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

Day: March 27, 2026

Dear SILVER WORLD and Hinsdale County family,

I have been overwhelmed with support and love from this community since news of my termination from Hinsdale EMS became public. I have heard from so many past patients and supportive community members. Your kindness has carried me through a difficult time. While I understand that the county leadership will be working towards some changes with the agency, I do not currently have a position with medical response in Hinsdale County. However, I will continue to remain on the Hinsdale County Search & Rescue Team.I have been offered and have accepted a full-time position with Ouray County EMS. I will be commuting to work 48-hour shifts with them in this way. I will be able to keep my medical skills and knowledge fresh and grow as a leader in a different but similar response system. I will continue to advocate for a healthy future for Hinsdale County EMS, as well as be a bridge to our neighboring county.The path forward is a fantastic professional opportunity for me and will prepare me even more to serve Hinsdale County in the future, should the door be opened.Hinsdale County is a spectacularly beautiful place to live and work, but people truly make it a community. Be good to each other. Amanda HartmanLake City

Read More »

Endowment, Friends of EMTs Merge

Lake City Medical Center (LCMC) Endowment Fund and Friends of Lake City EMTs have announced the merging of Friends into the Endowment. Turnover of assets is underway and the orderly closing of the Friends operation will be completed over the next few months.Friends’ Board of Directors, Keith Chambers, Leslie Nichols, and Rachel Moore, have determined that the Endowment has a highly complementary Mission, a grant program that balances near-term support with long-term growth, a strong and established volunteer board, and a consistent vehicle to channel future support for the benefit of EMS volunteers and operations.Friends Board member Keith Chambers says, “I believe this merger will achieve the utmost in assisting the EMTs of 2026 along with providing help to the EMTs of 2036 and beyond.”Friends was formed in 1995 by Jerry Gray and Jack Nichols. The mission was to raise funds to provide an incentive program for the recruitment and retention of volunteer emergency medical providers and ambulance drivers serving Hinsdale County EMS.Contributions by Jerry Gray, Keith Chambers, Sandy Hines, Michelle Murphy, Buffy Witt, Becky Campbell, Rachel Moore, John Bonner, Dave Jordan, Marcia Connell Carl, Lori Lawrence, Guy Corder, Rick Hernandez, Liana Whitlock, Jodi Linsey, Ray Blaum, Leslie Nichols, Jack Nichols, and countless other EMTs and ambulance drivers sustained Friends through 4th of July turkey leg booths, t-shirt sales, Adopt-an-EMT campaigns, and more. San Juan Solstice 50 ultrarun, started in 1995 as the Lake City 50, was picked up by Jerry Gray and Friends in 2002 and quickly became the major fundraising event for Friends. The bulk of the current Friends fund is the result of this exceptional event and untold hours of volunteer time in support of Lake City EMTs.Friends Board member Leslie Nichols states, “It has been a great run for this scrappy non-profit! The spirit of Friends will carry on with the merger with LCMC Endowment Fund, and the generous donations and countless hours of volunteer fundraising of the last three decades will continue to meet the Friends mission for decades more to come.”Friends has provided support by sending EMTs to conferences for continuing education, helping stage EMT and Wilderness First Responder (WFR) classes in Lake City, providing personal protective equipment and branded gear, and providing consistent and essential team dinners for run reviews, camaraderie, and recognition.The Endowment was formed in 1996 for the support of the Lake City Area Medical Center. In 2018, the scope was expanded to include Hinsdale County EMS and the Silver Thread Public Health District.The Endowment provides financial support to the delivery of quality healthcare in Lake City. Merging Friends assets with the Endowment will leverage a larger asset and supporter base for the benefit of both organizations. Since 2018, the Endowment has granted $67,918 to EMS or about 22 percent of their total grants of $302,450. Grant requests are submitted by the supported organizations and approved by the nine-person volunteer Endowment Board.Strong support for EMS is expected to continue due to the stated Mission and connections to EMS on the Endowment Board. The Endowment’s Board of Directors includes the EMS Director Katherine Heidt, former EMS Director Jerry Gray, former EMT Marcia Carl, and EMT Sarah Moody. Bylaws guarantee a seat on the Board for the EMS Director.Bernie Krystyniak, Endowment Board President says that “the Endowment will continue to be enthusiastic fundraisers on behalf of EMS along with the medical center and public health. We look forward to including Friends of Lake City EMTs donors into our family of Lake City healthcare organization supporters.”Friends of Lake City EMTs entity will be formally dissolved as it winds down operations over the next few months. Future donations benefiting EMTs and EMS programs can be directed to the Endowment, the Lake Fork Community Foundation collection process, or directly to EMS.Donations to the Endowment can be made online at www.LCMCEndowmentFund.org, by check to PO Box 822, Lake City, or by designating an Endowment donation in the Lake Fork Community Foundation process. Gifts of property can be arranged by contacting the Endowment at [email protected]. Legacy donations are also an option. Some companies have matching gift programs that can be leveraged to increase donation value.Donations directly to Hinsdale County EMS can be made online at https://hinsdalecountyems.square.site/ or by mail to EMS at PO Box 277, Lake City.The current Endowment Board consists of Marcia Carl, Linda Downs (Secretary), Jerry Gray (Public Health Representative), Katherine Heidt (EMS Representative), Malinda McDonald, Sarah Moody, Greg Olson (Health District Representative), Cindy Rae (Vice President), and Bernie Krystyniak (President and Treasurer).LCMC Endowment Fund, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) established in 1996 with the Mission of supporting quality health care delivery in Lake City through supported organizations Lake Fork Health Service District, Silver Thread Public Health District, and Hinsdale County EMS. More information can be found on their website at www.LCMCEndowmentFund.org.

