Saturday, January 28, 2023

Parsons Preserve Status update

John Parsons (right) and Camp Verde Community Development Director Steve Ayers at the dedication of Parsons Preserve in April 2019. (VVN/file/Vyto Starinskas)

By Vyto Starinskas

Originally Published: January 25, 2023 12:05 a.m.

(NOTE: This article appeared in the Verde Valley News editions of the "Camp Verde Bugle" and "The Verde Independent".  It is Copyright 2023 by Verde Valley News.)

CAMP VERDE – John Parsons’ dream is $45,000 closer to reality.

The Camp Verde Council chipped in to make improvements to Parsons Preserve, the 40-acre nature preserve on the Verde River open to the public.

The Parsons Preserve is both a preserve and a recreation spot with hiking trails and other amenities, according to Community Development Director Steve Ayers.

But the preserve development was delayed to accommodate an extensive project to armor up pillars of the Interstate 17 bridges, which are near the casino, Parsons explained. The preserve is near the base of the interstate pillars.

The $45,000, approved by the council in October, will develop an unpaved road into the park property; a fenced-off parking area and signage, Parsons said.

This “shows a real commitment on the part of Camp Verde Town Council to make the Parsons Preserve a destination attraction,” Parsons said. “The Verde River riparian corridor is a birder’s paradise.”

The preserve was dedicated in April 2019 by the Parsons family, city staff and supporters of the Verde River.

A longtime Arizona conservationist, Parsons is best known in the Verde Valley as “Mr. Verde River” for protecting the cherished waterway and educating people about it.

Ayers said the contractor for the ADOT project, Vastco, bladed in an entrance road and flatten out a parking area after they finished the work on the I-17 bridge pillars.

“Over time, the planned improvements will significantly enhance the experience of visiting the preserve,” Parsons said.

“Once it is accessible, it will begin to receive steady usage for those seeking to be near The Verde River.” He said it’s a small preserve, so the hiking trails will be short.

Ayers has said the preserve will be a nature area with hiking trails, a parking area, a place to launch kayaks and canoes in the river and a place to enjoy nature.

Most of Parson’s Preserve is prone to flooding and not suitable for high development and intensive use, Parsons said. Fortunately, these same characteristics make it perfect for wildlife watching and quiet recreation such as bird watching and nature walks.

Parsons thanked Ayers for his advocacy for the preserve and Wayne Ranney for suggesting the idea many years ago.

Parsons has led efforts to protect the Verde River since the 1980s and has encouraged rafting, kayaking and other recreation on the fragile waterway threatened by over-development and invasive species growth.

Parsons said he would be forever grateful to have such a nice nature preserve bearing his name.

The $45,000, approved by the council in October, will develop an unpaved road into the park property; a fenced-off parking area and signage. (Courtesy of the Town of Camp Verde.)


Saturday, January 14, 2023

Eric & Michelle Jurisin respect employees


Story by Paige Daniels. Published in "Verde Independent" January 8, 2023.

COTTONWOOD – Eric and Michelle Jurisin may be the busiest business owners in the area. In addition to handling nine hospitality businesses, they treat nearly 300 employees to uncommon benefits.

Owning Haunted Hamburger, Grapes Restaurant & Bar, Nic’s Italian Steak & Crab House, The Tavern Grille, Pizzeria Bocce, Strada @ Bocce, Crema Craft Kitchen & Bar, The Tavern Hotel, and The Clinkscale, the Jurisins are constantly traveling between Cottonwood and Jerome to keep their businesses running.

Eric and Michelle began their business journey with the opening of Haunted Hamburger in Jerome in 1994. With its popularity established, Eric was convinced to open an eatery Cottonwood.

That was 20 years ago, with Nic’s opening Dec. 30, 2002.

At the time, no one imagined anyone putting in a fine dining establishment in Old Town, which was looking shabby and survived on trinket shops and dives amid some hardy and beloved businesses. But the Jurisins saw what could be.

“I was amazed how many locals showed up and hung out in Old Town. We saw potential with this town, and we love the old buildings,” says Eric. “It was in a good location, it’s walkable to the river, and it’s near trails.”

As beautiful and ideal as Old Town Cottonwood became for Nic’s, Eric and his wife soon saw neighboring businesses come and go, such as thrift shops and a movie theater (ushered out by a fire). The couple was able to maintain their locations during tough economic times and now have six locations on Main Street

But everything came to a halt in 2020.

As COVID-19 swept through every part of the globe, the Jurisins’ locations, along with many others, had to close. Their business was put on pause for six weeks, which didn’t affect their employees’ paychecks.

“In terms of payroll, it was business as usual so everyone basically got a six-week paid vacation,” Eric said. “We already knew the Verde Valley was in an employee crisis and we couldn’t risk losing people because we didn’t know if we would be able to reopen without them.”

Eric and Michelle are known to go above and beyond for their employees. In addition to a free six weeks of pay, the Jurisins also closed all of their locations on Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas.

