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Meet Your Farmer: Holley Family Farms celebrates ten years providing organic produce at Carson Farmer's Market

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Tucked away in the valleys of Dayton, a multi-generational ranch and farm has been quietly producing organic and sustainable agriculture for decades to the local community.

Holley Family Farms has been owned and operated since 1970, and bases their practices on the 19th century farming traditions of Dayton Valley, “where Italian immigrants produced vegetables and meat for the thousands of residents of the Virginia City Comstock,” according to the Holly Family Farms blog.

Cecil Holley first moved to Dayton Valley in 1970 where he and his son Bill developed a reputation for raising quality beef cattle and hay. Now, Cecil’s grandson Rob has taken up to the mantle and together with wife Loni and their three children, continue to raise “grass-fed and finished” beef and lamb, as well as soy and GMO-free pork alongside USDA organic vegetables.

This year, the Holleys are celebrating their 10th year producing USDA organic vegetables, and ten years of selling them at the Carson Farmers Market.

“The Carson Market is special to our entire family,” said Rob. “Many of the vendors and customers have become dear friends, and having grown up in Carson City, we look forward to frequent visits with teachers, neighbors, classmates, teammates and others – some going back over 40 years!”

Rob and Loni recently moved away from Rob’s grandfather’s property after he passed, and have now set up shop on a ten acre farm in the wide desert of Dayton, where they endeavor to provide certified organic produce to the community, as well as ethically grown meat.

Currently, the Holleys have sheep and cattle grazing in three valleys, though they still have a few livestock animals on the property. For example, a group of lambs Rob calls “bummer lambs” bleat whenever you pass by, asking for treats.

They’re called bummer lambs, Rob says, because for whatever reason they needed extra attention. Some were rejected by their mothers, others refused to thrive without hands-on attention. Instead of putting them down, the Holleys bottle fed them until they were old enough to eat on their own.

The valleys were built on ranching, from Dayton to Douglas, but many have abandoned the old ways and ranching has become diminished throughout our area. However, the Holleys are keeping the traditions alive.

“If anybody goes back far enough in their ancestry, you’ll find a horse culture,” said Rob. “Either that or you walked. My family has always maintained their love of horses wherever they were in the U.S. An extension of that is ranching and cowboys.”

Hand in hand with that is farming, said Rob. The men in his family have always been gardeners, he said, but they decided to try and make their hobby into a commercial practice, and are now celebrating a decade of producing fresh, organic produce to the community.

“It’s been a lot of generations since my family has done commercial farming,” said Rob. “But the practices are important.”

While many local farmers raise their crops and livestock to organic standards, many decide to forgo the organic certification. However, the Holleys choose to undergo the rigorous testing for the sake of their customers.

“It gives customers confidence to know we’re certified,” said Rob. “It helps educate us as well. There’s a fine line between good practices and practices that would be considered organic, and a lot of farmers aren’t aware of those distinctions.”

For example, in order to be considered organic, it’s more than just not using chemicals. Everything, down to the straw used for mulching, must have been grown organic as well so that there’s no way it could leech anything into the soil or the plants.

But this, Rob says, is more than just a marketing ploy, it’s an important aspect of taking care of the environment.

“It’s better for everyone involved,” said Rob. “It’s better for the soil, better for the plants, better for the wildlife that lives on your farm.”

Within the high tunnels on the farm, among the growing leafy greens, is an empty bed that has recently been harvested. Rob points to a couple holes in the dark dirt, oval in shape and smaller than his fist.

“That’s where the toads live,” he said. He scratches the dirt to try and get them to poke their heads up, but with no luck.

“You want to have healthy wildlife that are able to live on your farm,” said Rob. “When you spray chemicals like Round Up, you’re damaging an entire ecosystem. So many things are greatly diminished when traditional organic practices aren’t used.”

In the high tunnels there is an array of leafy greens including spinach, lettuce, chard, and more, with tomato plants shooting up from between.

Their goal this summer for the Carson Farmer’s Market, said Rob, is to have leafy greens all throughout the summer, and not only in the colder seasons when lettuce grows naturally.

In addition to selling at the market, they also have an online farm store where people can come and make pick ups, or receive curb side delivery in Carson City.

They’ve also been supplying the Great Basin Co-op in Reno with their organic produce for years, and on Friday, they dropped off hundreds of seedlings to the annual Seedling Sale at the Co-Op.

This year, said Loni, they sold significantly more seedlings than they have before, even with the changes to the sale in that it was moved online.

This, Rob guesses, is due to the fact that people are realizing how food insecure we are in the wake of COVID-19.

“It’s so important to be diversified,” said Rob. “People are looking for local products, and they’ve realized how fragile the food supply is, and are seeing all of the food insecurity issues. Even if it’s a temporary break in the supply, people’s need for food is not temporary. Not getting food for even a week is not good for anybody.”

This, Rob said, illustrates why it’s important for people to provide their own food, or have local sources of food that are safe, healthy and available.

You can learn more about the Holleys and their organic farm by visiting https://www.holleyfamilyfarms.com/ and you can purchase directly from their store by visiting https://shop.holleyfamilyfarms.com/

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Are you a local farmer and would like to tell your story? Contact kelsey@carsonnow.org to be featured in our Meet Your Farmer series.


Gaming regulators say casino restaurants are allowed to reopen, with restrictions

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Nevada gaming regulators are giving restaurants inside still-shuttered casino properties the green light to reopen, with some significant restrictions still in place.

