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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1993-05-25 Support Documentation Town Council Work Session VAIL TOWN COUNCIL WORK SESSION TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1993 2:00 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS AGENDA 1. Local Licensing Authority Candidate Interviews. 2. PEC Report. 3. DRB Report. 4. Review of Support for a Recreation Center in the Town of Avon. 5. Information Update. 6. Council Reports. 7. Other. 8. Executive Session: Legal Matters and Personnel Matters. 9. Adjournment. THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL OVERVIEW WORK SESSION WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/1/93, BEGINNING AT 6:30 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL EVENING MEETING WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/1/93, BEGINNING AT 7:30 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. ~ THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL WORK SESSION WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/8/93, BEGINNING AT 2:00 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. C:\P,GENDA.WS VAIL TOWN COUNCIL WORK SESSION TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1993 2:00 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS EXPANDED AGENDA 2:00 P.M. 1. Local Licensing Authority Candidate Interviews. Holly L. McCutcheon Action Reauested of Council: Interview candidate Davey Wilson. Linda Fried and Bill Bishop also wish to be considered as candidates, but will be unable to be present for this interview as they will be out of town. Backaround Rationale: All three (3) of these candidates have been serving on the Local Licensing Authority and are applying for reappointment. Their resumes and/or letters of application are enclosed. No other applications have been received. There are three (3) positions open on the Local Licensing Authority. The terms would begin 6/1/93 and expire 5/31/95. Appointments are scheduled to be made at the 6/1/93 Evening Meeting. 2:30 P.M. 2. PEC Report. Mike Mollica 2:40 P.M. 3. DRB Report. Shelly Mello 2:45 P.M. 4. Review of support for a recreation center in the Town of Avon. Bill James Backaround Rationale: At the 4/27/93 Work Session, Bill James discussed an overview in support of a recreation center in TOA, left with Council copies of the report "An Avon Recreation Center!", prepared by Browne, Bortz & Coddington, Inc., and requested Council give TOA a response within thirty (30) days. 2:55 P.M. 5. Information Update. 6. Council Reports. 7. Other. 8. Executive Session: Legal Matters and Personnel Matters. 9. Adjournment. THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL OVERVIEW WORK SESSION WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/1/93, BEGINNING AT 6:30 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL EVENING MEETING WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/1/93, BEGINNING AT 7:30 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. THE NEXT VAIL TOWN COUNCIL WORK SESSION WILL BE ON TUESDAY, 6/8/93, BEGINNING AT 2:00 P.M. IN TOV COUNCIL CHAMBERS. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~k C:WGENDA.WSE MEMORANDUM TO: Town Council FROM: Holly McCutcheon, Town Clerk DATE: May 20, 1993 RE: Appointments to the Local Licensing Authority s=asansasssssssm=sassssssssssssao==sa=sasssassaszss=sasses:assess Terms for Bill Bishop, Linda Fried and Davey Wilson on the Local Licensing Authority expire June 1, 1993, and they are all re- applying. Bill's first appointment was in March of 1988, and this will be the last consecutive term he will be able to serve on the Local Licensing Authority. Bill's attendance records for each of his three appointments are as follows: Present Absent 03/88 - 03/90 30 3 03/90 - 03/92 19 7 03/92 - 06/93 16 2 Davey was initially appointed in January of 1991, and his attendance records for each of his two terms are as follows: Present Absent 01/91 - 06/92 16 3 12/92 - 06/93 7 2 Linda was originally appointed in 11/91, and her attendance record for her current term is as follows: Present Absent 11/91 - 06/93 18 5 ~,L~ F, BISHOP -r ~ ~ . : ~ ~ _ s ~ ~ ~ 2 t~i~t 3 I, • . _ ~ 14~ Ua~ ( (nom ~o~~~ li' 5 i_ t i r 6 ~ ~ / _ ~ - - / _ - ; ; ~r jj ~r``~2 ~ do ~ 2vi~ Cb l LT ~-LL 1Sibc~S , ~ ~ , 1 ` ~ V ~ - I . ~ ~ ~ . ~ ~ ~ 1~ ~ - - ~e¢ict~ .5 Iq-93 9 ~ 93 v - - - - - ti'"C ti , r _ d ~ y - - - - Li'2 P~~'l~. - - - - - ~i vv~-~-~~-c.~~.- a~.,,~~ ,cam.-~-t ~.~li~-~ d' ~ _ O 1 J _ ~ 0 U ~ _ - - - / ~ ~ ~ - r . PLANNING AND ENVIRONMENTAL COMMISS{ON May 24, 1993 AGENDA Protect Orientation/Lunch 11:00 a.m. PEC discussion session: Zoning Code and Land Use Plan. Confirm PEC Workshop in Glenwood Springs at May 25, 1993 at 9:30 a.m. at the Garfield County Courthouse. Confirm PEC Workshop for June 10, 1993, 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. at the Library Community Room. Reminder of Affordable Housing Meeting at the Town of Avon Municipal Building on May 27, 1993 at 7:00 p.m. Slte Visits 12:15 p.m. 1139 Sandstone/Reinforced Earth Co. Simba Run Intermountain, Stephen's Park for Public Service Discussion Lionshead/Gichegume Gulch Pazzo's, Village Center Building A & D Building, 286 Bridge Street Drivers: Shelly, Mike and Jim Public Hearing 2:00 p.m. 1. A request for setback and site coverage variances to allow for the construction of an addition and a garage located at 2409 Chamonix Road/Lot 19, Block A, Vail das Schone Filing No. 1. Applicant: Anneliese Taylor Planner: Shelly Mello 2. A request for a conditional use permit to allow for an outdoor dining deck located at 122 E. Meadow Drive, Village Center Commercial Building/A part of Lot K, Block 5E, Vail Village First Filing. Applicant: Fred Hibberd Planner: Shelly Mello 3. A request for a conditional use to allow tee-pees to be used in conjunction with Vail Associates summer programs to be located adjacent to the Base of Chair 8, Tracts B and D, Lionshead 1st Filing. Applicant: Vail Associates Planner: Jim Curnutte 1 i 4. A request for a conditional use permit to allow for the elimination of a dwelling unit in order for the Vail Associates Real Estate office to expand in the A & D Building, located at 286 Bridge StreeULots A - D, Block 5A, Vail Village First Filing. Applicant: Vail Associates Planner: Mike Mollica 5. A request for a major amendment to SDD #5 to allow for the development of the remaining portion of the Simba Run SDD, Savoy Villas, located at 1100 North Frontage Road, more specifically described as follows: That part of the First Supplemental Map for Simba Run Condominium, according to the map thereof recorded in the office of the Eagle County, Colorado, Clerk and Recorder, described as follows: Beginning at the most southwesterly corner of said map, thence the following three courses along the westerly lines of said map; 1) NO3°33'01"E 160.79 feet; 2) N12°50'33"E 144.72 feet; 3) N17°56'03" 70.60 feet; thence, departing said westerly line, S13°16'03"W 157.26 feet, thence S76°43'57"E 91.50 feet; thence N13°16'03"E 35.00 feet; thence S76°43'57"E 72.31 feet to the easterly line of said map; thence the following two courses along the easterly and southeasterly lines of said map; 1) S24°44'57"E 52.38 feet; 2) S52°50'29"W 272.50 feet to the Point of Beginning, containing 0.6134 acres, more or less; and That part of Simba Run, according to the map thereof, recorded in Book 312 at Page 763 in the Office of the Eagle County, Colorado, Clerk and Recorder, described as follows: Beginning at the most southerly corner of said Simba Run, thence the following four courses along the southwesterly and northwesterly lines of said Simba Run; 1) N37°09'31 "W 233.28 feet; 2) 334.57 feet along the arc of a curve to the left, having a radius of 1771.95 feet, a central angle of 10°49'06", and a chord that bears N42°13'20"E 334.07 feet; 3) N36°48'48" E 201.36 feet; 4) 15.96 feet along the arc of a curve to the right, having a radius of 428.02 feet, a central angle of 02°08'12", and a chord that bears N37°52'54" E 15.96 feet to a corner on the westerly boundary of the First Supplemental Map for Simba Run Condominium, according to the map thereof recorded in the office of the Eagle County, Colorado, Clerk and Recorder; thence the following four courses along said westerly boundary; 1) S21 °51'28"W 69.90 feet; 2) S17°56'03"W 181.17 feet; 3) S12°50'33"W 144.72 feet; 4) S03°33'01"W 160.79 feet to the southeasterly line of said Simba Run; thence, along said southeasterly line, S52°50'29"W 113.08 feet to the Point of Beginning, containing 1.560 acres, more or less. Applicant: Simba Land Corporation/Walid Said Planner: Mike Mollica 6. A request for a minor subdivision to vacate the lot line between Lots A-1 and A-2 and a request for variances from the subdivision road standards and wall height standards for Lots A-1 and A-2, Block A, Lions Ridge Subdivision Filing No. 1/1139 and 1109 Sandstone Drive. Applicant: Michael Lauterbach/The Reinforced Earth Co. Planner: Shelly Mello 7. A request for a conditional use permit to allow the construction of a 12-inch diameter high-pressure natural gas pipeline generally located between Dowd Junction and the Vail Associates Shops. 2 tr L Applicant: Public Service Company of Colorado Planner: Russ Forrest 8. A request to amend Section 18.04.170 of the Zoning Code to clarify the definition of the height of structures. Applicant: Town of Vail Planner: Shelly Mello 9. A request to amend Section 18.58.020 of the Zoning Code to clarify the height allowed for retaining walls in setbacks. Applicant: Town of Vail Planner: Tim Devlin 10. A request for a work session on proposed text amendments to Chapter 18.38, Greenbelt and Natural Open Space District, and Chapter 18.32 Agricultural and Open Space District, of the Vail Municipal Code. Applicant: Town of Vail Planners: Jim Curnutte and Russ Forrest 11. Update on Sweet Basil's deck construction located at 193 Gore Creek Drive/part of Block 5B, Vail Village 1st Filing. Applicant: Ned Gwathmey Planner: Shelly Mello 12. A request for a modification to PEC conditions of approval for the revised development plan for Vail Point/1881 Lionsridge Loop/Lot 1, Block 3, Lionsridge Filing No. 3. Applicant: Steve Gensler Planner: Andy Knudtsen TABLED UNTIL JUNE 14, 1993 13. A request for a proposed SDD and minor subdivision to allow for the development of single family homes located on Tracts A and B, The Valley, Phase 11/1480 Buffer Creek Rd. Applicant: Steve Gensler/Parkwood Realty Planner: Andy Knudtsen TABLED UNTIL JUNE 14, 1993 14. A request for a wall height variance for a property located at 3130 Booth Falls Court/Lot 6, Block 2, Vail Village 12th Filing Applicant: Johann Mueller Planner: Shelly Mello TABLED UNTIL JULY 12, 1993 3 15. A request for a conditional use permit, a paving variance to allow for a gravel access road and the cemetery master plan and management plan for the proposed design of the Vail Cemetery to be located in the upper bench of Donovan Park generally located west of the Glen Lyon subdivision and southeast of the Matterhorn neighborhood. Applicant: Town of Vail Planner: Andy Knudtsen TABLED INDEFINITELY 16. A request for a front setback variance, a wall height variance and a site coverage variance to allow the construction of a garage located at Lot 26, Block 7, Vail Village 1st Filing/165 Forest Road. Applicant: Paul Raether Planner: Jim Curnutte TABLED INDEFINITELY 17. A request for a work session for the establishment of a Special Development District, a CCI exterior alteration, a minor subdivision, a zone change, and an amendment to View Corridor No. 1 for the Golden Peak House, 278 Hanson Ranch Road/Lots A, B, C, Block 2, Vail Village 1st Filing. Applicant: Golden Peak House Condominium Assoc.Nail Associates, Inc./Partners, Ltd./Margaritaville, Inc. Planner: Mike Mollica~T'im Devlin TABLED INDEFINITELY 18. A request for a setback variance to allow an addition to Unit 3-A, Vail Trails Chalet/a portion of Block 4, Vail Village First Filing/433 Gore Creek Drive. Applicant: W. Patrick Grahm Planner: Jim Curnutte WITHDRAWN 19. An appeal of a staff decision regarding GRFA for a covered entryway to be constructed as part of a residence located at Lot 1, Distelhorst Subdivision/4582 Streamside Circle East. Appellant: Kyle Webb Planner: Jim Curnutte WITHDRAWN 20. A request for an amendment to Chapter 18.54, Design Review, to modify the review procedures for the Design Review Board. Applicant: Town of Vail Planner: Jim Curnutte WITHDRAWN 21. Approve minutes from May 10, 1993 PEC meeting. 22. Discussion of agenda format: listing times. 4 I t 23. Council update: •View Corridor project •Neon Ordinance •Lighting Ordinance •Newspaper Boxes •Open Lands Project 5 PAGE 2 MAY-20-93 14:03 FROM= ROBERT I. MACDOI~iMELL ID: 4157650224 x~ ; ~J Robert t. Macl7~nnell May 20, 1993 Ms. Kristarr Fritz Town of Vail Planning Department 7S South Frontage Road West Vail, CO $1657 Dear 1VIs. Fritz: I havo been notified that there is a proposat before the Town of Vail which would allow a change in the l~pen-Space Designation on ttte land. near my house at 394 Beaver Dam Road, thereby opening the possibility of commercial use. When I bought my house, I expected the land to be used as it is today. Please do not threaten that wonderful setting with business uses that will disturb all of the householders there and reduce the value of our property. Y respectfully urge you to reject the proposed open-space amendment. Sincerely, Robert I. MacDonnell RIMlmpl 101 Cd4fomia Street, Suite 4550, $rn FrantlsCO, Califomla 941'17 MAY-20-H3 14.02 FROM. ROBERT I. MACDONbtELL ID• 4167660224 PAGfi 1 I£G~r~t~,$ERG KRAVIS RUB~tTS & CO. l01 California Street, Suite 4550 San Francigca~ Califortia 94111 NB1~V YoAK 4 SAN FRANCCSCQ TEI.ECOPV i^t1yElt anr.~r cor~~„~~rtTr~a~ x~,~~ The informative in >ble tiicaimile meeeega is legally privileged end coat9dandal tafotmadon, intended only for tho use of the Individual ar eatity Asiped below, if the reader of this manage is not ~e Intended recipient. you are hereby nodfled that any dlsaemination, disfsihutloa or copy of this Ielocvpy la strictly prohibited. 1f you have received this telecapy iat error, please itrtmadiately tlotiYy ue by taWphvae and tt7htrn the original meeeage to w • at the above address via the Pgatal aervise. Please deliver the fallowing material as sawn as possible: - ~A~: ~I~UI~~ TO: Uq ~ I ~O(~i'~ C,G' ~ YI L4 ~ cOMPANY: f~ m FRUM: r ~ Y~' .L • NICIC~ UU hY(e I I NUMarx OF PAGF~: tinCludiag the Ct1vCt page} Nvr~.S: PI.BASE Nui 1r { MAAY I.IiNAN$ A"f 415~4~3.6350IMi1sEDrATELY IF NOT RECEIVED PRaPEALY. T4ta>~it Yat~, 05-21-1993 05~47PM FROM GLRZOV TO 13034792157 P.01 x c ~ Tc KP ~aPy a L ~A~ '~Fl~i ~ t i ` t1 ~GL: 6'N^. i..Ci1:1C:i wC.:;:1 era^i.2^ya ~'wrt~ _~E !lCSL T:~L' :St:. lv:Jl'. vv .ii i ~~t._?.Sc -ii= ~::2.~~~~ 7.bh:.i n d:,::.'2 Ga~~ ..^~^ci,:. a= ~.Oi.:i~6cZw. ~;a ' a. , =vc':'?i rr~!!le -:Jt` w.5iti': is 8 lv@ 2.i1L' ni'= ~YI~:~3 G!~~~ t3}. C~ . :vv Y4~ C?o. ~ Y ircd^: '~^u ±:"~5~ viii _ Y,t~_:'•!:]lt Y:i~! .:C'i~7~ - •u _u~ ^1.e: f!:{S:JY:idli! !oQ i:l$ ~~:.L Lr6RE~ °~~:f 2..~, ter: i ~ n a. 5: c~C_~ _.Olfi: 3~kir;~a {_st~ Z~^_. midi ~i;ar'.e Al -ulTlBs' ii'Sfi ~flo:^BWbtQS _la~ SZ•NC^~ .fi .i. JC•__ SM i~ _a.ic5 rc.. :uc !CL Lam. 5v; ~t~ i' "t .ic2?i~eP~ L11Q ~di~ ;rii: :_~.1!~J~_! Pidi'.a c~ ;;r^c,gi'°G ::~iuFc~ C%''J?!"AC~Tt2"`. we i~r%i'. a~ -___'e. iiG'i1:A JUh. ~~~r• li~.'~.t.~itili~lYi __r_.C:'C..~~:1. ..C.T~: J . v:wv~ WS•~4:C,... TOTAL P. 01 05i21r93 17:08 FIELD CONTAINER COP. 001 ~(c : T~ /r'/° PIEId COIyTAINEa COMPANY, L.P. ~~oy ~ JJ Larry Field L G Chief Executive Clffic:erPA~ May 21, 1993 V~i.l Town Council 75 s . l~ rontage Raad PTest Vail Co X1657 Gentlemsns Y am caritatsting you becaur~e I vehemently appose th+r proposed change in zoning which would turn the area along Gore Creels near my residence from Agricultural and Open Space zone district to a Recr+~ation and Oda®n Space zany dia~trivt. Z know that this change would allow "active and passive" rearr~~,tional ul~es i» this axea. The passage of this ch~rige would open the deor far activities an the land :3uch as softball fi~:lds, to»nis ct~urts, and sledding areas. dbviausly, all of these activities could be "floodlighted" for evening use. As a taxp~iyer a»d ao»cer»ec1 homeowner, x aa»not emphasize enough my oppasi~Gion to this prop~+sad change. I would life my voice hoard at the Vail >?~.ann~.ng and Environmental Cammis~sian meeting an May 24th. Very truly yours, i C Larry Field ~sb W. Forest lts~ad Vail, Colorado 1500 Nicholas [loulevard Telephone 70R.95G.32zG Hlk Orove Village, I({inois 60007 facgi~rite 708.9SG.32A9 BENSON MINERAL ID:3038631932 MAY 24'93 15 43 No.032 P.01 BBNSON MINERAL GROUP, INC. ~ ~ ~ ~ ° ' ~Cc ; TG COp May 24, 1993 Vail Mown Council 75 South Frontage Road West Vail, Colorado 81657 Gentlemen: I own a home on Deaver Dam Circle and I strongly oppose thQ proposal to change the zoning from an Agricultural and Open Space zone district to a Recreation and Open Space zone district. We should keep the area as it was Originally intended. Sincer' ly, Bruce D. Benson President i56p Brpadway * Sufta 1900 + Denver, Cotorado ~a~.