“Even though the holidays are great restaurant days, we don’t want people to have to make the choice of work or kids,” Eric said. “Michelle and I grew up working in the industry working on major holidays. We decided if we can’t get business the other 362 days of the year, what are we doing?”

The Jurisins also host yearly holiday parties, giving away roughly $50,000 worth of prizes. Eric said they have done everything from busing the employees to Laughlin, to finding the biggest venue to host a party. This year, they hosted their 286 employees and their dates at Cliff Castle Casino for an all-inclusive night of fun.

“We rent out all the rooms so everyone can be safe,” Eric said. “We also have a black-tie dinner and rented out the bowling alley, ice skating rink, and we gave away about $30,000 worth of prizes and $20,000 in cash.”

Jurisin says it was their turn to give back and thank their employees for the year.

“We are a people-business. The hamburger doesn’t cook itself. It comes down to who cleans the plate, who cooks the burger, and who served it to you,” Eric said. “The buildings are just shells for us to operate in. You have to take care of your people. The employees are the most important tool.”

The Jurisins have extremely loyal employees. Eric said their first ever employee they hired still works for them today.

“I’ve had employees with me for so long and I feel loyal to them,” he said. “So when it comes to be time for Michelle and me to retire, we would probably pick a few of those people and bring them in as partners.”

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Starting at $1,800 a night...


 SEDONA – Widely considered one of the most anticipated hotel openings in the country, Ambiente, A Landscape Hotel is ready to make its debut as North America’s first landscape hotel when it opens Dec. 26 in Sedona.

According to a news release, the adults-only hotel is now accepting online reservations for stays beginning Feb. 10, 2023, with room rates starting from $1,800 per night. Additional dates prior to February will be available on opening day.

Set on three acres in Red Rock Country overlooking the city’s most iconic monoliths, the majestic red rocks of Sedona are on full display from Ambiente’s unique 40 cubed-shaped, glass-encased Atriums that seemingly float above the rugged terrain. While all Atriums offer the same 576-square foot, king accommodations, the dramatic 360-degree panoramic views vary drastically as each Atrium has been expertly placed to maximize view corridors, whether that is north to the surrounding Coconino National Forest or east and south to the Steamboat, Chimney, Coffee Pot and Snoopy red rock formations.

“This has been a labor of love for our family over the past five years and we have been so overwhelmed by the outpouring of interest and support from future visitors around the world,” said Jennifer May, co-founder of Two Sister Bosses, a Sedona-based family development company. “We’re now ready to pull back the curtain and showcase what we believe is one of the most spectacular settings in all of America.”

Elevated above the ground by steel piers and constructed using floor-to-ceiling, bronze-tinted glass and matte-charcoal and rusted metal, Ambiente’s Atriums are uniquely designed to blend in with the surrounding geography. With a focus on sustainable methods and organic, modern architecture that complement the neighboring topography and minimize the impact on land, the Atriums’ sleek design reflects elegant minimalism, while contemporary, elemental interiors afford the utmost in luxurious, intimate accommodations.

Each Atrium embodies a lavish hideaway with a petite kitchen offering complimentary refreshments, restocked daily, and on-demand wine dispensers where guests can self-serve from a selection of Northern Arizona wines.

Learn more at AmbienteSedona.com.




Monday, October 3, 2022

Poll watchers

 GOLDSBORO, N.C. (AP) — The situation with the poll watcher had gotten so bad that Anne Risku, the election director in North Carolina's Wayne County, had to intervene via speakerphone.

"You need to back off!" Risku recalled hollering after the woman wedged herself between a voter and the machine where the voter was trying to cast his ballot at a precinct about 60 miles southeast of Raleigh.

The man eventually was able to vote, but the incident was one of several Risku cited from the May primary that made her worry about a wave of newly aggressive poll watchers. Many have spent the past two years steeped in lies about the accuracy of the 2020 election.

Some Independent voters in Wisconsin are leaning toward Democratic nominees for the November midterm election, which could be a bellweather for independents accross the country, and risk Republican gains in the House and Senate this fall. (Sept. 19) - Source: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Those fears led the North Carolina State Board of Elections in August to tighten rules governing poll watchers. But the state's rules review board, appointed by the Republican-controlled Legislature, blocked the new poll watcher regulations in late September, leaving election officials such as Risku without additional tools to control behavior on Election Day, Nov. 8.

"It becomes complete babysitting," Risku said in an interview. "The back and forth for the precinct officials, having somebody constantly on you for every little thing that you do — not because you're doing it wrong, but because they don't agree with what you're doing."

Poll watchers have traditionally been an essential element of electoral transparency, the eyes and ears for the two major political parties who help ensure that the actual mechanics of voting are administered fairly and accurately. But election officials fear that a surge of conspiracy believers are signing up for those positions this year and are being trained by others who have propagated the lie spread by former President Donald Trump and his allies that the 2020 presidential election was riddled with fraud.

In Michigan, groups that have spread falsehoods about that race are recruiting poll watchers. In Nevada, the Republican Party's nominee for secretary of state, Jim Marchant, denies President Joe Biden's 2020 victory and was a featured speaker at a party poll watcher training.

