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

Day: December 12, 2024

Dear community

Thank you for coming out on Saturday and supporting Toys for Tots at the Sweets Auction and through your donations. We’d like to thank Peggy Bales, Karen Shaw, Allison Athey, Susan Cardin, Michael Murphy, Judy Warren, Kristie Borchers, Cindy Rae, Sarah DeCristino, Beth Kendall, Linda Downs, Chillin’, Packers Saloon & Cannibal Grill, Susan Heumann, Karen Hurd, Lynn McNitt, Mary Nettleton, and the baker of the Eggnog Logs for your donations! The auction raised $748 plus donations of $610 for a grand total of $1,358. Thanks to the Museum for providing the space.Happy holidays. Respectfully,Commissioners Borchers, Levine & Hurd, Lynn McNitt, and Bobbi McDonald, Sheriff’s Office

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Boat Slip Lottery Applications

Hinsdale County will accept applications during December to participate in the lottery to rent a motorized boat slip at Lake San Cristobal for the 2025 season. Motorized boat slips are chosen through two separate lotteries, one for non-commercial use and one for commercial use.Five non-commercial boat slips and three commercial slips are available for rent. Drawings for both the non-commercial and commercial boat slips will take place during the January 8, 2025, Board of County Commissioners’ meeting. Those who are chosen to rent a slip will be notified that afternoon.Non-commercial motorized boat slips are $600 per season. Commercial boat slips are $1,200 per season. Slips are available for the entire season, mid-May to October 15, weather dependent.Those wishing to participate in either of the boat slip lotteries may contact the Hinsdale County Administration office at 970-944-2225 or [email protected] for an application.Only one application will be accepted per person/per boat, and only one boat slip per business.Those chosen for a slip must pay the corresponding fees within 30 days of the lottery or the reservation will be forfeited.If the County receives less applications than slips available in either lottery, the remaining spots may be filled with either commercial or non-commercial applicants at the County’s discretion. Thank you,Davee MenziesAdministrative AssistantHinsdale County

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Community Saddened by Two Local Deaths

Lake City residents were saddened early this week following announcement of the deaths of two well-known local residents, one of whom, 67-year-old Debra Ramundo, was a multi-year cancer survivor who was transferred from her Gunnison Avenue residence to Gunnison Valley Hospital, Gunnison, where she died at 3:08 p.m. Saturday, December 7.    Also, a shock to Lake City friends and community at large was the unexpected death of Hinsdale County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Mark Zeckser, 66, who was found dead at his South Bluff Street residence early Sunday afternoon, December 8.    Zeckser, who owned Lake City Brewery, spent the Thanksgiving holiday with family in Oklahoma City and on his return last week told friends he felt unwell.    He had not been seen since Wednesday, December 4, and last Sunday, December 8, Hinsdale County Sheriff Ron Bruce, Undersheriff Denham Starnes, and Deputy Sarah Poet conducted a welfare check at which time he was discovered deceased in his home.    The three officers met outside Zeckser’s Bluff Street home at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, and, following no response, proceeded to enter the residence after Undersheriff Starnes used a sledge hammer to break through an interior deadbolt on the front door.    The body, apparently lifeless for some time, was discovered after entering the home.    Zeckser was certified deceased by Hinsdale County Coroner Lori Lawrence, accompanied by her deputies, Mandy Caldon and Rick Hernandez, at 1:17 p.m. Sunday.     On Monday his body was transferred to Grand Junction where Forensic Pathologist Dr. Havlik conducted an autopsy Monday afternoon at Community Hospital; results now await toxicology and microscopic analysis.    Debra Ramundo was one of a large family — three brothers and one of four daughters — who were natives of Albany, New York. One of Debra’s sisters was Lake City resident Linny Ramundo, now deceased, and during a Lake City residence stretching back nearly a decade, Deb occasionally performed with Linny and other Lake City cloggers on the Lake City dance stage.    She was a heroic, multi-year cancer survivor who was tenderly cared for by her partner, Denis Cox.    Further obituary details will be published at a later date.    Another well-known Lake Citian who has died in recent days is Mark Beatty Zeckser who transitioned from a seasonal, part-time deputy with Hinsdale County Sheriff’s Office — including enjoyable work as the department’s Back Country Ranger navigating the Silver Thread Scenic Byway and other back country routes — starting in 2021. He gradually increased his work hours with the local sheriff’s dept., spending nine months as deputy in 2023 and transitioning to full-time in 2024.    He graduated from law enforcement classes at Delta-Montrose VocTech Academy in 2019 and, at age 62, had the distinction of being the academy’s eldest enrollee in over three decades.    Prior to Lake City, Zeckser attained the rank of Major after working 33 years as a professional fire fighter with a metro Oklahoma City fire fighting division based out of Midwest City, Oklahoma.    Zeckser, who remained a Hinsdale County Sheriff’s Office Deputy with limited duties at the time of his death, had considerable property interests within Lake City, in September this year acquiring Lake City Brewing Co. on portions of the southeast corner lots at 2nd and Bluff Streets from the Hill family.    By federal law, operation of the brewery business conflicted with his work as sheriff’s deputy, and he had plans to resign as sheriff’s deputy, although, as stated, he was still employed as deputy at the time of his unexpected death.    In a conversation with SILVER WORLD in October, Zeckser reiterated his love for law enforcement work, stating “I don’t want to leave at all.”    Zeckser owned two residences in Lake City, one at 508 Gunnison Avenue which he acquired from Tim and Ann Mallory in December 2019, and the other the frame home immediately adjoining the Brewery to the south on Bluff Street which he also bought from the Hill Family, doing business as Elephant Corral Properties, effective October 9 this year.    He had just finished moving from the Gunnison Avenue home to the new Bluff Street house which he was in process of remodeling. He had arranged to rent the Gunnison Avenue home to Mike and Tracy (Nichols) Coffin whose across-the-street house is in process of major renovation by Ken Bodine and workforce.    At Lake City Brewing Co., Zeckser had plans for significant changes, not the least of which was display of portions of his extensive collection of historic automobile-related paraphernalia, including vintage gas pumps, as well as doubling seating capacity by enclosing the side outdoor deck patio area. His eventual goal, he told newspaper, was to transform the brewery into an events center hosting weddings, receptions, and other community events.    In addition to his law enforcement and plans for the brewery, Zeckser assisted Jesse Kendall as a guide on Hinsdale Museum’s summer walking ghost tours, and he was a summer regular at Lake City Old West Shooters where he provided gun safety training for children.     Further obituary details on Mark Zeckser will be printed later. Carol Colopy … past Lake City resort and ranch manager, 80, worked side-by-side with husband, Charlie Colopy.    Old-time Lake City residents will be grieved with news of the death of former longtime resident Carol Delashmutt Colopy who has died at her rural Montrose, Colorado, home — age 80 — after several years’ ill health.    She and her husband, multi-generation Lake City native Charles N. Colopy, will be recalled as managers at a succession of Lake City properties starting with G & M Cabins in downtown Lake City in the 1970s and continuing through 2012 at first Valley View Ranch and later for over 20 years at Lake Fork Hunting & Fishing Club.    Near blind and in weakened physical condition after a succession of illnesses extending over a decade, and tenderly cared for by her husband, Carol died at 5:30 a.m.

