Filed under: EMS, Silt, betsy suerth, gale carmoney, gene duran, satire, tibbetts, town board, town government, trustee
In a 1968 speech Eldridge Cleaver, author of Soul on Ice, 60s activist, and former minister of information for the Black Panther Party said: “What we’re saying today is that you’re either part of the solution or you’re part of the problem.” In the 80s, Cleaver saw the light and became a conservative Republican and Reagan supporter, which just goes to show that the real measure of success means becoming part of the problem and not part of the solution.
These days the Silt town staff proudly upholds that old conservative tradition. For instance, this week the town’s EMS Director Susie Taylor resigned.
Director of Silt-based West Care ambulance quits
Sudden move throws ‘transition’ into turmoilSILT, Colorado — A plan to merge a Silt-based ambulance service with the Burning Mountains Fire Protection District hit a substantial snag Monday night when the longtime director of the ambulance service resigned without notice.
Susan Taylor, who has been since 1993 in various capacities with the ambulance service now known as West Care, made the sudden announcement at the Silt Board of Trustees meeting …
… in her announcement, Taylor accused Silt’s town administrator, Betsy Suerth, of having “censored” Taylor’s efforts to talk directly to members of the Silt Board of Trustees and the fire district.
She also accused Suerth of resorting to “intimidation” to force Taylor to prevent her ambulance employees from speaking directly to the same officials, in an apparent attempt to affect the terms of the merger.
Taylor said that at one time, after two ambulance workers addressed a meeting about the merger in New Castle, Suerth told her “I needed to control my staff better, [or] I would be fired.”
Taylor’s claims were supported by several West Care employees, and she said she was resigning because “I can no longer tolerate … the abusive administrative tactics or the hostile work environment” that she claimed Suerth had created for her …
…“The leadership of West Care is, in effect, defecting to Transcare,” Duran declared at one point …
It’s not so hard to understand why Town Administrator Betsy Suerth and Town Attorney Gene Duran would be upset with Taylor. Look at all the effort she put into that whole ambulance and fire department merger. She not only looked for a solution, she actually found one. It’s no wonder Betsy was abusive and threatened her. No one asked Taylor to take the initiative and solve this problem. Her job was to focus on the problem – not DO something about it. She was supposed to sit around and whine and bitch about it like everyone else on the town staff.
Then there’s that busybody Tod Tibbetts who also showed up at Monday’s meeting to present some of the details of the Transcare proposal. Come to find out he has been working on the ambulance and fire department merger for over a year. Who does this dude think he is anyway? He resigned from the Board last spring. Why does he keep sticking his nose in town problems? Well the Board members weren’t having any part of his and Suzie’s solutions. His proposal was met with skepticism and cool indifference. They showed him they are committed to being part of the problem, and not some silly solution.
Then on Wednesday the Rockies got hit with a raging snowstorm that quickly turned into a weather emergency. Heavy snow fell at the rate of about an inch an hour in Silt with accumulations of 8-10 inches during the day. Suddenly the town was flush with all kinds of new problems. Hundreds of falling tree limbs and branches created plenty of chaos. Willow branches fell onto the power line a half block away and knocked out my power for 4 hours. When the power came back on I checked my email and found this message from the town in my inbox:
To all Town of Silt Citizens:
With this heavy snow, there have been a number of trees that have fallen or have broken limbs. Here is some information and tips:
• Please report any blocked roads to the Town at 876-2353. After hours call dispatch at 625-8095.
• Residents are responsible for removal of their own trees.
• Do not park or stand beneath snow-laden trees.
• Remove snow from branches if possible to do in a safe manner.
• Do not attempt to remove trees from power lines; please call Xcel Energy at 800-895-4999
• Note that Xcel Energy is prioritizing their services: Those without power will be addressed first: other issues will be taken care of after power outages are restored.
• The Police Department asks that you please slow down, drive safely and lock your vehicles!
After a day filled with falling trees, no electricity, my fussy grandson, and those fracking battery backups shrieking at me I was dangling by my last frazzled nerve. I understood exactly how those folks at the town hall felt. I bet people were calling them and asking for help all day long.
