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Show 1 f CLEARFIELD COURIER, Davis County's Fair is coming up soon - Aug. We will be happy to enter your hobbies, crafts, art work, etc., for you but we must have them before Aug. 14. 5 Just bring them to Heritage Center or call for further information. Remember Seniors, the special fun day at the fair. Dinner, games, prizes. So plan to attend and if you havent been there before, call us and find the facts about a great time at the Fair. -- 17-1- 9. 773-706- Utah Congressman Gunn McKay anWASHINGTON nounced that residents of Utahs First Congressional District will soon be able to participate in a "grassroots inof the federal regulatory process. vestigation" McKay said a citizens survey would soon be mailed to all households within his district. The survey is part of a nationwide Citzens Audit he and other members of the Forum on Regulation (FOR) are sponsoring to get practical ideas and experience form their own constituents. which really boils down to a The purpose of this effort is to determine which regulations grassroots investigation are working, which arent and why, said McKay. School registratn'ii will be held Wednesday, August 9th for all students af South Clearfield Elementary School (890 East 700 k-- 6 JCLY25, 1978 p investigation was being made concerning a that had been passed money order stolen from an Ogden in Clearfield. Officers are investigating a case of forcible sexual abuse involving five little girls, ages 0 years old. A girls bicycle was found in the Valhalla area. The owner was located and the bike returned. A follow-u- 7-- JULY 26, 1978 Bernice Graham, 80 S. 400 E., reported having some 12 gauge shotgun shells in storage that she wonted 11-1- children must have proper immunization and physical examinations. January reported the theft of a vertible top and doors from a Jeep. Items valued at $200. 283 W. 550 N., JULY 27, 1978 A bicycle theft was reported by Kristine DeBase, 1000 E. the stolen was valued at $50. JULY 28, 1978 Medical assistance was offered at 1400 S. 1000 W. in an area where towers were being replaced. Ronald Cyr, 40, an employe of the company working in the area, fell from a scaffle and fractured his leg. lie was taken to the Davis North Meical Center. A license plate was found, turned over to the police, and the owner was contacted. Tom Clarke, Classic Realty and Construction, 162 E. 750 S., reported the office had been broken into and the files gone j ", f thrOlghr'-T'J.'f 7 ; Briart Eastw(Vitll33 N. 1200 W., reported someone broke a v with a large rock; JULY i i Pioneer registers for 78 Pioneer Elementary Two juvenile boys were found swimming in the canal, 775 E. 200 S. Officers explained the dangers involved and pointed out the trespassing signs. The boys denied seeing the signs. They were taken to die police department and released to their parents. A misdeamonor citation on a shoplifting charge was issued against Ya Yoi Leard, 35, 1287 N. 1000 W., Clinton, following an incident at Adrians. Greciela Fernandez, 429 E. Center, reported losing a wallet and identification, valued at $5. A broken w'indow was observed by patrolling officers at North Davis Junior High however a check of the building found it to be secure. $50 damage was done to a screen on a window at the Plaster Works. The premises seemed intact. Stan Williams, 1790 S. 200 E., reported two speakers, some tools and five tapes missing from his vehicle. Items taken valued at $125.95. A pair of glass were found at the park and placed into the lost and found. JULY 30. 1978 A prowler report was responded to, however officers couldnt find any evidence of a break-in- . Three boys from the Clearfield Job Corps are being investigated in a case of possession of marijuana. cont. from page is planning a registration day on August 9 from 9 a.m.. to 3 p.m. for children who have just moved into the area or children kindergarten 29, 1978 1, 1979 McKay said the Citizens Audit will be followed by three con- 1081 S. President Carter has signed into law a proposed grazing fee hike, Utah Gunn McKay today reported. Congressman According to McKay, the President signed the bill without fanfare last Firday (July 21), ope day before the bills expiration date. Had the President let the bill expire, McKay said, the fee schedule would have gone into effect raising the cost of grazing livestock on public lands by up to 100 per cent in the next three or four years. Rep. McKay, a sponsor of the moratorium, said the bill will hold off the fee increase until the President signs my bill changing for at least seven years the way grazing fees are assissed. The Public Lands Improvement Act, which passed the House June 29th, would lock the cost of grazing fees to the cost of raising the livestock. The bill is now awaiting Senate action. According to McKay, the Interior and Agriculture Departments proposed charging ranchers "fair market value for the use of the grazing land what they would pay to graze comparable private lands. The problem is, nobody knows what fair market value is, said McKay. Further, public lands are definitely inferior to private lands. "The BLM ignored recommendations by its technical staff to