Catch comedy and classic films for multiple evenings of heartwarming laughs 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.
Summit County courts dismissed a lawsuit against Summit High School Principal Tim Ridder this week.
On June 9, Silverthorne resident Michael Hornback filed a lawsuit against Ridder seeking $250,000 in damages, saying that the school was teaching false and misleading curriculum to students related to critical race theory and claiming the teachings are “discriminatory, slanderous and are an indoctrination of young people to stereotype white people … as oppressors of non-white people.”
In the lawsuit, Hornback pointed specifically to Jason Reynolds and Ibram Kendi’s book “Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You,” which he alleged was secretly being taught by a teacher at the school. He asked the court to ban the book and teacher from ever entering Summit County again.
Opinion | Scott M Estill: Changes are coming 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.
Steamboat Springs plans to extend its 90-day moratorium on new licenses
Vail Daily staff report
The town of Vail’s proposed 90-day suspension of short-term rental registrations would apply to properties in Zone 2, mainly outside of the village commercial core areas.
Map from Vail Town Council packet
As tourist towns across the Mountain West grapple with labor and housing shortages, many are eyeing regulations on short-term rentals.
On Tuesday, July 13, the Breckenridge Town Council declined to place a moratorium on new short-term rental licenses at the request of the town manager though council said the option is still on the table.
Frisco and Lake Havasu City, Arizona
Having been brought up in a “blue” city, I was indoctrinated to believe that the policies of a bigger government were best for Americans. Yet, the real world shattered those beliefs and proved otherwise. As an experienced economist, with a long list of verifiable education and work credentials, it seems undeniable that the most sustainable and most beneficial forms of government are those from the “right“ side of the aisle.
Government does have a meaningful role in oversight or involvement in running the nation, but less government is better than more. Arguments that favor more regulatory controls over our private lives are based upon a lack of true understanding of the negative consequences of these positions.