~-r~~ • (303) 863-3504 • FAX (303) 863-1932 I 11 DESIGN REVIEW BOARD AGENDA May 19, 1993 3:00 P.M. PROJECT ORIENTATION 12:00 P.M. - 1:00 P.M. SITE VISITS 1:00 P.M. - 3:00 P.M. 1. Curtis - 1483 Aspen Grove Lane. 2. The Valley Condos - 1516 Buffer Creek Road. 3. Community First Bank - 2111 N Frontage Road West. 4. Dietz -Generally located to the north of Meadow Creek Condos along Gore Creek. 5. Fauland - 1711A Geneva Drive. 6. Subway - Lionshead Auxiliary Building. 7. 1st Bank of Vail - 17 Vail Road. 8. Bolden III - 4145 Spruce Way. 9.. Mueller - 4816 Juniper Lane. Drivers: Tim and Andy AGENDA 3:00 P.M. 1. Police addition -Final. A request for an addition MM to the Municipal Building to house the Vail Police Department. 75 South Frontage Road West/East end of existing Municipal Building. Applicant: Town of Vail MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 2. Mueller -New duplex. SM 4816 Juniper Lane/Lot 1, Block 5, Bighorn 5th. Applicant: Johann Mueller MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Brainerd VOTE: 5-0 Tabled to June 2, 1993. 3. Kayser -Addition SM 1760 Alpine Drive/Lot 4, Vail Village West No. 1. Applicant: Robert and Mike Kayser MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Staff approved with conditions. 5 4. Community First Bank -New signs. SM 2111 N Frontage Road West/Unplatted, Vail Das Schone Filing 3. Applicant:. Community First Bank MOTION: Brainerd SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Consent approved with condition. 5. Indian Creek - (Conceptual) 3 new single family residences. SM Lot A-1 and A-2, Lionsridge Subdivision/1109 and 1139 Sandstone Drive. Applicant: Mike Lauterbach MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Conceptual review. 6. Brown - 16 new townhomes. AK 1330 Sandstone Drive/Lot G4, Lionsridge Subdivision Filing No. 2. Applicant: Stu Brown MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Tabled to June 2, 1993. . 7. Sweet Life -Outdoor public seating. AK 304 Hanson Ranch Road/Lot H, Block 5A, Vail Village 1st Filing. Applicant: Mike Gray MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Tabled to June 2, 1993. 8. Bolden III -New duplex. AK Lot 9, Block 9, Bighorn 3rd Filing/4145 Spruce Way. Applicant: William Bolden MOTION: Borne SECOND: Arnett VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 9. Curtis -New single family residence. AK 1483 Aspen Grove Lane/Lot 1, Ridge at Vail. Applicant: Lee 8 Melodie Curtis MOTION: Borne SECOND: Arnett VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 70. Village on Bighorn -Changes to approved plans for Unit No.S. MM Lot 1, Block 7, Bighorn 3rd/4222 Bighorn Road. Applicant: David Schermerhorn/Bighorn Development Ltd. MOTION: Brainerd SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Consent approved. 2 ~i 11. Trevina LP -New awning and sign. JC 143 E Meadow Drive/Crossroads Shopping Center/Lot P, Block 5D, Vail Village 1st Filing. Applicant: Casey Cooper MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Withdrawn. 12. Lionshead Miniature Golf -lighting and starter shack. JC Tract C & D, Lionshead 1st Filing. Applicant: Charlie Alexander MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Staff approved. 13. Regal -Two new single family residences. JC Lot A3, Block A, Lionsridge Filing 1/1079 Sandstone Drive. Applicant: Walter Regal MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Williams VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 14. Simba Run -Repaint buildings. JC 1100 N Frontage Road. Applicant: Don Hancock MOTION: Brainerd SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Consent approved with conditions. 15. Sonnenalp (Bavaria Haus) -Modifications to landscape islands. AK Part of Lots I&K, Block 5E, Vail Village 1st Filing/20 Vail Road. Applicant: Johannes Faessler MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Brainerd VOTE: 5-0 Approved. 16. Bernhardt -New Primary/Secondary residence. AK Parcel C, Stephens Subdivision/2695 S Frontage Road. Applicant: Chas Bernhardt MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Williams VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 3 } t 17. De Vaney - Reroof. AK ' Lot 2, Block F, Vail das Schone Filing 1/2565 Cortina Lane. Applicant: Mr. De Vaney MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Tabled to June 2, 1993. 18. Fauland -Request to separate garage from primary/secondary AK residence. 1711A Geneva Drive/Lot 5, Matterhorn Village. Applicant: Carl Fauland MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Brainerd VOTE: 5-0 Approved. 19. 1st Bank of Vail -Site modifications. AK 17 Vail Road/Lot 6, Vail Village 2nd Filing. Applicant: Mark Ristow MOTION: Brainerd SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Consent. 20. Allen -Addition. TD 4224 Streamside Circle/Lot 10, Bighorn 4th Filing. Applicant: Stuart Allen MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Staff approved. 21. Subway -Outside seating. TD Lionshead Auxiliary Building. Applicant: Avon Subs/Jim Comerford MOTION: Brainerd SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Consent approved. 22. Dietz - (Conceptual) 6 new single family residences. SM Parcel D, Stephens Subdivision/Generally located to the north of Meadow Creek Condos along Gore Creek. Applicant: Carl Dietz MOTION: SECOND: VOTE: Conceptual review. 4 f 23. Waterford - (Final) Multi-family development. SM Generally located at the corner of Westhaven Drive and the South Frontage Road in Cascade Village. Applicant: MECM Enterprises MOTION: Arnett SECOND: Borne VOTE: 5-0 Approved with conditions. 24. Discussion of Employee Housing Unit allowances. AK/KP Tabled to June 2, 1993. MEMBERS PRESENT MEMBERS ABSENT Mike Arnett Sally Brainerd George Lamb Bob Borne Dalton Williams (PEC) Staff Approvals Howe Remodel -Revise bathroom on interior, change out window. Northwoods/Northwood #A102 Applicant: Mr. Howe Northridge Condominiums -Exterior changes. Lot 24 & 25, Block A, Vail Das Schone 1 / Applicant: Northridge Condo Association Hajim - 250 Gross Residential Floor Area addition. Lot 0, Block 5D, Vail Village 1st/ Applicant: Ed and Barbara Hajim Sandstone Park -New window to match existing. Lot 67, Block B, Lions Ridge Filing 1. Applicant: George Nelson The Valley -Maintenance and Site improvements. The Valley, Phase I. Applicant: The Valley Condo Association Finn Residence -Exterior modification/repaint 2865 Aspen Lane, Lot 2, Block A, Vail Village 11th. Applicant: Mike Krohn 5 t ~f Cascade Crossing -Paint garage doors. 1031 S Frontage Road. Applicant: Paul Pensabene Lockton -Expand on-grade patio. 3994 Bighorn Road, Lot 2, Gore Creek Park. Applicant: Eric Berg The Valley Condos -Repaint window trim, driveway maintenance and retaining wall maintenance. 1516 Buffer Creek Road/Phase I, The Valley. Applicant: The Valley Condominium Assoc. Hilb -Deck and exterior stairs. Lot 2, Block 6, Vail Intermountain/2923 Bellflower, Unit 2. Applicant: David Hilb Brinkman Residence -Retaining wall design (rock face). Lot 4, Block A, Vail Ridge/2346 Cortina Lane. Applicant: Arno Brinkman Frierson Residence -Window changes. Lot 12, Block 3, Vail Village 1 st/1517 Vail Valley Drive, Unit #2. Applicant: T. Carter Frierson 6 A . RECEIVED 1~AY f 7 f9 PAIIL D. COOPER COOPER & KELLEY, C. JOHN R. MANN DANIEL R. McCUNE THOMAS B. KELLEY FRANK R. KENNEDY ATTORNEYS AT LAw REGINA M. RODRIOIIEZ DANIEL R. CHRISTOPHER DOIIOLAS J. COX 1660 WYNICOOP STREET, SIIITE 900 LARRY S. McCLDNO KIM B. CHZLDS DEAN A. MCCONNELL BERNARD B. SAPP DENVER, COLORADO 802.02-1197 PETER M. LIIDWIO KAY J. RICE • LORI M. DORMAN ELIZABETH A. STARRS TELEPHONE 13031 823-2700 CLARK L. McCIITCHEN RICHARD H. CASCAETTE • P'AX (3031 823-0434 ANDREA M. KETCH MARK A. FOGO REBECCA L. GROTTY MICHAEL T. MIHM RENEE COOPER SHEILA P. CARRIGAN LORRAINE E. PARKER CHRISTINE A. MIILLEN STEVEN J. PICARDL CHARLES R. LEDHETTER JOHN E. CLOUGH Oa coIINSEL LISA H. HEINTZ PAIIL E. SCOTT, M. D., J. D. RONALD H. NEMZROW CHARLES P. NORTHROP BARBARA H. GLOGIEWIC2 May 14 , 19 9 3 DAWN E. MZTZNER • ALSO ADMITTED IN WYOMING PRtVILEGE® Mr. Scott Wehrley & ITT Hartford ~ONFt~ENT~~~. P.U. Box 22F315 Denver, Colorado 80222 Lawrence A. Eskwith, Esq. Town of Vail 75 South Frontage Road Vail, Colorado 81657 Re: Insured: Town of Vail Claimant: Title Insurance Co. of Minnesota File No.: 651 KLP 60987 Dear Scott and Larry: . Enclosed for your information and files are copies of a Joint Motion regarding the filing of Disclosure Certificates in this matter. As I discussed_with...Larry,._the.~:-proposed Stipulation will be presented to the ` City Counc il_: on ~ Tuesday;'' -May 2 5 , -y~19 9 3 Because the cash portion of the proposed settlement has been approved by Hartford, if the City Council approves the mechanism for verifying transfer taxes, we will be able to conclude the settlement of this matter. I would appreciate hearing from Larry following the City Council meeting regarding its decision. Ve truly yours, . B nard B Sapp COu~ KELLEY, P.C. BBS/cas Enclosure DISTRICT COURT, EAGLE COUNTY, COLORADO Case No. 92 CV 143 JOINT MOTION FOR SECOND EBTENSION OF TIME TO FILE DISCLOSIIRE CERTIFICATES TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MINNESOTA, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff, v. THE TOWN OF VAIL, COLORADO, a Colorado Home Rule Municipality and T~-iE BOARD CF COUtdTY CGi~iSSIGNERJ CF THF, COU?dTY ^v F' EAGLE, Defendants. Plaintiff, Title Insurance Company of Minnesota, now known as Old Republic National Title Insurance Company, and Defendants, the Town of Vail, Colorado, and the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Eagle, by their undersigned attorneys hereby request this Court to enter an Order extending the time for filing a Disclosure Certificate under C.R.C.P. 16, stating as follows: 1. Pursuant to Rule 16(a), this case was "at issue" on October 19, 1992, ten days following the filing of an Answer to Cross-Claim of Town of Vail by the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Eagle. 2. The case has not been set for trial. Pursuant to Rule 16(a), the parties were to file Disclosure Certificates on or before April 19, 1993. Pursuant to Order of this Court dated April 20, 1993, the parties were given until May, 19, 1993 to file Disclosure Certificates. Ti12 r2asori for the first request for exten~icn was that the parties have been actively discussing settlement of the within case, and believe there is a reasonable probability that settlement can be reached. The parties have continued to try to reach an agreement, and have reached a preliminary agreement, subject to approval by the Town Council of the Town of Vail and Eagle County. 4. The next meeting of the Town Council at which the issue can be raised is scheduled for May 25, 1993. The parties wish to avoid the expense involved in preparing Disclosure Certificates which will be unnecessary if settlement is reached. 5. The parties seek an additional extension of time, to and including June 4, 1993 in which to either submit a stipulation for settlement or their respective Disclosure Certificates. WHEREFORE, the parties jointly request that the Court extend the time for filing of Disclosure Certificates to and including June 4, 1993. DATED this ~I ~~`'Y~ day of May, 1993 . FAEGRE & BENSON Diane B.. Dava.es, #11182 2500 Republic Plaza 370 Seventeenth Street Denver, CO 80202-4004 (303) 592-5900 YOUNGE & HOCKENSMITH, P.C. Mark R. Luff, #16411 200 Grand Avenue, Ste. 500 P.O. Box 1768 Grand Junction, CO 81501 (303) 242-2645 COOPER & KELLEY; P.C. • Ber rd B. p, ~ 0 Wynkoop S~': ,~~900 Denver, CO 80202-1197 (303) 825-2700 DEEOOBI2.WP5 - 2 - DISTRICT COURT, EAGLE COUNTY, COLORADO Case No. 92 CV 143 ORDER TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MINNESOTA, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff, v. THE TOWN OF VAIL, COLORADO, a Colorado Home Rule Municipality and THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF EAGLE, Defendants. This matter coming before the Court on the Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Disclosure Certificates filed by Plaintiff, Title Insurance Company of Minnesota, now known as Old Republic National Title Insurance Company, and Defendants, the Town of Vail, Colorado and the Board of County Commissioners of Eagle County, and the Court being fully advised in the premises, it is hereby ordered that the time for the parties to file and serve Disclosure Certificates pursuant to Rule 16(a) is hereby extended to and including June 4, 1993. DONE IN COURT this day of May, 1993 BY THE COURT: District Court Judge ' RECEIV~~i L ~ i993 . * COOPER & KELLEY, P. C. JOHN R. MANN PAIIL D~ COOPER DANIEL R. MCCUNE THOMAS H. XELLEY ATTORNEYS AT y.bW REGINA M. RODRIOIIEZ FRANX R~ KENNEDY DOIIOLAS J. COX DANIEL R. CHRISTOPHER 1660 WYNKOOP STREET, SIIITE 900 LARRY S. MCCLIINO KIM H. CHILDS * DEAN A. MCCONNELL BERNARD H. SAPP DENVER, COLORADO 80202-1197 pETER M. LUDWIO XAY J. RICE * LORI M. DORMAN ELIZABETH A. STARRS TELEPHONE (3031 825-2700 CLARK L. MCCIITCHEN RICHARD B. CASCHETTE • FAX (3031 825-0434 ANDREA M. KETCH MARK A. FOGO REBECCA L. GROTTY MICHAEL T. MIHM RENEE COOPER SHEILA P. CARRIOAN LORRAINE E. PARXER CHRISTINE A. MIILLEN STEVEN J. PICARDI CHARLES R. LEDBETTER JOHN E. CLOIIOH OP COIIxsEL LISA B. HEINTZ PAIIL E. SCOTT, M. D., J. D. RONALD H. NEMIROW CHARLES P. NORTHROP BARBARA H. OLOGIEWICZ April 2 6 , 19 9 3 DAWN E. MITZNER * AL50 ADMITTED IN wYOMINO it n-s-.++- I---l •:r. o~.v.,~ ~F°1t~.LCy ITT Hartford 'P.O. Box 22815 Denver, Colorado 80222 Lawrence A. Eskwith, Esq. Town of Vail 75 South Frontage Road Vail, Colorado 81657 Re: Insured: Town of Vail Claimant: Title Insurance Co. of Minnesota File No.: 651 KLP 60987 Dear Scott and Larry: Enclosed for your review are copies of a Stipulation which has been prepared and proposed by the plaintiff in this matter. As you know, the plaintiff has agreed to accept the sum of $15,000.00, $10,000.00 of which will be contributed on behalf of the Town in settlement of its claims against the Town and Eagle County. The enclosed proposal deals with the remaining issue in the case, i., n prever_t? cn of ¢°~~~Lre rer_.;:rrerces , When you have had an opportunity to review these materials, please contact me to discuss our response. Judge Hart has granted the joint request for an extension of time within which to file Rule 16 Disclosure Certificates. Those pleadings are now due on May 19, 1993. Obviously, we would like to resolve the suit, if it is to be resolved, prior to that date. Ve ruly yours, 6 rnard B Sapp BBS/cas Enclosures .i - RECEl~~`L ,~?;=~;1 8 199 DISTRICT CC]TfRT, EAGLE COUNTY, CaLORADO Case No. 92 CV 143 SSIPOL??TIO~T OLD RZrPUSLIC NATIONAL TITLE INBUKANC~i COMPANY, f/k/3 TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MINNESOTA, d Minnesota Corporatl011, i i Plaintif2, I v. TkE Tv'rr'N Gr^ VAIL, CGLORA~7O, a Colorado Howe Ruie Municipality and ~ THE BOARD OF CQUNTY COMI+iISS2QNERS OF THE COUNTY 4F EAGLE, Defendants . j Plaintiff, Old R~±pt~hlir- National Titlo Insurance Company, f/k/a Title Insuranr_p Company of MinnQSOta ("Old RepubYia") and i Defendants, the Town of Vail ("Town") and the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Eagle ("County"}, stipulate and agree as follows: - 1. Old Republic is a title insurance c:u~upany, which does businca~ in the Town and the County, riiz~ec;tly and through its agent, Land Title Guarantee Campnc~y ("Land Title").~ Old Republic insured certain read estate transactions involving sales of properties located iri the Tvwn. Subsegueritly, the TOWTl Claimed liens un ttie properties involved in those transactions based oA the ~ Luilure oP parties to prior sales to pay the Vail Transfer Tax, imposed pursuant to Ordinance No. 26, Series of 1979, as amended. Il Z. The Transfer Tax is imposed by the Town, and in some instances is collected by the County. The Transfer Taxes claimed due had not been reflected in tax certificates obtained by Old Republic in connection with the transactions. Upon demand by its ~ insureds, and under protest, Old Republic paid thy: Town the gum of ' $39,?27.39 in taxes, interest and other charges. nld R?public brought this suit against the Town and the County to racc~v~+r the amount paid to redeem tax sales and for del i ngt~ent taXQ9 and to obtain declaratory and injunctive relief regardinD t.h~ imposition of liens asserted by the Town to ~rallect the Transfer Tax. 3. The parties desire to settlQ the disputes between them, and to set_ forth the procedure to be followed by than in the futtir~. I JL'VI DI . Y'iJ'.7J c: ••7 U1 :11 + Ciil.ut~L l1[ L1rr.1V1r-' LvuNri ~ A:l iey,~r w v 4. The parties agrpQ that prior to closing a sale for which It has issue@ a titles insurance commitrssnt, Old Republic, directly or through its agent, Land Title shall: (a) request a certificate of taxes due from the County, pursuant to C.R.6. § 39-IO-115; (b) request a certificate oC taxes due fram the `t'own in the form attached her~.to as Exhibit A; and ~ (c) inrorm the Town of any sale of trie property it irstends to insure which occurred and for which a dead was recorded, within the previous 90-day period. s. In response to the request by Old Republic or Land Title, the county shall issue a written certificate of taxes due, Which shall include any Transfer Tax claim which has been certified to it by the Town. 6. The Town shall certify, in writirq, to Old Republic any Transfer Taxes which it claims to be due, and shall affirmatively state whether the Transfer Tax obligation s~aa ceriified far thQ particular sales of which it i.s advi.s~ad by old Republic and/or Land Title. 