231 N. Silver St. Ste 2,
Lake City, CO 81235

Day: May 23, 2024

Dear Community-

During EMS (emergency medical services) Appreciation Week, we would like to thank our local Hinsdale County team.These individuals demonstrate ongoing commitment to training, communications, and professionalism, and we are grateful. Please join us in thanking Brad Jones, Buffy Witt, Bob Downs, Amanda Hartman, Dan Humphreys, Melody Crump, Rachel Moore, Leslie Nichols, Sara Barker, Katherine Heidt, Richard Williams, Tom Arnold, RE Hall, Jerry Johnson, Lydia McNeese, Lorie Stewart, Kelly Elkins, Sarah DeCristino, Eli Loper, Grant Loper, and Danny Ogé.Thank you. Respectfully,Commissioner Kristie BorchersCommissioner Robert HurdCommissioner Greg Levine

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Hessler announces candidacy for GCEA Board of Directors

Hi Lake City Community! In a time when so much in the world feels outside our control, we’re fortunate to have our own non-profit energy co-operative here in Colorado’s High Country. How do we want the future of Gunnison County Electric to look? How can we build a local energy future that reduces costs, reflects our values, and creates resilience against aging infrastructure and an unstable climate? We have the opportunity to decide, right now, by voting for the GCEA Board of Directors. And I am excited to announce my candidacy.I’m Shannon Hessler – a professional town planner, Master of Environmental Management from Western Colorado University, and a trained environmental engineer. I grew up in Fairplay, home to wind, ranching families, a deep mining history- and not much else. I hold rural values of independence and self-sufficiency dear. As a town resident today, I also know the cost-of-living crisis firsthand.Our rural residents are looking for solutions that will help them save on ranch and heating costs, alongside options to diversify their income with a solar installation – if they choose.Our towns are looking for electrification options, unlocking thousands of dollars of savings each year through new appliances and vehicles.I’m running to be a partner for all our residents, working on solutions that honor our needs.I’d be honored to earn your vote to represent our communities as your next partner on the GCEA Board, working on solutions that work for all our members. For more information: shannonforgcea.comGCEA’s 2024 Board of Directors Election opens for voting on Monday, May 20 and voting closes with the Annual Meeting on Tuesday, June 18th. You can vote by mail ballot, vote online in GCEA’s secure system, or vote in-person at GCEA’s Annual Meeting. Shannon HesslerMaster’s in Environmental ManagementEnvironmental Engineering, EIT719.839.0070

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Editor:

I would like to thank all those who attended my retirement party at the Lake City Arts Center last Monday evening, May 13. It was great to see patients and community members as well as our wonderful clinic staff and Medical Center Board. Special thanks to those who planned such a great evening.I was very moved to say the least.When Rachel told me where the venue was, I was concerned because of the size and that maybe no one would show up. Boy was I wrong! Thank you all so much! It has been a privilege to serve the community in this capacity.Bob Downs, PALake City

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Bridge Repairs, Limited Reopening

A – Structural repairs to Dillon Pinnacles Bridge, between now and late June, will include the installation of four massive steel plates — 2 at fracture joints and 2 at “structural anomalies.” Structural steel plates shown in blue are 27 feet long, 2 1/2 “thick and between 2 and 2 1/2 feet wide and will be secured with 280 bolts.  B – This graphic shows examples of where still plates remedying anomalies on the Dillon Pinnacles Bridge, which will continue this summer into late October.  C – Including the two weld fractures and two anomalies to be repaired immediately with steel plates, a total of 183 bridge structure anomalies have been identified which will be repaired between now and late October.  Graphics courtesy of CDOT.    Structural repairs to the U.S. Highway 50 Dillon Pinnacles Bridge — closed to traffic across Blue Mesa Reservoir since cracks were discovered April 18 — may allow the resumption of limited traffic across the bridge as early as the upcoming July 4 weekend.   Participants at a remote webinar hosted by Colorado Dept. Transportation and Gunnison County on Tuesday evening this week learned that four immense steel plates, 27’ long, 2-1/2” thick, 2 to 2-1/2’ wide and anchored with 280 bolts, will be installed in coming weeks to stabilize steel girders on the bridge at the location of two cracks and two other locations within the bridge supports where “concentrations of anomalies” have been identified.   At Tuesday’s webinar, CDOT Executive Director Shoshana M. Lew stated “if everything goes right and conditions make it possible,” limited traffic will allow reopening that portion of heavily-travelled U.S. Highway 50 on July 1. In addition to limited traffic with specific weight limits, reopening the 61-year-old Blue Mesa Reservoir bridge is also contingent on shaving off 3” of accumulated asphalt on the bridge decking to literally lighten the load.   Including the four steel plates which will be installed in coming weeks to structurally reinforce the bridge, repairs will continue on the Dillon Pinnacles Bridge non-stop between now through October to rectify a total of 183 “anomalies” to the bridge structure which have been identified through ultrasound analysis.   An added complication to traffic flow on U.S. Highway 50 even with a partial reopening of the Dillon Pinnacles bridge is resumption of the five-mile highway widening project through Little Blue Canyon, a multi-year effort scheduled for completion this summer under guidance CDOT partnering with Federal Highway Commission. Work on final phases of the project is now resuming with completion of infill terracing, paving, and completion of guardrail. Expansion work through Little Blue Canyon will once again require traffic delays with one-lane traffic flow through the construction zone.   CDOT Executive Director Shoshana Lew was questioned on the potential of expediting completion of the Blue Canyon work which is scheduled for late July. Lew stated a meeting with representatives from the Federal Highway Commission was slated Wednesday morning this week, Lew expressing her hope that with minimal traffic flow on Highway 50 as a result of the bridge closure, the Little Blue Creek Canyon work end date might be moved up to early July…. To read the full story, pick up this week’s edition of the Lake City Silver World or subscribe today!

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