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Show Lakeside Review, Wednesday, May 1, 1985 2A Grants A vailable For New Ideas Coming Events Recital to Feature Work .Of 4 Local Composers ; The works of LAYTON four Jocal composers will be featured at a special recital sponsored by the Layton Arts Council, at the Layton Heritage Museum on May 5 at 7:30 p.m. There is no admission charge. Featured on the program will be original compositions by Dr. Jeffrey Fokens, Kathy Skidmore, Dennis Wright, and ' Joan Scott. Dr. Fokens, originally from New Jersey, will present works for solo piano, flute, and voice. Ms. Skidmore is the current president of the Layton Arts council. She is originally from Salt Lake City where she graduated from the University of Utah in music education. Wright , has had various Innovative FARMINGTON Davis County companies with new ideas now have an opportunity to develop those ideas into something profitable. The Private Industry Council of Davis County and the Davis Countv Commissioners are mak- - forms of musical training since he was a child. He graduated cum laude with a bachelors degree in composite vocal and instrumental music education I from the University of Utah, has taught in the Ogden School District, has been a member of the LDS Tabernacle Choir, and has played lead roles in several local musical productions. Ms. Scott will present works for voice and piano. She currently lives in Centerville. Performers for the evening include all of the composers, the vocal group Soliloquy, soprano Diana Halliday, the Rasmussen Sisters, flutist Catherine Palmer, and a choral ensemble from the Layton 20th Ward. run a county without a tax base, which in the long run, is more - with different and potentially profitable ideas. We put $200,000 seed money into a pool, and sent applications to small businesses. If theyve done their homework and can make a case showing us theyve developed an idea with a proto- - . - aid NeUnn lmPrta Applications were recently sent to small businesses with 500 em- ployees or less. To ' receive grants, businesses must be in Davis County or be willing to set up an in the county. They must.be an innovative firm with new ideas. A business helped by a similar program in Utah is Native Plants Inc., said Les Derbyshire, one of the developers of the Davis County program. The business was started by a young man, a horticulturist who had ideas of seeds, about Derbyshire said. He found ways Grants will be given rather and 355u,uuu irom . the Utah Technology Finance Corporation of which $200,000 comes frpm Davis County. The funds 'will to go to businesses than loans; payback on the grants will be in taxes generated for the county by the businesses. In the year 2000 there will be 300,000 people in the county. You g cross-breedin- cant The South Clearfield PTA will sponsor a health and safety fair Thursday, May 2, from 5 to 8 p.m. at South Clearfield Elementary School, 990 S., Clearfield. is invited. E. 700 The community The fair will consist of workshops, a food fair, free glaucoma and blood pressure screenings, post contest.-Smokethe Bear and Officer McGruff will be on hand to greet children and an ambulance and fire engine will be available for hands-o- n row be ore. w04lnt 'y manage-operatio- compa-Legislatu- ' experi- ' t-- & o Community Church will hold a rummage sale on Thursday, May 2, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 'i $11; n ence. Dinner will be available in the food court with all proceeds going for the purchase of a new computer for the school. The workshops will cover topics such as preventive dentistry, poisoning prevention in the home, personal physical fitness, smoking hazards, fire safety, drug and alcohol abuse, safe and healthy vision, Im In Charge, safety belt .use, emergency and trauma first aid. fir 11 i ' r- .nm'tik' - s Z uifcvw Jr aT s X saJ-- i r y v - j?ft r 4$ r ,,s & and on Friday, May 3, from 9 a.m. to noon. In addition to items for sale, punch, coffee and cookies will be for sale throughout both days. The public is invited. i , trr , : S Y' f - - Yv Layton Seniors Dance Saturday LAYTON The Layton Senior Citizens will hold a dance at the Senior Citizen Center, 410 Wasatch Dr., Saturday, May 4, from 8 until 10:30 p.m. is S' ' Church Group Sets Rummage Sale CLEARFIELD The Martha Circle of the Clearfield re r rl 1 Xv.'O. 5.'' - y . The young man showed his jdea, so where there was one man now have 35 Ph.Ds. Its a world-wid- e program. The man now says he wouldnt have got anyWhere if he hadnt