7. Tn the avQnt that old Republic, directly or through its agent, band Title follows the procedure set forth in paragraph 4, neither the County nor the Town ,shall assert a lien against the property which is the ,,object of such :ertificate, except for Transfer Taxes reflected on the certificate of taxes due issued by ~ the County or the written certification issued }ay the Town. Further, neither the County nor the Town shall seek to enrorce a lier? against the property which is the subject of the certificate, except for Transfer Taxes reflected on the certificate of taxes due ~ issued by the County or the written certificate issued by the Town. 8. The Town and the city nave paid Old Republic the sues of $ls,oaa.oa, which in consideration of the other agreements set forth Herein, Old Republic accepts in full sat~.sfaction of its claim to recover the $39,727.39 previously paid by it. 9. The parties request the Court to make this Stipulation an order of the court. i I - a - JL11! L1 ~ I T LV VV I G•UGl iLL 1 1aLU1V.. 1Y LL:7~7V17 VYV`/C1 tY [1C11Cy1a Tf V I nATEb this day of April, 1993. FAEGRE ~ BEN$aN ~ i Diane 8. Davies, ,11182 2500 Republic Ylaza 370 5eventeenttl Street Denver, CO 8020 24004 Attorneys for Plaintiff, Old Republic National Title Insurance Company YoUNC & HOCKENSMITH, P.C. By: ~ Mark Luf f X00 Grand Avanua, Ste. 5fl0 P.O. Box 1768 Grand Junction, CO 81501 Attorneys for thn Board of County Commissioners of the County of Eagle COOPER & KELLY ~ P . By: Bernard B. Sapp ~ 2660 Wynkoap St., Ste. 90a beriver, CO 80202-1197 Attorneys for the Town of Vail DHEOIIARD.YVpS i 7 JL.SYI Ulu • Y .:V u~ c.•vvitu + iv...wti LS NLIdV31' VVV}!C3 ¢ nc:icY~i* w v . 1De s. tronagt Rd. w sw«:w P. 0. Baa 357 11~i1, CO 9ti59 ~t~21g~ r~ ,,t I I aeCe1 j s~. ?tca~ flo i our Oscdtr eTUmber 0- Propertl peecript:inn~' . Current Oweer~ j Dees 6ir:: We ari a~tiaipati~ a real aetet• :ransaaesan a~ the a?e•e reBerenced property to acaur oa or tbout is tkee r•e'rd rns nerd the foll.oyiar< itttcra~tion frog you. { } OP VAti.r ( ) =rareEer t'ax ( ? i+ionehiad !'fell Aeeteea~ent ~ ( J Warr veil l~t:dlity A4eeeameat ( ) veil villa3e 14~h ail;fa>; toclcfaill berre Aeeeitrtmeat i _ ~ ( } ?0~ Or Avaz'I: ( } ?reaefer T:Y j ( ) ?fall Aaaasrwrtle ( ~ ~Tildrid~e Utility Line Laprcve nt Aee~eensnC ( ) ( ) T4fd!( fJF Dltii'lURfi~ ( ~ Transfer ~i<x ( ) ( ) ~ OF GY3'BfM: ( ) TrariiEee ?ax } i biAVdt write. ~l ( ~ Z'feflaiar ?rrx I . Coantsoa Ae~taamant ( } ( } Aff.A0HH8AD AT VAIE.~ ( } i'can~fer 7s7f EXH1tSl1' A ELr1~•wl~rrJ `IlYrl'dra NwNf Y1 N+ Nqt. i _ .i .~L~ l PILCASK ~C4ilt8 'tO1~CiiNL~ t ~ apscia2 Meeeansnt 10a0C.: ~ j 81aaa• provide tM iallaxin~ iafarmation to aa.' I. anq sad all bask e~ip~ aaisuats due: Aey and all carrtnt amonnti du.: ~ I Mi~cellaa~oua Inlos'matioa+ 9Pt xill be isauin: eltl• iesvr~nea based en eka igfarukioA lrou provid¦ and thei~i~or• avasidar tha authnYised Ri~aature balov to b• s vsinten osrtLficatlon o! that l~~Oz"1M C n. Your 3~aadiala aCtention to oomplatir~t and securniu~ Chic ivra~ t0 t]la tiadasei~l d is nanaaaarp. ltiaak yaa !or your eaepar#tleA~ and pleeae do nvt heaLCata =o contact ua i! yQq hav! ant quiatiaa~. very truiq yours ~ I.l31D TITl.i CLUAI~liTYE Ca}~Al+nt 8p~ Th• aDov~ inlQrmNtian has 6a•t1 prapazad ay: Pida.eur.~ rlcl~~ I i DISTRICT COURT, EAGLE COUNTY, COLORADO Case No. 92 CV 143 ORDER TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MINNESOTA, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff, v. THE TOWN OF VAIL, COLORADO, a Colorado Home Rule Municipality and THE BOARD OF COUNTY COI~iISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF EAGLE, Defendants. This matter coming before the Court on the Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Disclosure Certificates filed by Plaintiff, Title Insurance Company of Minnesota, now known as Old Republic National Title Insurance Company, and Defendants, the Town of Vail, Colorado and the Board of County Commissioners of Eagle County, and the Court being fully advised in the premises, it is hereby ordered that the time for the parties to file and serve Disclosure Certificates pursuant to Rule 16(a) is hereby extended to and including May 19, 1993. kl. DONE IN COURT this ~ day of April, 1993 BY THE COURT: /s/ RICHARD H. HART District Court Judge APR 2 3 ~99~ i' C V V X i MAC TAGGART & NOSIER, INC. `r ~ Real Estate Appraisers and Consultants 3318 East Second Avenue C.K. Mac Taggart, MAI Denver. Colorado 80206 Vail, Colo. 81657 r , Richard C. Mosier, MAI (3Q3) 399-5615 i. ~ Colleen H. Flanagan, SRA Fax (3U3) 399-5006 P•O. Box 2498 Harold S. McCloud (303) 926-3746 May 13 , 19 9 3 Y,. Mr. Jonathan L. Madison Wolf & Slatkin 745 Ptarmigan Place E„~ 3773 Cherry Creek North Drive Denver, Colorado 80209-2999 ! ~ Dear Mr. Madison: L.; _ At your request, I have inspected the 6.576 acre site located ~ on the north side of the West Vail Frontage Road which is north of I-70 in Vail, Colorado. The purpose of the inspection was to estimate the market value of this property as of May 7, 1993, the - date of contribution of the gift to the Town of Vail. The property was most recently inspected on April 29, 1993. The definition of market value, legal description, 15-item limiting conditions and assumptions and all other pertinent data used to solve the appraisal problem are included in the attached report. The report contains a total of 16 pages and 7 exhibits. r--~ - As concluded in the report, the subject property has as of May 7, 1993, a: FINAL VALIIE ESTIMATE FOUR MILLION FIVE HUNDRED FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS .j ($4,550,000) Thank you for the opportunity of working with you on this appraisal assignment. n~t~, Res~ctfu y submitted, r } ~ `;1.: ~.Z k Richard C. M sier, MAI Colorado Ge eral Certified Appraiser # CG 0131314 t cf 11r. . ~ KV . y~. ``:7 4•~'r~ R C i TOWN OF VAIL MEMORANDUM TO: Larry Grafel Council Members FROM: Shelly Shanley DATE: May 20, 1993 RE: Investment Report Enclosed is the investment report with balances as of April 30, 1993. We did not purchase any new securities during April. The average yield for the debt service fund wad 7.63% and the average yield for the pooled cash fund was 4.44%. Currently the yield curve for 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year are 3.0%, 3.2%, and 3.4% respectively. Please call me if you have any questions. Town of Vail, Colorado ' Investment Report Summary of Accounts and Investments for the Month Ending April 30, 1993 Funds For Reserve Balances Percentage Operating Furxis 04/30/93 of Total Money Market Accounts (see page 1) Commercial Banks 5196,588 512,024 5208,612 0.88% Money Market and Mutual Funds 53,298,512 57,019,486 510,317,998 43.73X Colorado Investment Pools 510,248,811 510,248,.811 43.43% Total 513,743,911 57,031,510 520,775,421 88.04% Commercial Savings Banks Loans Certificates of Deposit (see page 2) Eagle County Institutions 0.00% Other Colorado Institutions 0.00% National Institutions 599,000 599,000 599,000 0.43% Total 599,000 899,000 599,000 0.43X Percentage of Portfolio in Savings & Loans 0.00% U.S. Government Securities (see page 3) Treasury Notes & Bills 5584,159 5584,159 2.48% GNMA~s 5114,164 5114,164 0.48X U.S. Savings Bonds 524,867 524,867 0.11X Federal Agency Discount Notes & Bonds 51,998,956 51,998,956 8.47X Total 52,137,987 5584,159 52,722,146 11.54% Total Portfolio 515,980,898 57,615,669 523,596,567 100.00% Maturing Within 12 Months 515,242,867 57,031,510 522,274,377 94.40% Maturing Within 24 Months 5599,000 5584,159 51,783,159 5.01X Maturing After 24 Months 5139,031 5139,031 0.58% 515,980,898 57,615,669 523,596,567 100.00% Breakdown of Reserve Funds G.O. Bond Reserve 51,863,622 Police Bond Proceeds 55,740,023 Chuck Anderson Memorial 510,991 Health Insurance Funds E1, 033 57,615,669 5/18/93j1p invsm4 Money Market Accounts as of April 30, 1993 --For the Month of April-- Institution Balances Type of Accounts High Low Average 04/30/93 COMMERCIAL BANK ACCOUNTS First Bank of Vail - Operating Interest 2.530% 2.430% 2.470% 5202,586 Balance $2,644,695 579,771 $609,489 First Bank of Vail - Insurance Interest 2.530% 2.430% 2.470% $1,033 Balance Central Bank of Denver Interest 2.250% General Operating Account Balance $4,993 Total Commercial Bank Accounts $208,612 LOCAL GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT POOLS Colorado Trust Operating Account Interest 2,730% Balance $1,713,935 Colorado Trust Housing Bond Proceeds Interest 2,730% Balance 5844,320 CSAFE Interest 3.060% Balance 57,690,556 Total Local Government Investment Pools Accounts 510,248,811 MONEY MARKET FUNDS Federated Securities Corp. U. S. Treasury Trust Reserve Account Interest 3.030% Balance 51,011,938 Fidelity Investment Government Money Market Accounts Interest 2.810% Bond Issue Reserve Account Balance $267,525 1992 Bond Proceeds** Balance 55,740,023 Operating Account Balance $2,281,833 Overland Express Interest 4.900% Balance $1,016,679 Total Money Market and Mutual Funds 510,317,998 Total all accounts 520,775,421 **Account Subject to Arbitrage Rebate 5/18/93j1p invsm4 Page 1 Certificates of Deposit as of April 30, 1993 Bank Name, Location Days to Rates Purchase Maturity Maturity Maturity Ins Coupon Yield Date Date at Purchase Value BestBank, Thornton Colorado FDIC 4.750% 4.600% 16-Feb-93 13-Feb-95 654 $99,000 Avg Yield 4.600% $99,000 invcd4 5/18/93j1p Page 2 Government Securities as of April 30, 1993 ***Treasury Notes & Bills*** Days to Days Interest Rate Purchase Maturity Maturity to Book Par Type Fund Coupon Yield Date Date at Purchase Maturity Value Value Zero Debt Service 7.820% 21-Jun-91 15-Nov-95 1608 929 5584,159 $700,000 Average Yield 7.82% $584,159 5700,000 Average Days to Maturity 929 ***GNMA~S*** Years to Estimated Interest Rate Purchase Maturity Maturity Years to Principal Pool Coupon Yield Date Date at Purchase Maturity Outstanding 5803 8.000% 8.480% 14-Nov-86 15-Oct-05 19.10 16.00 534,574 13003 8.000% 9.500% 24-Oct-86 15-Oct-06 20.20 17.00 534,890 14659 8.000% 9.200% 24-Oct-86 15-Jan-07 21.20 18.00 $44,700 Avg Yield 9.074% 5114,164 ***U.S. Savings Bonds*** Years to Issue Maturity Maturity Years to Book Maturity Series Yield Date Date at Purchase Maturity Value Value EE 7.170% 01-Oct-86 01-Oct-96 10.00 3.42 $24,867 530,000 ***Federal Agency Discount Notes & Bonds*** Days to Interest Rate Purchase Maturity Maturity Days to Book Maturity Agency Fund Coupon Yield Date Date at Purchase Maturity Value Value FFC Pooled 4.150% 4.150% 25-Mar-93 25-Mar-96 1096 1060 $500,000 5500,000 FFC Pooled 3.800% 3.132% 29-Mar-93 01-Dec-93 247 215 $507,325 $500,000 Strip Pooled 3.140% 3.140% 29-Mar-93 15-Nov-93 231 199 $491,631 5500,000 FHLB Pooled 7.080% 7.080% 25-Jun-91 25-Jun-93 731 56 $500,000 5500,000 $1,998,956 52,000,000 Average Yield 4.38% Average Days to Maturity 56 Total 52,722,146 5/18/93j1p invtr4 Page 3 MAY 25 '93 12~25PM VRIL RSSOCIRTES 1 • ~ K~ ~ F ~ ~~L ~'Fi~ Va~i1,A,ssociates, Inc. q~'s Creators and Operators of Vail azxd Beavor Creele• Resorts ~99~ MSMORANI~UM To: Peggy Osterfoss, Mayor Town of Vail FROM: Andy Daly DATE: May 2s, 1993 RE; STATOR EXPEG'~TIONS As we discussed, I am excited by the possibility of a group of town officials joining us for some of our long-term business planning meetings. We at Vail Associates, Inc. believe that there are mountain and support facility planning opportunities that would be explored with input fem..,,. the Town of Vail, and that we both should benefit from your participation. To this end, we believe a facilitator could be used to successfully guide us tluough discussion of these planning topics and help us reaoh a consensus on as many issues as possible. The following are my suggestions and criteria for starting this ~..~.,ess: • Length of process - 120 days maximum with meetings to be held every 2-3 weeks for 3-4 hour duration. • Inftial kick-ofP session -would be a full day event in order to outline the scope of planning process, familiarize with the planning pmcess, review of planning completed to date, and to get to know one another's priorities, • Cost of facilitator - to be shared by the Town of Vail and Vaii Associates, Tnc. • Antlc3~ted topics -would include mountain expansion, mountain access, cross-mountain traffic, and drier support facilities in all khree base portals. Topics would lead to transit, traffic, and parking discussions important to us both. W might also look at lodging (rentable bed base) and employee housing strategies. ~ ~ L~ ~ ~ cU~,~l~,v' Post OKice Box 7 • Vait, Colorado 81b58 • U5A - (303) 476.5601 MRY 25 '93 12~26PM VAIL ASSOCIRTES P.2 Peggy ~sw;a.f~?se, Mayor May 25, 1993 Page a • If this process proves fruitful, it nosy lead to continued discussion on other issues of mutual interest, including the PerF~,.a~~iai; Arts Cer?ter. I will call you this week to review facilitator selection with you as welt as any additional information for these discussions. I look forwazd to talldng with you. APD: sb Enclosure '43 03120 14 37 ~ 303 475 6008 UAIL RESORT RS50 01 TOURISM CONVENTION BUREAU u formerly ill Reaott As~a~tvn 100 Fast Mtadaw Drivt • Valli Golarado 81b57 T0: dVT&C9 Board FROM: Fronk W. Sohrlsr~n DATE: May 19, 1993 RE: Bpeoial Eudget Meeting As agreed at our meeting on May 19, we will meet on Wednesday, May z6 at 8:so AM h®re at the TCS aonferenr~ room to approve the budget for s3 94. Thank you all for your effort in this project. The agenda is as Pbllowa~: A. Finalize budget 53-94 B. Review organization's role wiirhput a central reservations department C. Review opert~tinq numbert3 through April we will adjourn at 10 AM. Please let Judy know i! you will be unable t:o attend. Thank you. PiOat•It° brand fax transmltt8d memo 7871 ~xo~ aap•• + Pvst•It" brand fox transmittal memo 7871 ~ ~ orp.yr.. / R ?v bF' ~ co. ~-C.~I p~. Phone k ~wxr~ ICI • ZI~~ F.xN ~-Ilo~(~ Gtntra! RcservattOns I~BOd-3,25,3873 Group Salts (303) 479-2360 Busfncss 4.j~cc (303) 476-2000 Group Sata I-800-7T$-8243 Fi4X L303) 4r9-$364 FA.'K' (303) 476-6p08 _ - vvv?rr?•v?. VVVVG VLViVIIT 1! 1 EAI~ F CUIB+IFY 6LYIlJ~VIi ss1 BROADWAY f P.l), fW7( 850 OFFK;f OF 1NE BOARD OF C~AML55lO!'~R5 : tAGir, COIURADO 81631 {303) 31SSS05 .^ir FAN: (303) 9]8.7207 t s5,~ ~ ~,"S:u: EAGLE C~tJI~TY, CQLtJRADO l~;MOxArmvM TO: 1'Grafel;=Acting Town `Manager Andy Knudtsen, Planning Department r? Jen Wright, Planning Commission FROM: James S. Johnson ~ v~ DATE: May 18, 1993 RE: AFfU~,lable Housing Meeting We would like to put together an Affordablc Housing Meeting at the Town of Avon Municipal Budding on Thursday, May 27 at 7:00 g.m. It is very important far your council and cammiz~ion members to attend if their schedules p~:~...:t. Plcasc call June Deane at 32&8605 with your response. Thanks. jd ' L ~ Inter ~ ~ ~o untaln ~ Trans por~ation ' Planning . Region Background The legislation establishing the Colorado Department of the R P C s and the Colorado Department o f Transportation mandated the development of a fiscally Transportation that would improve modal choice and balanced statewide multi-modal transportation plan. In linkage between modes. December 1991, Congress enacted the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act referred to as The tentative schedule for development of the regional ISTEA ("ICE TEA") legislation also mandated the transportation plans is to have a draft plan completed development of a statewide multi-modal transportation by November 1993 and the final plan by May 1994. plan. The national legislation required the statewide transportation plan be developed by 7anuary 1, 1995. One of the major components of the rules and It did not require a specific process for developing this regulations is public participation. The rules and plan. However, the state legislation did mandate an regulations require, as a minimum, the public approach which required the statewide plan be based involvement program: (1) maintain a mailing list of on regional transportation plans. The state legislation all interested parties; (2) provide reasonable notice and also required that the statewide transportation planning opportunity regarding transportation-related activities and process be established through the rules and regulations meetings; and (3) hold at least one public meeting at process. the beginning of the regional transportation plan development process and on the draft regional In September 1992, the Department completed the transportation plan. development of statewide planning rules and regulations with the formal adoption by the Colorado Transportation Commission. These rules and public Involvement regulations subdivided the state into fifteen transportation planning regions (TPRs). One of these regions is referred to as the Intermountain The Intermountain Regional Planning Process has Transportation Planning Region which consists of the adopted a public involvement program to guide how counties of Lake, Summit, Eagle, Garfield, and Pitkin. the public will be involved in the development of the In addition, the rules and