Slander Accusations Made In Augusta Township Regarding Solar Application thesuntimesnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thesuntimesnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Air conditioning, refrigerators and luxury bedding are becoming camping staples as young travelers bridge the gap between nature and home life. Northwest Arkansas is home to a few modern camping experiences, including the Hideout Airstreams and White Tail Tents.Â
Glamorous camping, or glamping, has risen in popularity with half of millennials and nearly half of Gen Z having shown an interest in glamping, according to the 2019 Northern American Camping Report. The glamping market in the U.S. is projected to grow nearly 15% by 2024 to a value of $1 billion, according to Arizton.Â
Glamping encompasses a broad range of camping styles, including luxury tents and campers. In November 2020, a group of friends launched The Hideout Airstreams, an urban glamping business located in the Mill District of south Fayetteville.Â
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None of the land that was going to be used for the proposed White Tail solar project in Augusta Township will be used for that purpose, even if it does eventually pass. Whether it will pass in York Township will depend partly on what the public tells the Planning Commission at the next public comment meeting, on August 12.
Ranger Power asked the Augusta Township Planning Commission to withdraw its application for its solar location as submitted, and move it to a new series of lots, south of the original proposed location. Since White Tail is pausing the solar application, we are confirming that the solar application will not be heard at the public hearing currently scheduled for March 17, and that the solar application will not be the subject of further public hearings and Planning Commission meetings unless and if the White Tail makes a request to you, the press release to Planning Commission Chair Robert Yurk, released through the firm Dickinson Wright PLLC said.
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Update: 2/15/2021 - New 2nd reading passes as amended 27 votes yes to 23 votes no. The new version of the bill available here.
Earlier this week we caught wind from Randy Newberg about a new bill that is being discussed in the current Montana Legislature.
Senate Bill No. 143 was introduced by Jason Ellsworth on January 26. You can read the full text of the bill here and see all the notes of the bill here. The hearing for this Senate Bill No. 143 is on February 2, 2021.
Randy also discussed this new bill on his Elk Talk Live! Episode 104 last night. You can jump to his conversation on this bill here and read comments on his Hunt Talk forum thread.
Standing on the side of a mountain on the Eason Ranch, way out in Pecos County, I found myself somehow caught up in a time warp as I glanced across the vastness of distant mountains, just as the morning sun began to light them up. The day before, during the middle of the day after the morning hunt for mule deer, John Eason had given my friends Jeff Rice, Larry Weishuhn and I a tour of some of the ancient campsites that were scattered throughout the ranch. The feeling is difficult for me to describe but I felt almost as though the ancients, as Mr. Eason refers to inhabitants of his ranch many years ago, were calling out to me through the years. Iâm sure my buddies were probably experiencing the same feelings.