September 2022
The month ended on a great note! We did a cleanup on Spanish Valley Drive, headed toward the mountains, on Friday, September 30, with this great group from a Winnebago gathering. Emily works for Winnebago and contacted me a couple of months ago wanting to do some volunteering while they were here. Everybody had a great time collecting trash and recycling while leaving the earth just that much better. Emily gave me a bunch of brand new orange vests and some gloves, in addition to reusable clean up bags. THANKS EMILY!
So if you are ready to join us for a cleanup, we have the gear. We hope to see folks from the Winnebago gathering again next year.
The month ended on a great note! We did a cleanup on Spanish Valley Drive, headed toward the mountains, on Friday, September 30, with this great group from a Winnebago gathering. Emily works for Winnebago and contacted me a couple of months ago wanting to do some volunteering while they were here. Everybody had a great time collecting trash and recycling while leaving the earth just that much better. Emily gave me a bunch of brand new orange vests and some gloves, in addition to reusable clean up bags. THANKS EMILY!
So if you are ready to join us for a cleanup, we have the gear. We hope to see folks from the Winnebago gathering again next year.
We had to say goodbye to Dr. Lauren Prest, one of the most beautiful people I have ever met. She is the reason we have a Recovery Center in Moab, and why so many who are trapped in the web of addiction are breaking free. Luckily, Dr. Paula Cook, who was instrumental in training Lauren, has stepped into the job of working with the population suffering with Substance Use Disorder. She is dynamic and dedicated and we welcome her to Moab.
These docs, who give their all to ease suffering have my deepest admiration. Thank you Lauren, Paula, and all the other docs out there dealing with SUD. And thanks to the nurses assisting them, like our own Brett Heselpoth, the human energy infusion.
I worked with Sandy Freethey several times in September, tackling spots on the in=town parkway system that were rearranged by all the flooding we had in August. All the land we have worked on for almost two decades has been changed drastically. And as things evolve and recover, we will continue removing weeds, keeping trails clear and clean, and doing all we can to love this beautiful earth we live on.
These docs, who give their all to ease suffering have my deepest admiration. Thank you Lauren, Paula, and all the other docs out there dealing with SUD. And thanks to the nurses assisting them, like our own Brett Heselpoth, the human energy infusion.
I worked with Sandy Freethey several times in September, tackling spots on the in=town parkway system that were rearranged by all the flooding we had in August. All the land we have worked on for almost two decades has been changed drastically. And as things evolve and recover, we will continue removing weeds, keeping trails clear and clean, and doing all we can to love this beautiful earth we live on.
July and August 2022 (9/5/22)
July and August were HOT, HOT, HOT! For me, it felt like we were teetering on the edge of habitability. After a bit of a cool down in late August, we were hit with a heat dome in late August/early September, making the temps climb up over 100 to 105 degrees where they will remain for another 4 days. We also experienced monsoons with flash floods - about 5 of them, the last one being a monster that turned parts of Main Street into a river, and deposited debris everywhere while reclaiming real estate all along Mill Creek. Everything looks different and it is an awesome thing to witness the changes. I am looking forward to watching the natural evolution in places that are untouched by human hands. But in the meantime, we have had our work cut out for us trying to keep trails passable as repairs go on all across the region.
Nevertheless, we tried to live life around the edges - early morning and late evening - so we could continue our FreeCycle pickups, do trail work and maintenance, and fit in a few other things as well. One such other thing was meeting up with the good folks at Replenysh at the CRC (Community Recycle Center) on July 15. They are working on creating a circular economy by increasing collections of items that are often not recyclable, (and items that are), like Thermoform plastics. Think clamshells that salads come in and deli containers, plastic egg cartons, and other #1 plastics. Check out their website to see how they encourage anyone to become a collection point and get good, clean materials to manufacturers. They work with some of the big companies who are striving to have more recycled content in their containers. They have a fairly simple goal....End Landfills!
We have also have the great fortune to be doing trail work with Sandy Freethey. She ran Trail Mix for 10 years, during the time that the group went out and did the actual trail building. She and her beloved passed husband Geoff, are responsible for creating over 150 miles of mountain bike trails. She and I go into the Potato Salad Hill and Powerdam sides of Mill Creek and do trail work together on occasion. We also have done several meetups at the in-town parkway to help clear the trails of debris from the series of flash floods we've had. Of course, with that the last flash flood, the land was greatly rearranged, so, like ants, we will continue on with what we can do to keep the trails clear and clean.
Hats off to the latest group of addiction fellows we met with on August 9th. These doctors are taking extra time to learn about addiction medicine so they can help their patients achieve freedom from the prison of addiction. We are pleased that so many doctors are studying ways to help people with substance use disorders. It is great for those suffering, and for the greater community. These fellows, studying at the University of Utah, will take rotations down here for a month at a time. They make it a point to volunteer with lots of the nonprofits working in the community to help folks in need.
We worked with a small group from the larger Faith-based Coalition to distribute money to many of the people who lost everything in the Murphy Fire that happened in June. From an August 17 Times-Independent:
“The impacted residents of the Pack Creek Mobile Home Park and the Grand County Faith-based Coalition would like to thank this community for your support,” reads an email sent out by Sara Melnicoff on behalf of Pastor Nathan James of the Moab Seventh-day Adventist Church, who said slightly over $25,500 was donated to the relief effort, the majority of which was raised by the Lisbon Valley Mine.
The distribution of funds has been divided between a variety of needs proportionate to the scale of impact in the various cases. The majority of the funding went to the families who had experienced the total loss of their home while smaller amounts were shared with others who experienced significantly lighter impact but still faced unexpected needs, said James.
“Thank you for your contribution to our community and neighbors,” he wrote. “It is people like you that make this county ‘grand.'”
It was wonderful working with the group to help the fire victims and we look forward to working together again.
In the meantime, our Emergency Needs Fund spent about $4,100 in July and $2,421 in August answering calls for urgent needs. We partner often with the good people at the Moab Valley Multicultural Center to make sure we did everything we could do to help people in their time of need.
And last but not least,
Friends of the Parkway, a project that Moab Solutions started in 2004 in partnership with the City of Moab, turned 18 years old in August. The project aims to get the community involved in keeping the parkway clear of trash and recycling, alerting us to major issues, like mattresses or shopping carts in the water, and performing minor trail maintenance.
Four years into the project, Moab Solutions stumbled upon many homeless camps, so starting in August, 2008, after conferring with the police chief and talking to some of the homeless, the group started a weekly meetup. We paid small sums of money to the people living along the creek in exchange for them bringing all the recyclables out of the camps to be sorted by type, and disposing of all trash in the cans along the parkway. That meetup lasted 5 years, during which Moab Solutions did intense street level case management to learn about and address the unique and complex issues facing these folks.
We introduced the homeless to the community by inviting them to speak at city and county council meetings, through newspaper articles, and at weekly dinners the First Baptist and Community Churches hosted. The community responded by donating homemade knit hats, making delicious lunches, and mentoring some of the folks. Green job training at the recycle center and learning about lawn care work was provided. Eventually everybody got into housing, connected to treatment for substance use, or reunited with family. Volunteers sat with one man in the hospital as illnesses related to his former addiction robbed him of his life. Moab Solutions learned through that man's struggles that creating a nurturing environment helps some people decide to tackle the prison of addiction and free themselves from it, as he had done.
Moab Solutions continues to do street level outreach, and to care for the Parkway, a gem in our midst. We invite anyone who wants to volunteer to adopt a section of the parkway to keep it looking beautiful reach out to Moab Solutions for more information.
Moab Solutions also does daily work on public lands and advocates for reducing and reusing over recycling, and best-practices recycling over landfilling.
July and August were HOT, HOT, HOT! For me, it felt like we were teetering on the edge of habitability. After a bit of a cool down in late August, we were hit with a heat dome in late August/early September, making the temps climb up over 100 to 105 degrees where they will remain for another 4 days. We also experienced monsoons with flash floods - about 5 of them, the last one being a monster that turned parts of Main Street into a river, and deposited debris everywhere while reclaiming real estate all along Mill Creek. Everything looks different and it is an awesome thing to witness the changes. I am looking forward to watching the natural evolution in places that are untouched by human hands. But in the meantime, we have had our work cut out for us trying to keep trails passable as repairs go on all across the region.
Nevertheless, we tried to live life around the edges - early morning and late evening - so we could continue our FreeCycle pickups, do trail work and maintenance, and fit in a few other things as well. One such other thing was meeting up with the good folks at Replenysh at the CRC (Community Recycle Center) on July 15. They are working on creating a circular economy by increasing collections of items that are often not recyclable, (and items that are), like Thermoform plastics. Think clamshells that salads come in and deli containers, plastic egg cartons, and other #1 plastics. Check out their website to see how they encourage anyone to become a collection point and get good, clean materials to manufacturers. They work with some of the big companies who are striving to have more recycled content in their containers. They have a fairly simple goal....End Landfills!
We have also have the great fortune to be doing trail work with Sandy Freethey. She ran Trail Mix for 10 years, during the time that the group went out and did the actual trail building. She and her beloved passed husband Geoff, are responsible for creating over 150 miles of mountain bike trails. She and I go into the Potato Salad Hill and Powerdam sides of Mill Creek and do trail work together on occasion. We also have done several meetups at the in-town parkway to help clear the trails of debris from the series of flash floods we've had. Of course, with that the last flash flood, the land was greatly rearranged, so, like ants, we will continue on with what we can do to keep the trails clear and clean.
Hats off to the latest group of addiction fellows we met with on August 9th. These doctors are taking extra time to learn about addiction medicine so they can help their patients achieve freedom from the prison of addiction. We are pleased that so many doctors are studying ways to help people with substance use disorders. It is great for those suffering, and for the greater community. These fellows, studying at the University of Utah, will take rotations down here for a month at a time. They make it a point to volunteer with lots of the nonprofits working in the community to help folks in need.
We worked with a small group from the larger Faith-based Coalition to distribute money to many of the people who lost everything in the Murphy Fire that happened in June. From an August 17 Times-Independent:
“The impacted residents of the Pack Creek Mobile Home Park and the Grand County Faith-based Coalition would like to thank this community for your support,” reads an email sent out by Sara Melnicoff on behalf of Pastor Nathan James of the Moab Seventh-day Adventist Church, who said slightly over $25,500 was donated to the relief effort, the majority of which was raised by the Lisbon Valley Mine.
The distribution of funds has been divided between a variety of needs proportionate to the scale of impact in the various cases. The majority of the funding went to the families who had experienced the total loss of their home while smaller amounts were shared with others who experienced significantly lighter impact but still faced unexpected needs, said James.
“Thank you for your contribution to our community and neighbors,” he wrote. “It is people like you that make this county ‘grand.'”
It was wonderful working with the group to help the fire victims and we look forward to working together again.
In the meantime, our Emergency Needs Fund spent about $4,100 in July and $2,421 in August answering calls for urgent needs. We partner often with the good people at the Moab Valley Multicultural Center to make sure we did everything we could do to help people in their time of need.
And last but not least,
Friends of the Parkway, a project that Moab Solutions started in 2004 in partnership with the City of Moab, turned 18 years old in August. The project aims to get the community involved in keeping the parkway clear of trash and recycling, alerting us to major issues, like mattresses or shopping carts in the water, and performing minor trail maintenance.
Four years into the project, Moab Solutions stumbled upon many homeless camps, so starting in August, 2008, after conferring with the police chief and talking to some of the homeless, the group started a weekly meetup. We paid small sums of money to the people living along the creek in exchange for them bringing all the recyclables out of the camps to be sorted by type, and disposing of all trash in the cans along the parkway. That meetup lasted 5 years, during which Moab Solutions did intense street level case management to learn about and address the unique and complex issues facing these folks.
We introduced the homeless to the community by inviting them to speak at city and county council meetings, through newspaper articles, and at weekly dinners the First Baptist and Community Churches hosted. The community responded by donating homemade knit hats, making delicious lunches, and mentoring some of the folks. Green job training at the recycle center and learning about lawn care work was provided. Eventually everybody got into housing, connected to treatment for substance use, or reunited with family. Volunteers sat with one man in the hospital as illnesses related to his former addiction robbed him of his life. Moab Solutions learned through that man's struggles that creating a nurturing environment helps some people decide to tackle the prison of addiction and free themselves from it, as he had done.
Moab Solutions continues to do street level outreach, and to care for the Parkway, a gem in our midst. We invite anyone who wants to volunteer to adopt a section of the parkway to keep it looking beautiful reach out to Moab Solutions for more information.
Moab Solutions also does daily work on public lands and advocates for reducing and reusing over recycling, and best-practices recycling over landfilling.
June 2022
The biggest event of June was meeting the new police chief, Jared Garcia, and taking him on a tour of one small area where homeless camps appear on the regular. The Chief is interested in enforcing the laws against camping in town, but wants to have a team in place to help those people in the best way possible. We have had a surge of homeless coming into town. Many have severe mental health challenges and/or substance use disorders. It is in the best interest of these homeless, and the greater community, to help them get into better situations. We will update you as we work with the Chief and others to address these challenges. Moab Solutions wants to see positive outcomes from this work.
Emergency Needs Fund: We spent a lot in June, $3,581.24 to be exact. The largest amount was spent on rent assistance and emergency lodging. Then on transportation costs = getting stranded people on the bus, putting gas in hard-working community member's cars so they can get to doctor appointments/work. We spent a healthy chunk on food, work boots, and utilities. July is proving to be very busy too. To date, 7/16, we have spent $2,519.89. We are happy to be here for those in need, for the other non-profits and agencies we partner with, and especially law enforcement. They end up with many interesting cases and we are happy to help when we can.
The Canyon...We have been continuing with all the daily maintenance and minor trail work to keep our major trail work in good shape. I have had the great luck of being able to work with Sandy Freethey on trail work a few times recently. She is an expert and I always learn a lot from her. It keeps getting better in there, and hopefully that will continue on until the canyon is in its most natural state and open and free for all to enjoy the beauty there.
The biggest event of June was meeting the new police chief, Jared Garcia, and taking him on a tour of one small area where homeless camps appear on the regular. The Chief is interested in enforcing the laws against camping in town, but wants to have a team in place to help those people in the best way possible. We have had a surge of homeless coming into town. Many have severe mental health challenges and/or substance use disorders. It is in the best interest of these homeless, and the greater community, to help them get into better situations. We will update you as we work with the Chief and others to address these challenges. Moab Solutions wants to see positive outcomes from this work.
Emergency Needs Fund: We spent a lot in June, $3,581.24 to be exact. The largest amount was spent on rent assistance and emergency lodging. Then on transportation costs = getting stranded people on the bus, putting gas in hard-working community member's cars so they can get to doctor appointments/work. We spent a healthy chunk on food, work boots, and utilities. July is proving to be very busy too. To date, 7/16, we have spent $2,519.89. We are happy to be here for those in need, for the other non-profits and agencies we partner with, and especially law enforcement. They end up with many interesting cases and we are happy to help when we can.
The Canyon...We have been continuing with all the daily maintenance and minor trail work to keep our major trail work in good shape. I have had the great luck of being able to work with Sandy Freethey on trail work a few times recently. She is an expert and I always learn a lot from her. It keeps getting better in there, and hopefully that will continue on until the canyon is in its most natural state and open and free for all to enjoy the beauty there.
April and May 2022
Coming soon! (Finally, see below!) Information about this year's Common Thread project at Potato Salad Hill, work with the homeless and others in need, recycling advocacy and potentially exciting news about partnerships to increase recycling and diversion rates, a clean up with the high school Honor Society, news about Mill Creek, and much more!
Okay, I admit it! I have gotten lazy about the Monthly Diary. So let's catch up. Common Thread 2022 was one of the best ever. It is pure joy to watch the land recovering and not being harmed (too much) more by the Easter weekend events. We worked closely with the Sheriff's office to delineate protected areas, and for the most part, they stayed protected. This is a win-win project, as people can still go and enjoy the hill climb feature, and the recovery of the land from old damage can continue. Hats off to Sheriff Steve White and his deputies, especially Austin Brewer and Brad Hines, who made it happen on the ground.
Street Level Homeless Outreach continues. More and more homeless are coming through and staying in Moab, which generally happens after winter's cold melts into spring's beauty and then summer's heat. The issue I have been seeing is more and more folks are coming here with serious mental health and substance use disorder challenges. Unless we fix the fundamental societal issues that create homelessness and untreated SUD/MH issues, we are only going to see things get worse. Much worse. Plans are afoot, see the June Diary.
Recycling Specialist. We are working hard to try to create this position, to be shared by the city, county and the solid waste authority. See June Diary for more updates.
High School Honor Society!!! On May 11, Mel Sakrison and I were joined by an incredibly enthusiast group from the HS Honor Society. A camp that would have taken the two of us 5 hours each, at least, was cleaned up, with things loaded in my truck for the recycle center, in under an hour. I have worked with different students with the Society in the past, and have always been very impressed with their work ethic and care for the community.
Coming soon! (Finally, see below!) Information about this year's Common Thread project at Potato Salad Hill, work with the homeless and others in need, recycling advocacy and potentially exciting news about partnerships to increase recycling and diversion rates, a clean up with the high school Honor Society, news about Mill Creek, and much more!
Okay, I admit it! I have gotten lazy about the Monthly Diary. So let's catch up. Common Thread 2022 was one of the best ever. It is pure joy to watch the land recovering and not being harmed (too much) more by the Easter weekend events. We worked closely with the Sheriff's office to delineate protected areas, and for the most part, they stayed protected. This is a win-win project, as people can still go and enjoy the hill climb feature, and the recovery of the land from old damage can continue. Hats off to Sheriff Steve White and his deputies, especially Austin Brewer and Brad Hines, who made it happen on the ground.
Street Level Homeless Outreach continues. More and more homeless are coming through and staying in Moab, which generally happens after winter's cold melts into spring's beauty and then summer's heat. The issue I have been seeing is more and more folks are coming here with serious mental health and substance use disorder challenges. Unless we fix the fundamental societal issues that create homelessness and untreated SUD/MH issues, we are only going to see things get worse. Much worse. Plans are afoot, see the June Diary.
Recycling Specialist. We are working hard to try to create this position, to be shared by the city, county and the solid waste authority. See June Diary for more updates.
High School Honor Society!!! On May 11, Mel Sakrison and I were joined by an incredibly enthusiast group from the HS Honor Society. A camp that would have taken the two of us 5 hours each, at least, was cleaned up, with things loaded in my truck for the recycle center, in under an hour. I have worked with different students with the Society in the past, and have always been very impressed with their work ethic and care for the community.
March 2022
Lots going on this month! We worked with three local nonprofits to help them install and/or learn how to maintain their internal recycling systems. It is excellent that these great organizations, USARA (Utah Support Advocates for Recovery Awareness), Seekhaven, our domestic violence shelter, and the Interact Clubhouse, part of Four Corners Community Behavioral Health, all have good systems in place. The best part is, that beyond an assist or two in getting the items to our gem of a center, the Community Recycle Center, each entity is dedicated to learning how to get their items recycled. When Heidi and I went for her training, she remarked, "It's so easy!" That is what we love to hear because recycling is the very foundation of sustainability, but is so often marginalized. Here are Heidi and Lanette of USARA showing off their recycle bin:
Lots going on this month! We worked with three local nonprofits to help them install and/or learn how to maintain their internal recycling systems. It is excellent that these great organizations, USARA (Utah Support Advocates for Recovery Awareness), Seekhaven, our domestic violence shelter, and the Interact Clubhouse, part of Four Corners Community Behavioral Health, all have good systems in place. The best part is, that beyond an assist or two in getting the items to our gem of a center, the Community Recycle Center, each entity is dedicated to learning how to get their items recycled. When Heidi and I went for her training, she remarked, "It's so easy!" That is what we love to hear because recycling is the very foundation of sustainability, but is so often marginalized. Here are Heidi and Lanette of USARA showing off their recycle bin:
We did a parkway cleanup with the Girl Scouts on March 24.
We worked with this same group when they were Brownies. It was so pleasant to walk the beautiful parkway with these enthusiast youth, removing trash and recycling, all the while having fun. Here's a few photos from the day:
We worked with this same group when they were Brownies. It was so pleasant to walk the beautiful parkway with these enthusiast youth, removing trash and recycling, all the while having fun. Here's a few photos from the day:
Are we getting through to the city at long last?
We have been cheerleading recycling community-wide since 2000. We have tried to explain to entities that recycling is not a passive action. With just a little bit of effort, huge results are achieved - results that are good for the earth and good for humans and all life. This infographic is very inspiring:
We have been cheerleading recycling community-wide since 2000. We have tried to explain to entities that recycling is not a passive action. With just a little bit of effort, huge results are achieved - results that are good for the earth and good for humans and all life. This infographic is very inspiring:
During a visit to Lions Park, a hub located at the intersection of 191 and the River Road, we happened to notice that there were 13 containers spread throughout the site. 11 were for trash, 2 were for recycling. They all look the same, and the casual observer wouldn't even realize recycling was available.
As an experiment, we visited Lions Park everyday for 11 days and pulled the recycling out of the 11 trash cans. We made a short video to show the city. We collected just under 300 cans and other recyclables in 11 days during the off-season. The problem was, we didn't want to see the wasting continue, so we keep doing the collections. As the season started, we collected as many as we got in 11 days in just 2 days. We then reached out to the Parks supervisor, who we met at the park. We agreed that Moab Solutions would set up recycle bins at every location where there were trash cans as a way to gauge amounts and public interest. We have been maintaining them since then and have taken 100s of gallons of aluminum, #1 plastic, #2 plastic, steel cans, glass jars and bottles, along with some single layer cardboard and a corrugated box or two to the Community Recycling Center. We are hoping that the City will step up with simple ways to ensure that recycling gets recycled, not trashed. Stay tuned! Here is the photo of the items collected over 11 days:
As an experiment, we visited Lions Park everyday for 11 days and pulled the recycling out of the 11 trash cans. We made a short video to show the city. We collected just under 300 cans and other recyclables in 11 days during the off-season. The problem was, we didn't want to see the wasting continue, so we keep doing the collections. As the season started, we collected as many as we got in 11 days in just 2 days. We then reached out to the Parks supervisor, who we met at the park. We agreed that Moab Solutions would set up recycle bins at every location where there were trash cans as a way to gauge amounts and public interest. We have been maintaining them since then and have taken 100s of gallons of aluminum, #1 plastic, #2 plastic, steel cans, glass jars and bottles, along with some single layer cardboard and a corrugated box or two to the Community Recycling Center. We are hoping that the City will step up with simple ways to ensure that recycling gets recycled, not trashed. Stay tuned! Here is the photo of the items collected over 11 days:

We pulled this recycling from a city trash can along the parkway.
