have to
make personnel changes, let’s
make personnel changes.”
Aside from Bear River junior
running back Gage Kaneko
and his 133 rushing yards, the
Cowboys played nearly flawlessly on defense. Bear quarterback Triston Merritt was held to
5-of-13 passing for 62 yards and
a score.
The Bears are now 1-3 and will
take on Park City in their 3AA
North region opener while the
Cowboys are winless through
four games and will face Union
on the road. Both games are
scheduled for 7 p.m. on Friday.
“I can’t say it hurts, but it’s
something we can learn from,”
Smith said. “It’s something we
need to find in ourselves to
come next week, and I believe
we can do that.”
tstucki@tooeletranscript.com
Duggan’s Buffalo soccer team serves community
by Tavin Stucki
SPORTS EDITOR
The Tooele girls soccer team
took some time off the pitch on
Sept. 3 to make a difference in
the community.
Each of the players went with
head coach Stephen Duggan to
Cottage Glen, an assisted living
community in Tooele, where
they visited residents to chat,
play games, help clean and do
good.
“I decided a few weeks back to
Wrap
continued from page 10
football rankings last week had a
rough weekend. Arkansas, Tennessee
and Mississippi State all dropped out
after losses Saturday. Auburn needed
overtime to beat Jacksonville State
of the FCS and slipped from No. 6 to
No. 18. The SEC was down to seven
ranked teams, still the most of any
conference. Ohio State remains No. 1,
but the Buckeyes are no longer unanimous. No. 4 Michigan State received
two first-place votes from the media
panel after beating Oregon 31-28.
Alabama remains No. 2. TCU is 3. No.
19 BYU jumped into the rankings after
Join the Scholar Academy families yard sale event! Part of
the proceeds from the Scholar Academy bake goods and
yard sale will go the the Griffith Family. Dusty Griffith is
a Scholar Academy board memmber and life-long Tooele
resident who recenty had a brain tumor removed.
get the girls involved in a service
project in the community; I felt
it was important we gave something back to the community
that we all live in,” Duggan wrote
in an email to the Transcript
Bulletin. “So many times today
young people get bad press, not
enough times are they praised
for doing good and making a
difference. These girls genuinely
made a difference.”
Duggan asked his team members if they wanted to participate
in something like this before
making any arrangements, and
the team voted unanimously
in the affirmative, so Duggan
scheduled a meeting time with
a representative from Cottage
Glen.
The first-year head coach at
Tooele said some of the players
were assigned to a separate unit
to converse with and help entertain the guests.
“I’ve got to say, they did fantastic and were a credit to their
families, school and community,”
Duggan wrote. “They did with no
questions asked and with great
gusto and enthusiasm.”
Duggan said the girls listened
to one resident, a 94-year-old
World War II Air Force veteran,
who told vivid stories of his life,
complete with photographs of
his wife, while the players sat
and listened with awe and reverence.
“As head coach of these girls,
I couldn’t be prouder of them,
both on and off the field of play,”
Duggan wrote.
tstucki@tooeletranscript.com
beating Boise State and knocking out
the Broncos. The Cougars were ranked
in the top 25 for four weeks early
last season before star QB Taysom
Hill was injured. Hill went down again
in the season opener at Nebraska,
but Tanner Mangum has led BYU to
two straight victories with late long
touchdown passes. Oklahoma moved
up three spots to No. 16 after coming
from 17-0 down to win at Tennessee,
31-24 in double overtime. Oregon
dropped five spots to No. 12 after its
loss at Michigan State.
Correction
In the Thursday edition, Tooele volleyball’s Sydnee Simmons’ name was
misspelled. The Transcript Bulletin
regrets the error.
See News Happening?
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TOOELE
Small vendors welcome to set up booth, call 435.566.6957
FREE ATV/OHV Safety Certification Course
Bring n
your oOwHV
ATV/
THUR • SEPT 17 • 5-9PM
DESERET PEAK COMPLEX
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO
Tooele’s Emily Webber tries to score off a header in Thursday’s game against
Grantsville. The Buffaloes prevailed 5-1 in the rivalry match.
Soccer
Children under the age of eight are prohibited from operating
ATV/OHVs on public lands in Utah. Any person over the age of
eight who wishes to do so is required to have a valid ATV/OHV
safety certificate or driver license in their immediate possession.
FREE
HELMET!
for each
participant
Call 435-277-2302 to register or
email abate@tooelehealth.org
OHV Skills Course: Many students who are granted ATV/
OHV safety certificates have very little riding experience.
During the skills course, students bring their own ATV/
OHV and are allowed to practice the techniques taught
during the classroom portion. Topics include: conducting
a pre-ride inspection, starting, stopping, turning, climbing,
descending, avoiding and crossing obstacles, and much
more. The class is taught by a certified ATV/OHV instructor.
OHV Education Course: The four hour course is designed
to give riders the basic skills necessary to safely operate
an ATV/OHV. Some of the topics included are: nomenclature, laws in Utah, proper safety equipment, riding techniques, and much more. At the conclusion of the course,
students will take a written test on the material covered
during the course. After successfully passing the test, the
students will be sent a valid ATV/OHV safety certificate for
the State of Utah.
continued from page 11
Wangsgard wide open with the
ball in the 18-yard box in the
33rd minute. Wangsgard made
no mistake, ripping a shot past
Fackrell into the left side of the
net.
“[Tooele plays] the level of
soccer we want to be at, and
we were right there at different
intervals of the game,” Lowry
said.
Tooele forward Sydney Russell
restored Tooele’s two-goal cushion just before halftime, but
Duggan was less than pleased
with his team’s effort through the
first 40 minutes.
“We gave away a silly goal,
and you can’t be doing that at
this level,” Duggan said. “Maybe
the girls were a bit complacent
after after how well they played
[against Stansbury]. Maybe they
thought they were just going to
come out and do it again. We’ve
got to build consistency — we
can’t be having back-to-back
performances like that.”
Tooele’s Kaitlyn Asay added a
goal in the 60th minute, while
Meyer capped the scoring with
a high, hard shot from the left
wing in the 77th minute.
The Buffs were back in action
Tuesday at home against Park
City in a game that was not
complete at press time. Tooele
will play Union on Thursday in
Roosevelt.
“If we play like that against
Park City, we’re probably going
to get beat — I know the reality
of it,” Duggan said.
Meanwhile, Grantsville traveled to Stansbury on Tuesday.
The Cowboys will have a week
off before facing Park City on
Sept. 22.
dvaughan@tooeletranscript.com
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
• Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays
• Classifieds and Public Notices
B1
Hometown
Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as
weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin
Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired
publication date. To place a community news item or for more
information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or
dvaughan@tooeletranscript.com. Items more than one month old
will not be considered for publication.
Stephanie Welsch (above) gives a pan full of potatoes a stir at the
annual Fall Festival. Troy Medina (right) fills the Fall Festival with
music, singing the classic Eddie Rabbitt tune “Driving My Life Away.”
2015 Fall Festival
PHOTOS
FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE
A
n annual tradition for more than a quartercentury in Tooele, St. Marguerite Catholic
Church’s Fall Festival welcomed the community on Saturday for fun, games and food, as
well as a celebration of the parish’s patron saint,
Saint Marguerite Marie Alacoque.
The festival featured a community dance, live
music, games and food from all over the world,
as well as children’s games, pony rides and a car
show.
All proceeds from the event benefited St.
Marguerite Catholic Church and St. Marguerite
Catholic School.
SEE FESTIVAL PAGE B8 ➤
Lilian Gren (above)
stands in front of
John Daly’s 1984
Chevrolet K20
Custom Deluxe. The
truck was entered
in the car show held
in conjunction with
Saint Marguerite
Catholic Parish’s
annual Fall Festival.
Cisco Valadez (right)
ties a balloon to
place it on the
board for a game.
DJ Dan Rouggly (above left) spins the tunes for the car show
held on Saturday afternoon at the Saint Marguerite Fall
Festival. Anna Barela takes aim and tosses a ping-pong ball
to try to win a fish in a game. William Johnson (left) gives the
thumbs-up while he barbecues ribs to sell at the Fall Festival.
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
B2
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
by Fifi
Rodriguez
1. U.S. STATES: What is the
highest capital city in the
United States?
2. SLOGANS: What was
Woodsy Owl’s message
from the federal government?
3. RELIGION: When is
Maundy Thursday in the
Christian religion?
4. MUSIC: Which pop singer
was called “The Man from
Memphis”?
Moments
in Time
THE HISTORY CHANNEL
➤ On Oct. 1, 1890, an act
of Congress creates
Yosemite National Park in
California, home of Half
Dome and giant sequoia
trees. The act paved the
way for generations of
hikers, campers and
nature lovers, along with
countless “Don’t Feed the
Bears” signs.
Mega Maze
➤ On Oct. 2, 1948, the
first American road race
since World War II takes
place in Watkins Glen,
New York. The New York
Central railroad agreed to
suspend train service for
the afternoon so that the
drivers could cross the
tracks safely.
ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW
➤ On Sept. 30, 1955, actor
James Dean is killed
in California when his
Porsche hits a sedan.
Rumor has it that Dean’s
car was cursed. After the
accident, the car rolled
off the back of a truck
and crushed the legs of a
mechanic. When the parts
were sold, the engine,
transmission and tires
were all transplanted into
cars that were subsequently involved in deadly
crashes.
➤ On Sept. 28, 1960, at
Boston’s Fenway Park,
Red Sox star Ted Williams
homers in the final at-bat
of his 21-year career. After
being booed by Red Sox
fans early in his career,
Williams swore never to
tip his cap to the Boston
fans. He never did.
➤ On Oct. 4, 1970, singer
Janis Joplin dies of an
accidental heroin overdose at age 27. Joplin,
who had a No. 1 hit with
“Piece of My Heart,”
was discovered in her
Los Angeles hotel room
after failing to show for a
recording session.
➤ On Sept. 29, 1982, cyanide-laced Tylenol kills six
people in Chicago, leading
to a nationwide recall. The
culprit was never caught,
but the mass murder
led to new tamper-proof
medicine containers.
➤ On Oct. 3, 1990, less than
one year after the destruction of the Berlin Wall,
East and West Germany
come together on what
is known as “Unity Day.”
Germany had been divided since 1945.
Q: My favorite show of last
season was “Legends,” starring
Sean Bean. Will it be back for
another season? I thought it
would be back over the summer.
— Patrick K., via email
A: Season two of the hit TNT
spy thriller — based on the
award-winning book by master spy-novelist Robert Littell
— returns Monday, Nov. 2, at 10
p.m. ET/PT. The show has been
completely revamped, with a
new supporting cast, locations
and more. Sean Bean (“Game
of Thrones,” “The Lord of the
Rings”) returns as an undercover
FBI agent whose world is turned
upside down when he discovers
that the life he knew — including his name — has all been a
lie. Now on the run for a murder
he didn’t commit, he searches
for his true identity, following a
trail that takes him to London
and the European continent,
where he discovers a dark and
violent past that holds the key to
his future survival.
The new 10-epsisode sea-
son stars Winter Ave Zoli, Steve
Kazee, Aisling Franciosi, Kelly
Overton, Klara Issova and Ralph
Brown. In addition, Morris
Chestnut will guest-star in several episodes, reprising his role
from the first season.
In case you’re interested,
just before the premiere of
“Legends,” at 9 p.m., is the fall
premiere of the second half of
season four of “Major Crimes,”
which has been on hiatus since
Aug. 10. Mary McDonnell is back
as Los Angeles police captain
Sharon Raydor, along with G.W.
Bailey, Tony Denison, Michael
Paul Chan, Raymond Cruz,
Kearran Giovanni, Phillip P.
Keene, Robert Gossett, Jonathan
Del Arco and Graham Patrick
Martin.
• • •
Q: Is “Wayward Pines” coming back next season? — Martin
B., Palm Springs, California
A: Fox decided not to renew
the sci-fi/mystery/thriller, which
starred Matt Dillon and Terrence
Howard, and was executive-produced by M. Night Shyamalan.
Originally intended as a standalone event miniseries, the head
honchos at Fox teased that there
might be a season two in the
works, if the ratings were there.
Apparently they weren’t, because
DEAR PAW’S CORNER: My
son’s two cats will not use the
litter boxes at all! They will
defecate in them, but only urinate on the carpet or floor. We
helped him clean the carpets,
which seemed to help some,
and blocked off areas they
were urinating on. But now
they just go in a different spot.
Our vet said to take the lids off
the three boxes, but that didn’t
work. What will help stop the
madness? — Tim H., via email
DEAR TIM: Litter-box avoidance is one of the biggest issues
cat owners can have. Even
when you rule out most of the
possible causes, the problem
may never be totally solved.
However, you’re taking some
very good steps to minimize it.