Cleta Mitchell, a prominent conservative lawyer and North Carolina resident, is running a group recruiting poll watchers and workers in eight swing states. Mitchell was on the phone with Trump when the then-president called Georgia's secretary of state in January 2021 and asked that official to "find" enough votes for Trump to be declared the state's winner.

Chris Harvey, who was Georgia's election director in 2020 when Trump claimed the election was being stolen from him, recalled how swarms of Trump backers came as self-appointed poll watchers to observe the state's manual recounts, harassing election workers and disrupting the process. Harvey fears a repeat this year.

"The whole tension that we're expecting to see at polling places is something we're talking to election officials about, something we're talking to law enforcement about," said Harvey, who is advising a group of election officials and law enforcement before November.

The laws governing poll watchers vary from state to state. Their role is generally to observe, question any deviations from required procedure and, in some states, lodge formal complaints or provide testimony for objections filed in court.

The worries this year are similar to those during the 2020 election, when Trump began railing against mail voting and the Republican National Committee launched its first national operation in decades. It had recently been freed from a consent decree that limited its poll watching operation after it previously was found to have targeted Black and Latino voters. But voting went smoothly that November.

Mitchell said her organization, the Election Integrity Network, is just trying to ensure that everyone follows the law.

"We are not a threat," she told The Associated Press during a text message exchange. "Unless you think elections that are conducted according to the rule of law are a threat. We train people to follow the law."

Risku said there were issues with poll watchers from both parties during the primary in May. But of the 13 incidents she reported to the North Carolina board from Wayne County, all involved Republicans.

In addition to the poll watcher who had to be ejected, Risku said another Republican poll watcher in her district waited after hours in the parking lot of the Mount Olive Train Depot early voting site until Chief Judge Susan Wiley began carrying boxes of marked ballots to her car.

On two occasions, the man tried to follow her back to the elections office in Goldsboro, about a 20-minute drive.

Recognizing that the job has become "a scary ordeal" in the last year, Risku said she has stepped up security before November and offered raises to entice precinct officials to stay. She expects many won't return after this year.

The North Carolina GOP chairman, Michael Whatley, said that's not what the party is teaching its poll watchers.

"What we saw in terms of some of the activities that were at play may have been coming from Republicans but were not things that we have been teaching people in our training sessions," Whatley said. "What we want to do is make sure that we have people that are in the room that are going to be very respectful of the election officials at all times, be very respectful of the voters at all times and, if they see issues, then report them in."

He has declined to allow reporters to attend the training sessions, which he said have trained 7,000 potential poll watchers so far this year.

As in many states, poll watchers are only permitted in North Carolina if they have been designated by the major parties. But in Michigan, organizations that register with local election offices also can provide poll watchers. A coalition of groups that have questioned the 2020 election are scrambling to get as many of their members in place as possible in the politically critical state.

"The best I can do is put a whole bunch of eyeballs on it to make sure that anything that doesn't look right gets a further look," said Sandy Kiesel, executive director of the Michigan Election Integrity Fund and Force, part of a coalition that recruited 5,000 poll watchers for the state's August primary.

Kiesel said several of her coalition's poll watchers and poll challengers — Michigan law allows one person to observe and another person to formally lodge challenges at precincts — were prevented from observing or escorted out of polling places in August.

Michigan election officials are bracing for more confrontations in November. Patrick Colbeck, a former Republican state senator and prominent election conspiracy theorist who is part of Kiesel's coalition, announced this past week that a comprehensive fall push to scrutinize every aspect of voting would be called "Operation Overwatch."

"They are talking about intimidating people who have the right to vote," said Barb Byrum, clerk of Michigan's Ingham County, which includes Lansing, the state capital.

In a sign of the importance the state's Republicans place on poll watchers, the GOP-controlled Legislature last week agreed to let election offices throughout Michigan start processing mailed ballots two days before Election Day — something most states with mail voting allow long before then — but only if they allow poll watchers to observe. The ballots are not actually counted until Election Day.

In Texas, a new law allows every candidate to assign up to two poll watchers, raising the potential that observers could pack polling locations, particularly around big cities such as Dallas and Houston where ballots are the longest.

According to records from the secretary of state's office, more than 900 people in Texas already had received poll watching certification in the three weeks after the state opened required training on Sept. 1.

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Ballot Box Bullies

(Note: Blog title is mine. Original headline is: "

Lions of Liberty may ‘box watch’ voters"

 By Vyto S. October 2

VERDE VALLEY – The Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office is aware of plans by a conservative group calling itself “the Lions of Liberty” to “box watch” voters at ballot drop boxes outside polling places during the upcoming General Election.

“Bring a phone or a camera,” the Lions of Liberty website states, offering a signup form. “If you see someone putting more ballots in than their own, take a picture of them, their car and their license plate.”

The group was looking for volunteers to observe in Yavapai County communities, including Cottonwood, Camp Verde, Clarkdale, Jerome and the Village of Oak Creek.

