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GOLD HILL TOWN MEETING NEWSLETTER

GOLD HILL TOWN MEETING NEWSLETTER
Minutes of the October 12, 2020, Town Meeting by Zoom

Next Town Meeting will be Monday, December 14, 2020, 7:00 P.M. by Zoom

The meeting was called to order by Chair Emma Dirolf. Nineteen people signed on: Emma, Vice Chair Marielle Sidell, Secretary Gretchen Diefenderfer, Treasurer Martha Knapp, Member-at-Large Dan Maedke, Chrissy Maedke, Deb Yeager, Rick Sheingold, Erich Gundlach, Lacey Storey, Virginia Schultz, Maya MacHamer from the Fourmile Watershed Coalition, Val Crist, Marcus Moench, Elisabeth Caspari, Anya Brown, Sarah O’Brien, Sam Bennett, and Mercury.

Minutes of the August meeting were approved as published.

Treasurer’s Report – Martha reports – At the previous regular Town Meeting in August 2020 our bank balance was $15,732.47. Our current total cash assets are $17,999.74.
Revenue Summary: General Fund donation $1,386 from Sands’ Moving Sale fundraiser, Cemetery Fund donations $200, Community Relief Fund online donation $48.25, Water Harvesting/Ag Education Grant $4,000, additional funding for COVID-19 Response Fund $1500 and return merchandise refund $219.
Expense Summary: COVID Response Fund $1461.78 for Food Bank expenses and $3,624.20 Cemetery shed construction and signage.

General Fund $4,036.71; Cemetery $3,065.65; Safe Link (combined funds for SafeSite, AirLink, NeighborLink projects) $2,466.79; Community Planning/Fundraising $0 (zero;) Fund transfers: none

Current fund totals:
Forest Management $0 (zero;) Community Relief $2,375.20; COVID-19 Response Fund $2,055.39; Water Harvesting/Ag Education Grant $4,000.
Anticipated expenses for 2020: General Fund $50.00 for porta-potty maintenance, estimated $300 for liability insurance and estimated $80 for cleanup dumpsters, should that occur this year.
Non-discrimination Statement – Marcus said that we need a non-discrimination statement in the bylaws, specifically to apply for grants. Here is what we came up with:
The Gold Hill Town Meeting, Inc., does not and shall not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion (creed), gender expression, age, citizenship status, national origin (ancestry), disability, marital status, sexual orientation, political affiliation or military status, in any of its activities or operations. These activities include, but are not limited to, election of Town Council members, participation by any members of the Town Meeting area, selection of volunteers or vendors, or potential hiring and firing of any staff. We are committed to providing an inclusive and welcoming environment for all members of the Gold Hill Town Meeting, Inc., its partners, guests and attendees, volunteers, subcontractors and vendors.
Amending the bylaws is a two-step process. Amendments are brought up at a regular town meeting and voted on at the next regular meeting. We can finalize this statement at the December town meeting. If we change it, it will need to be finalized at the February meeting.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
Mountain Stewards – Marcus reports on his discussion with Sarah Davis, County Consultant, on the Gold Hill energy study. They had planned a meeting with the Energy Commission, but decided to move to more vertical interactions by circulating a summary of their study findings, the history and proposed ways forward, then circulate their findings via town email list, Next Door, etc., Then they plan to hold discussion meetings before the report is due at the November 10 County Commissioners Meeting – possibly Zoom meetings, or get-togethers at the Store and/or one on one meetings with Dina, Virginia, Cat, Marcus, or Virginia. Short term goals are bulk purchases of heat pumps, etc., and paying for Energy Smart evaluations. The County has reserved some funds for implementation.
Forestry – Emma introduced Maya MacHamer of the Fourmile Watershed Group. In August Emma signed an MOU with 13 other groups on a shared vision to increase forest health and restoration and decrease fire hazards in the County. The Watershed Coalition applied for a grant for Caroline Ashley’s property and received $244,000 with a $100,000 match. The Ashram also received a $146,000 Natural Resource Conservation Center grant. Together this will be 180 acres of forest restoration and mitigation work. Multiple treatments will be employed – fuels mitigation in strategic areas, restoration of ecological habitat, encouraging aspen, and making some openings for wildlife encouraging diversity. This project should really help protect the Gold Hill area and the USFS has already asked where else they should figure out for the next project. This will probably start in June and go through the Fall. She would love to do an outreach meeting up here and maybe a field trip to explain the project and answer questions. The 180 acres consists of the area near Val’s and goes west to border around the Colorado Mountain Ranch and includes the Ashram – sort of L shaped. The goal is to provide a linked, complete area. They hope to have another race next year to help with the matching funds, which is the hardest part. The race last year was such a good beginning. They have momentum now, so we can start on Phase II before this one is finished up.
Virginia added that Wildfire Partners has a webinar Wednesday – a piece on mitigation, ember showers, etc. Gretchen will put out a town email. The County chipping program has had 350 participants in the mountain areas. The Sort Yard in Nederland is closing.
Everyone thanked Maya for her efforts on our behalf.
Gold Hill School – Chrissy reports that this is the third week of in-person classes after 5 weeks online. It’s going all right. They are off Mondays and meet T, W, Th, and Friday. They have 17 kids and another 8 online, so it’s a little tricky. They are wearing masks and can take mask breaks outside and for eating. Dan, as the custodian, is doing extensive cleaning. They’re looking at possibly school fundraising in the Spring. We’ll see how November and December go and follow County recommendations.
Chrissy also asked if the town wants to plan anything for Halloween – will have to follow Colorado guidelines – Covid19.colorado.gov/Halloween (covid19.colorado.gov is a good site to keep up with the State Guidelines as well as county by county). It is recommended to wrap treats individually and put your porch lights on if you want Trick or Treaters. So far, they are expecting this to be ok.
Museum – Deb reported that Marcus and Elisabeth have donated an old Weaver vehicle from their garage and the Museum is planning to create a community event to rebuild it to be a replica of the Bluebird bus that Tim Walter built and drove. It is a White Company chassis from sometime between 1916 and 1923. Last weekend several people moved it from Marcus and Elisabeth’s and parked it on the north side of Max’s garage. It is 16’ long and 7’wide. Tim reconfigured it as a bus with wooden seats. The license place is 1985 – Joe, Jr. drove it around. The plan is to begin work on it this spring. Anyone interested may join in the rebuilding project. It may be a static exhibit – not sure.
Marcus added that you can still turn the crank and the tires aren’t flat! They also found an old Gold Hill road sign in the garage. Deb has heard that our local Monkey Wrench Gang made signs to Gold Hill disappear along the Peak to Peak – Gretchen added Boulder Canyon signs as well.
Community Planning and Fundraising – Dan reported that he has a check for $217/pint glasses to get to Martha. He wants to make another purchase for the holidays. He moved to transfer $300 into Community Planning for this. Mari seconded it and all approved
Covid Relief Fund – Marcus reported that they received an extra $1500 from the Community Foundation. Aside from the grants to people, they have spent some of the money to support the Food Pantry. They also submitted a proposal a while ago for $4,000 for an environmental project involving a small water harvesting demonstration. They’re brainstorming how to involve the kids, where and how. This grant runs for a year so they have a while to figure it out.
Cemetery – No committee members were present, but we noticed from the Treasurer’s report that money has been spent for a new shed, and someone reported that yes, they’ve seen it.
Community Center – no report.
SafeLink – Deb reports that NeighborLink is in the process of revamping our phone/contact tree for emergency notifications. They want it to be as simple and direct as possible. She encourages people to form neighbor/friend groups to share contact and other information – especially in case of evacuation. Our community area is divided into the four directions – Deb is Old Town/South, Gretchen is East, Paul Roberts is South (the GH Subdivision), and Dina is west of town and we’ve set up circular communication between us. Our job is to make sure emergency information is communicated to everyone in the community, so each neighbor group should have a contact person for us to contact and to get back to us with a report about their group being informed. Then we can all touch base afterward as well, if need be. This is a work in progress. When it comes down to it, we may have to go door to door to contact new people we don’t know to explain this and see if they want to participate. We’ve sent out emails, but know some new people are not in the loop.
Virginia is working with Norm Skarstad in Lefthand, Val, and Amy down at the bottom of Lickskillet to include them.
Gretchen added that, when we were evacuated for the Fourmile Fire, it all worked organically to inform everyone because neighbors jumped to let everyone know. NeighborLink developed after that to organize better, and we’ve now added email addresses and expanded the list through the town website (goldhilltown.com) to stay in touch and we can send out emergency information and updates that way. Also, everyone can sign of for alerts through Everbridge – Boulder County’s reverse 9-1-1- through the Office of Emergency Management (boulderoem.com).
Val asked if we are certain we can contact new people/renters, etc., to be aware to join in. Deb said that they’ve been given Welcome Buckets with information about it, but we seem to need to follow up.
AirLink – no report, but Gretchen reported that several people were up recently working on the repeater up on the ridge. Deb added that they’re our back up if the phones are out. It’s a two-day course to become a Ham and if several people are interested they will get an instructor. Contact Dina Elder if you’re interested. There’s lots of online information, too. Rick suggested that we should have a map of the Hams so we know where our nearest one is. Emma said that she teaches GIS and can put together a map.
Deb will add Food Pantry information to the Welcome buckets.
Other Town News – Roads – Joanne Cole is our self-appointed bug-the-county person and wrote a letter to the Road Department regarding the condition of our roads, particularly Sunshine, which she sent to several of us. Their response is they’re trying to do the best they can with their manpower. – that they do work on our roads every week. The speed limit up here is 20 mph and speed creates washboard, so slowing down helps.
Weed Management – Gretchen said that, at this point, weed whack for fire mitigation.
Historic Zoning – no report
Fire Department – update from Leslie Finn – COVID tests are available in Nederland Thursdays and in Allenspark on Fridays. These are drive-through. There was a possibility of having it in Gold Hill, but most didn’t want it in town.
Rick added that there is also free testing at Stazio Field on 63rd Street.
The Nederland food pantry has asked if we’d like free flu shots.
Leslie will convey our concerns to Rebecca and we’ll see.
Mining – no report. Gretchen said it seems to be on hiatus now.
More Other News – Deb wanted to add that they will be combining the Wednesday and Monday Food Pantries to Monday only and will be meeting to discuss that. They will also be combining the volunteers and are working on logistics.
Weed management – Anya wanted to add that using Monsanto products up here kills bees. Chrissy reported that the School lost their whole observation hive – they all died. They don’t know exactly why. She would love for Gold Hill to be a Bee Safe community and encourages practices other than chemicals for weed control. Pam Sherman has been our weed guru and has lots of information on alternatives. Sarah added that there is also interest in Boulder County to look into Fire Retardent /Slurry and the possibility that ingredients in that could be destructive. Gretchen thought it was basically detergent with iron added for color, but Sarah didn’t think so. It was suggested that we get in touch with Maya with the fourmilewatershed@nullgmail.com because they did a water study and may know.
Respectfully submitted, Gretchen Diefenderfer, Secretary