First, your son is in touch
with the cats’ vet. This is important in order to rule out any
illness, such as a urinary tract
infection, causing elimination
outside the box. Second, you’ve
thoroughly cleaned the soiled
areas and tried to keep the cats
away. Third, access to the boxes
is unimpeded because the lids
are off.
Now it’s time to try a few
more things. A “keep-away”
spray, available at pet supply
© 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
Activities Every Thursday
in Your Transcript-Bulletin
5. DISCOVERIES: Who is
credited with discovering
streptomycin?
6. U.S. PRESIDENTS: Which
president had a pet badger?
7. SCIENCE: What has happened to a cell that has
undergone necrosis?
8. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What
is the average gestational
period for a rabbit?
9. GEOGRAPHY: Where is the
Lombardy region?
10. LITERATURE: What 19thcentury poet wrote that
“the United States themselves are essentially the
greatest poem”?
ANSWERS
Trivia Test Answers
1. Santa Fe, New
Mexico (7,000 feet
above sea level)
2. “Give a hoot, don’t
pollute!”
3. Thursday before
Easter, marking the
Last Supper
4. Elvis
5. Selman Waksman
6. Theodore Roosevelt
(“Josiah”)
7. It has died.
8. 28-31 days
9. Northern Italy
10. Walt Whitman
© 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
the show was not renewed. At
least it wasn’t the type of show to
leave viewers hanging: Much like
how each season of “American
Horror Story” and “True Crime”
are set up, “Wayward Pines” was
a self-contained close-ended
series.
• • •
Q: Is it true that Danny
Boyle is going to make a
“Trainspotting” sequel? —
Samuel R., via email
A: God willing and the creek
don’t rise! Director Danny Boyle
revealed recently that next on his
agenda is adapting Irving Welsh’s
2002 novel “Porno” — the sequel
to “Trainspotting,” which picks
up a decade later — for the big
screen. Danny told deadline.
com: “All the four main actors
(Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner,
Jonny Lee Miller and Robert
Carlyle) want to come back and
do it. Now it is only a matter
of getting all their schedules
together, which is complicated
by two of them doing American
TV series.”
Write to Cindy at King
Features Weekly Service,
628 Virginia Drive, Orlando,
FL 32803; or e-mail her at
letters@cindyelavsky.com.
© 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
Q: My favorite show of last
season was “Legends,” starring
Sean Bean. Will it be back for
another season? I thought it
would be back over the summer. — Patrick K., via email
A: Season two of the hit TNT
spy thriller — based on the
award-winning book by master spy-novelist Robert Littell
— returns Monday, Nov. 2, at 10
p.m. ET/PT. The show has been
completely revamped, with a
new supporting cast, locations
and more. Sean Bean (“Game
of Thrones,” “The Lord of the
Rings”) returns as an undercover
FBI agent whose world is turned
upside down when he discovers
that the life he knew — including his name — has all been a
lie. Now on the run for a murder
he didn’t commit, he searches
for his true identity, following a
trail that takes him to London
and the European continent,
where he discovers a dark and
violent past that holds the key to
his future survival.
The new 10-epsisode season
stars Winter Ave Zoli, Steve
Kazee, Aisling Franciosi, Kelly
Overton, Klara Issova and Ralph
Brown. In addition, Morris
Chestnut will guest-star in several episodes, reprising his role
from the first season.
In case you’re interested,
just before the premiere of
“Legends,” at 9 p.m., is the fall
premiere of the second half of
season four of “Major Crimes,”
which has been on hiatus since
Aug. 10. Mary McDonnell is
back as Los Angeles police
captain Sharon Raydor, along
with G.W. Bailey, Tony Denison,
stores, could make the marked
areas much less desirable.
Cleaning both the carpet and
the padding underneath with
an enzymatic cleaner that neutralizes odors also can help.
Scooping the boxes daily is
essential, too.
Next, observe the cats’ behavior closely. Is there some conflict? Is one cat preventing the
other’s access, or disturbing the
other cat while it’s trying to go?
Are both cats marking the carpet, or just one?
For more tips on solving this
problem, go to the ASPCA website at www.aspca.org and do a
search for “litter box problems.”
Send your questions or tips to
ask@pawscorner.com.
© 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
Sean Bean
Michael Paul Chan, Raymond
Cruz, Kearran Giovanni, Phillip
P. Keene, Robert Gossett,
Jonathan Del Arco and Graham
Patrick Martin.
• • •
Q: Is “Wayward Pines” coming back next season? — Martin
B., Palm Springs, California
A: Fox decided not to renew
the sci-fi/mystery/thriller, which
starred Matt Dillon and Terrence
Howard, and was executive-produced by M. Night Shyamalan.
Originally intended as a standalone event miniseries, the
head honchos at Fox teased
that there might be a season
two in the works, if the ratings
were there. Apparently they
weren’t, because the show was
not renewed. At least it wasn’t
the type of show to leave viewers hanging: Much like how each
season of “American Horror
Story” and “True Crime” are set
up, “Wayward Pines” was a selfcontained close-ended series.
• • •
Q: Is it true that Danny
Boyle is going to make a
“Trainspotting” sequel? —
Samuel R., via email
A: God willing and the creek
don’t rise! Director Danny Boyle
revealed recently that next on
his agenda is adapting Irving
Welsh’s 2002 novel “Porno”
— the sequel to “Trainspotting,”
which picks up a decade later
— for the big screen. Danny told
deadline.com: “All the four main
actors (Ewan McGregor, Ewen
Bremner, Jonny Lee Miller and
Robert Carlyle) want to come
back and do it. Now it is only a
matter of getting all their schedules together, which is complicated by two of them doing
American TV series.”
Write to Cindy at King
Features Weekly Service,
628 Virginia Drive, Orlando,
FL 32803; or e-mail her at
letters@cindyelavsky.com.
© 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
B3
TELL ME A STORY
‘St. Jerome’s Lion’
(a biblical tale)
adapted by Amy Friedman and
illustrated by Meredith Johnson
S
t. Jerome was born near the town of Aquileia
at the head of the Adriatic Sea. He was a
warm, outgoing boy who few imagined
would become a monk. But he did, settling with
his followers near Bethlehem, where he built a
monastery.
One day, as Jerome was sitting in his cell with
the other monks, a lion walked through the open
door. The others quickly ran toward the window
and clambered outside. But Jerome sat quietly,
watching the stately lion as he walked to him.
When the creature was close, he suddenly held
up his paw.
Jerome took the paw in his hand and studied
the lion’s eyes — they were full of sorrow and pain.
He noticed the pad was swollen, so he carefully
examined the paw until he found a thorn stuck
near a nail. He slowly removed it. Then he boiled
water with healing herbs. With this potion, he
bathed the lion’s paw until the swelling subsided.
Afterward, he wrapped a linen cloth around
the paw so the wound would not get dirty. When
he was done, the lion sighed with gratitude, and
Jerome’s heart swelled with joy. He waited for the
lion to depart. Instead, the creature stretched out
on the floor and fell fast asleep.
After a while, Jerome lay down beside him and
slept.
When they woke, Jerome said to the lion, “I see
you plan to stay here with me.” The lion wagged
his tail.
“Well, then,” Jerome said, “you must understand
that everyone who lives here has to work, so I shall
give you a job.”
Again the lion wagged his tail.
Jerome decided the lion must accompany the
monastery’s donkey down to the forest each day.
There an old woodcutter loaded up the donkey’s
panniers with wood, and the donkey carried it
back to the monastery. The lion was assigned to
protect the donkey from robbers and wolves on
her journey.
For many months the lion and the donkey
walked together to the forest. There the lion lay
down and watched as the woodsman heaped
the donkey’s panniers with wood until the donkey could carry no more. Sometimes the lion fell
asleep, and when the donkey was loaded down,
she brayed to wake him, and together they walked
back to the monastery.
But one hot morning in late summer, the lion
fell asleep as usual and did not hear two men
creep up beside the woodsman and the donkey.
They tied a cloth over the man’s mouth and over
the donkey’s mouth, too. Then they drove them
away to their caravan, wood and all.
When the lion woke, he noticed the sun was low
and he wondered why the donkey had not woken
him. He looked around and saw no one there, and
he thought she must have walked home alone. He
searched for her footsteps and saw the footprints
of three men instead. He then understood that the
donkey had been stolen.
With a heavy heart, the lion walked home, going
directly to Jerome’s cell.
“What’s wrong?” Jerome asked when the creature walked in.
The lion bowed, his tail between his legs, awaiting punishment.
When Jerome noticed the donkey had not
returned, he and the other monks thought the lion
must have eaten her. As punishment, the monks
wished to banish the lion. But Jerome refused.
Instead, he put the panniers upon the lion’s back.
“From now on, you shall carry the wood from the
forest,” he said.
The lion sighed with gratitude, for he loved
Jerome and the monastery, and he did not wish to
leave.
Months passed.
One day, as the lion stood in the forest and the
old man loaded him with wood, the caravan of
thieves returned from Damascus, passing through
Bethlehem on their way to Egypt.
The lion heard them before he saw them, and
he turned to see the caravan coming toward him.
But then, he nearly fainted with joy when he recognized his friend the donkey among them.
He leapt toward the caravan — knocking the
old man down. The wood flew in every direction.
The caravan drivers were terrified when they saw a
lion charging toward them. But before they could
run away, the lion approached, growling, and
managed to shepherd the whole caravan to the
MISSIONARIES
monastery.
Jerome was sitting in his cell reading when
he saw the caravan coming, the lion in the lead.
Puzzled, he walked outside. To his astonishment,
he recognized his old donkey.
The merchants fell to their knees. “Oh, holy
father,” they said, “please ask this lion to spare our
lives. We confess. We stole the donkey while her
guardian was asleep. We will gladly return her if
you let us go on our way.”
Jerome smiled. “Go on your way,” he said.
The very next day, the donkey and the lion, two
old friends, walked into the forest together. Jerome
and all the monks rejoiced. From that day and
forever after, the lion remained a faithful friend to
Jerome, seldom leaving his side.
GJHS STUDENTS OF THE MONTH
Elder Frost Bennion
Mitchell
Elder Frost Bennion Mitchell
recently returned home after successfully completing a mission
for The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. He served
in the Ghana Cape Coast mission. Elder Mitchell will speak
Sunday, Sept. 20, at 10 a.m. in the
Vernon Ward sacrament meeting
in Vernon, Utah. Elder Mitchell is
the son of Alan Rex and Elizabeth
B. Mitchell.
Gotta Get
Something Off
Your Chest?
Write a letter
to the Editor,
(it’s good therapy).
P.O. Box 390
Tooele, UT 84074
tbp@tooeletranscript.com
PHOTO COURTESY OF CHARLES MOHLER
Grantsville Junior High School honored its first Students of the Month for the 2015-16 school year. Pictured,
from left to right, are Mrs. Sagers, Hunter Hiller, Brynlee Butler, Tanner Davis, Lewis Cook, Simon Williams,
Emma Buchanan and Mr. Mohler.
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
B4
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
The Bulletin Board
Tooele
Senior Center
The senior center is for the enjoyment of
all seniors 55 and older. New and exciting activities include bridge, pinochle,
bingo, exercise program, line dancing,
wood carving, Wii games, watercolor
class, movies and health classes.
Meals on Wheels available for homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For age
60 and above, suggested donation is
$3. For those under age 60, cost is $5.
Transportation available to the store or
doctor visits for residents in the Tooele
and Grantsville areas. For transportation information call (435) 843-4102.
For more information about the Tooele
center, call (435) 843-4110.
Grantsville
Family History Center
Greet your ancestors free at the
Grantsville Family History Center, 117
E. Cherry St. All are welcome, with
consultants there to assist you. Open
Mondays noon to 4 p.m., and Tuesday
through Thursday noon to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m.
Senior Center
The senior center is for the enjoyment
of all seniors age 55 and older. For info,
call (435) 884-3446. Activities include
Bunco, exercise programs, bingo,
ceramics, pinochle, movies and wood
carving, etc. Meals on Wheels available
for homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For age 60 and above, suggested
donation is $3. For those under age 60,
cost is $5. Transportation available to
the store or doctor visits for residents
in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For
transportation information, call (435)
843-4102.
Grantsville Irrigation
We would like to thank Grantsville
Irrigation users for their continued effort
to conserve water. If you have reached
your allotment of 250,000 gallons per
share, please turn off your system. We
do not have extra shares to rent. There
are penalties for those exceeding their
allotment. Please contact the office at
(435) 884-3451 if you have any questions.
Daughters of Utah Pioneers
The DUP is seeking any family histories,
photographs, books, stories or vintage
artifacts (before 1900) to display at
our DUP Grantsville Museum, located
at 378 W. Clark St. (in the basement
of the J. Reuben Clark Farmhouse
across from the Grantsville Cemetery).