Assists for People in Need, and Homeless Updates
We are keeping our eye on Brandon. He has been homeless for some time now and has a host of serious health issues. We check in on him once a day and make sure he has what he needs to get by. He doesn't have many options, so the best we can do is struggle to keep him going.
When the weather starts to warm up, many transient homeless find their way to Moab. We try to meet folks who seem to be staying here, and make sure they are aware of the variety of services available.
In March, we spent $4,787.94 in assists for people in need of rent assistance, utilities, food, transportation, (from repairs to gas), and more. Community helping Community!
We are keeping our eye on Brandon. He has been homeless for some time now and has a host of serious health issues. We check in on him once a day and make sure he has what he needs to get by. He doesn't have many options, so the best we can do is struggle to keep him going.
When the weather starts to warm up, many transient homeless find their way to Moab. We try to meet folks who seem to be staying here, and make sure they are aware of the variety of services available.
In March, we spent $4,787.94 in assists for people in need of rent assistance, utilities, food, transportation, (from repairs to gas), and more. Community helping Community!
February 2022
The Point in Time Count has been successfully completed. We are still waiting for the final numbers to come in from all who performed the count, but we estimate that we counted close to 30 people. We think at least 15 to 20 people went uncounted, either because they are living in places where we couldn't find them, like sheds, or in their vehicles in someone's driveway. Some people came in to be counted after the time to do so had lapsed.
Our efforts to create a warming shelter have not yet been successful. We keep trying and we won't give up, but it is an uphill climb given that there is no political appetite for this much-needed and life-saving service.
Looming on the horizon are two big events, the first is Common Thread, our work on Potato Salad Hill during Easter Jeep Safari. We prepare all year, but efforts intensify as we near the very busy 4 days ending in Easter Sunday on April 17. During the year, we work on refreshing rock outlines that delineate where one can travel, make sure that the off-trail areas are protected and free of tracks, and remove any and all trash and recycling we find. Starting on Thursday the 14th, we will install a recycle station. On that Friday and Saturday, we will hire staff to walk around the crowds, offering to collect people's trash and recycling for them. We are planning a refreshed informational display, with fact-filled reasons why reducing and reusing are so important, and then why recycling is preferable to landfilling. Want to volunteer with us? We'd love to have you.
Earth Day 52
We are in the planning process now, but hope to have other features to add to the popular Cash for Cans, where the public can turn in their clean aluminum cans for cash. Price to be determined.
I walked in the very first Earth Day in my home city of Philadelphia on that first day. The atmosphere was rich with energy and excitement to do the right thing by the planet that generously supports our ability to live. That bright promise has been tarnished through the years, but there is reason for hope going forward. As we like to say, "Giving up is not an option".
The Point in Time Count has been successfully completed. We are still waiting for the final numbers to come in from all who performed the count, but we estimate that we counted close to 30 people. We think at least 15 to 20 people went uncounted, either because they are living in places where we couldn't find them, like sheds, or in their vehicles in someone's driveway. Some people came in to be counted after the time to do so had lapsed.
Our efforts to create a warming shelter have not yet been successful. We keep trying and we won't give up, but it is an uphill climb given that there is no political appetite for this much-needed and life-saving service.
Looming on the horizon are two big events, the first is Common Thread, our work on Potato Salad Hill during Easter Jeep Safari. We prepare all year, but efforts intensify as we near the very busy 4 days ending in Easter Sunday on April 17. During the year, we work on refreshing rock outlines that delineate where one can travel, make sure that the off-trail areas are protected and free of tracks, and remove any and all trash and recycling we find. Starting on Thursday the 14th, we will install a recycle station. On that Friday and Saturday, we will hire staff to walk around the crowds, offering to collect people's trash and recycling for them. We are planning a refreshed informational display, with fact-filled reasons why reducing and reusing are so important, and then why recycling is preferable to landfilling. Want to volunteer with us? We'd love to have you.
Earth Day 52
We are in the planning process now, but hope to have other features to add to the popular Cash for Cans, where the public can turn in their clean aluminum cans for cash. Price to be determined.
I walked in the very first Earth Day in my home city of Philadelphia on that first day. The atmosphere was rich with energy and excitement to do the right thing by the planet that generously supports our ability to live. That bright promise has been tarnished through the years, but there is reason for hope going forward. As we like to say, "Giving up is not an option".
January 2022
Happy New Year! We are so grateful to the community for helping us fill the coffers of the Emergency Needs Fund. Now we are setting our sights on the upcoming Point In Time, or PIT count. Here is our PSA explaining that:
POINT IN TIME COUNT (PIT)
Members of the Grand County Local Homeless Council will be conducting the annual "Point in Time" (PIT) count from January 27th-29th. The PIT Count takes place in large cities and rural communities all across the United States. The count has two components, counting those who are unsheltered, and those who are in temporary shelter, such as a motel room.
We are asking the community for help in locating people that may be sleeping outdoors, or in cars, storage units, sheds, or any other place not fit for human habitation. Please call Sara Melnicoff, the PIT Count Coordinator for Moab Solutions, at 435-401-4685 if you, or someone you know is experiencing homelessness.
The count asks homeless where they slept the night of Wednesday the 26th and takes place the three following days. All data is then submitted to the State Office of Homeless Services, where it helps determine where and what kind of funding is needed to assist the homeless into permanent housing for each county. Beyond the funding to address homelessness that the PIT Count determines, the count also provides a means to by which we can help connect people to a variety of services in the region.
The count attempts to locate and count all people who are homeless in Grand County. All information collected is kept confidential.
Happy New Year! We are so grateful to the community for helping us fill the coffers of the Emergency Needs Fund. Now we are setting our sights on the upcoming Point In Time, or PIT count. Here is our PSA explaining that:
POINT IN TIME COUNT (PIT)
Members of the Grand County Local Homeless Council will be conducting the annual "Point in Time" (PIT) count from January 27th-29th. The PIT Count takes place in large cities and rural communities all across the United States. The count has two components, counting those who are unsheltered, and those who are in temporary shelter, such as a motel room.
We are asking the community for help in locating people that may be sleeping outdoors, or in cars, storage units, sheds, or any other place not fit for human habitation. Please call Sara Melnicoff, the PIT Count Coordinator for Moab Solutions, at 435-401-4685 if you, or someone you know is experiencing homelessness.
The count asks homeless where they slept the night of Wednesday the 26th and takes place the three following days. All data is then submitted to the State Office of Homeless Services, where it helps determine where and what kind of funding is needed to assist the homeless into permanent housing for each county. Beyond the funding to address homelessness that the PIT Count determines, the count also provides a means to by which we can help connect people to a variety of services in the region.
The count attempts to locate and count all people who are homeless in Grand County. All information collected is kept confidential.
November and December 2021
Things have been very active lately! Starting in mid-November, we started preparing for the 10th annual Emergency Needs Fundraiser. While it is hard to believe Moab Solutions has been fundraising for the needs of the community for a decade, and doing this work for even longer, the outpouring of support from the Moab community has been overwhelmingly positive. For the Emergency Needs Fund, we fundraise from the day after Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve in front of City Market. We’d like to give a huge thanks to City Market for allowing us the space in front of their store. They are key to our success!
We are absolutely amazed by the warm and generous spirit of our community. With the help of 70 volunteers, we raised over $11,800 in 25 days of fundraising. Many volunteers took multiple shifts and a couple of nonprofits took multiple shifts on a day. A regular highlight was back after a Covid break last year - the Singing Teachers: a group of 4th grade teachers who have been volunteering and singing at our table for many years now.
Here is the thank you ad that will appear in our local papers:
Things have been very active lately! Starting in mid-November, we started preparing for the 10th annual Emergency Needs Fundraiser. While it is hard to believe Moab Solutions has been fundraising for the needs of the community for a decade, and doing this work for even longer, the outpouring of support from the Moab community has been overwhelmingly positive. For the Emergency Needs Fund, we fundraise from the day after Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve in front of City Market. We’d like to give a huge thanks to City Market for allowing us the space in front of their store. They are key to our success!
We are absolutely amazed by the warm and generous spirit of our community. With the help of 70 volunteers, we raised over $11,800 in 25 days of fundraising. Many volunteers took multiple shifts and a couple of nonprofits took multiple shifts on a day. A regular highlight was back after a Covid break last year - the Singing Teachers: a group of 4th grade teachers who have been volunteering and singing at our table for many years now.
Here is the thank you ad that will appear in our local papers:
In the meantime, Diego and I have been doing rounds to collect recycling from our publicly placed bins, working with several hard-core homeless to try to get them prepared for the cold weather, doing trail maintenance in the canyon and on the parkway lands, working on a wonderful new brochure and making plans to expand an understanding of the importance of recycling, especially source separated recycling. Diego attends the Local Homeless Council meetings, and we keep trying, against many odds, to create a warming/crisis resource center. The Point-in-time (PIT) Count, the annual count of sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January, commences January 26. The count is instrumental in identifying homeless in our area and pointing services in their direction. If you know anyone who is sleeping in a place not meant for human habitation, please contact us so we can see if they will agree to be counted. Thank you.
October 2021
Things have been very active! I will do a full report when I write the November diary entry. For now, we hope you enjoy our latest newsletter!
Things have been very active! I will do a full report when I write the November diary entry. For now, we hope you enjoy our latest newsletter!
September 2021
It makes sense to me to write the diary at the end of the month, recapping activity from the month, and highlighting things to come in the next month. So here it goes!
Working with Diego has made all the difference. Since he started working with us on August 17, we have done so many things it is hard to remember them all. I am teaching him about our main missions, and the actions we take in support of them. The things we do have grown and evolved since 2004 and are many and varied. He is learning about street level outreach and the other work we do with the homeless and others in need across the community. He patrols the parkway and looks for new camps and other issues, as well as help maintain trails, remove trash and recycling, and alert the city to larger issues. He has attended several meetings with the various entities we work with as well, in an effort to combine efforts for the benefit of the community. He is helping a lot with the FreeCycling and other recycling we do. We have held several work parties, two in the canyon, and one on the parkway, (that one through Pack it Out Utah), and we are looking forward to offering more volunteer opportunities to improve public lands, remove trash and recycling from highways, byways, trails, and streams, and try to keep in touch with the homeless on the streets as we seek solutions to their plight. He is working toward keeping Facebook, Instagram, and our websites up to date and interesting. He is also quite adept at creating flyers for our events. That is just some of what he is doing! We are looking forward to being much more efficient and helpful to the community now that Diego is on board.
It makes sense to me to write the diary at the end of the month, recapping activity from the month, and highlighting things to come in the next month. So here it goes!
Working with Diego has made all the difference. Since he started working with us on August 17, we have done so many things it is hard to remember them all. I am teaching him about our main missions, and the actions we take in support of them. The things we do have grown and evolved since 2004 and are many and varied. He is learning about street level outreach and the other work we do with the homeless and others in need across the community. He patrols the parkway and looks for new camps and other issues, as well as help maintain trails, remove trash and recycling, and alert the city to larger issues. He has attended several meetings with the various entities we work with as well, in an effort to combine efforts for the benefit of the community. He is helping a lot with the FreeCycling and other recycling we do. We have held several work parties, two in the canyon, and one on the parkway, (that one through Pack it Out Utah), and we are looking forward to offering more volunteer opportunities to improve public lands, remove trash and recycling from highways, byways, trails, and streams, and try to keep in touch with the homeless on the streets as we seek solutions to their plight. He is working toward keeping Facebook, Instagram, and our websites up to date and interesting. He is also quite adept at creating flyers for our events. That is just some of what he is doing! We are looking forward to being much more efficient and helpful to the community now that Diego is on board.
Join us Tuesday, October 5, at 7 pm at the Helipad on W. Center St. for a discussion on single use plastics and their impact on the planet. See the flyer for details. Hope to see you there!
Last minute recycling! I got a call on September 10, about an hour and a half before setup for a major event was to begin. There wasn't a plan for recycling and they asked if we had any ideas. We promote Greening your Event on our Green Tips page. Planning for recycling from the onset of event planning allows for a robust and educational system to be implemented.
In a few short hours, we conferred with the venue to plan the number of bins needed, secured the bins from the Moab Community Recycle Center, hired a recycling expert to set up and maintain the bins throughout the two and a half day event, and sorted all the recycling we were able to save from the landfill.
The photos below show Ian Jewell, an amazing human, sorting recycling with Sara from Moab Solutions. We ended up with 5 forty gallon bags of #1 plastic, two of aluminum, a bunch of cardboard, and lots of steel cans.
Installing a robust recycling system at your event can make all the difference to our fragile and beautiful planet.
In a few short hours, we conferred with the venue to plan the number of bins needed, secured the bins from the Moab Community Recycle Center, hired a recycling expert to set up and maintain the bins throughout the two and a half day event, and sorted all the recycling we were able to save from the landfill.
The photos below show Ian Jewell, an amazing human, sorting recycling with Sara from Moab Solutions. We ended up with 5 forty gallon bags of #1 plastic, two of aluminum, a bunch of cardboard, and lots of steel cans.
Installing a robust recycling system at your event can make all the difference to our fragile and beautiful planet.
August 18, 2021
This is the latest I have ever made an entry, but it may be one of my favorite ones. We hired an assistant!!! If I had tried to create a resume that would encompass what we were looking for, I never would have made one as incredible as the one I received from Diego Velasquez. After so many years of working alone, I am energized to have a bright and energetic presence to help us make our projects be all they can be while refreshing our websites and social media. I feel very lucky. Read our press release below, and you may see why!
Diego Velasquez Joins Moab Solutions As New Assistant to the Executive Director
Diego is a new resident to Moab, originally coming from the South East. Growing up in a small rural town in the Appalachian Mountains of Southwest Virginia, Diego developed a deep connection to the community through outdoor recreation, environmentalism and community service. Last year, Diego attained his undergraduate degree in environmental studies and political science from Bowdoin College on the coast of Maine. There, he immersed himself in the nonprofit world, working in community development, natural resource conservation, land management and broader environmental issues to bring together groups of people across wide and diverse divides.
“Coming from small towns and from a background of nonprofit work, running the gamut from grant writing to communications, from programs to education, I’m exceptionally excited to both integrate and find my place within the community, as well as make my own positive mark on it,” Diego said.
At Moab Solutions, Diego will be interfacing with the homeless population and other people in need throughout the community and doing street-level outreach to those experiencing homelessness. He will be advocating for reducing and reusing over recycling, and recycling over landfilling through coordinated projects with the Community Recycling Center as well as community clean-up events. He will also engage in maintenance and restoration work on public lands by performing trail maintenance, riparian repair, and “Friend of the Parkway” opportunities. As the new assistant to the executive director, Diego begins his position the week of August 16th, 2021.
“We’re ecstatic to have Diego on board, he’s exactly what we need. I look forward to introducing him to the community and working with him to make Moab an even better place than it already is,” said Melnicoff, Founder and E.D.
This is the latest I have ever made an entry, but it may be one of my favorite ones. We hired an assistant!!! If I had tried to create a resume that would encompass what we were looking for, I never would have made one as incredible as the one I received from Diego Velasquez. After so many years of working alone, I am energized to have a bright and energetic presence to help us make our projects be all they can be while refreshing our websites and social media. I feel very lucky. Read our press release below, and you may see why!
Diego Velasquez Joins Moab Solutions As New Assistant to the Executive Director
Diego is a new resident to Moab, originally coming from the South East. Growing up in a small rural town in the Appalachian Mountains of Southwest Virginia, Diego developed a deep connection to the community through outdoor recreation, environmentalism and community service. Last year, Diego attained his undergraduate degree in environmental studies and political science from Bowdoin College on the coast of Maine. There, he immersed himself in the nonprofit world, working in community development, natural resource conservation, land management and broader environmental issues to bring together groups of people across wide and diverse divides.
“Coming from small towns and from a background of nonprofit work, running the gamut from grant writing to communications, from programs to education, I’m exceptionally excited to both integrate and find my place within the community, as well as make my own positive mark on it,” Diego said.
At Moab Solutions, Diego will be interfacing with the homeless population and other people in need throughout the community and doing street-level outreach to those experiencing homelessness. He will be advocating for reducing and reusing over recycling, and recycling over landfilling through coordinated projects with the Community Recycling Center as well as community clean-up events. He will also engage in maintenance and restoration work on public lands by performing trail maintenance, riparian repair, and “Friend of the Parkway” opportunities. As the new assistant to the executive director, Diego begins his position the week of August 16th, 2021.
“We’re ecstatic to have Diego on board, he’s exactly what we need. I look forward to introducing him to the community and working with him to make Moab an even better place than it already is,” said Melnicoff, Founder and E.D.
July 11, 2021
115 degrees! That was the temperature on Friday. Heatwaves are pummeling the west, along with drought and wildfires. We are reaping what we have sown, and I hope that the realization spreads that we humans have done this to the planet, therefore we can help undo it.
We had a valuable lesson in the power of nature last spring when things were shut down here for 6 weeks. The earth come back with a vibrancy and beauty that was indescribably moving. My wish is that people decide to stay in their home areas, all across the globe, and do restoration and clean ups where they live. As Native philosophy teaches, "Every part of the earth is sacred". So if we plant native trees and other plants, clean out debris, tend neighborhood green spaces, add resiliency back from where we took it, we will have a chance at getting enough recovery to get us through the hardest parts of climate disruptions and extreme weather.
Have you ever been in a mostly natural area during wind or rain storms? The way nature absorbs the elements is so very different from the way it happens in man-made environments.
Glass Project and Community Service
Next Saturday, the 17th, we will lead a group of volunteers who want to give back to the community, in a Glass Project cleanup along the rocky ledges above Mill Creek in the Powerdam/Potato Salad Hill area. We have removed thousands of pieces of glass through the years with a wide-ranging number of volunteer groups and individuals. I will post photos in next month's diary. For now, here is a little slide show of past cleanups. Enjoy!
115 degrees! That was the temperature on Friday. Heatwaves are pummeling the west, along with drought and wildfires. We are reaping what we have sown, and I hope that the realization spreads that we humans have done this to the planet, therefore we can help undo it.
We had a valuable lesson in the power of nature last spring when things were shut down here for 6 weeks. The earth come back with a vibrancy and beauty that was indescribably moving. My wish is that people decide to stay in their home areas, all across the globe, and do restoration and clean ups where they live. As Native philosophy teaches, "Every part of the earth is sacred". So if we plant native trees and other plants, clean out debris, tend neighborhood green spaces, add resiliency back from where we took it, we will have a chance at getting enough recovery to get us through the hardest parts of climate disruptions and extreme weather.
Have you ever been in a mostly natural area during wind or rain storms? The way nature absorbs the elements is so very different from the way it happens in man-made environments.
Glass Project and Community Service
Next Saturday, the 17th, we will lead a group of volunteers who want to give back to the community, in a Glass Project cleanup along the rocky ledges above Mill Creek in the Powerdam/Potato Salad Hill area. We have removed thousands of pieces of glass through the years with a wide-ranging number of volunteer groups and individuals. I will post photos in next month's diary. For now, here is a little slide show of past cleanups. Enjoy!
June 5, 2021
UGH! It is over 103 and it's only early June! This is the hardest part of the year for me, as I love cool temps and winter. I have been getting up at 5 or 5:30 a.m. and going to do my recycle rounds and visit the canyon for the sheer enjoyment of it, and to do a bit of clean up and daily trail maintenance. Very sad to report that the canyon is getting hammered in certain places as visitation is the highest ever. We struggle to keep user made trails naturalized and make sure folks get where they want to go on the actual trail.
We got this wonderful email notice recently:
I’m writing because Loveland Living Planet Aquarium is near completion of our new outdoor exhibit space called “Choices.” In this area, guests will be engaging with four separate kiosks that explore distinct areas of environmental concern that we want to motivate our guests to take action on. These areas are water use, air quality, plastic pollution, and biodiversity. In each kiosk, we highlight a story about a conservation hero.
Your story was selected to be used for this new exhibit! I’ve included a sample of what we put together.
Sara Melnicoff
Biodiversity Hero
When Sara Melnicoff saw the bare hillside surrounding the Moab Community Recycling Center, she had an idea. With the help of the Utah Native Plant Society, volunteers rescued about 60 native plants from a nearby construction site. These plants were added to the hillside surrounding the recycling center. Today, her efforts have preserved the natural biodiversity of the landscape.
We invite you to come view the exhibit at Loveland Living Planet Aquarium once it is fully installed, by the end of summer. Please contact me if you plan to visit. I will arrange a free admissions ticket for your visit.
Thank you for the difference you make and the inspiration your actions provide to everyone!
UGH! It is over 103 and it's only early June! This is the hardest part of the year for me, as I love cool temps and winter. I have been getting up at 5 or 5:30 a.m. and going to do my recycle rounds and visit the canyon for the sheer enjoyment of it, and to do a bit of clean up and daily trail maintenance. Very sad to report that the canyon is getting hammered in certain places as visitation is the highest ever. We struggle to keep user made trails naturalized and make sure folks get where they want to go on the actual trail.
We got this wonderful email notice recently:
I’m writing because Loveland Living Planet Aquarium is near completion of our new outdoor exhibit space called “Choices.” In this area, guests will be engaging with four separate kiosks that explore distinct areas of environmental concern that we want to motivate our guests to take action on. These areas are water use, air quality, plastic pollution, and biodiversity. In each kiosk, we highlight a story about a conservation hero.