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Happy Thanksgiving.

Boulder County to move to Colorado COVID Dial Red Level

From: Boulder County Health <bouldercounty@public.govdelivery.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 10:23 AM
To: cfinn@nullcenturylink.net
Subject: Boulder County to move to Colorado COVID Dial Red Level: Severe Risk on Friday, Nov. 20

CDPHE is making this move due to the ongoing increase in residents testing positive for COVID-19

Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page.
Public Health Banner
For Immediate Release
11/18/2020
Media Contact
Chana Goussetis, 303-441-1457
Boulder County to move to Colorado COVID Dial “Red Level: Severe Risk” on Friday, Nov. 20
CDPHE is making this move due to the ongoing increase in residents testing positive for COVID-19
En Español Abajo

Boulder County, CO – In response to the ongoing increase in residents across the county testing positive for COVID-19, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) will move Boulder County to the new “Red Level: Severe Risk” on the state Dial this Friday, Nov. 20.

“New cases are continuing to rise rapidly in Boulder County. This move on the dial is an important step that needed to happen to stop this virus from continuing to overwhelm our communities,” said Jeff Zayach, Boulder County Public Health executive director.

Through the end of day on Nov. 15, the five-day rolling average daily case count in Boulder County was 220.6 cases per day compared to 146 one week ago. This is higher than at any other time in the pandemic. The current two-week cumulative incidence is 758.9 per 100,000; more than two times the threshold for “Red Level: Severe Risk.”

The “Red Level: Severe Risk” prohibits personal gatherings between members of different households, indoor events, and indoor dining at restaurants. Restaurants may offer curbside and takeout until 10 p.m., delivery services, and in-person outdoor dining to tables with a single household. The last service of food, drink, and alcohol at restaurants is 8 p.m. The order also reduces or eliminates indoor capacity for most business sectors and strongly recommends remote work for all workers when possible. Individuals at risk of severe Illness from COVID-19 are strongly recommended to remain at home as much as possible.

Requirements for houses of worship in the “Red Level” remain at 25% capacity up to 50 people (using space calculator if unseated). Outdoor church services may continue as long as six feet of social distancing is maintained between non-household members at all times.

At “Red Level,” childcare providers may continue to provide care per standard ratios. For schools in this Level, in-person learning is suggested for grades K-5, in-person, hybrid, or remote is suggested for middle school grades; and hybrid or remote is suggested for high school. Boulder County Public Health will continue to support both school districts in their efforts to provide in-person and remote options as appropriate.

Residents should review the Colorado Public Health Order and the CDPHE quick reference chart for specific details about each sector. Boulder County Public Health staff will do their best to answer questions about the new Colorado requirements. Residents can contact the Public Health call center at 720-776-0822.

“Let’s keep each other safe by following these requirements and support our local economy by ordering for curbside pick-up or delivery from our local businesses, or purchasing gift cards now that can be used in the future,” said Zayach.

