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Letters to the Editor

Hansen’s experience, vision makes him ideal city manager

It seems a shame to have go outside searching for a new city manager when we have a qualified and dedicated person already on city staff that could fill this position.

Scott Hansen has lived in Boulder City since he became city engineer in 1998. He has done an outstanding job as public works director for the last 12 years.

At times when we have not had a city manager, Scott has always been selected to fill that post.

Scott has a vision and thinks outside the box.

He has always been responsive in any contact we have had with him. He is a dedicated and conscientious employee who would make an excellent city manager.

Steve Cottrell

Support of Lend A Hand fundraiser appreciated

Lend A Hand of Boulder City is grateful to all who donated and contributed to the success of the recent “non-event” fundraiser. Your donations will help Lend A Hand continue its mission of assisting Boulder City seniors and disabled residents remain independent by providing transportation to medical appointments, helping with daily errands and chores and providing companionship and caregiver respite.

Thank you for your thoughtfulness and generosity.

Shannon Eckman

Executive director

Solar leases should directly benefit city’s residents

What is the city of Boulder City? It’s not the administrators or elected officials. It’s us, the residents who live here. All those above just work for us.

Let’s hear a story: I have a house with a huge backyard and a company asks if they can put solar panels there. They claim the panels will generate electricity to sell. I listen and do some homework. I come back with four requirements for using my land.

First, you will provide me with cheap/free electricity for the duration of the lease. The solar company shall provide the grid system and/or make arrangements for the delivery of this electricity to my house. (It is a common practice for power companies to share grid systems from other companies. The onus of making this arrangement is on the solar company.)

Second, the facility must stay environmentally friendly and aesthetically pleasing. I’ll set these standards.

Third, there also will be an annual fee for leasing my land. That money goes to me and not Clark County.

Fourth, Upon expiration a) renegotiate a new lease; b) purchase the facility at a fair and equitable price (like a landlord purchasing a renter’s furniture when the tenant moves out); if no agreement is reached, the solar company will remove all remnants of the facility. The solar company must restore my backyard to its original state. That includes all natural flora and fauna and washes and gullies.

Now that my friends is the negotiation we, the owners of Boulder City, demand our hired City Council do. We cannot allowed these hired guns to sell us out like the last utility vote.

If anything, our rates should be going down. The use of our land by others needs to effect directly each of our pocketbooks: i.e. our power bills. A good portion of our citizens are on fixed incomes and cannot afford these costs.

Mark St. Arnault

Return to old-fashioned values, end to loneliness needed

We need to return to the old-fashioned values of yesteryear. We need a companion to take walks with through leaf-sodden woods, where we can smell the aroma of birch and pine trees and feel the mulch under our feet.

We need old-timers sitting on their front porches wearing bib-jeans who will share their wisdom while talking under the shaded canopy of a large maple tree.

I see you people go to the park with your dogs hoping to find someone real who will take away your grief and heartache, if only for a moment (yes, the sage sees all).

In the past, we had individuals who reach out to us from their hearts with their writing — like poet Robert Frost. But where are people like him today?

Men, you look at that lady. And ladies, you look at that man in the park and you desire to tell them to “stop talking about your shaggy pet dog and give me the answer that will give me certainty and end my loneliness.”

What we need is to return to our basic core values that have been stolen from us. Loneliness and anxiety will continue to chip away at us until we stand firm and fight back. We fight back by saying no to pot, drugs, drinking, vulgarity, tattoos, vile behavior, homosexuality, dishonesty, greed, lies gossip, calumny, etc. Let’s return to what God originally intended for us. Are you coming with me? Please do. There’s always room for one more where I’m going.

Bobby Morrow

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Birds and trees and forests and stuff

Okay so, I know I am not normal. It’s true. And it’s something I have embraced as I’ve gotten older. I just don’t have what anyone might describe as “standard” human wiring when it comes to the way I think and the way I see the world.

We all benefit from Eldorado Valley

Last week, Mayor Joe Hardy shared details in his opinion piece (“The Gift that Keeps Giving”) about Boulder City’s purchase of more than 100,000 acres of the former Eldorado Valley Transfer Area from the Colorado River Commission in 1995.

Back-to-school lessons in gratitude

This week is back-to-school week in Boulder City, the first time in 27 years that I don’t have a child in public schools.

Unhappy with lawsuit

Unhappy with lawsuit

Eldorado Valley: The gift that keeps on giving

Boulder City may be considered a small town with a population around 15,000 people, but our land mass of 212 square miles makes us the largest city by geographic area in Nevada and the 41st largest in the United States.

Letters to the Editor

Choosing the right market

Communicating best with love

Our hearts contain consciousness that is most apparent when we enjoy love in conversations. The more we stare at screens instead of faces, the less we feel this love. Shared understanding arises from our intimate, interpersonal conversations. Healing arising from loving communications is what America is missing at this time.

Call me Mr. Greenthumb(ish)

A couple of weeks ago I was up in Northern California visiting relatives when I got talking to my aunt Joan about her garden this year. I then shared my triumphs and failures in the world of gardening. I’m wondering if some of you have had similar experiences.

Balance and rhythm

I moved to Boulder City almost 50 years ago and quickly became fast friends with Will Ferrence.