Coconino County Community Services may assist you in paying utility bills

cococouncommservWILLIAMS – Coconino County Community Services—in conjunction with APS, Unisoure Energy Services and the Community Action Partnership—is offering to assist those in need to pay for gas, electric or propane bills. If you qualify, they can help pay your utility bills on a first come, first served basis.

Coconino County Community Services will be holding an application session on Saturday, June 14 from 9 am to 4 pm. The event will be held at the Williams Senior Center at 850 W. Grant Street in Williams (behind Safeway).

In order to qualify, you must bring documentation to prove your eligibility. The person submitting the intake form must also be the person listed on the intake application. You must provide ALL of the following documentation listed below or your application cannot be processed.

  1. Original Birth Certificates, CIB, current Passport or Certificate of Naturalization, Social Security (SSA, SSI or SSDI) award letters, or proof of current legal resident status for all house members
  2. Original Social Security Cards or current Tax Return (which includes social security numbers) for all household members.
  3. Current Driver’s License or Photo ID for all household members over age 18
  4. Current Food Stamp or SNAP award letter (if applicable)
  5. Current Lease
  6. Gross income for ALL household members from May 16, 2014 through June 14, 2014 (Includes: All paystubs, Social Security SA/SSI/and Disability Award Letters,
    Unemployment, Pensions, etc.). Bank statements are not acceptable.
  7. Provide both current and/or delinquent Electric and Gas bills (not a door hanger); Or, Propane hill or Propane Estimate for tanks that are 100 gallons or more.

If you have questions please call Coconino County Community Services at (928) 679-7425

Bearizona extends hours

bear-140605-hoursWILLIAMS – If you are not on a Hog for the rally, you can take in the Bearizona Drive Through Wildlife Park just to the east of Williams up to an hour later. Bearizona recently extended their hours from 5 to 6 pm for the summer. The gates open at 8 am, though, and unless you are in a rush you should go in early. If you are rushed, you will probably miss much of the park like the walk-through area and petting zoo.

If you are new, here are some tips. The animals are moving earlier in the day when it is cool. They may be moving about later in the afternoon when it cools off. You can go through the drive through portion more than once. So go through once and have your cameras ready. Concentrate on watching the actions of the animals. Go through a second time prepared to get your pictures. Don’t forget to watch for the Kaibab squirrels enjoying lunch with the bears.

You can also enjoy the park by riding the open-air buses which allow you to take pictures without reflection from your windows. So you can drive through once and then take pictures from the bus.

Going earlier will allow you to take in the raptor show and get a closer look at the animals in the walk-through area.

If you are looking for an alternative to the traffic congestion downtown, Bearizona could be your ticket.

Gettysburg skull auction canceled, burial planned

gettysburgGETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — The planned auction of a skull found at Gettysburg that purportedly was that of a Civil War soldier has been canceled following protests, and officials say the remains have instead been donated by the auction company for burial with honors.

Estate Auction Co. of Hershey had listed the skull for sale at auction Tuesday in Hagerstown, Md., drawing protests from the U.S. National Park Service in Gettysburg and others.

The listing was removed from a public auction website and replaced by a statement saying the auction company was donating the skull to the Park Service. “At the auction company’s request, it remains as part of the catalog due to its historical value,” the statement said.

Read more at Daily Local News

EPA’s Next Wave Of Job-Killing CO2 Regulations

June 3, 2014 by David Rothbard and Craig Rucker

Gina McCarthy, an unelected bureaucrat, signs a bill into law.

Gina McCarthy, an unelected bureaucrat, signs a bill into law.

Supported by nothing but assumptions, faulty computer models and outright falsifications of what is actually happening on our planet, President Obama, his Environmental Protection Agency and their allies have issued more economy-crushing rules that they say will prevent dangerous manmade climate change.

Under the latest EPA regulatory onslaught (645 pages of new rules, released June 2), by 2030 states must slash carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired electricity generating plants by 30% below 2005 levels.

The new rules supposedly give states “flexibility” in deciding how to meet the mandates. However, many will have little choice but to impose costly cap-tax-and-trade regimes like the ones Congress has wisely and repeatedly refused to enact. Others will be forced to close perfectly good, highly reliable coal-fueled power plants that currently provide affordable electricity for millions of families, factories, hospitals, schools and businesses. The adverse impacts will be enormous.

The rules will further hobble a U.S. economy that actually shrank by 1% during the first quarter of 2014, following a pathetic 1.9% total annual growth in 2013. They are on top of $1.9 trillion per year (one-eighth of our total economy) that businesses and families already pay to comply with federal rules.

A U.S. Chamber of Commerce study calculates that the new regulations will cost our economy another $51 billion annually, result in 224,000 more lost jobs every year, and cost every American household $3,400 per year in higher prices for energy, food and other necessities. Poor, middle class and minority families – and those already dependent on unemployment and welfare – will be impacted worst. Those in a dozen states that depend on coal to generate 30-95% of their electricity will be hit especially hard.

Read more at CFact

Williams radio history: KYET 1180 am

KYET Studio at 138 W. Route 66 downtown Williams.

KYET Studio at 138 W. Route 66 downtown Williams.

Bob Hardy0001WILLIAMS – With the rise of the new radio station, KZBX 92.1 FM, elders in Williams may harken back to the days of the former AM station KYET. The KYET studio was located at 138 W. Route 66 in downtown Williams. Now the location of the Grand Canyon Winery. Rather ironic since Bob did not like whining at the station.