Your story was selected to be used for this new exhibit! I’ve included a sample of what we put together.
Sara Melnicoff
Biodiversity Hero
When Sara Melnicoff saw the bare hillside surrounding the Moab Community Recycling Center, she had an idea. With the help of the Utah Native Plant Society, volunteers rescued about 60 native plants from a nearby construction site. These plants were added to the hillside surrounding the recycling center. Today, her efforts have preserved the natural biodiversity of the landscape.
We invite you to come view the exhibit at Loveland Living Planet Aquarium once it is fully installed, by the end of summer. Please contact me if you plan to visit. I will arrange a free admissions ticket for your visit.
Thank you for the difference you make and the inspiration your actions provide to everyone!

We were honored to be interviewed by Rachel Fixsen for the Moab Area Real Estate Magazine. This is from the May to June edition. Enjoy!

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A picture is worth???? A caption!
May 6, 2021
Started out the day picking up recycling at some FreeCycle sites, (see photos below), then painting out graffiti in the bathroom in the canyon, (see more photos below). Later, I got a call from a local advising me of a couple of homeless people who appeared to be camping on their property. They sent me a photo and I recognized the people. I went out to talk to one of them, who agreed to move in the morning, and to clean the camp up and save me the recycling! (Fingers crossed on that.) So instead of this organization having to call the police and have them take up time dealing with this issue, I was able to take care of things. I will, of course, report to my police liaison what occurred, in case there are any other issues with this person.
A couple of things frustrated me today. I got a call for assistance for a problem with no current solution. A family, with young children, got notice they had to be out of their home in 30 days as the property was purchased to be used as employee housing for a local employer. There are no places to rent, no places to buy unless you have $400,000 or so. So many locals feel let down by what Moab has become. The homeless guy I had to talk to about moving camp asked me, "Where can I go?" I told him we are trying to work on something, but it is going to take quite some time until I can offer him a place to go. We are coming up empty on too many important issues.
The other frustration, is the lack of awareness of what can be recycled, and why recycling is important. At all of my FreeCycle sites, I check the trash cans and carefully remove any recyclables that end up in the trash can instead of the recycle bin. Sometimes there is more in the trash can even though it is right next to the recycle bin. I want to come up with a cool way to draw attention to the bins, using some of the materials that can be recycled. Wish me luck!
The wildflowers are off-the-hook beautiful. The sight and smell of them is refreshing for the soul. See even more photos below.
I love Moab and want to see it return to a little bit of what it once was...a peaceful place of incredible beauty that is always inspiring...
Started out the day picking up recycling at some FreeCycle sites, (see photos below), then painting out graffiti in the bathroom in the canyon, (see more photos below). Later, I got a call from a local advising me of a couple of homeless people who appeared to be camping on their property. They sent me a photo and I recognized the people. I went out to talk to one of them, who agreed to move in the morning, and to clean the camp up and save me the recycling! (Fingers crossed on that.) So instead of this organization having to call the police and have them take up time dealing with this issue, I was able to take care of things. I will, of course, report to my police liaison what occurred, in case there are any other issues with this person.
A couple of things frustrated me today. I got a call for assistance for a problem with no current solution. A family, with young children, got notice they had to be out of their home in 30 days as the property was purchased to be used as employee housing for a local employer. There are no places to rent, no places to buy unless you have $400,000 or so. So many locals feel let down by what Moab has become. The homeless guy I had to talk to about moving camp asked me, "Where can I go?" I told him we are trying to work on something, but it is going to take quite some time until I can offer him a place to go. We are coming up empty on too many important issues.
The other frustration, is the lack of awareness of what can be recycled, and why recycling is important. At all of my FreeCycle sites, I check the trash cans and carefully remove any recyclables that end up in the trash can instead of the recycle bin. Sometimes there is more in the trash can even though it is right next to the recycle bin. I want to come up with a cool way to draw attention to the bins, using some of the materials that can be recycled. Wish me luck!
The wildflowers are off-the-hook beautiful. The sight and smell of them is refreshing for the soul. See even more photos below.
I love Moab and want to see it return to a little bit of what it once was...a peaceful place of incredible beauty that is always inspiring...
Pure bliss...desert wildflowers...
I had to place cardboard over the opening in the window to block out the sun so the graffiti would show up better.
I want to design really cool and artistic art/signs for bins so folks see what can be recycled. In this trash can were glass bottles, aluminum cans, plastic water bottles, and milk jugs.
April 17, 2021
We had the most success ever on Potato Salad Hill this year! Due in large part to Sheriff Steve White and his deputies, the land enjoyed the most protection it has seen in years. We barely had to rake out any tracks. The litter was minimal, but I did hire folks to work the Friday and Saturday before Easter. Carey Jones worked alone on Friday, keeping the recycling sorted and gathering up litter. On Saturday we hired two woman, Blake and Elle, who are interns with Community Rebuilds. They were fantastic. The two of them worked on Saturday, and then one of them helped me with the cleanup time on Monday, after the crowds were gone. It was a lifesaver.
I had mentioned to Blake that I used to go in the dumpster to rescue recycling, but was too tired to do so this year. I had to do all the set up and prep work alone. Unbeknownst to me, she decided to rescue the recycling, which was a wonderful surprise. I have a lot of hope when I meet people like Blake and Elle.
We had the most success ever on Potato Salad Hill this year! Due in large part to Sheriff Steve White and his deputies, the land enjoyed the most protection it has seen in years. We barely had to rake out any tracks. The litter was minimal, but I did hire folks to work the Friday and Saturday before Easter. Carey Jones worked alone on Friday, keeping the recycling sorted and gathering up litter. On Saturday we hired two woman, Blake and Elle, who are interns with Community Rebuilds. They were fantastic. The two of them worked on Saturday, and then one of them helped me with the cleanup time on Monday, after the crowds were gone. It was a lifesaver.
I had mentioned to Blake that I used to go in the dumpster to rescue recycling, but was too tired to do so this year. I had to do all the set up and prep work alone. Unbeknownst to me, she decided to rescue the recycling, which was a wonderful surprise. I have a lot of hope when I meet people like Blake and Elle.
Earth Day 51 is coming up on the 22nd. We will be celebrating at the Community Recycle Center on Saturday the 24th, from 9 to 1. In addition to Cash for Cans, where we pay .30 cents a pound for aluminum cans, we will have a collection box for pens/caps, markers/caps, highlighters, permanent markers/caps, wooden and mechanical pencils. The box, when full, will be shipped to TerraCycle, a great and innovative company. We invite you to explore their website.
I did a little bit of sign repair in the canyon recently. I like the "after" picture!
March 9, 2021
On this day in 2012, we officially became a nonprofit! Although we came together as a group on May 12, 2004, we were, by choice, a volunteer group without any official status. It was only after we began working with people experiencing homelessness, mental health challenges, and substance use disorder, that we realized that it was time to take the step and incorporate as a nonprofit. Thanks to Sarah Bauman, who helped us through the paperwork, it was a fairly painless process. Since then, we have refined and expanded our projects to encompass doing what is best for the planet, and for people. Visit our "Programs and Projects" page to learn more.
Easter Jeep Safari is on this year, which means that we will be doing our project at Potato Salad Hill again this year. It was kind of nice to have a year off after 16 consecutive years, but we are ready! We have some volunteers coming in who will help us get the hill area in good shape. We will be looking for folks to staff our table on Friday and Saturday, April 2 and 3. If you want to get involved, give us a call at 435-401-4685.
On this day in 2012, we officially became a nonprofit! Although we came together as a group on May 12, 2004, we were, by choice, a volunteer group without any official status. It was only after we began working with people experiencing homelessness, mental health challenges, and substance use disorder, that we realized that it was time to take the step and incorporate as a nonprofit. Thanks to Sarah Bauman, who helped us through the paperwork, it was a fairly painless process. Since then, we have refined and expanded our projects to encompass doing what is best for the planet, and for people. Visit our "Programs and Projects" page to learn more.
Easter Jeep Safari is on this year, which means that we will be doing our project at Potato Salad Hill again this year. It was kind of nice to have a year off after 16 consecutive years, but we are ready! We have some volunteers coming in who will help us get the hill area in good shape. We will be looking for folks to staff our table on Friday and Saturday, April 2 and 3. If you want to get involved, give us a call at 435-401-4685.
February 8, 2021
It is due (almost!) solely to the kindness of this community that Moab Solutions is able to give assistance to those in need. Your support has helped countless families and individuals stay in their apartments, obtain needed medicines and food, keep the heat on and the water flowing, and so much more. We help stranded travelers get home, saving the city and county resources, give temporary shelter to those out in the cold, and have helped dozens of people get into free drug and alcohol rehab.
Moab Solutions works with all area law enforcement agencies and is on call 24/7 in order to help them when they need help after normal business hours and on weekends. We regularly partner with, or get calls for assistance from, nonprofits, Moab Regional Hospital, agencies, churches, and individuals. We feel enormously fortunate to live in a community like Moab. A community with a big heart, and one that cares about those with the least among us.
2020 was a record breaking year for the Emergency Needs Fund administered by Moab Solutions. Even though others stepped up to provide rent relief, and funds were flowing to agencies and nonprofits, we still managed to spend a small fortune.
Our regular assists for 2020 totaled $35,100.77, about $8,000 more than normal years. Our Community Gifts Fund, a special account set up by donations intended to help those not eligible for other assistance, spent $32,770.
Total spent on assistance in 2020 was $67,870.77
We wanted to take this opportunity to thank everyone who sent in a check, donated through PayPal, handed me cash on the street, or who put money in our collection jar at City Market, We believe that challenges are byproducts caused unintentionally by society and can therefore be identified and solved by society.
We were honored to receive the Citizens Service Award from the Moab City Police recently. We are happy to be of assistance to law enforcement. We are all in this together.
It is due (almost!) solely to the kindness of this community that Moab Solutions is able to give assistance to those in need. Your support has helped countless families and individuals stay in their apartments, obtain needed medicines and food, keep the heat on and the water flowing, and so much more. We help stranded travelers get home, saving the city and county resources, give temporary shelter to those out in the cold, and have helped dozens of people get into free drug and alcohol rehab.
Moab Solutions works with all area law enforcement agencies and is on call 24/7 in order to help them when they need help after normal business hours and on weekends. We regularly partner with, or get calls for assistance from, nonprofits, Moab Regional Hospital, agencies, churches, and individuals. We feel enormously fortunate to live in a community like Moab. A community with a big heart, and one that cares about those with the least among us.
2020 was a record breaking year for the Emergency Needs Fund administered by Moab Solutions. Even though others stepped up to provide rent relief, and funds were flowing to agencies and nonprofits, we still managed to spend a small fortune.
Our regular assists for 2020 totaled $35,100.77, about $8,000 more than normal years. Our Community Gifts Fund, a special account set up by donations intended to help those not eligible for other assistance, spent $32,770.
Total spent on assistance in 2020 was $67,870.77
We wanted to take this opportunity to thank everyone who sent in a check, donated through PayPal, handed me cash on the street, or who put money in our collection jar at City Market, We believe that challenges are byproducts caused unintentionally by society and can therefore be identified and solved by society.
We were honored to receive the Citizens Service Award from the Moab City Police recently. We are happy to be of assistance to law enforcement. We are all in this together.

January 9, 2021
Happy Belated New Year! Let's hope for good things for the world in the coming years. We finished out 2020 on a high note. Our very scaled back fundraiser for people in need was more successful than we hoped for. With 19 volunteers instead of 50+, with many fewer hours, and fewer days, we raised almost $8,000 at City Market.
Those funds, plus private donations, plus a little cushion we have in the Emergency Needs Fund checking account, will enable us to help folks throughout 2021....we hope!
If every month is like December 2020, we're in trouble. We spent about $7,226 on a variety of urgent needs, much of it for rent and emergency lodging. Throw in utilities, food, medicine, gas, transportation for stranded travelers, and a miscellenous item or two, and it adds up. That is the most we have ever spent since I started doing this in 2010,
I think the stimulus checks, rent assistance programs, and other funds being released from the government through the states will help the local population a lot.
This is our thank you ad to the community and to our volunteers!
Happy Belated New Year! Let's hope for good things for the world in the coming years. We finished out 2020 on a high note. Our very scaled back fundraiser for people in need was more successful than we hoped for. With 19 volunteers instead of 50+, with many fewer hours, and fewer days, we raised almost $8,000 at City Market.
Those funds, plus private donations, plus a little cushion we have in the Emergency Needs Fund checking account, will enable us to help folks throughout 2021....we hope!
If every month is like December 2020, we're in trouble. We spent about $7,226 on a variety of urgent needs, much of it for rent and emergency lodging. Throw in utilities, food, medicine, gas, transportation for stranded travelers, and a miscellenous item or two, and it adds up. That is the most we have ever spent since I started doing this in 2010,
I think the stimulus checks, rent assistance programs, and other funds being released from the government through the states will help the local population a lot.
This is our thank you ad to the community and to our volunteers!

Check out this great photo and caption, in the Moab Sun News, of one of our volunteers, Liz Ballenger, on the last day of our fundraiser.
I was honored to receive the Thomas A. Martin Individual Recycler of the Year award. (See photo of the award below.) I was in very good company. Read the entire press release here to see what places like Intermountain Health Care and Deer Valley Resort are doing. Our own Community Recycle Center was awarded Local Government Recycler of the year. See article from the Moab Sun News here.
Individual: Sara Melnicoff, Moab Utah
Sara Melnicoff’s dedication towards active environmental stewardship through the non-profit organization, Moab Solutions, has brought countless benefits to the residents and businesses of Moab, Utah. Sara’s dedication to recycling is evident in her daily travels throughout the Moab community collecting recycling from private businesses and local non-profits for free. Sara takes the material she collects daily and delivers the (source-separated recyclables) to the Moab Community Recycle Center (CRC).
Sara does not accept payment for her services. In fact, the local Food Coop Moonflower Market, provides Sara with a monthly gift card for her services and the local newspaper provides discounted advertising; all of which she then donates to the local Solid Waste District to promote the Community Recycling Center and other sustainability initiatives. Sara’s long-term commitment, passion, and advocacy for the local CRC is admired and deeply appreciated by many in the community. By following her philosophy of zero-waste activism, the rural community of Grand County will continue to achieve a thriving environment for future generations. It is people like Sara who are committed to recycling that make a difference through their actions in our communities.
Brad Mertz, RCU Executive Director had this to say about Sara, “Sara Melnicoff is an inspiration. Not only does she believe in being a steward of the environment, she is an example of going above and beyond in her daily collections of recycleables, all of which she does for free. When she is offered gifts or recognition as a thank you, she thinks of others by using those tools to promote recycling even more. Sara is the kind of person who reflects positively on our industry and is well deserving of the Thomas A. Martin, Utah Recycler of the Year Award!”
Individual: Sara Melnicoff, Moab Utah
Sara Melnicoff’s dedication towards active environmental stewardship through the non-profit organization, Moab Solutions, has brought countless benefits to the residents and businesses of Moab, Utah. Sara’s dedication to recycling is evident in her daily travels throughout the Moab community collecting recycling from private businesses and local non-profits for free. Sara takes the material she collects daily and delivers the (source-separated recyclables) to the Moab Community Recycle Center (CRC).
Sara does not accept payment for her services. In fact, the local Food Coop Moonflower Market, provides Sara with a monthly gift card for her services and the local newspaper provides discounted advertising; all of which she then donates to the local Solid Waste District to promote the Community Recycling Center and other sustainability initiatives. Sara’s long-term commitment, passion, and advocacy for the local CRC is admired and deeply appreciated by many in the community. By following her philosophy of zero-waste activism, the rural community of Grand County will continue to achieve a thriving environment for future generations. It is people like Sara who are committed to recycling that make a difference through their actions in our communities.
Brad Mertz, RCU Executive Director had this to say about Sara, “Sara Melnicoff is an inspiration. Not only does she believe in being a steward of the environment, she is an example of going above and beyond in her daily collections of recycleables, all of which she does for free. When she is offered gifts or recognition as a thank you, she thinks of others by using those tools to promote recycling even more. Sara is the kind of person who reflects positively on our industry and is well deserving of the Thomas A. Martin, Utah Recycler of the Year Award!”
December 14, 2020
12/21/2020 This is the latest entry I have ever made! There has been a lot of activity around our fundraising efforts at City Market, and for many days we had call after call after call for assistance. So besides the latest entry, it will be the shortest!
We love Moab and the way the community steps up to help those in need. We are getting lots of private donations and lots of public donations at our City Market table, which we only have out a few days a week. Covid precautions. We want to keep our volunteers and the public safe.
12/21/2020 This is the latest entry I have ever made! There has been a lot of activity around our fundraising efforts at City Market, and for many days we had call after call after call for assistance. So besides the latest entry, it will be the shortest!
We love Moab and the way the community steps up to help those in need. We are getting lots of private donations and lots of public donations at our City Market table, which we only have out a few days a week. Covid precautions. We want to keep our volunteers and the public safe.
November 2, 2020
We were thrilled to be chosen as the "Round Up at the Register" nonprofit at Moonflower Community Cooperative this month. The round up started yesterday and will run until close of business on the 14th. When you make a purchase, you will be asked if you want to round up to the dollar. This is a great way to raise money to help us further our projects in the community. Moonflower is an amazing partner and we love them!
We were thrilled to be chosen as the "Round Up at the Register" nonprofit at Moonflower Community Cooperative this month. The round up started yesterday and will run until close of business on the 14th. When you make a purchase, you will be asked if you want to round up to the dollar. This is a great way to raise money to help us further our projects in the community. Moonflower is an amazing partner and we love them!
Orchard cleanup, take two
One of our projects is called "Volunteer Vacation". People visiting Moab can spend an hour or two helping us with a variety of projects. The Howard family from the Salt Lake City area wanted to help us with the last huge and abandoned camp in the old orchard between the hospital and the Grand Center. And it was a doozy!
We saved all items that could be recycled, and had to put the rest in a landfill-bound dumpster. But now, that area is looking so much better!
One of our projects is called "Volunteer Vacation". People visiting Moab can spend an hour or two helping us with a variety of projects. The Howard family from the Salt Lake City area wanted to help us with the last huge and abandoned camp in the old orchard between the hospital and the Grand Center. And it was a doozy!
We saved all items that could be recycled, and had to put the rest in a landfill-bound dumpster. But now, that area is looking so much better!
Good friends are a great gift! My friend Holly came to visit recently. Not only did she expertly help roll barbed wire I needed removed from the property where I live, she also got a start on picking up some of the hundreds of pieces of broken glass on the back part of the property. As if that wasn't more than enough, she helped me with the annual autumn ritual of removing cans and bottles flung under trees and bushes in the canyon that become visible as the seasons change. Here she is, pictured with a bunch of containers that we had to go to great lengths to remove. These were from past the Powerdam structure to the confluence. THANKS HOLLY!
October 4, 2020
We were honored to be invited to be one of the nonprofits meeting with some addiction medicine fellows, their attending, and an administrative staff member on Sept. 24. We showed them the remnants of a homeless camp near the hospital while talking about the challenges in this community, and then found a few of the homeless hanging out on the Parkway. The fellows got to meet and talk with them. Here is some information about their visit to Moab from our addiction specialist psychiatrist, Dr. Lauren Prest:
"University of Utah Addiction Fellows will be visiting Moab to better understand our community needs and discuss how they might be helpful or contribute to your work. Ultimately, these fellows are looking to spend a significant amount of their training working with rural populations, so I am so grateful for your willingness to meet with them! Their training year would begin in 2021, so this visit will be an opportunity to give them a tour of the work you do and consider ways an addiction trained doctor might contribute to your work."
It is exciting to see this field of medicine growing, as addiction rates are soaring. We hope some of the fellows come down to Moab when they are done their training.
We were honored to be invited to be one of the nonprofits meeting with some addiction medicine fellows, their attending, and an administrative staff member on Sept. 24. We showed them the remnants of a homeless camp near the hospital while talking about the challenges in this community, and then found a few of the homeless hanging out on the Parkway. The fellows got to meet and talk with them. Here is some information about their visit to Moab from our addiction specialist psychiatrist, Dr. Lauren Prest:
"University of Utah Addiction Fellows will be visiting Moab to better understand our community needs and discuss how they might be helpful or contribute to your work. Ultimately, these fellows are looking to spend a significant amount of their training working with rural populations, so I am so grateful for your willingness to meet with them! Their training year would begin in 2021, so this visit will be an opportunity to give them a tour of the work you do and consider ways an addiction trained doctor might contribute to your work."
It is exciting to see this field of medicine growing, as addiction rates are soaring. We hope some of the fellows come down to Moab when they are done their training.
For this month's diary, I am going to let a few pictures tell the tale of a thousand words, with just a few of mine.
September 5, 2020
Moab Solutions has been part of the Mill Creek Community Collaborative for two years. The group is reaching out to the community to get reactions and comments on the four plans that were developed during that time. Consider taking the survey and sharing this with your friends. Make your voice heard!
Moab Solutions supports Option A, which offers the most protection for the canyon. With some small measures put in place, this option could be an example of how to protect land and educate visitors as to why numbers must be limited, say by the number of parking spaces, for example.
I fear that there is a plan in place to connect the in-town parkway with the Nature Conservancy Preserve on one side, and the Powerdam section of the canyon on the other, which would cause grievous harm to all three areas. Connectivity isn't always a good thing! (Recently it came to light that there was a plan in place to "develop" the parkway into an "outdoor recreation corridor" with multiple bike skills areas. The horrific phase one has already destroyed a special part of the parkway. We brought the greater plan to light and presented it to the public, many of whom were horrified and heartbroken. Now it may not be so easy for the county and the city to install more of these monstrosities, to the determent of the land.)
We need to educated folks about the fragile nature of desert ecosystems, so that people get more out of their experience, and learn how to enjoy the land without harming it.
Link to the options and link to the survey mentioned in the poster below.
