Opinion

Dear Editor, This letter is to share my wonderful experience and support that I received working together with our Mayor, Bill Diak, since May 2009. My liaison between my job with Great Lakes …

The tag at the bottom of the Writers on the Range column that ran in the Oct. 23, 2024 Lake Powell Chronicle, “How to learn where we live,” should have read: “A version of this …

In 1998, when I was in fourth grade, I joined a class field trip to Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado. But when we got to Cortez, the road was barricaded. Hours earlier, three men had stolen a …

Page, AZ – Understanding the civil traffic case process at the Page Magistrate Court can be helpful for drivers in our community. In fiscal year 2024 (July 1, 2023 - June 30, 2024), the court …

The Colorado Trail, an iconic 567-mile high-elevation trail that crosses the Rockies, owes its existence largely to Gudy Gaskill, a charismatic, six-foot-tall woman who could make tough things seem …

More frequent wildfires in the West can turn hiking through beautiful, high-elevation country into a dangerous game for hikers. In July, seven friends from Idaho, Colorado, Washington and Montana …

The company I work for recently built a new ticket office at the base of Buttermilk Mountain in Aspen, Colorado. Environmentally, we killed it: argon-gas-filled windows, super-thick insulation and …

I suppose it’s the human thing on a hiking trail to acknowledge one another when passing. But on a well-used trail, the same comments come up time and time again. “Good …

Shame on you! Our democracy thrives on our ability to vote. The latest election in Page confirms that the majority of registered voters and even eligible residents, that don’t bother to …

Dear Editor, I seldom voice, but it is time again. I see that the City is moving forward again with the downtown area. I still ask, why? Yes, we are becoming a year-round tourist area and …

Although I am no longer a resident of Page due to various health issues, I still consider Page my “hometown” and have retained many close, personal relationships. As a former member …

The experts tell us an energy gap looms. Fossil fuels are phasing out, and solar and wind power can’t produce enough electricity to meet the demand in coming decades.

Guides in the outdoor industry inevitably come up with collective nicknames for customers. On horseback they’re “dudes,” on the river they’re “mers” – short for customers – and they’re “sticks” if you’re trying to trick a trout. Sometimes the terms trend a little negative – “flatlander” comes to mind, and there’s another name I’ve come to use but need to explain it.

For the past few years, I’ve participated in “Thistle Thursdays,” targeting a popular trail near Jackson, Wyoming.

Hunting may be losing popularity nationally, but in the West the number of hunters is climbing.

Here’s a statistic to be unhappy about: Colorado and Utah host the fifth and sixth most expensive housing markets in the country, according to Bankrate.com.

Skunks love autumn as our backyard gardens fill up with ripe vegetables. But in my northern New Mexico corn patch, that meant a determined skunk chowing down on ears of corn every night. What followed next was a conundrum: I wanted it gone but didn’t know how to make that happen.

The notion, ubiquitous in America, that all beavers everywhere are a panacea for what ails an ecosystem is misinformed. Yes, beavers are beneficial – in the right places.

Dozens of TVs, refrigerators, stoves, washers, dryers and abandoned cars had either been gunshot, torched or both.

Trace was born at home in Page, Arizona, to John and Beth (Jacobson) Hepworth on September 18, 1986.

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