consider the extra costs of raising livestock on land in its jurisdiction, which is definitely inferior to private land. First of all, the cow has to walk farther on BLM land to eat and he just burns off what hes gained. Second, the grazing fee schedule they proposed didnt take into account the permit the rancher has to buy to go onto the land. In a bad market year with depressed prices, the small ranchers would be wiped out paying the high prices. But with a fee schedule pegged to the cost of raising the animals, fees in a bad market year will drop. Conversely, the fees in a good market year will rise. But then they can afford them. WASHINGTON moratorium on a toll-fre- officers to dispose of. Terry Manning, Moratorim signed on grazing fees The FOR survey instrument was developed by the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress and will be distributed in nearly a hundred congressional districts during the summer months. At the completion of the survey in early fall, there will be a week-lon- g e WATS lines opened telethon featuring 50 nationwide for direct input. During this period (targeted for 1978) persons who have not mailed in a September to cite their experience by phone. will be able survey Answering the phones in Washington will be Members of Congress, and other public officials. Results of the Citzens Audit will be tabulated by computer and distributed to the President, the Congress, regulatory officials and the media. This is scheduled to be completed by South) from 8 a.m. to 5 p in.. Students living between 700 South to 1700 South and west of State Street who attended Pioneer School last year will attend South Clearfield this year. Students also living in the Pepper Ridge apartment complex and Sundowner Condominiums attend South Clearfield. If further information is needed call the school at Parents are reminded that all kindergarten 2 other carefully planned phases. The purpose of these phases is to: develop a specific code of principles to improve the federal regulatory process; test these principles for improvement; and seek public support necessary to bring about needed changes. McKay explained that on the grassroots level, the cost of regulation show's up most significantly in the prices of homes and automobiles. In 1978 alone, the price of the average passenger car rose $666 dollars because of federal safety and environmental regulations. On a typical new home the toll of regulation hit $2500. There have been several previous efforts to do something about this problem, and every one I know of has come up Theres been a lot of short, commented Rep. McKay. theorizing and speculating in Washington, but too little input from the people actually affected by the regulatory explosion. Thats why were going to do a survey. registers students School "Utahns, better than most, understand the notion that government regulation is a potent and expensive medicine, said McKay., K we take it in limited doses with full regard for all the bad side effects its a good thing. But inflation, unemployment,- loss of productivity and capital formation are among the bad reactions if we get too strong a dose. To illustrate the potency of the present federal regulation dosage, FOR sponsors displayed the .Code of Federal Regulations for 1938 when it was introduced with 19,789 pages. In 1958 it rose to only 20,643 pages. But in 1976 it reached 73,149 pages a stack 16 feet tall. He placed the cost of private sector compliance with these federal regulations in 1976 at $66 billion almost 4 percent of the gross national product of $307 for every person living in the U.S. He added that projections for 1978 place that figure at $97 billion a $ 30 billion icreasse in just two years. The major impact of all this regulation is paperwork, claimed McKay. We figure that over 90 percent of the cost of regulation comes in shuffling papers and filling out form-s- . Aug. 2, 1978, Page beginning school this year. The school is located at 435 South Main Street, Clearfield, and Jeanne Swenson, vice president of the PTA, reminded parents who filled out registration cards for their children last spring do not have to register their children again. Parents registering their children for kindergarten need to bring $15 to pay for snacks for the entire year; a physical examination form filled out by a doctor; immunization dates of all shots the child has received and a birth certificate. For those parents who need the physical examination form, she said one should contact the school, Parents of new children in the area need to bring their childs immunization record along with a birth i WE LEASE ALL SHAKES MODELS, TOO! 1 Reunion Debra Hartman, James E. Hartwell, Francisco It. Hernandez, Darrel R. Howell, Marie Howell, Joel K. Hutchins, Donald It. Jackson, Danny C. Jones, Cheryl A. Kloeppel, James Brent Krueger, Margaret Ann Kuykendall, William S. Lamb, Melody A. Lane, Ray Larsen, Blaine D. McArthur, Roger Mendenhall, Debbie G. Merritt, Rex Mills, Rick Muir, Patricia L. Nelson, Paul E. Nichols, Mary L. Norris, John C. Peterson, Kelly D. Peterson, Cory R. Phelan and Michael L. Phillips. Jeri L. Pinner, Lorraine J. 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