The Nevada Gaming Control Board issued a notice to the state’s licensed casino gaming industry on Thursday night outlining the steps needed for a restaurant inside a casino to reopen. The state’s gaming industry was not included in Gov. Steve Sisolak’s Phase 1 reopening plan, though restaurants and other retail stores are now allowed to operate limited in-person services with strict social distancing measures in place.

The notice says any restaurant inside a casino can reopen if it follows the industry-specific guideline previously released by the state, as well as following several other directives including:

  • Confirming with regulators that there is a separate entrance for the restaurant aside from one off the casino floor. If there is no separate entrance, they must “articulate to the Board how it will ensure that patrons are only able to enter the restaurant from inside the property without traversing the gaming floor.”
  • If there is not a separate restroom in the restaurant, tell regulators how the restaurant plans to allow patrons to use other bathrooms in the facility without traversing the casino floor
  • Comply with any directives or orders from county governments or health districts that have more stringent rules on reopening
  • Provide the board with a plan to prevent customers from congregating outside the restaurant prior to entry, if they operate in Clark or Washoe county

“The Board will be enforcing these health and safety requirements on any licensee that decides to partially open a restaurant, and these restrictions are subject to change based on new data related to the spread of COVID-19,” the notice says.

— This story was used by permission of The Nevada Independent. Go here for this and other stories.

Nevada State Bank Secured Approval For 4200+ PPP Loans, Helping Northern Nevada Businesses And NonProfits

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RENO - Based on processed applications as of May 13, 2020, Nevada State Bank has announced approval for 4,255 U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans totaling $592,005,500.

More than 68% of the loans were made to businesses with fewer than 10 employees and approximately 82% of the loans approved were for amounts less than $150,000 (57% for amounts less than $50,000). The funding will help preserve payrolls for 65,607 Nevada jobs, based on applicant data.

The average loan for Nevada State Bank clients is $139,132; the median loan amount approved was $34,750. In addition, an estimated $60 million in PPP loans went to businesses in rural Nevada cities.

“I have never been prouder of my Nevada State Bank colleagues than during the last 30 days. Processing half a billion dollars and thousands of loans in 30 days took heroic efforts, but that is exactly the effort needed to help save businesses in our state,” said Terry Shirey, president and CEO of Nevada State Bank. “These weeks of social distancing have been critical to saving lives but incredibly difficult for our economy. The PPP loans may help mitigate that impact and provide businesses some basic resources as the Phase 1 reopening begins.”

Throughout Nevada, more than 200 colleagues were engaged in receiving, processing and funding loans via the newly constructed PPP loan portal and funding process. Technology teams in Nevada were key to utilizing financial technology tools to solve client needs, participating with Zions Bancorporation’s Enterprise Technology and Operations division to develop an end-to-end PPP technology solution in less than a week. “After receiving additional guidance from the SBA on April 2, the team worked through nights and the weekend to have an automated loan application available on Tuesday, April 7,” added Shirey.

“There was a frantic pace around the Round 1 funding. Clients were very anxious about accessing the funds and when Round 1 ran out, the uncertainty was extremely difficult for everyone as we all waited to see what would transpire,” recalled Richard Thomas, EVP/Northern Nevada executive, who oversees the northern business team for Nevada State Bank. “Fortunately, now most anyone who applied and qualified has received funding. There was significant relief locally when the guidance was finally modified for small, local gaming companies. Through it all, there has been a constant flow of communication between colleagues and clients – just trying to keep everyone informed. We knew clients and local businesses were concerned, and we felt a strong responsibility to do anything we could to help.”

The sense of uncertainty around both COVID-19 and the PPP funding caused a lot of anxiety. Carpet King Interiors business owner, Kelly Bryce, shared his experience: “When Gov. Sisolak’s order came down, I called a meeting and talked to my employees about their options. We didn’t know what to expect. The PPP loan gave me peace of mind, knowing I could pay the rent and keep my employees on, and not jeopardize my ability to bring them back once business picked up. It’s not easy finding employees with the skills we need, even before the coronavirus, so it was important to hang on to our experienced employees.”

“In Fernley, a national bank closed their application process right after it opened. Fernley is a small town, and everybody knows everybody, so we all knew about that from talking to other businesses,” he shared. “That just increased our anxiety. While NSB took a few days to get its online application open, once it did, it was painless. I was ready and my banker, Tracy Jo Johnson, was there on the phone to answer any questions I had. I was funded within a week. It was really quick. It’s hard to describe the peace of mind that gave me.”

The PPP loans also benefited Nevada non-profit organizations, such as Artown, whose annual July art festival and events have been drastically impacted. Beth Macmillan, executive director for Artown, describes the drama of the situation: “The atmosphere of uncertainty was unprecedented. Each day brought new and unexpected challenges and mounting bad news. Artown has had to postpone all of its major 2020 public events and concerts. We have seen a dramatic decline in support from what are usually definite sources. Applying for a PPP loan directly impacted our ability to conduct business and the ongoing operation of our organization.”

Macmillan goes on to add: “If it were not for the staff at NSB, we would not have been able to complete the PPP process. Once their technology team created a workable and accessible digital application form, the bankers were very engaged with trouble-shooting issues as they arose. Our business banker, Shirley Rodgers, was ‘virtually’ at our side, keeping us informed about all the steps and requirements of the application process. She was an invaluable partner, providing personalized guidance and direction. Without Shirley and the NSB team, we would not have been able to determine if the application was complete, submitted, or even in process. We’re very thankful to have Nevada State Bank on our side.”