For more information, call Ellen Yates
at (435) 884-0253 or Coralie Lougey
at (435) 884-3832. Visit www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or www.exploretooele.com.
Stansbury Park
Restoration at Benson
Gristmill
The Historic Benson Gristmill
Restoration Committee is seeking
donations from individuals, groups, and
businesses to help with restoration
efforts and the operation of the historic
Gristmill site. Donations may be sent to
Tooele County Benson Gristmill Fund,
47 S. Main Street, Tooele, Utah 84074.
For more information contact Mike (602)
826-9471.
Ophir
Park reservations
There are some open dates for reservations at Ophir Town Park. Groups only.
No individual space reservations are
available. Limited dates available for
2015, more for the 2016 season. Call
Betty Shubert at (435) 882-5701. Note
that this is a new phone number.
Lake Point
Lake Point Cemetery
In 1877, Absolom Yates donated property for a cemetery in E. T. City. This
is the location of our present-day Lake
Point Cemetery. To commemorate this
event and to acknowledge his life and
contribution to our community, a headstone/memorial is being constructed
for his gravesite. Taylor Bott from Troop
324 in Salt Lake has chosen this for
his Eagle Scout project. He is asking for
donations. Checks should be made out
to Nu Art Memorial Co. To make a donation call or send to one of the following:
Taylor Bott, (801) 971-1595; Allan
Jordan, (801) 250-9364, 7852 N. Mtn.
View Rd., Lake Point, UT 84074; Lori
Young (801) 250-0366, 7840 N. Mtn.
View Rd., Lake Point, UT 84074.
Schools
Story and Craft Hour
Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at
the Tooele Family Center as we enjoy
the adventures of books and make fun
crafts. For more information, call 8331934 ext. 1410. We are now at our new
location, West Elementary School, 451
W. 300 South in Tooele. Please enter
through the south side doors.
Ready, Set, School! Preschool
Hour
Every Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele
Family Center has a fun activity hour
of learning, singing and creating. This
class is for all children 0-5 years old.
Please come and enjoy the fun. For
more information, call 833-1934 ext.
1410. We are now at our new location,
West Elementary School, 451 W. 300
South in Tooele. Please enter through
the south side doors.
National School Lunch
Program
Tooele County School District has
been approved to participate in the
Community Eligibility Provision of
the National School Lunch Program.
Beginning Sept. 1, 2015, children
attending Anna Smith, Ibapah and
Wendover High and who participate
in the National School Lunch Program
and/or National School Breakfast
Program (depending which program is
on provision) will receive meals free of
charge regardless of income or household size. This is in accordance with
a special provision under the United
States Department of Agriculture. The
National School Breakfast and Lunch
Programs are regulated by USDA. Please
contact Elva Roberts at (435) 833-1920
for further information.
Grantsville Elementary School
The next Grantsville Elementary
Community Council meeting will be held
Tuesday, Sept. 17 at 4 p.m. in the GES
library. All parents of GES students are
invited to attend.
TATC
Commercial Driver’s License
Program
Now enrolling for CDL. Join us for a
comprehensive six-week course that will
teach you everything you need to know
to pass the CDL test. Cost of program
is only $2,365. You will receive 120
hours driving time and get one-on-one
training from our experienced instructor.
Register today! (435) 248-1800 or visit
tatc.edu.
Nail Technician Program
Now enrolling. You can finish and get
licensed and start making money in
as little as four months at a low cost.
The nail program hours are MondayThursday, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Call us (435)
248-1800 or stop by 88 South Tooele
Blvd.
Industrial Maintenance
Program
TATC offers a 900-hour Industrial
Maintenance Training Program where
you can learn about maintaining and
operating industrial-type machinery. This
career is in high demand, and skills are
needed nationwide — if you have an
analytical mind and like to solve problems, you might find this to be a great
fit. Stop by the campus today to learn
about this exciting program, call the
campus for more information at (435)
248-1800.
Education
Online courses
Online courses in Network+ and
Security+ IT are designed for the IT professional seeking to upgrade their skills
and knowledge of networking and security, and prepares you for the CompTIA
Network+ and Security+ exams. Call the
TATC at (435) 248-1800 for more information or to enroll.
Adult education
Get your high school diploma this year.
All classes required for a high school
diploma, adult basic education, GED
preparation and English as a second
language are available. Register now
to graduate — just $50 per semester.
Located at 211 Tooele Blvd., call (435)
833-8750. Adult education classes are
for students 18 and over.
ESOL
ESOL conversational classes are
held Tuesdays and Thursdays. ESOL
students may also come anytime the
center is open for individualized study.
Registration is $50 per semester. Call
(435) 833-8750 for more information.
Early Head Start
Do you have a child under age 3? Are
you currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early
Head Start is a free program for eligible
families that offers quality early education for infants and toddlers in the home;
parent education; comprehensive health
services to women before, during and
after pregnancy; nutrition education and
family support services. Call (435) 8411380 or (801) 268-0056 ext. 211 to
apply or for free additional information.
Free developmental evaluation
DDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers
a variety of services to families with
infants and toddlers from birth to age
3. Individualized services are available
to enhance development in communication, motor development, cognition,
social/emotional development, self-help
skills and health concerns. Contact us
for a free developmental evaluation at
(435) 833-0725.
How to Guess Where to Start
Your Geneaology
A series of four classes will be offered
at the Tooele Valley Family History
Center to address research methodology. These are NOT classes on using
FamilySearch/family trees. The classes
will address finding correct families,
the use of census and other records,
use of a research log, availability of
records/documents, etc. Classes will
be on Thursday evenings in September
— Sept. 17 and 25. Time is 6:30-8
p.m. Space in the classes is limited to
20 and you must sign up. Sheets are on
the board at the Family History Center.
Home Canning Salsa and
Tomatoes
This class will be Tuesday, Sept. 29
from 6-9 p.m., featuring hands-on learning with Master Gardener and food
preserver Dana Cooper. Cost is $8,
and includes recipes and two jars of
home-canned food. To register, come to
the USU Tooele County Extension office
at 151 N. Main St. in Tooele from 7
a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Thursday
or register at homecansalsa@eventbrite.
com. If paying online, there is a $1.43
processing fee. If you have questions,
call Darlene at (435) 840-4404.
Churches
The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints
To find a meeting house and time of
worship for The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, go to mormon.org
and click the “Find a Meetinghouse” link
or contact (435) 850-2037.
Adult religion class
Jesus Christ and the Everlasting Gospel
— every Wednesday evening from Sept.
2-Nov. 18 from 7-8:30 p.m. at the
Grantsville Seminary, 115 E. Cherry St.
Tuition is $18 per course. Register at
the door.
Berean Full Gospel Church
We invite you to discover how God’s
Word can transform your life and provide
you with the answers for questions and
for problems you may be struggling to
overcome. Come join us this Sunday
morning for our 10 a.m. worship service
where we will assemble in praise, share
testimonies and explore worship in ways
that strive to highlight the greatness of
God. After our morning praise and worship time, we enter into a one-hour Bible
Study at 11 a.m. Attend with us Sunday
mornings at 635 N. Main St. (Phil’s
Glass), or call (435) 578-8022 for more
information.
United Methodist Church
Tooele United Methodist Church services are held on Sundays at 11 a.m.
Please check our website, tooelecumc.
org, or call Tooele UMC’s office at 8821349. We are located at 78 E. Utah
Ave. in Tooele.
Church of Christ
Church of Christ meets at 430 W. Utah
Ave. Bible class, Sunday at 10 a.m.
and worship from 11 a.m. to noon.
Wednesday Bible class at 7 p.m. We
seek to be the Lord’s church established about 33 AD. Jesus is our only
head of the church, headquarters are
heaven. Come and grow with us. Call
(435) 882-4642.
Cornerstone Baptist
Passion for God, compassion for people
at 276 E. 500 North in Tooele, phone:
(435) 882-6263. Come as you are this
Sunday, where you can hear a message
from the Bible and meet new friends.
Service times: Bible study (for all ages)
9:45 a.m.; morning worship 11 a.m.;
evening worship 6 p.m.; WiseGuys children’s program 6 p.m. Nursery provided
for all services, and children’s church
during morning worship. WiseGuys
Program during evening worship.
Mountain of Faith Lutheran
We’re a healthy, growing congregation
who welcomes newcomers and reaches
out to those in need. Join us for worship
Sunday mornings at 10 a.m., 560 S.
Main, Tooele. We treat the word of God
with respect without taking ourselves too
seriously. Check us out on Facebook by
searching for Mountain of Faith Lutheran
Church. Please join us for meaningful
worship that is also casual and relaxed.
For more information, call (435) 8827291.
St. Barnabas’ Episcopal
Weekly service of word, prayer and sacrament followed by fellowship. Sunday
mornings at 10 a.m. St. Barnabas’
Episcopal Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive,
Tooele. Phone: (435) 882-4721. Email:
info@stbarnabasepiscopal.org. Web at
www.stbarnabasepiscopal.org. You are
God’s beloved child, beautifully created
in God’s own image. Whatever your history, wherever you are in life’s journey,
the Episcopal Church welcomes you.
Spanish services
La Iglesia Biblica Bautista de Tooele
le invita a sus servicios en español
los jueves a las 6 p.m. y los domingos
a las 2 p.m. We invite you to their
Spanish services on Thursday at 6 p.m.
and Sunday at 2 p.m. Come to know a
church that focuses in the word of God
rather than the emotions. God loves you
and he wants to reveal himself to you.
Located at 276 E. 500 North, Tooele.
Call (435) 840-5036, rides provided.
St. Marguerite
Gardening
Tooele Valley Beekeeping Club
The club meets the second Wednesday
of each month during the active beekeeping season from 7-8:30 p.m. at
Tractor Supply Company, located at
the corner of SR-36 and SR-138 in
Stansbury Park. Open to all and free
of charge, come and learn from both
experts and fellow hobbyists about the
exciting world of beekeeping. A wide
range of topics and equipment will be
discussed in meetings, and will coordinate with typical beekeeping activity that
is happening in that month. For more
information, contact Jay Cooper at (435)
830-1447 or jay@dirtfarmerjay.com.
Free Plant Diagnostic Clinic
This clinic is provided by the Tooele
County Master Gardeners. Have a
problem with a plant, shrub, tree in
your landscape? Not sure if a pest is
the cause, or watering or something
in the soil? You can get some great
advice, at no charge. The clinic is held
every Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the
USU Extension Office, 151 N. Main. in
Tooele. Bring your sample in and get
some answers!
Winning Plant Combinations
for Tooele County
This free public presentation is hosted
by the Tooele County Master Gardeners
and presented by Virginia Hooper (MLA).
Virginia holds her Master of Landscape
Architecture. The presentation will focus
on water-wise and native plants. It will
be held Wednesday, Sept. 23 from 7-8
p.m. at the USU Extension Office, 151
N. Main in Tooele. For more information,
contact Jay Cooper at (435) 830-1447
or jay@dirtfarmerjay.com.
St. Marguerite Catholic Community
welcomes you to worship with us. Our
liturgy schedule is as follows: Saturday
Vigil 5 p.m., Sunday 7 a.m., 8:30 a.m.
(Spanish), 11 a.m. Daily Mass(M-Fri)
9 a.m. Confessions 4-4:45 p.m. on
Saturday or by appt. Office hours, MFri 10-2. Our office is closed on Tues.
(435)882-3860. St. Marguerite Pre-K8th Grade Elementary School (435)8820081. We are located on the corner of
7th St. and Vine.
Rite of Christian Initiation
(RCIA)
Any individual or family interested in
converting to or joining the Catholic
faith, or any baptized Catholic wishing to
complete the sacraments of Eucharist or
Confirmation may join the RCIA class at
St. Marguerite Church beginning Sunday,
Sept. 20 at 9:45 a.m. at St. Marguerite
School. For more information, please
contact Marianne Rutishauser, (435)
882-1485 or (435) 830-2613.
Brit-Ammi Kahal
Covenant People Assembly are teaching the Hebrew roots of the Christian
faith. Visitors welcome on Saturdays at
1 p.m., 37 S. Main Street, Tooele. Call
(435) 843-5444 for more information.
Bible Baptist Church
We would like to invite you to a good
old-fashioned revival with some bluegrass music and old-fashioned preaching every night at 7 p.m. at Bible Baptist
Church, located at 286 N. 7th Street in
Tooele. Contact Pastor Sinner at (435)
840-2152.
Mountain View Baptist Church
We would like to invite you to discover
what God’s plan and purpose is for
your life. The Bible contains all of the
answers for life’s questions. Come
and join us this Sunday for our adult
Bible study and graded Sunday School
which starts at 9:45 a.m. Our worship
service begins at 11 a.m. We also have
a Bible study time each Sunday at 6
p.m. We meet on Wednesdays at 7
p.m. for prayer time. Bring your needs
and let us pray together for God’s help.