had the n business investment merit, Derbyshire said. innovia, a Layton computer graphics company has made an application for a grant. They have an idea; a piece of hardware that changes colors. Theyve got other ideas. Its quite a ny, Nelson said. Such companies could receive up to $100,001). In reality its going to be $35,000 to $40,000. That way you spread it around, Nelson said. ' Health, Safety Fair Set Thursday CLEARFIELD of making grass grow where it Music will be provided by the Washington Terrace Citizens Band. Singles and couples 40 years old and older are welcome. A donation of $2 is ft DUST ROLLS as workers continue construction of a Union Pacific System automobile transfer lot in south Clearfield. Handling the development of the project is Upland Industries, a subsidiary of Union Pacific. Cities Reviewing Layton Bidding Ordinance Adopts Animal Ordinance Davis County cities are being asked to review proposed county animal control ordinances and agreements with the county. The new county ordinances, reviewed by the Davis County Attorneys Office, should be adopted around May 6, said the county animal shelter director. We are asking for city input into the animal program, said Glenn Taylor, director. Gray areas in the existing ordinances will hopefully be cleared up with the proposed agreements, he explained. $500. Approval for the purchases or contracts will come from the department needing the items or the contract, if the amount doesnt Correspondent A new ordinance LAYTON has been adopted by the Layton City Council specifying which items and services for the city are to be bid and who can approve the purchase of city supplies and The agreements give authority to the county animal shelter to enforce animal ordinances, he said. This includes writing citations, impounding animals, picking up an animal from a home, or rounding up a vicious animal. The new agreements will also contain a clause to hold the county harmless on any legal complaint coming out of a city, he said. LYNDIA GRAHAM Review services. Under the new ordinance, no purchases may be made unless there are sufficient funds already budgeted to make the purchase and the purchase is approved by the appropriate city official. Cam Caldwell, Layton city manager, will present a monthly review to the City Council outlining all purchases made and contracts awarded in amounts over . The state gives the county the authority to handle large animals, but not smaller animals. exceed $2,500 annually. Amounts over $2,500 but under $10,000 will need approval from to reject any and all bids. The Council will also have the option to accept a bid of a venn dor whose business is within Lay-to- over boundaries lower-biddin- g non-Layto- a ven- n the city manager, and amounts over $10,000 will need City Council approval. All contracts of purchases costing the city more than $500 must be awarded only after competitive bidding has been conducted by the city. Under most circumstances, the lowest bid meeting all city specifications will be accepted,. but the City Council does have the right dor, if the local vendors bid is within 10 percent of the low bid y of the vendor for amounts under $50,000; within 7.5 percent on bids between $50,000 and $100,000; and five percent on bids over $100,000. The city can reject bids without cause and price quotations. In an emergency situation the city manager will be authorized to make purchases he feels are immediately necessary and pres Bountiful. Before the guidelines went into effect, about eight students from the area attended the school for the handicapped. The number has been whittled down to. three due to lack of transportation, according to Mrs. Robbins. Another van is being used to transport the students to school, but the cost is extremely high, she He said the stipulation was made the students could ride the vans if the escort was provided. Only one escort for all the students would be needed," he said. He defined the escort as just someone to ride with them. One problem that emerged in the first grievance hearing was the students may unfasten their seatbelts and cause a disturbance, said. he said. non-cit- ent written documentation and justification for those purchases to the City Council as soon as possible after the purchases have been made. Purchases could be made without the bidding process only if the purchase source is found to be the only provider of a service or product or has a special knowledge which would be beneficial to the city. If state or federal funds are