Moab Solutions has been part of the Mill Creek Community Collaborative for two years. The group is reaching out to the community to get reactions and comments on the four plans that were developed during that time. Consider taking the survey and sharing this with your friends. Make your voice heard!
Moab Solutions supports Option A, which offers the most protection for the canyon. With some small measures put in place, this option could be an example of how to protect land and educate visitors as to why numbers must be limited, say by the number of parking spaces, for example.
I fear that there is a plan in place to connect the in-town parkway with the Nature Conservancy Preserve on one side, and the Powerdam section of the canyon on the other, which would cause grievous harm to all three areas. Connectivity isn't always a good thing! (Recently it came to light that there was a plan in place to "develop" the parkway into an "outdoor recreation corridor" with multiple bike skills areas. The horrific phase one has already destroyed a special part of the parkway. We brought the greater plan to light and presented it to the public, many of whom were horrified and heartbroken. Now it may not be so easy for the county and the city to install more of these monstrosities, to the determent of the land.)
We need to educated folks about the fragile nature of desert ecosystems, so that people get more out of their experience, and learn how to enjoy the land without harming it.
Link to the options and link to the survey mentioned in the poster below.
August 5, 2020
My first employee....and I struck gold! Read about her below:
My name is Sam (she, her, hers) and I am a fourth-year student at the University of Utah. I recently finished up a B.S. in Environmental & Sustainability Studies, and am now 2 years away from finishing a B.S. in Geography and a B.S. in Environmental Geology. I initially wanted to be an Orthopedic Vet, but after taking some courses and working in a clinic I decided to drop being a Vet and fully dive into my Environmental & Sustainability degree. The other two degrees soon followed.
I am originally from Cortez, CO and spent my weekends coming over to my family’s place here in Moab. My childhood life centered around the outdoors and swim team. I have now lived in SLC for the past 3 years, but due to the Pandemic and all courses moving to a remote online setting I decided to move down to Moab. What better place to be as a geologist! I also work part-time for a geology lab on campus as a research assistant to a Professor and Graduate student.
After spending all of June here by myself I was feeling pretty lonely due to social restrictions from the Pandemic and moving to a new town. I looked through the June issue of Moab Happenings and saw Moab Solutions. Intrigued I went to the website and instantly fell in love and was immensely inspired by the work being done and the mission statement behind what drives them to do what they do. I wanted to be a part of this lovely organization and give back to a community that helped shaped me into the outdoor loving, mother nature respecting, human caring person I am today.
My first employee....and I struck gold! Read about her below:
My name is Sam (she, her, hers) and I am a fourth-year student at the University of Utah. I recently finished up a B.S. in Environmental & Sustainability Studies, and am now 2 years away from finishing a B.S. in Geography and a B.S. in Environmental Geology. I initially wanted to be an Orthopedic Vet, but after taking some courses and working in a clinic I decided to drop being a Vet and fully dive into my Environmental & Sustainability degree. The other two degrees soon followed.
I am originally from Cortez, CO and spent my weekends coming over to my family’s place here in Moab. My childhood life centered around the outdoors and swim team. I have now lived in SLC for the past 3 years, but due to the Pandemic and all courses moving to a remote online setting I decided to move down to Moab. What better place to be as a geologist! I also work part-time for a geology lab on campus as a research assistant to a Professor and Graduate student.
After spending all of June here by myself I was feeling pretty lonely due to social restrictions from the Pandemic and moving to a new town. I looked through the June issue of Moab Happenings and saw Moab Solutions. Intrigued I went to the website and instantly fell in love and was immensely inspired by the work being done and the mission statement behind what drives them to do what they do. I wanted to be a part of this lovely organization and give back to a community that helped shaped me into the outdoor loving, mother nature respecting, human caring person I am today.
Bike Skills Park Update
Some horrible truth has come out about the Bike Skills Park, but it hasn't changed any of the plans! Turns out there has been an extensive plan in place to create an "outdoor recreation corridor", by adding at least two other bike skills stations, one at the Rotary Park area, another near the high school, in addition to the pivotal location we have been protesting on 100 East. There is also a possibility of redoing all of Anonymous Park.
The entire parkway would be heavily advertised to tourists, in an effort to get folks to stay here an extra day, rent bikes, attend skills camps, eat out and stay in our lodging accommodations. It is mind-blowing and wrong to mislead the public about the real intent of this skills park, in order to sacrifice an area beloved by many, and turn it into a money maker. Many in the community have withdrawn support for this park, and are extremely upset about the hidden plan that has surfaced. We are not going to give up fighting for this area to remain untouched, but the grading is scheduled to begin the week of August 10, so time is quickly running out.
A Day in the Life
It started around 5:30 a.m., when I forced myself to go to the laundromat. It is cool and uncrowded early in the morning. While my clothes were washing, I walked one of my dogs and picked up loads of trash and recycling along the way. While the clothes were drying, I walked the other dog, picking up more litter.
When my folded clothes were in the truck, I headed off to the post office to check my POB, I emptied my "FreeCycle" recycle bin while there. I then did two more "FreeCycle" pickups on my way to the Canyon to do my regular rounds....picking up trash and recycling, checking for trail damage, etc. Then off to the recycle center to deposit all the recycling. The staff was installing beautiful new collection container holders.
Came home and started on this update. While writing this I got a call from my Easter Seals trainee, (I train, Easter Seals pays), who told me he found a camp in a very public area. I met him at the camp. We organized all the scattered belongings into a neat pile, then left a note offering assistance to the people if they needed any, then did more cleanup around the area. The people came back while we were still there, so I met them, offered to help them. They asked for tickets to get home to Glenwood Springs, CO. I am in the process of getting them a ride to the train platform, which is an hour away, and the tickets. All this and it is only 11:30!
Nap time!!!
Some horrible truth has come out about the Bike Skills Park, but it hasn't changed any of the plans! Turns out there has been an extensive plan in place to create an "outdoor recreation corridor", by adding at least two other bike skills stations, one at the Rotary Park area, another near the high school, in addition to the pivotal location we have been protesting on 100 East. There is also a possibility of redoing all of Anonymous Park.
The entire parkway would be heavily advertised to tourists, in an effort to get folks to stay here an extra day, rent bikes, attend skills camps, eat out and stay in our lodging accommodations. It is mind-blowing and wrong to mislead the public about the real intent of this skills park, in order to sacrifice an area beloved by many, and turn it into a money maker. Many in the community have withdrawn support for this park, and are extremely upset about the hidden plan that has surfaced. We are not going to give up fighting for this area to remain untouched, but the grading is scheduled to begin the week of August 10, so time is quickly running out.
A Day in the Life
It started around 5:30 a.m., when I forced myself to go to the laundromat. It is cool and uncrowded early in the morning. While my clothes were washing, I walked one of my dogs and picked up loads of trash and recycling along the way. While the clothes were drying, I walked the other dog, picking up more litter.
When my folded clothes were in the truck, I headed off to the post office to check my POB, I emptied my "FreeCycle" recycle bin while there. I then did two more "FreeCycle" pickups on my way to the Canyon to do my regular rounds....picking up trash and recycling, checking for trail damage, etc. Then off to the recycle center to deposit all the recycling. The staff was installing beautiful new collection container holders.
Came home and started on this update. While writing this I got a call from my Easter Seals trainee, (I train, Easter Seals pays), who told me he found a camp in a very public area. I met him at the camp. We organized all the scattered belongings into a neat pile, then left a note offering assistance to the people if they needed any, then did more cleanup around the area. The people came back while we were still there, so I met them, offered to help them. They asked for tickets to get home to Glenwood Springs, CO. I am in the process of getting them a ride to the train platform, which is an hour away, and the tickets. All this and it is only 11:30!
Nap time!!!
July 6, 2020
Moab has 20 cases of COVID. Five active, 15 recovered. Most community members are being very careful. Wearing masks can help a lot, so we hope folks will do it willingly to help themselves and those around them. With so many states seeing surges, I wonder how long until we to into another shut down. Tourists are pouring in, as if nothing is wrong whatsoever. Is Rome burning or is someone cooking dinner?
Bike Skills Park. This has been a very sad time for the community. Many people feel a deep attachment to the section of the parkway that the city/county want to alter forever by grading it and removing trees to make way for a bike skills park that could be placed in other areas. This tranquil section of the parkway is a wildlife corridor, offers habitat in a world where wildlife habitat is shrinking, and is a riparian area, in a floodplain and a flood-way.
I have heard from artists, teachers, business owners, retired professionals, bicyclists, and others who are heartbroken about the very real possibility of this happening soon. I am still fighting it as much as I can, but this is one hard battle. What makes me sad is that we are robbing our children of an unspoiled area, a gift they can give to their children's children. What are we teaching kids when adults normalize destroying natural areas for playgrounds? Fingers crossed they will move this to a better location.
Homeless. There seems to be more homeless around lately. It looks like a few folks lost their housing and are back out on the street with the other chronic homeless. These folks are human beings, although they are often lumped together as one group of undesirables. I am working on ways to show that there is a common thread running through humanity...Then we need to provide services that will help create a healing environment so people can move forward.
Moab has 20 cases of COVID. Five active, 15 recovered. Most community members are being very careful. Wearing masks can help a lot, so we hope folks will do it willingly to help themselves and those around them. With so many states seeing surges, I wonder how long until we to into another shut down. Tourists are pouring in, as if nothing is wrong whatsoever. Is Rome burning or is someone cooking dinner?
Bike Skills Park. This has been a very sad time for the community. Many people feel a deep attachment to the section of the parkway that the city/county want to alter forever by grading it and removing trees to make way for a bike skills park that could be placed in other areas. This tranquil section of the parkway is a wildlife corridor, offers habitat in a world where wildlife habitat is shrinking, and is a riparian area, in a floodplain and a flood-way.
I have heard from artists, teachers, business owners, retired professionals, bicyclists, and others who are heartbroken about the very real possibility of this happening soon. I am still fighting it as much as I can, but this is one hard battle. What makes me sad is that we are robbing our children of an unspoiled area, a gift they can give to their children's children. What are we teaching kids when adults normalize destroying natural areas for playgrounds? Fingers crossed they will move this to a better location.
Homeless. There seems to be more homeless around lately. It looks like a few folks lost their housing and are back out on the street with the other chronic homeless. These folks are human beings, although they are often lumped together as one group of undesirables. I am working on ways to show that there is a common thread running through humanity...Then we need to provide services that will help create a healing environment so people can move forward.
June 13, 2020
This entry is late because I am feeling sad and defeated. I found out, very late in the game, that a project is planned on the Mill Creek Parkway that will destroy a riparian area, remove many trees, and forever alter a very special area of the parkway. If that isn't enough to break your heart, it is also in a floodplain and a flood-way! Most folks didn't know anything about this, and are very upset that this is happening. I am trying to stop it. Active Transportation and Trails, (ATT) which works closely with Trail Mix, worked to put together grants and city/county cooperation to create a bike skills park on one of the most pleasant areas of the parkway. There are other locations that could be used for this skills park, but it will be a huge challenge to try to stop this at this point in time. Many things were flawed in this process. For one thing, Moab Solutions, a 16 year partner with the city on Friends of the Parkway, wasn't even informed of this when it was decided on in November of 2019.
We asked the city to hold a public hearing so all the people who just learned about his would have an opportunity to be heard, but only one council member voted to have a hearing.
Moab Solutions and countless volunteers have worked very hard and with joy over the last 16 years to keep the parkway clean. We dealt with the very complex issues of homelessness,mental health challenges, and addiction when we decided to try to help the homeless living along the creek area. That was in 2008 and we are still going strong in our efforts to help people move forward in life and explore their full potential.
Keep a thought in your heart for this gorgeous part of the parkway, home to wildlife, mature trees, and the sound of wind through leaves...
This entry is late because I am feeling sad and defeated. I found out, very late in the game, that a project is planned on the Mill Creek Parkway that will destroy a riparian area, remove many trees, and forever alter a very special area of the parkway. If that isn't enough to break your heart, it is also in a floodplain and a flood-way! Most folks didn't know anything about this, and are very upset that this is happening. I am trying to stop it. Active Transportation and Trails, (ATT) which works closely with Trail Mix, worked to put together grants and city/county cooperation to create a bike skills park on one of the most pleasant areas of the parkway. There are other locations that could be used for this skills park, but it will be a huge challenge to try to stop this at this point in time. Many things were flawed in this process. For one thing, Moab Solutions, a 16 year partner with the city on Friends of the Parkway, wasn't even informed of this when it was decided on in November of 2019.
We asked the city to hold a public hearing so all the people who just learned about his would have an opportunity to be heard, but only one council member voted to have a hearing.
Moab Solutions and countless volunteers have worked very hard and with joy over the last 16 years to keep the parkway clean. We dealt with the very complex issues of homelessness,mental health challenges, and addiction when we decided to try to help the homeless living along the creek area. That was in 2008 and we are still going strong in our efforts to help people move forward in life and explore their full potential.
Keep a thought in your heart for this gorgeous part of the parkway, home to wildlife, mature trees, and the sound of wind through leaves...
May 4, 2020
There are barely words adequate to express all the changes that this global pandemic has brought about. Here in Moab, there are 3 confirmed cases, no deaths in this county, but Utah has over 5,300 cases and climbing.
I feel as if nature is reacting to a situation that was close to making life on earth uninhabitable. Being shut down has been eye-opening in so many ways. All of the sudden, the Moab I moved to in January of 2000 was back....quiet, calm, peaceful, and always breathtakingly beautiful. Land, long hammered by hoards of visitors pounding it, recovering....beautifully. Cleaner air, clearer water, and did I mention quiet? Something golden and something becoming more and more rare.
Lowered air pollution is better for reducing the worst impacts of the virus on human lungs. And please, don't get me wrong, the suffering that is going on right now, all across the planet, is tragic. But what if the earth becomes uninhabitable? That is a very real threat. See this story from The Guardian.
It seems to me that the virus has exposed many cracks in our society. Where it is unfair, how it is unsustainable, how we have bartered our tranquility for dollars. I say we can have what we want and need without killing off the ability of the earth to support life. Instead of Profit, People, Planet, let's try for Planet, People, then Profit. We could have a much healthier life, with fairness for all.
Recycle Center Reopens!
The Community Recycle Center reopened on April 14, on a limited schedule. As of this writing, they are open on Tuesdays from 1 to 5 pm and on Saturdays from 8 am to 1 pm. They have a great system in place to ensure that staff and the public are safe. The next E-Waste collection is scheduled for June 13. The Household Hazardous Waste Day has been moved to August 8. See full information about both here.
There are barely words adequate to express all the changes that this global pandemic has brought about. Here in Moab, there are 3 confirmed cases, no deaths in this county, but Utah has over 5,300 cases and climbing.
I feel as if nature is reacting to a situation that was close to making life on earth uninhabitable. Being shut down has been eye-opening in so many ways. All of the sudden, the Moab I moved to in January of 2000 was back....quiet, calm, peaceful, and always breathtakingly beautiful. Land, long hammered by hoards of visitors pounding it, recovering....beautifully. Cleaner air, clearer water, and did I mention quiet? Something golden and something becoming more and more rare.
Lowered air pollution is better for reducing the worst impacts of the virus on human lungs. And please, don't get me wrong, the suffering that is going on right now, all across the planet, is tragic. But what if the earth becomes uninhabitable? That is a very real threat. See this story from The Guardian.
It seems to me that the virus has exposed many cracks in our society. Where it is unfair, how it is unsustainable, how we have bartered our tranquility for dollars. I say we can have what we want and need without killing off the ability of the earth to support life. Instead of Profit, People, Planet, let's try for Planet, People, then Profit. We could have a much healthier life, with fairness for all.
Recycle Center Reopens!
The Community Recycle Center reopened on April 14, on a limited schedule. As of this writing, they are open on Tuesdays from 1 to 5 pm and on Saturdays from 8 am to 1 pm. They have a great system in place to ensure that staff and the public are safe. The next E-Waste collection is scheduled for June 13. The Household Hazardous Waste Day has been moved to August 8. See full information about both here.
The Earth
Work in the canyon has been delightful. With so few visitors, the land had time to fully realize spring...native grasses and flowers everywhere, especially in a lot of the places that we worked hard to protect. With the slow reopening going on, we hope that the clear trails and the robust growth will help folks decide to stay on the trail. Below are two photos, one showing a flower with the most heavenly scent I have ever had the pleasure of taking in, and a mean message someone wrote on a wall, now erased.
Work in the canyon has been delightful. With so few visitors, the land had time to fully realize spring...native grasses and flowers everywhere, especially in a lot of the places that we worked hard to protect. With the slow reopening going on, we hope that the clear trails and the robust growth will help folks decide to stay on the trail. Below are two photos, one showing a flower with the most heavenly scent I have ever had the pleasure of taking in, and a mean message someone wrote on a wall, now erased.
April 2, 2020
WOW! What a difference a couple of weeks makes. We are living in a very strange and new "normal" as the COVID 19 virus spreads across the globe. My heart breaks for those suffering, and those caring for them. Here in Grand County, we have one very recently confirmed case to date. But I know the wave of positives is coming.
Moab now is very much like the Moab I moved to on January 23, 2000. Quiet. Calm. Beautiful. Much less noise, much less of a circus atmosphere. Much less exploitation of the land. Lower pollution levels. Starry skies. My deepest wish is that humanity can see clearly our impact on the air we breathe, the water we drink, the forests we destroy, the wildlife and plants we drive into extinction, and take a lesson. We, all life, is in this together, and the more we respect the commons, for all life, the healthier we all are.
Our Cash for Cans event, scheduled for Earth Day 50 will most likely be postponed. The recycle center has been closed for a couple of weeks as management determines the safest way forward. A limited opening may be coming soon. For locals, we urge you to hold onto your recyclables, or call me at 435-401-4685 for options.
WOW! What a difference a couple of weeks makes. We are living in a very strange and new "normal" as the COVID 19 virus spreads across the globe. My heart breaks for those suffering, and those caring for them. Here in Grand County, we have one very recently confirmed case to date. But I know the wave of positives is coming.
Moab now is very much like the Moab I moved to on January 23, 2000. Quiet. Calm. Beautiful. Much less noise, much less of a circus atmosphere. Much less exploitation of the land. Lower pollution levels. Starry skies. My deepest wish is that humanity can see clearly our impact on the air we breathe, the water we drink, the forests we destroy, the wildlife and plants we drive into extinction, and take a lesson. We, all life, is in this together, and the more we respect the commons, for all life, the healthier we all are.
Our Cash for Cans event, scheduled for Earth Day 50 will most likely be postponed. The recycle center has been closed for a couple of weeks as management determines the safest way forward. A limited opening may be coming soon. For locals, we urge you to hold onto your recyclables, or call me at 435-401-4685 for options.
March 12, 2020
As I write this, the Coronvirus is changing the global community in ways that are immeasurable. So far, there haven't been any cases in Moab, but several events have been cancelled, and it is possible that many more will be, as emergency meetings of our local councils and health departments take place. There is, of course, a lot of division about what to do, but anything that stops the spread will be a long-term positive result.
Usually, I would be gearing up for events at Potato Salad Hill. That may still happen, but at this point it is uncertain. So I will do some prep work and just take it day by day.
In the meantime, we continue working closely with the homeless population and the other agencies involved with that population as well. We were able to make it through the winter without any deaths by exposure, and that was a concerted effort that paid off.
We are continuously picking up recycling from a variety of locales, and doing trash pickups, but are exercising a bit more caution given the virus....
GOOD NEWS! We are working with the Solid Waste District to create an Earth Day 50 celebration event. Cash for Cans is back! Save your aluminum cans and trade them in for cash on April 18 from 8 to 1 at the Community Recycle Center. Stay tuned for more information about this and the other events coming up!
Mark your calendar for May 2, 2020. The Solid Waste District will host a Household Hazardous Waste day at the CRC. Take a look at the informationbelow.
As I write this, the Coronvirus is changing the global community in ways that are immeasurable. So far, there haven't been any cases in Moab, but several events have been cancelled, and it is possible that many more will be, as emergency meetings of our local councils and health departments take place. There is, of course, a lot of division about what to do, but anything that stops the spread will be a long-term positive result.
Usually, I would be gearing up for events at Potato Salad Hill. That may still happen, but at this point it is uncertain. So I will do some prep work and just take it day by day.
In the meantime, we continue working closely with the homeless population and the other agencies involved with that population as well. We were able to make it through the winter without any deaths by exposure, and that was a concerted effort that paid off.
We are continuously picking up recycling from a variety of locales, and doing trash pickups, but are exercising a bit more caution given the virus....
GOOD NEWS! We are working with the Solid Waste District to create an Earth Day 50 celebration event. Cash for Cans is back! Save your aluminum cans and trade them in for cash on April 18 from 8 to 1 at the Community Recycle Center. Stay tuned for more information about this and the other events coming up!
Mark your calendar for May 2, 2020. The Solid Waste District will host a Household Hazardous Waste day at the CRC. Take a look at the informationbelow.
February 5, 2020
It is OPT OUT time! Here is an ad that we have placed in local papers this month and last. We believe that source separated recycling is the absolute best for the planet. We want to support our almost 30 year old recycle center. Items you drop off at the Community Recycle Center are processed by type of material, in Moab, and then sent to Salt Lake City, except the cardboard, which goes to two different mills that process the material in the USA. The items that go to SLC stay mostly in the state. The plastics may on occasion go to Canada or Mexico, but it all stays in North America. Please invite your friends to learn about responsible recycling.
It is OPT OUT time! Here is an ad that we have placed in local papers this month and last. We believe that source separated recycling is the absolute best for the planet. We want to support our almost 30 year old recycle center. Items you drop off at the Community Recycle Center are processed by type of material, in Moab, and then sent to Salt Lake City, except the cardboard, which goes to two different mills that process the material in the USA. The items that go to SLC stay mostly in the state. The plastics may on occasion go to Canada or Mexico, but it all stays in North America. Please invite your friends to learn about responsible recycling.