Boulder County Public Health epidemiologists also want to remind anyone who tests positive for or has symptoms of COVID-19 to:

Stay home and separate. Anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 or feels sick should stay home and separate from others, such as in their own room and bathroom (see full isolation requirements) and ask everyone they’ve been in close contact with to also stay home (see full quarantine requirements). Close contact is living in the same household or being within 6 feet for a combined total of 15 minutes within a 24-hour period, regardless of whether masks were worn.
Anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 or feels sick should notify everyone they’ve had close contact with two days before their symptoms started to the first ten days after their symptoms began OR two days before they got tested through the ten days after they got tested. Residents are also encouraged to sign up for the secure Exposure Notification app to be notified of or notify others of possible exposure.
Stay home. Anyone who has been in close contact with someone who was sick or tested positive for COVID-19 should stay home for two weeks starting two days before their symptoms started through the first ten days of having symptoms (See full quarantine requirements).
The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 can spread to others from people who have the virus but don’t have symptoms. It can also take more than seven days for the virus to be detectable by a swab PCR test.

As of Tuesday, Nov. 17, 91 people were hospitalized in Boulder County hospitals for confirmed COVID-19. Currently, 1,378 people are hospitalized for confirmed COVID-19 across Colorado compared with 1,116 people a week ago. This is the highest number of COVID-related hospitalizations we have had in Colorado to date.

To date, 108 Boulder County residents with COVID-19 have died; 71% have been among long-term care facility residents. Since Oct. 1, 27 residents have died, compared to 9 residents with COVID passing away for the entire period of July-September.

Residents with questions about isolation or quarantine can contact CO Help at 877-462-2911. Residents who would like help with food, health care, mental health, housing, child care, safety, or financial or legal assistance are encouraged to visit www.boco.org/COVID-19Resources.

Summary of requirements in Boulder County under the Severe Risk level

No personal gatherings of members of different households
Non-critical office-based businesses may allow 10% of posted occupancy to work in-person
Both non-critical and critical retail may operate at 50% posted occupancy and should offer enhanced options for curbside pickup, delivery, and dedicated service hours for senior and at-risk individuals
Gyms and recreation centers may operate at 10% capacity not to exceed 10 people indoors, excluding staff per room, and may operate with 10 or fewer individuals, excluding staff, outdoors.
Non-critical manufacturing may operate at 25% posted occupancy limit not to exceed 50 people, whichever is less, per room
Personal services may operate at 25% posted occupancy limit, not to exceed 25 people per room, whichever is less
Limited healthcare may operate at 25% posted occupancy not to exceed 25 people per room
Restaurants are closed for in-person indoor dining but may offer curbside, takeout, and delivery services. Restaurants may offer outdoor in-person dining for a single household per table, but all sales for alcohol and on-premises consumption of food and drink must end at 8 p.m.
Non-critical field services are closed
Indoor events are closed
Organized sports and day camps are closed for indoor settings; sports and camps may operate outdoors with no more than 10 participants
The order defines individuals at risk of severe illness from COVID-19 to include those who:

Are 65 years and older
Have cancer
Have chronic kidney disease
Have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Are immunocompromised (weakened immune system) from solid organ transplant
Have a body mass index of 30 or higher
Have serious heart conditions, such as heart failure, coronary artery disease, or cardiomyopathies
Have Sickle cell disease
Have Type 2 diabetes mellitus
Are pregnant
Smoke
Are determined to be high risk by a licensed healthcare provider
-boco.org/covid-19 –

El Condado de Boulder se mueve a “Nivel Rojo: Riesgo Severo” el viernes 20 de noviembre
Condado de Boulder, CO – En respuesta al aumento continuo de los residentes que han resultado positivos con COVID-19 en todo el condado, el Departamento de Salud Pública y Medio Ambiente de Colorado (CDPHE) moverá a el Condado de Boulder al “Nivel Rojo: Riesgo Severo” en el indicador estatal este viernes 20 de noviembre.

“Los nuevos casos continúan aumentando rápidamente en el Condado de Boulder. Mover el indicador a este nivel es un paso importante que tenía que suceder para evitar que este virus continúe abrumando a nuestras comunidades”, dijo Jeff Zayach, director ejecutivo de Salud Pública del Condado de Boulder.

El 15 de noviembre, al final del día, el promedio de cinco días del recuento de casos diarios en el Condado de Boulder fue de 220.6 casos por día en comparación con 146 hace una semana. Este número de casos es más alto que en cualquier otro momento de la pandemia. Los incidentes acumulados de dos semanas es de 758.9 por cada 100,000 habitantes, lo cual sobrepasa más de dos veces el límite para llegar al “Nivel Rojo: Riesgo Severo”.

El “Nivel Rojo: Riesgo Severo” prohíbe las reuniones personales entre miembros de diferentes hogares, eventos en interiores y comer dentro de restaurantes. Los restaurantes pueden ofrecer comida para llevar hasta las 10 p.m., servicios de entrega y se puede comer al aire libre en establecimientos, siempre y cuando sea un solo hogar por mesa. Los restaurantes tienen hasta las 8 p.m. para servir comida, bebidas y alcohol. Para la mayoría de los sectores, la orden también reduce o elimina cuantas personas pueden estar adentro de un establecimiento y recomienda trabajar remotamente cuando sea posible. Se recomienda fervientemente a las personas en riesgo de padecer gravemente si contraen COVID-19, que permanezcan en casa tanto como sea posible.

En el “Nivel Rojo”, los requisitos para lugares de adoración se mantienen en un 25% de capacidad con hasta 50 personas (usando calculadora de espacio si no están sentados). Las iglesias pueden continuar servicios aire libre mientras se mantenga seis pies de distanciamiento entre los miembros (que no viven en un mismo hogar) en todo momento.

En “Nivel Rojo”, los proveedores de cuidado infantil pueden continuar brindando servicios por proporción estándar. En este nivel se sugiere el aprendizaje en persona para kínder a 5º de primaria. Para secundaria, se recomienda clases en persona, híbrido o remoto. Se sugieren clases híbridas o remotas para las preparatorias. Salud Pública del Condado de Boulder continuará apoyando a ambos distritos escolares en sus esfuerzos para proporcionar opciones en persona y remotas, según corresponda.

Los residentes deben revisar la Orden de Salud Pública de Colorado y la tabla de referencia rápida de CDPHE para obtener detalles específicos sobre cada sector. El personal de Salud Pública del Condado de Boulder hará todo lo posible para responder preguntas sobre los nuevos requisitos de Colorado. Los residentes pueden comunicarse con el centro de llamadas de Salud Pública al 720-776-0822.

“Mantengámonos seguros siguiendo estos requisitos y apoyemos a nuestra economía local ordenando comida para llevar de nuestros establecimientos locales o comprando tarjetas de regalo que se pueden usar en el futuro”, dijo Zayach.