Mountain View Baptist Church meets at
the Eastgate Plaza in Grantsville, Suite
2C. Join us.
Stansbury Park Baptist Church
Please join us each Sunday morning at
10 a.m. for Worship Services and Bible
Study at the Stansbury Park Clubhouse
(next to the SP Swimming Pool). For
details, please call us at (435) 8301868 or go to www.stansburyparkbc.org.
First Lutheran Church
First Lutheran Church, on the corner of
7th and Birch, would like to invite you
to hear of God’s grace and the love of
Christ, who died to forgive you of your
sins and attain salvation on your behalf.
Worship is at 6 p.m. on the first, third
and fourth Sundays of the month and at
10 a.m. on all other Sundays. Sunday
school at 11:15 a.m.
New Life Christian Fellowship
We invite you to worship and serve
Jesus with us. Our clothing closet and
food pantry is open from noon to 3
p.m. every Tuesday to Thursday at 411
E. Utah Ave. Programs for kids, teens,
women and men are also available
every week. Sunday services are at our
Tooele building at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and
1:30 p.m. Come join us. Find out more
by calling 843-7430 or visiting www.
NLOT.org.
Tooele Christian Fellowship
Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship
Service 11 a.m. Services are held at 40
N. Main, former Stowes Family Music
building. For more information, call
(435) 224-3392 or www.tooelechristianfellowship.org. Parking and entrance in
back of building.
Tooele First Assembly
Sunday school at 10 a.m., morning
worship at 11 a.m. Spanish services:
Escuela dominical a las 2 p.m., y el servicio general a las 3 p.m. Services are
held at 127 N. 7th Street.
Tooele Springs Calvary Chapel
A verse-by-verse study of God’s word.
Sunday service at 10 a.m. Wednesday
night Bible study and youth groups at
7 p.m. Men’s, women’s and couple’s
Bible studies. Hunting and equestrian
fellowship ministries available. Child
care provided at all services. For more
information, check out our Facebook
page or visit www.tooelesprings.org.
To hear Bible teaching, download our
mobile app. 47 N. Main Street, (435)
962-9427.
Charity
Tooele Children’s Justice
Center
Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in
need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water
and snacks. We appreciate all donations. For inquiries or drop-off call (435)
843-3440. 25 S. 100 East, Tooele.
United Methodist dinner
Tooele United Methodist church offers
a free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee
and social hour starts at 4 p.m. and
dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All are
welcome.
The Tooele Valley Resource
Center
The Tooele Valley Resource Center is
currently in need of donations. Please
consider donating items such as deodorant, chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula,
toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner,
combs and brushes. Cash is also
welcomed. Those who receive services
include individuals or families in crisis,
the homeless and families at risk of
becoming homeless. Located 23 S.
Main Street, (435) 843-4761.
First Baptist Food Pantry
The First Baptist Church in Tooele is
offering an emergency food pantry to
meet the needs of our community. The
food pantry is available for emergency
needs. Hours of operation are Saturdays
from 10 a.m. to noon. We are located at
580 S. Main Street. For information call
(435) 882-2048.
The Tooele County Food Bank
& Grantsville Emergency Food
Pantry
The Tooele County Food Bank and
Grantsville Emergency Food Pantry
are in need of canned meats, soups,
pasta and any non-perishable foods. We
are accepting donations for Pathways
Women’s and Children’s Shelter (victims
of domestic abuse). They are in need
of socks, underwear, blankets for twin
beds, hygiene products (hairspray, hair
gel, body wash, nail polish and remover), toys. Anything will be appreciated.
Underwear and socks must be new.
Other items can be gently used. Please
help us help our community. Drop boxes
are located in the Intermountain Staffing
Office, 7 South Main Street #203,
Tooele, UT 84074.
First Baptist Church Food and
Clothing Closet
We have clothing for everyone from
newborn to adult. We ask you to take
what you need and then pass the information to others. We ask that you call
for an appointment as we are not at the
church all the time. Contact Linda (435)
849-1849, Sondra (435) 849-3222, or
Sandie (435) 830-7876.
Baby blankets needed
Baby blankets are needed for the nursery at Mountain West Medical Center.
Blankets should be new and in good
condition. Homemade blankets are
also accepted if new. Donations can
be turned in to the volunteer desk at
Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N.
Main St. in Tooele. Call Diane at (435)
843-3691 with any questions.
Moose Lodge
Meals at the Lodge
Friday and Saturday night dinners will
be served from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday
night dinners include clam chowder or
homemade soup, and/or fish baskets
(halibut, shrimp), or chicken strips.
Saturday night dinners include 12-ounce
ribeye or T-bone steak with choice of
baked potato/fries, salad and roll;
halibut or salmon steak with choice of
baked potato or fries, salad and roll,
or Jumbo shrimp with choice of baked
potato or fries, salad and roll. All meals
are for a reasonable price. No orders
are taken after 8:45. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11
a.m. After purchase of 10 (ten) meals
either Friday/Saturday nights you get
a free one. If you have more than four
people in your party, please call ahead
to ensure the cook can plan better. For
members and their guests only.
will be available to purchase at our
meeting. The History of Tooele County
Volume II is $30, The Mining, Smelting,
and Railroading in Tooele is $20, and
we also have eight note cards depicting
four different pioneer buildings for $4.
These will make great gifts for your family and friends. Please call Alice Dale at
882-1612 if you would like to purchase
these books.
Live music
Local author seeks photos
Groups and events
Tri-Lodge weekend
The fourth annual Tri-Lodge (Elks,
Eagles and Moose) weekend is scheduled from Friday, Sept. 18 through
Sunday, Sept. 20 at Camp Wapiti in
Settlement Canyon. There will be campsites available as well as food, drinks
and entertainment.
A local author and historian is seeking
original photographs of Saltaire, Black
Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Point,
as well as any similar turn-of-the-century
attractions and resorts for an upcoming
book project. Those who wish to contribute information or photographs of these
parks should contact Emma Penrod
at elpenrod@gmail.com. Contributions
will be printed with credit in a yet-to-be
released pictorial history book. There is
no such thing as too many photographs
as the author needs a minimum of 160
photographs, and any help is greatly
appreciated.
Annual convention
Tooele Valley Flute Choir
On Friday, Sept. 18, Bent Fender will be
playing. On Saturday, Sept. 19, Wilson
and Harris Band will be playing during
the Tri-Lodge weekend at Camp Wapiti
from 7-11 p.m. For members and their
guests only.
The Idaho/Utah Moose Association
Annual Convention is scheduled for
Sept. 24-27 at the lodge in Twin Falls,
Idaho. Call the lodge or stop by to
register.
Eagles
Sunday breakfasts
There is a breakfast served each
Sunday from 9 a.m.-noon. There is a
special every Sunday for $5 per person
and you can order off the menu for $7
per person or $3 for seniors who order
very few items or for kids age 11 and
under. The breakfast includes one glass
of juice or milk and coffee with refills.
Bad beer is available and the food is
delicious. Public invited.
Steak nights
On Sept. 18, the dinner special is a fivepiece shrimp dinner for $11. On Sept.
25, the special is a 12-ounce sirloin
steak for $12.
Planning meeting
On Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015, the planning meeting will be held at the lodge
at 6 p.m. All officers are expected
to attend along with chairmen of any
activities.
Past presidents’ dinner
PMP Corrie Anderson will host the dinner at the Casa del Rey Restaurant in
Grantsville on Wednesday, Sept. 16,
2015, at 7 p.m. All PPs are invited to
attend.
Tri-Lodge campout
The Eagles, Moose and Elks are holding a campout at Camp Wapiti up in
Settlement Canyon. Bring your RV and
camp out or come for the day/evening.
Meals will be served and a good time
had by all. More information can be
obtained at the lodge or on the Eagles’
Facebook page.
Eagles car show
PWP Clyde Moore will chair the car show
on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2015, from
noon-? at the Eagles lodge. There is no
entry fee to enter your car. Hamburgers
and hot dogs with chips and a drink
will be available for $4 for adults and
$3 for kids 11 years and under. Bring
up your fancy car, and those who do
not have one can come and see the
masterpieces.
Elks
Friday night dinners
Dinner will be served each Friday night
from 6-9 p.m. The menu includes a
T-bone for $16.50; halibut for $16.50;
shrimp for $12; steak and shrimp for
$12; fish and chips for $10 or chicken
breast for $10. All items above include
your choice of baked potato, French
fries or rice pilaf and soup or salad bar.
Thursday night pizza
Come get all the pizza you can eat every
Thursday from 6-8 p.m. Cost is $6.
Meetings
Lodge meetings are held the second
and fourth Tuesday of every month.
House committee meetings are held
every third Tuesday of the month. All
members are welcome and encouraged
to attend.
Dinner and Comedy Show
A chicken enchilada dinner, stuffed
green peppers, salad and dessert will
be served Sept. 19 at 6:30 p.m. with
a comedy show to follow at 8 p.m.
Please sign up by Friday, Sept. 18 in the
lodge’s social quarters. Cost is $30 for
dinner and show or $20 for the show
only. We have seven comedians from
the Salt Lake Valley coming to put on a
good show full of laughs.
PaintNite Brunch Style
This event takes place Sept. 27 at
11 a.m. In just about two hours while
you’re eating brunch, our performing
artists will guide you through each painting so that you can come up with your
own unique masterpiece. Everything
you need will be provided. Cost is $45
per person, with $15 of each purchase
going to the General Charity Fund.
Tickets will be available online at www.
paintnite.com/pages/events/view/saltlakecity/904916. You have to purchase
tickets in advance. The last day to purchase tickets is Sept. 10.
Tooele County
Historical Society
Seeking Historical Items
Tooele County Historical Society would
like members of the community who
have any family or personal histories,
photographs, books, brochures, DVDs,
VHS tapes, or newspaper articles that
you would like to donate to our organization to please call us. We are also
looking for books, newspaper articles,
photos, brochures or any history that
pertains to the Tooele County area. If
you would like to donate them to our
organization, or if you would let us make
a copy for the Tooele County Historical
Society, please call Alice Dale at (435)
882-1612.
Historical books
Tooele County Historical Society’s books
The Tooele Valley Flute Choir seeks
members interested in our inaugural
effort to raise the profile of local flautists. If you love to play the flute and
want to grow your musical horizons,
please join us! All levels of skill and
experience welcome. Contact Emma at
elpenrod@gmail.com.
Tooele Valley Free Masons
The Tooele Valley Free Masons meet
the second Friday of each month for
dinner and socializing. If you are interested or have questions please join us
at the Lodge, located at the corner of
Settlement Canyon Road and SR 36, or
give us a call at (435) 277-0087.
Tooele Valley Family History
Center
Research your ancestors free with
trained FamilySearch volunteers at the
Tooele Valley Family History Center,
751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone (435)
882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday
through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday evenings by appointment
only. Special classes offered regularly.
Call the center for more information.
Take Off Pounds Sensibly
Give yourself the gift of health and
wellness. Resolve to lose those extra
pounds. TOPS can help you achieve your
goals and support you in your journey.
We provide accountability through weekly weigh-ins and support and encouragement in a non-judgmental environment.
TOPS is open to all men, women, teens
and preteens. There are now two TOPS
chapters in Tooele to accommodate your
schedule. UT 330 Tooele meets Tuesday
at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 276 E.
500 North. Weigh in from 5:30-6 p.m.,
meeting at 6 p.m. Call Mary Lou at
(435) 830-1150 for information. UT 365
Tooele meets Saturday at 10 a.m. at
the Bit n Spur Clubhouse, 240 W. 500
North. This chapter will meet occasionally at a private residence, so call ahead
for the exact location. Call Lisa at (435)
882-1442 for information. Also see the
TOPS website at www.tops.org.
Tooele Gem and Mineral Rock
Club
Tooele Gem and Mineral Rock Club will
resume its regular meetings on the
second Tuesday of the month starting
at 7:30 p.m. at the Tooele Applied
Technology College (TATC), 88 S. Tooele
Blvd., Tooele. Come learn about rocks,
minerals and ways to craft with them
and enjoy field trips for rock collecting.
Membership is $10 per year. Our annual
rock show will be Sept. 25-27 at the
Dow James Building, 400 N. 400 West,
in conjunction with the Mountain Man
Rendezvous. Admission is free. Visit
us on Facebook or our website at www.
tooelegem.com. For more information,
call (435) 882-5752 or email TooeleGe
mandMineral@gmail.com.