January 1, 2020
Happy New Year! We are happy to report that our 24 days of fundraising, which ended Christmas Eve, was a big success! We raised about $11,180 at our table at City Market, and another $7,500 in private donations. With an expected grant of $5,000 in June, and small private donations throughout the year, we feel confident we can answer dire needs for all of 2020 through our Emergency Needs Fund. We are very moved by the generous spirit of caring, alive and well in this community.
Moab Solutions received an honor from Moab Valley Multicultural Center. We were named their nonprofit partner of the year. We have been working together closely this past year, trying to get folks into housing, or keep them in housing they have now.
Working together works, as we can assess, refer, and assist more people together than we can alone. We would love to see ZERO homelessness in Moab, and will continue to work as hard as we can to make that happen.
Happy New Year! We are happy to report that our 24 days of fundraising, which ended Christmas Eve, was a big success! We raised about $11,180 at our table at City Market, and another $7,500 in private donations. With an expected grant of $5,000 in June, and small private donations throughout the year, we feel confident we can answer dire needs for all of 2020 through our Emergency Needs Fund. We are very moved by the generous spirit of caring, alive and well in this community.
Moab Solutions received an honor from Moab Valley Multicultural Center. We were named their nonprofit partner of the year. We have been working together closely this past year, trying to get folks into housing, or keep them in housing they have now.
Working together works, as we can assess, refer, and assist more people together than we can alone. We would love to see ZERO homelessness in Moab, and will continue to work as hard as we can to make that happen.
Good WabiSabi news! Moab Solutions was picked, once again, to be one of WabiSabi's nonprofit partners for 2020. That means that when you shop at WabiSabi, and vote for Moab Solutions, we will get a donation. The thrift has been giving out the awards every month, which helps with all the things a nonprofit needs to do to get through the year. Thank you WabiSabi, a great store in a great community of nonprofits.
We are hoping for good things in 2020, especially with ways we can help heal the environment. Recycling responsibly is one great way to help. We like to say that "recycling is a gift we give the earth that comes back to us". Recycling at our local center, where all items are processed (by type of material) in Moab, and then shipped mainly to Salt Lake City, where a good deal of it stays in the state, is a much better option than single stream recycling, which is shipped to Denver, where a good portion is landfilled by the processor up there. They own a landfill, and a recycling sorting center. They get paid by the waste hauler for the recycling collected here in Moab, so it matters not to them that this messy method of recycling can cause as much as 50% to be landfilled.
We will be promoting an "Opt Out" of single stream campaign soon, as folks in Moab can opt out of the service twice a year, February being the next opportunity. We believe in recycling locally to support many local jobs, a much lower carbon footprint, and a better quality of recyclable materials being reused by the mills who buy the materials from our center to make new materials.
We will be promoting an "Opt Out" of single stream campaign soon, as folks in Moab can opt out of the service twice a year, February being the next opportunity. We believe in recycling locally to support many local jobs, a much lower carbon footprint, and a better quality of recyclable materials being reused by the mills who buy the materials from our center to make new materials.
December 15, 2019
Our Cash for Cans day was very successful. We gave out close to $600 to the folks bringing aluminum cans to the CRC on America Recycles Day. Read more about all the events during America Recycles Day on the recycle center's Facebook page. Moab Community Recycle Center
We started raising money for our Emergency Needs Fund the day after Thanksgiving. We will be at our fundraising table at City Market most days until Christmas Eve. Many volunteers are helping by taking one hour shifts. We even had a dinosaur come back from extinction to help us out. All funds go to address emergency needs within the community, and for the poor souls stranded here by some horrible misfortune. Enjoy the photos! (Click to see fuller photo.)
Our Cash for Cans day was very successful. We gave out close to $600 to the folks bringing aluminum cans to the CRC on America Recycles Day. Read more about all the events during America Recycles Day on the recycle center's Facebook page. Moab Community Recycle Center
We started raising money for our Emergency Needs Fund the day after Thanksgiving. We will be at our fundraising table at City Market most days until Christmas Eve. Many volunteers are helping by taking one hour shifts. We even had a dinosaur come back from extinction to help us out. All funds go to address emergency needs within the community, and for the poor souls stranded here by some horrible misfortune. Enjoy the photos! (Click to see fuller photo.)
Although we have a shortened season, as Thanksgiving was late this year, we are raising good amounts of money to help those in need. To date, we have raised approximately $12,980. About $6,316 of that is from the shoppers at City Market, who drop coins and bills into the jar on our table. The rest is from private donations and grants. We are in awe of the beauty of this community. We hope to hit our goal of at least $20,000, so wish us luck!!!
We continue to encourage people to use the Community Recycle Center over the single stream method offered by the waste hauler. Why? Single stream is very wasteful. Up to 50% of what goes in the single stream cart here in Moab ends up in Alpine's landfill in Denver, if it even gets that far. The hauler is probably removing as much as he can that can't be recycled, like plastics #3, 4, 6, and 7. Perhaps all the liquid soaked paper too. There is no way we can tell for certain, as private businesses are not transparent the way governmental entities and nonprofits are.
All items from the CRC, except cardboard, go to the broker in Salt Lake City. A lot of those materials stay in the state for processing. Occasionally, a little bit of material may go to Canada or Mexico, but mostly stays in the USA. The cardboard all stays in the USA and goes to two mills who process the materials here.
Plus, the CRC supports many local jobs. Keeping your recyclables within the county helps local workers, not ones up in Denver. Think it over!
We continue to encourage people to use the Community Recycle Center over the single stream method offered by the waste hauler. Why? Single stream is very wasteful. Up to 50% of what goes in the single stream cart here in Moab ends up in Alpine's landfill in Denver, if it even gets that far. The hauler is probably removing as much as he can that can't be recycled, like plastics #3, 4, 6, and 7. Perhaps all the liquid soaked paper too. There is no way we can tell for certain, as private businesses are not transparent the way governmental entities and nonprofits are.
All items from the CRC, except cardboard, go to the broker in Salt Lake City. A lot of those materials stay in the state for processing. Occasionally, a little bit of material may go to Canada or Mexico, but mostly stays in the USA. The cardboard all stays in the USA and goes to two mills who process the materials here.
Plus, the CRC supports many local jobs. Keeping your recyclables within the county helps local workers, not ones up in Denver. Think it over!
November 11, 2019
We are less than a week away (11/16) from our Cash for Cans day at the recycle center. I am looking forward to seeing how many people come up to visit our beautiful center and get paid for their aluminum cans.
On Friday the 15th, the Travel Council will host a table and give away their "Do It Like a Local" t-shirts and more. Moab Solutions will also have some giveaways, recycled reusable bags with scences from Arches National Park on them, organic chocolates, and raffle prizes.
See this flyer for full details:
We are less than a week away (11/16) from our Cash for Cans day at the recycle center. I am looking forward to seeing how many people come up to visit our beautiful center and get paid for their aluminum cans.
On Friday the 15th, the Travel Council will host a table and give away their "Do It Like a Local" t-shirts and more. Moab Solutions will also have some giveaways, recycled reusable bags with scences from Arches National Park on them, organic chocolates, and raffle prizes.
See this flyer for full details:

We are about to start getting ready for our annual fundraiser for the Emergency Needs Fund. We raise about half the money we need for the year at City Market. If you want to take an hour shift, let me know. We start just after Thanksgiving and go until Christmas Eve.
Is a Warming Center on the horizon? When we had a cold snap recently (12 degrees!), we scrambled to try to make sure everybody was safe. We would like to make sure that the homeless at risk make it through this winter, so we had an idea to approach the city about using some of their space for a warming center. That center would open when the temperatures are low enough to be dangerous. It would be open in the evening until early morning. No frills, just a warm place to sleep. We are working out details on this, because it is complicated, so stay tuned!
Is a Warming Center on the horizon? When we had a cold snap recently (12 degrees!), we scrambled to try to make sure everybody was safe. We would like to make sure that the homeless at risk make it through this winter, so we had an idea to approach the city about using some of their space for a warming center. That center would open when the temperatures are low enough to be dangerous. It would be open in the evening until early morning. No frills, just a warm place to sleep. We are working out details on this, because it is complicated, so stay tuned!
October 23, 2019
This is a record! I am super late with this month's entry, but things have been hopping. I have been up to my eyeballs in recycling, as I am trying to get as much material as possible to our Community Recycling Center. I have been picking up, sorting, dropping off, in an almost constant cycle, while trying to maintain all the other projects of Moab Solutions. For example:
Working in Mill Creek Canyon...We held a work party day on 10/5 to remove tumbleweeds from the land before the Powerdam. We had a great group of volunteers and were able to remove hundreds of the weeds. Moonflower Market donated snacks, The Moab Area Watershed Partnership donated gloves, and the Weed Dept. brought a bit more food and their great removal efforts. We got a lot done and the native plants now have less competition and can thrive.
Today, a group of volunteers from a high school in Hollywood, who volunteer for the BLM every year, came out to remove tumbleweeds from the Potato Salad Hill area. They worked with the BLM and the Weed Dept. and had a very productive day.
Cash for Cans (Part Two) is coming! Plus, Shred Day. All in honor of America Recycles Day
In 2012 we held a Cash for Cans event at the recycle center. It was a big hit, so we are holding another one. We are also having a free shred day. See the flyers below for information. We hope to see you there!
This is a record! I am super late with this month's entry, but things have been hopping. I have been up to my eyeballs in recycling, as I am trying to get as much material as possible to our Community Recycling Center. I have been picking up, sorting, dropping off, in an almost constant cycle, while trying to maintain all the other projects of Moab Solutions. For example:
Working in Mill Creek Canyon...We held a work party day on 10/5 to remove tumbleweeds from the land before the Powerdam. We had a great group of volunteers and were able to remove hundreds of the weeds. Moonflower Market donated snacks, The Moab Area Watershed Partnership donated gloves, and the Weed Dept. brought a bit more food and their great removal efforts. We got a lot done and the native plants now have less competition and can thrive.
Today, a group of volunteers from a high school in Hollywood, who volunteer for the BLM every year, came out to remove tumbleweeds from the Potato Salad Hill area. They worked with the BLM and the Weed Dept. and had a very productive day.
Cash for Cans (Part Two) is coming! Plus, Shred Day. All in honor of America Recycles Day
In 2012 we held a Cash for Cans event at the recycle center. It was a big hit, so we are holding another one. We are also having a free shred day. See the flyers below for information. We hope to see you there!
September 4, 2019
Almost, but not quite! The heat will break next week, and the sweet promise of autumn will fill the air with a cool breeze! As I write this, a storm is brewing. Hopefully, it will actually rain, and the thirsty ground can soak up some much needed water.
I got some funding that will allow me to do a lot of trail work in Mill Creek Canyon starting next week. There are plenty of user made trails to erase, weeds to pull, and brush to cut back. The poison ivy really needs to be cut back, a task I approach with great caution. So far I have been lucky!
Almost, but not quite! The heat will break next week, and the sweet promise of autumn will fill the air with a cool breeze! As I write this, a storm is brewing. Hopefully, it will actually rain, and the thirsty ground can soak up some much needed water.
I got some funding that will allow me to do a lot of trail work in Mill Creek Canyon starting next week. There are plenty of user made trails to erase, weeds to pull, and brush to cut back. The poison ivy really needs to be cut back, a task I approach with great caution. So far I have been lucky!
August 13, 2019
The heat has been getting to us, here in Moab. We had a very wet winter, and a cool wet spring, but then BOOM, we were in it and it has been hot. We are nearing the point where the heat will break, people will feel semi-normal again, and energy levels will increase. (I hope!)
Since single stream recycling came to Moab, I have been very busy doing FreeCycle pickups of recycling to take to our beautiful local Community Recycle Center. Knowing the materials there are processed by type and kept in the US, mostly in Utah, is a very good thing. I have a few free public bins that I service, and do pickups for friends, neighbors, nonprofits, businesses, and others. Single stream has taken over in many places across the USA and that is not good for recycling. Much of the material ends up landfilled because of contamination, or sent to Asian countries for processing in environmentally unsound ways. And, the CRC is only here because of the blood, sweat, and many tears of dedicated folks since its founding in 1991. The center is in the best shape ever, and can accept and process a myriad of materials. Thanks for recycling at the CRC. If you aren't, consider a visit there to see how nice it is now. Make sure and check out the Recycle Garden! It full of flourishing plants, grasses, and flowers.
The heat has been getting to us, here in Moab. We had a very wet winter, and a cool wet spring, but then BOOM, we were in it and it has been hot. We are nearing the point where the heat will break, people will feel semi-normal again, and energy levels will increase. (I hope!)
Since single stream recycling came to Moab, I have been very busy doing FreeCycle pickups of recycling to take to our beautiful local Community Recycle Center. Knowing the materials there are processed by type and kept in the US, mostly in Utah, is a very good thing. I have a few free public bins that I service, and do pickups for friends, neighbors, nonprofits, businesses, and others. Single stream has taken over in many places across the USA and that is not good for recycling. Much of the material ends up landfilled because of contamination, or sent to Asian countries for processing in environmentally unsound ways. And, the CRC is only here because of the blood, sweat, and many tears of dedicated folks since its founding in 1991. The center is in the best shape ever, and can accept and process a myriad of materials. Thanks for recycling at the CRC. If you aren't, consider a visit there to see how nice it is now. Make sure and check out the Recycle Garden! It full of flourishing plants, grasses, and flowers.
The story of the amazing Kate of the Virginian Motel The manager of the Virginian Motel wanted to start recycling, so she contacted me for information about how to bring it to life. I was very happy to hear that the motel wanted to recycle, so I started working with her right away. We provided the small blue guest room bins, and the containers to sort the recycling into for transport to the Community Recycle Center. Kate is getting her staff on board, and has put in time sorting into the larger bins.
This very positive action will have far reaching impacts that are good for Moab, and the planet. We are very grateful for people like Kate who take the time to understand recycling on this scale and to make it happen. They are going to end up with very little trash, judging by the first few days of collecting recycling. We will update you as we work to make this system work. THANK YOU KATE!
This very positive action will have far reaching impacts that are good for Moab, and the planet. We are very grateful for people like Kate who take the time to understand recycling on this scale and to make it happen. They are going to end up with very little trash, judging by the first few days of collecting recycling. We will update you as we work to make this system work. THANK YOU KATE!
Saddest entry ever. July 7, 2019
My dear friend, and partner in "grime", Carol Hoggard, peacefully slipped from this world to the next on July 5. Her loving daughter Patti was at her side. Carol always saw the good in people, and because of that, she brought out the good in people.
We met in 2002 and walked hundreds of miles together on the highways and byways of the area, removing trash and recycling from the land. She and I spent a lot of time pulling recycling from trash cans and dumpsters, and servicing free recycling bins we installed at the ball park, the Old Spanish Trail Arena, and other places. David Morgan was usually right there with us on that.
Carol served on our board and lent Moab Solutions the respectability we needed in the early days to try to get our zero waste, cleanup, and recycling messages across to our beloved community.
Carol volunteered everywhere in the community, from Seekhaven to the Arts Festival. She was a tutor and a mentor for Grand Area Mentoring. She was a hospice volunteer, and would, at the drop of a hat, do whatever was needed to help out anyone in need. She was inspirational.
I love you Carol, and was honored to know you.
The photo is from a long ago highway cleanup. David Morgan is in the photo with Carol.
My dear friend, and partner in "grime", Carol Hoggard, peacefully slipped from this world to the next on July 5. Her loving daughter Patti was at her side. Carol always saw the good in people, and because of that, she brought out the good in people.
We met in 2002 and walked hundreds of miles together on the highways and byways of the area, removing trash and recycling from the land. She and I spent a lot of time pulling recycling from trash cans and dumpsters, and servicing free recycling bins we installed at the ball park, the Old Spanish Trail Arena, and other places. David Morgan was usually right there with us on that.
Carol served on our board and lent Moab Solutions the respectability we needed in the early days to try to get our zero waste, cleanup, and recycling messages across to our beloved community.
Carol volunteered everywhere in the community, from Seekhaven to the Arts Festival. She was a tutor and a mentor for Grand Area Mentoring. She was a hospice volunteer, and would, at the drop of a hat, do whatever was needed to help out anyone in need. She was inspirational.
I love you Carol, and was honored to know you.
The photo is from a long ago highway cleanup. David Morgan is in the photo with Carol.
June 8, 2019
Things are heating up in Moab and we are shifting gears to get up and out to the canyon early. Soon it will be too hot to be out (for me!) after 7 am or so. I will attempt to acclimate.
We had some great press coverage for our 15th anniversary, which I will share with you here:
Jenna Whetzel of the Moab Sun News, did this wonderful piece, and Molly Marcello of KZMU did this one. Thanks!
Trail work continues apace in Mill Creek. The area before the Powerdam has been worked on extensively, and we now need to have a little weeding work party to deal with the parking lot weeds. We had so much moisture this spring and winter that the weeds and wildflowers are abundant.
We were able to start trail repair and maintenance on a few areas on the right hand and the left hand trails near the confluence. Watch out for the poison ivy. It is thriving too!
Your Community Recycle Center is ready, willing, and able to accept your recyclables. Free drop off for residents. Check out the items accepted and the hours here! Support local jobs, local mills, and local recycling.
Hats off to Michele Hill! Michele is working at the local airport, Canyonlands Field Airport, and, as a loyal recycler, she started collecting and bringing in recycling from the office areas. She and I worked together to have two very nice bins installed in the public areas for use by the traveling public. What a great thing for people to see when they arrive in Moab....a recycle bin that will collect their can or bottle and be delivered to our own recycle center by volunteer labor.
Thank you Michele!
June 8, 2019
Things are heating up in Moab and we are shifting gears to get up and out to the canyon early. Soon it will be too hot to be out (for me!) after 7 am or so. I will attempt to acclimate.
We had some great press coverage for our 15th anniversary, which I will share with you here:
Jenna Whetzel of the Moab Sun News, did this wonderful piece, and Molly Marcello of KZMU did this one. Thanks!
Trail work continues apace in Mill Creek. The area before the Powerdam has been worked on extensively, and we now need to have a little weeding work party to deal with the parking lot weeds. We had so much moisture this spring and winter that the weeds and wildflowers are abundant.
We were able to start trail repair and maintenance on a few areas on the right hand and the left hand trails near the confluence. Watch out for the poison ivy. It is thriving too!
Your Community Recycle Center is ready, willing, and able to accept your recyclables. Free drop off for residents. Check out the items accepted and the hours here! Support local jobs, local mills, and local recycling.
Hats off to Michele Hill! Michele is working at the local airport, Canyonlands Field Airport, and, as a loyal recycler, she started collecting and bringing in recycling from the office areas. She and I worked together to have two very nice bins installed in the public areas for use by the traveling public. What a great thing for people to see when they arrive in Moab....a recycle bin that will collect their can or bottle and be delivered to our own recycle center by volunteer labor.
Thank you Michele!
May 12, 2019
Today is our 15th birthday! It is a day for reflection and assessment, as I think back over the years, to all we have tried to do to make the world a little bit better where we stand in it - from removing hundreds of thousands of pounds of trash and recycling from the streams, trails, highways and byways, to installing and maintaining hundreds of public bins, in various venues, some for years, for free, to striving to make recycling as easy, or easier, than wasting, to working with the homeless - doing street level outreach and case management, to volunteering with our beloved recycle center, to working with volunteer groups from across the country, to every moment being inspired to this work by the raw and fragile beauty of the natural world,
Thank you to the people who donate to Moab Solutions and help us keep on keeping on. We are especially grateful to the first foundation who "got" what we were doing and helped us help the homeless with a grant, The Carl George Bjorkman Foundation, and our contact here in Moab, Drake Taylor. To The Synergy Company, for supporting our work with the homeless and others in need. To Colin Fryer, for his generous support of our Emergency Needs Fund, to the Ruth H. Brown Foundation who made it possible for me to get a salary for the first time ever, back in 2013, by donating half the funds needed, to many others who have helped us continue and expand our projects.
Let's hope for 15 more years!
Today is our 15th birthday! It is a day for reflection and assessment, as I think back over the years, to all we have tried to do to make the world a little bit better where we stand in it - from removing hundreds of thousands of pounds of trash and recycling from the streams, trails, highways and byways, to installing and maintaining hundreds of public bins, in various venues, some for years, for free, to striving to make recycling as easy, or easier, than wasting, to working with the homeless - doing street level outreach and case management, to volunteering with our beloved recycle center, to working with volunteer groups from across the country, to every moment being inspired to this work by the raw and fragile beauty of the natural world,
Thank you to the people who donate to Moab Solutions and help us keep on keeping on. We are especially grateful to the first foundation who "got" what we were doing and helped us help the homeless with a grant, The Carl George Bjorkman Foundation, and our contact here in Moab, Drake Taylor. To The Synergy Company, for supporting our work with the homeless and others in need. To Colin Fryer, for his generous support of our Emergency Needs Fund, to the Ruth H. Brown Foundation who made it possible for me to get a salary for the first time ever, back in 2013, by donating half the funds needed, to many others who have helped us continue and expand our projects.
Let's hope for 15 more years!
April 12, 2019
We are full into tourist season now. Easter Jeep Safari is just around the corner, (as in it officially starts tomorrow), and work on our project, Common Thread/Operation Cooperation, starts in earnest on Thursday the 18th. We could use volunteers to help with early morning cleanups, raking out tracks, or working with staff at the recycle station.
We have been doing a lot of cleanups. Two homeless camps, both abandoned - one on the north side of the river, the other behind a billboard near the Rock Shop - were cleaned up. We also went behind the USU and along parts of the Parkway, and did a major cleanup from Rotary Park down to the dog park. Three of us worked for 2 hours each, and got a door out of the creek, and a tire that was on land near the waters. We also got loads of recyclables, which we took to our local Community Recycling Center, and we got a fair amount of trash too. See photos below
We are full into tourist season now. Easter Jeep Safari is just around the corner, (as in it officially starts tomorrow), and work on our project, Common Thread/Operation Cooperation, starts in earnest on Thursday the 18th. We could use volunteers to help with early morning cleanups, raking out tracks, or working with staff at the recycle station.