“A few months ago the group called the sheriff to find out if it was legal for them to ‘box watch,’ and he told them that it is legal if that person is sitting outside the 75-foot perimeter, is on public property and is not engaging in any harassment or intimidation of voters,” said Kristin Greene, Public Affairs and Government Relations director for the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office.

Sheriff David Rhodes wasn’t informed that there would be photographing or filming, Greene, pointed out.

There is no photographing of voters within 75 feet of polling places, but some drop boxes may be outside this 75-foot perimeter. Jerome does not have a polling location, just a drop box.

“There is no law against filming or photographing a person without their permission unless it is in a place where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy, which would include inside the polling place and within the 75-foot perimeter, but not outside that perimeter,” she said. 

“However, taking photos or videos outside the 75-foot-limit may have an intimidating effect on voters entering or exiting the voting location if done in an aggressive, threatening or harassing way, which is also unlawful,” Greene acknowledged.

It’s subjective if a voter feels intimidated, she said.

“However, the right to vote is sacred in this country and no one should face intimidation while doing so,” Greene added.

“In our endeavor to secure our election from those who would cause this country harm, we have created Operation: Drop Box,” the Liberty of Lions webpage states. “For the upcoming election, we plan on watching the ballot boxes throughout Yavapai County.”

On their webpage, which touts the Oath Keepers, the Lions of Liberty stated: “We are a resolute nucleus of concerned, passionate conservative patriots who are determined to correct the course of our country which has been hijacked and undermined by global elites, communists, leftists, deep state bureaucrats, and fake news.”

An email to the Lions of Liberty website for comment was not returned by press time.

Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Camp Verde Cowboys 5-0

CAMP VERDE – The Camp Verde High School football team roughed up winless St. John Paul II Catholic on Friday, 58-0 to keep their perfect season intact.

The Cowboys are now 5-0 and preparing for region play for the last half of their season.

The visitors from Avondale had little chance, losing more yards than they gained. Though both teams are 2A, Camp Verde outmatched them as they have every team this year.

Quarterback Tyson Buckley threw the ball at will, connecting just over half the time for 330 yards. Junior Jordan Williams was on the receiving end of four of those for 145 yards and three touchdowns. Junior Christian Sanabria also had four reception, gaining 98 yards and scoring three touchdowns.

Camp Verde used eight receivers in the air raid.

The team had another 124 yards rushing. Senior Sam Williams ran nine times for 78 yards and a touchdown. Junior Tobias Loveall had five carries for 27 yards and a score.

Freshman kicker Logan Ayotte was 6-for-6 in PAT attempts. Noah Collins took a 2-point conversion.

Senior Brice Gorda and junior Prestyn Stratford led the Camp Verde defense with nine and seven total tackles, respectively. Gorda also had a sack. Collins and Gunner Selting had interceptions, and Tristan Palmer scored a safety.

Next, the Cowboys head off to North Pointe Prep (0-5) in Phoenix on Friday for their first 2A Agua Fria competition. This season, Camp Verde has outscored its rivals 251-88.

Sunday, September 18, 2022

Welcome Porcupine Mountain

CAMP VERDE - In 2021, the U.S. Department of the Interior declared the word “squaw” to be a derogatory term that needed to be erased from geographical place names on federal lands. Last week, the department issued a list of the new names, including 66 for Arizona landscape features.

For Vincent Randall, former chair of the Yavapai-Apache Nation, the battle to be rid of the word had been going on for a much, much longer time.

“Going way back to when I was just a young boy – in 1962 I was the youngest tribal member elected when I was 22 years old,” he said. “It was an issue then.”

That tribal council used the Apache names when talking about the dome-shaped summit the official maps called “Squaw Peak” that rises over Camp Verde and “Squaw Canyon” and other Yavapai County locations. The term rankled the council.

“And we said, ‘Those aren’t the right names,’” Randall said. “My Uncle Ted Smith tried to do something to have the name changed.”

But such objections over the years had little traction with big government. “We’ve always called it that,” seemed enough of a justification to keep the name, even with a more prominent Squaw Peak in Maricopa County.

Randall said the term was “awful.”

The Apache term for the mountain south of Camp Verde translates to “Where the porcupine sits and suns itself.” Randall said they spoke of people who lived on the mountain as Where the Porcupine Sits people. It is unclear why the porcupine was so identified with the summit that offers one of the grandest views of the Verde Valley.

There was little will to even hear that “squaw” was derogatory, let alone any real effort to make big changes – until the 21st century. The first glimmer in Arizona that something could be done was the renaming of Maricopa County’s Squaw Peak to Piestewa Peak in 2008.

That change was proposed in 2003, shortly after Army Spc. Lori Piestewa, a Hopi soldier from Tuba City, was killed in the Iraq War.

There were more signs that public opinion in the nation was shifting, too, when the NFL team in Washington, D.C., and the MLB team in Cleveland opted to change their names away from monikers deemed culturally insensitive at best.

When Deb Haaland was named Secretary of the Interior last year, as a Laguna Pueblo woman she immediately saw an opportunity. In November, she issued Department of the Interior Secretarial Order 3404, creating the Derogatory Geographic Names Task Force and ordering the Board on Geographic Names to expunge the work “squaw” from place names and find replacements.