Los epidemiólogos de Salud Pública del Condado de Boulder también tienen el siguiente recordatorio para cualquier persona que resulte positivo o tenga síntomas de COVID-19:

Quédate en casa y mantente separado. Cualquier persona que resulte positivo con COVID-19 o se sienta enfermo, debe quedarse en casa y separado de los demás en su propia habitación y baño (ver requisitos de aislamiento) y decirles a todos con los que ha tenido contacto cercano que se queden en casa (ver requisitos de cuarentena). Contacto cercano significa vivir en el mismo hogar o estar dentro de 6 pies de distancia durante un total combinado de 15 minutos dentro de un período de 24 horas, independientemente de si se usaron cubrebocas.
Cualquier persona que resulto positivo con COVID-19 o se siente enfermo debe notificar a todos con los que ha tenido contacto cercano dos días antes de que los síntomas comenzaron hasta los primeros diez días después de que comenzaron los síntomas; o dos días antes de que se hicieron la prueba y diez días después de que se hicieron la prueba. También se recomienda a los residentes que bajen la aplicación de notificación de exposición para que se les notifique o notifiquen a otros sobre una posible exposición.
Quédate en casa. Cualquier persona que haya estado en contacto cercano con alguien que estuvo enfermo o resulto positivo con COVID-19 debe permanecer en casa durante dos semanas empezando dos días antes de que los síntomas comenzaron y los primeros diez días de tener síntomas (ver requisitos de cuarentena).
El coronavirus que causa COVID-19 se propag, aunque las personas que lo tienen no tengan síntomas. También puede tomar más de siete días para que el virus sea detectable mediante una prueba de PCR.

A partir del martes 17 de noviembre, 91 personas fueron hospitalizadas en el Condado de Boulder por casos confirmados de COVID-19. Actualmente en el estado, 1,378 personas están hospitalizadas por casos confirmados de COVID-19 en comparación con 1,116 personas hace una semana. Esta estadística es el mayor número de hospitalizaciones relacionadas con COVID que se ha tenido en Colorado hasta la fecha.

Hasta la fecha, 108 residentes del Condado de Boulder con COVID-19 han muerto; el 71% de las muertes son de residentes de instalaciones de cuidado a largo plazo. Desde el 1 de octubre, 27 residentes han muerto, en comparación con 9 residentes con COVID que fallecieron durante todo el período de julio-septiembre.

Los residentes que tengan preguntas sobre aislamiento o cuarentena pueden comunicarse con CO Help al 1-877-462-2911. Se recomienda a los residentes que necesiten ayuda con alimentos, atención médica, salud mental, vivienda, cuidado infantil, seguridad o asistencia financiera o legal a visitar www.boco.org/COVID-19Resources..

Resumen de los requisitos en el Condado de Boulder bajo el nivel de Riesgo Severo

No reuniones personales de miembros de diferentes hogares
Las oficinas o empresas que tienen oficinas que son denominadas como no críticas, pueden permitir que el 10% trabaje en persona
Tanto el comercio minorista no crítico como el crítico puede operar al 50% de ocupación registrada y deben ofrecer opciones mejoradas de entrega y las horas de servicio dedicadas para personas de la tercera edad y en riesgo
Los gimnasios y centros recreativos pueden operar al 10% de capacidad sin exceder 10 personas en el interior, excluyendo al personal por habitación, y pueden operar con 10 o menos personas, excluyendo el personal, al aire libre.
La manufactura no crítica puede funcionar al límite de ocupación registrado del 25% sin exceder 50 personas, o lo que sea menor, por habitación
Los servicios personales pueden operar al límite de ocupación registrado del 25%, sin exceder 25 personas por habitación, o lo que sea menor
La atención médica limitada puede operar al 25% de ocupación registrada sin exceder 25 personas por habitación
Los restaurantes no pueden servir adentro del establecimiento, pero pueden ofrecer servicios de entrega y comida para llevar. Los restaurantes pueden ofrecer servicio al aire libre para un solo hogar por mesa, pero todas las ventas de alcohol y consumo local de alimentos y bebidas deben terminar a las 8 p.m.
Los servicios de campo no críticos están cerrados
Los eventos en interiores están cerrados
Los deportes organizados y los campamentos de día están cerrados en interiores; deportes y campamentos pueden operar al aire libre con no más de 10 participantes
La orden define a las personas en riesgo de padecer gravemente si contraen COVID-19 como lo siguiente:

tienen 65 años o más
tienen cancer
tienen enfermedad renal crónica
tienen enfermedad pulmonar obstructiva crónica
están inmunocomprometidos (sistema inmunitario debilitado) por trasplante de órganos
tienen un índice de masa corporal de 30 o más
enfermedades cardíacas graves, como insuficiencia cardíaca, enfermedad de las arterias coronarias o cardiomiopatías
tienen enfermedad de células falciformes
tienen diabetes mellitus tipo 2
que están embarazadas
que fumas
tiene alto riesgo según el proveedor de atención médica con licencia
-boco.org/covid-19 –

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Wildfire Partners

Let’s Talk Mitigation!

You’ve got questions.

We’ve got answers!

Please join us for our virtual Let’s Talk Mitigation event! Wildfire Partners staff members, Abby Silver and Leslie Brodhead will be available to answer your questions and discuss wildfire mitigation.

This month we’ll be talking about last month’s wildfires and lessons learned. For many of you, it was your first time evacuating — what went well? What would you do differently?

Date: Wednesday, November 18
Time: 7 – 8 p.m.

Join via Zoom:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81713605541?pwd=Y2kwRm5KemhtL1NVOGdURCtQMW9idz09

Meeting ID = 817 1360 5541
Password = 210719

You can email questions ahead of time to info@nullwildfirepartners.org.

Wildfire Partners
2045 13th Street
Boulder, CO 80302
www.wildfirepartners.org
303-441-1420
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Wildfire Partners · PO Box 471 · Boulder · Colorado · 80306
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Covid testing in Ned

COVID testing time change! 3:30-5:30p
Importance: High

COVID testing at NCC (Nederland Community Center) will now be done from 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm! Please help get the word out on this change from BCPH.
Thanks, Dawn

Dawn Baumhover
Community Center Manager
Town of Nederland
dawnb@nullnederlandco.org
(303)258-9721

Fire Board Meeting changed to Tuesday

Yes, the rise in positive COVID seems to suggest that we should Zoom this board meeting.

GOLD HILL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
AGENDA
7:00 PM November 17, 2020

CALL TO ORDER
SWEARING IN OF CHRIS DRIOLF
ATTENDANCE
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
FIRE CHIEF’S REPORT
CALLS: Lefthand Wildfire
TRAINING REPORTS/RECRUITMENT
MAINTENANCE
EQUIPMENT:

OTHER BUSINESS
Forest Restoration Projects Maya MacHamer
WiFi for Fire Barn
Possible 2020 Projects: new technologies
Cisterns: rock and drainage improvements
Dry Hydrant completion
Sustainability for FPD: solar, etc.

lopez.law.office.co@nullgmail.com

Slash dumpster postponed

We need to postpone the slash dumpster scheduled for tomorrow due to the weather – too windy, cold and snowy – miserable and potentially dangerous. Will let you know if/when we can reschedule.

Slash Dumpster on Saturday, Nov. 14

Slash Dumpster on Saturday, Nov. 14

We’ll have a slash dumpster from the County available in the Bluebird Lodge parking lot from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm.