Overall, U.S. SBA officials report that Nevada received $4.1 billion in PPP loans as of May 10 through the CARES Act. Nevada State Bank and Zions Bancorporation, N.A. processed approvals for 14.3% of the dollars received by Nevada businesses. “If businesses are the heartbeat of the American economy, then financial institutions are helping pump the blood to them. The best advice…talk to your banker,” emphasized Shirey. “This community will work together to endure, and to rise again.”

About Nevada State Bank (@nevadastatebank)
Nevada State Bank, a division of Zions Bancorporation, N.A., is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year. Founded on Dec. 9, 1959, the full-service bank offers a complete range of consumer, private, and business banking services. Nevada State Bank’s colleagues regularly volunteer in their communities and have been dedicated to helping make Nevada a better place to live for the last 60 years. Zions Bancorporation, N.A. is included in the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Financial 100 indices (NASDAQ: ZION). For more information on Nevada State Bank, call 702.383.0009 or visit www.nsbank.com.

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Quad-County COVID-19 Update for May 15: Three New Cases and Three Recoveries brings total to 137

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Quad-County Emergency Operations Center (Quad EOC) is reporting three new positive cases and three recoveries of COVID-19 in the Quad-County region. This brings the total number of cases to 137, with 90 recoveries and two deaths, 45 cases remain active.

The new cases are:

A female Carson City resident in her 20’s

A female Lyon County resident in her 30’s
A male Carson City resident in his 20’s

Carson City Health and Human Services is working to identify close risk contacts to prevent further spread of the disease. Due to medical privacy requirements and to protect their identity, no further information about the cases will be released.

Gender and age break down of the cases by county is available at https://gethealthycarsoncity.org/novel-coronavirus-2019/. Statewide numbers can be found at the Nevada Health Response website (nvhealthresponse.nv.gov/).

Within the community based asymptomatic tests, 1,699 of 1,798 tests have been returned, with one positive test.

The lab is experiencing a high volume of tests. Results from the asymptomatic community-based testing locations are taking longer than expected. CCHHS will contact those tested by phone when their results are available.

For those who are experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 or have questions, call the Quad-County COVID-19 Hotline 7 days a week, 8 am to 5 pm. Spanish speakers are available. The phone number is (775) 283-4789.

Stay informed. For updates and more information on COVID-19 visit https://gethealthycarsoncity.org/novel-coronavirus-2019/.

MEDIA: The situation is continuously evolving, to allow for more accurate number reports, situation updates can be anticipated at 6:00 pm daily, unless immediate updates are necessary.

Storey County searches for suspects in Virginia City school bus damage

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On May 11, 2020 at approximately 8:15 pm, three unidentified individuals in a black coupe entered the Virginia City High School Campus.

A subject wearing a blue shirt, black basketball shorts, and black knee-high socks exited the vehicle from the back seat.

The individual is seen throwing a rock at the windshield of the school bus, shattering the glass.

The black 2 door coupe has a spoiler on the rear trunk with partial red coloring in or on the rims. The vehicle is similar to a Chevrolet Cobalt.

If you have any information, please contact the Storey County Sheriff’s Office via dispatch at 775-847-0950.

Tuesday Night Archery Shoots are back at Carson City Archery Range

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Starting May 26th, and continuing every Tuesday evening, 5:30 p.m. to dusk, the Clear Creek Bowmen will resume hosting their Tuesday Night Archery Shoots at the Tim Meigs Carson City Archery Range (Formerly the Centennial Park Archery Range).

Both standard and 3D targets are available.

The target range is open shooting for use at no cost. There is a $5.00 fee (kids 17 and under are free) to shoot the 3D animal targets.

We have archery equipment, volunteers and instructors to get you started.

Come on out and join us.

It’s a great way to experience the world of archery. Open to all ages.

Social distancing will be required. Groups will be limited to 10 or less.

For more information visit our website: http://clearcreekbowmen.com/

Sisolak: Initial signs following Phase 1 reopening are positive, but no timeline on moving to Phase 2

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Gov. Steve Sisolak said it’s not yet clear what the week-old effort to reopen some Nevada businesses has done to infection metrics or when the state will move to Phase 2, but he said health indicators are pointing in the right direction.

Sisolak held a press conference in Carson City on Friday as an update on how Phase 1 has played out in the state. He pointed out that the rate of positive results out of all people tested since the pandemic began continues a 20-day downward trajectory, and that the Nevada Hospital Association says COVID-19 hospitalizations “are not significantly impacting the hospital system.”

“Our goal is to continue reopening more of Nevada’s economy in a safe and responsible manner … but it’s too early to make any determinations,” he said.

Sisolak announced last week that the state would move to a limited reopening of businesses on May 9, after nearly a two-month long shutdown of most aspects of public life and business activity in the state in hopes of slowing the spread of COVID-19. Phase 1 guidelines allow most retail businesses to reopen, as long as they don’t exceed 50 percent capacity, require employees to wear masks and follow various safety and social distancing guidelines.

Hair and nail salons, as well as some dine-in restaurants, are also allowed to reopen but directed to follow safety precautions. Sisolak said the Division of Industrial Relations reported that a majority of businesses are complying with the rules.

“I’m really pleased to hear this and I’m proud of the fact that they took this so seriously,” he said. “We know that there are some that are not in compliance right now. Unfortunately, their negligence puts Nevadans at risk. And so there will be repercussions as a result of that.”

