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(From the August/September Z) Take it or Leave it: The Way it is This Morning in Moab, Utah. August, 1936 … Jim Stiles

‘STILES’ TIME MACHINE’ (Return to Moab, August, 1936 … Jim Stiles

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DAWN. ARCHES NP. 2015

dawnarches2015

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(EcoWatch) Humboldt County’s Marijuana Boom Is Destroying Redwoods and Killing Rare Wildlife

EXCERPT: With California poised to fully legalize marijuana, a “green rush” has hit Humboldt as outsiders—Bulgarians, Laotians, Texans—flood into the county and set up industrial-scale marijuana farms. The environmental impact from more than 4,000 pot “gardens” is ravaging the redwood ecosystem that Humboldt environmentalists have spent decades fighting to save and restore. And not just in Humboldt

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redwoodforests

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(Moab Times-Independent) Moab City manager placed on paid administrative leave while council members evaluate ‘internal issues’ in city organization

EXCERPT: Moab City Manager Rebecca Davidson has been placed on paid administrative leave for an indeterminate period of time, effective immediately, according to city officials. The decision was made at the discretion of Moab Mayor Dave Sakrison, who officially informed Davidson on Tuesday morning, Sept. 13 that she would be placed on paid leave….Moab City Recorder Rachel Stenta said that although the decision to place Davidson on paid administrative leave was made at the discretion of the mayor, that choice was “influenced” by issues raised by members of the Moab City Council.

“There were internal issues in the organization that the council determined needed to be evaluated,” Stenta told The Times-Independent. “The council felt the process would be streamlined if the city manager were on leave. That was the reason behind the mayor’s decision.”

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Rebecca Davidson, new Moab City Manager.

Rebecca Davidson, new Moab City Manager.

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New GRAMA Request to the City of Moab from the Canyon Country Zephyr…

moabcityhall

NOTE: On September 12, 2016, The Zephyr sent a detailed, three part GRAMA request to the City of Moab, c/o its Recorder Rachel Stenta. According to USPS Tracking, the letter was received at 8:54 AM, September 15.

Part 2 of this request was also sent by USPS to the Utah State Attorney General and was received by that office on Wednesday, September 14.

We have asked that the City respond with the appropriate requested documents and information by December 1, 2016.

JS

T H E C A N Y O N C O U N T R Y
Z E P H Y R
Jim Stiles, publisher
PO Box 271 Monticello, UT 84535
cczephyr@gmail.com

September 10, 2016

TO: Rachel Stenta, Moab City Recorder
217 East Center St
Moab, UT 84532

RE: GRAMA REQUEST

Dear Ms. Stenta,

Pursuant to the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act, (GRAMA), I am requesting the following documentation:

PART 1
Definitions: Correspondence means “emails, texts, social media messages, letters, and memorandums.” City Manager means “Rebecca Davidson and her administrative assistant.” City Recorder means “Rachel Stenta and staff in the City Recorder’s office.”

Any correspondence between the Mayor, City Manager, City Recorder, City department heads, and/or the City Council regarding:

a. the necessity for, requesting, bidding, paying for, or hiring out the initial IT Audit, aka IT “initial assessment,” prior to the June 3, 2015 (the date of the Assessment);

b. recommendation for TAYO, Inc. for the City’s IT work in April or May 2015;

c. Rebecca Davidson’s relationship or household living arrangement with TAYO, Inc, Niyo Pearson, and/or Tara Smelt in 2015 and 2016

d. determination of an IT emergency, or any termination of said emergency, in 2015 and 2016;

e. releasing the TAYO contract or TAYO Scope/Statement of Work;

f. requests for resources to upgrade software licensing, and any draft or approved budget that either reflects those requests, or shows that those requests were removed by the acting City Manager or City Council from 2009 until May 1, 2015

g. expanding the scope of the RFP dated July 27, 2016 from “Information Technology Security (Cyber Security)” as approved on June 7, 2016 by the City Council to “Information Technology Security (Cyber Security) and Information Technology Support Services” from June 7 until the current date;