Sons of Utah Pioneers
The goal of the Sons of Utah Pioneers
Settlement Canyon Chapter is to keep
our pioneer heritage alive. We do this
through histories, stories, artifacts,
monuments, museums, service and
scholarships. Much of this labor of
love is found in the Tooele Pioneer
Museum at 47 East Vine in Tooele, as
well as various statues and monuments
around the county. The Tooele Pioneer
Cemetery at the mouth of Settlement
Canyon is another of our projects. We
are always looking for artifacts and histories as a loan or gift to be displayed
for everyone’s benefit at the Tooele
Pioneer Museum. If you are interested
in the values of honoring past and
future pioneers and in visiting their
historical settings and learning more
about those who settled and shaped
Utah, attend our business and education meeting the first Thursday of each
month. A potluck dinner followed by
various presentations starts promptly
at 6:30 p.m. in the new TATC Center at
88 So. Tooele Blvd. Call Jerry Henson at
(435) 882-4917 for more information.
Mood disorder support group
Do you or someone you love have a
mood disorder? NAMI-Tooele affiliation
offers help, hope and healing. Please
join us for support group sessions every
Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. at the New
Reflection Clubhouse on 900 South in
Tooele. For more info, contact Kelly at
841-9903.
Caregiver Support Group
Join us the third Monday of each month
from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical
Center, 2055 N. Main St. in Tooele.
The Tooele County Health Department’s
Aging Services program is the sponsor
for these Alzheimer’s Association’s
Caregiver Support Groups. The groups
are designed to provide emotional,
educational and social support for caregivers. They help participants develop
methods and skills to solve problems.
The meetings encourage caregivers to
maintain their own personal, physical
and emotional health, as well as optimally care for the person with dementia.
Questions call (435) 277-2456.
Tooele Family Al-Anon
Wednesdays at 11 a.m. at the Tooele
Pioneer Museum, in the basement at
the back of the building. For questions
or more information, please call Allene
at (435) 830-0465 or Elizabeth at (435)
884-0825 or (435) 241-9200.
Alcoholics Anonymous
Meeting daily at noon and 8 p.m. at the
Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. Utah Ave.
For more information, contact Glenn at
(435) 882-1789 or (860) 798-2139.
Food Addicts in Recovery
Anonymous
Are you having trouble controlling the
way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery
Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step
recovery program for anyone suffering
from food addiction. Meetings are held
every Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer
Museum, 47 E. Vine St. in Tooele. Enter
at the north back entrance. For more
information, call Millicent at (435) 8827094 or Denise at (435) 830-1835 or
visit www.foodaddicts.org. Everyone is
welcome to attend.
Tooele County Aging
Tooele County Aging is looking for volunteers to help us meet the needs of
seniors in the community. Many seniors
require assistance and need rides to
doctors or other health professionals.
Rides help seniors live more independent lives. Call Holly at (435) 843-4102
for more information. The Grantsville
and Tooele Senior Centers also are in
need of volunteers. For more information about volunteering at the Grantsville
Center, call Dan at (435) 843-4753. For
volunteering at the Tooele Center, call
Debbie at (435) 843-4103.
Life’s Worth Living Foundation
Suicide support group every third
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the TATC, located
at 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. If you
struggle with suicidal thoughts or have
lost a loved one to suicide, please plan
on attending. Please go on Facebook
and like our page to keep current with
our latest news and events. Contact us
on that page. lifesworthlivingfoundation.
com.
DAV Chapter 20
The DAV will hold its monthly EC meeting from 7:30-8 p.m. on the third
Thursday of each month at the Pioneer
Museum. The general membership
meeting will follow from 8-9 p.m. In
addition, the DAV is looking for three
volunteer drivers. No DAV membership
is required. Will need a VA physical. Call
Curtis Beckstrom at (435) 840-0547 or
Ross Curley at (801) 641-9121.
Parkinson’s Disease Support
Group
Meetings will be held every third Friday
of the month at 1 p.m. Tooele Applied
Technology College (TATC) has generously donated their beautiful boardroom
for the meetings. This is a very comfortable setting with ample seating and ADA
access, located at 88 S. Tooele Blvd.
in Tooele (west end of Vine Street).
For more information, you may contact
Barbara Royal at barbcroyal55@hotmail.
com or (801) 656-9673. Look for our
booth in the upcoming Senior Expo in
September.
Stansbury Art and Literary
Society Artist of the Month
Jane Autry is the Stansbury Art and
Lit Chamber Wall Gallery artist for the
month of September. Her work is highly
idealistic, much like the old masters,
with an emphasis on eternal themes
using age-old techniques but employing modern tools and supplies. This
includes a much brighter color palette
with an old-fashioned twist, which she
loves! She is an idealist to the core,
an artist who cherishes high and noble
principles. This artwork will be available for the public to view at the Tooele
County Chamber of Commerce, 153
S. Main, during their regular business
hours.
Yoga by Yerzhan
Yoga by Yerzhan, a professional certified
yoga instructor with 25 years experience, is it the Tooele Valley Academy
of Dance, 291 N. Main, Tooele, Utah.
Mondays from 7-8 p.m. For more information, contact Patricia at (435) 8437060 or (801) 750-7172.
Fall Craft Boo-tique
Tooele Methodist Women will hold its
annual fall boo-tique Oct. 9-10. If you
are interested, contact Glenice Moore at
(435) 830-1443 to reserve your space.
Crafters wanted
Tooele Methodist Women are looking for
crafters and vendors for the Boo-tique
being held Oct. 9-10. Please contact
Glenice at (435) 830-1443.
Scout Youth Protection
Training
To all Scout and Cub Scout leaders,
youth protection training for renewal and
new Scout leaders will take place on
Sept. 24, Sept. 30, Oct. 8, Oct. 15 and
Oct. 22 at 7 p.m. in the Stockton Ward
building.
Something
On Your
Mind?
Write a letter
to the Editor!
Tooele Transcript Bulletin
P.O. Box 390
Tooele, UT 84074
or
tbp@tooeletranscript.com
Bulletin Board Policy
If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin
at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to dvaughan@tooeletranscript.com. “The
Bulletin Board” is for special community events, charitable organizations, civic
clubs, non-profit organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the
advertising department. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele
Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement will be printed. To
guarantee your announcement please call the advertising department at 8820050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the
desired publication date.
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
CLASSIFIED
Visit
www.tooeletranscript.com
to place your Classified ad!
Or call 882-0050
CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES
Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, published every Tuesday and Thursday
TWENTY WORDS OR LESS
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All classified line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will
automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all
nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. They will also run on our web-site.
Classified ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for Thursday edition
Services
Services
*DRYWALL and all Con- HOME REPAIRS expert.
struction Services. Pro- Door knobs, basefessional Quality. De- boards, mouldings, drypendable. References wall repairs, textures,
available. Free esti- caulking, weatherproofmates. Jobs big & ing, framing, home upsmall!
T o o e l e . dating and renovations
(801)660-9152
and much more.Small
jobs okay. Call Shane
DEADLINES FOR clas- (435)840-0344
sifieds ads are Monday
and Wednesdays by BECOME A SUB4:45 p.m.
SCRIBER. 882-0050
BAILIFF
TOOELE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
STARTING SALARY: $16.40 - $19.92 PER HOUR, DOQ
STATUS: FULL-TIME POSITION WITH BENEFITS
CLOSING DATE: SEPTEMBER 21, 2015 AT 5:00 P.M.
The Opportunity
To maintain the security of the Tooele County
Courts Facility and maintain order and insure
prisoner welfare as outlined in the Tooele County
Detention Facility Policy and Procedures and to
serve as Bailiff in the 3rd District, 3rd District
Juvenile and Tooele Justice Courts. May have to
supervise the County Inmates on the Work Release
Program. Escorts prisoners within the confines of
the facility; prepare inmates for transportation;
transport inmates to court, and other destinations as
assigned by administrative personnel. Supervises
cleaning of facility. Maintains order within the
facility. Secure proper care for sick prisoners.
Minimum Qualifications
• Graduation from high school or GED certificate.
AND
• Certified by the State of Utah as a Special
Function Officer (CAT.II) Correction Officer or
Peace Officer (CAT. I) within six months of hire.
Required Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:
• Must maintain certification throughout his/her
employment.
• Must be at least 21 years of age and in good
physical condition.
• Must possess a valid Utah Driver’s License.
• Must be able to pass security checks.
For a complete job description or an on-line
application please visit
http://www.co.tooele.ut.us/hr.html
Applications must be submitted to
Tooele County Human Resource Office, Rm 308
47 South Main Street, Tooele or
email Tita Adams at tadams@tooeleco.org
EEO Employer
Services
ALTERATIONS
and AWARD
WINNING
TAILORING
by
KATHY
JONES
882-6605
A1 PAINTING. Interior,
exterior painting, staining, deck oiling, power
washing,
drywall,
phase, patching. Professional work at reasonable rates. Steve
(435)248-9113
DRYWALL: Hanging,
finishing, texturing. 33
years experience. Licensed and insured.
Doug (435)830-2653
ELECTRICIAN/ HANDYMAN residential/ commercial electrical installs & repairs, remodeling, painting, plumbing! Dale 435-843-7693
801-865-1878
Licensed, insured.! Major
credit cards accepted!
HANDYMAN. Tree trimming, sprinklers, yard
work. Snow Removal.
Residential and business. Call Jimmy at
(435)224-3150
JERAMIAH!S WINDOW
Cleaning LLC. Full
service professional
window cleaning. Call
to schedule a free estimate 435-840-4773
TREE WORK. Free estimates! Local company. Licensed & insured. Bucket truck,
Crane service, Stump
removal,
mulch.
801-633-6685 PreciseYard.com
SELL YOUR CAR or
boat in the classifieds.
Call 882-0050 or visit
www.tooeletranscript.
com or e-mail your ad
to tbp@tooeletranscript.com
We’re Growing
We offer great
benefits that include:
health/dental and
vision insurance.
401K with company
match. Vacation and
personal days off.
We provide paid on
going training and
promote from within.
Great opportunity
to start a career in
the Auto Business
while making a
strong income – best
auto sales pay plan
in the state. Team
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works well together.
Signing bonus for the
right candidates!
B5
• Sales
Consultants
• Certified
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• Quick Lane
Technicians
Apply in person 1141 North Main
or call 882-7000, 882-1300
Miscellaneous
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to place your Classified ad!
Or call 882-0050
NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product or service advertised
in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all
liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is
not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin
has the sole authority to edit and locate any classified advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. reserves
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All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, religion, sex or national origin, or any intention to make any such
preference, limitation or discrimination.” The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Livestock
Help Wanted
Wanted
DIAMONDS don't pay Need to sell that new Business owners If you WANTED: Scrap metal.
retail! Large selection, champion bull or your need someone fast, Appliances, lawn mowhigh quality. Bridal sets, yearling calves? Place place your classified ad ers, garbage disposals,
wedding bands. Every- your classified ad into in all 48 of Utah's news- batteries, fencing, etc.
thing wholesale! Rocky 47 newspapers, find papers. The person you Will pick up free. ColMtn. Diamond Co. your buyers quickly. For are looking for could be lecting for Homeless
S.L.C. 1-800-396-6948
only $163. your 25 from out of town. The Hospice. Call Rick at
word classified will be cost is only $163. for a (801)599-5634
FIREPLACE AND stove seen by up to 500,000 25 word ad and it
clearance. Pellet, gas, readers. It is as simple reaches up to 340,000
and wood. Pellet demo, as calling the Tooele households. All you do
Autos
$900. New gas insert, Transcript Bulletin at is call the Transcript
$2,089 installed. Wood (435)882-0050 for de- B u l l e t i n
at
Pacific Energy $980. tails. (Ucan)
(435)882-0050 for all 1985 OLDSMOBILE
(801)295-7398
the details. (Mention 442, $2000. Call Kevin
(801)598-3473
STRAW bales.
New UCAN) You can now (435)882-1825
crop. $5/ bale you pick
If you sell Insurance, up. $7/bale Delivered. order online www.utah- SELL YOUR CAR or
promote a hospital or Garth (435)837-2246 press.com
boat in the classifieds.
an ambulance service, (435)830-2309
FACTORY
L A B O R . Call 882-0050 or visit
place your classified ad
Temporary employment www.tooeletranscript.
in all 47 of Utah's newsavailable through Janu- com
Sporting
papers. The cost is only
ary. These are Factory
$163. for a 25 word ad
Goods
Labor/ Production posiApartments
($5. For each additional
tions. We will train. We
for Rent
word). You will reach SELLING YOUR moun- are located on the Utah
up to 500,000 newspa- tain bike? Advertise it in Industrial Depot. $9/hr,
per readers. Just call the classifieds. Call 7:45am-4:15pm. OverTooele Gateway
Tooele Transcript Bulle- 882-0050 www.tooele time available. 20 posiApartments
tin at (435)882-0050 for transcript.com
tions available. Apply
details. (Ucan)
in person and ready
2 AND 3bdrm
to work. No phone apartments behind Super
JAZZY POWER chair
Child Care
calls please. Midwest
Wal-Mart. Swimming
$1700. Transport chair
Canvas, 230 South
combination walker and
pool, hot tub, exercise
wheelchair $150, call LOVING RELIABLE Garnet, Tooele, UT.
room, playground, full
EOE.
