Summit County deputies helped recover a rental car that had gone missing from the area more than a week before and was located several hundred miles away in Vail, Colorado, according to a report from the Summit County Sheriff’s Office.
The rental agency reported the 2020 Chevrolet Malibu stolen on Jan. 26 after it wasn’t returned on Jan. 15. The agency requested that Summit County deputies list the car on a national registry of stolen vehicles.
Once that was done, the ONSTAR system in the vehicle located it in Vail, according to the report.
Deputies indicated the vehicle was remotely disabled and that the Vail Police Department recovered it.
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Melissa Brielle Photography
Pastor Tim Wilbanks, President of the Vail Religious Foundation, on Monday announced the members of the volunteer advisory committee that will steer fundraising efforts related to the Vail Interfaith Chapel’s $10 million 50th Anniversary Capital Campaign.
“This volunteer committee supports restoring and maintaining our beloved Chapel, and values it as one of Vail’s cultural and historic centers,” Wilbanks said. “We are so grateful for their support, not only financially but with their time and energy over these next two years.”
Vail Pioneer Rod Slifer was one of the first to volunteer to help the chapel. Slifer brokered the land deal in the late 1960s when the original chapel building was built.
El Paso County Undersheriff Peter Carey receives his first Moderna COVID-19 vaccination administered by registered medical assistant Bailey Eltagonde at the UCHealth Memorial Administrative Center in Colorado Springs on Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2020. Last week, UCHealth began providing vaccinations to first responders. As of Wednesday morning around 22,900 people, including staff, providers and community members across the state, have received COVID-19 vaccinations from UCHealth. (Chancey Bush/ The Gazette)
Chancey Bush/ The Gazette
Vail Interfaith Chapel
Spectacular orchestral music lifts the vaulted wooden ceiling. An intimate moment takes place Gore Creek-side as a younger (and sometime not-exactly-younger) couple sit snuggled together to mark an anniversary, or schedule one. There is incisive, provocative fora on super-intellectual subjects with attendees like me occasionally nodding my head thoughtfully while furtively web searching vocabulary on my hidden cell phone. Exhausted, overwrought stranded travelers morph into overnight refugees seeking a warm bed and safe shelter when Interstate 70 is closed or wildfires threaten. Individuals, couples and families walk into the sanctuary and sit down … for awhile, reflecting upon private thoughts which inevitably arise when confronted with the majesty of our Rocky Mountains. Dear friends and complete strangers move regularly in and out seeking recovery, personal solace and honest support. Where in our resort town do all these moments happen quite regularly, yo