We have been doing a lot of cleanups. Two homeless camps, both abandoned - one on the north side of the river, the other behind a billboard near the Rock Shop - were cleaned up. We also went behind the USU and along parts of the Parkway, and did a major cleanup from Rotary Park down to the dog park. Three of us worked for 2 hours each, and got a door out of the creek, and a tire that was on land near the waters. We also got loads of recyclables, which we took to our local Community Recycling Center, and we got a fair amount of trash too. See photos below
We also worked with a great group of high school students from Telluride a few days ago. They were on a spring-break trip with the non-profit, True North, that leads youth groups on trips which include some community service. We picked the area known as Potato Salad Hill for our work site.
We split into two groups. Some of the students helped clean up the Styrofoam, plastic bags, cardboard, and other assorted items that blow out of the landfill on high wind days and end up in the washes along the road. We got four 40 gallon bags full of that stuff, in an area the size of a couple of city blocks. We have cleaned out these washes for over a decade. The items littered there are harmful to the natural world, and we are so happy to remove them. The new District Manager is looking at some litter fence solutions, which we would love!
Most of the other students worked to "beef" up the rock outlines that designate where the road is, and to protect the recovering native plants in this area. Once a year, hundreds of off-road vehicles visit this area. We try to maximize recycling, remove litter, and minimize off-road damage. See more info here.
We split into two groups. Some of the students helped clean up the Styrofoam, plastic bags, cardboard, and other assorted items that blow out of the landfill on high wind days and end up in the washes along the road. We got four 40 gallon bags full of that stuff, in an area the size of a couple of city blocks. We have cleaned out these washes for over a decade. The items littered there are harmful to the natural world, and we are so happy to remove them. The new District Manager is looking at some litter fence solutions, which we would love!
Most of the other students worked to "beef" up the rock outlines that designate where the road is, and to protect the recovering native plants in this area. Once a year, hundreds of off-road vehicles visit this area. We try to maximize recycling, remove litter, and minimize off-road damage. See more info here.
Earth Day 2019 falls the day after the last of the jeep week activities wind up. I will be removing the recycle bins, and signage that we post during the event. I am going to try to do a small cleanup along the in-town parkway system if I have any energy left! We encourage you to clean the streets around your neighborhood or along your favorite trail or canyon. Just a short clean up can make a huge positive difference!
Homeless and others in need: Our Local Homeless Coordinating Committee is working with the county to see if we can create a resource center and safe drop-in spot for the homeless and others needing services. Keep your fingers crossed. This could be a very good thing.
Our birthday is next month! Moab Solutions was founded on May 12, 2004. We are trying to come up with some good ideas for a birthday celebration.
Homeless and others in need: Our Local Homeless Coordinating Committee is working with the county to see if we can create a resource center and safe drop-in spot for the homeless and others needing services. Keep your fingers crossed. This could be a very good thing.
Our birthday is next month! Moab Solutions was founded on May 12, 2004. We are trying to come up with some good ideas for a birthday celebration.
March 2, 2019
We are getting a nice, soaking rain as I write this. We have been blessed with lots of snow, and it looks like we will be getting a lot of rain in the next week or so. I think we are going to have a fantastic wildflower season, and I am looking forward to that. I love winter, but spring is full of beautiful surprises that never fails to delight!
We are working hard in Mill Creek Canyon, trying to restore and maintain trails so that the fragile ecosystem is protected as best as it can be when hundreds of people stream into the place everyday at the height of the season. I am working with a great trail worker and looking to do some volunteer days soon. We will need to deal with weeds, and with cutting back brush along the main trail. Come join us! We will meet you at a time that works for you.
We are relieved that the City has given residents the ability to opt out of mandatory recycling. But I don't know if people who use the single stream method really understand how that works and how much waste is involved in collecting recycling mixed together, compacting it in the collection vehicle, placing it in a semi, driving that to Denver, and then having it processed at a MRF, where it is sorted by AI, robots, and humans. Because of all the liquids and food waste left in the containers, the paper is unusable in the USA. Actually, about 50% of the items recycled here in Moab will then be shipped to Asian countries, according to the MRF in Denver where our recycling will go. There, the practices involved in the recycling of things like plastics, cause water pollution and worse. Contrast that to our local center, in great shape, fully staffed with good and hard working people, ready and able to process your recycling, and accepting many items with plans for more to be added. Supporting our local center, and the good paying, year-round jobs it creates should be reason enough to patronize the center, but when you learn that almost all the materials, except cardboard, goes to Salt Lake City, and then stays mostly within the state for reprocessing, makes keeping recycling local a no-brainer. Check out and share this website, Moab Recycles, with your friends. We strive to keep it up-to-date with the latest from the Community Recycle Center.
We are very proud to be a WabiSabi Nonprofit Partner. The crew over at Wabi is fantastic and they have put together some great ways for the public to learn about their nonprofit partners, and for us to receive donations. I have been a huge fan of WabiSabi ever since Sarah Bauman started it back in 2002 (I think that was the year!). It is wonderful to see her original concept live on through the wonderful work the store is doing now. Thanks WabiSabi!
We are getting a nice, soaking rain as I write this. We have been blessed with lots of snow, and it looks like we will be getting a lot of rain in the next week or so. I think we are going to have a fantastic wildflower season, and I am looking forward to that. I love winter, but spring is full of beautiful surprises that never fails to delight!
We are working hard in Mill Creek Canyon, trying to restore and maintain trails so that the fragile ecosystem is protected as best as it can be when hundreds of people stream into the place everyday at the height of the season. I am working with a great trail worker and looking to do some volunteer days soon. We will need to deal with weeds, and with cutting back brush along the main trail. Come join us! We will meet you at a time that works for you.
We are relieved that the City has given residents the ability to opt out of mandatory recycling. But I don't know if people who use the single stream method really understand how that works and how much waste is involved in collecting recycling mixed together, compacting it in the collection vehicle, placing it in a semi, driving that to Denver, and then having it processed at a MRF, where it is sorted by AI, robots, and humans. Because of all the liquids and food waste left in the containers, the paper is unusable in the USA. Actually, about 50% of the items recycled here in Moab will then be shipped to Asian countries, according to the MRF in Denver where our recycling will go. There, the practices involved in the recycling of things like plastics, cause water pollution and worse. Contrast that to our local center, in great shape, fully staffed with good and hard working people, ready and able to process your recycling, and accepting many items with plans for more to be added. Supporting our local center, and the good paying, year-round jobs it creates should be reason enough to patronize the center, but when you learn that almost all the materials, except cardboard, goes to Salt Lake City, and then stays mostly within the state for reprocessing, makes keeping recycling local a no-brainer. Check out and share this website, Moab Recycles, with your friends. We strive to keep it up-to-date with the latest from the Community Recycle Center.
We are very proud to be a WabiSabi Nonprofit Partner. The crew over at Wabi is fantastic and they have put together some great ways for the public to learn about their nonprofit partners, and for us to receive donations. I have been a huge fan of WabiSabi ever since Sarah Bauman started it back in 2002 (I think that was the year!). It is wonderful to see her original concept live on through the wonderful work the store is doing now. Thanks WabiSabi!
February 17, 2019
Excuse the late entry. I was completely swept up in an effort to save recycling in Moab from what I felt was a fate worse than death....Single Stream Recycling. The City was contemplating making recycling mandatory for all households within the city limits, some 1,600 of them. Monument Waste, the waste haulers for our community, bid on offering recycling, but only through single stream, which I feel is the dirtiest form of recycling. I collaborated with expert partners from across the recycling field, and all of my research regarding single stream was confirmed. I then launched a campaign to inform the public about the possibility that their rates would go up from $11 to $13 per month, and that they would have to have a recycle bin that would take our recycling out of Moab and up to Denver, to be sorted at a MRF .
I placed ads in all the papers for two weeks, invited an expert to come answer questions from the community, and encouraged people to write to the city council letting them know how they felt about this situation. People turned out in record numbers to the council meeting where they were to vote on this. By then, the City had decided to allow residents to "opt out" of mandatory recycling, and to actually allow people to save money by getting a slightly smaller trash can, emptied every other week, instead of every week.
Moab Solutions plans to work closely with the recycle center, (which is in excellent condition, fully staffed with qualified employees, and caught up on all processing), to hold events, contests, and do remote collections in order to keep our local center healthy, keep providing good, year-round jobs, with benefits, and continue sending the bulk of the materials processed to Salt Lake City, where most of the items stay. All I can say is "Whew!"
Point in Time count (PIT): For three days in January, starting on the 24th, I sought out unsheltered homeless so I could ask them if they would allow me to fill out a form for the PIT. This is done every year across the USA and is a way to try to find out how many homeless there are here. I was able to find and get permission from 7 people to count them. Other agencies counted too, so when the final results for Grand County come out, I will post them here.
There are several unsheltered that do not wish to be counted, and others, living in cars, that are hard to find, so I would guess that there were at least as many that I did not find, and two that I know of for certain who would not consent to the count, out there.
Trail work: We are about to enter into some trail work to prepare Mill Creek for the upcoming visitor season. I have had the good fortune to be able to hire a very highly qualified trail worker, so look for improvements in the canyon soon.
Excuse the late entry. I was completely swept up in an effort to save recycling in Moab from what I felt was a fate worse than death....Single Stream Recycling. The City was contemplating making recycling mandatory for all households within the city limits, some 1,600 of them. Monument Waste, the waste haulers for our community, bid on offering recycling, but only through single stream, which I feel is the dirtiest form of recycling. I collaborated with expert partners from across the recycling field, and all of my research regarding single stream was confirmed. I then launched a campaign to inform the public about the possibility that their rates would go up from $11 to $13 per month, and that they would have to have a recycle bin that would take our recycling out of Moab and up to Denver, to be sorted at a MRF .
I placed ads in all the papers for two weeks, invited an expert to come answer questions from the community, and encouraged people to write to the city council letting them know how they felt about this situation. People turned out in record numbers to the council meeting where they were to vote on this. By then, the City had decided to allow residents to "opt out" of mandatory recycling, and to actually allow people to save money by getting a slightly smaller trash can, emptied every other week, instead of every week.
Moab Solutions plans to work closely with the recycle center, (which is in excellent condition, fully staffed with qualified employees, and caught up on all processing), to hold events, contests, and do remote collections in order to keep our local center healthy, keep providing good, year-round jobs, with benefits, and continue sending the bulk of the materials processed to Salt Lake City, where most of the items stay. All I can say is "Whew!"
Point in Time count (PIT): For three days in January, starting on the 24th, I sought out unsheltered homeless so I could ask them if they would allow me to fill out a form for the PIT. This is done every year across the USA and is a way to try to find out how many homeless there are here. I was able to find and get permission from 7 people to count them. Other agencies counted too, so when the final results for Grand County come out, I will post them here.
There are several unsheltered that do not wish to be counted, and others, living in cars, that are hard to find, so I would guess that there were at least as many that I did not find, and two that I know of for certain who would not consent to the count, out there.
Trail work: We are about to enter into some trail work to prepare Mill Creek for the upcoming visitor season. I have had the good fortune to be able to hire a very highly qualified trail worker, so look for improvements in the canyon soon.
January 7, 2019
Happy New Year to all!
We had a very successful fundraiser for our Emergency Needs Fund. 55 volunteers helped us fill the coffers at our table at City Market from the day after Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve. We raised $11,125.00 at City Market, and a little more than that through private donations. When you add in a grant we will most likely receive later this year, we have exceeded our goal of $25,000! See the thank you ad we placed in the Moab Sun News, the Ad-Vertiser, and the Times-Independent.
Happy New Year to all!
We had a very successful fundraiser for our Emergency Needs Fund. 55 volunteers helped us fill the coffers at our table at City Market from the day after Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve. We raised $11,125.00 at City Market, and a little more than that through private donations. When you add in a grant we will most likely receive later this year, we have exceeded our goal of $25,000! See the thank you ad we placed in the Moab Sun News, the Ad-Vertiser, and the Times-Independent.
In addition to raising funds for our emergency fund, we were able to get in some trail work, volunteer some at the recycle center, deal with a very large assist involving over a dozen people, walk along the parkway, and, best of all, get great help from Girl Scout Troop "Daisy Troop #572". We all got together on Saturday the 5th - 6 girl scouts, four parents, and siblings of the scouts. We split up into three groups and walked different areas of the parkway looking for trash and recycling. Because of the cold weather and snow, we didn't find as much as we would find in the warmer weather, but we did find trash and recycling on all sections we walked. The troop decided that they wanted to do the same section again when the weather is warmer and note the difference. Thanks Girls!!!
Homeless News The Point in Time (PIT) count is coming up. This is a nationwide effort to count homeless across the USA. Moab Solutions works on looking for the unsheltered homeless. We have had a cold and snowy winter, which is hard on the aging homeless population. A couple of the guys are in jail for a few months, which may just save their lives. We are hoping to find a more positive alternative. Stay tuned!
In addition to raising funds for our emergency fund, we were able to get in some trail work, volunteer some at the recycle center, deal with a very large assist involving over a dozen people, walk along the parkway, and, best of all, get great help from Girl Scout Troop "Daisy Troop #572". We all got together on Saturday the 5th - 6 girl scouts, four parents, and siblings of the scouts. We split up into three groups and walked different areas of the parkway looking for trash and recycling. Because of the cold weather and snow, we didn't find as much as we would find in the warmer weather, but we did find trash and recycling on all sections we walked. The troop decided that they wanted to do the same section again when the weather is warmer and note the difference. Thanks Girls!!!
Homeless News The Point in Time (PIT) count is coming up. This is a nationwide effort to count homeless across the USA. Moab Solutions works on looking for the unsheltered homeless. We have had a cold and snowy winter, which is hard on the aging homeless population. A couple of the guys are in jail for a few months, which may just save their lives. We are hoping to find a more positive alternative. Stay tuned!
December 12, 2018
Another late entry, but forgive me, things have been extraordinarily robust. We are doing daily, except for Sunday, fundraising over at City Market for our Emergency Needs Fund. We raise about half of the $25,000 we need to make it through one year. We have a wonderful group of volunteers who have stepped up to volunteer with us. We made the shifts one - one and a half hours so that is much more tolerable than the two hour shifts we have had in the past. And we are over halfway to reaching our goal with this effort. City Market has been amazing.
This is my favorite time of the year in certain respects. Main Street is often empty, the air is clean and fresh, the light is off-the-charts gorgeous, and the community reemerges or is just easier to see as the tourism slows way down. This is the community I moved to and fell in love with 19 years ago. And one that is sadly disappearing.
Many calls for help come in this time of year. I have had over 15 calls already this month. Some of which are heartbreaking. We are honored to be able to assist when we can and to help be a turning point for people when they are really down on their luck.
Trail work and maintenance continues in Mill Creek Canyon. This is the time to get things ready for the busy times. An ounce of protection.......
We would love to have you join us for a cleanup in the washes in the Potato Salad Hill area, or for walk along the parkway in town to look for homeless camps and to enjoy this gem right in city limits. Give us a call!
In the meantime, enjoy this wonderful photo from a friend.
Another late entry, but forgive me, things have been extraordinarily robust. We are doing daily, except for Sunday, fundraising over at City Market for our Emergency Needs Fund. We raise about half of the $25,000 we need to make it through one year. We have a wonderful group of volunteers who have stepped up to volunteer with us. We made the shifts one - one and a half hours so that is much more tolerable than the two hour shifts we have had in the past. And we are over halfway to reaching our goal with this effort. City Market has been amazing.
This is my favorite time of the year in certain respects. Main Street is often empty, the air is clean and fresh, the light is off-the-charts gorgeous, and the community reemerges or is just easier to see as the tourism slows way down. This is the community I moved to and fell in love with 19 years ago. And one that is sadly disappearing.
Many calls for help come in this time of year. I have had over 15 calls already this month. Some of which are heartbreaking. We are honored to be able to assist when we can and to help be a turning point for people when they are really down on their luck.
Trail work and maintenance continues in Mill Creek Canyon. This is the time to get things ready for the busy times. An ounce of protection.......
We would love to have you join us for a cleanup in the washes in the Potato Salad Hill area, or for walk along the parkway in town to look for homeless camps and to enjoy this gem right in city limits. Give us a call!
In the meantime, enjoy this wonderful photo from a friend.
November 17, 2018
I am really late with my entry this month. Sorry! I took a short trip to Oregon, on the Amtrak, to visit some very dear friends at their farm. The time away was nourishing and seeing dear friends and Moab Solutions supporters and volunteers, was refreshing.
I hit the ground running when I got back. Right off the train and soon off to the canyon to check things out, then over to the recycle center. We are still trying hard to create the recycle center we deserve here in Moab. A recent great hire, for facilities manager, is going to make a wonderful difference.
I have been doing "Fix Mix" things the last few days - checking out Moonflower Canyon and doing little bits of trail maintenance, and working on refreshing rock outlines at Potato Salad Hill, and maintaining and improving protective measures at spots along Sand Flats Road.
We had a great group from USU Logan help us repair a trail near the bike jumps for their alternative break earlier this month. They were inspiring and did an excellent job widening the trail, and helping pull hundreds of weeds that were growing across the trail. See photo below.
I have had so many calls for help this month that I have blown through my budget for the month. Luckily, we will start our fundraising at City Market right after Thanksgiving. We try to raise about $24,000, which just about gets us through the year. If you want to help us at the City Market table, give me a call!
I am really late with my entry this month. Sorry! I took a short trip to Oregon, on the Amtrak, to visit some very dear friends at their farm. The time away was nourishing and seeing dear friends and Moab Solutions supporters and volunteers, was refreshing.
I hit the ground running when I got back. Right off the train and soon off to the canyon to check things out, then over to the recycle center. We are still trying hard to create the recycle center we deserve here in Moab. A recent great hire, for facilities manager, is going to make a wonderful difference.
I have been doing "Fix Mix" things the last few days - checking out Moonflower Canyon and doing little bits of trail maintenance, and working on refreshing rock outlines at Potato Salad Hill, and maintaining and improving protective measures at spots along Sand Flats Road.
We had a great group from USU Logan help us repair a trail near the bike jumps for their alternative break earlier this month. They were inspiring and did an excellent job widening the trail, and helping pull hundreds of weeds that were growing across the trail. See photo below.
I have had so many calls for help this month that I have blown through my budget for the month. Luckily, we will start our fundraising at City Market right after Thanksgiving. We try to raise about $24,000, which just about gets us through the year. If you want to help us at the City Market table, give me a call!
October 8, 2018
The cool rains came on Thursday and they keep on coming! Thursday saw powerful rains, waterfalls everywhere, high winds and much needed relief to the area. The continuing gentle rains are helping all living things thrive. We are thrilled!
The Solihull Society returned to Moab, as they do every two years, and they kindly offered to volunteer with us again. Seven members of the group worked with us to clean a section of the Loop Road, near Pack Creek. We filled Moab Solutions' truck with recycling and trash, and enjoyed the fellowship and good will of passing motorists who stopped to thank us.
Thank you Solihull Society!
The work that Trail Mix did at Mill Creek for National Public Lands Day was very successful. If it holds, the restoration of this large area will improve habitat, plant life, and watershed health. Thanks Trail Mix!
Stay tuned for more of this entry, coming soon!
The cool rains came on Thursday and they keep on coming! Thursday saw powerful rains, waterfalls everywhere, high winds and much needed relief to the area. The continuing gentle rains are helping all living things thrive. We are thrilled!
The Solihull Society returned to Moab, as they do every two years, and they kindly offered to volunteer with us again. Seven members of the group worked with us to clean a section of the Loop Road, near Pack Creek. We filled Moab Solutions' truck with recycling and trash, and enjoyed the fellowship and good will of passing motorists who stopped to thank us.
Thank you Solihull Society!
The work that Trail Mix did at Mill Creek for National Public Lands Day was very successful. If it holds, the restoration of this large area will improve habitat, plant life, and watershed health. Thanks Trail Mix!
Stay tuned for more of this entry, coming soon!
September 8, 2018
The cooler weather is here! Mid-day can still get into the 90s, but nights and mornings are cool, almost cold. I am loving it. My energy comes surging back and I feel like a new person.
This month I turn 64, and I want very much to find the next executive director of Moab Solutions so the work will continue past my time with it. I want to hire someone part-time, who may be interested in continuing many of the projects, and then after a few years of working and training, retire. If you know anyone who is interested, let me know.
Keep your fingers crossed for our recycle center. My deepest desire is to see it vibrant and functioning the way a center should and can. I want to see the center take more materials and in that regard I am working on something that could make the whole town smile soon. I am still going every morning when the center is open and making sure the front area is ready for the public. Clean, with room for people to drop off their recycling. Stay tuned!
Lots going on in Mill Creek soon - Trail Mix is bringing in a group for Public Lands Day, 9/22 and they will work on closing some user-created trails. Those trails are not helpful to the restoration process, so we are looking forward to a successful trail day.
I will be working on my own and with hired trail workers throughout the winter to continue protecting off-trail areas to the waterfall and beyond. We would love you to join us when you can.
Every day I go in the morning to perform minor trail maintenance, keep the dog waste station full of bags, and check the bathrooms, parking area, and trails for trash and recycling. I have heard from a couple of pros lately that the place is looking great. YEAH!
Outreach to the homeless continues, but is getting trickier as those with the most serious problems remain on the streets. One man, with whom I have worked for over 8 years, and who had achieved sobriety, work and an apartment, (before it all fell apart), told me the other day (when I asked him if I could help him get a shower), that "he makes more money from the tourists when he looks dirty". This broke my heart as it shows he is so far gone he has a long, long, way to go to try to get his life back should he decide on that path. But some of the others are making a little headway.
Volunteer Vacation swings back into action on September 20, when members of the Solihill Society are here for the National Land Rover Rally. We are going to pick up littered trash and recycling along Spanish Valley Drive, from Ken's Lake towards the mountains and make a little video of the amounts to share with the public.
Until October!
The cooler weather is here! Mid-day can still get into the 90s, but nights and mornings are cool, almost cold. I am loving it. My energy comes surging back and I feel like a new person.