“Racist terms have no place in our vernacular or on our federal lands. Our nation’s lands and waters should be places to celebrate the outdoors and our shared cultural heritage – not to perpetuate the legacies of oppression,” Haaland said.

The task force reached out to Native American communities affected by the coming change, asking for suggestions for new names.

Randal said his office at the Yavapai-Apache Cultural Resource Center would have loved to have the names be the Apache terms they had always used, but they knew it would be “too difficult” for others to pronounce. They told the Interior representatives the history of the summit.

“She said, ‘Why don’t we just name it Porcupine Mountain?’” Randall recalled.

Porcupine Mountain is one of 17 features in Yavapai County that received a name change (including another Squaw Peak). Squaw Canyon is Porcupine Canyon. Squaw Butte is Verde Butte. Squaw Creek Mesa is Hósh Flat, one of the places given a Native American name.

Because the U.S. Forest Service is a member of the task force, it is expected that some forest roads may also see name changes.

This was not the first time the Board on Geographic Names has been called on to eliminate pejorative terms from the federal landscape. In the 1960s and ‘70s, the board got rid of place names using derogatory terms for Black people and Japanese people.

“Squaw” is considered a racist and sexist term. It is not used among Native American people in the United States. The word is only a small component of much longer words used by some northeast indigenous peoples. It has no relation to any Native American languages in Arizona, the Southwest or the West at all but has been persistently used in the broader white culture for Native American women.

Over the years, Randall said, there had been increasing local support for changing the name of the prominent summit that rises above the Verde Rim at an elevation of 6,525 feet. Those who understood were already calling it Porcupine Mountain even before it became official this year.

“I’m glad they worked it all out,” Randall said.

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Cornville cell tower nixed again.

 CORNVILLE – The lease agreement with T-Mobile Cellular for a cell phone tower at the Oak Creek School has been terminated by the governing board.

T-Mobile had signed an agreement with the Cottonwood-Oak Creek School District to place a cell phone tower at the school’s baseball field.

At its regular meeting on Tuesday, Sept, 6, the COCSD Governing Board unanimously approved a motion that gave direction to the superintendent to terminate the lease agreement.

“After hearing from the community, furthering our research, and identifying alternative solutions to resolve the communication problem at Oak Creek School,” COCSD Director Operations Matt Schumacher said, the board voted “to terminate the lease agreement with T-Mobile.”

This proposed tower had some residents in a state of panic, concerned about the risk of their children being exposed to harmful radio frequency radiation.

Others applauded the agreement for the cell tower, saying the response time in an emergency would be faster and the tower would reduce dropped calls.

In August, Cottonwood Oak-Creek School District Superintendent Steve King said the proposal was in its the early stages and was focused on student safety.

However, local resident Jennifer Richards started a campaign to stop the communications giant from building the structure near the school. She posted a YouTube video on social media, outlining her concerns.

Sunday, September 11, 2022

Historic Beaver Creek golf resort is sold - may become vineyards

Courtesy Chambers Realty

LAKE MONTEZUMA – The former Beaver Creek Golf Course and historic ranch property has been sold to Sedona Vineyards LLC.

“We closed escrow on Aug. 31,” said Richard Chambers of Chambers Realty Group in Camp Verde. “It’s a pretty exciting deal.”

The property sold for $2.5 million, Chambers said, and it sold as one piece, which includes the former 18-hole golf course, the former Beaver Creek Ranch House property, 108 acres of agricultural land with water rights, a three-acre commercially zoned parcel, a clubhouse, equipment and a private residence.

Douglas J. Edgelow, of Phoenix, said they are looking forward to unveiling their plans for the property to the community very soon, but he said their intention is to have part of the golf course be vineyards. Edgelow is listed as the manager of the Sedona Vineyards LLC under the Arizona Corporation Commission.

LAKE MONTEZUMA – The former Beaver Creek Golf Course and historic ranch property has been sold to Sedona Vineyards LLC.

“We closed escrow on Aug. 31,” said Richard Chambers of Chambers Realty Group in Camp Verde. “It’s a pretty exciting deal.”

The property sold for $2.5 million, Chambers said, and it sold as one piece, which includes the former 18-hole golf course, the former Beaver Creek Ranch House property, 108 acres of agricultural land with water rights, a three-acre commercially zoned parcel, a clubhouse, equipment and a private residence.

Douglas J. Edgelow, of Phoenix, said they are looking forward to unveiling their plans for the property to the community very soon, but he said their intention is to have part of the golf course be vineyards. Edgelow is listed as the manager of the Sedona Vineyards LLC under the Arizona Corporation Commission.

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Rimrock cattle issue update

 RIMROCK – Unbranded cattle roaming public lands belong to the U.S. government.

That was one piece of information learned in the aftermath of a free-ranging cow dying on private property in Rimrock as described earlier in The Verde Independent (“Cow carcass left to rot in neighborhood symbolic of unbranded range cattle,” Sunday, June 19, 2022).

