Showing posts with label Commission meeting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Commission meeting. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2020

January Gatherings: Snow Storms and Referendum Signatures


Happenings Across the West

 ~~ Contact Logan Monson to sign Tax Referendum (158 S 200 E Blanding) Bring ID

       For More Information

~~ Commission Meeting January 7 in Monticello

11:00 A.M. Commission Meeting

1. Approval of Minutes December 17, 2019
2. Citizens comments to the commission* (Please complete the request form - available at the door)
3. Ordinance Adopting the 2020 Annual Commission Meeting Schedule
4. Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness Grant Tammy Gallegos, San Juan County Emergency Manager
5. Contract Amendment to Aging Waiver Budget Tammy Gallegos, San Juan County Aging Director
6. Letter of Thanks for Salt Lake County Aging and Adult Services Tammy Gallegos, San Juan County Aging Director
7. Grand Water and Sewer Service District Board Appointment Approval Mack McDonald, San Juan County Administrator
8. Beer License Renewals John David Nielson, San Juan County Clerk
9. 2020 Commission Assignments
10. Commission Reports

~~ Doomers vs. Boomers: Generational Fear, Angst and Loathing  by Jim Stiles

~~ Commission Meetings in Garfield County/ What's Up

~~ Fifty Years ago on the Navajo Reservation  -Navajo Times Dec. 31




~~ 2019 in Review: Despite Negativity, US Economy Best in 50 years

~~ President Trump Signs Bill to Protect the Navajo Language

~~ BLM Funds Five Year Watershed Restoration Project

~~ Utah Groups Push Referendum on Tax Reform Law 

~~A Spoof on Vegan Diets and Climate Change

~~ History of Voting Districts in San Juan County by former County Clerk Gail Johnson





~~ Western Governors Association Forcing Urban Values on Rural West

~~ A Sea of Change in San Juan County: Government Gone Sour

*Part 1: Rule by resolution.  Kenneth Maryboy and Willie Grayeyes took their oaths of office as commissioners a little over a year ago after what was described as a “historic” election. They immediately staked their claim to power by choosing to govern primarily through resolutions written by their longtime private attorney and approved without advice or informed consent of virtually anyone in the county.


*Part 2: The Power of Non-Profit Organizations in County Politics: Bill Keshlear
"It’s hard to overstate the influence Utah Diné Bikéyah and its national allies have had in advocating for Native American interests connected with use and management of public lands in southeastern Utah." In its campaign to create Bears Ears National Monument, the organization succeeded in a way that eventually took a presidential election and proclamation to derail it.
     The advocacy organization based in Salt Lake City has a staff of eight and an estimated 50 volunteers, according the latest IRS Form 990. It has assumed a visible lead in the national initiative to create Bears Ears National Monument.
     Part of that success is directly attributable to its ability to tap funding sources outside of San Juan County and even Utah.
     The organization had revenues of $1,281,371 in 2017 — all but $45,847 came from grants and contributions. Total revenue since UDB began reporting to the IRS beginning in 2014 is $2,656,931.
     UDB and its allies give voice to a historically marginalized group of Americans. Ironically, voices of hundreds of Utah Navajos, unaffiliated with the nonprofits, have been muted in the multimillion-dollar, multiyear national political campaign.  Though supposedly conducted on their behalf to create a sacred sanctuary to protect artifacts of indigenous peoples; it has instead focused on 
becoming a playground for tourists, rock climbers, mountain bikers and ATV riders.


     In another strange twist, Attorney Kendall Laws wanted a legal firewall to protect the county, if the new commissioners crossed an ethical or legal line. And that’s what he got.
     In an effort to oust him from office, the scheme was deemed “unlawful” and “unconstitutional” and was tabled. Both Grayeyes and District 1 Commissioner Bruce Adams voted in favor of this action; Maryboy abstained and expressed his disappointment.


