News

Arnold inducted into Idaho Aviation Hall of Fame

Ray Arnold was inducted into the Idaho Aviation Hall of Fame earlier this month to honor his storied career of backcountry flying, which included 44 years of delivering mail to far-flung ranches in the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness.Arnold, 84, hauled not just mail but groceries, appliances, machinery, chickens, goats, dogs and cats, a newborn foal, and even a pair of llamas.He retired from the route in 2019, but not before dozens of national publications from the New York Times to National Geographic and the CBS evening news picked up on his unusual delivery route.Arnold, and his ex-wife and business partner Carol Arnold, have been inundated by requests to interview the operators of the last backcountry delivery route outside of Alaska.“It’s unique in that it’s the only route left like this in the lower 48 states…But there’s only so much you can write about,” Arnold told The Star-News in 2019 during yet another interview about his work.Arnold was inducted into the hall of fame alongside Harold Dougal, 97, of Boise.Dougal helped establish the Graham and Landmark backcountry airports and authored the book “Adventures of an Idaho Mountain Pilot.”Inclusion in the hall of fame is reserved for people who have contributed significant and lasting advancements to aviation, according to the Idaho Aviation Association.“The award is not for longevity, popularity, or other non-aviation status, or for merely being a “good pilot,” said the association’s nominee eligibility rules.Arnold was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1937 and learned to fly in McCall under the tutelage of Bob Fogg and Bill Dorris.

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M-D seniors present projects

Zoey Mello showed off the prized lion’s mane mushroom that she grew from spores as part of her senior project on cultivating nutritious mushrooms.“Lion’s Mane is primarily used for medication, but it can also help with improved memory by making the less active parts of the brain communicate,” Mello said.Health benefits vary between species, but the lion’s mane has also been shown to regulate blood sugar, reduce high blood pressure, combat fatigue, help heart health, slow aging and protect the kidneys and liver, she said.To grow the white furry looking mushroom, Mello had to recreate the conditions of a forest floor in a controlled environment by using a mix of birdseed to foster the mushroom and later transfer it into soil.Creating the lion’s mane was easier than others she grew, including the cordyceps mushroom, which only grows from the bodies of dead insects.“When the cordyceps is growing naturally, it will take over a bug and kill it, then use its decomposing body to grow from,” Mello said.

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McCall gets $1.9M for Davis Ave rebuild

A $1.9 million grant to rebuild Davis Avenue in McCall was awarded to the city last week by the Idaho Transportation Department.The work, which is tentatively slated to begin next summer, would rebuild Davis Avenue between Reedy Lane and Lick Creek Road with new pavement and bicycle lanes.The grant money from the state increases the likelihood that additional work could be funded as part of the project, McCall Public Works Director Nathan Stewart said.That work could include paving a public parking lot at the corner of Davis Avenue and Lick Creek Road and building a separated pedestrian pathway along the roadway.Work to replace underground water lines and make stormwater drainage improvements is also expected to be included in the project.The grant funding could pay for nearly half of project’s $3 million cost as estimated earlier this year by city engineering consultants, though Stewart said cost estimates are currently being updated.Stewart does not expect to pursue additional street projects next year as a result of the grant funding.“This grant will, however, help the city be better positioned to absorb cost increases for our current projects and for projects we’re budgeting for in 2025 and beyond,” he said.Work next summer would mark the second year of a two-year rebuild of Davis Avenue from Thompson Avenue to Lick Creek Road.This fall crews completed the first phase of work between Reedy Lane and Thompson Avenue.

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McCall mulls Tesla charging stations

Four electric vehicle charging stations would be built in the Mill Street Parking Lot under a proposal aired last week to the McCall City Council.Tesla, an Austin, Texas, electric vehicle manufacturer, would spend an estimated $150,000 to upgrade power infrastructure in the city-owned parking lot and install the charging stations, council members were told.The eight parking spaces occupied by the stations would be leased by Tesla for about $19,000 per year, or $200 per month per space.

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Ditch the secret backroom dam breaching deals. Let’s focus on common ground.

The recent agreement between the Biden Administration and the states of Washington and Oregon and the tribes on dam breaching represents a missed opportunity.Instead of working together to find common ground, the signatories to the agreement pandered to their political supporters and paid no attention to the REAL impacts dam removal would have on Idahoans.As Idaho state leaders, we are united in our strong opposition to removing the dams because it would eliminate a clean source of energy (hydropower) that powers the entire region, harm agriculture, and fundamentally change our economy for the worse.Sustaining healthy salmon and steelhead populations is important.

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Roxy Theater given revitalization grant

In July 1939 the average price of gas was $0.19 per gallon, President Franklin Roosevelt was in his second term, and The Roxy Theater in Cascade showed its first film.“Nowhere in Idaho is there to be found a finer theater than in Cascade…its perfection, both as to beauty and sturdy construction, as well as from the point of acoustics, is undeniable,” read an article on the theater’s opening in the July 14, 1939 edition of The Cascade News.The theater was built by Forest Robb for $25,000, receiving a warm welcome from the community and several congratulatory advertisements in The Cascade News.“The big Zeon signs in front of the theater are visible for a long distance and add a lively metropolitan touch to the town’s main thoroughfare,” the article read.

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McCall Nordic skis W. Yellowstone

Colton Nalder placed first in Nordic sprints as one of three members of the McCall Nordic and Biathlon Ski Club to travel to West Yellowstone, Montana this weekend.The Intermountain Division Opener Saturday and Sunday was the first divisional race of the year that allows racers to tune up their race skills without the pressure of Junior National qualification points on the line, said Nordic Director and Head Coach Matt Galyardt.These races were approached as a training effort and a pre-season shake down for the racing environment,” Galyardt said.“There was some concern a week ago that there wasn’t going to be enough snow to hold the races.

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Clear Creek Campground Denied

A proposal to create a campground with 19 campsites on Clear Creek Road was denied by the Valley County Planning and Zoning Commission last week.Commissioners asked the applicant, the Valley County Recreation Department, represented by director Larry Laxson, to talk with neighbors about their concerns about traffic and dust.Commissioners’ primary reason for denying the application was a lack of proposed road improvements to the mile-long section of dirt road that accesses the roughly 5-acre site.“If this was a private developer, we would require some sort of development agreement,” said Commission Chair Katlin Caldwell following a public hearing on Thursday, Dec.

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