regulations also address the. Intermountain Regional Transportatior_ Plan. That formation of Regional Planning Commission (RPC) in program is described below. order to develop the regional transportation plan. If an RPC is not created, the responsibility defaults to the Newsletter Colorado Department of Transportation. In the Intermountain Transportation Planning Region, there is A newsletter will be periodicially sent to those agreement by most of the units of local government to individuals and organizations interested in monitoring form an RPC. That process is currently underway. the Intermountain regional transportation plan development process. It will provide draft and final The state enabling legislation also required the material as it is developed and approved by the RPC establishment of a Transportation Advisory Committee and identify any upcoming meetings that may be of (TAC). The TAC.is made up of one representative interest to the citizenry in the region. from each of the fifteen transportation planning regions. The TAC is responsible for reviewing the Formal Public Meetings progress of each regional transportation plan, review and provide recommendations to the Colorado There will be three formal public meetings held Department of Transportation meet the requirements throughout this process: the first would be at the contained in the rules and regulations, assist in beginning of the proccss to discuss the vission, issues, resolving conflicts between regions, making values, and goals; the second would be after the recommendations to the Colorado; Department of completion of the alternatives analysis; and the last Transportation concerning the intergration and would be the after the draft regional transportation plan consolidation of the regional plans, provide advise on is developed. These meetings would be announced mobility requirements, and make recommendations to _ through the newsletter and in the various local newspapers two weeks prior to the meeting and again one week prior to the meeting. There will be an open house at each of these locations starting at 10:00 am and running through 5:00 pm. Public Outreach Program The formal public meeting will begin at 7:00 pm and is scheduled to end at 10:00 pm. The date, city, and Representatives of the RPC would meet with those location are as follows: groups or organizations to identify the issues they believe are important as well as possible solutions. May 18, 1993, Tuesday Frisco Public Workshops Frisco Community Center I10 So. 3rd. Avenue The RPC would have some informal public workshops where the public could work along side the staff of May 19, 1993, Wednesday the RPC on specific activities. The tentative Vail workshops are during the development of the Town of Vail Library socioeconomic and environmental profile, identification 292 W. Meadow Dr. of alternatives, alternative analysis, development of the draft regional transportation plan, and the staging of May 20, 1993, Thursday the plan. Leadville 1`:ational Mini.;g hall I~fusciiiii RPC Meetings 117 W. 10th This newsletter will be used to inform the public of May 26, 1993, Wednesday the regularly scheduled meetings of the RPC. Aspen However, since this newsletter will only be produced The Inn at Aspen once a month, it may not be possible to cover ail the meetings. Therefore, if you want to know of any May 27, 1993, Thursday upcoming meetings, please call the Colorado Glenwood Springs Garfield County Commissioner's Office, 3rd Floor Fo~~lial Public 1'Vleetings . 'c omments Pubh C The Intermountain Regional Planning Commission is scheduling a series of public meetings to discuss the If you have any comments or ideas you would like to vision, issues, values, and goals that will be used to share with the Intermountain Regional Planning guide the development of the regional transportation Commission, please contact the Colorado Department of plan: In addition, a preliminary identification of Transportation care of Dave Ruble at the return address transportation needs is being developed based on each listed below. agency's perception. This should also be available. Finally, a description of the condition of the existing transportation system is just being initiated. Some of this information may also be available at the public meetings. Colorado Department of Transportation ~ ~ y 4201 E. Arkansas, Room 212 i_`:! 1 ~ Y% ~ a Denver, Colorado 80222 '~='~U - - , Mayor of Vail 75 S. 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Abaue; lWiic9jael Heizer's /ldjacerrt, Against, dJ, on, an t'angement a$ t;ascarii~:,i gral~i$e slabs anti crr,crete I:;z:,~:a in Seattle's myrtle I^dwards park, is a minimalist iand° scape that raised resistance fraln its neighbarhaod. Oelq~°~: Artis$ Platsert !bin's iyiaie Spaces, ~Jine frees (1983) arranges blue euire mesh in$a nine roams, each planted with a plum tree. Sarno 66 ssluare teEt, it is best seen train the jail aucrloQlsing this dawn$ou+n Beattie plaza. 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Y ,p =,e;, -s..:e €~,'a~c. ~ ~e fir. ,"Ska ' i$' _ ,'~`Y1:,~~+-'~,"+7~1 ,n"-`Yy?~ r ~`.1,a''~"~~_- ?~ss''S:~1-t''q?,~,~,•.,,~•~"' ~4-r,'g'v~t~;,;~""' `.t; :"`~~.~:~i'-',Y+, ',r< n~ ~1 '.e'`~K '~,r i'$' y~g,~d,.~ ' 'Fj'i ~ ~ ' W S ~ wa X~ ~ ,a - ~ ~ - {~.a',~ ° ~,,,,f .4'b, 1 ``~f `'o~ 'sl~ $t~. yC~'e~-"-.` ~ X` e ~ fi a.a~', a.. ~r~ - - - ,-~Sy'3,i`~ ~ y'y~. z' ' ?a` ~dyt°, a~ ,"lf~~rr~r , .ra.:~ k "s~„z ss~..~-, . - . ' F E B R U A R Y 1 9 9 3 ~11 ' O V E R 5 T O R Y~ i E N O . T H VV E S T ~11ith one-percent-for-art funds, design teams produce everything fro?n brick pavers to ~a+zhole covers. Below: Earthwork atJolrnsan Pit#30by Robert Morris reclaims a gravel pit in King County, Washington. Built over six months in 1979, the 3.7-acre earthwork sculpture suffered for years from poor drainage, loitering, landslides (resulting from overly steep grades on the hillsides) and vandalism. More recently, fhe damage has been repaired under pla=3s by Seattle landscape architect Barbara Svaift, Associate, ASLA. Opposite left: Three images from the "i"ropical Africa Exhibit," none-percent enllaboration among Mayer/Reed Landscape Architecture and artists Baba Wague Oiakite and Ronna Neuenschwander at Portland's Metro Washing- ton Park Zoo. The artists incorporated African proverbs vaitit precast animal relief panels, meant to he touched by visitors. In addition, the Wall of Handsreflects an African tribal tradition to personalize territory by leaving impressions in mud banks. Opposite right: Charles Greening-Kim Lazare Sun- dialat Gas Works Park, the award-winning project designed by Richard Haag, FASLA. The face is made of concrete, bronze, shells, rocks and fossils. contc~~nt to spend their careers cz•e<.ctiz?~;~ ayc.ihpie blend-in look." " High on Kangas's list of~ offenders is Seattle's ambitious - ~ ~ _ 1.5-Mile tr~ulsit tunnel ~~-ith S 1.5 million worths of art. ~l'~~ren i ~ .rx ~ .q LL ty-one artists cz°eated ber?chcs, n~ru~als, tile, rlesi~;~ns and even .~in;n~c;,e..~~.ccoz•di,cg~ to l~ ucgas a:rd other critics, the, arf i~;ts' ~ r r~ ~fiorts are littlr~ more tha?~i ~-enec:r. ~ ~'i~ t ~ •`Ail't1stS n0\1'' UR'e 1118 C~iChCt~" Sa•yS IvOh7e'.]"t ~iii,nll;i, ~V~-i~ li~, s i~ ~ - ~1'T'hilr.idr_~11?1?i<r's H~uu?a/Olin, Ltd., who «-orked o?it~~ > > ,i~:,t- ~ ~lCe'~rea T'0}labo)"21t]Oil`;. U J~.allila~ t;hE 1C di'y?~~'1; tC~llllti r('1) ~ ' ~q~~ - .'('',Sellt 2L ~`11011C1U111111 S\\ lll~" tQt~• ;11'!'1 St }'le Gild a~V' ~A- (roll? ` ~I ~ W , r ~zrb;,tal?ce, as l~u~da~:<• pe a~•chitc ~1:~ ,~n•c~ ~iow r,clil~sed b,y 1'asl? ~ , ~ ~"tt lc;nat,le }il'tlr`tti 111.`itf!~1r1 f)f ('~1N1110ll:-Irle i7 Ch11;eCaa. ~~,r~~tiK< ~ Hann~c prints to trio czn•i cent prc;~;;ct foz• tl~ie. University of r-_ti~ ~4.~~~ ~4~~ ~~Va~,hu?•<.;~on s .f.'acrnr~a crun ors. 1 he state hired zx.atile artist ~r".~~~ ~ _ llStf~7'r5711!}~SOn (St;C `•i11]77 ~tTE'E',j', Cr21,1'r18nti ~ a?'li, ~llll)' 1.))~~ ~ a. a~_ st. ~.`~:~,~~~.`~~d~"2 _ __,a+".,.?._:N ,>~°.~..~.,::~5a ~yh~ to eonsult on the master }flan. Siz-nl)SCni oa~r;~ztr;d `~9~-page "p'7•emise, i'nr Art" t,hc.ci he >cduntti snir~~ l~?,llled into some- thiug~ more li!;r the mgt.<_tr. i~l:u, ztai~~ll i, }~iz•iclc ho~~~~.~i 1~lru?t ~~t~~~~~~~~~}~~ ~.6%1~%Uicl 1)E:COt'r1L }.Il E''1t:Ci:i•UI?;C 11'lE.'ih,:1 '`pU`.t%~)' tel"lli)le." iA'.?tll- roarl t;r..cch dividing tyre carnhus would kx: used for t;rohleys In 1973 and 1974. Seattle, King Corn?ty and Washington state all passed r:~r perhaps even a rolling restaurant. ~~ru} the fruit trees ordinances mandating that cr?e percent of public '`capital in?provement" i.hat speckle the site, planted l:Ty ~ apane,e innni~,rants, x~~ould projects be set aside for purchasing art. Reaching into school budgets tye ccllt.ivated into a "I-l~erit.r~~e Orcli<ird." and even arcane projects li,~e rmderground v~iring. the ordinances have j.3ired in t}u~ wake of the "1'ren~rise," an unirripz°essed ]-1~anna Producer) swell over S15 million for art, n?uch of it fused wits? landscape sa}~5 5imh~son's more obvir,~~s ide~rs .have ber.,n infla.tecl by architecture. With ti?ese one-percent funds; artists-in-collaboration have designed E tits status as ~m artist. Otlrer 7iml~;;on ;cl~~ernes hc: srys r everything from brick plaza patterns to manhole covers. The best of these c`. rc: ~.e;•, rx,;~i.i~: ~ ?e>; c~ a 1~ I~ r t~ l z° . ~rt, efforts rise above decorai~r~ fo explore larger issues of frrrrction, h+sto- r,z~rrz .•^,~r l,~liuvr~~ tl~<~~: il~ll u:c zs ..,.ir~ ,,zo_i; ti;ru r.~rt>e] rig and urban space UVhere early programs specrfied tna'~beautificaiion , ~zrc:hitect for th<ct }rTr,,ject." of buildings.'` Seattle assigned public art a landscape role: [he "respon- Ir? mother incident, a~~chitect .11~}ichael Canatscy claims sibility for expanding experience." fa?ai; Chuck C~~reening's proposal foz• a roui'top scr:rll~it;ru•e of• "The program !~~ias born." says Diane Shamash, n?anager of Seattle's ;;z Halibut schooner has little to do ~.vith his vag•uel.v neo- Art in Public Places program, "at a time in which environmental artists caassical building. '.I'he artist .u?d r.o•chitect; az:~c:z1't speaking. like Robert Smithson, E;lice Aycoci;, Siah Armajani and others were very ~ Yet as dcsi~;n te,zms have bred a nerai,ion of ~~rhat Kan- articulate spokespeople for po!~dertul ideas about the landscape." r gas c~clls "r:crt.ists wit,)? bz~iel~cases"-along ~~~iLh ??eat- boars}_ Seattle's progran?, have been among those in the vanguard: import- I :r•orz,n f;ension.~--tltc~9 have alsl~~ l~c;ll~~ed. landscr+.he architects mg challenging ~~~,rorks by artists like P,~iichael heizer, Robert Irvin? and Robert Morris. Tha controversies that plague other programs rarely infect l~~isc~n their ties;. `~i:r:~tlce 1.~GU:;;" s,:zy; J:o.~,ert PJlurase,~ ~~.Sl.~f1, liberal, ~:-,yell-educated Seaitle. In r'act, the loudest outcry over public art of 1'oz•f~,land-based i~!f.urase v;;:ociates, "liuul~;c:;.r}.~e archi- occurred when a Japanesa collector nearly whisked a~>>ay Henry Moore's tcets ~?~ez•e alz?~zost solely oriez?i;ed towaz°d unbar; l~,lanning bronze t~ertebrae. ' i sand stewardship. Put tyre Sean}e pro~?~•am has helped re- In 1975 and 1980 respectively; Oregon and Portland passed their own i .establish the art oi' the Landscape. I tl~,ink tl~iere's n hc~a~lth- public art ordinances, yviti? 54.1 n?illion since sper?t on art Though Ore- ~~:r balance." gor`s commissioneci art~:~,rorks are generally less adventurous, the pro- ~'or c~xac7?p)e, l~lurr:rse ai,l;z-ibzztc~s, sot,?e u1~ the h;e;t ~~r.Cures gnat??s are similar to Seattle's in their en?phasis on collaboration, not to ref ]cis design at f'ciz~•t,land's netiv Or•c:4~;on (~on~,-entii:.~ Cen_ mention their public popularity. f.ez°-t]~re diagonal walkways through the par)<inn,~ lot,, a wa11 Meamwhile. the design-team approach has become a prin?e export. e,,f clizrcbint;~ vines ~.cnd a series of cast bells dunr~rt;ed by Port- Since 1977 Seattle agencies have sponsored n?ore than 40 design-team 3 ~~~znd's sister cities inAsia-to an eaz•ly artist;/landscape archi- Projects; from community centers to a new downto~~rn bus tunnel. Near- ? ly every major U.S. aty is no+.~~ using tl~e process in some form.-R. G. , feet charette. , t I'. 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"~r~.~, .-~..+,r•:~,, 'x:1..;8. . t`l'~r'y'?;ii1 r~-~y ;fit` ~';4"•r~'~~7:'.~'=-;e~ ,~y ~,~;'~'y >."~.,-b-.,.- - '',;rv, ~ : '~~y' x- ~:ts~: ;~~=~,~~..~"Yr., ,~:~y?'yy~~~;~'~u"~1~` '~"~'§..4'.`~%~~'^'~~*'cve~;i i '"'~"':.~•r'`Y's :~i '.:.s`"ro',.:~:: s~;,a:°',~-~z~.-~*a i~'`~'?94"',...a., +'c,~:;ti ~'e~USG4;:.s„,~,::~.4 ~3c.,r.„etev~°=sue... 49d..v ~,r,~:."i..;. ^.'~3.~~ ,•Q~!,~ Oat(;ns;ihly, idle 011;1 n!'t to i~:'r,nlif:v }°,rd:en!.:i;ll 2;it(':~ f,.)r "Uc~: i~t~u te<mis 111ve given the desi~~n },rofessionals l~lore fll't, lJ!!t tIIC: l)1'[illl' (U1'11i111,-„ RF'l'Ul !111 1O .':'1,1'.l "lr~?!h.~i 1,:; 1tItiLU(1:' ft,l' l;hl" :'1•.~' tlI1l71Clllh'. ~~1h(!1(: pr01('('tt~ ?l?i"~: f;<lltlEiCl enormousl}- iu t,llinl:in~ al)out i}.c overall (1(~si~;n." ,1.rti~t,:: t,lfe aural of art.." Yet dcsi~'n dc::i•t;n te:uns \\url: uu a deli interpret red'?oral hlistol',y in 2l nlanl~el• that: ltlurisc,lpe ar~ali- c~lte c•?lcrnitr~~. "1 eves thin' ;ues (al," sad-~ ;;hamzislt, reels tc;ncl 1:o slci}), gilds 11'Tnrase. "b~~e g'et so e,lut;'llt u}~ \\-ith "'_I'here's still a 7(i/'~0 chance it \t'on'L ur]c." architcet.ure," 11C l<uncllts• contril:nltions Lo iruli\ idutll prl.,j(cts become l.)lurred, University of bVashinf;ton 1>uulsca;;~ architeci;l'Villianl 'I'al- so have the. it}entit.ies and c)h descl•i})tiolls of tho cimtrilnl- lev cl<unh; his 1•ecc~nt, cull,.ll)ul•tltiin( with tu't.i:-L l~7ar~r i~9iss tort;. In the nlosi- ~uccess(1!1 projects, the panic!})rusts tn'e (:a!lsc(1 J°:iiu to re!:hilik s;inne ttssllnl}:)tiiuu•. I)(~:_i}:;ne(1 to l,e unal_,le to atit'i+:n~Le irlc'ris. 1'r,ltltu!d' I'iou('er Culn•thonse \'ll;\\'C(1 11'~;lt? t,i!(: l'i: )ii tJ`i' t-J~llti('I'; 'tV -i1O: ;L,)Il, la':(' ~,I'i'C(.' P, 7t i'a,tit!i'e I(+1' 1r1: LR!1,, illit> IUJ (il>."I'i;t:.2ir{• C'\ ~;l i.lii~U;'l! t(C111',- c1tl:;tC'1' O1' ~Clll `;11(,'1L'(I ;?i:111CiN p;)IiC1:J C)011•ilE.lt'C"•.' h~- C:111'\`i!1;' LI.)1• l.,C;i, I''•.(_;I!\ ~!!1;211.)Oi',itt>(I ,y`It.ll :i. ~)CiUi'ltl: ~i!,l'.'_•~~, i:~.,jl,,f:r, chain-link p:u•titSulls xni] rcve!•seil steps. "11~ar~r f akes star- and ,u','hite(:t \'1~ill~.u'd itii,u•t in (:,('e "Pc)1•Llan(l':_ Pion'..;;r;~(lunrc:," lard f'urlr!s ]ike '.ci_,; ,ulrl turns tllenl insid(: olr.," sxy~•. '.l'al- :1u~;n;) I9S'.)). ?VTai?lstreanl enou.;h to }~r~ the cite':; most po}~- iey. "She \\-a:; very taken \vitll l';l)'rc'r',arcnt cl,c::'t)r:(;i:i, w}-1X11 to ular ~atlferin; sl:,ot, the s.rhlare still leas it.s artistic eci;en- me is so nul•mal. ShE; selecte(i ii, for pur;a•y vi;u_il reaeons," tricities. ~J'1!cl•c':; the a\\-1:\\-a 1'd-to-\call; sae}:,},(~(1 an,phithe- , 1 ta!e scl•<~amin~ blue, templr~-li);e entrtmce to under- retlcLinc> to col(u• r<ltl(er t;hall plaul~ inaLerizl!." at(;1• a.l~c. J.;lli('. I~!hSti's p!eCC, !`~C'tltL!t1'~ 1)C:St ].)l1J)]i:: )il'i,\Glai'1~S al'('. ?]lf.'ll- E;1'l)Llllll Uft1C('~. r~ 1 i l! t; + tl t tllc~ )t11111C-:ii"t ll'~ (i~.iV Il?i U\'C:]" 1}- (;~}.,e!•ieni.i>d. l.y!)ic<;; is L}1('. ;u'i: }rtr„ ;nrru!u~nin.; the t,ili, crliic Iar!r',;ls fill.:; ti' J J\1.1t;lOllal tl('.Ctll]I(: ti,ild ..r !110c;}:111'.1'i( /".rlYlll'1;.,. I(!I'1 , ,'i,'!` - :1- \`I~C1?l; 1)t 'i U!li !~llt!LCl'' Cl IU!'l`; all (1 .;II'.'ll!1i!l; f.l!!c1P'('tti. ;,i , ~ ~ ~ ~II, l'1 1 -,;It ' 111 \•11_'~(Jl lJ+j i','1 r,'1 j'(?.. i ! I •;'~I}1 1'; 1,1C' 1OI~ .!!l! II ,)U I,;J\•t C' i, y:;l li,: ~ ~ ' al c.;ni.c~r ul. I,<11':c . ! ,I;I:I~Lc;. ! n. , , "L+Otllitl ~r!Ll.'(i(;11'' Of 1,111(1-acts\'t1C i,tl''LI,I1}111`!'ti,;11111\'r, })iF 1\' Ifil ,i.t1~ 1]i11lUl li}' 1)%li't,l('1}!.!ttl)Il. w1C<,?1\'. If 11 U, i,! l ;h11lt;Lol1 S are multi sensutll lanilscapt:/tu•t 1•u:;iotls rat}lcr t?lan encuu.u- ).in„ Count` cxpcrimellts \\~if,h 1)ru,jcrt, t.h~tt: pl;;ce art,lsts t l (li.,tincL tu•t\ern•hs. ~~a r. rt ili I'nblic }'laces man- in th(; le~.lr-', \\Jiti1 the, architect", <md l~uuasc~l})(: ar(:hitec.ts ± cr;; ~v i. 1, ~ ) aEa' .l)1t;11C: ,>!!alllilS',11, 11115 (1111}.tl<L+.,] (iil IIUiC~!U.1 L:1:')\„' (~lL llli'CU C(.Ii:S•1 t.;!lt.