435-884-6221.
clubhouse.
Child care in my home.
SELL YOUR computer in Snacks, meals, plenty FULL TIME Medical ReTooele Gateway
the classifieds. Call of indoor & outdoor fun. ceptionist. Friendly, outApartments
All
ages
welcome.
Migoing.
Familiar
with
882-0050 or visit
(435)843-4400
chelle
(435)882-9911
Chiropractic.
Email
rewww.tooeletranscript.
sume to dana@tvspicom
STANSBURY PARK LI- n e c . c o m
or
fax
You may have just the CENSED DAY CARE, (435)833-9223
24HRS,
FULL
TIME,
SETTLEMENT CANthing someone out of
town is looking for. CPR, FIRST AID, SEEKING Weekend YON APARTMENTS 2
R E G U L A - work carpool for 8am to & 3 bedroom apts.
Place your classified ad S T A T E
BUS
TO 4:30 shift near Airport. Prices starting at
in 45 of Utah's newspa- T I O N S ,
pers, the cost is $163. SCHOOLS, REFER- Rate negotiable. Con- $840/mo. Call Danielle
(435)882-6112 for info.
For up to 25 words. E N C E S , N I G H T LY tact 435-277-0183.
You will be reaching a RATES DISCOUNTED TEACHING ASSISTANT
potential of up to (435)224-4005
spanish instructor,
Homes for
340,000 households.
Scholar Academy.
Rent
All you need to do is
6hours daily, $10-12/hr
Help Wanted
call the Transcript Bul435-566-6957
WHY RENT When You
letin at 882-0050 for full
Can Buy? Zero down
details.
( M e n t i o n BABYSITTER NEEDED WAREHOUSE LABORERS wanted, call for in& Low Income proUCAN)
at my home in Grants- terview 435-830-3391
grams, 1st time & Sinville. 3days on 3days
gle parent programs,
off.
Call
Ken
Furniture &
Berna Sloan (435)
Business
(435)884-4411
Appliances
840-5029 Group 1
Opportunities
BINDERY
HELP
2BDRM, 1BTH, carport,
BRAND NEW Queen pil- NEEDED. Transcript
low top mattress 2/box Bulletin Publishing is Small Business owners: security lighting, dustill sealed in factory currently accepting ap- Place your classified ad plex. Call RPM A
wrapper $250 obo plications for a full time in 45 newspapers 801-436-8100.
throughout Utah for
801-651-0996
entry-level position. Du- only $163. for 25 3BDRM, 2bath, Rush
ties
will
include:
Helping
NORTH VALLEY Appli1,000/mo,
words, and $5. per V a l l e y
ance. Washers/ dryers on a saddle stitch & word over 25. You will $1,000/dep. Utilities inrefrigerators, freezers, trimmer binding line, reach up to 340,000 cluded, w/d hookups,
stoves, dishwashers. folding and cutting households and it is a no pets, horse property.
$149-$399. Complete equipment and various one call, one order, one (435)830-8694
repair service. Satis- printing equipment. No bill program. Call the
faction guaranteed. experience necessary Transcript Bulletin at 3BDRM, 2BTH mobile
Parts for all brands. Gift but helpful. Must be at 882-0050 for further home for rent, no smoking/ pets. 882-1550
cards w/purchases over least 18 years of age info. (ucan)
with a high school di$199. (435)830-3225.
HOMES available to purploma or equivalent
chase for LOW INand have a current drivWanted
COME buyers with
Garage, Yard
ers license. Heavy liftgood credit.! Berna
Sales
ing required. All beneSloan (435)840-5029
fits included. Apply at I AM paying more for
HAVING A GARAGE 58 North Main Street junk cars/trucks. I will Group 1 Real Estate.
SALE? Advertise it in Tooele. Transcript Bul- come to you and tow it
the classifieds. Call letin Publishing pro- a w a y .
Call/Text
882-0050
motes a drug free envi- (435)224-2064 DL5970
ronment.
TOOELE, 1236 N 380 E,
HAVING A yard sale?
Saturday 11am-?. Girls BECOME A SUBAdvertise in the TranClothes and more.
SCRIBER. 882-0050
script
Homes for
Rent
Homes for
Rent
MUST SEE inside! Re- Tooele 3 bed 2 bath
modeled 3bdrm, 2bth, rambler.! New carpet
fenced yard duplex. and paint.! Single car
637 Smelter Rd. Call garage. !$1195 a
RPMA 801-436-8100.
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Tooele 3 bed 1.5 bath !Realty choice
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For Choice
SPRING/
paint, no pets/smoking.
Realty
SUMMER
$1095
POSITIONS
SELL
YOUR computer 777 E Valley View Drive
in the classifieds. Call
(665 N)
882-0050 or visit
Davidson Realty
www.tooeletranscript.
(801)466-5078
com
www.dripm.com
CLERK / MINUTE COMPOSITION
Tooele City is accepting applications for a part-time (estimated to be
10-12 hours per month), variable hour Clerk to attend and prepare
minutes for meetings including:
• City Council (7:00 p.m. 1st and 3rd Wednesdays of each month);
• Planning Commission (7:00 p.m. 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each
month);
• Board of Adjustments (occur infrequently but is generally
afternoons/evenings); and,
• Board of Appeals (occur infrequently but is generally afternoons/
evenings).
Outside of the scheduled meetings, this position has flexibility
regarding when, where, and how the minutes are prepared and
work from home may be considered. The specifics of these or other
proposed arrangements, including computer requirements, can be
discussed with the City Recorder during the interview process.
Duties include making audio records of meetings, taking notes at
meetings to assist in preparing minutes, preparing draft minutes
of meetings, distributing minutes to appropriate officials or staff
members, receiving feedback regarding minutes, making edits as
directed, and preparing final official minutes within statutory and
staff deadlines. The nature of the position may include exposure to
private, protected, or confidential information and the incumbent
must be able to maintain confidentiality. $13.67/hour
We are seeking applicants who:
• type a minimum of 40 wpm with accuracy;
• have a high school diploma;
• have skills in written expression with the ability to communicate
information and ideas in writing so others will understand;
• have reliable and predictable attendance at meetings;
• have strong active listening skills with the ability to give full
attention to what other people are saying,
• have the ability to take time to understand the points being made,
and self-control to not interrupt at inappropriate times;
• have strong speech recognition skills including the ability to
identify and understand the speech of others including those with
diverse communication, accents, voice tone, etc.;
• have working knowledge of the structure and content of the
English language including the meaning and spelling of words, rules
of composition, and grammar; and,
• have working knowledge of personal computer operation,
Microsoft Word, internet, and e-mail.
Our top applicants will be invited to attend a scheduled meeting and
submit a sample of their work for consideration. Examples of prior
meeting minutes are available at www.tooelecity.org for review.
To Apply
Log on to www.keyhero.com/free-typing-test and complete a
basic type test, print your results, and include it with a completed
Tooele City Application. All materials must be submitted to the
Tooele City Human Resource Office, 90 N Main, Tooele, UT,
84074 by 5:00 p.m. by Sept. 17, 2015.
Applications may be obtained from our website or at City Hall.
Pre-employment drug screening and background check is required.
www.tooelecity.org | ADA/EEO Employer
For Sale
Pets
Pampered Pet Resort
Quality pet care for
over 30 years.
Dog & Cat boarding
435-884-3374
OPEN HOUSE
THIS THURSDAY!
632 SO. HAYLIE LN • TOOELE
310,900
$
pamperedpetresort.com
RUSH
LAKE
KENNELS.
Dog & Cat boarding,
obedience training.
Call (435)882-5266
rushlakekennels.com
BECOME A SUBSCRIBER. 882-0050
NEW JOB OPPORTUNITIES
New listing in Tooele near Settlement Canyon
in quiet neighborhood.
Large open floor plan, 3BR/2BA, fully
landscaped 1/3 acre lot, and five star plus energy
star rating. Come see this custom built 2008
home this Thursday Open 5pm-9pm. 49 Iron
Rod Road, Tooele. Asking $289,000. For more
information, contact Dustin at 435-840-2096.
East Bench Rambler, 6 Bedrooms, 3 1/2 Baths,
Master Suite, Extra wide and deep Garage.
List your home here, give me a call!
Tooele County School District
is seeking applicants for –
ADULT CLEANER
Applicants must be 21 years of age and have custodial experience. Position is 19 hours per
week. Position is open until filled. Please apply online at www.tooelesd.org
SUBSTITUTE CUSTODIAN
Applicants must be 21 year of age and have custodial experience. Position is up to 29 hours
per week. Position is open until filled.
Please apply online at www.tooelesd.org
Now Renting
!"#$%&&'()*+,$%((-*&.)*"+/
!"#$%&'(&)*+,#*,$")'-../0
Income
Restrictions Apply
(&"*1/'1)),)*1"#&'%10'2&'
Exclusively for Seniors
131,/12/&4'51//'6$+'7&*1,/)
Pet Friendly
012340135676
899$45536123:;55
435.843.0717
Call for details
For any of your
real estate
needs, call
Shane Bergen
435-840-0344
1953, as amended, that
on September 2, 2015,
the City Council (the
“Council”) of Tooele City,
Utah (the “Issuer”),
adopted a resolution (the
“Resolution”) in which it
authorized the issuance
of the Issuer's Taxable
PublicTax
Notices
Franchise
Revenue
Meetings
Bonds,
Series 2015 (the
“Series 2015 Bonds”) in
the maximum principal
amount of $5,500,000
(to be issued in one or
more series and with
such other series or title
designation(s) as may
be determined by the Issuer).
TIME, PLACE AND LOCATION OF PUBLIC
HEARING
The Issuer shall hold a
public hearing on October 7, 2015, at the hour
of 7:00 p.m. at 90 North
Main, Tooele City, Utah.
The purpose of the hearing is to receive input
from the public with respect to (a) the issuance
of the Series 2015
Bonds and (b) any potential economic impact
that the Project to be financed with the proceeds of the Series 2015
Bonds may have on the
private sector. Interested individuals are invited to express their
views, both orally and in
writing, on the proposed
issue of the Series 2015
Bonds and the location
and nature of the Project. All members of the
public are invited to attend and participate.
Written comments may
be submitted to the Issuer at the City Recorder's office located at
90 North Main, Tooele
City, Utah, until 5:00
p.m. on or before October 7, 2015.
PURPOSE FOR ISSUING THE SERIES 2015
BONDS
The Series 2015 Bonds
will be issued for the purpose of (a) financing the
acquisition of approximately 31 acres of land
and related improvements located at approximately 1000 North
Main Street (the “Project”), and (b) paying
costs of issuance of the
Series 2015 Bonds. The
Project is being acquired
to protect and preserve
current master planning
and zoning uses of the
Project for the general
welfare and public benefit of the Issuer, and to
enable the Issuer to coordinate and facilitate
public infrastructure
easements and connections for the Project and
surrounding area. It is
likely the Issuer will
eventually sell the Project to a buyer (currently
unknown) willing to use
the Project for its current
master planning and
zoning uses.
TAXES PROPOSED TO
BE PLEDGED
The Issuer proposes to
pledge 100% of the
revenues produced by
the telecommunications
franchise tax revenues
received by the Issuer
pursuant to Title 10,
Chapter 1, Part 4, Utah
Code Annotated 1953,
as amended and (ii) the
Municipal Energy Sales
and Use Tax revenues
received by the Issuer
pursuant to Title 10,
Chapter 1, Part 3, Utah
Code Annotated 1953,
as amended (the “Revenues”).
PARAMETERS OF THE
SERIES 2015 BONDS
The Issuer intends to issue bonds in the aggregate principal amount of
not more than Five Million Five Hundred Thousand
Dollars
($5,500,000), to bear interest at the rate or rates
of not to exceed five percent (5.00%) per annum,
to mature in not more
than twenty-one years
(21) years from their
date or dates, and to be
sold at a price not less
than ninety-seven percent (97%) of the total
principal amount thereof.
The Series 2015 Bonds
are to be issued and
sold by the Issuer pursuant to the Resolution, including as part of said
Resolution, a Supplemental Indenture (the
“Indenture”) which was
before the Council and
attached to the Resolution in substantially final
form at the time of the
adoption of the Resolution. Said Indenture is to
be executed by the Issuer in such form and
with such changes
thereto as shall be approved by the Designated Officers; provided
that
the
principal
amount, interest rate or
rates, maturity, and discount of the Series 2015
Bonds will not exceed
the maximums set forth
above.