Read More »

Dire Outlook Cited by County’s Water Basin Rep

by Bruce Heath I am currently serving as the Hinsdale County Representative on the Gunnison River Basin Round table.Mother Nature and human nature have combined to produce a historic low water availability crisis for the seven states in the Colorado River Basin.For the past 25 years, the southwest has been in the longest drought in the past 1,200 years. Moisture in mountain snow pack that then melts into river water is the very life blood of our region.This winter, depending on location, portions of Colorado have produced readings that are nearing — with potential to surpass by April 1 — the two lowest years since recording began 75 years ago.This winter’s low snow has created an immediate water emergency.Since 1922, users in the Colorado River system have followed laws about how water is apportioned to seven states in the upper and lower basins.Annually, flows in the river vary considerably due to the wide variance in winter snow totals. In the face of these variances, a vast array of reservoirs were built to provide a reliable water source for the lower basin states. The two largest reservoirs are Lake Powell and Lake Mead with Powell having become the “key” to making the agreement work.Although the 1922 agreement was based on deeply flawed data and future water availability assumptions, the “laws of the river” for water distribution proved adequate until 2006.The mega drought began in 2000. Having no way to know the magnitude of the ensuing drought, the lower basin states kept taking their legal water right from Powell. All involved believed future “wet” snow years would restore the capacity.In 2007, the seven states — having seen Lake Powell go from nearly full in 2000 to 50 percent of capacity in 2006 — agreed to a set of restricted release and usage guidelines to be followed in critically dry years. With several modifications, these have been in place for 18 years.Originally, it was thought that the two sets of tiered dam outlets allowed for up to 90 percent of the reservoir capacity to be released downstream. However, in 2023, a design flaw in the Glen Canyon Dam became known, making it a critical impediment to downstream users having access to the reservoirs’ stored water.If the water elevation drops below the upper inlets, the four lowest river outlets near the bottom of the dam have proven to not be functional. The Director of the Bureau’s Technical Service Center who has advised against using the outlet works as the sole means for releasing water from the dam. A previous high-capacity use of them for only 72 hours in 2023 caused structural damage, which required nine months to repair.Despite the remedial effort, the Bureau concluded the repairs will not prevent future damage. So for now, close to 4-million acre feet of water is “trapped” in Powell.The elevation of the reservoir has to remain above the upper inlets built into the dam that allow water to pass through to the turbines that generate electricity and then be sent down stream to lower basin users. In the years when the previous low snow readings were set, Powell was near 100 percent capacity and water levels were well above the upper inlets.This allowed water to be released downstream to meet the legal right of the lower basin. Today, Powell is currently at 24 percent of capacity and approaching that critical water level where Glen Canyon dam would experience operational failure because water level would be below the upper inlets.Knowingly facing an October 1, 2026 expiration of the operating guidelines, the seven states have met multiple times over the past two years to negotiate new release operating rules for critical dry years. All the sessions failed to reach agreement.Having missed the final deadline of February 14, 2026, the Bureau of Reclamation [BRC] has announced they will suggest the new operating rules, dictating who gets what amount of water during severe drought years.So far the alternatives suggested by the BRC have been soundly rejected by all seven states.With much of Colorado experiencing record high temperatures, the meager snow pack is melting early. This spring, river runoff flows into Powell are expected to be 25 percent of the past 30 year average. That would be nearing the lowest low flow that has occurred in the last 60 years.The situation has become so dire that a near term stopgap decision is being forced to avoid Glen Canyon dam operational failure. This operational failure, in turn, would prevent water flowing into the lower basin states via Lake Mead.Until system-wide hydrology conditions have shown meaningful improvement, several decisions must be made.There are 34 tracked reservoirs upstream from Powell. As a system, they are capable, based on current capacity, of contributing at least one emergency water release to Powell this year.This on its own will not be enough to keep the water level high enough to maintain the dam’s functionality. Releases out of Powell will also need to be curtailed to keep water elevation above the upper inlets. Then, voluntary lower basin cuts in their water use will likely also be required by at least one million acre feet.Depending on the actual amount of spring runoff, the upper basin may also have to cut consumption to insure inflows to Powell contribute to maintaining the needed elevation at the dam.The impending life style changes and negative economic implications from less water available to use by all involved parties are enormous.What users are involved: Seven states. 5.5-million acres of agriculture land that produces $5-billion in revenue and 90 percent of the green leaf vegetables we consume in the winter use Colorado river irrigation water.Forty-million people use river water in some way daily. Five-million people depend on dam hydro electricity, 30 Native American tribes and Mexico are river water users.Both Phoenix and Denver get 40 percent of their water from the Colorado River. The river supplies water to almost all the cities in the greater Los Angeles, San Bernadino and San Diego areas.Agricultural junior water rights in

Read More »
Verified by MonsterInsights