But the governor said it was still too early to discuss Phase 2 and additional steps to open up sectors of the economy, saying he wanted to have at least two weeks’ worth of health care data at hand before making a decision.

“Those decisions will be forthcoming but we need the data in order to move forward on any more reopenings,” he said.

Asked about whether churches would be allowed to open to larger in-person services if they implemented social distancing measures — a request articulated by a coalition of 190 faith leaders in a letter dated Thursday — Sisolak said he didn’t plan to add more organizations into Phase 1.

“No one wants churches to open more than me, and my mother probably more than me, because she doesn’t think it’s the same watching Mass online as it is attending in person,” he said.

But he argued that it’s difficult to socially distance in a house of worship and that many congregations include older people who are particularly vulnerable if they catch COVID-19. He said drive-in services are allowed and there are discussions about outdoor services, but Phase 1 “is what it is right now.”

Nor was there concrete guidance on when schools would be allowed to reopen, especially as evidence emerges of an illness among children called multisystem inflammatory syndrome that appears to have a nexus to the coronavirus.

“That’s going to be another one where we don’t just come up with these ideas or pull them out of the air,” he said, noting that while discussions are happening, “as of today, I’ve not been presented with a plan.”

Sisolak said members of the “LEAP” committee — Local Government Advisory Panel, led by Clark County Commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick and Eureka County Commissioner J.J. Goicoechea — were taking recommendations on different types of businesses that may be allowed to reopen in Phase 2 and evaluating whether limits on capacity could be safely changed.

“That’s gonna be difficult to increase capacity and at the same time maintain social distancing requirements,” he said. “So it’s kind of going to be dependent upon the data that we get continuing to come forward.”

Sisolak also touted the number of tests performed by the state — more than 17,000 last week. Asked why Nevada’s rate of testing lags behind the national average, the governor said he expects said capacity is growing and will expand further as more workplaces are testing their employees on a large scale.

“Not that this is a race, but we’ll be able to catch up with the other states,” he said.

The state averaged about 2,500 people tested per day in the last week, and he said the state probably already has the capacity to test 4,000 people a day — if not now, then by next week. But he acknowledged the logistical barrier of people physically going to a testing site and actually getting 4,000 people a day to submit to the test.

“We do have capacity, but people have to go get tested,” he said. “They have to get in their car and drive down there. I encourage them to do that.”

On the Culinary Union’s recommendation that all employees are tested before returning to work, Sisolak said many companies are planning to do so in plans submitted confidentially to gaming regulators but that Gaming Control Board Chairwoman Sandra Douglass Morgan is making those decisions.

He also used the press conference to exhort Nevadans to wear a face covering in public. He urged those who don’t know anyone personally who has had COVID-19 to remember the story of Marine veteran Ronald Pipkins — the first coronavirus patient in Nevada who spent about a month in a coma and fought to recover because he hoped to someday meet his grandchildren.

“Wear a face covering for someone that you love, for someone that you care about … and we’ll all be able to get into Phase 2 quicker,” he said.

— This story was used by permission of The Nevada Independent. Go here for this and other stories.

Man arrested for assault with deadly weapon says victim hit himself with coffee mug to prove how tough he is

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A 32-year-old Redding, Calif. man was arrested in the area of College Parkway Thursday night for felony battery with a deadly weapon, an assault with a deadly weapon warrant, and a domestic battery warrant.

Skyler Shane Smith was arrested after deputies responded to the area after an anonymous caller stated a fight was going on between two men in a parking lot.

When deputies arrived, the fight had ended but they were able to follow a blood trail to an apartment.

Deputies heard yelling for help coming from inside the apartment, and they made entry.

Inside, deputies located Smith and detained him. He was escorted outside into a police vehicle. He had several lacerations on his right hand, deputies noted.

Deputies learned he had a warrant for assault with a deadly weapon and domestic battery first with a $50,000 bail amount issued from Carson City Justice Court.

Inside the apartment, deputies located another man who was hiding in a bedroom closet. He had a laceration on his forehead and nose. He told deputies he was in a fight, but did not remember anything after getting hit and was unconscious for about 15 minutes.

Carson City Fire Department responded and transported the man to the hospital for medical attention. He received several stitches to his face and had trouble remembering his address, according to the report.

Deputies asked Smith what the fight was about, and he said it was something stupid but did not go into detail. He said he did not remember how his hand got injured.

Deputies spoke to a juvenile that was in the apartment and had witnessed the fight. They said the two had been drinking and got into a fight, and that Smith hit the other man over the head with a tin cookie sheet. He then took a coffee mug and hit the other man in the head, causing it to break and cut up the man’s face.

Smith told deputies that the man had broken a mug on his own face to show how tough he was.

Smith was taken into custody and received stitches on his right hand.

Bail: $80,000

— A 21-year-old Gardnerville man was arrested in the area of West Nye Lane and West College Parkway for possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia, and two warrants for contempt of court.

On Friday afternoon, deputies were dispatched to a local auto sales store after William Thomas Liggett called 911 stating there was a man on scene that had stated he was going to shoot him.

Dispatch advised Liggett had warrants out for his arrest.

Deputies arrived at the auto sales business and found Liggett hiding behind a wooden fence, and came out when deputies pulled into the parking lot.

Liggett pointed out the man who had allegedly threatened to shoot him, and deputies went to speak with the man. He was released on scene.