“Trees are falling on my house.”
“My power is off.”
“Can somebody help me?”
Wah-wah-wah.
The town staff had every right to shoot out a snotty email. After all they’re in the midst of a big budget crisis. People have no right to expect the town to help them solve their problems during a weather emergency. Instead people ought to be out there pitching in to help the staff.
Stop your whining people. Get out there and knock that snow off the trees so they don’t fall over and block the streets. And clean up all those branches on the ground while you’re at it. The town’s a damn mess.
The next thing you know people will expect the town to produce solutions to their problems in the way of services, like offering to pick up those limbs and branches and actually haul them away. Or even provide some place where people can take the debris once they clean it up.
Instead the town’s crackerjack staff got out ahead of the situation with an email that spelled out the problems so people wouldn’t get their hopes up and start expecting solutions.
In a bad economy people need to buck up and face reality. The town staff doesn’t give a rat’s ass about them.
Let’s face it, people are lucky the staff even answered the phone for them on Wednesday. If that storm had happened on “Furlough Friday” the town hall would have been closed and there would have been no one to whine to.
And that’s one more way the town staff is determined to be part of the problem. They created even more problems, like closing the town hall and cutting the hourly wage workers hours and pay while giving the salaried employees like Town Administrator Betsy Suerth, Town Attorney Gene Duran, and Town Planner Gale Carmoney a 3-day weekend with pay twice a month.
Thank goodness the staff is staying focused on the problems. Otherwise the people might come up with their own solution to the big budget crisis.
Fire the town staff.
Filed under: Garfield County, West Elk Multi-Use, White River National Forest, cross country skiing, snowshoeing, tibbetts, trail, west elk, winter sports
Tired of the high cost of skiing?
Downhill skiing has become an expensive habit for us locals over the past several years with the cost of lift tickets and ski passes rising steadily. We had hoped with the recession and skier numbers declining, the ski resorts would at least not increase their pass rates. We were so wrong.
Aspen Ski Co raised the rates on all their passes and eliminated the 2-day a week pass. They added a new Escape Pass that I can’t even get my mind around. They want me to pay them $299 so that I can pay $49 for a lift ticket. I usually buy the Classic Pass which was $269 for 7 days last year. Extra days were $59. This year it’s $249 for 5 days with extra days possibly up to $79. No free days and no friend discounts. Ouch.
Sunlight Mountain raised their season pass rates this year but their daily lift ticket will stay the same at $50/day. The problem with Sunlight is their old, slow lifts don’t have foot rests which is hard on the knees.
The Colorado Pass is probably the best deal at $459 (up from $439 last year) which includes unlimited, unrestricted skiing at Keystone, Breckenridge and Arapahoe Basin. Pass holders also get 10 restricted days at Vail and Beaver Creek, plus friend discounts. But all those ski areas are at least 1½ to 2 hours away.
The high cost of lift tickets means I spend fewer days on the slopes each year. But I ski more days than ever thanks to the West Elk cross country ski trail. Cross country skiing is low cost winter recreation for all ages and dogs are allowed.
The West Elk ski trail is the best kept winter secret in Garfield County. It is a 3-loop winter trail system, which is approximately 10 miles in length, starting on Forest Road 819 just off the Buford Road, 16 miles north of New Castle.
This year Tod and I took over management of the West Elk Multi-Use Club (WEMUC). Tod is the new Executive Director and I am the Secretary/Treasurer. We currently have about 60 members and are hoping to grow our membership this year through community outreach and word-of-mouth.
This week was a banner week for the club. We won the support of the Garfield County Commissioners in the way of much needed funding and some great publicity.
A group of volunteers, after creating and maintaining what one man called “‘the best kept winter secret’ in Garfield County,” now enjoys public support after a meeting with the Board of County Commissioners this week.
The “secret” is a small cross-country skiing trail system in western Garfield County, which has been in existence since 2002 but has had a low public profile, according to Todd Tibbetts, executive director of the West-Elk Multi-Use Club.