This event is in response to the fires, and is for slash only, from residents’ yards:
 
Service is for yard waste, slash and logs only. Dimensional lumber cannot be mixed with this material. No plastic bags or food waste are allowed.
No dirt, brick, rock or sod are allowed with this service. No logs more than 12″ in diameter or 20′ in length are allowed. No tree stumps of any kind or size are allowed with this service. Roll-offs cannot be loaded with a loader which scoops earthen material with this material to be loaded in the roll-off.

Slash Dumpster

The County is bringing us a dumpster for slash on Saturday, November 14th. I do not have the timing or all the details yet, but this is a great opportunity to get rid of any piles of slash around – mitigation! Also, of course, I will need a few Volunteers to help. Please let me know if you can help for a few hours with this great service the County is providing for us. I will get the details out as soon as I have them
Gretchen
gretchend@nullmac.com
302-442-3847

Emergency Preparedness Coordination

Emergency Preparedness Coordination – Zoom Meetings
Meeting 1
Topic: Emergency Preparedness Coordination – Zoom Meeting
Time: Nov 9, 2020 05:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)

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Meeting ID: 784 9187 9559
Passcode: 1f7MQm

Meeting 2
Topic: Emergency Preparedness Coordination – Zoom Meeting
Time: Nov 9, 2020 05:40 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)

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La Niña Winters and Wildfire Danger

Calwood and Lefthand Canyon Fires

Our deepest condolences to all who lost their homes in the recent wildfires. All our mountain residents have been in our hearts and thoughts throughout this challenging time.

If you have specific questions about your home or property, please don’t hesitate to reach out to our staff or your mitigation specialist.

La Nina Winters and Wildfire Danger
Winter Outlook

I remember my first winter in Nederland.

It was the night before Thanksgiving. I woke up at 2 a.m., because I literally felt the house moving, creaking.

The wind was howling.

I got up and stared out the upper windows that faced west. Huge lodgepole pines were bowing back and forth from the force of the wind. I stood transfixed, trying to understand how this was possible.

I felt so rattled by the buffeting of the house that I couldn’t go back to sleep. Is the roof going to blow off the house?

Read More

Nederland Sort Yard Re-opened
Open Through Nov. 21

Due to wildfire activity, the Nederland Sort Yard is temporarily extending the 2020 season to assist with urgent material removal.

The sort yard is open normal operating days (Wed-Sat) from 9:00am-5:00pm.

Don’t let this chance pass you by!
Let’s Talk Mitigation!
Wednesday evening

You’ve got questions? We’ve got answers!

This month, we’ll be talking about the recent fires in Boulder County and emergency preparedness. For many of you, it was your first time evacuating for a fire. What went well? What are things you wished you’d done differently?

Join Wildfire Partners staff members , Abby Silver and Leslie Brodhead to talk about recent fires and and ask any mitigation questions you have.

Wednesday, November 18 at 7 p.m.

Join via Computer Through Zoom Link

Meeting ID = 817 1360 5541
Password = 210719

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P.O. Box 1813
Nederland, CO 80466
www.wildfirepartners.org
303-441-1420
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Forest Closure updates

Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests
Fort Collins, Colo.
www.fs.usda.gov/arp
@usfsarp on Twitter and Facebook

Forest Closure remains in place East of Continental Divide through at least Saturday
Arapaho National Forest areas in Grand County will move to Stage 2 fire restrictions Friday

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (Nov. 5, 2020) – Forest Supervisor Monte Williams said the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests east of the Continental Divide will remain in Stage 3 Fire Restrictions, which closes the Forest to all uses, until at least Saturday. West of the Divide, in Grand County, Forest personnel are preparing on Friday to return to Stage 2 Fire restrictions, which bans all fires but opens the Forest to other uses. Closures around fire areas will remain in effect.

This decision comes after meeting Monday and Wednesday with sheriffs in Grand, Clear Creek, Gilpin, Boulder, Larimer and Jefferson counties as well as Colorado Parks and Wildlife regional managers. The team heard from NOAA meteorologists and fire managers, reviewing the short and long term weather forecasts. Conditions will remain windy, warm and dry through the remainder of this week. A low pressure system is developing and is expected to bring moisture to the area over the weekend, however predictions call for very little snow/water equivalency along the Front Range (about one-tenth of an inch).

“We continue to be in historically warm and dry conditions for this time of year,” Williams said. “What we need to see is a series of storms stacking up, bringing sufficient precipitation and sustained cold temperatures to provide some relief.”

The group will meet again on Saturday in hopes of getting a clearer picture of the incoming storm system and the 14-day outlook after that.

“We have to be sure we are really coming out of this current fire weather trend,” Williams added. “A monumental amount of effort goes into closing the forest and opening it up. It’s not a switch that we can just keep flipping as conditions change.”

The county sheriffs supported this decision, citing concerns for new fire starts, the risk of more loss of homes, and a drawdown of firefighting personnel and resources at this time of year.

Meanwhile, temperatures west of the Continental Divide in Grand County have remained cooler, allowing snow to melt more slowly and moisture to be absorbed by the fuels. Higher amounts of snow are forecasted for the weekend and coming week west of the Divide. With those factors in mind, and support from the Grand County sheriff and commissioners, Forest personnel are currently preparing to return to Stage 2 fire restrictions across the Sulphur Ranger District by Friday. Forest Closures will remain in place around the Williams Fork and East Troublesome Fire burned areas.

Williams Fork Fire Closure
East Troublesome Closure
Fire Restriction information

This electronic message contains information generated by the USDA solely for the intended recipients. Any unauthorized interception of this message or the use or disclosure of the information it contains may violate the law and subject the violator to civil or criminal penalties. If you believe you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and delete the email immediately.

Monday Food Pantry info

FOOD PANTRY ATTENDEES…..thanks for a terrific pantry last Monday. It was a great day and it was wonderful seeing so many of you!

Please remember to bring your personal shopping bag to the pantry on Mondays as we move forward for the winter. If you require a paper sack, we will have them for you but we would very much appreciate you bringing your own sack as long as you are comfortable with our volunteers putting items into your sack with a gloved hand!
Remember to SOCIAL DISTANCE. It’s easy to forget that we have that responsibility to each other and we have several people in town who are at high risk. We very much appreciate you keeping that in mind as you are waiting in line.
FINALLY, AND VERY IMPORTANT: We begin the pantry promptly at 3 pm. You are welcome to line up whenever you wish BUT you will not be allowed to “shop” prior to 3 pm. Please line up by 3:30 pm if you wish to shop. When the line is gone, our volunteers begin to pack up the pantry. If you arrive after 3:30 PM, we cannot guarantee that the food will still be out on the table. The team will be packing up any remaining foods and loading it into a truck to be driven to the Ward food pantry. The driver leaves by 4 pm. Following that, we still have to clean up and store items away for the next week. We don’t want to miss you but our food pantry team has been working on weighing, sorting, loading, carrying, unloading, displaying, and cleaning up this food since they left Gold Hill at 9 AM. By the time the line has finished between 3:30 pm and 4 pm, the team has been working for 7 hours on getting food to you. The team makes this look effortless but the truth is that they’ve put in an entire day by the time you receive your food. Our team is the best and they are very devoted to supporting our town with these foods. We appreciate your understanding and hope to see you on Monday for our next pantry.
We have been asked to find out what you would like to receive at the pantry. Please tell one of the volunteer servers what items you’d like to get in the future. The Ned pantry folks shop for us each week and are anxious to hear from us.