Liggett was very upset and was not making sense, according to deputies. He said he was aware he had two warrants out of the Carson City Justice Courts. Deputies asked if he had anything on him, and he said he had two hypodermic needles in his pack.

He was taken into custody. Deputies located two hypodermic needles, two spoons, two small clear baggies and a small white container with a white crystal-like substance believed to be methamphetamine.

He was transported to the jail without incident.

Bail: $5,637

All information for the crime log (unless otherwise noted) comes from the arrest reports supplied by the Carson City Sheriff's Office, and is considered by law to be public information. All subjects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The policy of Carson Now is to name anyone who is arrested for a felony offense.


State Unemployment Site Down Temporarily to Improve System Performance and Access DETR says, Users Must Be Logged Off System by 1 PM

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CARSON CITY, NV – The Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation (DETR) has announced their unemployment insurance (UInv) website (http://ui.nv.gov) will be down TODAY, Saturday, May 16, 2020 at 1 p.m. until 7 p.m., the period of lowest traffic, in order to improve system performance and access expansion for filers.

During this time, all unemployment insurance functions, including unemployment insurance filing will not be functional.

Filers are encouraged to visit the site after 7 p.m. on Saturday evening.

Carson City fire department, sheriff's office respond to smoking, hot-wired vehicle near Goni

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Just before 11:30 a.m. Saturday morning Carson City firefighters and sheriff's deputies were dispatched to the Goni pits on a report of a smoking vehicle.

According to dispatch, a park ranger found the vehicle running, and it appeared it had been running for some time and had been hot-wired. The vehicle was starting to smoke when responders were dispatched to the scene.

The vehicle was located past the water tank off of the gravel road.

Deer, peacocks spotted roaming Curry Street in Carson City

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Reader Jeff Moses submitted these photos of a wildlife menagerie roaming Curry Street in Carson City on Friday afternoon. Moses snapped photos of both deer and a peacock strutting their stuff!

Missing elderly woman located by Lyon and Washoe County Sheriff's deputies using infrared technology

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A 74-year-old woman is back home with her family after an extensive search which began Friday, May 15, 2020 and lasted into the overnight hours.

The Regional Aviation Enforcement Unit (RAVEN) was called to assist Lyon County Sheriff’s Office deputies around 9 p.m. to help locate the Silver Springs woman who had been missing six hours. Due to ongoing medical issues, the woman’s family was very concerned about her welfare.

Using Forward-Looking Infrared (FLIR) technology RAVEN located the woman alive, lying in the middle of a road around 12:30 a.m. Saturday, May 16th. RAVEN guided Lyon County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue teams to the woman.

Lyon County Sheriff Office deputies returned the woman home to her family. Any further questions regarding this rescue should be directed to the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office.

Pictures: Images from RAVEN’s FLIR technology of the moment a woman was found in Lyon County and of Lyon County Sheriff’s Office deputies with the woman after RAVEN guided them to her.

Careflight called to motorcycle accident with injury reported at Fairview and I-580 off ramp

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At 1:29 p.m. Saturday afternoon a vehicle accident involving a motorcycle was reported at Northbound Fairview and I-580.

According to dispatch, a motorcyclist lost control of his motorcycle on the northbound off ramp on Fairview and I-580.

The rider was unconscious but breathing. He was wearing a helmet.

First responders are enroute. Delays are expected. Use alternate routes if possible.

Careflight was called to the scene at 1:40 p.m.

Quad-County COVID-19 Update: Six New Cases and Two Recoveries bring totals to 143

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Quad-County Emergency Operations Center (Quad EOC) is reporting six new positive cases and two recoveries of COVID-19 in the Quad-County region. This brings the total number of cases to 143, with 92 recoveries and two deaths, 49 cases remain active.

The new cases are:

A female Carson City resident in her 40’s

A female Carson City resident in her 30’s
A female Douglas County resident in her 40’s
An adult female Carson City resident in her teens
A female Carson City resident in her 30’s
A male Carson City resident in his 40’s

Carson City Health and Human Services is working to identify close risk contacts to prevent further spread of the disease. Due to medical privacy requirements and to protect their identity, no further information about the cases will be released.

Gender and age break down of the cases by county is available at https://gethealthycarsoncity.org/novel-coronavirus-2019/. Statewide numbers can be found at the Nevada Health Response website (nvhealthresponse.nv.gov/).

The lab is experiencing a high volume of tests. Results from the asymptomatic community-based testing locations are taking longer than expected. CCHHS will contact those tested by phone when their results are available.

For those who are experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 or have questions, call the Quad-County COVID-19 Hotline 7 days a week, 8 am to 5 pm. Spanish speakers are available. The phone number is (775) 283-4789.

Stay informed. For updates and more information on COVID-19 visit https://gethealthycarsoncity.org/novel-coronavirus-2019/.

A Red Tail Hawk moves in for a close up

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A red Tail Hawk moves in slow toward the camera Saturday morning at Silver Saddle Ranch.


Demonstrators at Governor's Mansion protest shutdown, call for Sisolak's removal

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About 150 demonstrators returned Saturday to the Governor's Mansion in Carson City to protest his handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
Go here for the full story.

Senator Square: Carson High School Class of 2020 yearbook has arrived

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Editor’s Note: Patt Quinn-Davis is adviser for the Carneta yearbook. She wrote this letter to CHS staff members to share the challenges she and her student staff faced in finishing this year’s carneta. Quinn-Davis also teaches Honors American Literature and English IV.

