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Golf Free in Prescott, AZ

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

**2010 Golf Season is Here! Golf Free in Prescott…Because Prescott Rocks! April 1, 2010 to October 31, 2010. Package includes a minimum of 2 nights stay at participating hotels, two rounds of golf with cart. Package rate Midweek $240, Weekend $280. Call Antelope Hills Golf Course to schedule Tee Times @ 928-777-1888

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Downtown Prescott’s Easter Egg Hunt

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Easter in Prescott Arizona

PRESCOTT - Depending on the weather this weekend, as many as 5,000 kids could converge on the Yavapai County Courthouse Plaza for the community’s annual Easter egg hunt and Egg-Stravaganza.

Prescott Special Events Coordinator Becky Garvin reports that the city will conduct its 11th annual Egg-Stravaganza from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Saturday, April 3, at the Courthouse Plaza.

While last year’s snow, rain and sleet kept the numbers down to about 1,000, Garvin said previous Easter egg hunts have attracted upwards of 4,000 participants.

“This year, I’m preparing for the larger crowd,” Garvin said. “I think it’s going to be great weather.”

New this year will be special prizes and gift certificates that some of the eggs will come with. When children turn in their collected eggs in exchange for candy, Garvin said, some of the eggs will have markings that indicate a winner.

“We try to make it larger every year,” Garvin said of the event, which includes multiple egg-hunt opportunities, along with crafts, inflatables, and carnival games, face painting, and a balloon artist.

To add to the fun, about 30 downtown businesses will participate by handing out prizes to participating children.

While the egg hunt is free to the public, those who want to participate in the other events will pay a $5 fee, which will cover items such as a backpack, toys, stuffed animals and other prizes from the participating businesses. The participating children will get an Easter backpack, which they will be able to fill with the prizes.

In addition, the $5 cost includes activities such as inflatables, train rides, and carnival games.

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University’s Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will once again help conduct the free Easter egg hunt on the plaza, in coordination with the city’s Egg-Stravaganza.

Garvin said about 30 fraternity members regularly help distribute plastic eggs on the plaza.

Those who want to participate in just the egg hunt should bring their own baskets, Garvin said. They also can pay a per-ride rate of $1 per ride.

The event includes:

• Two rounds of egg hunts - at 11:30 and 1:30. Age groups include up-to-5; 6-to-8; 9-to-12; and 13 and older.

• Easter backpack to decorate.

• Games such as an egg toss, hula-hooping, and sack races.

Along with the scheduled events, Garvin said a photographer will be on hand at the plaza bandstand to take photos with the Easter bunny, offering packages for $5 and $10. In addition, a roaming rabbit will be circulating on the plaza.

The event will cost the city about $5,000, some of which the $5 fees help to offset.

“We want to give our community a family-fun event that’s affordable,” Garvin said. “It helps our local businesses, and lets people know what’s in the community.”

Lakes Golf Course to Close in Prescott

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

The continued existence of the Prescott Lakes community golf course may soon come to a vote.

Representatives of golf club members and the course developer are working on another proposal for members to vote on, with the course’s future hanging in the balance.

It comes down to residents either voting for an offer to keep the course active or voting it down and possibly watching it turn into open space.

Bill Brownlee, managing member of M3 Companies, announced the temporary closure of the golf club effective next week.

Brownlee said the closure begins March 1 and he anticipates it will last for 60 days or until property owners vote on the proposal for the Prescott Lakes Community Association and Arnold Palmer Golf Management to control and operate both clubs jointly on or before the end of April.

“If the vote fails, it will be closed permanently,” he said. “The golf course does not make economic sense to continue to operate.”

Brownlee said residents got a letter Wednesday explaining the outcome of a meeting this past week with the community’s golf advisory committee.

Jeff Davis, who announced in late January that he is parting ways with M3 while still keeping an equal interest in the golf club, declined to comment.