We are really fortunate to have so many great people making this work. The Nederland Food Pantry is very flexible and always willing to help us out. They are planning special food stuffs for the holidays and they go out of their way to accommodate us. Boulder Food Rescue Mountain Division is what supports our Monday food pantry. It takes 3 drivers to get this food for us on Mondays and they go to 3 or 4 locations in Boulder to gather all of the items that are available to you on Monday. If you want any additional information, we can provide that for you.

Thanks everyone. Enjoy!
Deb Yeager
deb@nullmountainvisions.net

November Birthday party at the Gold Hill General Store

We’re going to be doing a monthly birthday get together out back of the store. It will be an excuse to set up some tents and heaters out back if its cold and celebrate community members Birthdays once a month.

This month we’re doing it on November 19th from 5:00-8:00. Free Cake for all the November Birthdays! Anyone else can buy a slice. I’ll also have soup, sandwiches, and everything I normally make at the store. The cake soup and sandwiches will all be cheap. We don’t want anyone to feel excluded because of the price. Hot soup to stay warm. Novemeber 19th, 5:00-8:00pm
Jay

Halloween

From Chrissy

Gold Hill Trick or Treating 2020

Hello, GH Residents,

As you may have heard, the Gold Hill School is currently quarantined due to a case of covid-like symptoms in one household. Due to evacuations, this family has not been in Gold Hill since Oct. 16th. This morning, the family got their negative covid results back. The Covid tests from various other families that have taken tests and received results have all come back negative at this point as well, including the teachers. Even with negative results, we’re all asked to quarantine until Nov. 7th, and we may return to school on Tuesday, Nov. 10th.

Which leads us to Saturday- Halloween. Many students have received their covid test results, or will by tomorrow. Many parents are feeling their children can still participate in trick or treating safely. Many residents have expressed their desire to move forward with trick or treating activities, both during the last town meeting, as well as since the GHS closure began. All that said, please consider the CDC recommendations for trick or treating this year:

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/holidays.html#halloween

https://bouldercolorado.gov/newsroom/family-friendly-halloween-events-in-boulder

As you know, our trick or treating numbers are always rather small. With no Halloween parties attracting outside guests, our numbers should be even smaller than usual. We aren’t talking about the mobs of children we see in Boulder. Still, many residents plan to follow the following CDC guideline:

Line up individually wrapped treats at the end of the driveway or yard’s edge. Watch the fun and enjoy the costumes from a distance.
If you are preparing goodie bags, wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 second before and after preparing the bags.
A costume mask (such as for Halloween) is not a substitute for a cloth mask. A costume mask should not be used unless it is made of two or more layers of breathable fabric that covers the mouth and nose and doesn’t leave gaps around the face.

Setting out treats on a table by the road with a light on it for kids to grab as they walk by may be a safe alternative for our setting. Treats can be spread out to avoid digging hands into a common bowl. Residents can keep a distance from any passers-by.

If none of these solutions are comfortable for you, of course you do not need to accept trick or treaters. You can leave your porch light off and not set out treats.

Thank you all for your consideration.

Have you voted?

This very important election is just a week away. It’s now too late to mail your ballot, but you can drop it off at any number of drop boxes – the County Court House, the Clerk and Recorder’s office out at 33rd Street. Find a drop box near you on your county clerk’s website bouldercounty.org/elections

Don’t forget to vote the whole ballot and sign the outside of the envelope.

For information on ballot issues from the League of Women Voters, go to https://www.lwvcolorado.org

Food Pantry Monday

The Monday food pantry is scheduled for tomorrow. WE HAVE MOVED IT TO THE FRONT OF THE BLUEBIRD LODGE. Be prepared to drive on Main Street and find a parking place but KEEP THE AREA IN FRONT OF THE HANDRAIL VACANT SO PEOPLE CAN WALK HERE AND PICK UP THEIR FOOD. See you at 3 pm.

PLEASE CHECK BACK ON MONDAY MORNING TO MAKE SURE THAT THE SNOW HASN’T KEPT THE TEAM FROM GETTING THE FOOD. WE WILL CONFIRM BY 10 AM.

NeighborLink/SafeLink/AirLink – Zoom Meeting

Topic: NeighborLink/SafeLink/AirLink – Zoom Meeting
Time: Oct 26, 2020 05:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 793 3462 7540
Passcode: Scmtz0

Much conversation has followed our recent evacuation and we’d love to get together to talk about plans for future incidents. We welcome you to join us for a Zoom meeting to discuss NeighborLink, SafeLink, and AirLink and share your ideas on ways to support communication in Gold Hill.

Agenda
Introduction of the meeting
History of NeighborLink/SafeLink/AirLink
Current efforts toward supporting these groups
Ideas for the future
Interested participants

Fire Board Meeting today at 5

From: Richard Lopez <lopez.law.office.co@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2020 9:39 AM
Subject: In person board meeting Thursday

Let’s meet in person (masks, distancing) tomorrow (5 PM). Bring a chair and bundle up.

I’ve left messages with Brian Finn to see if there is a space in the Inn where we might meet. If not we’ll meet in the barn if it’s too cold outside.

Rich

We still intend to meet in person, but I’ll try to Zoom it to those that can’t join us. I’ll be borrowing a WiFi link from a neighbor. Note to self, discuss WiFi for the fire barn. Rich
Richard Lopez is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Richard Lopez’s Personal Meeting Room

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Meeting ID: 441 567 3455
Passcode: 2ncvHa

Wildfire Partners webinar

Wildfire Partners

Let’s Talk Mitigation!

You’ve got questions.

We’ve got answers!

Please join us for our virtual Let’s Talk Mitigation event! Wildfire Partners staff members, Abby Silver and Leslie Brodhead will be available to answer your questions and discuss wildfire mitigation.

This month we’ll be discussing alternative options to get rid of slash piles with a focus on pile burning during the winter months.

Date: Wednesday, October 14
Time: 7 – 8 p.m.

Join via Zoom:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81713605541?pwd=Y2kwRm5KemhtL1NVOGdURCtQMW9idz09

Meeting ID = 817 1360 5541
Password = 210719

You can email questions ahead of time to info@nullwildfirepartners.org.

Wildfire Partners
2045 13th Street
Boulder, CO 80302
www.wildfirepartners.org
303-441-1420
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Wildfire Partners · PO Box 471 · Boulder · Colorado · 80306
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Free Flu Shots in Nederland

Forwarded by Colleen Sinclair | Mountain Resource Specialist
Boulder County Area Agency on Aging | Community Services Department
303-258-3068 (office) | 720-616-9109 (cell) | Resource Line: 303-441-1617
Resources: BoulderCountyHelp.org | Sign up: Age Well Newsletter | Facebook

FREE FLU SHOTS – On Saturday, 10/17, free flu shots will be available for those age 19 and over who are otherwise having difficulty getting a flu shot. These will be offered in conjunction with the Nederland Food Pantry’s food distribution in the upper parking lot of the Nederland Community Center from 10:00 am-noon. Everyone is welcome! Please spread this information.