`1. of st.ron.:; 1Tc;i;1;1-1L)nl'hooil o)•i,,;1ni:;'.t,iulh; i!1ii('ci ',n acl,tl'1:;C al•L 7'llr lu~';rlr:} 1)tr;l}- Lc 1<ll•t;el• than rnl~' ul!c t:!'ol~l•<un nl' pru- 1 c , J''J1' U:iCC C.tlatl\"C' i)otllldtU'leS Lll'', i;Stel"1dC(l, L17C'V ::Ca- r a11C1 C!r'Slf;l'1 CU7111111.1111t,1(?S. J'hr' 1:6iE;st l-:\alltli,C 1.; 1:i11'aCl.' ~?I;I11~- ~(I:'t, son's coalpost.iug; i:oilet, pla'::F;(.l in tut or~aiaril, moved etlch (li)ril rctri!ct. ""I'If(~ (ie it~'li team 11as• assn tl~-~, }~e<;11 <in e~}~er- Arhol• U,-i;,r vul replac('.d ith a tree, invent, not a 1•eli,,~,inn," says Andre\\-s. "lt's surnetlling as old }t;ven critics of desiZ;ll teams pl•ojects xnri;e they 1-!ave xs zn•t and tlrcllii.ecture thcanselves, hnt it hail to be redis- \videned the scope of both ]::.rlci,>czl},c artiuicCi,lu'e ~ulr1 art. eo\-erect in <l ruorlerll contest.'' ~%1 "Public. projects terul to l)e J'ast tlrld lo\','-l:n1d,~;~~L," observes Richard l~rulre\vs, a former 1\rt in Public I~l;ices rnanagcr. Ra',ac1y C;')•c,gr~ is (n•ts c)•ific for tlrc Pnrtl;.uu} Ure~t;niml. F E P r, U A Y I 9 9 J 64 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1993 YECHNOLOGY INFOIRMATIONAGE/sywluaAMM.BULKELIEY i~ Libraries Shif t From hooks to Com uters Y p Can this be a library? Every day, this technology in a real-world setting," that would be paid if they had it copied teenage workers at the Chicago-Kent says Terry Martin, law librarian at Har- at a copy shop. School of Law a.t Illinois Institute of Tech- vard University. Librarians hope that computers can nology slit open bindings, rip out the pages The Columbia law library's effort, help them avoid redundant effort. If every- = and throw away the books. which is still under development, uses a thing electronic could be cheaply sent from A computer scans the pages and stores supercomputer called the Connection Ma- one library to another, each one could take Them so anyone with a library password chine made by Thinking Machines Inc., certain responsibilities. For example, Har- = and a computer can retrieve them. But the Cambridge, Mass., to store and search vard might keep electronic copies of all the books "will no longer be on my shelves," documents. The supercomputer lets users Nuremburg trial information, eliminating says Mickie Voges, director of the legal ask questions in English and get back a list the need for Columbia to collect any of it, information center and professor of law, of documents related to the question. says Jim Hoover, director of the Columbia As far-fetched as it sounds - and it will Using the system, Willem Scholten, law library. Libraries would no longer be decades before libraries become totally director of computer systems and research need to keep dozens of copies of items on electronic -some libraries are starting at Columbia, looks at a screen that gives reserve for large classes. Many students to create limitless digital bookshelves, for him writing space after the phrase "Tell could read them simultaneously on the the mundane reason that they're running me about." He types in "child abuse computer. out of space on their bookshelves. _ `l In one of the most ambitious efforts to ~ r•~eQ " Ms. Voges notes that computers make date, Columbia University's law library ~ a ~ t' libraries more accessible for disabled re- tomorrow will announce a plan to scan and ,.l > searchers, providing large screens for vi- r sually handicapped users and eliminating store on a 51.5 million supercomputer 10,000 deteriorating old books yearly by 'l worries about wheelchair users being un- 1996. That would provide enough shelf ~ able to reach upper shelves. space for all the new, copyrighted material ~ . ~ ~ ~ r ~ '3" ; Still, institutional and ergonomic pres- the library gets yearly - at a far cheaper _ ~ ;'3 , sores will keep the all-electronic library , cost than a canceled plan to build a $20 ~ ~ ~ ! ~ away for at least 50 years, says Jay. million addition to store new books. ~ ~ + ~ Locker, director of libraries at the Massa- Suchearly efforts at electronic libraries ~ chusetts Institute of Technology. Books re- a ' main easier to read than a computer foretell vast changes in academic re- y • =F - - screen and "a very good way of packaging search. When scholars go to the library in the next century, they won't have to go _ _ information," he says. "Some people talk anywhere. The library will come to them- ~ of libraries becoming museums of old ~ r books. I think that won't happen for a very on a desktop computer. Need original eonr, spa, long time." documents from Yale or Oxford universi- ties? No problem. Tap in a request and get and child prostitution." Within two sec- ' what want on your screen. If you don't onds, it gives him a list of 40 documents, know exactly what you want, the computer such as a United Nations report on child will find it for you. Pictures and graphs will pornography and prostitution, and another appear. Sound from the oral history collet- on "Contemporary forms of slavery (ex- tion will come through earphones. ploitation of child labor)." "The knowledge world is going from a When he highlights two paragraphs as paper culture to an electronic culture, and being close to what he wants, the computer ` libraries will be deeply affected," says refines the list of documents. The system _ _ _ • : - Martin Dillon, director of the office of ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ " • evaluates words in the query based on how research at the Online Computer Library unusual they are, figuring that rare words Center, Dublin, Ohio. "With electronic are more important. It then rates docu- - - - networks linking eductional and research ments based on how often they include the institutions, the question arises: What is rarer words. the role of the library?" says Wilfrid Columbia says that scanning into tom- ; Lancaster, professor emeritus of library puters old books whose acid-laced paper is sciences at the University of Illinois, who rotting won't cost any more than the 5100 a has been writing about a future paperless volume that it pays to preserve them on } society for 20 years. microfilm. And old books don't pose copy- For some time to come, one role will be right problems. Columbia also plans to put s converting existing books into electronic public-domain material such as govern- ' form. Ms. Voges says: "We all have the ment reports on the system, especially , same problems. We run out of space. We because those frequently are available as can't acquire everything we want. We have computer tapes. to preserve materials that are falling At Chicago-Kent, Ms. Voges stores apart. We try to figure out better ways to images of books' pages rather than dfgitu- deliver information." Computers can help ing the text. Users search for materi- solve all of these problems. als the same way they currently do from Not that there aren't obstacles. Pub• the computerized card catalog, not by ?ishers fear rampant copying of electronic searching for particular words or topics. " , material. Moreover, the costs of receiving She has set up a system under which law a lot of data over phone lines could pose firms can subscribe to the library for as problems for scholars, who are used to little as $200 a year and view any document getting most of their information for free. on the system from computers in their own So librarians are closely watching Colum- offices. If they want to make their own bia and Chicago-Kent. "It's a little early, copy, they pay the school $21 and a fee to but somebody's got to do some work with the publisher equal to the copyright fee X C: C dtt~t~,u,~, RECEIVLD t 8 1993 ~ ~ ~~~:::C~~~ VairA~ ine Garden r _ ~ - foundation .l, D ' i, ~ ~ !-J~, VOLUME 7 Spring • 1993 NUMBER 3 ~ , Vail Ua l l e o Flowers ~l y U ~ Will Get a New Lie 1 lizs Year c~`~ ~ The Vail Alpine Garden Foundation, this 5 rin Garden Activities C1~ I year in cooperation with the Vail Valley p g Marketing Board, the Vail Daily, and KQMT, by Nancy Rondeau ! II will sponsor Vail Valley Festival of Flowers Director of Volunteer Gardeners 4 from June 19-27. The event offers visitors an invitation to enJoy Vail's spring flowering Spring is here but will the snow _ bulbs and early perennials that begin our disappear? If you look at our summer ~ ~ spectacular summer floral display. calendar (see insert in this newsletter), you ~ ,-j will note that Tans have been made and q .r- , The Vail Alpine Garden Foundation, ho es are thatt we will be ankle dee in ardci~ developer of the Betty Ford Alpine Gardens, p p g - has recognized and rewarded residential and mulch on May 10th! ~ ~ business gardens in Vail since 1987. This year I'm sure you all want to know how the the program will be extended down the Valley Gardens, and your garden, will be after all this to include Avon, Beaver Creek, Arrowhead, snow, and you may have questions about your Singletree, and Minturn. present and future plantings. We will again Notable gardens and flower displays will have our Spring panel discussion for you to be identified as "Special Vail Valley Gardens." ask the experts about things to do for your ~ Those in commercial areas will be included in garden. It will be held Tuesday evening, May r~ ~ a brochure to provide visitors with aself- 18, at 7 p.m. in the library. Our speakers will ~ ~ Please see Valley of Flowers on page 2 be Sherry Dorward, Landscape Architect, and . -c. ( Robert "Ziggy" Gosiewski, Intermountain i _ z~ Landscaping and Maintenance, Inc. ' t ~ ~ ~ ; ` ~r. The public is most welcome. ~ ~ ~ ' ~r If the ground is clear of snow, our t ~r~~~=~ ~ ',.a ~ first day in the Garden will be ~3i _ Monday, May 10th. Be sure your foot _ r . ` ~ . gear is waterproof, bring several pair v ~1 ; : ' t ~ =r~;~'t ` _ ~ of garden gloves, a leaf rake, and ~fl,~~ ' ~ ,;'i~, - pruning shears if you have them. It (C.t~'" ~ . sr=~~ ~ ~ ~~'f ~ will be a major work day. Vac,,, - r ~ ~ i On May 17th, we will have a ~ ~ ~ I~ a ` ~ "planting workshop" during the _ T'. C~~ ~ ~ - ~ ~ ~s.r,a ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ morning, including some exciting ~..M f.r , ~ G. ' ~ ~ information on root systems of plants t . T s '~f < (and trees) which I learned about at ` ~ the Master Gardener course this Alpine Garden volunteer gardeners enjoy the summer Monday gardening days. Please see Volunteers on page 3 ~ireetor's Notes Well, it's like this, if the soil is hard and compact, the weeds and grasses will probably do better than the intended recipients of your affections (garden plants). They will also be Tl~ie Same Old Dirt more difficult to get out, especially without breaking them off so they can return next week. HOWEVER!!!!!!!!!!!! if the soil is By Marty Jones lose, open, fluffy, even sumptuous, the weeds will jump into your hands as you pass by waving an ominous, gleaming trowel in your hand. Like the Iraqi army, they don't stand a People often come into the garden center and tell me they chance. want to buy some dirt. That brings to mind images of This has been fun, but now its time to complicate the politicians in a campaign. Dirt is what they print in tabloids matter. As I said earlier, different plants have different needs. or something you sweep under the rug. Plants grow in soil, The above statements pertain largely to annuals, most not dirt. The soil they grow in has everything to do with how traditional perennials and some rock garden plants. Iris, for they grow. example, like lean soils. I would not heavily amend soils in an If you put annuals or perennials into "good top soil," at Iris bed. Many of our native dry land plants prefer their own least what we in the Rockies consider good top soil, they will unique soil conditions. If you are planning a different type of probably not do very well. Especially in containers. This is garden, I would recommend some research on your part, or why professionals generally plant in a soilless potting mix. all of your parts for that matter. Typically, this mix contains various proportions of Canadian peat, perlite, vermiculite, and occasionally bark, charcoal, fertilizer, and trace elements. Some of the commercial potting Valley o f Flowers from page 1 soils you buy could be used to pave country roads. I guess some consumers feel that they get more for their money if it guiding "flower walk" throughout the summer. weighs more. In this case, more is less. Plaques will be placed in gardens in mid-June as they are The lighter your potting soil, the better it is (probably). being planted for the summer. The Vail Alpine Garden Lighter soils allow space between the particles for root Foundation will continue to award trophies recognizing the growth, as well as the magic ingredient. AIR! Plants can best gardens and flower displays in four suffocate, and many do drown in heavy soils that don't drain. categories-residential, hotels/commercial buildings, They're a lot like people in that respect. Water is essential for condominium associations, and shops/offices/restaurants. our lives but, if we're held under it for too long, it's These awards will be judged in early July when annual hazardous to our health. flower displays are more developed. Plants are like people in many ways. In order to get along If you are interested in having your commercial or with them well you need to be sensitive to their needs. residential garden included in this event, contact the Alpine Different plants can have dramatically different needs. Garden office at 476-0103. One of the benefits of being Maybe if we understand plants better, we can learn how to involved in this event is that the panel of judges who visit get along with each other better as well. your garden will be happy to provide you with feedback and I digress, back to the subject at hand..... what exactly was suggestions on how to improve or expand your garden. the subject at hand? Ah yes, DIRT.... NO, SOIL.... that's it, soil, the foundation of plant life on our planet. So, what we should do is modify the soil we grow our plants in until it VAIL ALPINE GARDEiVBULLETIN > . doesn't remotel resemble what the lants ow in in their p ~ Published quarterly. by Va11 Alpine Garden Foundation, ;183 Gore Creek: natural environment. Right? Right! Especially in Drive, Vail,. Colorado<81657: The Bulletin is a.;benefit of,membe;ship in,:' containers. In the garden if we want big, fast growing, the Alpine Garden; a nonprofit Colorado corporation; ;The Bulletin healthy plants, we should do the same thing. Add peat to the soliats articles for publication. about plants anii gardening.thaP arc of , interest to Its membership. For further inforrriahon about Vail'Alpme soil in liberal quantities. I usually recommend 4" to 6" of Garden Foundation or to submit an aiticle, pease waste to the address:` - u e peat tilled into the top 12" of "good top soil." This is above or call'(3o3) 476-o1a3. something you may have to do every three or four years, ~ITOIUAL;BO.~D depending upon the condition of your original soil. The peat Sydney summers (Editor), t-lclen Fritct,, Deane Ha11 gradually breaks down and should be replenished occasionally. When you do this, it is also a good time to lift BOARD OF DIRECTORS and divide or divide and conquer, whatever suits your HONORARY DIRECTOR Betty Ford garden's needs at the Hme. Pea gravel or course sand is also a OFFICERS Helen S .Frttcti; President helpful additive, especially if your "good top soil" is a little KaEhenne:S Borgen, Vice President sticky when wet. This will help keep the soil from compacting Andrew'Pierce, Secretary and allow for air spaces. I will till in from 2" to 4" of pea James R Stephenson, Treasurer gravel into rock garden beds particularly, but it can be used in DIRECTORS Adele Douglas Fern Portnoy perennial beds as well, especially in commercial applications Jeanne Bailey Lynda Goldstein Robert Oliver where proper maintenance can be difficult and expensive. Try Robert Buckley Deane Hall Peter Rudy to use a fairly neutral pH gravel.... avoid limestone chips, for Cissy Dobson Robert Kenney Maureen Shapiro example. ALPIhlE GARDEN DIRECTOR ' Marty'Jones Did I say maintenance? How does this relate to soil prep? 2 . y~~ • :•Y 4 e, ti ~ ail . V Al ine p - Garden ~ ~ • Foundation 1 93 Calendar 9 MA.Y JI,INE BETTY FORD ALPINE GARDENS OPEN. Snow WHAT'S IN BLODM IN jLINE? delayed early bloomers in the Alpine Display Garden and Early: Tulips, columbine may affect later bloom times. Later: Lupine, oriental poppies, veronica, dwarf iris WHAT'S IN BLOOM IN MAY? PLANT PERSPECTIVES: Spring Bulbs. Tour the Early: Snow crocus, drabas, iris reticulata, primulas Gardens on Saturday mornings from 10 to 12 and learn Later: Daffodils, tulips, a variety of alpines about early season bloomers. 10 GARDEN WORKDAYS BEGIN MAY 10. Volunteer 5 VAIL ALPINE GARDEN PLANT SALE. 9-3, gardeners work on Monday and Thursday mornings Safeway Parking Lot. Annuals, perennials, hanging baskets, throughout the summer from 9:00 to 11:30. Nancy Rondeau and more. directs and trains volunteers in caring for the plant 21 DOCENT ORIENTATION. 10:00 a.m. Betty Ford collection. Both beginning and experienced gardeners are Alpine Gardens. welcome... Also summer visitors and part-time homeowners when they are in Vail. 19 SPRING POTLUCK DINNER. 6:30 p.m. at the home and garden of Maureen & Les Shapiro atop Squaw 15 TOWN OF VAIL CLEAN UP DAY. Join Vail's Creek. Invitations will be mailed to local members in early spring clean up, followed by a Town picnic, and benefit the June. Betty Ford Alpine Gardens. Call the VAGF office to reserve a space. 19-27 VAIL VALLEY FESTIVAL OF FLOWERS. A celebration of gardens and flower displays in the Vail Valley. 17 TECHNIQUES OF GARDENING. 