County commissioners Trési Houpt and John Martin (Mike Samson was absent) agreed to put $4,000 into the county budget to help defray the operating costs of the club, and to assist in the purchase of trail-grooming equipment …
For the past 7 years we have relied on donations from our members. Our $15 voluntary annual membership fee is the same as it was 7 years ago.
If you’re in the market for low cost winter recreation you’ve just found it. Doesn’t this look like fun?
For more information check out the WEMUC blog.
Interested in joining? Send an email to: peggyt@siltnet.net
West Elk Ski Trail Map (click on the map for a printable version)
Filed under: FTC ruling, bloggers, book review, books, entertainment, pajamas, satire, zumaya
Bloggers have been feeling picked on lately and with good reason. There was the new FTC ruling that bloggers who receive free products or compensation for products they review and/or endorse on their blogs must make full disclosure or they will be subject to a hefty fine.
Wait a minute. Are there actually bloggers who are making money on the internets? Really? Where do I sign up?
Then an anonymous White House advisor said “bloggers need to take off their pajamas, get dressed and realize that governing a closely-divided country is complicated and difficult”.
All of which makes me wonder whether people who work for the federal government are required to surrender a part of their brains – as in the thinking part.
This blog is my personal blog. My other blog, Advice from a Caterpillar is my professional blog. Occasionally on this blog I post book reviews. I often post book reviews on my Caterpillar blog. Those same book reviews are also published at Bookideas.com, Midwest Book Review, and Amazon. I am never paid for my reviews but I do receive free books – lots and lots of free books. If I reviewed every book sent to me I would never sleep or eat. Therefore I must pick and choose the books I review.
So – under the FTC ruling – does this make me guilty of the sin of advertising?
I set out on the internets to find the answer to that question. I began by posting to a couple writers’ listservs in hopes of opening up a discussion. But as we’ve learned from the great health care debate we don’t have discussions in this country anymore. Most people either want to argue or have no opinion. What I gleaned from my efforts was some people felt that book reviews are indeed advertisements and should be accompanied by a disclaimer. Others felt book reviewers should be exempt from the ruling.
In a recent interview with FTC’s Richard Cleland, blogger Ed Champion attempted to clarify the ruling. However Cleland’s attitude toward book reviewers was totally out to lunch. About the whole free books thing he said, “You review it and return it” because if you keep it then it’s “compensation”. But that’s just plain dumb. Publishers don’t want reviewers to send the books back. And only an idiot would pay the postage to return books that she reviewed for no pay. Come to think of it, only an idiot would review books for free. Cleland’s rationale was “If a blogger received enough books he could open up a used bookstore.” Has this dude been to a used bookstore lately? At 50 cents each, the stack of free books I have on hand would be worth a whopping $10.50.
After reading several more articles and opinions I discovered there are as many interpretations of the FTC ruling floating around as there are versions of the health care reform bill. No wonder we can’t get anything done in this country anymore.
So what do I do with all my free books – or as the FTC refers to them “compensation”? I donate them to libraries, give them away to friends, or keep them.
Liz Burton of Zumaya Publications (home of The Road to Weird – yes that’s a shameless plug for my book – makes a great gift for Halloween) said that because my reviews are published elsewhere online, that technically makes them reprints on my blog, which would mean I probably don’t need to post a disclaimer.
Then I read Kay Day’s Web Savvy column for The Writer magazine and she said essentially that it’s better to be safe than sorry and bloggers should post disclaimers.
This week an article in The Wall Street Journal stated:
The Federal Trade Commission doesn’t intend to bring individual cases against bloggers or tweeters who accept cash or gifts to tout a company’s products or services, an FTC official said Wednesday.
“We are not planning on investigating individual bloggers,” said Mary Engle, associate director for advertising practices at the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.
And no, there won’t be any hefty fines levied against bloggers Apparently that was a nasty rumor they blamed on – you guessed it – bloggers.
So what is the answer to my question?
I don’t know. I forgot what the question was.
Let’s try a different question.
Should I put a disclaimer on my blogs?
Since I don’t consider myself a salesman or advertiser, the answer is no. If I want to cover my ass, the answer is yes. But the White House wants me to take off my pajamas.
Let me get this straight. I should take off my pajamas and put on my disclaimer.