Dennis Whalen, Chair
P2P Housing and Human Services Alliance
p2phhs.org
Pronouns: He/Him/His
303-862-1501

Agenda GHTM 10-12-20

Gold Hill Town Meeting
Monday, 7:00 p.m. October 12th, 2020
____________________________________________________________________________

Zoom Virtual Meeting
This is a 40-minute meeting. The link and log-in information for three back-to-back meetings are the same.
Topic: GHTM Zoom Meeting 10.12.2020
Time: Oct 12, 2020, 07:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 264 480 5716
Passcode: GHTM
____________________________________________________________

1. Review of Previous Minutes (any additions or corrections)
2. Treasurer’s Report
3. Non-discrimination statement, introduction and comments, edits to existing statement
4. Committee Reports
o Mountain Stewards
o Forestry and Forest Management
o Gold Hill School
o Museum
o Community Planning and Fundraising
 Covid Relief Fund status
 Purchasing of glasses
o Cemetery
o Community Center
o SafeLink/NeighborLink
o AirLink
5. Other Town News:
o Road report
o Weed Management
o Historical Zoning
o Fire Department
o Mining
o Upcoming Meetings/Events
____________________________________________________________________________

Next Gold Hill Town Meeting: December 14th, 7:00 pm
____________________________________________________________

Minutes of the GHTM 8-10-20

GOLD HILL TOWN MEETING NEWSLETTER
Minutes of the August 10th, 2020 Zoom Town Meeting

Next Town Meeting will be Monday October 12, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. by Zoom

The meeting was called to order by Chair Marielle Sidell. Fifteen people checked in via Zoom: Member at Large Dan Maedke, Chrissy Maedke, Vice Chair Emma Salmon, Mari, Secretary Gretchen Diefenderfer, Treasurer Martha Knapp, Marcus Moench, Elisabeth Caspari, Val Crist, Virginia Schultz, Ota Lutz, Cat Russell, Debra Yeager, Karen Simmons, John Sand.

Minutes – Minutes of the June 8th meeting were approved as published.

Treasurer’s Report – Martha reports: At the previous regular Town Meeting in June 2020 our bank balance was $20,787.30
Our current cash assets are $15,732.47

Revenue Summary: COVID-19 Response Fund matching grant $500.00; General Fund donation from Sands’ Barn Sale fundraiser $1147.

Expense Summary: COVID Response Fund $6,000 for Pandemic Fund awards and $701.83 for Food Bank expenses.

Fund transfers: none

Current fund totals:
General Fund $2650.71; Cemetery $6,489.85; Safe Link (combined funds for SafeSite, AirLink, NeighborLink projects) $2,466.79; Community Planning/Fundraising $0 (zero;) Forest Management $0 (zero;) Community Relief $2,326.95; COVID-19 Response Fund Grant $1798.17.

Anticipated expenses for the remainder of 2020: General Fund $50.00 for porta-potty maintenance, estimated $300 for liability insurance and estimated $800 for town cleanup dumpsters.

Income consisted of a contribution of $1147 from Sand’s barn sale, which they so generously donated to us, and $500 grant from Morgan Stanley in conjunction with the Community Foundation COVID grant. Thanks to Marcus for his work on this grant.

ELECTIONS! Beginning with the position of Chair, Mari nominated Emma, stating that she, Mari, has too much on her plate and would happily change positions with Emma. Marcus seconded the nomination of Emma and as there were no further nominations, Emma Salmon was elected our new Chair unanimously. Next, Gretchen nominated Mari as Vice Chair, Marcus seconded and in the absence of further nominations, Mari was unanimously elected Vice Chair.
Marcus nominated Martha as Treasurer, Mari seconded, there were no further nominations and Martha was re-elected Treasurer unanimously. Gretchen was nominated as Secretary by Martha, seconded by Mari and elected unanimously in the absence of any other nominations. Dan was nominated by Mari to continue as Member At Large, seconded by Gretchen, there were no further nominations and he was also re-elected unanimously.
Contact information:
Chair: Emma Salmon has now been married and changed her last name to Dirolf (legally
Emily Dirolf) – Phone: 513-259-1532, email: emma.dirolf@nullgmail.com
Vice Chair: Marielle Sidell – Phone: 303-819-2029, email: marielle.sidell@nullgmail.com
Secretary: Gretchen Diefenderfer – Phone: 303-442-3847, email: gretchend@nullmac.com
Treasurer: Martha Knapp – Phone: 303-442-5254, email: elev8296@nullearthlink.net
Member at Large: Dan Maedke – Phone: 303-808-7082, email: maedkedan@nullgmail.com
Thanks to all the board members was expressed by zoom by several. Emma, who has her wedding and moving in the coming busy week, asked to be excused and Mari, as Vice Chair continued to run the meeting.

COMMITTEE REPORTS
Mountain Stewards – Cat reported that her presentation on Climate Change is available on the website – resilientgoldhill.com as well as lots of other good information. She is happy to do it again any time!
Marcus reported that they will be having a planning meeting – more an in-person event to identify options for action. They’re checking on having it possibly at the Inn.
They are looking at forming a non-profit in order to move beyond Gold Hill. For instance, the Energy Grant – how to replicate this organizing effort around the intermountain west, which is a neglected area, to enable groups like Gold Hill to share technical discoveries and visioning. This is a big idea and just in the preliminary stages. For emergency electrical power, they’re now looking at distributed solutions versus a central system and at back-up systems with batteries for storage. Maybe utilizing bulk purchases for savings. Xcel is complicated if we use their lines – easier at a household level.