The icon of the station was talk show host Bob Hardy. Bob Hardy was born into a radio family at Clark Air Base in the Philippines on June 25, 1954. His father, Bob Hardy Sr. was stationed there. Bob Hardy Sr. went on to become a noted radio personality and the young Bob Hardy learned the business from his father at KMOX in St. Louis.

Bob Hardy Jr. went on to WINU in Highland, Ill, WGSB in Chicago and WJNO and WPBR in West Palm Beach, Florida. Bob came to northern Arizona in 1992 where he found a broadcasting home at KVNA radio in Flagstaff. With Bob Hardy, however, political correctness was not one of his endearing traits. By one account, this caused a rift at KVNA. Letting him leave was probably a big mistake on their part.

Bob was hired on at the 10KW KYET station in Williams. His Northland Now show became a popular morning show with news and commentary including callers to the station. His station provided coverage and drew listeners from Flagstaff, to Valle and the Grand Canyon, to Ash Fork and into Utah.

People would particularly tune in on Saturday for News of the Weird in which he would read strange stories. He never revealed the source of the stories. As a KYET insider, I think it safe to reveal now that many of the stories came largely from tabloid journals.

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Pete Christensen and Bob Hardy cover the Rendezvous Day parade in a KYET remote. (Northern Arizona Citizen file photo)

Bob was very patriotic, conservative and Second Amendment friendly. But he was also people friendly and loved to share other views. (It could have been, of course, that he just liked to spark controversy.) He opened his microphone to the Coconino County Libertarians. Bob even brought in the big, liberal guns from Phoenix in the form of comedian Pete Christensen. Christensen, unlike many other “liberal” comedians, prefers to perform family friendly comedy.

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Patrick Whitehurst at the KYET studio.

Patrick Whitehurst is a writer and artist who submits work to various papers in northern Arizona. He started locally in Williams and served as an intern at KYET.

“My memory of the station is a bit fuzzy, but I remember the overall sense of the place (even down to the feeling it was haunted) and the thrill of getting on the radio, even if it was a small town radio station,” Patrick said. “Bob was always a very accommodating kind of guy, and possessed boundless energy. That I remember well. Just as I remember stressing about each and every Pat This! column I wrote.

“I started the weekly commentary show with the idea I would sound old and wise. Instead I came off sounding like a punk version of Dennis Miller. But it worked, just as Bob knew it would. And thanks to him, I had a blast doing it. In fact, even though I did host weekend talk for a while as well, the commentary was my favorite part of KYET.”

Bob also brought the Arizona Cardinals games to the station. After his Northland Now show ended, syndicated conservative talk radio took over and the late night favorite was Coast-to-Coast AM in the days of Art Bell.

Bob Hardy and Pete Christensen had great times at the station.

Bob Hardy and Pete Christensen had great times at the station.

Of course Bob was active in the community doing remote broadcasts for the parades and broadcasting complimentary music for the Williams fireworks displays.

I recall passing by and seeing the station several times. I tuned it in one day and could not believe this guy; Bob Hardy. He was hilarious. If memory serves, in fact, it was a Saturday morning dose of News of the Weird. I went down to the station and walked right in. It was void of the normal security trappings of radio stations today. Except, of course, for the 9-mm Bob normally carried under his vest. I introduced myself and he responded with that deep, resounding voice of his. Our friendship began.

I set up the KYET web site. I provided news copy which was almost never satisfactory. I also provided publicity shots and exchanged advertising for the station through the Northern Arizona Citizen newspaper which I edited.

I wrote an ad for the Northern Arizona Citizen which stated that it was great for wrapping fish and lining bird cages. And you might even try reading it too. I walked into the station one day and Bob told me I had got him in trouble. A lady called and politely told him that he should not make fun of the paper. His response to her was, “You’ll never forget the name, will you?”

One Saturday morning I received a call from (I believe) Mik of the Libertarian Party asking me if I had seen or heard from him. I was rather stunned when I turned on the radio and did not hear the voice of Bob Hardy. When I finally did wake up, I realized something was terribly wrong. Bob always made it to the station every day except Sunday because he loved his job.

By the time I got to the station, the door was opened and mourning had begun. We found out that he passed away the previous night, Friday, June 5, 1998.

The station lasted only a few more months in Williams before shutting down.


Updated 6/6/14 6:06 pm


Contributing to this article

Patrick Whitehurst. Patrick Whitehurst is a fiction and non-fiction author who’s written for a number of northern Arizona newspapers over the years, covering everything from murders to Rotary luncheons. He contributed much to the Northern Arizona Citizen and has historic Williams books for sale around town. In his spare time he enjoys painting, blogging, the open water, and reading everything he can get his hands on. Whitehurst is a graduate of Northern Arizona University and currently lives among the red rocks of Sedona, Arizona. His latest novella, Talk Jock Twits, is based on his short-lived career at KYET and will soon be available on Amazon. Visit him at www.patrickwhitehurst.com.

Glen Davis. Editor of the Northern Arizona Gazette. Glen worked at KYET as a volunteer for over a year where he met Patrick Whitehurst and Pete Christensen. Glen has self-published Concerning the Militia through LULU.com which started out as a notebook of research that he did for Bob and others. He also self-published a fiction work, A Shroud of Evidence.