To hell with it. I’ll just blog naked.
*Disclaimer: This is not an ad but if you would like to buy this T-shirt click here
Filed under: Akbash, alaskan malamute, books, crazy bitch, dog story, dogs, jon katz, peggy tibbetts, sheep, trail, west elk
During the summer I read almost all of Jon Katz’s dog books. He has Labs and Border Collies. One crazy Border Collie in particular, Orson changed his life forever. Even though Border Collies are not the same as Akbash, I definitely related to his struggles with Orson because they so closely resembled our struggles with Venus.
Katz even took Orson to a sort of sheepherding school where they learned with actual sheep how to herd them. Eventually Katz bought a farm and his own herd of sheep and well, you’ll have to read his books to find out what happened.
Several months ago an acquaintance, who knows a thing or two about dogs and upon hearing about Venus’s mental condition, suggested that I should locate a sheep rancher who would let me and Venus spend some time with a herd of sheep. I thought that sounded like a risky proposition. What rancher in his right mind would let an unstable, unpredictable Akbash near his sheep? And, since we don’t have any sheepherding schools around here, I decided that herding sheep was not necessarily the key to her sanity. Nor did it turn out to be the key to Orson’s sanity as I learned from Katz’s book, A Good Dog: The Story of Orson. Besides, Venus has her own little surrogate flock of kitties.
For the past several weeks we’ve been taking the dogs up to the West Elk Trail to let them run wild before the rifle stage of hunting season began. On September 26 she went up alone with Tod and followed him on his bike. I stayed home and made salsa. Zeus stayed with me because he can’t keep up with the bike. Tod and Venus came across some cattle on the trail. He said she barked at them but when he told her, “Good girl, leave it” she backed off and didn’t bother them anymore.
We bought an old Jeep CJ5 in August. The dogs love it because it’s open like a convertible and takes us into the back country. We wanted to do some trail maintenance to prepare for the ski season and we needed to get it done before hunting season. So we took the dogs in the CJ and headed up to the trail on October 3.
Because there were a few hunters around setting up encampments, we tied a blaze orange scarf around Venus’s neck and Zeus wore a blaze orange vest. We weren’t taking any chances. Tod brought his chainsaw for clearing fallen trees, so he drove around the trail while the dogs and I hiked in the opposite direction. I cleared limbs and brush strewn across the trail.
About halfway through, as we climbed out of a gully, Venus’s nose hit the ground and she took off uphill like a bullet. Zeus followed her. I heard bells – tinkling bells.
“Oh crap,” I muttered. “Sheep.”
I couldn’t see the sheep but I knew they must be on top of the hill. I called the dogs but they were not in listening mode. I heard Venus bark once. I also heard a smattering of “baahs”. I just kept walking and figured I’d assess the situation once I reached the crest.
Zeus reappeared about a hundred yards ahead. Looking slightly frantic he made eye contact with me then began galloping in circles as his tail spun around like a helicopter blade. Wearing his blaze orange vest he looked so ridiculous I couldn’t help but laugh at him. I assumed he had made an effort to control whatever the situation was on top of the hill that I still couldn’t see and had failed miserably then slipped into worry mode. Zeus knows nothing about sheep and has no herding instincts whatsoever.
“Come on back Zeus,” I called.
He just kept running in circles with his tail rotating wildly which was a good thing because laughing at him helped me remain calm. Venus has never attacked or harmed another species so it was pointless to panic.
On the hilltop I saw the herd huddled together at the edge of the woods. There must have been about 75-80 sheep. But I couldn’t see Venus. I called her name – still no sign of her. Zeus ran toward the sheep. Bleating and squealing they scattered in all directions. I was reminded of the movie Babe where the anthropomorphic sheep cried “Wolf! Wolf!” whenever Fly ran at them. They probably thought he was a wolf and panicked. I called him off and he obediently retreated.
That’s when I saw Venus. She flew around from the back of the herd then she cut to the front. Even though we had not gone to sheepherding school I had learned quite a lot about sheepherding from Katz’s books. Venus made all the right moves. In less than a minute she had all the sheep back together in a tight circle at the edge of the woods and held them there.