Forestry and Forest Management – The big ticket things on forestry include a lot of work on the North Slope. Marcus read Virginia’s update on forestry work:
The MOU signing will be on the 13th in Nederland. Here is the statement that I sent from GH for use in PR about multi-community, multi-agency MOU on Forest Management:
With catastrophic snowfall, wildfire, and flood in little more than a decade, the Gold Hill Community is focused on addressing community resilience, emergency preparedness, and climate adaption/mitigation programs from forest health to renewable energy. The Gold Hill Risk and Adaptation Advisory Report of 2017 outlined multiple recommendations for reducing wildfire risk. This MOU is a vital step in helping Gold Hill work collaboratively to better wildfire protection for our community and the Arapaho lands that we steward.
Please remind people that there is a Level 2 Fire Ban and that means NO fires, no charcoal, no evening at an open fire on your deck, etc.!!!! And, careful use with safety equipment for any chainsaw work!
The fire ban PROHIBITS:
• Building, maintaining, attending or using a fire, campfire, or stove fire on private and public lands. This includes charcoal grills and barbecues, coal and wood burning stoves and sheepherder’s stoves and includes use in developed camping and picnic grounds.
• Fireworks sales, use, and possession, including permissible fireworks.
• Shooting or discharge of firearms for recreational purposes.
• Smoking, except in an enclosed vehicle or building, a developed recreation site, or while stopped in an area at least three feet in diameter that is barren or cleared of all flammable materials.
• Operating a chainsaw without a USDA or SAE approved spark arrester properly installed and in effective working order, a chemical pressurized fire extinguisher kept with the operator and one round point shovel with an overall length of at least 35 inches readily available for use.
• Using an explosive. This includes but is not limited to fuses or blasting caps, fireworks, rockets, exploding targets, and tracers or incendiary ammunition.
• Welding or operating acetylene or other torch with open flame outdoors.
• Possessing or using a motor vehicle off established roads, motorized trails or established parking areas, except when parking in an area devoid of vegetation within 10 feet of the vehicle.
Gold Hill School – Chrissy reported that BVSD will begin online and they we will see in September. Possibly special populations will attend in person after Sept. 22. Check in to see. We don’t really know how this will look yet. They are starting to put together plans, looking at resources. They expect approximately the same number of students. The reconstruction projects are in the final stages and they will be moving all the stuff back in next week, It’s exciting.
Museum – Deb wanted to thank everyone who attended the Community Outreach event at the Beer Garden. We had about 50% of our usual attendance, but it was great fun/successful. They are thinking of scheduling more evening gatherings at the Bocce Court – sit around and tell stories, bring chairs, food, and drink. There is lots of fun history to be shared. The have finished the summer maintenance projects – thank you to Dan for replacing the steps. Lots of work got done, so they are very prepared, hoping they can open next year. She received a note from Nancy Crow in Wyoming. Her grandfather, Elmer Curtis Swallow had owned the Green Swallow. We had all assumed it was named after the birds, but it turns out it was her grandfather’s name! She is bringing her parents and cousin to the Museum on Sept. 18 to share stories of the family.
Community Planning and Fund raising – Dan reports that usually he would start planning our fall Bake/Rummage/Craft sale around now, but due to the pandemic that looks like next year. He has a small update on the large bike-race that was planned for September. Josh Kravitz is still hoping to run a smaller race, but it’s questionable if this will actually happen. If it does, maybe we could sell some food or merchandise at most.
COVID Relief – Mari reports that the committee got 3 applications which they were able to fill in the process of helping the community continue and thrive.
Cemetery – no committee report, but John reported that he and Cherry have put in a memorial bench in the SW corner for friends and neighbors. Deb added that she’d like to create a marker that says, ”Party Down Under”.
Community Center- Mari reports that, as part of the COVID Relief Fund, they kept some money aside to look into planning for a meeting center. No action yet.
SafeLink/NeighborLink – Deb expressed thanks to Ota for taking over the POD leadership of the Gold Run Subdivision when Tony left, but they are now moving west of town and Paul Roberts, who has been a group leader since 2011, has agreed to take it over from Ota. We’re excited about this and are working to redevelop our organization and make it more user friendly.
AirLink – John reports that they are still very active, have Tuesday night Ham net meetings, and are working on major renovations to the repeater on Horsfal Ridge.
Other Town News –
Social Justice Demonstration – Cat reported that we got great coverage of our demonstration in the Mountain Ear with several pictures. The Anti-racist book group is alive and well. It’s on NextDoor or email Cat – wildcat.russell@nullgmail.com – for information to join. They’re meeting every other Thursday.
Renewable Energy – Cat is also working on a grassroots effort to document renewable energy use in Gold Hill – it’s on NextDoor, too. She is happy to do her Climate talk again. She’s Co-Chair of the Climate Action Group.
Mining – Gretchen reported on an email report from Dick Cole: Good Morning–I went to MLRB search but not much there: Colorado Milling Company – permit M1994117- has been filing the required quarterly hydrology reports for 2020 (after some prompting by DRMS in December 2019 to stay current with hydrology reports which were missing from 2016 thru 2019–CMC then complied as requested). CMC also filed an annual report on 7/26/2020 and stated therein that all mining activities are in ‘temporary cessation’.
Cash and WhoDo Mines-permit M1983141- also filed required hydrology reports.

Weeds – no report

Historical Zoning – no activity excerpt that Marcus and Elizabeth are taking down the west side of the old garage because it’s falling down after the old vehicle was removed. This will provide off-street parking. They’re also reinforcing the east side.

Fire Department – Gretchen reports that, with Bobby gone, they are looking for a new board member. The Board meets the third Thursday of each month at 7:00 pm. ADDENDUM: The Board has appointed Kent Coghill to replace Bobby.

Respectfully submitted, Gretchen Diefenderfer, Secretary

The Zoom meeting stopped and started and several of us were disconnected for a while. After the second cut-off, John Sand was not able to get back in and he had wanted to make some farewell remarks for Cherry and himself. This is his email:
This meeting was the last that we could attend as voters as we are no longer property owners in Gold Hill. We both leave Gold Hill with the community close to our hearts and with regret for leaving behind all our friends and our ability to participate in the life of its activities. Believing strongly in being a part of sustaining the vitality and history of the community, we want to encourage all the new property owners, many of whom are decades younger than we are, to be the active new generation that will guide the future of Gold Hill. There is much to be preserved and sustained of what it is today, but we realize that a degree of change is inevitable. It is up to the new residents to think, plan and act in a way that retains its vitality while evolving to meet the changing needs of its residents.
To assist with that process, the current long-time residents must pass along what we have held dear for the last century and a half. We have supported the role of the Historic Zoning Committee’s charter of “keeping Gold Hill looking like Gold Hill”. Our Museum houses the evidence of what our forebearer’s used in their daily lives, to remind us of how they dealt with life of their times. Our school provides the type of education that enables our children to understand how this type of pioneer life fits in with today’s world.
Also, those of us who are in positions of service to the community must lay the groundwork for our successors. In the corporate world, it is called succession planning. None of us are indispensable, so we must train our replacements to knowledgeably take over what we do. With their energy, enthusiasm and skills they will do so ably.
When we return to visit, as we will do, we look forward to what the evolution of Gold Hill will look like. Much the same, we are sure, but with tweaks that reflect the ideas of the next generation. To them we say “Carry on the good work!” All the best, Cherry and John

Poetry Reading

Gold Hill’s own Julie Carpenter reading poetry from her new book at the Gold Hill Inn Beer Garden, Friday, September 25th, 5-6 pm. Books Available for sale for $6 after reading
WHERE A PIECE OF ME IS TORN AWAY
is Gold Hill author, Juliet Carpenter’s memoir in poetry, describing her long career as a renowned physician in Boulder, Colorado, her personal and spiritual life, her work as a humanitarian, and her insights about the sacred spaces of birth and death.

Red Flag Warning today

Be careful out there folks! Red Flag Warning until September 6, 8:00 pm, and then Winter Storm Watch September 8, 12:00 am until September 9, 6:00 am

Monday Food Pantry

The food pantry on Monday, Labor Day will be at the same time – from 3 to 4 – but is being held in Kirby Field in anticipation of large crowds in Gold Hill and the Pub. See you there.
Deb deb@nullmountainvisions.net