Before jumping into teaching, Quinn-Davis worked many years at The Nevada Appeal as city government reporter, columnist, and city editor. She was also editor of The Nevada Appeal and previously was editor of The Daily Democrat newspaper in Woodland, California.

It has been just a few weeks since we finished the 2020 Carneta yearbook. Since that time, I have wondered how I can explain to all of you what it took for these students, Sydney Lloyd, Desirea Fox, Lindsay Chowanski, Allison Gill, Bryce Alvarado, Aspen Carrillo, Julia Nolan, Anthony Alvarado, Justyce Quintana, and Veronica Burson, to make that deadline during these extraordinary times.

And you know what? I do not believe I can explain all of it. You really did have to be there. We are used to hearing all that is wrong with kids. But we know, in our own little teaching worlds, that the criticism is not always true. It certainly is not true of this yearbook staff. Yes, they had other classes. Yes, I was with my other classes.

Alyssa Smith, who had co-taught one of my publications’ classes, worked with both sections, plus all of her other classes. But the staff, Alyssa, and me, also thought about “Yearbook” and how we could finish it, on time, and tell our unique story about an event we, from our first-person perspective, would read and remember for days and months and years hence.

Materials from the classroom had to be collected and delivered to staff. Zoom was set up. And we met, between classes, during lag times in other classes, after class, and long into the evening. The stories I could tell. Two of the editors had picked up extra shifts at their jobs. One of them brought her laptop to her work and squeezed in writing and layout between pizza orders.

Another ran through the empty streets of Carson, shooting the closed casinos, the closed downtown, and, yes, the closed CHS for our local reaction section. Yet another ended up with his grandparents in South Lake Tahoe with fractured internet service. Some were helping with siblings and parents, others were more literally grounded, sitting on their beds, reading from notes I texted to them, deciphering, putting together, figuring it out. Some of it felt awful. Often there was despair.

Some of the materials could not be duplicated and had to be dropped from our plans for this 2020 Carneta. I felt like I had walked across this country by the time we had finished it. How do we get the books to the kids, our book is historic, and I think it is hard for some people to appreciate this. Spring sports disappeared, senior pages were not done, relying on kids not sitting in front of you to do the work, received pre-made pages from Walworth, but we did not use then, books should be signed by all of the editors, order through the Yearbookforever.com website, it was a challenge.

On the last night, April 10, I worried about stories that were still being written and making the Midnight deadline.

“QD,” said Lindsay Chowanski, executive editor, “we have almost five hours; we are fine.” For years, when I am wondering if I will get something done in time, I will remember her words...almost five hours...we are fine. I have had victorious books over the years. Nothing could top this one, however. Ironically, our theme for the 2020 Carneta is “Here and Now. Now and Then.” Definitely a theme to capture this weird, weird year, and I wanted all of you to know.

ORDER A 2020 CARNETA YEARBOOK ONLINE
The 2020 Carneta is here, so please do not miss out on this unforgettable record of the most unforgettable senior year in history. CHS adviser Patt Quinn-Davis and CHS Administrators are working out details on the best way to get yearbooks delivered to students, but ordering one online is simple. Quinn-Davis, and co-adviser Alyssa Smith-Ackerley, made a very quick how-to video for ordering. See the video here. Want to skip the video, no problem. Go straight to yearbookforever.com/.

COMO PEDIR EL LIBRE ANUARIO DEL 2020 CARNETA
Sí
El Carneta 2020 ya casi está aquí. La asesor de CHS Patt Quinn-Davis y los administradores de CHS están trabajando de la mejor manera posible para que los libros se entreguen a los estudiantes, pero pedir uno en línea. Instrucciones para hacerlo disponibles en YouTube: Quinn-Davis y la co-asesora Alyssa Smith-Ackerley han estado recibiendo correos electrónicos y preguntas sobre cómo los estudiantes y los padres pueden pedir anuarios, por lo que hicieron un video de cómo hacerlo muy rápido porque pensaron que los miembros del personal de CHS también podrían necesitar aclaraciones. Para las interesados pueden ir a yearbookforever.com. Un video instructivo está disponible aquí: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkeN1ImGaGU&feature=youtu.be

SAFE GRAD COMMITTEE PUTTING PLANS INTO MOTION
Here is the scoop on what is happening with Safe Grad. A meeting will be held after May 15 to determine if Safe Grad night can happen. Safe Grad is also sponsoring the Downtown Street Banner event, and all information may be found on the CHS class of 2020 parents on Facebook. Look for a picture of the CHS at school, and there are two groups: One for anyone and one just for CHS Class of 2020 Senior Parents.

A post from the group on Facebook says, “Permission to install banners up and down Carson Street and Fairview has been granted. There will be four pictures of the CHS Class of 2020 Seniors on each banner, two per side. The cost per senior is $28. However, we would like to fundraise to offset the cost for each student. Carson High Safe Grad has agreed to sponsor the project, and donations may be sent to: Carson High Safe Grad Booster, PO Box 486, Carson City, NV 89702. To donate online, go to the ‘Donate’ tab at carsonhighsafegrad@gmail.com. All donations are tax deductible. Please reference “Downtown Banners” on your donation.” Approximately $13,000 needs to be raised to do the Downtown Street Banner project to be able to offer it to all graduating CHS students. Please contact CHS Safe Grad Secretary, Wendy Yang at 720-6160, President Kyra Hinton at 434-760-0635, or go to carsonhighsafegrad@gmail.com.

