Access gates to close near Spring Valley Cabin due to winter conditions

Recreation staff for the Williams Ranger District of the Kaibab National Forest will be closing three road access gates near Spring Valley Cabin Thursday due to winter weather conditions and safety concerns.

The first gate to be closed is near the intersection of forest roads 141 and 76, and the second is farther in on Forest Road 76 as part of the popular Spring Valley Cross-Country Ski Trail. The third gate is also located on Forest Road 76, 1-mile north of Forest Road 58 (Pipeline Road). The gates could remain closed until early spring, depending on weather conditions.

Spring Valley Cabin remains open and available for rental by members of the public through the Arizona “Rooms with a View” Cabin Rental Program. Those reserving the cabin while the gates are closed will have to access it by hiking, snowshoeing or cross country skiing into the area.

Additional information regarding the Spring Valley Cross-Country Ski Trail can be found at: www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/kaibab/recreation/wintersports/recarea/?recid=43349&actid=91. Other nearby winter sports opportunities can be found at: www.fs.usda.gov/activity/kaibab/recreation/wintersports.

Information on Spring Valley Cabin and how to reserve it can be viewed at: hwww.fs.usda.gov/recarea/kaibab/recreation/camping-cabins/recarea/?recid=11662&actid=101.

SR 89 reduced to one lane at Hell Canyon tomorrow for bridge work

hell canyonState Route 89 north of Prescott at Hell Canyon (milepost 345) will be narrowed to a single lane from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow, Jan. 13 as crews repair potholes on the existing bridge deck.

The lane closure will provide a safe work zone and drivers will be delayed for up to 20 minutes at a time.

ADOT advises drivers to proceed through the work zones with caution, slow down, and be alert for construction equipment and personnel.

ADEQ, ADOT and Keep Arizona Beautiful Host Free Environmental Resources Roadshow in Wickenburg

PHOENIX —Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ), Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) and Keep Arizona Beautiful (KAZB) staff will conduct an “Environmental Resources Roadshow,” where attendees will learn about ways to improve their local environment.

Wickenburg
Thurs., Jan. 28, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Wickenburg Council Chambers
155 N. Tegner St.
Wickenburg, AZ 85390

The Environmental Resources Roadshow partnership encourages community members, business people, elected officials, government agencies, and school representatives in Wickenburg and the surrounding area to attend one of the no-cost, two-hour events. Following brief presentations, attendees can engage in open dialogue and participate in a question and answer session.

Topics

> ADEQ: successful recycling programs such as electronic waste and food recovery
> ADEQ: how communities can benefit from ADEQ’s brownfields grants and technical expertise
> ADOT: volunteer process for adopting sections of Arizona highways for litter cleanup
> KAZB: statewide litter prevention, recycling and beautification programs

If you are interested in the Environmental Resources Roadshow presenting in your community in 2016, please call one of the listed contacts.

Tips on preventing auto burglary at home and while shopping

coco-sheriff-300pxFlagstaff — The Coconino County Sheriff’s office would like to provided tips on preventing auto-burglary. Auto-burglary prevention, like all crime prevention, involves limiting the criminal’s ability and/or opportunity to commit the crime. With very little time and effort, you can make a huge difference in your vulnerability to auto-burglary.

Lock ALL your vehicle’s doors even if you plan to be gone for only a brief time. Every year, we have items stolen from unlocked vehicles where the owner was only going to be gone “just for a second.” It only takes seconds to steal your stuff! It’s not uncommon for thieves to walk down a row of parked vehicles and check vehicle doors to see if they are unlocked. Don’t leave any window open or even cracked open, including vent/wing windows and sunroofs.

Don’t leave valuables in your car. That sounds like “common sense,” but drivers/passengers do leave items of value in plain view every day. If you leave valuable items visible in your car, your car is automatically a target.

Try to park in busy, well-lighted areas. Try to park in well-traveled areas. Large anonymous lots are hit by thieves much more often than parking immediately adjacent to residential housing or other occupied buildings.

Set any alarm or anti-theft device. If you have one, use it! Many people believe that car-alarms no longer make a difference, but they can be an effective deterrent to an auto-burglar, who most often chooses the easiest target.

Mark your valuables! As a last line of defense (not really to prevent theft as much as to aid in recovery), mark your valuables. Recording serial numbers is dandy, but nowadays many serial numbers are on removable “labels” rather than “engraved” into valuable items. Sheriff Pribil suggests inscribing/engraving a “personal identifier” on all valuables.

Take Removable Equipment with You. If you have an after-market stereo/CD-player with a removable face plate, remove it. Without the face plate, the unit is less attractive/useful to many thieves, and harder to “fence.” If the unit can be pulled, pull it! Take it with you. Just covering a valuable radio (or ANY valuables in your car) with something (like a blanket or towel) to hide it will probably only draw thieves’ attention.

What Items are Most Commonly Stolen from Vehicles?
• Backpacks, gym bags, briefcases, day-planners
• Cash/coins, checkbooks and credit/debit cards
• Wallets/purses (even when hidden under a seat or in an unlocked glove compartment)
• Laptop computers, iPods and MP3 players (and docking stations)
• Cell phones (and chargers)
• Portable GPS navigation systems
• Stereo/CD players (and faceplates), amps, speakers (even when bolted down!)
• Jewelry, keys, mail (identity theft), tools
• Anything of obvious value

Report Suspicious Activity. If you see suspicious activity, report it to the Coconino County Sheriff’s Office at (928) 774-4523 or call 911

What should you do if something is stolen out of your car? As soon as you notice something’s stolen (or that your car has been broken into) do not touch/adjust anything in, on, or around the car. As soon as possible, call the Coconino County Sheriff’s Office to report the incident.

Two Flagstaff Men Arrested for Vehicle Burglaries in Doney Park

hankins-peavy-1Flagstaff, AZ — During the early morning hours of Sunday, January 3, 2016 Dispatchers of the Flagstaff Regional 911 Center received multiple calls from concerned citizens regarding suspicious activity and reckless driving by a vehicle and its occupants. One caller reported seeing the vehicle enter the driveway of his home located in Doney Park and then slowly back out. The reporting citizen attempted to follow the vehicle; however he lost sight of it. The investigating Deputy put out an attempt to locate message with the vehicle description.

Later that day Flagstaff Police Officers located the vehicle which was occupied by two adult males. The officers arrested the men on unrelated charges.

During the investigation, a wallet was located in the vehicle with identification that did not belong to either occupant. The Deputy contacted the person listed on the identification who lived in the Doney Park area. According to this person his wallet was last known to be inside his vehicle. The Deputy and the victim checked his vehicles that were in front of his home and discovered that two of them had been burglarized.

Twenty-one year-old Samuel David Hankins and twenty year-old Scott Julian Peavy both of Flagstaff were charged with two counts each of burglary from a vehicle. Coconino County Sheriff’s Detectives are continuing this investigation in an effort to determine if the two suspects are involved in other burglaries that have occurred in the area.