OUTSTANDING BONDS
SECURED BY TAX
REVENUES
The
Issuer
has
$8,868,000 of Franchise
Tax Revenue Bonds currently outstanding that
are secured by Revenues (as more fully described in the Indenture).
OTHER OUTSTANDING
BONDS OF THE ISSUER
Additional information regarding the Issuer's outstanding bonds may be
found in the Issuer's financial report (the “Financial Report”) at:
http://auditor.utah.gov/au
sue bonds in the aggregate principal amount of
not more than Five Million Five Hundred Thousand
Dollars
($5,500,000), to bear interest at the rate or rates
of not to exceed five perPublic
cent
(5.00%)Notices
per annum,
to mature
in not more
Meetings
than twenty-one years
(21) years from their
date or dates, and to be
sold at a price not less
than ninety-seven percent (97%) of the total
principal amount thereof.
The Series 2015 Bonds
are to be issued and
sold by the Issuer pursuant to the Resolution, including as part of said
Resolution, a Supplemental Indenture (the
“Indenture”) which was
before the Council and
attached to the Resolution in substantially final
form at the time of the
adoption of the Resolution. Said Indenture is to
be executed by the Issuer in such form and
with such changes
thereto as shall be approved by the Designated Officers; provided
that
the
principal
amount, interest rate or
rates, maturity, and discount of the Series 2015
Bonds will not exceed
the maximums set forth
above.
OUTSTANDING BONDS
SECURED BY TAX
REVENUES
The
Issuer
has
$8,868,000 of Franchise
Tax Revenue Bonds currently outstanding that
are secured by Revenues (as more fully described in the Indenture).
OTHER OUTSTANDING
BONDS OF THE ISSUER
Additional information regarding the Issuer's outstanding bonds may be
found in the Issuer's financial report (the “Financial Report”) at:
http://auditor.utah.gov/au
dit_reports/financial-reports-of-local-governments/. For additional
information, including
any information more recent than as of the date
of the Financial Report,
please contact Glenn
Caldwell, City Finance
Director
at
(435)
843-2100.
TOTAL ESTIMATED
COST
Based on the Issuer's
current plan of finance
and a current estimate of
interest rates, the total
principal and interest
cost of the Series 2015
Bonds if held until maturity is $7,482,138.67.
A copy of the Resolution
and the Indenture are on
file in the office of the
City Recorder, 90 North
Main, Tooele City, Utah,
where they may be examined during regular
business hours of the
City Recorder from 8:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday for a
period of at least thirty
(30) days from and after
the date of publication of
this notice.
NOTICE IS FURTHER
GIVEN that a period of
thirty (30) days from and
after the date of the publication of this notice is
provided by law during
which any person in interest shall have the
right to contest the legality of the Resolution, the
Indenture, or the Series
2015 Bonds, or any provision made for the security and payment of
the Series 2015 Bonds,
and that after such time,
no one shall have any
cause of action to contest the regularity, formality, or legality thereof
for any cause whatsoever.
DATED this September
TOOELETRANSCRIPT
2, 2015.
BULLETIN
Michelle
Pitt
City Recorder
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin September
8 & 15, 2015)
ity of the Resolution, the
Indenture, or the Series
2015 Bonds, or any provision made for the security and payment of
the Series 2015 Bonds,
and that after such time,
no one shall have any
cause of action to conPublic
Notices
test
the regularity,
formality,Meetings
or legality thereof
for any cause whatsoever.
DATED this September
2, 2015.
Michelle Pitt
City Recorder
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin September
8 & 15, 2015)
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
B6
Homes for
Rent
Public Notices
Meetings
Public Notices
Meetings
TOOELE 3BDRM 2bth
unfinished basement. 2
car garage, main floor
laundry, $1000/mo.
$700/dep. Pets negotiable. Contact Abe
801-819-9711.
Deadline for public notices is 4 p.m. the day
prior to publication.
Public notices submitted past the deadline
will not be accepted.
UPAXLP
TOOELE,
4BDRM,
2.5bth, beautiful fenced
yard, 2 single garages,
2400sqft
living,
$1195/mo. guardrightproperty.com Realty
Choice (801)842-9631
PUBLIC NOTICE
The agenda for the
Tooele County Commission meeting to be held
September 15, 2015 at
7:00 p.m., will be posted
on the county website at!
(http://www.co.tooele.ut.
us/clerk.htm, click on
“Tooele County Commission Meetings” and on
the public notice website
(http://www.utah.gov/pm
n/index.html) .! Copies
may also be obtained at
the County Clerk"s Office, County Health Department, Transcript Bulletin, Tooele County
Senior Center, Grantsville City Hall, Grantsville
Senior Center and Wendover Senior Center.!
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin September
15, 2015)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
that the Tooele City
Council & Tooele City
Redevelopment Agency
of Tooele City, Utah, will
meet in a Business
Meeting on Wednesday,
September 16, 2015 at
the hour of 7:00 p.m.
The meeting will be held
at the Tooele City Hall
Council Room located at
90 North Main Street,
Tooele, Utah.
1. Pledge of Allegiance
2. Roll Call
3. SART (Sexual Assault
Response Team) Case
Review Resources Project
Presented by Ron Kirby
4. Presentation on the
Tooele County School
Board Bond
Presented by Kathy Taylor
5. Mayor's Youth Recognition Awards
6. Public Comment Period
7. Number Correction for
September 2, 2015,
Bond Resolution from
2015-37 to 2015-41
Presented by Roger
Baker
8. PUBLIC HEARING
and MOTION on Resolution 2015-42 A Resolution of the Tooele City
Council Approving the
Sale of Seven Acres of
City-Owned Property Located on Vine Street
Near Droubay Road
Presented by Roger
Baker
9. Final Plat Approval of
Peterson Industrial Depot Plat 2B, A Two-Lot
42.52 Acre Subdivision
Located at Lodestone
Way and I Avenue
Presented by Jim Bolser
10. Final Plat Approval
of Peterson Industrial
Depot Building 651 Condominium, A Two-Unit
Condominium Located at
1736 West H Avenue
and 1735 West I Avenue
Presented by Jim Bolser
11. Final Plat Approval
of Tooele Town Center
No. 5, A Two-Lot Subdivision Located at 915
North 100 East
Presented by Jim Bolser
12. Final Plat Approval
of Tuilla Subdivision, a
Two-Lot Subdivision Located at Approximately
200 East 400 North
Presented by Jim Bolser
13. Minutes
14. Invoices
Presented by Michelle
Pitt
15. Adjourn
Michelle Y. Pitt
Tooele
City
Recorder/RDA Secretary
Pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities
Act, Individuals Needing
Special Accommodations Should Notify Michelle Y. Pitt, Tooele
C i t y R e c o r d e r , at
843-2110 prior to the
meeting. (Published in
the Transcript Bulletin
September 15, 2015)
Homes
$$SAVE
MONEY
Search Bank & HUD
homes www.Tooele
BankHomes.com
Berna Sloan (435)
840-5029 Group 1
Planning on selling your
home, you could be
sending your sales
points to up to 340,000
households at once.
For $163. you can
place your 25 word
classified ad to all 45
newspapers in Utah.
Just call the Transcript
Bulletin at 882-0050 for
all the details. (Mention
ucan)
SELLING
YOUR
HOME? Advertise it in
the classifieds. Call
882-0050 or visit
www.tooeletran
script.com
Mobile Homes
3BDRM, 2BTH mobile
home for rent, no smoking/ pets. 882-1550
3BDRM, 2BTH mobile
home for rent, no smoking/ pets. 882-1550
Office Space
PERFECT
54 South Main
602.826.9471
Lots & Land
GRANTSVILLE 20 acres
w/water
well
801-942-3072
Water Shares
TOOELE WATER for
sale limited supply call
now 801-942-3072
Buildings
If you build, remodel or
remove buildings you
can place your classified ad in 45 of Utah's
newspapers for only
$163. for 25 words ($5.
for each additional
word). You will reach
up to 340,000 households and all you do is
call the Transcript Bulletin at 882-0050 for all
the details. (Mention
UCAN Classified Network)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
that the Tooele City
Council & Tooele City
Redevelopment Agency
of Tooele City, Utah, will
meet in a Work Session
on Wednesday, September 16, 2015 at the hour
of 5:00 p.m. The meeting will be held at the
Tooele City Hall Large
Conference Room located at 90 North Main
Street, Tooele, Utah.
1. Open Meeting
2. Roll Call
3. Discussion:
- Electronics and Equipment Needs for City Hall
Conference & Council
Rooms
Presented by Chairman
Pratt
- Final Plat Approval of
Peterson Industrial Depot Plat 2B, A Two-Lot
42.52 Acre Subdivision
Located at Lodestone
Way and I Avenue
Presented by Jim Bolser
- Final Plat Approval of
Peterson Industrial Depot Building 651 Condominium, A Two-Unit
Condominium Located at
1736 West H Avenue
and 1735 West I Avenue
Presented by Jim Bolser
- Final Plat Approval of
Tooele Town Center No.
5, A Two-Lot Subdivision
Located at 915 North
100 East
Presented by Jim Bolser
- Final Plat Approval of
Tuilla Subdivision, a
Two-Lot Subdivision Located at Approximately
200 East 400 North
Presented by Jim Bolser
- Main Street Project Update
4. Close Meeting to Discuss:
- Property Acquisition
- Litigation
5. Adjourn
Michelle Y. Pitt
Tooele City Recorder/
RDA Secretary
Pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities
Act, Individuals Needing
Special Accommodations Should Notify Michelle Y. Pitt, Tooele
C i t y R e c o r d e r , at
843-2110 prior to the
meeting. (Published in
the Transcript Bulletin
September 15, 2015)
SELLING
YOUR
HOME? Advertise it in GOT A good idea for a
the classifieds. Call story? Call the Tran882-0050 or visit script and let us know
882-0050.
www.tooeletran
script.com
WANT TO get the latest
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Transcript Bulletin Clas- to the Transcript Bullesified section.
tin.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING AND BONDS
TO BE ISSUED
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN pursuant to the
provisions of the Local
Government Bonding
Act, Title 11, Chapter 14,
Utah Code Annotated
1953, as amended, that
on September 2, 2015,
the City Council (the
“Council”) of Tooele City,
Utah (the “Issuer”),
adopted a resolution (the
“Resolution”) in which it
authorized the issuance
of the Issuer's Taxable
Franchise Tax Revenue
Bonds, Series 2015 (the
“Series 2015 Bonds”) in
the maximum principal
amount of $5,500,000
(to be issued in one or
more series and with
such other series or title
designation(s) as may
be determined by the Issuer).
TIME, PLACE AND LOCATION OF PUBLIC
HEARING
The Issuer shall hold a
public hearing on October 7, 2015, at the hour
of 7:00 p.m. at 90 North
Main, Tooele City, Utah.
The purpose of the hearing is to receive input
from the public with respect to (a) the issuance
of the Series 2015
Bonds and (b) any potential economic impact
that the Project to be financed with the proceeds of the Series 2015
Bonds may have on the
private sector. Interested individuals are invited to express their
views, both orally and in
writing, on the proposed
issue of the Series 2015
Bonds and the location
and nature of the Project. All members of the
public are invited to attend and participate.
Written comments may
be submitted to the Issuer at the City Recorder's office located at
90 North Main, Tooele
City, Utah, until 5:00
p.m. on or before October 7, 2015.
PURPOSE FOR ISSUING THE SERIES 2015
BONDS
The Series 2015 Bonds
will be issued for the purpose of (a) financing the
acquisition of approxi-
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
SUBJECT: Vacation of
7C Lane (350 East) in
the 7C Subdivision located in Erda, Tooele
County, Utah
For questions or to review a map of the area
described above contact
the Tooele County Planning Office Room 211 of
the County Building or
call (435) 843-3274.
On October 7, 2015 the
Tooele County Planning
Commission will hold a
public hearing on the
above described road
vacation. The meeting
will be held at 7:00 p.m.
at the Tooele County Administration Building
(Auditorium, First Floor),
47 S. Main Street,
Tooele, UT 84074.
The public is welcome to
provide any written comments to the Planning
Office at 47 S. Main in
the Tooele County Building prior to the meeting
or to attend the meeting
to gain information or
voice your opinion regarding this issue. For
questions or additional
information, please contact the Planning Office
(435-843-3274).
Future meeting regarding this application will
be posted at the Tooele
County Building, advertised in the public notice
section of the Tooele
Transcript Bulletin and
posted on the Tooele
County Website.