GREATER NEVADA CREDIT UNION VIRTUAL LEARNING DAY
GNCU is bringing free virtual financial wellness May 20 using Zoom online meetings. They will facilitate two Bite of Reality simulations for students ages 13 to 22, regardless of whether or not they or their family are GNCU members. Bite of Reality is a hands-on based simulation that appeals to teens while giving them a taste of real-world financial realities. Teens are given a fictional occupation, salary, spouse and family, student loan debt, credit card debt, and medical insurance payments.

The teens will then "purchase" housing, transportation, food, clothing, household necessities, day care, and other needs. Fortunately, the game also includes a "credit union" to help with their financial needs. This interactive activity will teach teens how to make financial decisions and give them a better understanding of the challenges of living on a budget. Teens will have to deal with a pushy "car salesperson" and a commission-based "realtor," and weigh their wants versus their needs. There is even a "Fickle Finger of Fate" to give students unexpected "expenses" or "windfalls" just like in real life. To RSVP, go here, click the button below each session, and fill out the form.

CAREER CENTER OPEN TO HELP STUDENTS PREPARE FOR EMPLOYMENT
The CHS Career Center is open every day and ready to assist students with many tasks in preparation for their future careers. The center offers assistance with writing cover letters to employers, creating resumes, preparing for interviews, and provides information about current job openings with local businesses.

The center has helped many students get their first job, and students who are signed up for Work Experience through the Counseling office have their number of work hours kept track of by the Center, to earn credits for high school graduation. The Center also organizes the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery testing schedule for sophomores, juniors, and seniors interested in serving in the armed forces; the ASVAB is given twice per year, Fall and Spring, at no cost to students, and the results can assess which jobs students are most suited for based upon their scores” Darnell added.

Also organized by the Center is the setup of Senior Project Academies, which allows seniors to participate in educational job shadowing opportunities, which parallel their career interests such as the healthcare, law enforcement, and banking or finance. Students are able to have hands-on experiences by observing and attending sessions alongside professionals at Carson Tahoe Hospital, the Carson City Sheriff’s Department, and Wells Fargo. Throughout the school year, the Center hosts speakers from local businesses and has several trips to manufacturing, retail, or service businesses in the community.

The Center partners with University of Nevada, Reno to help juniors, those interested in exploring careers in science and health, to sign up for UNR’s Student Research Summer program, Community of Bilingual English-Spanish speakers. The Center also runs queries on grades and prepares spreadsheets for Career and Technical Education Level I teachers to keep them informed of the overall academic progress of their students in order to help them reach a B or better and succeed as a Completer in their CTE pathway. Center hours are Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.— Contributed by Jeannie Danell, CHS Career Center Senior Office Specialist.

UPCOMING EVENTS FOR STUDENTS THIS SUMMER
Get on the road with Western Nevada College’s fully online driver’s education class. Students pay $34.99 Meets Nevada Department of Motor Vehicle requirements. Call 775-445-4210 or email wnc.edu/driver-education for more information.

CHS STUDENT ELECTED NEVADA SKILLSUSA STATE OFFICER
Carson High junior, Olivia Syndergaard was elected to the Nevada SkillsUSA State Officer Team May 8. Nevada SkillsUSA is a student organization that works with the Career and Technical Programs to ensure high school students have the job skills needed to become strong employees in the community. As a state officer, Olivia will assist in developing initiatives and provide guidance on how the SkillsUSA organization may meet the challenges of creating a strong workforce.

She will be conduct leadership training for members during the annual leadership training. Olivia has been in student leadership since her freshman year. Next school year, she was also elected as Student Body President. Olivia will be a third year Culinary Arts student next year as well. She excels at culinary management tasks and enjoys the baking arts. In her free time, Olivia rock climbs and mountain bikes. Olivia has exemplified the qualities that make effective leaders. She loves to challenge herself and puts her heart into every endeavor. Olivia strives to be her best and to bring out the best in others. Congratulations, Olivia. — Contributed by CHS SkillsUSA adviser and Culinary Arts teacher Kasey Kemmet.

STUDENT OF THE WEEK
The CHS Student of the Week is Jane Read, a senior. According to her nominating teacher, CHS Language Department Chair Cheryl Macy, “Jane is quiet and unassuming, but she powers through her work.” Macy added, “She is ahead of the game on assignments, and last semester Jane did not have a single tardy or absence for any class. Jane will attend college to become a teacher, and she interned at Seeliger Elementary with Mrs. Reed, who thoroughly enjoyed having Jane in class." Congratulations to Jane Read as a positive standout even amidst this worldwide crisis.

— Senator Square columnist Phil Brady is an English teacher at Carson High School in Carson City, Nev.

Northern Nevada outdoors with JoAnne Skelly: I'm a grass warrior, are you?

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I have been a grass warrior lately. Grass persists in exploring and establishing in areas I don’t want it: under shrubs, twined in flowers, out of the edges of the lawn, under the trees, in the field and so on. As a grass warrior, I have employed various attack strategies from hand-digging, weed-whacking and mowing with three different mowers — a riding mower, a small area electric mower, a rough area mower and finally, a tractor.

Thank goodness I have my own mechanic living with me who keeps all the equipment in excellent working order or grass would take over my landscape world.

Being a grass warrior requires tenacity, doggedness and endurance because grasses never give up. The prolific annual grasses flourish early. However, because they complete their life cycle within one year, they are shallow-rooted and easy to pull.

