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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Karasema Events at Inn at Snow Meadows

Karasema Restaurant at Snow Meadows Inn is featured in the 2013 Utah Bride Issue and will be spotlighted on Channel Two  Road Trippin' on Thursday the 17th from 6-8am. That segment will run for 12 weeks and hopefully bring more business to Garden City.The Restaurant and Inn are also highlighted in the new 2013 Issue of Utah Bride and Groom for the big wedding they did in July here in Garden City.
 
On Saturday February 9th there will be a special Mardi Gras event with interesting food from New Orleans for a Valentines date. 

Friday, January 11, 2013

Rich Reading and Libraries

Silence
Doug Alder, Historian
Elaine and Doug Alder
From our nest high on Sweetwater Hill, we can take in Bear Lake’s greatest resource-- silence.  Occasionally we hear an airliner way up in the sky, seeing it before hearing it.  Sometimes a semi-trailer shifts down and we can hear it on the highway beside the lake. Usually it is silence that dominates.  That makes it possible to watch flocks of birds overhead and notice the morning ritual of deer visits.  About four times a year elk come by to see if our water is spraying and available to them.  Every day we see sage hens and occasionally wild turkeys.  Squirrels are always nearby, occasionally a badger.  A pair of finches make a nest each spring under our roof overhang and we experience the birth and eventual departure of their next generation.  The silence makes all this possible. 

Almost every day silence leads to reading. Like most residences, our home is the depository of many books, but the silence is better than elsewhere.  Of course, I have to recommend some reading about Bear Lake.  The first is Robert Parson’s “A History of Rich County.”  It was published as part of a 29-volume set to celebrate Utah’s Centennial in 1996.  The State Legislature sponsored the effort and made a full set available to all high schools, community libraries and academic libraries.  This book has been the basis of this series of articles about Bear Lake.  Parson is a Special Collections Librarian at the Merrill-Cazier Library at Utah State University in Logan.  When I was a faculty member at USU, my office was in the old Merrill Library.  Drs. Merrill and Cazier were my valued colleagues then.  I am very proud of the new library and it’s honoring of those two scholars.  

A second book is “Sons of Bear Lake” that I wrote and was published in 2003.   It is about the coming of age of young boys who grew up in the villages of Bear Lake Valley.  Some of them became my students at USU.  It has been available in stores around the lake and is in the local libraries. 

Speaking of libraries, it is important to know that Montpelier, Garden City and Randolph each have a library.  There is also one in the school in Laketown.  Each of them is a great value to their community. 
 
My wife, Elaine, and I and our children and grandchildren have been patrons of the Garden City Library since it’s founding by a group of community women.  Marie Weston and her friends, including one from Laketown, initiated an effort to have a library in Garden City.  The town leaders made a small room next to the council room available in the old town office.  The ladies solicited donations of books, videos and tapes.  They volunteered to be the circulation workers each afternoon.  They pressed the council to build a permanent library.  The elected leaders considered doing so and considered a site near the town park.  When the town was able to purchase a motel complex on Highway 89 near the town entrance, they included the library in their plans.  Today the facility includes a medical clinic, a swimming pool, a community room, a council chamber and the old entrance is the town library.  Citizens rallied and remodeled the facility, obtained equipment and coordinated with the State Division of Libraries.  The city hired a professional librarian and Garden City is now up to the standard of Montpelier and Randolph.  So silence is there for you to read and books are available.
                                                                       

Business Sign Ordinance Review

Randall Knight, Reporter
Rich County Times 

GARDEN CITY, Utah- January 9, 2013. The Public Hearing of the Garden City Planning Commission was held as scheduled to discuss Ordinance 12-18 Sign Ordinance #11C600 and 12-19 Definitions #11A-200-132.  No one was in attendance to discuss the two ordinances so the meeting was adjourned with no comments.  This reporter is always amazed to attend these meetings that affect not only the business owners (current and future) but indirectly the local residents and no one attends them except the board members and RCT reporters.
The Garden City Planning Commission held their regularly scheduled meeting  directly after the public hearing to discuss the sign Ordinance #11C-600 and 12-19 sign definitions #11A-200-A-132.
The purpose of the ordinance is necessary to reduce potential risk to health, safety and welfare of the citizens and to ensure conformity with the surrounding environment according to the board members.  Several issues were discussed but a main concern was voiced about the costs that will be required to get proposed signs approved.  A recommendation was made to require signs costing $1000 or more to be professionally designed and installed.  Bill England voiced  his concern that the ordnance bans banner signs and recommended that certain banner signs should be exempt from the requirement as written for short periods of time because the local season is limited to basically 90 days.   The current ordinance states an owner is allowed to display temporary signs for a total of 90 days.  Another recommendation was mentioned in regard to the document being hard to understand and should be written in clearer language and with not so much legalese.  
Board members said there have been several previous sign meetings with little support from the local companies and residents.  England pointed out that the number of people attending the previous sign meetings diminished because of various conflicts in schedules and changes in meeting times.  Most of the board members stated they had received the ordinances just a few days ago and hadn’t had time to review them completely so a motion was made to review the documents so that they would be prepared to review them page-by-page at next month’s meeting.
Copies of the two proposed Ordinances are available at the city office building for review and comments will be heard at the next Public Hearing meeting scheduled for 6 Feb.  Because this ordinance will impact not only the businesses, but also the local citizens and tourists, this reporter recommends everybody review the ordinances and provide their comments to ensure the attractiveness of Garden City is maintained.
There is a concern about the canal easement changing from 15 to 30 feet as it transverses through the city.   George Peart, Rich County Building Inspector, stated that state bill HB298, Land Use Authority Notification of Canal Development, was passed and requires municipalities and counties to notify canal companies of proposed development within 100 feet of the center line of a canal and also requires the canal companies to provide the municipalities and counties with the company's contact information and a general description of the location of their canal(s) by July 1, 2010. Nobody in attendance knew if the local canal companies were in compliance.  The city feels they need to write an ordinance to address this issue.  Danny said he will write a draft for review and comment within the next 2-3 months.
County funding has been approved to aid in building a kiosk that will identify the local businesses and locations.  The kiosk will be located on Bear Lake Boulevard between the LDS chapel and Jake’s.  

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Monday, January 7, 2013

Winter at the Lake

Photo  of Bear Lake by Tammy Calder

Thanks to Computer Specialist Joe Stocking who fixed our photo upload feature on Blogspot we can have pictures in this weeks Rich Civic Times.  He volunteers to keep the paper going!  But if you find a computer problem, hire him...he is totally amazing!  

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Life Guard Jobs May Be Available

The Garden City pool may need two lifeguards this summer.  If you are 15 or will be by the time summer begins you might want to see if you can qualify for life guard certification and apply to be a life guard.  If you are accepted, the city may pay for your training and that certification is good anywhere.

Pool Winter hours are 5-9 on Monday and Wednesday, and 1-9 on Fridays and Saturdays.