Any correspondence between the Mayor, City Manager, City Recorder, City department heads, City Council, vendors, and/or TAYO regarding:

a. security concerns with the City’s water system or SCADA;

b. security concerns linked to credit cards or other personal information stored on City servers/databases/applications, including Xpress Billpay, the MRAC server, and SportsMan;

c. fees, payments, or project scope for the IT Audit, aka IT Initial Assessment; consulting services; and/or time and materials agreement for IT work in 2015 and 2016

d. requesting IT assistance or difficulties reaching TAYO;

Any official budget worksheets from 2009 to the present that contain requests for resources to upgrade software licensing, and any draft or approved budget that either reflects those requests, or shows that those requests were removed by the then-acting City Manager or City Council;

List of unlicensed software used on City computers or servers, and a list of the computers and/or work stations with said unlicensed software, or any other documentation that supports the Recorder’s statement on June 7, 2016 that there was an “abundance of unlicensed software;”

Copy of any fully executed contract(s) with TAYO or Niyo Pearson;

Copy of all Scope or Statement of Work documents with TAYO or Niyo Pearson in 2015 or 2016

Copy of all Non-Disclosure Agreements with TAYO, Niyo Pearson, and Tara Smelt in 2015 or 2016

Copy of Niyo Pearson’s IT credentials and ISC2 certification number;

Copy of the IT Policy, dated January 27, 2015;

Copy of any documentation supporting or summarizing what IT changes have occurred, including any metrics or study that show the efficiency or success of the IT upgrades;

Invoices submitted by TAYO, Niyo Pearson, and Tara Smelt, and copies of payment coupons and checks made to the same, from May 1, 2015 to the present date for the IT Assessment, monthly retainer fee, travel, and all time and materials contracts.

PART 2
This section of a Utah Government Records Access and Management Act request is based upon information provided by Assistant Attorney General Brian Nalder, re: my previously expressed concerns about possible violations of the Utah Open Meetings Act by the Moab, Utah City Council.

On August 9, as a result of a review of those concerns, the Civil Review Committee wrote:
“It does not appear that the Moab City Council’s posted approved minutes include sufficient detail or specificity of the agenda items discussed in its meetings or the comments made by its members. Written minutes should provide enough information for the public to have a general sense of the discussions involving all matters that the members propose, discuss, or decide in their meetings.”

Nalder’s inference here was that the issue of restructuring had been discussed but because of a “lack of specificity of agenda items,” the discussion was not referenced in the minutes.

In a subsequent letter to me, Mr. Nalder insisted that, “the CRC for the Utah Attorney General’s Office reviewed everything available, including meeting agendas, audio recordings, (emphasis added) meeting minutes, and materials.”

Since the AG agrees that the Moab City Council minutes “lacked specificity,” the only way to determine whether the matter of restructuring was discussed at any of the public meetings held by the Moab City Council meetings is via the audio recordings.

Therefore. pursuant to the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act, (GRAMA), I am requesting the following:

1. Identify by date and time during each public Moab City Council meeting prior to September 22, 2105, wherein “restructuring” and the reorganization of city departments was discussed in a manner open to the public, as determined by the results of the CRC.

2. Provide that portion of the required audio recording of each such open meeting, prior to September 22, 2016, that discusses the reorganization/restructuring of city departments.

PART 3
All supplementary documents for agenda items on the City Council agenda from June 2015 to the most recent city council meeting, including “administrator reports submitted in writing”

* * *
If there are any fees for searching or copying these records, please inform me of the cost. However, I request a waiver of all fees in that the disclosure of the requested information is in the public interest and that this publication serves the public interests of the citizens of Moab, Utah.

This is not an expedited request, but we believe your office should be able to provide this information and the audio recordings by December 1, 2016. If you deny any or all of this request, please cite each specific exemption (identified by part/number & letter) you feel justifies the refusal to release the information and notify me of the appeal procedures available to me under the law.

