Commissioner Donald Broom (middle) presented commemorative plaques to commissioners Ray Beck (left) and Don Cook (right) at their final meeting Tuesday, Jan. 5.
In their final commissioners’ meeting as members of the Board of County Commissioners, outgoing District 1 commissioner Don Cook and outgoing District 2 commissioner Ray Beck moved to reopen the Moffat County Courthouse to the public following a month-long closure to help stop the spread of COVID-19.
The decision to reopen the courthouse reverses Resolution 2020-118, completely reopening the courthouse to the public. Previously, offices on the first floor were closed to the public and made available to residents by appointment only.
No need for this juggle
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January 9, 2021 10.00pm
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The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number.
No need for this juggle
The foreshadowed Victorian Electoral Commission’s review of Legislative Assembly seat boundaries (‘‘Libs face election rout’’,
The Sunday Age, 3/1) does not need to be a population distribution juggle drawing arbitrary lines on maps, and in turn becoming a puzzle for the state’s main political parties based on a series of demographic variables in the pursuit of the retention of the two-party system.
Moffat County commissioners, in partnership with the Associated Governments of Northwest Colorado (AGNC) announced that they’ve submitted a Colorado Open Records Act request to determine if Colorado Parks and Wildlife and Governor Jared Polis’ office are working to accelerate the development of a plan and limit public and stakeholder input on this important matter.
Commissioners Ray Beck, Don Cook and Donald Broom stated Tuesday morning that they’re submitting a letter of support to local media as part of a united front the county joined against wolves.
Proposition 114 passed on the Nov. 3 ballot by less than 2%. Originally, the reintroduction of grey wolves on designated lands in Colorado, west of the continental divide, was scheduled to take at least three years before being implemented in 2023.
OddLane Explanation of The Holy Trinity, from Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus by Nabeel Quereshi: Projected in the front of the room were three large depictions of nitrate in bold black and white. We were studying resonance, the configuration of electrons in certain molecules. The basic concept of resonance is easy enough to understand, even without a background in chemistry. Essentially, the building block of every physical object is an atom, a positively charged nucleus orbited by tiny, negatively charged electrons. Atoms bond to one another by sharing their electrons, forming a molecule. Different arrangements of the electrons in certain molecules are called resonance structures. Some molecules, like water, have no resonance while others have three resonance structures or more, like the nitrate on the board.
Moffat County commissioners Don Cook, Ray Beck, and Donald Broom.
Once again, out-of-state special interests have funded a ballot initiative (Proposition 114-Wolf Introduction) to manage wildlife in a manner that is neither scientific nor in the best interest of wildlife or the citizens of Colorado.
We are greatly concerned when we hear wildlife commission members advocating to fast-track wolf introduction (releasing wolves in 2021) and foregoing adequate time to develop a comprehensive management plan. Proposition 114 requires that CPW “takes steps necessary to begin reintroduction of gray wolves by December 31,2023.”
Our county strongly objects to any efforts to short-circuit or abandon the planning window provided by Prop 114 that interferes with public input, transparency, and that jeopardizes the safety of our communities and economies.