The perennial grasses are another story. They grow year after year putting down strong roots. They are difficult to pull, generally requiring a shovel rather than a trowel to get them out. In addition, any roots left behind re-sprout, growing multitudes of new plants.

I avoid herbicides these days in order to maintain a healthy soil biome, which then allows plants to thrive. However, some folks resort to herbicides. I’m often asked if the active ingredient, glyphosate, which is in 750 products including Roundup, is a good grass control.

Glyphosate is a non-selective, post-emergent herbicide. This means it kills almost all actively growing plants when it is applied to leaves or freshly cut stems. If you spray it on grass growing in your flowers or shrub beds, you probably will kill the flowers as well as the grasses and shrubs. If you spray it on your lawn weeds, it may kill them, but also the lawn. There is a lot of controversy about glyphosate these days with some research saying it is carcinogenic (cancer-causing) and other studies saying it isn’t.

There are selective post-emergence herbicides that target only grasses but also other monocots, such as irises and lilies. These include various products with one of the active ingredients fluazifop, fenoxaprop or sethoxydim. Products may come pre-mixed or require the addition of a surfactant or sticker-spreader ingredient to water in a tank sprayer. Before buying or using an herbicide, READ and understand the LABEL.

Since I will continue to avoid herbicides, I will remain a constant digger, mower or weed-whacking grass warrior. Are you one too?

JoAnne Skelly is an Associate Professor & Extension Educator Emerita at the University of Nevada Cooperative Extension. She can be reached at skellyj@unce.unr.edu.

Carson City area weather: Late spring storm to bring gusty winds, valley rain and Sierra snow

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A late-season spring storm will bring gusty winds, below average temperatures, mountain snow, and periods of valley rain Sunday through Tuesday around the Carson City region, according to the National Weather Service.

For Carson City, Carson Valley and much of northern Nevada Nevada, a Wind Advisory is in place through 8 p.m. Forecasters say we can expect widespread gusts of 35-50 mph and localized higher gusts in wind prone locations. Impacts to road and air travel are possible along with dangerous boating conditions and areas of blowing dust downwind of desert sinks.

Gusts could be strong enough to damage some fences and bring down branches. Fire weather concerns will also be present in areas that have dried grassy fuels, according to the weather service.

Rain will arrive in the Sierra on Sunday with snow levels lowering from about 9,000 feet to 7,000 feet by Monday morning. Impacts to Sierra passes are possible Monday morning with a few inches of snowfall possible.

The cold front will sweep through on Monday which will provide western Nevada its best shot at rain showers. Gusty winds will also remain, particularly south of Highway 50 just ahead of the advancing cold front.

Snow levels above Lake Tahoe will also continue to drop Monday evening into Tuesday morning with snow levels falling below 6,000 feet. Light snow showers will be possible at lake level but accumulations should be limited. All told, High Sierra elevations, mainly above 8,000 feet could accumulate up to a foot of wet snow through Tuesday morning.

Lingering snow and pellet showers will prevail Tuesday with isolated lightning strikes not out of the question on Monday and Tuesday.

Much cooler conditions will prevail Tuesday with high temperatures as much as 20 degrees below season averages. Some freezes will be possible in rural lower valleys Tuesday night into Wednesday morning.

Beginning Monday, rural households will begin receiving hand-delivered Census forms

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CARSON CITY — According to Nevada Census 2020, beginning on May 18, the U.S. Census Bureau will begin its “update leave” operations, where 2020 census forms are hand delivered to residences that either do not have mail delivered to the physical location of the home, or the mail delivery information for the residence cannot be verified. This process is to ensure all Nevadans — particularly in rural communities — are counted.

“We want to make sure people who receive the hand-delivered census forms do not mistake them for an advertisement and accidentally throw them away,” said Churchill County Commission Chair Pete Olsen. “It’s critical that rural residents who may not receive mail service at their homes still participate in the census.”

The U.S. Census Bureau is prioritizing the health and safety of the public and its employees. Therefore, the update leave process will not require any interaction with residents. Census workers will not ring doorbells or collect data during this phase and will wear personal protective equipment while in the field. Census questionnaires and instructions will be left at or in close proximity of the front doors of homes.

Nevadans have been able to complete their census questionnaire online, over the phone, or by mailing in the form since mid-March. However, many residences, particularly in rural parts of the state, have not received the physical form yet, since they are a part of the update leave phase of the national census.

As of Thursday, May 14, Nevada’s self-response rate is 58.4%, compared to the U.S self-response rate, which is currently 59.3 percent. In addition to congressional and state representation, census data is used to help determine how much and where approximately $67 billion in federal funding for the next ten years will be distributed throughout Nevada.

“We cannot rely solely on residents in the most populous counties in Nevada to be included in the census and expect to get our fair share of federal funding in the rural parts of the state,” said Carolyn Turner, Executive Director of the Nevada Rural Electric Association. “Nevadans living in rural counties must be counted. It’s our responsibility to respond to the census – whether it’s online, via phone, comes in the mail or is hand delivered.”

Funding based on past census information helped support: the United Way Food Shelter in Pershing County; road funds in Lyon, Mineral and Nye counties; and transportation and other services for seniors in Humboldt, Hawthorne and Eureka Counties — just to name a few.

The 2020 Census takes about 10 minutes to complete and only asks for basic information. It is confidential, and it does not include questions about financial information, social security numbers, political elections, or any other personal identification information.

More information about the 2020 Nevada Census can be found at www.census.nv.gov.

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