Latest Breaking News On - ஃபிரிஸ்கோ வரலாற்று பூங்கா அருங்காட்சியகம் - Page 2 : comparemela.com
Local teen plans Pride march for Sunday
summitdaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from summitdaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Frisco acquires historic 1930s cabin from Bill s Ranch
summitdaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from summitdaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Don’t know what to do this weekend? Well, you’ve come to the right place. Pull up a seat to the counter, and I’ll tell you about everything that’s hot and happening.
I love being a journalist because I learn something new every day. I then spend my free time to learn even more.
Naturally, the Summit County Library is the go-to resource for continuing one’s education, whether they are a kid or an adult.
Physical books naturally come to mind, yet the best part, especially in the second year of a pandemic, is that a multitude of resources are just a click away. I’ve known about checking out digital books on Libby or watching movies on Kanopy before, but over the summer, I learned about other offerings while doing the library’s reading challenge. It led me to dig deeper into various programs with virtual meditation and yoga classes. I also discovered that the Breckenridge Heritage Alliance puts out virtual tours on Facebook, and I watched one of Frisco Historic Park
Photo by Jason Connolly / Jason Connolly Photography
“It really started us out with a bang,” said Melissa Sherburne, the group’s co-founder and a Frisco Town Council member. That was such a fantastic event, and we were really energized. And then COVID hit.”
That was the only event the group hosted in 2020 as the pandemic created new challenges for members, many of whom were working to stay afloat. Despite the setback, the group has kept in touch and is hoping to recapture some of the energy it had at the start of 2020 with an ice luminary display at the Frisco Historic Park & Museum.
Photo by Sawyer D’Argonne / sdargonne@summitdaily.com
Frisco officials are hopeful that reaching back out to the development community could finally provide an answer for the long-vacant Sabatini lot on Granite Street.
Town officials discussed different options for the lot during a virtual Frisco Town Council meeting last week and ultimately decided to push out a request for proposals in search of a new housing development on the parcel.
The Sabatini lot is a half-block plot between Second and Third avenues at 275 Granite St., which has remained vacant since the town purchased the land in 1997. Last year, local developer Nathan Glassman pitched the town on a potential public-private partnership that would combine the town-owned Sabatini lot with the adjacent property to create a larger-scale housing project at the site.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.