While neighbors complained the Arizona Department of Agriculture had stopped communicating with them about the problem of free-range cattle wandering into and damaging their property, the department had picked up at least one calf three days before the article’s publication.

But the gears of progress were still slow to turn within the Department of Agriculture or any other agencies to assist the residents of Beaver Creek.

ARS Title 3-1296 states: An owner who knowingly permits range livestock, except unweaned animals running with their mothers, to roam and feed upon the ranges of this state without being branded and marked as provided by law, is guilty of a class 2 misdemeanor.

The statute provides the accountability of any ranch and may also be considered a theft deterrent of inspected, valuable and claimed livestock. However, unbranded cattle took over the area, wandering from yard to yard. Neighbors said they could get no accountability from the owner.

As previously reported, neighbors had to chip in for the removal of a rotting carcass from a vacant yard, due to the overwhelming smell, maggots and swarms of flies surrounding it. This had been in addition to the homeowners shoveling daily piles of excrement from their lawns. Most have extensive property damage, without state restitution for the destruction.

After offering a possible solution to allow residents to sell off the healthier, unbranded cattle that stumble into their yards, Department of Agriculture Capt. Janelle Lincoln explained that would be stealing.

“Unmarked cattle belong to the U.S. government” Lincoln stated. When asked why the government would allow its own property to trespass on private properties, she had no comment that day, (at the time investigating a Phoenix man who was charged with more than 60 counts of animal cruelty).

Robert Smook, spokesman for the Agriculture Department, said the agency returned to pick up more cattle July 2 and again July 8.

“The Arizona Department of Agriculture along with the help of the community were able to set up pens at the Beaver Creek School, where 22 cattle have been trapped and permanently removed,” he said. “Only three cattle remain with the owner at this time. The cattle have not left the owner’s property since July 8, 2022.

“The Department will continue to monitor these cows and we sincerely thank the community for their help in resolving this matter.”

Beaver Creek School had already become a focal point when cattle were seen on its campus.

“Aggressive bulls have become a real danger around here” said residents Jina Peterson and Annette Bloomfield. Some of these unclaimed bulls migrated to school property and were spotted grazing there. Risks of children being harmed were the community’s greatest concern.

Peterson is also a qualified expert in wildlife rehabilitation. She spoke up about the possibility of various illnesses being transmitted from free-range livestock.

“This has become a serious health risk. Leptospirosis (Swamp Fever) and even [bacterium causing] Anthrax are transmittable to humans through cattle,” she said. If left untreated after a bite from a rabid bat or raccoon, an entire herd could potentially be carriers of rabies through cross-contamination.

Restitution for neighbors whose property was damaged by the cattle and recent sightings of unbranded strays have yet to be addressed.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

A resort company walks into a small town: Cottonwood's rental crisis is no joke



 12 News  Kevin Reagan  12:45 PM MST August 1, 2022

Melany Walton had thought Cottonwood would be the perfect place for her to spend her retirement years.  

When she decided to move from California to the small Arizona town 12 years ago, she expected her costs of living to be cheaper. 

And for a while, they were. 

Walton's rent for her three-bedroom home was significantly cheaper than the prices she might have expected back in the Golden State.


But the housing situation in Cottonwood has started to change and Walton's worried she might soon end up homeless. 

 "There's not a lot of available to rent," the 72-year-old resident said. "I still don't have a place to go. It's getting more desperate." 

Walton's predicament began earlier this summer after she received a notice that her home had been bought by The Enchantment, a luxurious resort located about 20 miles away in Sedona. 

The disabled retiree thought the change of ownership might result in her rent getting raised. But the new owners didn't want more of Walton's money: They wanted her out. 

The resort is giving Walton until the end of August to find a new place to live and she hasn't had luck finding another rental she can afford solely with her Social Security funds.

"It's very depressing," she told 12News. "At my age, I didn't think I was going to have to move again."

'It's ruining the town'

Walton is not the only tenant in Cottonwood who has been struggling. 

The Enchantment has bought at least 28 units in the Cottonwood area to house its employees, which the resort's representatives say is needed to provide relief to resort workers who can't find housing of their own.

The resort says it has simply bought properties that were listed for sale in order to "render additional aid and support for employees."

But locals say the Enchantment issue is only one piece of a much broader issue that's been recently affecting their community -- a major lack of affordable housing. 

A shrinking supply and rising prices have put some tenants in a difficult dilemma and some feel it's unfair for a company in another city to buy up properties on their turf. 

"It's ruining the town," said Ken Wood, a Cottonwood resident for nearly 40 years. "It's sad to hear what's going on." 


Wood owns a moving company and says he's been getting many desperate phone calls from locals who don't know where to go. 

"I have never seen something like this," Wood added.

Representatives for Enchantment say they had to look for housing in neighboring communities due to a shortage of affordable homes and apartments in Sedona.

Cottonwood is a rural town of about 12,000 residents located in Yavapai County that doesn't have an abundance of housing listed on the market. A quick search on the website Zillow only yields a handful of available properties to rent and most are considered beyond the price range of locals who've been living in Cottonwood for years. 