This month I turn 64, and I want very much to find the next executive director of Moab Solutions so the work will continue past my time with it. I want to hire someone part-time, who may be interested in continuing many of the projects, and then after a few years of working and training, retire. If you know anyone who is interested, let me know.
Keep your fingers crossed for our recycle center. My deepest desire is to see it vibrant and functioning the way a center should and can. I want to see the center take more materials and in that regard I am working on something that could make the whole town smile soon. I am still going every morning when the center is open and making sure the front area is ready for the public. Clean, with room for people to drop off their recycling. Stay tuned!
Lots going on in Mill Creek soon - Trail Mix is bringing in a group for Public Lands Day, 9/22 and they will work on closing some user-created trails. Those trails are not helpful to the restoration process, so we are looking forward to a successful trail day.
I will be working on my own and with hired trail workers throughout the winter to continue protecting off-trail areas to the waterfall and beyond. We would love you to join us when you can.
Every day I go in the morning to perform minor trail maintenance, keep the dog waste station full of bags, and check the bathrooms, parking area, and trails for trash and recycling. I have heard from a couple of pros lately that the place is looking great. YEAH!
Outreach to the homeless continues, but is getting trickier as those with the most serious problems remain on the streets. One man, with whom I have worked for over 8 years, and who had achieved sobriety, work and an apartment, (before it all fell apart), told me the other day (when I asked him if I could help him get a shower), that "he makes more money from the tourists when he looks dirty". This broke my heart as it shows he is so far gone he has a long, long, way to go to try to get his life back should he decide on that path. But some of the others are making a little headway.
Volunteer Vacation swings back into action on September 20, when members of the Solihill Society are here for the National Land Rover Rally. We are going to pick up littered trash and recycling along Spanish Valley Drive, from Ken's Lake towards the mountains and make a little video of the amounts to share with the public.
Until October!
August 6, 2018
I am trying to be patient, but can't wait for the cooler air to come in, which usually happens mid-August. The heat and I don't get along all that well, but I am trying my best to live life at the edges - early mornings and late evenings.
Birthday Month! This month, 14 years ago, we started Friends of the Parkway in partnership with Moab City. That work, on the parkway system, led us to interactions with the homeless population. We started working very intently with them in August of 2008. Check our the variety of things we did with the homeless at our Homeless Assistance page.
We continue to try to work with people in need. We are getting ready to send our 22nd person to a free, highly effective six month rehab. We are also trying to work with the hard core, long term, homeless, still living out on the streets. I did recently get a grant from the Synergy Company. Their charitable arm takes requests for funding from community groups and I was honored to receive one to help people in need and homeless.
Speaking of great organizations, I want to give a shout out to WabiSabi. This non-profit thrift has touched every corner of this community with their gracious giving, wonderful staff, timely workshops and more. They support Moab Solutions as one of the partners, and we just received a very healthy check from them that will allow us to keep on keeping on with some of our projects. Thanks Wabi!
Recycling in Moab is going through many changes. World-wide changes are wreaking havoc with markets, but we are hoping that our center can improve and adapt to the changes. Currently, our Community Recycle Center has had to stop taking several items, and has had to cut back on open hours due to a backlog of material that needs to be processed, but we have hope! We have been looking to Curbside Recycling Indefinitely, in Grand Junction, CO for inspiration. This 25 year old curbside recycling and processing center, (with a free and vibrant drop-off for the public), sells separated materials for top dollar to domestic markets.
I have been going up to the center most mornings, with volunteers and on my own, to keep the front area nice and clean and pick up windblown trash and recycling. Come join us!
Mill Creek Canyon is holding its own. There are lots of user-created trails, which is heartbreaking, but we are hoping to address that issue over the less crowded winter months. We would love you to help us out when you have a half an hour or so!
Until September.
I am trying to be patient, but can't wait for the cooler air to come in, which usually happens mid-August. The heat and I don't get along all that well, but I am trying my best to live life at the edges - early mornings and late evenings.
Birthday Month! This month, 14 years ago, we started Friends of the Parkway in partnership with Moab City. That work, on the parkway system, led us to interactions with the homeless population. We started working very intently with them in August of 2008. Check our the variety of things we did with the homeless at our Homeless Assistance page.
We continue to try to work with people in need. We are getting ready to send our 22nd person to a free, highly effective six month rehab. We are also trying to work with the hard core, long term, homeless, still living out on the streets. I did recently get a grant from the Synergy Company. Their charitable arm takes requests for funding from community groups and I was honored to receive one to help people in need and homeless.
Speaking of great organizations, I want to give a shout out to WabiSabi. This non-profit thrift has touched every corner of this community with their gracious giving, wonderful staff, timely workshops and more. They support Moab Solutions as one of the partners, and we just received a very healthy check from them that will allow us to keep on keeping on with some of our projects. Thanks Wabi!
Recycling in Moab is going through many changes. World-wide changes are wreaking havoc with markets, but we are hoping that our center can improve and adapt to the changes. Currently, our Community Recycle Center has had to stop taking several items, and has had to cut back on open hours due to a backlog of material that needs to be processed, but we have hope! We have been looking to Curbside Recycling Indefinitely, in Grand Junction, CO for inspiration. This 25 year old curbside recycling and processing center, (with a free and vibrant drop-off for the public), sells separated materials for top dollar to domestic markets.
I have been going up to the center most mornings, with volunteers and on my own, to keep the front area nice and clean and pick up windblown trash and recycling. Come join us!
Mill Creek Canyon is holding its own. There are lots of user-created trails, which is heartbreaking, but we are hoping to address that issue over the less crowded winter months. We would love you to help us out when you have a half an hour or so!
Until September.
July 11, 2018
There has been so much going on I haven't been able to enter my July diary. I am going to get to it tomorrow! Or else.....
Well, tomorrow turned into a few tomorrows, but don't they say "Better late than never?"
July 14 There has been a lot going on across the community around recycling. The center appeared on the verge of collapse, so we stepped in with volunteers on a daily basis to help keep the drop off area neat and ready to accept recycling. We bring windblown cardboard and other recycling back to where it belongs, and even with the heat, we have fun doing it! Sweet Cravings gave me many $15 gift cards to hand out to volunteers, which is making lots of tummys happy!
We had discussions with the board and asked them how they would feel if another entity took over the recycle center operation in a public-private partnership with the District. They like that idea, as having to deal with running the landfills and the recycle center is too big of a task. So there are talks underway with an interested and highly experienced person to do just that! Stay tuned....
For a few more details, check out this letter to the editor that I submitted to the Times-Independent: The sunny future of recycling.
We were also busy helping a family that lost their home on May 1, 2018. This family of four, mom and three daughters, suffered the loss of their husband/father in 2014 when he was crushed to death when jacks failed on a vehicle he was helping fix at a local business.
A group was called to come together and we worked with the family to see what they wanted. They loved the idea of getting into a home they could own, so we found available homes in Grand Oasis, a manufactured home community. The family fell in love with one of the units and we set about to raise $20,000 for a down payment so that the family would have manageable payments going forward. They closed on the property last week and moved in right away. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints - Relief Society, had a garage full of collected items for the family. Beds, other furniture, clothing, kitchen goods, etc. They came right over that evening and moved all the items into the new home. The family is ecstatic! This was a true community effort, with many donations of food, gas cards, meals, realtor services, inspection services and donations toward the down payment coming from across the community. Check it out in this great story in the Moab Sun News: Lameman story. And this follow up item from after the closing: Lameman story part 2.
Mill Creek Canyon is suffering some from the number of people visiting who don't understand the fragile ecosystem that we call home. Off trail use turns the healthy soil to sand that doesn't support life, so we are going to redouble our efforts to protect off-trail areas and keep the trails maintained and easy to use.
Recently, work was started on removing some of the graffiti that mars the beauty of the canyon. See photos on the current Monthly Diary page.
I am struggling to find the best way to work with the homeless population. I am going to hire them to work with me on cleaning up area messes, but since they are scattered everywhere, I need to be ready on a moment's notice to get out and do a cleanup.
Once the weather cools off, that will be easy to do, but with the horrific heat and July humidity, it's a no go for this winter-loving woman.
As far as calls for assistance go, this month has been really active. I have spent more to date than I spent for all of June! I am going to have to do some fundraising soon. I need to have my funds last until December when we fund raise for the year.
Until August!
June 5, 2018
Great news! I was awarded a $2,000 grant from the Synergy Company so I can restart an evolved version of the Parkway Partners project. Check out these stories about it in the local papers: Times-Independent: New grant, new start for Parkway Partners and in the Moab Sun News: Homeless outreach project made possible by grant. We want to try to reach out to the homeless that are still struggling with mental health challenges and/or drug or alcohol issues. We can solve hard problems when we work together. We are very grateful to the Synergy Company.
Mill Creek Canyon has survived the crowds from Memorial Day weekend fairly well. All the trail work has paid off as there seems to be less damage this year than last. In the past, people walking off trail turned the healthy plant supporting crust to dust that nothing could grown in. Now wildflowers abound on the trail edges and brings a smile to our soul.
We are going to try to do some major trail work near the Powerdam in areas that have gotten very eroded. Stay tuned.
I gave assists last month totaling $1,612. Every request is carefully vetted. We are honored to be there when people in true need contact us. And to be there for a tool for the various law enforcement agencies. We are grateful to those who have donated to our Emergency Needs Fund. It would be empty without you!
Great news! I was awarded a $2,000 grant from the Synergy Company so I can restart an evolved version of the Parkway Partners project. Check out these stories about it in the local papers: Times-Independent: New grant, new start for Parkway Partners and in the Moab Sun News: Homeless outreach project made possible by grant. We want to try to reach out to the homeless that are still struggling with mental health challenges and/or drug or alcohol issues. We can solve hard problems when we work together. We are very grateful to the Synergy Company.
Mill Creek Canyon has survived the crowds from Memorial Day weekend fairly well. All the trail work has paid off as there seems to be less damage this year than last. In the past, people walking off trail turned the healthy plant supporting crust to dust that nothing could grown in. Now wildflowers abound on the trail edges and brings a smile to our soul.
We are going to try to do some major trail work near the Powerdam in areas that have gotten very eroded. Stay tuned.
I gave assists last month totaling $1,612. Every request is carefully vetted. We are honored to be there when people in true need contact us. And to be there for a tool for the various law enforcement agencies. We are grateful to those who have donated to our Emergency Needs Fund. It would be empty without you!
May 4, 2018
The spring wildflowers are so inspiring! Appearing as if by magic, they give us hope as their beauty sweetens our lives. But this time of year, when tourists pour into town like a heavy downpour, the land feels the impacts and it can be sad. While walking in the canyon early this morning I saw bicycle tracks. Bicycles are not permitted in the canyon, and this one did not stay on the trail. Tracks went off trail and over flowers and other vegetation. I naturalized the disturbed areas as best I could but it was very sad. It just takes one senseless act to destroy hours of work.
After 15 years of work at Potato Salad Hill, it may be the end of Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. There is one entity that is not willing to give a tiny concession to make the project work, so the future is uncertain. Stay tuned for more news on this issue. I am, quite frankly, heartbroken about this.
We are working with a variety of groups to address issues surrounding homelessness and need. We hope to have some kind of resource center available for emergency needs. We tried to accomplish this once before, years ago, but maybe the time is ripe now. Our Emergency Needs Fund has spent $12, 470.11 since I transitioned from The Salvation Army to giving assist through Moab Solutions, That was on October 1, 2017.
More later!
The spring wildflowers are so inspiring! Appearing as if by magic, they give us hope as their beauty sweetens our lives. But this time of year, when tourists pour into town like a heavy downpour, the land feels the impacts and it can be sad. While walking in the canyon early this morning I saw bicycle tracks. Bicycles are not permitted in the canyon, and this one did not stay on the trail. Tracks went off trail and over flowers and other vegetation. I naturalized the disturbed areas as best I could but it was very sad. It just takes one senseless act to destroy hours of work.
After 15 years of work at Potato Salad Hill, it may be the end of Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. There is one entity that is not willing to give a tiny concession to make the project work, so the future is uncertain. Stay tuned for more news on this issue. I am, quite frankly, heartbroken about this.
We are working with a variety of groups to address issues surrounding homelessness and need. We hope to have some kind of resource center available for emergency needs. We tried to accomplish this once before, years ago, but maybe the time is ripe now. Our Emergency Needs Fund has spent $12, 470.11 since I transitioned from The Salvation Army to giving assist through Moab Solutions, That was on October 1, 2017.
More later!
April 5, 2018
I am just starting to recover from the rigors of Common Thread, our Potato Salad Hill project. We keep an eye on the area all year, but toward "Jeep Week" we refresh rock outlines, make sure no off-road tracks exist, and get ready for the crowds that come out to enjoy the hill climb. This year we installed and maintained 12 recycle bins. 10 at PSH and a couple over at the Command Center. We pay for a free shuttle that runs continuously on Saturday, taking folks up to and back down from PSH. We have a staffed recycle station and volunteers walk through the crowds offering to take people's trash and recycling. This is year 15 of this project and it has, for the most part, served as a great example of what working together can accomplish. For more info on this project, visit our page about Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. Check out this radio piece from KZMU, our community radio station. PSH Story.
Fix Mix is what we call our little rag-tag group of paid trail workers and volunteers as we work on restoration and trail protection. We are heavily involved in Mill Creek Canyon and are seeing great results there. Work is also happening in other small spots along Sand Flats Road, at Potato Salad Hill, and in Moonflower Canyon. We would like to see Fix Mix groups all over this region, and maybe, all over the world.
The Church asked us to list volunteer opportunities on their Just Serve website. We listed a project and were recently contacted by an amazing family of 7 visiting from out of state. They heard about us at church and wanted to help do a cleanup along the in-town parkway. I met them and was super impressed by their willingness and joy. We got about half a truck load of recycling and more than our share of trash. We hope they come back and work with us again soon! Thank you all.
I am just starting to recover from the rigors of Common Thread, our Potato Salad Hill project. We keep an eye on the area all year, but toward "Jeep Week" we refresh rock outlines, make sure no off-road tracks exist, and get ready for the crowds that come out to enjoy the hill climb. This year we installed and maintained 12 recycle bins. 10 at PSH and a couple over at the Command Center. We pay for a free shuttle that runs continuously on Saturday, taking folks up to and back down from PSH. We have a staffed recycle station and volunteers walk through the crowds offering to take people's trash and recycling. This is year 15 of this project and it has, for the most part, served as a great example of what working together can accomplish. For more info on this project, visit our page about Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. Check out this radio piece from KZMU, our community radio station. PSH Story.
Fix Mix is what we call our little rag-tag group of paid trail workers and volunteers as we work on restoration and trail protection. We are heavily involved in Mill Creek Canyon and are seeing great results there. Work is also happening in other small spots along Sand Flats Road, at Potato Salad Hill, and in Moonflower Canyon. We would like to see Fix Mix groups all over this region, and maybe, all over the world.
The Church asked us to list volunteer opportunities on their Just Serve website. We listed a project and were recently contacted by an amazing family of 7 visiting from out of state. They heard about us at church and wanted to help do a cleanup along the in-town parkway. I met them and was super impressed by their willingness and joy. We got about half a truck load of recycling and more than our share of trash. We hope they come back and work with us again soon! Thank you all.
March 6, 2018
We are getting ready for the crowds over at Mill Creek, (normal springtime occurrence), and at Potato Salad Hill (for the upcoming Easter Jeep Safari). This year the EJS starts on March 24, and ends on April 1. We concentrate our efforts on the PSH area across from the Powerdam, especially on the last weekend of the EJS. We work to protect the land and the watershed, while ensuring that people can enjoy the area. We install recycling, keep trash and recycling cleaned up, interact with the crowds, and rake out off-trail tracks. We host a native plant display, offer a free shuttle from town, and have staff on hand to help with recycling. If you want to volunteer, give me a call!
Trail maintenance is ongoing at Mill Creek. Beyond the daily cleanups and minor maintenance, I have been working with trail workers to delineate trails, and have been placing brush just off the trails to encourage people to stay on the trails.
Calls for emergency assistance keep rolling in and we are trying to make our money last. We have helped 39 people so far this year, with rental assistance, utility payments, gasoline, food, lodging, appliance repair and more.
The homeless situation seems to be getting worse. Because there are no more "down at the heel" motels, we can't put people up in the winter. The very hard core are left out on the streets. Beyond that, people I have worked with for more than 10 years and have watched get sober, work, relapse, etc., seem to be in a downward spiral. We want to figure out ways to reach the almost unreachable. We are brainstorming on that often. I may try to restart the weekly meetup where I pay the homeless and other needy folks to clean up the parkway and sort recycling into my truck. It was a great way to get to know everybody's issue and how to help. We had a lot of success with that from 2008 to 2013, when everybody was housed, in rehab, or reunited with family.
Happy March everybody!
We are getting ready for the crowds over at Mill Creek, (normal springtime occurrence), and at Potato Salad Hill (for the upcoming Easter Jeep Safari). This year the EJS starts on March 24, and ends on April 1. We concentrate our efforts on the PSH area across from the Powerdam, especially on the last weekend of the EJS. We work to protect the land and the watershed, while ensuring that people can enjoy the area. We install recycling, keep trash and recycling cleaned up, interact with the crowds, and rake out off-trail tracks. We host a native plant display, offer a free shuttle from town, and have staff on hand to help with recycling. If you want to volunteer, give me a call!
Trail maintenance is ongoing at Mill Creek. Beyond the daily cleanups and minor maintenance, I have been working with trail workers to delineate trails, and have been placing brush just off the trails to encourage people to stay on the trails.
Calls for emergency assistance keep rolling in and we are trying to make our money last. We have helped 39 people so far this year, with rental assistance, utility payments, gasoline, food, lodging, appliance repair and more.
The homeless situation seems to be getting worse. Because there are no more "down at the heel" motels, we can't put people up in the winter. The very hard core are left out on the streets. Beyond that, people I have worked with for more than 10 years and have watched get sober, work, relapse, etc., seem to be in a downward spiral. We want to figure out ways to reach the almost unreachable. We are brainstorming on that often. I may try to restart the weekly meetup where I pay the homeless and other needy folks to clean up the parkway and sort recycling into my truck. It was a great way to get to know everybody's issue and how to help. We had a lot of success with that from 2008 to 2013, when everybody was housed, in rehab, or reunited with family.
Happy March everybody!
February 2, 2018
It has been unseasonably warm lately, but we may get another blast of winter before all is said and done. It is very dry here, and perhaps the first year since I have lived here where the mountains barely have any snow at all. Not good.
We are trying to get the canyon trails well marked and maintained so they survive the heavy usage they are sure to get, mainly in the spring. The parking lot is being enlarged so that the fire engines and emergency vehicles can turn around in the lot. Seven spaces are being added, and the way cars can park will be reconfigured. Beyond that, I will be going in with Jeff Adams of TerraSophia soon to remove poison ivy near the hiking trail. We will do other trail work and try to keep the canyon as protected as possible.
I had many, many calls for assistance in December and January, spending more than I intended, but happy to be able to help those with real needs. Things may slow down a bit now that folks will be getting back to work.
Potato Salad Hill recently got some protection thanks to the volunteer efforts of students from the University of Kansas, here on Alternative Winter Break. They helped us delineate new trails on the PSH side of Mill Creek and were delightful to work with.
It has been unseasonably warm lately, but we may get another blast of winter before all is said and done. It is very dry here, and perhaps the first year since I have lived here where the mountains barely have any snow at all. Not good.
We are trying to get the canyon trails well marked and maintained so they survive the heavy usage they are sure to get, mainly in the spring. The parking lot is being enlarged so that the fire engines and emergency vehicles can turn around in the lot. Seven spaces are being added, and the way cars can park will be reconfigured. Beyond that, I will be going in with Jeff Adams of TerraSophia soon to remove poison ivy near the hiking trail. We will do other trail work and try to keep the canyon as protected as possible.
I had many, many calls for assistance in December and January, spending more than I intended, but happy to be able to help those with real needs. Things may slow down a bit now that folks will be getting back to work.
Potato Salad Hill recently got some protection thanks to the volunteer efforts of students from the University of Kansas, here on Alternative Winter Break. They helped us delineate new trails on the PSH side of Mill Creek and were delightful to work with.
January 3, 2018 - Happy New Year to all!
The Fund Raiser for the Emergency Needs Fund went better than expected. It was a transition year for me, coming after 5 years of intense bell-ringing for The Salvation Army - coordinating 90 bell ringers and daily schedules. So we staffed a table at City Market a few days a week, and usually did one hour shifts. The community response was overwhelming supportive. We raised over $7,000 at the store and through mailed and/or PayPal donations. City Market manager Brendon Cameron matched funds raised by City Market employees for TSA during the "Big Ring", (something all Kroger stores are required to do) and donated the match to us! $437. Thank you Brendon! With those funds and other I had raised after transitioning from TSA, we probably have enough to last all year, IF I am careful with those funds.
Mill Creek Canyon has been covered in snow that is just starting to melt, so we will get busy with trail maintenance in the next couple of weeks. We plan to work on the Potato Salad Hill side as well. Jeep Week activities will be early this year, starting on March 24 and ending April 1, which is Easter. Although PSH is not part of the official route for Easter Jeep Safari, it is well used, especially on the days leading up to Easter. We will have staffed recycle stations, volunteers on site. a give-away and displays on the wildflowers of the area.
Other projects are going well. Reconnecting with the homeless and others in need, on the ground, is yielding some good results. I am walking the in-town parkway system as often as possible to enjoy the beauty and watch for any problems. I am looking forward to a positive and productive new year!
The Fund Raiser for the Emergency Needs Fund went better than expected. It was a transition year for me, coming after 5 years of intense bell-ringing for The Salvation Army - coordinating 90 bell ringers and daily schedules. So we staffed a table at City Market a few days a week, and usually did one hour shifts. The community response was overwhelming supportive. We raised over $7,000 at the store and through mailed and/or PayPal donations. City Market manager Brendon Cameron matched funds raised by City Market employees for TSA during the "Big Ring", (something all Kroger stores are required to do) and donated the match to us! $437. Thank you Brendon! With those funds and other I had raised after transitioning from TSA, we probably have enough to last all year, IF I am careful with those funds.