“Good girl. Leave it,” I called. “Good girl. Hold.” I even tried, “That’ll do, that’ll do” like in the movie and felt a little silly. Somehow “bah ram ewe” didn’t seem appropriate for the situation.
She was in another world. I don’t think she saw or heard me. She never made eye contact. Instead her eyes were glued to the herd, watching for stragglers. She kept them together, silently dashing back and forth. Working, working, working. With Venus in charge the sheep stayed calm and surprisingly quiet. I figured they were used to Akbash.
But Zeus scared the hell out of them. I decided it was best to keep him moving. They were safe with Venus and she was in sheepdog nirvana. I heard the chainsaw so I knew Tod was up ahead. Zeus and I met up with him and I explained what had happened and what Venus was busy doing. I knew he could entice her into chasing the CJ, which was exactly the way the adventure ended.
Afterward Venus was totally exhausted and completely calm. She vomited a couple times when we got home. I remembered Zeus’s bout with gastritis last winter and assumed a huge adrenalin rush on top of an empty stomach was the problem. I fed her half a can of chicken dog food and that settled her stomach. She was a little stiff for the rest of the day and slept it off.
I’m glad Venus had the opportunity to herd sheep. Her performance was nearly perfect considering she had never herded sheep before. I’m glad I got the chance to see her in action. I was amazed at her instinctive behavior. Most of all I’m glad nobody got hurt.
Read the Crazy Bitch series. Or click on the handy links provided on the left.
Filed under: Akbash, CCD, Silt, alaskan malamute, anxiety, canine compulsive disorder, clomipramine, crazy bitch, dog behavior, dog story, dogs, lake powell, tibbetts, training
Self esteem is as important to dogs as it is to humans. It’s so important I’m willing to bet that 99% of the dogs in shelters have self esteem issues.
Venus does. Zeus doesn’t. We’ve had Zeus since he was 7 weeks old. All his life he has heard the words “good puppy”, “good boy”, “good dog”, “good Zeus”. He knows he’s good. I’m pretty sure when Venus was a puppy she heard the words “bad dog” a lot. By the time she came to live with us at 10 months old she was convinced of her badness.
This past summer we learned that in order to reduce her anxiety we have to satisfy the Akbash in her and let her run wild, in spite of the risks. It has been working quite well. With the increase in Clomipramine and the running wild once a week she reached a new level of calm. I wondered if it would be possible to keep her from becoming anxious, to anticipate her anxiety before it escalates. That meant I had to pay closer attention to the triggers. What makes Venus anxious?
The past couple months have brought on some challenges for Venus as well as opportunities for me to address her anxiety. In mid August, school started and our schedule changed. During the summer I babysat Hailey and Bodi 3 mornings a week. Now I babysit Bodi 3 afternoons a week and Hailey comes here every day after school. Venus adjusted easily to the change with little more than a hiccup. She noticed – of course – then adapted.
We live a block and a half from Cactus Valley Elementary so there’s a parade of kids walking, biking, and scootering to and from school. Venus started barking more, a sure sign her anxiety level was increasing. I decided to try something new. Instead of telling her to stop barking and be quiet, in other words focusing on the barking, I went out on the porch and praised her. “Good girl,” I said repeatedly. She stopped barking. After about a week of consistent praise her barking gradually diminished.
Admittedly I had a “well duh” moment over the whole “good girl” thing. I’m not sure why it took me so long to figure out that Venus responds best to praise. Perhaps I was just too focused on training. Or maybe I’m just a stupid human. Whatever the case, I started saying “good girl” when I wanted her to do anything. “Good girl. Sit.” “Good girl. Come.” “Good girl. Leave it.” “Good girl. Hold.” I use the “hold” command when she’s on leash and wants to chase another dog, or cat, or kids on bikes.
The next challenge was Lake Powell. During our trip in June we didn’t understand that Venus was regressing. She acted anxious and obsessive while we were there and then attacked Zeus the day after we came home. We knew Venus had calmed down over the summer. But I needed to see the contrast. Would the truce the dogs made at Trappers Lake hold? Or would a trip to Lake Powell cause another regression?