10 a.m. Betty To be sure your garden is included, call the VAG office. Ford Alpine Gardens. A workshop on soil preparation, planting and transplanting... a "how to" in caring for your 24-27 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN garden. ROCK GARDEN SOCIETY. Westin Hotel. Hosted by the Rocky Mountain Chapter of the ARGS, Denver Botanic 18 "GARDEN TALK." 7-9 p.m. Vail Public Library Gardens, and the Vail Alpine Garden Foundation. Enjoy Community Room. Experienced and professional gardeners outstanding field trips, lectures, botanical art & will answer your questions about planning and planting photography, botanical gifts, and alpine plant sale with U.S. your garden. and international rock gardeners. ~ sEP 1 AMBER ' ~ ~ ~ WHAT'S IN BLOOM I1V SEPTEMBER? ~ Autumn crocus, colchicum, a variety of late bloomers { that hold over into fall. PLANT PERSPECTNES: Colchicum & Autumn Bulbs. Garden tours will continue in early September. Check _ ~ _ newspaper calendars or call the VAGF office for a schedule. JULY 13 FALL PLANTING IN THE GARDENS. WHAT'S IN BLOOM IIV JULY? ,r+'4 Early: Tall bearded iris, hardy geraniums Later: Shasta daisies, Siberian iris, day lilies, monarda ' ~ ' PLANT PERSPECTNES: Perennials. Tour the ~ , 'y _ Gardens on Saturday mornings from 10 to 12 and learn about the wide range of perennials that grow in the mountain landscape. OCTOBER WILDFLOWER WALKS & PICNICS. We will arrange 4-11 GARDEN CLEAN UP DAYS. wildflower walks on Shrine Ridge, Loveland Pass, Vail Mountain, or other wildflower areas to fit members' interests ~ ANNUAL MEETING & FALL POTLUCK DINNER. and schedules. Call the VAGF office if you would like to organize an outing. Invitations will be mailed to members in October. d 11 A MIDSUMMER NIGHT. Musical benefit for Betty r Ford Alpine Gardens accompanying a fully staged Bravo! } Colorado presentation of A Midsummer Night's Dream with the ~ ~ Colorado Springs Symphony & Theatreworks. The benefit features a "Rocky Mountain High Tea" & champagne - ' ' ~ ~ " rece lion from 5:00-6:30 m. in the Bett Ford Gardens before P P~ Y ~ti.:l r the performance. - :~j; a .f 23-25 PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP. Sponsored by ~ ~ ~~5 the Vail Alpine Garden Foundation and Denver Botanic , Gardens will focus on nature, flower, and closeup R P ~ ~ ~ . ~ photography. Call VAGF office for registration information. V I ~ E ' ' < DECEMBER ~ . ` 27 WINTER INTERLUDE. Holiday concert and buffet \ _ to benefit the Betty Ford Alpine Gardens. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. Concert at 6:00. Radisson Resort, LionsHead. Invitations will be mailed in November. AUGUST _ WHAT'S IN BLOOM IN Ai.IG LIST? Early: Delphinium, taI1 phlox, Japanese iris, roses Later: Asiatic lilies, helianthemum, Asiatic gentian FOR MORE INFORMATION PLANT PERSPECTNES: Late Summer Blooms. Tour about any of the events listed, and registration or ticket sales where appropriate, please call the Vail Alpine Garden ` the Gardens on Saturday mornings from 10 to 12 to learn how to plan your garden for a full season of bloom. Foundation office at 476-0103. MORE ON GARDEN TECHNIQUES. Workshop to If you are not a local resident and a member of the Garden be arranged especially for Garden volunteers, but others most but would like to be included on the invitation list for local welcome. Call VAGF office for date & time. events, please let us know. Volunteers~rom page 1 Don't Forget spring and would love to share with you. On May 24th, during our morning work session, there will be a special orientation planned for our new volunteers. Alpine Garden Plant Sale New green thumbs are welcome anytime, but we will not take time out for an "orientation" until the 24th. When you Saturday, June 5 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. join us, bring gloves, hat, sunscreen, and any favorite small Next to Safeway garden tools. Parking is at either the Tennis Center on the everything you need for summer floral color frontage road or at Manor Vail. Tell them you are a Garden volunteer. We do not meet if it is raining. If you have any questions, call me at 476-4688 before 8:30 a.m. American Rock Garden Society Our stazting time in the garden on Mondays will be 9:30. Starting June 21st, we will resume our regular 9 to noon COn f erenee schedule. That week we will also begin meeting on Thursdays as well, directed by Helen McIntyre. The last The Westin Resort Vail June 24 - 27 Monday of June, July and August, we will gather at noon for Alpine Plant Sale and Gift Shop flower identification. It will beheld at the Ford Amphitheater. There will be an hour session with discussion. Open to the Public Bring a bag lunch. See you all among the daffodils! ~ Saturday, June 26 9:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Remember, also, that there are other opportunities to Extensive selection of Alpine Plants volunteer your time, not only in the Garden itself but for some of the many activities associated with the Garden. Call Rare botanical prints the Vail Alpine Garden Foundation office to inquire. Birdsall gardening tools Bolle sunglasses Assorted botanica, including many from Vail artisans _ _ ' Memorials and Tributes In memory of Mary Frances Todd Leslie Granger Bravo Colorado ~ John & Rita Crowgey Devoni Wardlow Mr. & Mrs. Deane Keith Rod & Beth Slifer Bill & Wanda Frankenfield George Abbey Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Christy Mazjorie B. Jump Frances J. Crounse Bill & Karen Todd Dr. & Mrs. James L. Gray Frank J. Lynch Mrs. Richard Dendler Kristin & Kari Todd Ralph & Justine Donnelly Bette Campbell Mrs. Robyn R. Ulrich P. Coleman Ludlle & Ruth Wilson Paul J. & Eleanor Mills Ruth L. Arndt Lucille & Bill Kuefel ~ memory of Francis Maloit Nelson Mrs. Lind Nelson Jim Arndt Helen Frasher Edgar & Mary Weinberg H. Nelson WF. & Barbara Frasher A.G. Bernholdt, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ro Marfitano In honor of Cathie & Morgan Douglas John Barnett y on their 50th wedding anniversazy Stephen & Elizabeth Ellsworth Mazilyn Auberry Kathleen B. Cole Nan & Don Morgan David & M.J. Nothstine Willis & Virginia Bowman Mr• & Mrs. John F. Schultze Sally & Alan Aarons Stuart & Ann Hartman Tom & Myra Garnett Dames & Moore Henry Rosenblum Kevin M. Thomas In honor of Helen Fritch, Mr. & Mrs. Lynwood Burkhalter Mrs. Adele M. Kasel Dick & Martha Sayrs recipient of Hornblower Awazd Mr. & Mrs. Robert Meyer Tracy W. Prater John & Jean bugger, Jr. Lynda Goldstein Bill Jenkins Kath Bor en Mr. & Mrs. Ted IIy Mr. & Mrs. Don Gulley Imogene & Frank Doll y g Sam Schwartz Mina W. Skinner Robert J. Maloit In memory of Chandler Lamb Cazol Lee & Ken Robertson F.T. Fischer & Associates, Inc. Kathy Borgen Mr. & Mrs. Jack Bourdon & Mrs. Rudolf Benda Kenneth & Mazy Winslow Jersey Miniere Zinc In memor of Vern Anderson Sue & Jerry Garrett Susan, Cathy and Missy y Ruth Y. Maloit "Golden Bear Friends" Mrs. Thomas Winton PeBgY Brock Pazamount Communications, Inc. In honor of Lynda Goldstein Donald W. Moore T.R. & Ellinora Beck Sandra L. Ladendorf Elizabeth Dance Eagle Engineering Services, Inc. for the New Year Dr. James E. Walker Mr. Paul Tripucka Mattie C. Goodwin Leslie K. Goldstein Charles E. Piper Bob & Cibby Danyla Ludlle & Ed Jukkola In memor of Patricia Ann Mier Jean & Paul Bischoff y ) Barry & Tracy Bowden Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Bischoff Mr. & Mrs. Nick Sweeney Alice E. Muffly Mazgaret & Donald Hare Doris Sheneman Mrs. John F. bugger In memory of Barbara Pyne Marsha & Sam Dodson Maz C. Perr Mr. & Mrs. Don Sheneman Mr. & Mrs. Mark G. Mueller, Jr. Linda R. Cook Jo L. Hill y Marvel Barnes & Family Dr. & Mrs. Robert S. Brown Juanita & Bill Wilson In memory of John McIntyre Frances & James H. Williams Helen L. McIntyre Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Mulligan The John Provost Family Anne & Robert Bradford Richard DeVce Ann Repetti Mt & Mrs. R. Edward Storms Lce Eddie Bob & Helen Fritch In memory of Susie Ross Regina Erlandson Clayton & Tracy Lockhart Paul & Nancy Rondeau Sheika Gramshammer Becky & Kelly Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Elwood Hastie 3 Alpine Garden's June Potluck ` At Top of Squaw Creek . ' ~ , , On June 19 Alpine Garden members will be treated to the delightful drive up Squaw Creek to the home of Maureen and ° ~ ~ Les Shapiro for our annual spring/summer potluck. The - dinner begins at 6:30 in the evening at the Shapiro's lovely ~ home with its mountain rock garden and magnificent views of _ the surrounding ranges. A special feature of their home is the greenhouse, with lap pool and many blooming plants. ' ~ Maureen is Events Chairperson for the Gardens and one of { ~ our most ardent supporters and volunteers. ;,i , ~ ~ ~ Call Maureen to make your reservation and arrange what • ~ k ~ to bring to the dinner. Her number is 926-3510. ~ - - ~ ~ DBG Great Gardening Guides r ~~r ~ .-C, r r5~' , P ' ~ ~ Denver Botanic Gardens is offering a new series of "Great r,~ , .~`t ~ ~ ' ~ ~ ~ ~ Gardening Guides" free to home gardeners. Described as • "how-to brochures of environmentally friendly information for homeowners and gardeners," the 16-page pamphlets cover Composting, Container Gardening, Perennials, Water-Smart Gardening, and Environmentally Friendly Gardening. The guides were made possible by funds from Denver's Scientific Looking east through the Gardens in late February. & Cultural Facilities District. Usually the first dowers are seen in the Gardens about March The guides are free but available, one copy of each, only 25, b«t this year's deep snows still covered the ground through by telephone order. Call 1-800-944-8066 if you would like a April. Keep lookingl As fhe snow melts, the blooms will appear. copy. VRl1 Non-Profit f~l~ YlE U.S. Postage 2f3~ GIZYCle11 PAID ~ F'OLtYtlJithOfl Permit No. 31 Vail, Colorado 183 Gore Creek Drive Vail, Colorado 81657 TOWN OF VAIL TOWN MANAGER'S OFFICE 75 S. FRONTAGE RD. VAIL CO 81657 Annual Alpine Garden Plant Sale Saturday, June 5, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Sa feway Parking Lot It's the place to buy all the plants or summer color in your garden. -X~: i i t ~ _ ~l . ~ i - J i Li Box . p 81658 - ~ - t, C ~ - ~ ~ ~~N,~~G~ Vail, 4 2 _ ~ ~li~y~~,'r; .1303) 476- ? 1 i 24r.1g93 _ °f the paperwork MaY ettinq all _ e Crew ; ce in q t I do and - th ur assists ect • „ stem" , b~` fished _pndY u so much ur ParCel. C Pr°3 th the, scions estab et Thank Y° then for -o several tl Wish the oe eCts wools never q put tope ~I qot Eros inq me to c to h lp ~ the Pr 7 . re no her have .Caused You know that o,u are help t e kno of ers Y ?f You we _ any inCOnvenienCe I . approval• and I am sorry for - _ s aqa~-n ~ ,•lotYS Thank . , frustrd - ~ _ , m~ ~ the goodies• _ please end°Y - _ - - j/;r - - Bernhardt - `J 1 . _ ~ t ~ ~ 'J1 ~ / , . ~ 'r 'IA~~ ~7:~' '1'~ '1' N Town of Vail Employee Newsletter 'May .1993:. TOV HEADLINES DEPARTMENT NEWS... Get Set for the Picnic! Public Works/Transnortarion TheTOVEmployeePicnichasbeententativelyscheduled The seasonal employees have all but vanished, but winter is for July 24, 1993. The events committee has been busily lingering! What's the deal? We had no summer to speak of in making plans and the event promises to be a lot of fun! '92, and the 1993 winter has overstayed its welcome. The plow crew would like to remove the snow blades from their loaders, As in years past, plenty of food will be available, along and start fixing potholes! with soda and otherbeverages. More details will follow as Public Works has also been patrolling the waterways as flood plans are firmed up. Mark your calendars, and we'll see danger is eminent. Workers are pulling debris out of rivers to you there! avoid damming, and regular walk-shouts are performed on a strict schedule. These efforts will, hopefully, alleviate some of Hey, I Should have Thought of That... the problems which occurred in the last huge snow year of 1984. The IDEAS committee held their first meeting, and many ~nY and Kris Pardee are expecting a new addition to their great IDEAS were discussed. Several employees have family, and it's not a puppy! Charlie Boomhower's wife is also already submitted great plans to help make the TOV a in the "family way." Lots of new munchkins will soon be running around. better place. One example of IDEAS presented so faz outlinedpurchasingwashableplates,tablewaze,cups,etc. CommunitvRelarions and do away with paper products. This would not only Community Relations sent out We "super-duper way-to-go planting brochure" Todd Oppenheimer designed to all Vail save the TO V money, but would help out the environment residents and businesses. The brochure is very informative, and as well. Another employee suggested that by simply if you would like to obtain one for your very own, please see instructing ALL telephone users to utilize the MCI savings Desiree. code, a huge cost savings would occur. Many employees Community Develoomenr are just dialing long distance directly, and this costs the Com Dev staff has been running around like crazy people Town a substantial amount of money. For those of you recently. You guessed it, the building season has started! Talk who are dialing long distance within the (303) area code, of the Town spies were in Com Dev's office a few days ago, and please dial in the code 9 + 10222 + 1 + the number. If you we are here to tell you, the phones never stopped ringing, people are dialing a number outside the (303) area code, there is -with plans inhand -never stopped coming through the doors, no need to use the code; the MCI service automatically and staff members just kept smiling. Way to go, guys! kicks in. The 1993 Clean Up Day was a huge success! 420 volunteers showed up to pick, bag, and haul away many, many tons of Mark Yer Caeenders, Folks! trash. A big thanks goes to all the volunteers who signed up and On June 12 and 13, the Trees for Vail volunteers will plant SHOWED UP on such a nasty day. Thanks also goes to the public works folks who gave up a Saturday to help with the trees and bushes to beautify the north side of the main Vail effort. interchange. Grab your shovel and boots and come on out to help in the greening of Vail! Call 479-2138 to sign up Fire for this worthy effort. The Fire Department has three new student residents. Craig McGlashan joined the VFD in April. He was born and raised in Zimbabwe, South Africa, and moved to the United States to Ride the Rockies Returns to Vail finish high school and pursue other interests. He has become a On June 23, Ride the Rockies cruises through Vail! They naturalized American citizen. will be based at Ford Park and all kinds of good things are Marc Jordan signed on with the VFD in May. He is from planned for their 24 hour stay. If you would like to Arvada,Colorado.Marchasbeenincollegethepastfewyears, volunteer your services for the event, please call Pam but his dream was to become a firefighter. He is fmm a Brandmeyer at 2113. firefighting family, and wished to carry on the family tradition. Mike Gilbert also came aboard in May. He is from Denver, and Chris Lenieer. Fleet Maintenance spent the past winter in Vail, working for Vail Associates. He Chris is the newest mechanic at Fleet Maintenance. He is a graduate of Creighton University, with a degree in Political d is originally from Pennsylvania, and now resides in Science. He, too, wished to pursue other arenas, and naturally ~ Gypsum. He has lived in Eagle County for 15 years. drifted toward firefighting. Chris is married to Gini Leniger, and the couple has two Library y~jr children, Jason and Danielle. Chris enjoys hunting and The Vail Public Library has new software for their computers. Z? hiking. One program is an encyclopedia of graphics, sights and sounds. Get on over and check it out, it's pretty interesting. Another MAY program is a CD-Rom listing of all books that have ever been printed, and where to find them. If you are looking for anout- Tim Lahey Fire 17 Years ~ of-print book, simply drop your request off at the library, and Kurt Gordon Fleet Maintenance 12 Years ~ the new program might be able to locate it for you! Jce Russell Police 11 Years Joe Chesman Police Police 9 Years Annie Fox Library 8 Years ~ The TOV Dispatch Center in this month's "Guns 'n' Hoses." Jim Applegate Police 3 Years Thanks to TV Star (a.k.a. Dispatch Supervisor) Karen Smith, the Vail Valle will learn all about what those hard worki Greg Raile Data Processing 2 Years folks down in the dun eon do 24 hours a da ~ ~ dd Deto Administration 2 Years ~?j , g Y• Beth Ann Uhlrich Police 1 Year ~ ~ ~ ~ FOR SALE: High quality, brand name dinette set, which includes the table, two extra leaves, table pads, four chairs, china closet and Mr. Pete Burnett buffet. Excellent condition.