  *Part 3:  Stonewalling Gramma Requests/ Commissioners Fail to Comply

~~ December 31, 2016:  Anniversary of Bob Weaver's Tragic Death

   "The case of Bob Weaver is not the first account in which military-style home raids, over-the-top interrogations, and cruel threats from federal agents have led to the deaths of decent, law-abiding citizens. On the morning of June 10, 2009, 140 BLM and FBI agents dressed in body armor and armed with automatic weapons, arrived in dozens of SUVS and stormed into the small town of Blanding, Utah, raiding the homes of more than 20 local citizens. "   

~~  Far-left Groups Trying to stop Restoration Efforts GSNM --opinion


Political Cartoon by Jack AHasteen Begay, Navajo Times 12/19/19


~~ Winter is a Good Time to Think about Global Warming and get the facts straight. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Celebrating Freedom in Rural Utah July 10, 2019



Epic Blanding 4th of July Celebration

Blanding Fireworks 2019  Some of the best in the West! 

Thanks Raini Chee


Short Version of Stan Bronson's Concert, July 4


Combat Veterans are Grand Marshals for 4th of July


>>News In the West <<

~~ 1984 Voting Boundary Decisions Compared to Gerrymandering of 2017

"in the November 1984 general election, voters approved the boundaries of the new voting districts. These voter-approved boundaries remained the same for nearly 30 years.

In the general election, 64 percent of voters approved the new voting districts, with 2,055 approving and 1,161 opposing.

~~July 2 Commission Meeting in Oljato

~~ Commissioner Maryboy Comments on July 2 Commission Meeting

~~ Moab Considers New Nightly Rental Policy



Opinions in Recent San Juan Record
















~~ Government's $22 Trillion Debt, and Annual Gov. Shutdown, Makes Case for State Control of National Parks and Monuments

"The federal government, on the other hand, has no skin in the game when it comes to shutting down monuments and national parks thousands of miles from Capitol Hill. For the feds, it's all a political game in Washington, DC. What happens in the communities bordering federal lands — many of them rural — is but a mere afterthought to people like Nancy Pelosi. But at the local level, access to local tourist attractions could mean a restaurant's ability to pay its staff with income from tourists."

~~ Stop Relying on Tourism to Save Rural Communities

"No less than five new hotels are currently being built (in Moab). Tourists are pouring in like the end is near and Moab is the only safe place. The sewer system can barely keep up. And yet, Moab and the State of Utah continue to advertise the area throwing more than $2.3 million dollars into promoting the area each year.
Regardless of the fact that the land is suffering, that the roads cannot hold the amount of traffic, that the sewer system is being overwhelmed, growing tourism in Moab continues to be a top priority. In 2017 more than 46% of Moab’s job force labored in the tourism industry compared with the 11% of Utah’s total workforce."

~~ Administration Reining in EPA Union

~~ Families of Blanding Veterans Post Information on this Site

~~ America Has A Moral Obligation to Develop and Export Clean Nat'l Gas

~~ Utah's Cattle Herds are "Udderly" Astonishing: Cow Appreciation Day

~~Three Pillars of Good Navajo Communication

~~ Big Government is Not the Answer to Climate Change

~~ Does Supreme Court Decision Have Local Implications

"I recently reviewed the 1984 issues of the San Juan Record to better understand the issue. I walked away from the process with an increased appreciation for what happened in 1984. I also had a growing concern about what happened in San Juan County in 2017.

In 1984, the process to create the voting districts, at several key points along the way, was a public process. This is in marked contrast to the process to create the current voting districts." San Juan Record editor, Bill Boyle















~~ Roads in Ruin in Parts of Utah


"A transfer of ownership of some roads in San Juan County, Utah, from the county to the Navajo Nation has resulted in disappearing road signs, general confusion, and spreading potholes.
Around October 2018, Manuel Morgan, a former San Juan County commissioner, noticed that the county roads signs in his community between Ismay and Aneth were missing.
“One morning they were gone – everywhere,” he said. “No county road signs to help people find us. No one told us the county roads signs would be taken down.”  Four Corners Free Press

~~ Developers Redirect Water Resources Away From Agriculture in Colo.