being used by the city and the state or federal laws or regulations differ enough from the new city ordinance to jeopardize the use of those funds, the state or federal provisions would take precedence over the city ordinance. Separate Incidents Resident To File Another Grievance Leave Two Dead APRIL ADAMS Review Staff ' In unrelated incidents, two people were pronounced dead upon arrival at local hospitals in the last week. A old Layton man was 68-ye- ar pronounced dead at Humana Hospital Davis North after he was hit by a car Monday night when crossing Main Street in Layton, said Detective Sgt. Ross LeFevre, of the Layton Police Department. Edward W. Snow, 1505 N. 1200 West, was hit by an automobile after he left the Veterans of Foreign Wars building and was crossing to the east side of the street. Patricia Christensen, 1436 N. Main, 5, was the driver of the automobile, a 1975 Toyota, which struck Snow at 9:24 p.m. The accident is being investigated, LeFevre said. The woman was cited for not having a drivers license, but the citation 5- 0, handicapped. Florence Robbins son had ridden the vehicles to school until new guidelines were written on usage of the three vans last winter. Along with two other families whose children were affected by the new requirements, she filed a grievance shortly after with the countys Department of Human Services, who oversees the van operation. A grievance board set up to deal with problems regarding the vans heard the matter in February. A decision was made the three students could ride the vans as long as an escort was provided. The students attend a school in The escort is unnecessary, since the students are strapped into their seats, Mrs. Robbins claimed. One is in a wheelchair. How do they expect him to move about and cause problems? If these young people are as bad as they are made out to be, why is it we have no difficulty with the van service we are using now? But Richard Nelson, director of the countys Human Services Department, said the ball has been passed back in their park. Lakeside ISevSew A robber who fled with ROY an undisclosed amount of cash South, and demanded money from the night manager. Though a gun wasnt visible, the robber told store employes he had one in his pocket. He is described as being around 25 years old, foot-1about 150 to 160 pounds, with dark blond hair and a of a transportation van for the What would happen if there further solution to the problem could be to make a county vehicle accessible to Project Turn, an agency working with handicapped individuals. The vehicle would be a car rather than a A van, he said. The grievance will be filed sometime this week, Mrs. Robbins said. Do you have a NEWS TIP? CALL YOUR Lakeside Review AREA CORRESPONDENT Store Robbed from a grocery store has not been apprehended yet. police say. About 11:55 p.m. Saturday night, a man walked into Albertson's Food Center, 1963 W. 5600 A Layton resident said she will file another grievance with the county over requirements for use was unrelated to the accident, he said. He felt that no charges would be filed against Ms. Christensen. woman was A found unconscious in her car in a convenience store parking lot at Hill Air Force Base Friday at 2:45 p.m. Carrie Cox, 21, was pronounced dead at the base hospital at 3 p.m. . Witnesses saw her car rolling in the parking lot. When the car stopped, she was found unconscious between the bucket seats, said Len Barry, base spokesman. The death is being investigated by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations on base. A spokesperson for the Utah State Medical Examiners Office said determination of cause of death is still pending. was an accident? We want to protect the county and other passengers, he continued. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AND DISTRIBUTED FREE BY CARRIER EVERY WEDNESDAY FARMINGTON MORNING, FROM ROY KAYSVILLE, FRUIT HEIGHTS RUTHMALAN THROUGH NORTH SALT LAKE. A SUBSIDIARY OF THE STANDARD CORPORATION. MARILYN L. KARRAS Editor HATCH Sports Editor GARY APRIL ADAMS Assistant Editor 145 N. Main, Bountiful 298-110- 3 - 298-112- NEWS DEADLINES 3 news and photos, should be submitted no later than Friday at noon for- publication the following Wednesday. All - G. LAMAR 2146 Layton 776-495- 1 451-583- 1 ; - ROY ANITA KERSEY 298-891- 6 ADVERTISING DEADLINES Display advertisements Thursday at 4:30; classified liner ads, Monday at 3:30 544-442- 3 ' SOUTH WEBER JUDYBLACKNER BOTT Advertising Director N. 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