April Montgomery's daughter has had to resort to living in an RV on her mother's property after failing to find any affordable place to live in Cottonwood. 

Like Walton, Montgomery's daughter got a notice earlier this year warning her that she and her children had to vacate their property after it was bought by Enchantment. 

Now Montgomery's daughter is being asked to pay up to $2,500 per month for the same type of home she had been renting before and residents in Cottonwood are not used to seeing rents at that price level. 

"We're not living in the Silicon Valley, this is just Cottonwood," Montgomery said.


'Where are we all going to go?'

The housing situation in Cottonwood has gotten so dire that it's forced some locals to leave the community altogether. 

Barbara Reed has recently relocated to Florida after her landlord decided to move back into the three-bedroom unit she had been renting. 

She tried to find another place in Cottonwood but eventually decided she was probably better off moving across the country. 

"There's nothing available at all," Reed said.

Residents throughout Arizona have been feeling the ramifications of the state's housing crisis for several months. A spike in demand and limited supply has been quickly elevating prices while wages have not kept pace with the rising costs. 


According to a study by the National Low-Income Housing Coalition, Arizonans must earn at least $23.44 per hour or work 73 hours per week on the state's minimum wage to afford the average cost of a two-bedroom rental.

But the housing crisis can be even more burdensome in Arizona's rural communities, where home developers may not be as eager to build and the socio-economic conditions may not be as great as in the metro areas.

The most recent census statistics show a higher percentage of Cottonwood residents live in poverty compared to the national and statewide percentages and the city's median household income is significantly less than Arizona's average.

Lisa Sanchez was busy working two jobs when she found out her rental was being bought by The Enchantment earlier this summer. She didn't have much time to ask questions before discovering she and her college-age son would soon have to find a new residence.

She spent days stressing and losing sleep before Sanchez found a place for herself, but she still worries about her neighbors who haven't been as lucky in finding another rental.

"Where are we all going to go," asked Sanchez, whose family has deep roots in Cottonwood going back several generations.

Sanchez says she's never experienced a housing predicament quite like this before and feels it's unfair her community is being asked to forcibly go someplace else. 

"Our whole world has just been turned upside down," she said.

Story source: https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/arizona/its-ruining-the-town-rural-arizona-residents-feel-displaced-by-sedona-resort-buying-up-properties/75-fdcd8cd8-24bb-4829-ab50-9a0d9ae8960f

Sunday, July 24, 2022

City welcomes rentals as sawdust fills the air

By Vyto Starinskas published in the Verded Independent July 24, 2022 

COTTONWOOD – The aroma of freshly cut lumber was filling the hot desert air surrounding the construction site of the 192-unit Inspiration apartment project – just as another 48-unit residential development was approved for Main Street on Monday.

The new project, which is across from the former Hog Wild building, is to be known as Bungalows on Main, according to the LLC.

The site is a large vacant parcel on the south side of Main Street, at the entrance to Old Town, and will be developed as a multifamily residential rental development with a density of approximately five units per acre, according to the application submitted for design review at a meeting of the Planning & Zoning Commission. The city once looked at this site for a city hall location, but deemed it too expensive.

Bungalows on Main will function more like a grouping of attached single-family buildings and is akin to a compact single-family subdivision, they explained in the agenda for the hearing.

Buildings will be grouped to create intimate courtyards, anchored by shade trees to support healthy neighborhood interaction

P&Z Commissioner Randy Garrison said the motion, which passed 5 to 1, only dealt with the design, and said the project already met the zoning requirements.

Garrison said he felt the density of the project was too high and too close to the road, but they only could discuss the architectural design. There will be a lot of open space as part of the trade-off, he said.

Garrison asked city staff to give a monthly report on all the apartments that the city has approved in the last half year. He said the city has spent a lot of time approving several apartment projects and he wanted to know how many are breaking ground.

Fain Signature Group broke ground for its 192-unit Inspiration apartments with a ceremony on Dec. 7, 2021, and the group said Phase One of the five-phase project is 50% complete.

The project is going well and it is on schedule, according to Guy Roginson, of, Fain Signature Group, on Thursday. “Leasing has not begun yet. Typically, leasing starts approximately 90 days before opening. We are hoping to begin occupancy in March of 2023.”

The multi-family residential apartment community can now be seen rising at 345 State Route 89A across the street from the Verde Valley Medical Center.

Inspiration’s apartments will have one-, two- and three-bedroom floor plans, the developer explained. Amenities include a clubhouse, community pool, spa, work-out room, dog park and barbecue areas.

Leasing offices will not be open until the project is near completion, but Roginson said people can submit inquiries at InspirationApts.com

City Manager Ron Corbin said the apartment construction is going along “as expected.” He was amazed by the amount of lumber being used at Inspiration.

In another housing project in the city, the developer at Mesquite Hills, which is building more new homes off Mingus Avenue near the Verde Valley Humane Society, started paving new streets last week. He said there will be hundreds of homes.