~~Taxing Tourists is Popular, Taxing High Density Housing is Divisive

~~ Uranium Mining Ban and Russian Cash: Arizona Lawmakers at Odds

"trade tensions between the U.S. and a number of countries have heightened the need to assure adequate domestic supplies of minerals and metals.
Uranium, a crucial part of the nation’s energy supply as a fuel for power plants, is one of those minerals. Yet the country’s uranium production is near historic lows because of an international oversupply."
 Ten Years Since Infamous Blanding Raids of 2009  

~~ Emotions Run Hot After Artifact Raid in Blanding

~~ Artifact Raid Raises Questions Years Later

~~ BLM Used Excessive Force

~~ Artifact Sting in the Desert Goes Awry

~~ The Shameful, Archaeological Raids in the Four Corners

            (Be sure to read Jay Redd's Reply)

~~ Widow Sues Over Husband's Death

~~Artifacts, Suicides, and Struggle over Federal Lands

~~10th Circuit Court Clears Federal Agents In Doctor's Death 

________________

I think you'll find this as upsetting.

So, I'm hiking through Wire Pass which is a beautiful slot canyon that leads to an opening that's so breathtaking and sacred. It's a huge natural amphitheater that the Native Americans held so sacred. It's a huge natural amphitheater that the Native Americans held so sacred. You can actually feel it. I just get to the amphitheater and sit for lunch and notice who's here, I see a nice couple with two dogs soaking in the beauty. Then, I see a woman and daughter (I'm only guessing mother and daughter). I see the daughter open the metal box which contains a brief history of this historic place how sacred it was to the Native Americans and about it being unlawful to deface this area. I then stopped paying attention but then something drew my eyes over to where the girl was. I look and think she's carving into the wall but I see her mother watching her so I think naw, but curiosity got to me so I took out my camera and zoomed in. I yelled 'hey' to her and she walked away. I told her mother about it, I said your daughter just destroyed Native American Sacred history. I said look, she never said a word to me and walked towards her daughter. I was thinking she was getting her to bring her over when they both took off! Then, I go back to where I was sitting and I see a man letting his kids use this sacred place as a jungle gym destroying artwork. If you look at the picture with the name she carved you'll see it's right in the middle of petroglyphs This was all within 15 minutes of being there. No stopping this. It's going to be all destroyed soon. If you want to see this, best do it soon. I'm happy I can share these wonders with those who can't get here.
Update, she was caught. Here is the link
https://www.facebook.com/120889757943366/posts/2519780228054295/?substory_index=0

Friday, March 29, 2019

Concerns, Collusion, and County Commissioner Agenda 3/29/2019

             What's Happening in San Juan and The Nation 

San Juan Record March 26  Weather Stats

San Juan Record 3/27 Issue Summary


Concerns Voiced About Spanish Valley Growth and Planning

A meeting on codes and ordinances for the Spanish Valley area will take place 
on Wednesday, April 3, at 7 p.m. in the Grand Water and Sewer office building 
located at 3025 East Spanish Trail Road in Spanish Valley.

Thoughts on Water Allocation in the West Canyon Echo

Supreme Court Wary of Redistricting Issues in States/ Counties

Tribes Urge Government to Ban Drilling Near Chaco Site 

County Licensing: More Power to Government? or a Needed Safeguard?

Audio News: San Juan Record March 20 issue

March 19 San Juan Commission Meeting  -- Video recording

Summary of Most Recent SJ Commission Meeting, Wendy Black













~~Senator Lee Addresses "Green New Deal":  Satire and posters!

~~Please sign and comment on this BE Petition if you haven't already

~~ Alaskan Natives Angry with Dems who want to close ANWA to oil and gas

~~BLM Leases on Public Lands in Utah for Energy Development

~~SITLA Representative Answers Questions about Proposed Bluff Solar Farm

~~Clarifying Aneth Chapter Position on Bears Ears

~~ Bluff Leaders Pass Building Moratorium: Write Zoning Building Codes"  Canyon Echo