$10000BO.Ca1lChrisatextension Public Works Department 2121. Apple II GS computer. Complete setup includingsome software. Dear Pete: Call Chris at 2121. I would 1 ike to take this opportunity to thank you and the Town of Vail ALSO FOR SALE: for your assistance the afternoon of February 21, 1993, when an Queen Simmons hide-a-bed couch - $250. Two love seats avalanche closed Vail Pass. Your prompt dispatchingof a loader to the (match each other, but not the couch) - $135 each. Call Georgie scene assisted in the rescue of motorists trapped in the slide and opening of the eastbound lanes of I-70 reducing the length of the delay at extension 2104. for ski traffic returning to the metro area. Opening the eastbound lanes was essential for the clearing of vehicles in the area so our personnel ~y BIRTHDAYS could assure that remaining snow on the slope was stable prior to starting to remove the snow in the westbound lanes. Without your help, this operation would have required more time. Peggy Osterfoss 5/03 Marc Robinson 5/18 John Ervin 5/04 Leo Vasquez 5/21 Please relay a special thanks to the operator of your loader, Jim Hoza, Leonard Sandoval $/04 Jce Chesman 5/22 for his help in the slide area. He is to be commended for his safe and Dale Harpe 5/Og Jeff Layman 5/22 efficient operation of the unit during opening and extrication of the William Uphold 5/Og Matt Martinez 5/23 trapped vehicles, without additional damage. Audrey Gulick 5/10 Hank Lovato 5/24 Often, without the assistance of agencies such as yours, movement of Greg Hall 5/13 Kevin Whelan 5/27 traffic along I-70 would be more difficult during winter months. The Brian Hoyt 5/16 Christie Pinion 5/28 knowledge that you are willing and able to assist the Department in Bart Rivera 5/17 Donna Arnold 5/30 times of emergencies enables us to service the traveling public more efficiently. Congratulations Donna Arnold! Your name was drawn for this month's birthday present. Contact Desiree at 479-2118 about Again, thanks to you and Jim Hoza for your assistance. picking up your gift. Happy Birthday!! Sincerely, TOV EMPLOYEE SPOTLIGHT Edward R. Fink, Jr. State of Colorado Transportation Department The May spotlight shines on employee Kris C~treau. As Records Clerk, Kris is the "front lines" person at the window of the police department. She runs the night shift and gets a big Chuck House kick out of the different types of people who wander into her Vail Police Department realm. Kris processes computer reports, contact cards, police reports, and helps with filing and lots of secretarial duties. She Dear Chuck: performs all her responsibilities in aproficient and professional Thank you so much for the tour you gave the children from the manner, however, she is never without a smile and a friendly School'sOutProgram.Theyenjoyedseeingthe insideofthedepartment. Ford to all her customers. The Town of Vail is lucky to have Of course, the favorites were the squad car and the jail. Kris around, and the many patrons of the police window are glad she's here also! Thank you for reminding them about the caution needed when approached by strangers. It brought up a lot of discussion later in the The spotlight this month also focuses on Elaine Duran, Fire day when we talked about various situations children might find Department secretary extraordinaire. Naturally, anyone who themselves in. knows Elaine would guess her duties cover a wide spectrum. It's great the way the community opens their doors and helps educate Elaine types correspondence, pays bills, runs errands, and is the children. I know that they will benefit from the exposure they are that friendly voice of the VFD which answers the phones so getting now. Thank you, again. I appreciate the time and effort you many hours of the day. She is a CPR instnuctor, and a certified took to give the children a tour. baby-sitting instructor, as well. She is currently working on a baby-sitting program for upper valley kids. In addition to Sincerely, certifying the eager young sitters, she will also have a section on fire safety in the home. Elaine was a school teacher before Susan Hodder joiningthe ranks ofthe TOV fire department, and relishes this Vail Recreation District „rr,,.rtunity to broaden young minds. In addition to all this, she plays Super Mom to two kids and is involved in a John McCarthy horrendousarrayofphilanthropic/communityprojects.Elaine, Tracey Shutter howon earth do you get it all done? Do you sleep? Glad to have Vail Police Department you at the TOV, Elaine! Dear John & Tracey, On behalf of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Colorado, we would OTHER like to extend our sincere appreciation to you for providing police Many TOV folks took off for vacation after the ski season services for the Vail Jam on a volunteer basis. Your willingness to share your time for the benefit of the many individuals who attend the ended. Brenda and Joe Chesman took a long trip to Florida and Vaal Jam is what makes this event such a tremendous success. Alabama. Ken Hughey had a lovely rest in Tahiti and Bora Bora (what a guy!) A whole flock of people gathered at Lake Again, thank you for volunteering your police services for the Fourth Powell, and Greg Raile came back sporting a new moustache. Annual Vail Jam, held on Monday, March 29,1993 at the Radisson Caroline is headed out for a week to an unnamed place, one, Resort -Vaal, Colorado. which has no telephones or fax machines! Desiree Kochera is off for tropical Hawaii. Pam Brandmeyer is not going anywhere Sincerely, because she is "servingtime"with Ride the Rockies. Pam, after John Mazak, reading about everyone else's fun trips, do you feel sorry for Make-A-Wish Foundation of Colorado yourself? We feel sorry for you!! „K~ `°d' 3 m~~ 3 ~ 4.. fi'S,~ .,uh. _f. Y ~Yr yP "~'ffi ~l' . ~ ~ ~ t ~ a 3 i d o 6 N s a ~ #3 ~ t~he~ 1~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~i~l~e b~rk-e ~ra~c a fra~~m Ste a.:m~b=oxa~t~ t~o ~~Ip _ ~ e. _ v f `Coyne on out and brin , ~~°our s a~ ~ ~i~lhe~s ~~to~ g y ~ ch~:eer on thous~awnd~s~ of rd~erst~ a _ _ ~~Dres°s-up in costumes or come as you are._ { • Bring your noise makers, bal~lo~ons flags ~ ~ ~ ad r~ ~ ~ ~ +er~s . F~;pport the Vail Valley:!. - . 4 w; ~ a~<h , . ~f v T w~edx~es~~~ ~un~c ~~s ' n.~~#~:rc x Line, the route from Edwards to the Finsh~ at F.~ Ord Park: [ r ~ ~ ~ a ~ : eat N l ~ T r ~ f~K ~ ~ ~ ~ / P ~ rug. ~ ~ ~ - ~'i - For information call the Toawn of mail at 479-2100. .map on back w,. _ ~ _ • 1 ~ .e,, :v . ~~o~.S ~'o ~ -~o her IpCO~. . ~ ~ ~ .l~_ a ~a ati~tia d Z-7a 2.,~0. fib, n w . ~ .z , i - for s z. , 4 ~ e r ~ ~f ~ ~ ~ 3 _ f??! IlI ~ a~~. tip. ~v~ SENT SY-EAGLE COUNTY ; 5-17-93 ; 11 41 ; 3033287207 3039263515;# 1/ 4 ti - - May 77, 9993 - 71:22 • EARL[ tOUNTY BtlILUING _ S 51 BROADWAY OH-ic::E OE 1'HE y P.O. Rbx 850 BOAfNI (1F COMMISSIdNER5 tAGUt. WI.ORADO 81 F31 {303) 378.9803 iAx: (303) 328.7207 c EAGLE COUN~'Y, Ct3LQRADO A G~111DA BARD lJJ~' CC3(lN~"Y C~MI~JIISS/DNERS REGULAR METING D~4 Y n~>4 y ~4, ~ Og:00 - 10:30 WORK SESS/ON -WEEKLY UPDATE Holy Cross Jack l7. Lewis, Caen ty Manager 10:30 - 11:00 BREAK 77:00 - 72:00 WORK SESSION -FENDING L/TIGATION A4t of the Ffofy Cross Roam James R. Frltze, County Attorney 72:00 - 07:30 LClNGH 07:30 - 02:00 W[7RK SESSION - RECYCLING Mt ~ the Hcdy c.~ Room IVlaury No ttinc~ham, We Recycle 02:00 - 02:75 CONSENT CALENDAR EMlla ~~»ry Rco», /TENS OF A ROUTfNE AND NON-CaNTROVCASIAI NATURE Al3E w.ACIL1 ON THE CpNSENT CALI:JVDAR TO ALLOW THE BOARD pF COUNTY CDMMISSIpNERs 70 S1'tNt~ rr3 T1MF AND ENERGY oN MORI• !M1'dRTANT 1TEMN ON A LENGTHY AGENDA. ANY COneMISSIONER MAY REQUEST 7HATAN REM !iE %iEM01/ED' FROM THECONS!"NT CALENDAR AND L~ONS1LyEREO SEPARATEI. Y. ANV MEMBCli OF THE PUHLK: MAY 'fit=QUEST' ANY lfEM 6E "RFMOVEL7" FROM TNE. CPNSENT AGt1VUA. 7. BI,~L PAYING Linda P~rnkuch, Accounting Mark Sllverthorn, Acting Controller ACTION: Approval subject to review by the County Manager, 2. PAYROLL FOR MAY 27, 1993 Jack D. Lewis, County Manager ACTlQN: Approval subject to review by the County Manager. SENT SY~EAGLE COUNTY 5-17-93 ; 11 41 ; 3Q33287207-~ 3039263515;# 2/ 4 3 A1f+1ENDMENT ?"O RESOL U7-IOJV NUMBER' 93- y2' CONCERNING LEGAL QEPt!S/7'O.RIES Mary Jo Berenaty, Assistant County Attorney ACT10Nr Consider ,epprvval, 4. RESOLUTION RECUGNLZ/NG THE IMPORTANCE CF ENVIfiDNME1~7Al COMPLIANCE BY A/RPO!?TS Ft7R HANL)LING HAZARDOUS MATERIALS Oan Reynolds, Airport Manager ACTION_• Consider approval. 5. AGi;EEMENT VIlITHlSB/LL ASSOCIATES, !NC AND EA(,L,F COUNTY, STATE OF COLORADO FOR AIRPORT ENGINEERING SERVICES Uan Reynolds, Airport Manager ACTION: Consider approval. Q2:~a - a~:00 A. LIQUOR LICENSE HEARING - RENEWi~fL -LITTLE LINDA mare County Room MARIE dba LINDA'S KITCHEN Mary Jo Berenaio, Assistant County Attorney ACT/t7N.- Consider approval. B. LIQUOR LICENSE HEARING -RENEWAL - YARMbNY INC dba STATF BRl!]GE LODGE Mary Jo Berenaro, Assistant County AftQrney ACTION.• Consider approval. p3:0a - 03:45' ABATEMENTS t~~¢ ~~.R~ Cherlyn Baker, Assessor J.A. Crawford & Compeny Box 1 EI Jebel, CO $1628-0001 Schedule number Da2G849 AC7'/ON: Consider approval. l!. S-M Petrafeum Garet Smith as Leaser Box f 5 ? 0 Fagte, CO 81631-1540 Schedule number 007,3049 ACT10N: Consider approval. Ill. Pester Colorado Cc~rporativn Box 4372 Npustan, TX 7721 x4372 Schedule number 00 94034 ACTION: Consider approval. FAGS 2 SENT BY:EAGLE COUNTY 5-17-93 11:42 ; 3033287207 3039263515;# 3/ 4 r ' !V. Ben & Martha Rose Box 821 Avon, CO 80620-0829 Schedule number' 00 y f 565 ACTION.' Consider approval. V. United States of America P.O. Box 948 Glenwood Springs, CD 8 1 60 9-0948 Schedule number 629182 ACTION: Consider approval. VI_ M'idvalley Sports Medicine 23284 Hwy 82 Basalt, CO 81621 Schedule number P02y919 ACT/OIV: Consider approval. Vll. C/D Berenbaum & Weinshienk, P. C. 3701 17th Street, Suite 2600 Denver, G'0 80202-5$2fi Schedule number p011523, 00 ~ 7529, oa 1 r518, 007753/ ACTION: Gonsider approval. Vlll. Robert J. Tucker/Deanne J. Tucker 31033 Buttermilk Ct. Evergreen, CO 80439 Schedule number QD7780 ACTION: Consider approval. IX. Colleft, James F. & Barbara T Box 43.9 Gypsum, Ct7 81637-0439 Schedule number 1103250 y ACTION: Consider approval X Barbara and Wendel! Murray Box 2922 Vail, CO 8 ~ 858-2922 Schedule numbcr 0026297 AG77ON.• Consider approval. PAGE 3 SENT BY~EAGLE COUNTY ; 5-17-93 11 42 ; 30332872071 3039263515;# 4/ 4 Xl. Alien Inc. & Alistair Co LTD. C/L? Marvi» F Poer & Company J200 f 7th Street $uife 960 De»vBr, C(.7 80202 Schedule number DOSO45 ACTION.• Consider approval. Xll. Jean R. Bollinner P.0 BOx 23885 Fort Lauderdale. Florida 333!77 Schedule number 00/786¢ ACTION: Consider approval. Xlll. Crarld Eagle Investments Corp. 7703-8 S Blackhawk Way Aurora, CO 80072-5636 Schedule number 00 73 700 ACTION: Consider approval. XIV. Furo Va!! Development CO. 6$ J 5 L~l Fuerte St. Carlsbad, Calif. 92009 Schedule number 79094 ACTION: Consider approval. XV. Climax Molybdenum Company Clirrlax M1»e Climax, CO $0429 Schedule number 0629y53 ACTION: Consider approval. XVI. Pau! Ickes and Janet Lee Terry 53 Lakewood Lane Council Bluff, lows 5J501 Schedule number 0076870 AC7It~N: Consider approval. 03:45 - 04:00 OPEN MEETING Eep/e Cowrty Room 0~: 00 - 05:00 WORK SE$SlON - CIGNA Mt oJrne Nary Cmss Room Karen Hummel-Lawfon, Senior Accountant Manager THE NEXT MFFfJNG OF TNF FAGLE COUNTY COMMISS10NfRS WILL 8E HELD ON MAY 2b. 1993 THIS AGENDA 1S PAOV1bEi7 FOR INFORMATIONAL PUAPPSCS pNLY- AL1 TIMES AREAPPRd~(INt'ATE THE 80ARD WIIILE /N SESSION 1ldAY CONS1AFJi OTHbR 1TFMS THAT ARE BAOLJOlIT BEr.OAF. R PAOB 4 SENT SY~EAGLE COUNTY 5-19-93 ; 12 21 3033287207-~ 3039263515;# 1/ 3 • i...••: , • Msy 1s, 1993 - 8:$5 , . • F' EAGLE COLBdTY BUILDING • " ; y. ~ 551 tlNOAUWAY pFFiCE pF THE ~i BOARD OF CUAM~IISSICt51ERS EAGI,f:, COIORAT~p 81 bb 1 X303) 3.28.8805 ~ ~~Y, 1 FAX (303) 328-7207 :.~a••. :;f i••; EAGLE CC~l1NTY, CC7~L(~RADC> ~ U~lvu~ ,~3~AR1~ C~~ CC7UNT Y C+f~N1Ml~~I+DIV~R~ ~~'~(JL.4f~ MEETIl1lG D'A Y ..lUIU~ 199.3 D9~: QD - f D: 30 WORK $ESS/ON - WEEKL Y UPDA TE Mt a/the No1y Cross Room Jack D. L $W1S, COUnty Mt~nt~c~B! 7 U: RO - 17: DO BREA/C ~ QO - 12: QO WORK SESSIpN -FENDING LITIGATION h/t of Use Haly Cross Room James R. Frlt~e, County Attorney ~2: DD - D y: 3U LUNCH D f:3D - D2: DD WORK SES$IDN ~ MEET/NGS ATTENDED Mt of the Naly C1+sss fl04111 02: DO - 02:76 CONSENT CALENDAR Eagle Ceea~ty Ranm ITEMS OF A ROUTJNF AND NON-CONTRUVCft5lAL NAT(IRE ARE f'iACElJ PN TNE' CONSHVT CALENDAR TO ALLOW TIJE 80ARD OF COUNTY CUMMJSFilUNt:RS 1V sl'tIVD !7S TJMF ANO EriIERGV ON MO1tE JMPOATANT 1TEA7S ON A LENGTHY ACtNpA. ANY COMA41S51dNF/SMAYRFQUESTTHATANITF.MBE REMOVFU"FROM THECONSfNfCAL£•NDARANDCONSIDERED,StPARAT6~Y. ANY t?AEhiHE71 OFTHEP[JElJCMAY 'REQUEST°ANYJTEM AE °REMOVF.D° F/tQM TNFCONSENTAGt71JDA. BILL PAYING Linda pankuch, Accounting IVlark Si/verthvrn, Acting Controller ACTION: Appproval subjer:t to review by the County Manager. 2. PAYROLL FpR JUNE 1 p, 19s~ Allen Salon, Finance Director ACTIt'yN: Approval subject fo review by the County Manager. SENT BY~EAGLE COUNTY 5-19-93 12 22 3033287207-~ 3039263515;# 2/ 3 3. CONTRACT BETWEEN EAGLE COUNTY, STATE' Off' COLORADO AND G.lU/. C: p. CORPpRAT/pN FOR MAGNESIUM CHLORIDE 1N THE AMOUNT OF X0.286 PER GALCON APPRO~CIMATE'L Y 237,504 GALL O1VS Brad Higgins, Rosd and Bridge Assistant Director AC~"ION: Consider approval. 4. AUTHORIZING THE DRAWINGi OF C(?LLATERAL FDR THE SERVE ON THE EAGLE R1VER SUBDNISION, AND APPOINTING ATTORNEYS IN FACT RELATIVE ]'HERET'O James R. Fritze, County Aitorney ACTION: Consider approval. b: AGREEMENT BETWE,~N THE COUNTY OF EAGLE, STATE OF COLORADO AND EAGLE COMPUTER SYS11C/V1S FOR COMPUTER/ZED SYSTEM /N CLERK AND RECORDL~R OFFICE James R. Frifze, County Attamey ACTION.• Consider approval. f. CONTRACT BETWEEN l=AGLE COK/NTY, STATE OF COLORADO AND COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF HEAI TH INCREASING THE PRENATAL PRpGRAM CONTRACT TO y7,676.00 TOTAL INCREASE OF 2,500.001 Margie Gates, Qirector of Nursing ACT/ON: Consider approval. 02:15 - 02:20 RESOLUTION AUTHpRIZ1NG THE AUCTJrON OF mare co~mtyrtoo,r, CERTIFICATE OF pURCHA$E HELD BY EAGL4e COUNTY FOR NON-PAYMENT OF PROPERTY TAXES -RED CLIFF AREA -TAX L/EN CERTIFICATED NUMBER 7990-04$6 Sherry Brandon, Treasurer ACTION: Consider approval. 02:20 - 02:30 A. PE7"/TION FOIE ABATEMENT AND/OR REFUND OF r~,e ~+ir~a?~ PROPERTY TAXES FOR SCHEDULE NUMBER 11923 FOR LUG H. M!'YER Cherlyn Baker, Assessor ACTION: Consider approval. B. PETITION FOR ABATEMENT ANIa/OR RE'ICUIIID OF PROPERTY TAXES FOR SCHEDULE NUMBER 261B5 FOR DA VID S SWERSKY AND SAUL 814ANDMAN Cherlyn Baker, Assessor .ACT/ON: Consider approval. SENT BY~EAGLE COUNTY 5-19-93 ; 12 23 ; 30332872Q7i 3039263515;# 3/ 3 C. PETITION lc"171~ ABATEMENT ANa/OR REFUND OF PI~'OPERTY TAXES F'OR SCHE!?UIENUMBEI~ 21 ~ y ~9 Ft~R crnraSA HorER Cherlyn Baker, Afsessar ACTION: Consider approval. 02:3D - D3.•30 1 LIClUDR LICENSE HEARING -NEW LICENSE -GORE Eapk courery Roa+ri RANGE fi401~WORICS, lNG. dba SHRINE MT. INN A T VA1L PASS Mary Jo Berenato, Assistant County Attorney ACTION: Confider approval. II LIQUOR LICENSE HEARING - RENEWAL - DESCHAMP, GLORIA J. dba EL JEBEL LIL2UORS Mary Jp Berenato, Assistant County Attorney ACTION: Consider approval. III L/C7UOR LICENSE HEARING -RENEWAL - DEHEI?ffiERA, ROBERT J dba BUSS PLACE Mary Jo Berenato, Assistant County Attorney ACTION: Consider approval. IV LIQUOR LlCENSEHEARING -RENEWAL - OPINONS DAWN VALLEY BISTRO BECONTA INC. dba D PlNON$ l]OWN VALLEY BISTRU Mary Jo Berenato, Assistant County Attorney ACTIt7N: Consider approval. Q3: DO - 04~ 00 QPEN MEE]"ING Eegla County Roam 044: Op - U5: p0 WORK SESSlQN - BRET RANCH SUBalV1SlUN eat of the Noly Croaa Room Mary ,Jo Berenato, Assistant County Attorne y THE NEXT MC£T1NG OF THE E.AC'LE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WILL BEHELD ON JUNE ~4, x993 TNlS AOFNUA !S PROVlOED FOR 1N~QRMATIQNAL PLl1!!'O,".CS` ONL y-ALL TIMES ARF APPROXIMATE. rHE e~OAIrD WHILE iN SE1CS/ON MAY CONSlOF,R oryER rrEmts T1rAT.aR>_ eROVOHr uCiblrt I'l: PAGE 3 E: ~ ~ aid (~{~C~9~~~ 2 9 99~ 'OWN OF UAIL CONTACT: Mike Mollica 479-2138 FOR IMMEDIATE RFC EASE Jeff Bowen 476-2701 May 21, 1993 Caroline Fisher 479-2115 "TREES FOR NAIL" RETURNS! June 12 - 13, 1993 k ~ The Town of Vail, the Vail Vaiiey Rotary Club, and numerous residents are busy organizing the second annual Trees for Vail project, the goal of which is to eventually "green 1-70" from one end of Vail to the other. This year's planting of 200 trees and F shrubs will take place just north of the main Vail interchange on Saturday, June 12 and Sunday, June 13. Volunteers to assist in planting the trees are needed. r 4 The Trees for Vail program began last year when a group of longtime locals formed ~J ` an organization called 'Trees for Vail." The goal of the program was to raise the funds necessary to landscape a one mite stretch of interstate in the heart of Vail. 'With the support of the Town of Vail, the Vail Valley Rotary Cfub, the Colorado State ,Forest Service, the Colorado Department of Transportation, numerous private donors, ~ 'and 100 community volunteers, saplings and full-grown trees were put in place, along ~ with necessary irrigation, from the Vail Transportation Center to Nail's four-way stop. The weekend was considered a huge success and plans began for a repeat planting ' ~ this year. "It has long been felt that vegetating the I-70 corridor would help mitigate the ~ environmental and aesthetic effects upon the community; however, there have never been sufficient funds to move forward with such a project," Mayor Peggy Osterfoss ~ said. "The Trees for Vail effort represents what can be done when private business, public agencies, and volunteers combine their resources. Ultimately, we hope to landscape the entire interstate corridor which runs through our community." ~ $52,000 has been raised from the above mentioned entities for this year's project, with ~F, additional involvement from the Global Releaf Fund, Rotary Interact Club, and Battle F ,Mountain High School. Plantings will include a variety of vegetation, including Quaking Aspen, Pinyon Pine, Plum, Dogwood, Choke Cherry and Buffalo Berry. ~ ~ Organizers are hoping to enlist 200 volunteers to assist with this year's effort. As last ~ ~ year, each volunteer will receive a T-shirt and will be treated to a barbecue at the ' ~ ~ conclusion of the project on Sunday, June 13. Volunteers are encouraged to bring shovels, work gloves, and boots and should contact the Town of Vail Community F Development Department at (303) 479-2138 for more information. ~ 30 75 SOUTH FRONTAGE ROAll VAIi., C01.012Ai)O 81657 TELEPHONE 303-479-2]00 RECE1vED ; a~r €~e..o-~.u.