Labor Day weekend we took Hailey and the dogs back to Lake Powell. We kept up the praise technique, never scolding, always telling her she’s a good girl. The change in Venus was evident from the start. She had to ride in the camper again but this time showed no anxiety because we kept saying, “Good girl.” Instead of feeling like she was missing something by not riding in the pickup, she felt special.
After we set up camp the first evening we took the dogs down to Hobie Cat Beach for a swim. The dogs rode in the backseat of the pickup with Hailey. On the way, a coyote crossed the road in front of us. Tod stopped. The coyote halted about 20 feet away and stared at Zeus and Venus. I held my breath. The window was open. Venus and Zeus sat side-by-side and stared back at him. They didn’t bark. They didn’t try to jump out. They sat perfectly still. Eventually he trotted off and they watched spellbound until he disappeared over the desert berm.
He made quite an impression on Venus. At the beach instead of bounding into the water like she usually does, Venus put her nose to the ground and took off. I wondered if she would try to track the coyote so I kept an eye on her. She ran back and forth and up and down the beach, nose down. We soon realized she was setting up a safety perimeter. She barked at 3 women and herded them onto their beached boat, much to their chagrin. She meant no harm. She was simply warning them and protecting everyone on the beach from what she perceived as a threat – the coyote.
All 3 nights the coyotes were active on the ridge above our campsite, howling and barking. Venus and Zeus listened quietly but remained alert. Even though they were supposed to be leashed at all times, we allowed them to establish a perimeter of pee around our campsite because that’s what dogs do. It really helped Venus control her anxiety.
Last June she had spent her days obsessively chasing lizards. She hardly swam. This time around she chased lizards a little bit, but she also swam a lot, chased sticks and balls, explored and played with Hailey and Zeus. The contrast was amazing. She acted like a normal dog.
In the campground she wasn’t even bothered by the other campers. A large group arrived at 12:30 a.m. on Saturday and noisily set up camp until 2:30 a.m. Engines roared, car alarms went off, headlights shone in our camper, loud voices talked and laughed. During all the commotion Venus barked once. She was so friendly that on Saturday evening she even happily greeted the Park Ranger as he scolded me for not having her leashed.
When it came time to head home on Sunday, the camper temp was 91 degrees, too hot for her to ride comfortably, and we knew it would only get hotter on the drive. So she had to ride in the backseat with Zeus and Hailey. Luckily our pickup’s backseat folds down into a nice roomy flat area for the dogs to ride. And there’s a single jump seat for Hailey, but that makes the dog area much less roomy. In fact it was pretty cramped for the 2 dogs. Neither of them could stretch out like they usually do. We made several stops so they could take a break and stretch their legs. They persevered without any snarling or snapping. Whenever Venus became restless I repeated the mantra, “Good girl” and she settled down.
Lake Powell redux turned out to be a huge success. For us it was like an obedience trial and Venus won a blue ribbon. The downside is we had so much fun playing with Hailey and the dogs, we totally forgot to take photos – doh!
The next, even bigger challenge for Venus came in mid-September. Tod spent 9 days traveling. That meant just me and the dogs at home, and no running wild for 2 weeks. Zeus is accustomed to Tod’s wacky schedule and takes it in stride. Even though Venus has been with us for more than 3 years and during that time Tod has always traveled, whenever his suitcase appears her anxiety increases. This time I started out by reassuring her. “Good girl.” I repeated it over and over during his absence. I muttered it in my sleep. She never tired of hearing it. She always responded positively. I allowed her to sleep outside at night to satisfy her guardian instinct. The 9 days flew by without any problems.
And how does Zeus react to all that “good girl” nonsense? He doesn’t. He knows he’s a good girl.
The peace they forged at Trappers Lake has held fast for almost 2 months – through changes in routine, a Lake Powell trip, Tod’s absence, thunderstorms, loud bangs, and close quarters. So how do I keep Venus’s anxiety from escalating? I say, “Good girl”. She responds with a goofy grin, remains calm, and does whatever she’s told.
Works like magic.
Read the Crazy Bitch series. Or click on the handy links provided on the left.