Please send the results of this GRAMA request to the email address provided above.

Sincerely,
Jim Stiles, publisher
The Canyon Country Zephyr

cc: Rosemary Cundiff, State Records Ombudsman
rcundiff@utah.gov

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The Zephyr Backbone Needs Our Readers’ Support

THE ZEPHYR

September 2016

WE STILL NEED YOUR SUPPORT …

Hunter Thompson once wrote, “It’s a damned shame that a field as potentially dynamic and vital as journalism should be overrun with dullards, bums, and hacks, hag-ridden with myopia, apathy, and complacence, and generally stuck in a bog of stagnant mediocrity.”
But the dumber and more ‘hag-ridden’ and complacent the media becomes, and the more it embraces “stagnant mediocrity,” the safer its bottom line remains. There’s the rub.
The Zephyr works hard to avoid these labels, regardless of the “bottom line,” and we think we’ve mostly succeeded. But our efforts come at a cost. Corporations and other “Big Money” aren’t very fond of our little cyber rag. That’s why we depend on the financial support of our readers via your modest contributions.
 
As we approach the end of our 28th year of continuous publication, we continue to report on the remarkable changes happening to Moab and to the world.  Our planet and our lives bear little resemblance to the place we once knew.  As for my beloved Moab, I can only paraphrase Ed Abbey…
“Can you tell me where Moab, Utah is?” 

“No…but I can tell you where it was.”

But The Zephyr stays involved and continues to report the changes. Our 15,000 word investigative report, “What’s Past Is Prologue,” about Moab’s recent political controversy, has generated intense interest. We thought it was important to pursue this story when no one else in the Utah media would touch it.
And more than any other publication in southeast Utah, we continue to chronicle the history of the places and people who once made the Colorado Plateau such an interesting place to live. I am slowly working through thousands of new images, taken in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, by Herb Ringer, Edna Fridley, and Charles Kreischer. The collections are priceless and we hope you feel the same. Our plan is to share them with you. And after 30 years in the canyon country, my collection of images is slowly being archived as well.

And look for a new feature, “The Way it Was in Moab This Morning,” as I transport myself into Moab’s past and report on a much simpler time. In the current issue I found myself in the middle of the very hot summer of 1936. While much has changed since then, you’d be amazed how much the politics have not.

We feel that we offer more honest news, information, and history about Southeast Utah than ever. But with the exception of a handful of longtime advertisers, we now survive on the financial support of our individual readers. We must ask our readers to step up and help. Every component of The Zephyr web site is free to
everyone and, as long as we stay alive, it will stay that way. But we can’t keep going without you.

So please, if you think The Zephyr still has value and still makes a difference–if only a tiny one—consider supporting our little publication. We’re not quite ready to disappear. Not quite.

Thanks,
Jim & Tonya Stiles

  

 Here’s how you can keep us going…

JOIN THE BACKBONE

WHEN YOU JOIN THE BACKBONE or RENEW YOUR MEMBERSHIP,
you’ll receive a complimentary signed copy of BRAVE NEW WEST
by Jim Stiles or a DVD of the documentary film, “Brave New West,”
from High Plains Films. (Let us know which you prefer)

  

And if you send us a good head & shoulders photo of yourself, Stiles
will cartoon you for the Backbone and send the original to you with
the book.
  
One year Backbone membership: $100
Three years: $275 
(NOTE: You can also support The Zephyr with smaller contributions…follow the link below) 

You can use your credit card through PayPal at our web site:

 
Or we still take checks:

PO Box 271, Monticello, UT 84535

Thanks…

  VISIT THE HOMEPAGE HERE

And find us on:

 

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SAN JUAN COUNTY, UTAH. JULY 2016

sanjuanco2016

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CEDAR MESA. 1975

cedarmesa75

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“Here’s to the sunny days of long ago.” —Augustus McRae

sunnydays

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MOAB, UTAH…1978. Mill Creek Drive headed toward Fourth East

moab78millcreekdrive

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