83°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

Beatty Town Advisory Board honors EMT trainers

Beatty Town Advisory Board members listened to a couple of presentations at their Aug. 12 meeting, but the evening started with a presentation of their own.

Board Treasurer Erika Gerling presented letters and certificates of appreciation to Beatty Volunteer Fire Department Chief Mike Harmon and Beatty Volunteer Ambulance Service Coordinator Allison Henderson in recognition of their success in training new emergency medical technicians.

The two trainers started with 12 students in the recent class, seven of whom finished the course. Six of the seven passed the rigorous National Registry EMT Exam on the first try, and the seventh was preparing to re-take it. This represents an unusually high pass rate.

Some of the new EMTs are from Amargosa Valley and may be able to help revive the service there. Chief Harmon, however, said that they will begin by making runs with the seasoned EMTs in Beatty, rather than going out on their own. He said they didn’t want to “throw them to the wolves.”

Mining presentation

The board then heard a presentation from Richard Yancey, site manager for Coeur Sterling. Yancey said that the Sterling mine, located on the opposite side of Bare Mountain from Beatty, has been in operation, in one form or another, for more than 30 years. Currently, they are reprocessing ore in the leach heap at the mine, but they hope to develop it further.

Coeur purchased the Sterling operation from Northern Empire, and is one of the companies exploring for gold in the Beatty area, as he put it, “drilling to expand from known resources.”

“We’re serious about building a mine here,” Yancey said. “About making things happen.”

He said that they have workers fencing dangerous old mines. They also have installed watering facilities for burros and bighorn sheep. He said a representative of the Nevada Department of Wildlife told him that what they were doing was “life-sustaining” for the sheep.

Asked how soon they might be able to put a mine in operation, Yancey said he didn’t have a real answer, but that “a couple of years of exploration work would not be unusual at all.”

Highway 95 project

After Yancey’s presentation, the board heard from Lee Jacoby, of Horrocks Engineers, who provided information on the project to reroute U.S. Highway 95 just north of Goldfield. This is being done to enable the mining of gold located beneath the existing roadway.

Jacoby said that the existing highway should be open during almost all of the four to six months construction is anticipated to take. He said they hope to have it done before temperatures drop below what is needed for paving.

He said that the only time there would be a need for lane closure and a pilot car would be when they were working toward the end of the project on the tie-ins with the existing highway.

He also said that the new section, which is about two-and-a-half miles, would include some left-turn lanes for increased safety.

Other business

The board took up one item of business, approving the sending of a letter to the Nevada Department of Environmental Protection in support of a permit modification at the Beatty U.S. Ecology site. Gerling said that the modification did not involve anything new at the facility, just an expansion.

During public comment Nye County Sheriff’s Lt. Alan Lynn displayed a portable security camera that had been purchased for Beatty. He said that it could be put wherever people thought “something shady” was going on.

Richard Stephens is a freelance reporter living in Beatty.

THE LATEST
Impact fees rising for new development in Pahrump

The cost for new construction in Pahrump has now officially gone up following impact fee increases approved by the Nye County Commission, which went into effect as of Tuesday, May 7.

Nevada Volunteers hosts Pahrump Volunteer Fair

Nevada Volunteers hosted the Pahrump Volunteer Fair this month, the first such fair in a grant-funded series that will take the nonprofit all around the Silver State over the course of the next three years, all in the name of advocating for and educating people on the power of volunteering.

Garage fire destroys 11 classic cars

Close to a dozen classic cars in various states of restoration were consumed by fire at a residence along the 3000 block of North Joanita Street last week.

Repairs underway for wildlife fence

With a variety of free-roaming wild horse and burro herds calling the open land surrounding Pahrump home, car-versus-equine crashes are an unfortunate but all-too-common occurrence. Fencing is essential. Join the effort to protect wild horses and burros — and drivers too.

GALLERY: These community activists are changing Pahrump Valley

A dozen volunteers in the valley were celebrated for their contributions at the Inaugural Hope Floats Volunteer Recognition Luncheon hosted by the NyE Communities Coalition.

Beatty board backs Ash Meadows conservancy plans

At its May 6 meeting, the Beatty Town Advisory Board voted to send a letter supporting the Amargosa Conservancy’s conceptual map showing the boundary of its proposed Ash Meadows mineral withdrawal area.

Memorial service set for former Town Manager Bill Kohbarger

A special Celebration of Life ceremony for former Pahrump Town Manager Bill Kohbarger is scheduled for Friday May 10, at the Pahrump Veterans Memorial at 751 East Street from 12-to-4 p.m.

RENDERINGS: Pahrump OHV Park to be professionally designed

Two years ago, the town of Pahrump broke ground on what will become a 40-acre OHV Park at the Pahrump Fairgrounds but before any actual construction takes place, officials want to have the site professionally designed.

Valley’s ladies treated to the Women’s Expo

Soroptimist International has one main mission – ensuring women and girls can access the resources and opportunities they need to be able to reach their full potential and live their very best lives.