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Town Staff Hard at Work Finalizing Sewer Rate Schedule, 2025 Town Budget

 During the December 4 Town of Lake City Board of Trustees meeting, Trustees and Mayor Dave Roberts reviewed and discussed the nearly finalized recommendations of Lake City’s sewer rate structure from the Rural Community Advocacy Corporation (RCAC), a non-profit organization that partners with underserved rural communities of less than 50,000 to assist with environmental infrastructure projects.   For some time now, town staff has been considering increasing sewer rates and adopting a new sewer rate structure for a variety of reasons, due mainly, according to Town Manager Lex Mulhall, to the increased debt service incurred from the $3- million loan needed to renovate the Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP), which will require a payment of $187,402 per year for 20 years. In addition, operating costs have been steadily on the rise, with infrastructure that desperately needs to be updated, requiring capital reserves are adequately funded. The new rate structure proposed by RCAC is intended to justifiably and equitably distribute the cost of the new WWTP based on the strength of waste produced by users and its impact on the operation of the WWTP.    The rate schedule trustees were presented with at the December 4 meeting had preliminary numbers, explained Mulhall, with updated information to be presented at the special budget meeting December 11, and finalized numbers to be reviewed and hopefully ready to be approved at the next regular meeting December 18.   The schedule, which will be published once finalized and can be viewed at Town office, breaks down sewer categories beginning with single family residential (SFR), through different categories of commercial and industrial accounts, delineating the 2024 rates, the RCAC recommended rates, projected 2025 sewer revenues and excess usage fees per 1000 gallons.   The rate schedule also indicates different strengths of waste, which is a measure of the concentration of contaminants in wastewater. The most common way to measure wastewater strength is through biological oxygen demand (BOD), Total Suspended Solids (TSS), Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN – the sum of ammonia and organic nitrogen), and the presence and quantity of Ammonia (NH3). Wastewater with higher BOD, TSS, NH3, and TKN levels requires more treatment. TKN is the limiting factor for the WWTP and according to RCAC, it costs the Town $32 to treat 1lb of TKN in the summer months when RV parks are operating……   There’s more to the story….. Want the rest of the story? Subscribe to the Lake City Silver World today!

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