Prescott Lakes Community Association board member Dave Hackathorn said Arnold Palmer Golf Management and the community association eventually will borrow about $2.6 million to go toward additional amenities and contract with the golf management company to manage it if voters support it.

“We’ve already talked to banks and stuff and we know that we are likely to be able to get the money that we need,” he said. “I think what we’re trying to work through is just that we have all the details and then be able to come back and present that to the homeowners.”

According to Hackathorn, it will take weeks to put all the pieces together, present it to residents and get ballots out and count them.

In the meantime, developers are asking golf members to continue to make their monthly payments and that money would go to maintaining the course, according to Hackathorn, who said golf members will end up paying greater monthly fees, which would vary on the type of membership package they have.

Hackathorn said it also gets M3 out of the community.

“To me, that’s the biggest value of the whole thing: If we can do this, then (M3 is) out of it both from the homeowners’ association perspective and from the golf club,” he said. “If we don’t pass it, then they’re going to continue to own the athletic club and they will continue to control the homeowners association.”

Although the athletic club will continue to operate normally, Brownlee said the golf industry is really taking it on the chin right now.

“(The) Prescott Lakes golf club is really not unique with its situation; it’s not a stand-alone problem - it’s a problem that a lot of people in the industry have,” he said. “We view it as a great opportunity for the athletic and golf clubs and the community at large.”

The letter states that if people vote against the proposal, the club will cease operations and explore “repurposing” parts of the property, including residential and commercial development options.

“We are looking at various options right now, but the focus needs to be on Arnold Palmer and Prescott Lakes Community Association plan,” Brownlee said. “We just don’t want to do anything that would take away from their ability to be successful with that plan because that’s what we see as being best for the community is for them to be successful.”

Hackathorn made a similar comment.

“What we’re looking for really is to find something that everybody can get behind and agree is the best solution.”

Source: The Daily Courier

C-Span Bus Stops at Prescott High School

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Source: The Daily Courier

According to Prescott High School government teacher Mark Gologoski, it is the responsibility of citizens to “pay attention to what the government is doing.”

For most people, paying attention means watching network news. However, C-SPAN offers an alternative.

On Feb. 19, the C-SPAN bus stopped at Prescott High School on its national tour to talk about civic education. The bus is fully equipped as a news station. At one time, C-SPAN newscasters used it for interviewing and reporting. Today, the company uses it mostly for educational programs.

Senior Aubree Schuenman, a member of Gologoski’s Accelerated Program civics class, has watched C-SPAN but did not know all the channel’s facets.

“I didn’t realize it was non-biased and nonprofit,” she said.

During a presentation to the students, marketing representative Jennifer Curran explained that C-SPAN chairman and CEO Brian Lamb created the cable channel for televising sessions of the U.S. Congress and other public affairs events and policy discussions.

Lamb presented his idea for the new cable network to corporations, but only cable industry pioneer Bob Rosencrans provided $25,000 in seed money to get it going.

According the Curran, C-SPAN has remained true to Lamb’s initial vision. It receives no money from any government source, has no contract with the government and does not sell sponsorships or advertising. It strives for neutrality and a lack of bias in its public affairs programming.

C-SPAN (Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network) went on the air March 19, 1979, broadcasting a speech by then-congressman Al Gore. Today, C-SPAN2 covers all live sessions of the U.S. Senate.

PHS senior and AP civics student Jordan Vickstein was impressed with C-SPAN’s video library.

“I appreciate how they archive all their footage. That is not cheap,” Vickstein said. “They have this information for people to use.”

Curran said part of the reason of the national tour is “outreach to students, to tell them about our online resources, such as the video library.”

The C-SPAN video library is not copyrighted and is free for educational purposes.

“It is cool that they came to Prescott and that they are trying to get high school students involved in government. Students should be involved in what is going on,” Schuenman said.

C-SPAN marketing representative Steve Devoney said students really seem to be excited about the video library.

“There is a point when talking to students that you can almost see a light bulb go off in the mind. They understand that C-SPAN is a straightforward, primary source for news, with no commentary.” Devoney said. “We have taken the flashy stuff out and removed distractions.”

