News

Valley County approves Samson Trail storage condos

A denial of plans for 37 storage condos on South Samson Trail near McCall was overturned earlier this month by Valley County commissioners.The application by Carmello Echanis of Boise calls for three buildings containing 37 storage condos to be built on 2.8 acres at 450 South Samson Trail, or near Krahn Lane.The county commissioners on June 17 reversed an April 29 denial of the application after Echanis requested a reconsideration of the decision.The commissioners initially denied the application amid fears that trucks pulling larger trailers would not be able to safely turn out of the complex onto South Samson Trail.That fear was alleviated, however, by the revelation that the storage condos would not be large enough to store large travel trailers.In March, the McCall Area Planning and Zoning Commission recommended denial of the proposal, citing worries about traffic and compatibility with nearby homes.The 2.8-acre parcel planned for the storage condos is zoned for community commercial development, which allows storage condos as a permitted use.Abbey Germaine, a Boise lawyer who represented Echanis at last week’s meeting, noted that the parcel is adjacent to a 109-unit storage unit complex at 400 Krahn Ln.

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Cascade wins health award

The City of Cascade was awarded the Community Health Champion Award last week at the Association of Idaho Cities annual conference.The award comes with $5,000 that the city can use towards a program or project that promotes community health.This is the first year the Blue Cross of Idaho Foundation for Health has offered the Community Health Champion Award.

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Brundage Fire to come online by September

A newly established fire department at Brundage Mountain Resort expects to be operational by the end of August, Adams County Commissioners were told on Monday.Travis Smith, who was hired earlier this year as chief of the Brundage Mountain Fire Protection Association, is currently training 19 Brundage employees to be firefighters.“We’re really close,” Smith said of the timeline for the department to be operational.

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‘Big Creek 4’ lawsuit settled

A lawsuit accusing the Payette National Forest of illegally maintaining four airstrips in the Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness has been settled, according to United States District Court filings.The lawsuit, filed last June, says Payette officials and other Forest Service personnel illegally maintained four airstrips within the wilderness area in the far eastern reaches of Valley County about 20 miles northeast of Yellow Pine.The Simonds Airstrip, Vines Airstrip, Mile Hi Airstrip and Dewey Moore Airstrip, collectively known as the Big Creek 4, are the airstrips at issue in the lawsuit.The airstrips violate the federal Wilderness Act and the 1980 designation of more than 2.3 million acres in central Idaho as wilderness area, according to the lawsuit.The lawsuit asked a federal judge to stop the Payette from maintaining the four airstrips and allowing hobby pilot landings, among other things.The lawsuit was filed by the advocate groups Wilderness Watch, Great Old Broads for Wilderness, Friends of the Clearwater, and Friends of the Bitterroot.A settlement agreement signed by the parties earlier this month requires Payette Forest Supervisor Linda Jackson to issue a statement and public notice clarifying that the airstrips are open for emergency use only.The Payette also must begin monitoring the airstrips to ensure they are being used only for emergencies, under the settlement agreement.The agreement also establishes that any future improvement work on the airstrips will be subject to environmental review.General maintenance work, like removing downed trees or rocks from the airstrip, are exempt from environmental review.The Payette also must pay $20,000 to reimburse the plaintiffs’ legal fees, under the settlement.The four airstrips are not among 17 airstrips in the wilderness area that were allowed to continue pre-existing operations following the designation of the Frank in 1980.Instead, the four airstrips were considered “abandoned” and “not open for general public use” at the time of the designation, according to Forest Service records cited in the lawsuit.The Forest Service continued to allow emergency landings at the airstrips, but the lawsuit said that no emergency landings have ever been documented at the four airstrips.The lawsuit named Jackson as a defendant, along with Mary Farnsworth, the regional forester for the Intermountain Region of the Forest Service.A 2018 directive from Farnsworth told Payette officials to notify the public that the airstrips were not closed and to prepare maintenance plans for the airstrips.In 2022, the Payette complied with requests by the Idaho Transportation Department to cut down trees to improve the approach to the Dewey Moore airstrip.

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McCall picks local art for utility boxes

Four utility boxes around downtown McCall will be wrapped with designs created by local artists after action taken last week by the McCall City Council.The vinyl wraps will depict community through the lens of McCall artists Adri Meckel, Jack Aichison, Jenni Ritch, and Randy Resimius.“This is similar to the projects that you’ve seen probably driving around Boise and other communities where they wrap their streetlight control boxes,” said McCall Economic Development Director Delta James, who manages the city’s public art program.Aspen forests, icons from around McCall, wildlife, and scenes from local landscapes will be featured on the utility boxes.

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