~. Leonard Rice Consulting Water Engineers, Inc. GreggrS. Ten Eyck 2401 Fifteenth Street. Suite 300 /Denver. Colorado 80202-1143 / (3031455.9589 • FAX (303) 455-0115 Leslie H. Botham _ _ _ _ _ _ Ross Bethel Jon R. Ford May 19, 1993 Mr. Larry Grafel, Public Works Director Town of Vail 75 S. Frontage Road Vail, CO 81657 Dear Mr. Grafel: Enclosed is a graph of the annual runoff for the period of record for seven of Colorado's major rivers, which we thought might be interesting to you. The U.S. Soil Conservation Service water supply outlook, as of May 1, 1993, contains the following estimates of runoff for the April through September, 1993, period at the gages shown: April -Sept. Percent Runoff 30 year ~v, Gage (1000 AF) Average 1 South Platte River at South Platte 246 116% 2 Arkansas River above Pueblo 370 131% 3 Rio Grande near Del Norte 610 117% 4 Gunnison River near Grand Junction 2260 156% 5 Colorado River near Dotsem 1995 128% 6 Yampa River near Maybell• 1100 116% 7 Animas River at Durango 635 132% • Runoff estimate for April-July, 1993 period. For the first time in several years the runoff forecast is above average in all seven basins. While this is good news in terms of water supply it may indicate the possibility of spring floods in some areas particularly in the west and southwest part of the State. We have provided the enclosed diagram as part of our effort to be a source of water related information for you in your water planning efforts. We invite you to call us with any questions you have related to surface water, ground water, or civil engineering. Very truly yours, LEON D RICE CONSULTING WA><~x ENGINEERS, INC. Leonard Rice Chairman Water Rights Ground Water Civil Design and Construction ~ A Water Resources Planning `ou~~`` ~/`I/ XG TC~ LG~ /off! ~`s-vo r~,~-~ u,, ~ 7a ~,t,ue~d ~J~fLo G"L~L~ Convttunitu T<let i5ion ~~~v~r Q~~vC~ fir. ~ . May 14, 1993 rL~~U~ Caroline Fisher ~ji~~~~~7 Public Relations ~ ~ ~J ~ if /5~~~-~ Town o f Va i 1 C' ~ /tti~i~t,,~ 7 5 S . Frontage Rd . Vail, CO 81657 ~CL ~ ~ ~'6"~~? ~ Caroline: On behalf of our Board of Directors, I'd like to thank you and the town for your generous and continued support of Vail Valley Sunday. Our seventh consecutive season was completed last month following the presentation of 22 shows. We hope you had a chance to enjoy them all! As you probably know, each weekly show was repeated 10 times for a total of 220 airings for the winter season. In other words, your sponsorship association was mentioned at least 660 times. I'm enclosing a copy of our "thank you" ad which was carried in the April 24th edition of the Vail Daily. The ad contains the names of nearly 100 individuals who were directly involved in the winter season, either as a guest or member of the crew. We think these numbers are a reflection of the show's impact on the community. I'm sure you'll recognize the names of many of your friends and acquaintances. Thanks again for helping to make the winter shows possible. I hope you'll consider continuation of your sponsorship for another season beginning in June. I'll be in touch with you soon. arm regards, dd, S nne Silverthorn xe utive Director For council packets, Larry G. and Pam. enc. Thanks, Desiree Post Office I3ox SOU :won. CO 81020 30 ~ 'it)-~~~ ~._vr " w~sare:r m,+. ..r;K..~...-.,~...,~rm....o _ .~K+.•.~ r..r,~r...n~....n.u. :av:_. _ sear:u..~<r~.avae_.._ n..Ny.,r..:v ,.,:c.... _ - .r . -,r,.,c.,4 ~.~c ...~~rn-..-...a.. rss.. .~wc . . , w... ,.auusm..r ~ e..nu._. _ ~...~va+asw~asrr..rw+snw~enmw~.s~nmv.cm!w~-nwua.aaea+rrnt ~u~wa.~w+eronu ~ , . , _ E T T A ~``i( ~ I / t A~ ~ ilJ L L ~LLJi1J~ D A D WOULD LIKE TO THANK OUR GUESTS AND CREW FOR NJCAKING . THE WINTER SEASON A SUCCESS Acoustic Rooster Cindy CaAicrate Howard Gardner Bob Loudon Ron Phillips Dan Aguilar Richard Carnes Josh HaII Mac McCain Eric Prouty Carol AUeman Ruth Cook Bill Heicher J.l. Malone Michael Rawlings Buck Allen John Dakin Robin Hensler Tony 1ilauro Mark Ritterbusch Leslie Allen Kelly Davis Brenda Himelfarb Kevin McCabe The Road Trippers Judi Anderson-Wright Terry DeBeau John Ilulleberg Gordie McCeIlan RockSlyde The Crest Artisimo Dana DelBoaco The Instigators Jim Middleton John Rickert Jeff Atencio Jim Edfora Jamea Johnson Josh Millaapa Alan Schonberger Cherlyn Baker Terry Evans Marty Jones Jeff Mohrman Patti Sherman Michael Bennett Jim Feldhaus Steve Kiene Bob Morris Mike Shim-Konia Michael Billingsley Caroline Fisher Scott Kirkland Mike Morris Kelly Smith Jacqui Bishop Paul Fiorino Mike Kloaer Susanne Morris Eric Steiseberg Bluer Effect ~ Ceil Fols Barbara Kroeger Moe MuIrooney T,:~.,~ Stinnette Pete Brill Tony Forrest LA & Wendy Sheryl Newman Shannon Tanner ' Kirk Broaiua Steve Frank Jackie Lacy Dwayne Olson Kaylen Wells ' John Burrows Harald Fricker John Lange C.C. Oaterfoaa Tau Wolin-Brown Michael Cacioppo Helen Fritch Mero Lapin Peggy Oaterfoaa Mike Woods John Calhoun Brendan Gallagher Diane Leach Pat Peeples ~ Jeff Woser Jamea Phillips Mark Zaden SPECIAL THANKS ~TO OUR UNDERv~VRI~.t~tNG SPONSORS: RADIO • WARREN & ASSOCIATES VETERINARY MEDICINE KARATS JEWERLY • HUBCAP BREWERY & KITCHEN • TOWN OF VAIL Chan~'1E'~ TOWn? OF AvO~T • yAIL DAY Vaii Valley Community Televtslon 4~`E'LL FE FACE ~~~ITII ~ SLTi~~~°IEI? ~Ett~~?'~ ~I~ ~IIC~~'S ON SI.ND:41~, ~L-NE `'C~T~I ~ . r } i WORK SESSION FOLLOW-UP May 21, 1993 Page 1 of 1 TOPIC _ QUESTIONS _ - FOLLOW-UP SOLUTIONS _ _ I~, 1991 The CDD is summarizing comments from the 5112 walking tour and will I 11/19 NEWSPAPER VENDING MACHINES LARRY E.ITIM D./JIM C.: What can be done to make these present to Council when ready. uniform and locations less prolific? 1992 11/10 COUNTY REGIONAL MEETINGS Next meeting scheduled for Thursday, 613/93, from 5:00 P.M. - 7:00 P.M. Place to be announced. 03116 AMENDMENT 1 COMMUNICATION CAROLINEISTEVE B./STEVE T./HOLLY: Develop timeline Amid-July deadline is planned. STRATEGIC PLAN and plan to reach all "organized" groups within the TOV as well as general public/develop education tools for group representativesladdress issues through elections prolcon piece. 04/27 NOTICE TO LARRY E: Notify both county offices of the Town's interest TREASURER'SIASSESSOR'S in receiving all notifications of land tax sales in the county. OFFICES - - 1 150° YAMPA r ..~,8 eb•m orwNy . 1000 10 YEAR RUNNING AVERAGE RUNOFF v ~•~"f . - / 1 ~uTMPUrre 1500 • • • ~j 5--~s~ loan ti 500 • Z 4 ~^1,. ~ :M~, pUNNI~SON PuWb 8 ~ ~ "gyp ~ ~ 3 R108RAN DIVISION 1 -SOUTH PLATTE RIVER AT KERSEY ~ Z t0o0 ` 7 ~ ANwweas 8ANJUAN • • • • • • • . Dwr~ f 1 I o Map of Colorado Showing Water Divisions DIVISION 2 -ARKANSAS RIVER AT CANON CITY t9 U.S.G,S. Surface Runoff Gauge 15ao ~ Division Water Court loon • r•.••• 7 WaterDiviSlOn soo ~ The U.S. Soil Conservation Service water supply outlook, as of W DIVISION 3 -RIO GRANDE AT DEL NORTE May 1,1993, contains the fotlowing estimates of runoff for tl1e ~ 400° April through September,1993,period atthe gages shown: LU asoo ~ April-Sept Percent Q loo Qlv g(Y,er rlqun~l of 3A e~eae ~ 2500 • • • • • • • • • • • 1 Platte RNer at South Platte 248 118 p • • • • • • • • 2 Arkansas Rlver above Pueblo 370 131 p 2000 • • • 3 R(oGrandenearDalNorte 810 117 1500 4 Gunnison River near Grand Junction 2260 158 Z 5 Caloradc River near DotSeto 1995 128 1A00 i 8 Yampa River near Maybell 1100 118 ~ sao ~ 7 Animas River at Duranpa 835 132 Z ~ ~ ~"0 ^q'~ s`~ ^ Q s~,~~ n~~ ~ " DIVISION 4 - GUNNISON RIVER AT GRAND JUNCT{ON a3' loco 500 • Z ~ ~ COLORADO RIVERS DIVISION 5 • COLORADO RIVER AT HOT SULPHUR SPRINGS H I STO RI CA L : 2500 1~° RUNOFF • 1000 • • . i I 500 " " DIVISION ti - YAMPA RIVER AT MAYBELL ,soo 1 Leonard Rice Consulting Water Engineers, Inc. loco ~ 2401 Fifteer>th Street, Suite 300 • • • • • • • . . Derner, CO 80202-1143 ~ ~ • , • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • (303) 455-95691 Pax (303) 455A115 DIVISION 7 -ANIMAS RIVER AT DURANGO _ _ ~ ' May 1993 _ y ~ - - ~ ~ • ~ _ ~ ( F'~ ~ ~ a a r+~"' fir: •y; , ' lw. a ~ z ~ t fir'. _ i. ~a ~ _ f ` ~ r 3 ~Y" R Q 0 M~~ ix~ J' ~ ~ *Y ~ L~ { { wit .Fq:}}., A ~ ~ ~ 4 ~i '(q I) ' t A ~ 'vv y*'7~'J .C -•M nyt { 'i' S 'r~ V #Y ' } - x T - 1 3~ - sc:a c;>a. ~ ' Aa' , Y;3~ ~»2~"'~,~,`~~'. < 'ry: ~ a~" ° ~ - ~y.#~'~aa~.rr~~,,. ' i'3 W J 4-' 3. G.. y fd'ir ' q ~ ~ _t 1 ; i„?a , ~~~~~;d~ - k.V v {fF+.,.~,~`.n'„''. wr~,~4. `,.A,~y ~ i a x 9 ~,k~~ fix 4 ~ „4' _ ~ -~`;-x- ~ , k"`i~ ? Few- . a'`. .w .,a. :so~:.%,'`~°^' + - K:S~~sfi ,~~~t r, .gig ~ '3 ~ ~ .j Y~ • y a x x..' a'~~ 'K' =~~%~.a"`. ~'?a~°'. .t ins, r _ ,at--s.:~• ~ , i.~_" "w:< -,r~ ?a~~'g e.v ~ kq; T-a~?6<.aS."'a ..a'M:'' >a. . '%4'.~ ° s> ~ - a 1 . rte.., i,... k - .;z, ':'R-,- 2 ".?~s•, -i±~'' ate' ,'o+ rtR t~~ ~tk ~e. .i~x ms's : ~ ~'i P ~ :~~.,:it, 3 .ro ~4'„u .sue-' ~~r'-.~ z~,'~ t'~. ,~yy,~';~,., .k . Ada" ~ 6 wu ~a'~'. ~ 5:,,,, s~ ~ ¢ $a„ .,'•r3. ~ R ~ ..t1 : • nTr''. yr,.. i, .u. i`~i.' r`:~y: u r". ~i, ~ ~Qa. "`F' .t n':.' , s a A~ .+.^a. .s a„..'.i, fi + . ~z . _ N .s 7..., e~{ - ~ .,an' ~~`c. ' n air a„ zx ~ ,k..<t'N . "ys~ - ~~~e ' - r. rv'.,. v _ ~ y y d~ yy NN . > < n`~," ~ "?-i'>:t ~ ty'. :4. ~ T ^~t 'r. ~i.zs~H' neN r ~ ~'ry ,t. r 5e, x., ~ ' F ~9` ~ . 4:~ ~~+.~t ~ ~ 42~~ s ? + x <,,..-.,r„ ="-'six . fi.~ ash ~a~, s. ~ v ~r,. i' ~ . _ ~a, .'.<p-.:~v r x. ~:,,y;~y.t N~ 4~': ~ a'~;vf`. : ;e~ N ~;c~.q;.~ 'r - 0 'yea 1 g°.~ ~r +~`nt'. ~2r 3y, Yt: r'~" f Iii - `'-~#z, ham- £~w,"- ~6~ .~Y ~ W, Y c'~ "~,`y,11 ~ T Ky,,.++§ 3 s....$i g,~, ~~a`h. { a` a'~::~. ~T. a ~ c _ ~ ~.a''x~'s~~' +~,k_'"a s°`c"''~ ar~~ "m; . ..:FLI ~ ~ "9E? a 7 re=. ~ ys. •~~P l , rz -a ~ 3 ~a , c°u "-~a~$4~sa _ ~ , . y , ° ~ , Left and above: To those who fear crime, freeway Park - ~ + ~ ' r r~' a• tee,, s x~.5;-. ~r'`..* ~ ~ aS = ~ ~ ; r ` ~ ~ h become toa lush. A tree•thinning program is under • ~ ~ 9 „ 3~ ~t ~h ~ way while surveillance cameras and private security ~2.,~, ~ _ ~ ~ .y ~ guards are already on board. "t~Ue can't afford a single E • { : ~ ~ ~ ~ incident,,, says James EI1is, the park's biggest booster. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ B~xlow: Added in the 198Ds, Angela Danadjieva's acces• ~~-9= siblePigotthNemorialCarridorconnectsaretirementcom• - ' ~ ~ ; ' k~~<,. . '`"4~'" ~ munity with the new convention center and original park. i'' .y#. ~ ~ •`~tk`"'Fi F . .x4.'° #-'a s3-a-~~ "t,A. b~:," 8+~, . c.~ ~'a~~r '~j r" a'~~ vx:Y', j ~ -F 1~ ~ rx ~ ~ • ~ . ~ ~ un~ :,'x,,a.'~2 u , , ~ fir: ri ~v'°.. d.. ~ ~1 ,~4,~,,. n-;`r, . ;r~i~ N +~,§-4 7C ^ n. 'jY.t'a .,,'s' i - "5 ~ "'f _ zr. • n£.. i ~3 . ¢ - ~i a sank,.. K%x'~~ . v~+,-, o~ , Y F ` b .w. ~fi. ~,Y.. ~`+:u' i ua e> ~ a ? r. r,~:'~ fi ` ~ .a °G r, : ;si q; ~a. µµw: a. . . h " ? ~ 3rt - f .,+i . 7' n J x 'dam , `~il ~ `+f. Z r"~':..~'.~.a+ ~ v)., c x w. ~ ~tr.° ~•a# M ~r ,.Jf-a".°~:.C : , f~k3i. x 'i' ° ~ 3` : ";r x~:. a ~a,~ §Lsra..a ~ s ' :~"'h" "'3 ~ . a1, , .'v~`d'.. 4 .sr . - v,. _ ..a t'"° t' ' `S s_ - * i, a~er e s a . 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'P ' f~ 'r'• , ~ ^:ate~. ..;,-'ry Via.. e, ~ 't,. a - ~~'r' :^9~r.;» ~ fi^~z~'.- Jay '~."°'~4•r? m "r_ ~ ::T _ ? ~ - `.s. ~~t~~" a , ~ 4~ x ~ a , t ~ t - - ~ w' ' ~'R k ' u _ .oy, ~ i ,fir' ' 9 t p~ x„z ~ ~d x w F ..i:t ~ m..t~, ,;u.a r, 1 "ray'"' ~o. >i ~X'~ 4~ ~ z 3.. f ae J '~:J ~.s '?e`'. ,ft .f, 3' ~ nb- t ~r A'~ ~Ld 1. ~rii m ~ ~ r s ~ a' x% ~ _ e - s @'S a' -9a, "?k o ~ ~ ,ass ~ h._ ~ Ry'°1i .8' ~~vv'F~l ~ f g~, `t~ rq-~ ~ ffi. ~.T ~ ~ ? ~ 53 'r" Ag ~r ' ~ ~ , 4. ~d~, ~c ~ a.~, '•Mk'. . ~'sS a ~~v`~ ° +yi F a`~ .-t'~ " ~ 3, :4'~^rC 'u ~°'$i~~r,~ aK ~~-~rJ~ r as 'v,-~,rL' ' T". x, ~ - fs~r~~ •e • : 3 ' ~~,i' ~5~~ - a T ~ F~`: „rs.,p, ,~,s ,,,,vv s , = _ n. s. _ ' . `..3~' : !~S j ; r '~"t~:a ~ a f C O V E R S i 0 R Y • W E S T ( i N E N O R i H 'N E S i T H E O R i H C O V E R S i 0 R Y . , Opposite: Plan of Pigott INemorial Corridor, which adds access (on ramps graded at 8 percent) to the Halprin original. five fountains are placed so that eW prO,~eCtS h~lVe defied--t111C1 later Cle{~llled-C011Ve11t1011 ~S dl"21111~1t1C~lh( 2S se~lttle S Flee- one is always in view as a pedestrian moues down the corridor. Each fountain features a seating area surrounded by native plantings. Planters, foun- T t'`iI'h. Virhell fll St )r0 JOSGCl 111 the early l~~)oS, plans r0' tl C011C1'etE' "ll(l" OVeI' filter- tains, benches and ocher furnishings were all custom designed. Below: Autumn view of convention center entrance. Freeway Park actually con• ' a} . ~ l 1 ' r r Clt r OfflClalS aS al'Cl1lteCtlll'al ~V111n1Sy, I)Ut }Oy r 1Vhel1 I~a1V1'e11Ce sitsti astlrr ncC al olf Danadlieva and K enighAssociates bShedbased her designaondalnaturalscanyon~ The parkncomobinesra massiverprofi a meant to - State, ~ eT'e SpllrneCl by 5 e p p 1 ~Iall)1'll1'S StU11111ng, f1Ve-acre 11a11g'lTlg gal'Clell Ol)P,neCl t0 111te1'11at1011a1 aCCla1111, f01'nli;l' SheptlCS viewed by motorists with boz gardens and other smaller details for pedestrians. A walk through the park covers about a 90•toot rise in elevation, ,vere loudly touting "The Lid" as the ne~'v land-else gospel. ? In 1J~4, Seattle extended the parh easttiVard, reulliting~ downtoti~~n with it~'+ free~~(ay-sundered neighbors. In 19~~8, the lid s ~v. re, rt. ~ Lx ,;'r'.r+ u~>X?^" i~ ~s ~ - t ~"~:w^~~ x 4~ri'.r~`} 'C`°FSg'S'~"Trr ."a:",~ ms's ° `~~~,a,Yrc .~P3.y7re } x H~a ra~'~`"+g~11- ,,emu ~`a~ . r ~'Y s~ ~d)`a'2' , .err. ~ ?"k ~'x,~' m..~' e ~~''m t''1 fir, %ke A~~~~ ~ r,tfi'~-~hyr.s `3~ ~ cw Sya ?y`'X » ~.`3' ~_'Sa ex !.b c.r.~~ a~fE:.bs~ a+..qi' ~_'Tl ~m ~ ~ , u t,r`aR,;~;~ x.+v P`'~ c ,r '~zr~ eQ'~"';' x'`~~E s gas ~ n} ~ c' dd'~'~ ~'~u'~'~~ ~a r •'v ro y~i ~i. } 1 t Y ~M'r r~` ~M ~r . cYx<'a," ~!'F.~-a ° r~ ~ ~ ~r w~~" h~ ..n k. R ft~ E4 ca ~a~~r'` a ,r`~,~. ~ ~ ':awl `r a~ ,~i Sr 9~a~' ~s~ . e~ ' ~ ~~lfu~ "i:~`,1 a ~ a~ Zrf`a• q: x ~'~R''r4.t ~C ay ~'~~`r"sss~ < „h, t°` 5 r .era-k ~,r i~ th. 1 ~T'.~~~k'~''c," 1 B r Z 4r e'.h ~.y ~",u ~a"T,q i. xP. `yj"` "i~` n ! 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Hal )rill with \\-hon1 Dan;':rljieva n priced \!%hilc nonlle 41'eowth in the surroundin" (lo\~ ntoii n, Including l,_. ~ ; . „ ' , ~ iI'fr'a'ellt, from selves !s a cuu~,~el;tion c;nl,er surrounded b,~ r, n 1, 1 1 1 t > J q ih n ..";I. 11810 ieGt Of 1,1i; )Oh CL, I''1'LCG1rl.t}r I r11h ~,{lC,l' llalil', „ Illll(, d i_. ,I .Cl 1'0(1:1, I , ar,~~ - r. ~ I(;tPa!1 ',1'lthlil 1t,d,1r1I1~' CI1Fil.2t11Ct'. t~l'Olil ~'Olli' }{UtEl 1~ S!11YlCl.,adl" ldti~ fl^, ;'S 1''i'C',C:1G?i!r 1'arJc, \1"a.17eS t118t ;,alilB (,1~~1^.S, (7\'fll'(` r f0 residential unlt,- Z nl- 10 1 1 , , _ _ }l.t. , ln~c r till%111'11111 kli'1<. 111E;1)14;,; ..;t'liu.u,.,its ~iC 1lflVC 11'1. tl , +I ;p Cll)1C'C 811Ci c,,:l~~ 7U']~ll1t; slots. 1 r1 ~ cn 1.. J QCi 'til h'Jh"t• P'tCltt''I' Li;d t1e,1111d1)' 111~'JII','tir5, Il il~.)Df0\'e "S? r' ~E;".tGie ',l)11C('h6i' B1liilli ~li+.l,l.~la7,. 1!.C.1 slocil 1.11('1115e^.t CS lh:ilt 1.111 41' 11'liiS18('~, 14i; \ Uu1~i 11, i aff,t.l,,l t,t _l 1 ' -,<< , xr I''"F°t1'21\' Yal'h 1tS('11 1'ellld1115 81101'- S'.ent,~, .1,}S _ 1 i.;, „ ' 'f` c; T ' i it 111 hd'1i)!1a'.(i I".:,~i'd(l, i''1'CC`,i': 1J1i1 r,~5 C~~; 1' I; Dli i+C) 111 t!',` i • . ° llYbl('i li,lll:. 111(,11 ]11<l'„]lrli~ (i10:;5. .v 1 111 the )Al']i 81111 LIiC;Ir'\%C' gat Illl t.iip`;U Cf71't]L'r[, L.1 I1:~_i~ 111.' i lU:_. .dl, X11 , „T.7) 5 , ;11.1 ;r bee!1 `;1'1!1; 11'Gi)1811! l`;ltJl ttli' 1'1v'hL5 Lled81ai111P,Ut 1J that It Gill 111ollsly }:'opltlar among loc'.als and is a fa\'o116e lunch s}Jet I , a- ~ ;~•r;ls and )ar)<s officials ~ re}ult<11;ion grolis rosier her the }E~,,, ~,1,t, ..,1, clE,r 1 , . . , i ' a natura} caul ran Danad- Police have stepl!ul up I)a1:, p.11. 1 i , + _ ' \i'ave i,i' free\\%av lici )rojects. Rich- heconlc heap: }'-handed, IIa1171 m ;ply;.. Jnsi. l,eraus~. it• s for office «olhel,,llIo(relcll after r ~ S COLPI- wlll 111((:1 ' lllltllltCl Iln B,l'tE;11S11%C tl'CB-t11111ntlly }1Y04~Ti11Y1. f1tS d C~.! rltl .,t 111 the i'CCCilt ~ , 1 r _1 )111'ii 1)G811 J11alPn La 1Fal'l~: 111 a11C, )1RC8 (laCSll l 'dUtilln8i]Ci111V ]11Ei111 jieva s clesit;n features a labyrinth of con~lc,tc cldf , ~ ' ~;vell since the convention center opened, portions of Cllr ruond, Virginia, now has K~u1a\i'ha i l,lra, a tl~a lcl)ra•ect it on,'ht to lie allo\';ed to h~y)pEnl ever:~r\','11ere." t does, tairu-ells and footpaths. A to\verinl; fountain masks -r rule hullilreds of trees r,ncl lid have been nlollitorecl bar surveill~ulee can)eras and pri- ~ over afour-1'vle highway, I~asian s C,cntraltArtel} } l the ilitea;,i.~ltc,~ loan bclo\ti, ul. . ~ka~cra)ers. vote seau•ity guards. I'et, \\hile part: crime has drappe(1 proposes a ~1-acre fin, comp](te \vithliles ofodolrnto\t,n Pu'1(1 Roberts2ol'ites•fol't11eSe<Ittlelt(eehh'. flowering' shrulJS screen out the su.loundul~ , ~ ~ } Starveling inside, both freeway and cityr fade fi'am percep- siglliilc:autly, city officials and park boosters remain acute- j space and an arbm'etum, abo~re ].5 n F E B R U A 6' Y 1 9 4 7 _ , " ~ i