Across the street from the Human Society on Mingus Avenue ground is being prepared for a new RV park similar to the one in Camp Verde, Corbin said.

Also, he said, the development Kindra Heights is going gangbusters at the end of Old Town Cottonwood. “Beautiful homes.”

Plans are ready to be picked up for the Sixth Street Lofts apartments for about 50 units, he said. They can start once they pick up their permits.

The city staff is still in the “process” with the developer from the proposed apartment project behind Walmart and apartments on Cherry and 12th streets that have been approved by P&Z, he said.

Corvin added that some more apartments were approved behind the Post Office several months ago. “Those are still in the works.”

Houses are being built at the Vineyards, which is farther up State Route 89A towards Clarkdale, he said. The current phase is about 96 homes.

Corbin said if you ask the developers, the higher interest rates do not affect sales or construction that much.

He said instead of 20 offers, they are now getting five for a home. “There’s still more demand than there is product.”

A Phoenix developer is still moving along a proposal to develop the land across from the Verde Santa Fe development on Cornville Road and State Route 89A. They are working through water and sewer and infrastructure, the city manager added.

And “still nothing” from the developers of the Spring Creek Ranch Development, he said.

The Cottonwood City Council approved an ordinance that annexed Spring Creek Ranch, along with about 11 square miles of Coconino National Forest land in January 2021.

The Borowskys would have to present a plan to the city to develop the 282-acre Spring Creek Ranch property and have it approved by council, he said. “They have to solve water and wastewater.”


Wednesday, July 6, 2022

Cornville Cell Tower

By Vyto Starinskas

CORNVILLE – The plans for a cell tower near Cornville Road behind Crazy Tony’s Cornville Country Market are up in the air, according to the Yavapai County Development Services Director Jeremy Dye.

The tower was approved Feb. 2 by the director, and did not require a hearing in front of any Yavapai County Board of Supervisors.

“The applicant has notified the County that the project is suspended,” Dye said.

“To date, the applicant has not applied for building permits,” Dye said. “The applicant has 180 days from the date of the approval letter to apply for building permits, or for a 180-day extension to allow additional time to apply for building permits.”

Dye did not go into any specifics on why the permit was suspended.

However, a neighbor of the cell tower, Gillian Goslinga, said, “We wanted proof that the developer, Tilson Technology Management, had done the federally required National Environmental Policy Act review or ‘NEPA.’

“On Jan. 27, we filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) with the FCC asking for this information because the county and applicant ignored our requests,” Goslinga said. “NEPA can become a recourse, maybe the only recourse a community has, to make sure a tower placement is environmentally the smartest, safest and most responsible.”

NEPA was the only recourse, she said, because Yavapai County was not applying the full legislative intent “of their own code to protect of our environmental resources.”

“Meanwhile, the county went ahead and approved the permit on Feb. 2, stating Tilson was in full compliance with all local, state and federal regulations, including the FCC,” she said.

To make sure NEPA was reviewed, Goslinga and cell tower neighbor Runnin’ W Wildlife Center owner Billie Harvey filed a pleading with the FCC listing red flags for the NEPA review.

In an April 14 email, Jennifer Flynn, attorney-advisor for the FCC, wrote to Goslinga that “Tilson Technology Management, Inc. acknowledged receipt of Dr. Goslinga’s concerns and informed the parties that it expects to complete its environmental screening report within 60-90 days. We therefore toll the pleading cycle until July 7, 2022.”

“The FCC agreed and gave Tilson until July 7 to respond with an environmental report of their own, to which we will, of course, respond,” Goslinga said.

She brought to the FCC’s attention that there are three federally registered Oak Creek critical wetland habitats, eight endangered species, and 10 threatened migratory species as well as a native raptor and wildlife recovery center inside the immediate “action area” of the tower, and a kindergarten, she said.

Tilson Technology Management did not return requests for comment.

In an email to the Verde Independent, Dye said the applicant provided “all documentation required by the Yavapai County Planning and Zoning Ordinance section 605 to our office. “

Federal requirements for wireless communication facilities are separate processes outside of the scope of Yavapai County Development Services, he added.

The tower is an allowed-use on this property “by right,” given its C-2 commercial zoning, Dye said. So it does not have to go in front of the Board of Supervisors and is approved by the Yavapai County Development Services director administratively under Section 605 of the county zoning ordinance which he did in February.

“Our county ordinances don’t require proof of NEPA review for permitting towers. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 does allow local governments to write into their codes such protections and many other protections we still don’t have here in Yavapai County,” Goslinga said. 

“We also have let the county know they cannot claim FCC compliance in a legal permit approval letter like they did without actual binding proof of compliance,” Goslinga said. 

She said she asked county officials to make sure the applicant was NEPA compliant, but Goslinga said they ignored her.

“The problem is that the county doesn’t seem to be responding to the seriousness of placing permanent and massive microwave radiation infrastructure in the middle of our rural communities and lives,” Goslinga said.

“County’s blind eye to this is a big problem for a growing many of us in Cornville and in the Verde Valley as towers and antenna pop up everywhere. “