Show LocalMdbr© Business Standard-Examine- r Ogden Thursday May 1986 1 tiroims iraimikDod bw ©dyisafooTi eyS her daughter and helps other students at the Kaxsxille school “If they're not gixen proper education and counseling they need they will end up in court and prison" Jeppsen said Although special education comments dominated the meeting other concerns ere expressed By BARRY KAVA Da Breaj LAYTON — A mother lifted her son to the microphone and cited his discernible and improving speech as a testament to the Dais County School District's special education program A deaf girl asked the school board to gne others like her a chance in life And a mother asked why elementary teachers drie epensie sports cars and was confronted angnix by a teacher It was that kind of an evening Wednesday in the Layton High School auditorium The Da is Bo trd of Education held its second public meeting on the budget before an audience of about 300 residents teachers and staff The school district sought public iews on possible program and transportation cuts including the layoff of 37 staff specialists m special education Comments ran the gamut from the highly publicized special education staff Davis Schools cuts to support of a oted tax leeway increase for increased revenue “Em appalled that you're going to take the valuable teaching and specialists from these kids who have to work 100 times harder than the other students" said Joanne Rub of Lax ton “It makes me sick" Another mother Linda Stuart of Kays-die held son Dax id to the microphone and said he was a student at the Monte Vista school in Farmington “When he first went in fixe years ago he xxas not able to communicate with his parents" she said “Two years ago he was finally able to sax ‘I loxe you' " Helen Jeppsen said that without social work counseling at Mountain High School her daughter would not be ahxe today She said counseling has benefitted Rose Bullock said her children might haxe to walk along the busy frontage road to North Dax is Junior High School if the school eliminates bus routes that are hazardous “I feel that the only way xou can find how hazardous that route is by walking r traffic" down there during she told the board Marx Craxthome of Syracuse agreed with Bullock and said her kids would haxe to walk in a 55 mph zone to get to school See CUTS on 2B Wes and Kay White listen to Wednesday s discussion of education cuts Their daughter is a special ed student at Monte Vista School Window rapidly slamming shut By DON BAKER S’SKUratowei sal Local meteorologists have labeled it “the window" It’s another way of describing the period each year — usually between the first of April and the end of May — when warming weather brings the annual spring runoff roaring downstream Depending on the temperatures the window is usually open anywhere from fixe to nine weeks In an axerage water year fixe weeks is about the minimum lime needed for an orderly runoff But Bill Alder chief of the National Weather Scrxice bureau in Salt Lake City warns the window is rapidly slamming shut on Wasatch Front communities “It's not critical yet but we're getting there" Alder said “Counting this week the window has shrunk to fixe weeks “We need that period of time to get the majority of the snow off the mountains" he added “and each week we don't get some snow off it will become exen more critical" Record precipitation and unusually cool weather i April haxe preserxed large mountain snowpacks with a water content in excess of 150 percent of normal all through the Ogden and Weber fixer drainages “We haxe more water in the snow this week than we had the first part of April" Alder said “So while the window has Llama walk Jamie Sharp and her husband Doug (far right) wa’k two cf their e ght pet llamas and an a’paca (a dcmeshcated South American mamma! related to he llama) cn 3Sth Street a died by Doug's tmeie Eden Beutler fhe Sharps were en route heme to Petaluma Caff from Nebraska when they stopped Wedresday in Ogden Eeut er s re ghbor arranged for the Sharps to show tve anma's at reay Pa-- Concerns raised over pumping’s effect on range FORCE BASE — restrictions cn H'l Air Force Base's fi ght and munitions operations arc heightening concerns abret the proposed Great Sa't Lake west desert pmprg prefect The state wants to install g cn the west side cf the rv reg lake to dixcrt water into a desert region including 150 Sffi acres cf Air Force test range HILL Fears of Vev te Man sentenced in sale of drug to 12-year-- CA'C -- ACXE77 Lcense si’' Ma'an sa d he is fa r! Cretan the brecs are Berta- - tie’s bcca-s- e a dnxre's Litreve 1 f red fret to tre d sc ox ere d res de a brex Kan the si h re 're s ra- -r Mala- “It da fuj d sa d p am : k - t la Ma'am - m e r ' J t tre- ’ret - Ore' But hints that the project could seriously affect flight operations out of U — primarily the pr gram — are causing row waxes of concern among some state lawmakers who must decide this month whether to approve the 555 million proposed pumping project “I'm gorg to he xiry interested in what 1111 has to say abj-- t Karras “I'd he xerv cautious See RANGE on 2B this" said Rep s are was rel drex si t r h - : w d red c x v's: re :: : re re'T s - -“ d?n Tn io tI r s'' l tre- r'i tre ct a a d t d d t a pk-i- cammdgrs xcu-i- v e cf the weather" Malan sad If that is the case it woJJ be consistent with reports which appeared in the after Benagnole's dsappear-are- e get Cut s “I called Mary wfe who renamed in 190 j n Bren fJ and she confirmed that they had ixcd at that address after they were f ret reamed" Beragnale-htrsad Wednesday she is tv - ed ty the d vox cry “I can hardly work" she sad jret '0 fire fed that he may have fral'y been red alter all tvese years" The bares which are be! exed to be a leg b:res were dx-pVc dbree a d of hrete's 5 re day in a by par -a e at tre have cf a cl :T m a crex les s- - th r f e a a vc ( ra n w tre b ncs In aac: L V AIR Skeletal remains likely identified fhe skeleton fered Sreday rear hiul Crack prefabs s that cf Rdj Brenag'e'e a fr—cr Ogdn res dret who c 3 a hretrg t'p October It sa s Wcbre Caret Vrefifis LX: toe hr ( SE£FELT MA Ey School Afterward South Ogden pc' ce became escorts famas were led as to he Eewt’er hc"e at 3727 Ogden Ace re- - in the the water shrunk snow pack has increased — and that compounds the situation" The delayed runoff is poised and waiting to cascade downstream as soon as temperatures warm up in the mountains “In the latter part of May the potential for getting warm faster is greater" the meteorologist said “In the first part of Max temperatures axerage in the upper 60s By the 10th its 70 and of month it's in the upper 70s" Alder said temperatures usually hit the low 80s in early June bringing any remaining water downstream in a torrent “It's the ‘out of the refrigerator into the frying pan scenario" It's also the scenario that took place during the Memorial Day weekend of 1983 when temperatures suddenly zoomed upxxard and brought down a delayed snowmelt that turned city streets into canals and caused millions of dollars in damages Eespite hopes the spring runoff would begin in earnest this xxeek Alder said another storm is expected to amxe this weekend — adding exen more water to the snowpacks and bringing cooler temperatures that will hold up the runoff exen more “The weather charts for the weekend look pretty ominous again" he said “We'll probably get a good zonk — up to a half inch to an inch of water" i ' - e t up ream - t e h e re' ar - - tres re - c r re c t d ret The reports ir J care Berta gr ole had been kr in Guldersleexe Canyon rear twe between the Ogden and Weber Riser when a severe snowstorm drainages 3 feet cf snow cn the area were stranded by the Dnzers cf sternn and revue efforts were ha—pered Tho-g- h Bereagn'e-Stirsad her husha-- J W ended was an e per: creed Petrerv n a L'S V! a'd Cenrerxatcn ee red m M rea- - sa d h s a v d it wo tre ret a ' xasx r rg b rda'y Stween 'f v re a t e t s gre ret re |