Blaine Gehring, AICP
Tooele County Planner
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin September
8, 15, 22 & 29, 2015)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tooele County School
District's Title VII Indian
Education Program
September 29, 2015 @
5:00 p.m. Dugway High
School Library
Welcome and Introductions (Rae Garcia)
1. Explanation of Title VII
Indian Education Formula grant
Handout (Rae Garcia)
2. Review of School data
(Jeff Wyatt, Principal)
Instructional Programs
Extracurricular activities
Other opportunities for
participation and services available'
3. Comments (Superintendent Rogers)
4. Concerns/Questions/
Recommendations????
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin 15, 17, 22
& 24, 2015)
PUBLIC NOTICE:
The Grantsville City
Council will hold its regular meeting at 7:00 p.m.
on Wednesday, September 16, 2015 at 429 East
Main Street, Grantsville,
UT 84029. The agenda
is as follows:
CALL TO ORDER AND
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
ROLL CALL
AGENDA:
1. Public Comments.
2. Summary Action
Items.
a. Approval of Minutes
b. Approval of Bills
3. Presentation to Becky
Taylor.
4. Presentation by
Tooele County School
District on the School
Improvement Bond Election.
5. Consideration of Ordinance 2015-13 adopting
new sign regulations for
Chapter 20 of the
Grantsville
City Land Use Development and Management
Code and repealing sign
regulations previously in
use.
6. Mayor and Council
Reports.
7. Closed Session (Personnel, Real Estate, Imminent Litigation).
8. Adjourn.
Christine Webb
City Recorder
In compliance with the
Americans with Disability
Act, Grantsville City will
accommodate reasonable requests
to assist persons with
disabilities to participate
in meetings. Requests
for assistance may be
made by calling City Hall
(435) 884-3411 at least
3 days in advance of a
meeting.
One or more Council
Members may participate electronically. The
anchor location will be
City Hall at the
above address. (Published in the Transcript
Bulletin September 15,
2015)
AGENDA:
1. Public Comments.
2. Summary Action
Items.
a. Approval of Minutes
b. Approval of Bills
3. Presentation to Becky
Taylor.
Noticesby
4.Public
Presentation
Tooele
County School
Meetings
District on the School
Improvement Bond Election.
5. Consideration of Ordinance 2015-13 adopting
new sign regulations for
Chapter 20 of the
Grantsville
City Land Use Development and Management
Code and repealing sign
regulations previously in
use.
6. Mayor and Council
Reports.
7. Closed Session (Personnel, Real Estate, Imminent Litigation).
8. Adjourn.
Christine Webb
City Recorder
In compliance with the
Americans with Disability
Act, Grantsville City will
accommodate reasonable requests
to assist persons with
disabilities to participate
in meetings. Requests
for assistance may be
made by calling City Hall
(435) 884-3411 at least
3 days in advance of a
meeting.
One or more Council
Members may participate electronically. The
anchor location will be
City Hall at the
above address. (Published in the Transcript
Bulletin September 15,
2015)
Public Notices
Trustees
Deadline for public notices is 4 p.m. the day
prior to publication.
Public notices submitted past the deadline
will not be accepted.
UPAXLP
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
The following described
real property will be sold
at public auction to the
highest bidder, purchase
price payable in lawful
money of the United
States of America at the
time of sale, at the main
entrance of the Tooele
County Courthouse,
a/k/a the Third Judicial
District Court, 74 South
100 East, Tooele, Utah,
on Tuesday, October
13, 2015, at the hour of
9:30 a.m. of that day for
the purpose of foreclosing a deed of trust originally executed by Julie
Ann Workman and Julia
D. Workman, in favor of
Tooele Federal Credit
Union, covering real
property located at approximately 21 West
1930 North, Tooele,
Tooele County, Utah,
and more particularly described as:
SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT
“A”
13-011-0-002D
The current beneficiary
of the trust deed is HeritageWest Credit Union
(formerly known as
Tooele Federal Credit
Union), a division of
Chartway Federal Credit
Union, and the record
owner of the property as
of the recording of the
notice of default is Julie
Ann Workman.
The
trustee's sale of the
aforedescribed real
property will be made
without warranty as to title, possession, or encumbrances. Bidders
must be prepared to tender a cashier's check in
the
amount
of
$20,000.00 at the sale.
The balance of the purchase price must be paid
by cashier's check or
wire transfer received by
12:00 noon the following
business day. The trustee reserves the right to
void the effect of the
trustee's sale after the
sale based upon information unknown to the
trustee at the time of the
sale, such as a bankruptcy filing, a loan reinstatement, or an agreement between the trustor
and beneficiary to postpone or cancel the sale.
If so voided, the only recourse of the highest
bidder is to receive a full
refund of the money paid
to the trustee. THIS IS
AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
DATED this 10th day of
September, 2015
Marlon L. Bates, successor trustee
Scalley Reading Bates
Hansen & Rasmussen,
P.C.15 West South Temple, Ste. 600 Salt Lake
City, Utah 84101 Telephone: (801) 531-7870
Business Hours: 9:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Trustee No. 44081-151
EXHIBIT "A"
LOT 2D, THE FIELDS
OF OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, PHASE 1,
A CONDOMINIUM PROJECT OF TOOELE
CITY, ACCORDING TO
THE OFFICIAL PLAT
THEREOF, RECORDED
IN THE OFFICE OF
THE COUNTY RECORDER OF TOOELE
COUNTY, UTAH.
TOGETHER WITH ALL
IMPROVEMENTS LOCATED THEREON, AS
SAID UNIT IS IDENTI-
tle, possession, or en- LAKE CONDOMINIcumbrances. Bidders UMS, AN EXPANDABLE
must be prepared to ten- RESIDENTIAL CONDOder a cashier's check in MINIUM PROJECT, REthe
amount
CORDED FEBURARY
TUESDAYo fSeptember
15, 2015
$20,000.00 at the sale. 17, 2000 AS ENTRY
The balance of the pur- NO. 143986 IN BOOK
chase price must be paid 610 AT PAGE 407, AND
Notices
Public
byPublic
cashier's
check or A S
A M E Notices
NDED IN
wire transfer
received by A M E N
DMENT
NO.
Trustees
Trustees
12:00 noon the following THREE FOR EXPANbusiness day. The trus- SION OF THE FIELDS
tee reserves the right to AT OVERLAKE CONvoid the effect of the DOMINIUMS DATED
trustee's sale after the MAY 17, 2000 AS ENsale based upon infor- TRY NO. 147723 IN
mation unknown to the BOOK 622 AT PAGE
trustee at the time of the 3 0 2 ,
AND
AS
sale, such as a bank- AMENDED IN AMENDruptcy filing, a loan rein- MENT NO. FOUR FOR
statement, or an agree- EXPANSION OF THE
ment between the trustor FIELDS AT OVERLAKE
and beneficiary to post- CONDOMINIUMS, AN
pone or cancel the sale. EXPANDABLE CONDOIf so voided, the only re- MINIUM PROJECT, REcourse of the highest CORDED AUGUST 4,
bidder is to receive a full 2000 AS ENTRY NO.
refund of the money paid 150875 IN BOOK 633
to the trustee. THIS IS AT PAGE 292-295.
AN ATTEMPT TO COL- (Published in the TranLECT A DEBT. ANY IN- script Bulletin September
FORMATION
O B - 15, 17, & 24, 2015)
TAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
DATED this 10th day of
Public Notices
September, 2015
Water User
Marlon L. Bates, successor trustee
Scalley Reading Bates Deadline for public noHansen & Rasmussen, tices is 4 p.m. the day
P.C.15 West South Tem- prior to publication.
ple, Ste. 600 Salt Lake Public notices submitCity, Utah 84101 Tele- ted past the deadline
phone: (801) 531-7870 will not be accepted.
Business Hours: 9:00 UPAXLP
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Trustee No. 44081-151
EXHIBIT "A"
LOT 2D, THE FIELDS
OF OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, PHASE 1,
A CONDOMINIUM PROJECT OF TOOELE
CITY, ACCORDING TO
THE OFFICIAL PLAT
THEREOF, RECORDED
IN THE OFFICE OF
THE COUNTY RECORDER OF TOOELE
COUNTY, UTAH.
TOGETHER WITH ALL
IMPROVEMENTS LOCATED THEREON, AS
SAID UNIT IS IDENTIFIED IN THE PLAT OF
SAID DEVELOPMENT
RECORDED FEBRUARY 17, 2000 AS ENTRY NO. 143985 IN
BOOK 610 AT PAGE
404 OF THE OFFICIAL
RECORDED
OF
TOOELE COUNTY RECORDER, STATE OF
UTAH, AND AS IDENTIFIED AND DESCRIBED
IN THE DECLARATION
OF CONDOMINIUM OF
THE FIELDS AT OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, AN EXPANDABLE
RESIDENTIAL CONDOMINIUM PROJECT, RECORDED MAY 14, 1999
AS ENTRY NUMBER
131110 IN BOOK 568,
AT PAGE 338 OF THE
OFFICIAL RECORDS,
AND AS AMENDED IN
THE AMENDMENT TO
DECLARATION
OF
CONDOMINIUM OF
THE FIELDS AT OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, RECORDED NOVEMBER 1, 1999 AS
ENTRY NO. 139348 IN
BOOK 595 AT PAGE
500,
AND
AS
AMENDED IN THE
AMENDMENT NO. ONE
TO DECLARATION OF
CONDOMINIUM OF
THE FIELDS AT OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, RECORDED NOVEMBER 5, 1999 AS
ENTRY NO. 139557 IN
BOOK 596 AT PAGE
194,
AND
AS
AMENDED IN THE
AMENDMENT NO. TWO
TO DECLARATION OF
CONDOMINIUM OF
THE FIELDS AT OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS, AN EXPANDABLE
RESIDENTIAL CONDOMINIUM PROJECT, RECORDED FEBURARY
17, 2000 AS ENTRY
NO. 143986 IN BOOK
610 AT PAGE 407, AND
AS AMENDED IN
AMENDMENT
NO.
THREE FOR EXPANSION OF THE FIELDS
AT OVERLAKE CONDOMINIUMS DATED
MAY 17, 2000 AS ENTRY NO. 147723 IN
BOOK 622 AT PAGE
302,
AND
AS
AMENDED IN AMENDMENT NO. FOUR FOR
EXPANSION OF THE
FIELDS AT OVERLAKE
CONDOMINIUMS, AN
EXPANDABLE CONDOMINIUM PROJECT, RECORDED AUGUST 4,
2000 AS ENTRY NO.
150875 IN BOOK 633
AT PAGE 292-295.
(Published in the Transcript Bulletin September
15, 17, & 24, 2015)
Public Notices
Miscellaneous
Deadline for public notices is 4 p.m. the day
prior to publication.
Public notices submitted past the deadline
will not be accepted.
UPAXLP
PUBLIC NOTICE
Lifeline Assistance Who qualifies?
Low-income telephone
assistance is available to
qualifying low-income
Beehive Telephone customers through the “Lifeline” and “Link-up” federal telephone assistance programs.
Lifeline provides qualified customers with a
monthly reduction on
their telephone bill.
Link-up assists in paying
for the installation of basic telephone service by
reducing connection
charges by 50% or $30,
whichever is less.
Beehive Telephone customers who participate in
at least one of the following programs are eligible
for telephone assistance:
Medicaid, Food Stamps,
Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), Federal
Housing Assistance, Nevada Energy Assistance
Program (EAP), Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families
Program
(TANF), National School
Lunch Program (NSL).
Beehive Telephone customers who do not participate in one of the
above programs are eligible if their income is at
or below 135% of the
Federal Poverty Guidelines.
For more information
please
call
1-800-629-9993. (Published in the Transcript
Bulletin September 10 &
15, 2015)
Invite the
Whole
Town to
Your Yard
Sale!
TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
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TOOELE
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B8
TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN
PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE
TUESDAY September 15, 2015
Festival
continued from page B1
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TRANSCRIPT
BULLETIN
TOOELE
PHOTO OF THE MONTH
Lorena Needham and
Julia Viera (above) work
one of booths selling
items to raise funds
for Saint Marguerite
Catholic Parish during
the church’s annual Fall
Festival. Bob Tomac,
Annette Ruybal and
Jeffrey Martinez (left)
work the grill to prepare
bratwurst for sale. Kadin
Biernes (below) shines
up the 1934 Custom Ford
pickup on Saturday in
the car show held in conjunction with the festival.
Evelyn Montoya (below
middle) drops raffle
tickets in the bin. Grifffin
Lougy (bottom) uses his
putting skills trying to
win a prize while Terrel
Simons watches to see if
Lougy can sink a putt.
August 2015 Winner: Mike Smith
Your photo could be next!
Submit your photo to:
francie@tooeletranscript.com
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1/22/15 2:13 PM