C-SPAN does not point fingers at other networks, but “we ask people to look at what is being covered and why,” he said.

Unfortunately for students such as Vickstein, C-SPAN broadcasts only on a “federal level. There is nothing statewide. Watching C-SPAN now might not make a difference, but when we get older it will. We will have created a habit.”

Students are excited when the C-SPAN bus pulls in.

“They are impressed. We hope it is because of our resources, but in reality, it’s the bus,” Curran said.

Prescott Arizona Real Estate

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

The following info for Prescott Arizona was obtained from Trulia.com.

Prescott Zip Codes: 86301, 86302, 86303, 86304, 86305, 86306, 86313, 86330

Average Listing Price: $431,704

Median Sales Price: $243,750

Avg. Price sq/ft: $134

Prescott Valley: Weather triggers sewer plant spills

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

PRESCOTT VALLEY - This past week’s storm triggered the spill of 1.25 million gallons of untreated sewage from the town’s sewer plant Thursday and Friday into the nearby Agua Fria River, Utilities Director Neil Wadsworth said.

A power spike tripped the outside generators at the sewer plant and shut the plant down, Wadsworth said.

The power failure lasted from 7 p.m. Thursday until 7 a.m. Friday, and recurred from 2 to 7 p.m. Friday.

Full Story - The Daily Courier

Service upgrades PV’s bond rating

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

PRESCOTT VALLEY - “Sizable” General Fund reserves and “manageable debt profile” helped to upgrade the town’s bond rating from “negative” to “stable,” a national rating service reported Monday.

The A+ rating also reflects “financial pressures generated by declining sales tax and other economically sensitive revenues,” Fitch Ratings stated in a press release. Institutional investors read Fitch reports, spokeswoman Cindy Stoller in New York City said.

“Any bondholder can read these and get our take on what the town’s financial profile currently is,” said Steve Murray, an analyst with Fitch Ratings in Austin, Texas. “A lower rating does reflect additional risk to bondholders. If the risk is perceived to be higher, bondholders usually demand a higher return for that.”

Full Story on The Daily Courier

New security system would sound alarm over library theft

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

New security system would sound alarm over library theft

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

PRESCOTT - In just the past year and a half, about 1,500 movie DVDs have disappeared from the shelves of the Prescott Public Library.
Library Director Toni Kaus finds that a “shocking” level of loss for the library, which had a collection of about 8,000 DVD titles. Estimating the value of each DVD at $25, Kaus noted that the recent thefts have cost the library about $37,000.

Full Story The Daily Courier

Judge rules in Prescott’s favor on Big Chino water

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

PRESCOTT - A Big Chino water-related decision that the city’s water attorney calls a “100-percent ruling for Prescott” came down late this afternoon from the Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings.

In a 64-page decision, Administrative Law Judge Thomas Shedden ruled Thursday that the City of Prescott was entitled not only to the 8,067 acre-feet of Big Chino water that the Arizona Department of Water Resource had earlier designated, but also to 500 additional acre-feet of water as well.

“It’s all good,” city water attorney Rita Maguire said of the judge’s decision that states that Prescott is entitled to pump nearly 8,600 acre-feet from its Paulden-area water ranch. “Prescott has been successful and prevailed.”

Full Story on The Daily Courier

Fire destroys Dewey-Humboldt RV garage

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Wind gusts of 25-30 miles an hour Tuesday morning worried Central Yavapai firefighters as they battled a blaze in Dewey-Humboldt.

The call came in about 9:20 a.m. of a structure fire off Blue Ridge Road in the Foothills area of Dewey, said CYFD Assistant Chief Charlie Cook. A large RV garage belonging to Mark and Adriana Elsholz burnt to the ground. Cook estimated damage for the building and the contents of about $100,000.

Preliminary investigation is leaning toward an electrical problem in the garage, he said.

Full Story