Mill Creek Canyon has been covered in snow that is just starting to melt, so we will get busy with trail maintenance in the next couple of weeks. We plan to work on the Potato Salad Hill side as well. Jeep Week activities will be early this year, starting on March 24 and ending April 1, which is Easter. Although PSH is not part of the official route for Easter Jeep Safari, it is well used, especially on the days leading up to Easter. We will have staffed recycle stations, volunteers on site. a give-away and displays on the wildflowers of the area.
Other projects are going well. Reconnecting with the homeless and others in need, on the ground, is yielding some good results. I am walking the in-town parkway system as often as possible to enjoy the beauty and watch for any problems. I am looking forward to a positive and productive new year!
December 2, 2017
The calendar says it's December, but it feels more like October or November. Starting tomorrow, the nighttime temps are supposed to go way down, but I find the warm and dry weather discouraging. We need cold and we need moisture.
I have never run into more depressed locals as I have the last few weeks. The rate of growth here - more motels, more land paved over, more and more people causing unintentional harm to this fragile environment, are making them think about leaving. This is a hard place to leave once you are here and involved with trying to protect the beauty all around us. Wish we could do things slowly and the right way, but it seems that greed is the factor and that makes me sad.
On the plus side, I have been helping some very enthusiastic volunteers remove hundreds and hundreds of weeds from the in-town parkway near the Youth Garden Project. I help haul the weeds to a site that is using them to build up the land, so there is no negative impact through burning or landfilling this waste product. We plan to extend this project to the entire parkway, hand weeding which will eventually result in many more natives and many fewer weeds. Within a few years the change should be obvious. Come join Friends of the Parkway by doing a cleanup or helping weed. We'd love to have you.
In Mill Creek Canyon we are continuing with as much trail work as possible. We have had to do repairs from very heavy rains that have damaged trails, so a little bit of catch up is involved!
The Emergency Needs Fund is coming along. I have had many calls for help through Moab Solutions' Emergency Needs Fund since I left The Salvation Army. We start fundraising at City Market on Monday and hope to do a few days a week and get enough to help people going forward. Maybe I'll see you over there!
The calendar says it's December, but it feels more like October or November. Starting tomorrow, the nighttime temps are supposed to go way down, but I find the warm and dry weather discouraging. We need cold and we need moisture.
I have never run into more depressed locals as I have the last few weeks. The rate of growth here - more motels, more land paved over, more and more people causing unintentional harm to this fragile environment, are making them think about leaving. This is a hard place to leave once you are here and involved with trying to protect the beauty all around us. Wish we could do things slowly and the right way, but it seems that greed is the factor and that makes me sad.
On the plus side, I have been helping some very enthusiastic volunteers remove hundreds and hundreds of weeds from the in-town parkway near the Youth Garden Project. I help haul the weeds to a site that is using them to build up the land, so there is no negative impact through burning or landfilling this waste product. We plan to extend this project to the entire parkway, hand weeding which will eventually result in many more natives and many fewer weeds. Within a few years the change should be obvious. Come join Friends of the Parkway by doing a cleanup or helping weed. We'd love to have you.
In Mill Creek Canyon we are continuing with as much trail work as possible. We have had to do repairs from very heavy rains that have damaged trails, so a little bit of catch up is involved!
The Emergency Needs Fund is coming along. I have had many calls for help through Moab Solutions' Emergency Needs Fund since I left The Salvation Army. We start fundraising at City Market on Monday and hope to do a few days a week and get enough to help people going forward. Maybe I'll see you over there!
November 14, 2017
Things are starting to calm down as most of the tourism winds down. We volunteered to help with the recycling at the Moab Folk Festival this year. It reminded me of all the years we installed, maintained, and then counted and sorted the recycling during the first years of this now well-established event. It was a wonderful experience then and now.
Canyon work is progressing, but it always takes longer than you want. Hauling brush to block trails, erasing social trailing, maintaining existing trails, and planning for poison ivy removal does take time. But I have had several people comment to me recently that the canyon looks beautiful. That helps me to see that we are on the right track.
Since my Emergency Needs Fund took over for my old Salvation Army work, I have given 21 assists ranging from dental work to gas, utilities to lodging and a few things in between. I will be doing occasional fund raising outside City Market after Thanksgiving so look for us there.
I have had more time to reengage with the chronically homeless community and do more patrols on the parkway system. I am able to find out what issues need attention and trying to help people into housing or rehab. I have also found a few drinking spots and a couple of abandoned camps. I clean up what I can, but need some help for things like sleeping bags that are incorporated into the soil. I will get on it soon with a helper, a shovel, and a tarp.
Enjoy the calm, cool, and (usually) quiet Moab!
Things are starting to calm down as most of the tourism winds down. We volunteered to help with the recycling at the Moab Folk Festival this year. It reminded me of all the years we installed, maintained, and then counted and sorted the recycling during the first years of this now well-established event. It was a wonderful experience then and now.
Canyon work is progressing, but it always takes longer than you want. Hauling brush to block trails, erasing social trailing, maintaining existing trails, and planning for poison ivy removal does take time. But I have had several people comment to me recently that the canyon looks beautiful. That helps me to see that we are on the right track.
Since my Emergency Needs Fund took over for my old Salvation Army work, I have given 21 assists ranging from dental work to gas, utilities to lodging and a few things in between. I will be doing occasional fund raising outside City Market after Thanksgiving so look for us there.
I have had more time to reengage with the chronically homeless community and do more patrols on the parkway system. I am able to find out what issues need attention and trying to help people into housing or rehab. I have also found a few drinking spots and a couple of abandoned camps. I clean up what I can, but need some help for things like sleeping bags that are incorporated into the soil. I will get on it soon with a helper, a shovel, and a tarp.
Enjoy the calm, cool, and (usually) quiet Moab!
October 1, 2017
Fall is here for real and it feels wonderful! I finally can go out later, longer and all different times of the day. We have been doing loads of work in the canyon and intend on going all through the autumn and winter. When spring brings thousands to the canyon, we want to make sure the trail is clear, the poison ivy is nowhere near the trail, and that the natives plants are thriving. Right now is a great time to visit. Very quiet, full of fall flowers, delicious...
I made a very big decision to resign from The Salvation Army and restart the Emergency Needs Fund that we ran from 2010 to 2012. I was honored to work for TSA, but the paperwork and fundraising time was taking me away from what I love to do - street level outreach. I will continue to help those in need the same way I have been with TSA, but will fund raise throughout the year. I hope to work more with others in the community, and law enforcement on helping those with drug use issues, homelessness, mental health challenges, and poverty. I also look forward to more time on the in-town parkway and in the canyons of the region.
Onward through the fog!
Fall is here for real and it feels wonderful! I finally can go out later, longer and all different times of the day. We have been doing loads of work in the canyon and intend on going all through the autumn and winter. When spring brings thousands to the canyon, we want to make sure the trail is clear, the poison ivy is nowhere near the trail, and that the natives plants are thriving. Right now is a great time to visit. Very quiet, full of fall flowers, delicious...
I made a very big decision to resign from The Salvation Army and restart the Emergency Needs Fund that we ran from 2010 to 2012. I was honored to work for TSA, but the paperwork and fundraising time was taking me away from what I love to do - street level outreach. I will continue to help those in need the same way I have been with TSA, but will fund raise throughout the year. I hope to work more with others in the community, and law enforcement on helping those with drug use issues, homelessness, mental health challenges, and poverty. I also look forward to more time on the in-town parkway and in the canyons of the region.
Onward through the fog!
September 2, 2017
Yesterday I removed 5 intact (and one smashed) bottles that had been tossed from the parking lot into the brush at Powerdam. I saw one bottle off in the sage - experience has taught me that where you see one, there are usually more. So after looking around a little, I found them thrown under bushes and one (luckily just one!) smashed on a rock. If you ever want to know how long it takes to pick up smashed glass, get a tarp, put a rock on it, then smash the glass and pick it up. It is a lesson in patience.
We have been picking up intact and bits of glass in the canyon, and around the region, for almost 15 years. We have worked with university students, youth groups, Moab Solutions volunteers, and others to try to remove the tens of thousands of pieces of glass smashed on the rocky ledges on either side of the creek. Just when we think we have it all, new stuff appears. And so it goes.....
Thanks to cooler temperatures and the wonderful support I get from a couple of grants specifically to be used in Mill Creek, we started some serious trail work. I have a pro trail worker who will soon be able to give me some time as we work from the parking area back to the waterfall, making the trail safe and easy to navigate. That will save the land from being trampled and protect habitat.
The damaged beaver dams are still not repaired, but there have been sightings of activity in various places in the canyon. My dearest hope is that the beavers will make a full recovery and remain unmolested so they can work their magic on the land. Stay tuned for updates on that!
Wishing everyone a very happy September!
Yesterday I removed 5 intact (and one smashed) bottles that had been tossed from the parking lot into the brush at Powerdam. I saw one bottle off in the sage - experience has taught me that where you see one, there are usually more. So after looking around a little, I found them thrown under bushes and one (luckily just one!) smashed on a rock. If you ever want to know how long it takes to pick up smashed glass, get a tarp, put a rock on it, then smash the glass and pick it up. It is a lesson in patience.
We have been picking up intact and bits of glass in the canyon, and around the region, for almost 15 years. We have worked with university students, youth groups, Moab Solutions volunteers, and others to try to remove the tens of thousands of pieces of glass smashed on the rocky ledges on either side of the creek. Just when we think we have it all, new stuff appears. And so it goes.....
Thanks to cooler temperatures and the wonderful support I get from a couple of grants specifically to be used in Mill Creek, we started some serious trail work. I have a pro trail worker who will soon be able to give me some time as we work from the parking area back to the waterfall, making the trail safe and easy to navigate. That will save the land from being trampled and protect habitat.
The damaged beaver dams are still not repaired, but there have been sightings of activity in various places in the canyon. My dearest hope is that the beavers will make a full recovery and remain unmolested so they can work their magic on the land. Stay tuned for updates on that!
Wishing everyone a very happy September!
AUGUST 2017
I just realized today, 8/12, that I forgot to update the diary for August. It is the summer stupor! Lots going on lately, and the best news is the horrific heat is starting to break. It is still hot in the day, but not as hot as it has been, and the mornings and evenings are delicious.
We have a new police chief, Jim Winder, and he is very interested in the work we have done with the homeless. He was the Sheriff in Salt Lake City for years and years, and dealt with homeless issues that we very luckily do not see here on the scale that SLC does. The Chief and I are going to walk the parkway and other places where homeless congregate so outreach can take place. I may try to restart our outreach efforts by hiring some of the guys to help us clean up.
On that front, my friend Gill and I worked 2.5 hours each last Friday and got a 40 gallon bag of recycling and about half that amount of trash.
In the canyon things have been a little too active. In mid-July someone set a fire near the parking area close to midnight. Luckily, a deputy sheriff was patrolling and called it in. We have reseeded the burn area twice now and are waiting for sprouts to appear. We have had some good soaking rains, so we are hoping for the best. Sadly, someone damaged the beaver dams, and then a flood took them out. That one act has caused untold amounts of horrible damage. We hope the beaver will eventually rebuild, but those 11 dams were creating a lush and healthy environment and now it is gone.
We plan to do a lot of trail work in the autumn and through the winter. That way, when the crowds show up in the spring, we will have things well marked and ready for the crowds.
Here is a link to a great short video about the wonderful benefits of beaver, produced by PBS. Enjoy!
I just realized today, 8/12, that I forgot to update the diary for August. It is the summer stupor! Lots going on lately, and the best news is the horrific heat is starting to break. It is still hot in the day, but not as hot as it has been, and the mornings and evenings are delicious.
We have a new police chief, Jim Winder, and he is very interested in the work we have done with the homeless. He was the Sheriff in Salt Lake City for years and years, and dealt with homeless issues that we very luckily do not see here on the scale that SLC does. The Chief and I are going to walk the parkway and other places where homeless congregate so outreach can take place. I may try to restart our outreach efforts by hiring some of the guys to help us clean up.
On that front, my friend Gill and I worked 2.5 hours each last Friday and got a 40 gallon bag of recycling and about half that amount of trash.
In the canyon things have been a little too active. In mid-July someone set a fire near the parking area close to midnight. Luckily, a deputy sheriff was patrolling and called it in. We have reseeded the burn area twice now and are waiting for sprouts to appear. We have had some good soaking rains, so we are hoping for the best. Sadly, someone damaged the beaver dams, and then a flood took them out. That one act has caused untold amounts of horrible damage. We hope the beaver will eventually rebuild, but those 11 dams were creating a lush and healthy environment and now it is gone.
We plan to do a lot of trail work in the autumn and through the winter. That way, when the crowds show up in the spring, we will have things well marked and ready for the crowds.
Here is a link to a great short video about the wonderful benefits of beaver, produced by PBS. Enjoy!
JULY 2017
The hot days are here and life changes completely for me. I get up and out to the canyon at 5:30 or 6:00 a.m. so I can enjoy the cooler temps and do a little bit of work everyday without burning up!
Trail work continues. We have been "brushing" out areas next to the trail so folks aren't as likely to step off-trail. The large number of visitors can accidentally destroy what took us months to do. The power of feet!
Next thing I need to do is cut back some branches growing into the trail. And as temps cool off, and before winter's possible freeze, I have mapped out fixes I want to make in the canyon. It will be so much easier when it is cooler all day long and there are a few less visitors. The protected areas are thriving.
Our recycling campaign is getting very close to launching. www.moabrecycles.org is the site and we will publicize it when we place ads and a guest commentary in both local papers. Wish us luck!
Work with the homeless and others in need continues as we work with agencies and law enforcement to get help to those who need it most. We answered over 26 calls for help during June. We are proud to offer an option for assistance where often there is none.
The hot days are here and life changes completely for me. I get up and out to the canyon at 5:30 or 6:00 a.m. so I can enjoy the cooler temps and do a little bit of work everyday without burning up!
Trail work continues. We have been "brushing" out areas next to the trail so folks aren't as likely to step off-trail. The large number of visitors can accidentally destroy what took us months to do. The power of feet!
Next thing I need to do is cut back some branches growing into the trail. And as temps cool off, and before winter's possible freeze, I have mapped out fixes I want to make in the canyon. It will be so much easier when it is cooler all day long and there are a few less visitors. The protected areas are thriving.
Our recycling campaign is getting very close to launching. www.moabrecycles.org is the site and we will publicize it when we place ads and a guest commentary in both local papers. Wish us luck!
Work with the homeless and others in need continues as we work with agencies and law enforcement to get help to those who need it most. We answered over 26 calls for help during June. We are proud to offer an option for assistance where often there is none.
JUNE 2017
This will be the most depressing entry so far. Tourism is completely out of control here and it is causing deep, damaging, and lasting harm to the land in and around Moab, and to the very heart and soul of what makes Moab Moab.
The canyon is very busy some days, with cars clogging the roadways and annoying the folks in the new development. Lots of people, especially those in the development, want to shut down the road into the canyon from Powerhouse Lane and move everything to Potato Salad Hill. That would be a disaster unless done very carefully and thoughtfully.
This is happening all over the region. Too many people in too fragile a place.
Mill Creek Canyon and the Potato Salad Hill side were my last refuge in a shrinking world. So many of the places I once enjoyed freely are untouchable now because of extreme crowding and off-road vehicle use. Noisy!? You can't hear the gently breeze through the leaves of the cottonwoods, or the sweet lusty songs of birds as they find each other in the sky.
I am not the only one here in Moab feeling that they will soon be forced out of a place that is so deeply loved it is impossible to separate the place from the self.
But I keep on keeping on. Lots of work in the canyon early in the morning. Six a.m. walks so I can get in and out before the crowds come. And waiting for and hoping for a cold winter, so once again, the sound of ice freezing and melting is all you hear as you walk in solitude in the canyons and the beauty of Moab.
This will be the most depressing entry so far. Tourism is completely out of control here and it is causing deep, damaging, and lasting harm to the land in and around Moab, and to the very heart and soul of what makes Moab Moab.
The canyon is very busy some days, with cars clogging the roadways and annoying the folks in the new development. Lots of people, especially those in the development, want to shut down the road into the canyon from Powerhouse Lane and move everything to Potato Salad Hill. That would be a disaster unless done very carefully and thoughtfully.
This is happening all over the region. Too many people in too fragile a place.
Mill Creek Canyon and the Potato Salad Hill side were my last refuge in a shrinking world. So many of the places I once enjoyed freely are untouchable now because of extreme crowding and off-road vehicle use. Noisy!? You can't hear the gently breeze through the leaves of the cottonwoods, or the sweet lusty songs of birds as they find each other in the sky.
I am not the only one here in Moab feeling that they will soon be forced out of a place that is so deeply loved it is impossible to separate the place from the self.
But I keep on keeping on. Lots of work in the canyon early in the morning. Six a.m. walks so I can get in and out before the crowds come. And waiting for and hoping for a cold winter, so once again, the sound of ice freezing and melting is all you hear as you walk in solitude in the canyons and the beauty of Moab.

MAY 2017
The canyon is getting busy and so are we! I am very fortunate to have funding so I can have trail workers help me with trail maintenance, so we can make it easy for folks to get to the waterfall without creating numerous other trails. The Russian Olive removals and new native tree plantings are creating an increased beautiful feeling in the canyon. There are several beaver dams, and they are working their magic. The Great Blue Herons and ducks are often sighted near the ponds created by the beavers. Not sure if beavers are good for the world? Check out this great article. It will give you a whole new perspective on the situation.
The Clean Up Moab Facebook page is up and going. We hope to be able to devote time to that regularly and get some area-wide and regular cleanups going. Check it out on Facebook.
As soon as we get our editorial going, we will be placing ads and promoting our www.moabrecycles.org website. Have you seen it? Check it out and let us know what you think.
APRIL 2017
We have three big projects going - getting ready to kick off a community-wide recycle campaign, filming a movie and creating a Facebook page to get more folks involved in doing cleanups of the highways, byways, trails and streams all over this region, and getting ready for the 10 days of Easter Jeep Safari.
We have been working on a website for the recycle campaign. Check it out at moabrecycles.org.
MisoMedia filmed some cleanups we did in the washes of Potato Salad Hill and along the highway. It is being edited now and we will publish it as soon as we have it.
We are always looking for volunteers to help prepare Potato Salad Hill and help during the event. Give me a call if you want to volunteer! 435-259-0910.
Thanks!
MARCH 2017
March has been very active. Warm weather has brought thousands to the area as I scramble to keep up with my freecycle sites, get ready for "Jeep Week", work with those in need, and continue with trail and restoration work in Mill Creek Canyon.
A bright note! Marsha Marshall asked to volunteer with me to do cleanups. We have worked in a few areas and posted what we were doing on Facebook. We received a great response and offers to help, so we are going to create a Facebook page just for cleanup activities, photos and the like. Miso, a local filmmaker, is doing a short movie showing what a cleanup is like, and we will post that on Facebook. We hope to find lots of folks who love working directly with the earth, removing trash and recycling and restoring the natural beauty all around us. Stay tuned!!!
FEBRUARY 2017
The month is almost over as I write this! Well, half over. We have been enjoying the warmer weather and making plans for our project over at Potato Salad Hill, called Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. We have been doing cleanups with some enthusiastic new volunteers, working with the new crop of homeless, and trying to get the canyon ready for the hoards. We reported a huge panel of graffiti that we want to work on eradicating, but what we really wish is that people would just enjoy the amazing natural features of this gorgeous planet and not alter them. I think it is part of the disconnect with nature that causes this....the more we reconnect, the more we strive to restore and protect our precious earth.
JANUARY 2017
The new year brings a deeper determination to expand and refine our projects. We are currently working on a recycling/zero waste campaign and will soon launch a website with an easy-to-use guide on how to reduce, reuse, and recycle anything that is possible to recycle. We will be giving away a few six-month curbside recycling services from Green Solutions and featuring lots of local recycling heroes on the site.
We are also working toward finding all the good souls out there who do trash/recycle clean ups and try to start a monthly group cleanup somewhere in the area, while highlighting the ongoing work these individuals do.
The Salvation Army/Moab Solutions has been very busy with requests for help this month. We have had over 26 calls for assistance to date, (1-21-17), and expect a few more before the month is over. We are so grateful to the community for donating $13,198 to our red kettle during the fund raiser.
There are a few homeless out there that we know of, and we are working to find them and help them move forward in life if they so desire.
We'd love to have you join us for a cleanup!
DECEMBER 2016
This is far too busy a month to go into detail, but we are in the midst of a 29 day fund raiser for The Salvation Army at City Market, which takes a lot of time every day. We are also getting a lot of calls for assistance, and are aware of several new homeless in town. When we are done bell ringing at the red kettle, we will look for the camps and see what, if any, assistance we can offer. We have had a lot of calls regarding extremely mentally ill people and that is very challening. Mixed in with those are calls for utility payments, rent, and food.
In the meantime, we go to the canyon every morning and keep it clean while enjoying the beauty of the place. Now that the tourist season is quiet, multiple walks a day in area spots is the remedy for stress. We are so fortunate to live in such an incredibly gorgeous area.
We are also getting ready to launch our recycling campaign, aiming to get more people recycling and helping their friends and neighbors recycle. Stay tuned!
This community is so giving, we are moved by the generous spirit of those giving and those helping raise funds. So sweet!
NOVEMBER 2016
We are finishing up a few projects in Mill Creek before it gets too cold. We have had a much warmer than usual October and November (so far, I write this on the 19th!), but the cold weather is coming. We have transplanted some large grasses and laid down seed in disturbed areas, and are still erasing user-created trails. It takes months to undo what a few misplaced footsteps do in a couple of weeks.
The Salvation Army bell ringing starts the day after Thanksgiving. I have called over 50 people who rang last year to see if they want to ring again and mostly all have said "yes". We have a very caring community here which is one of the many reasons I love Moab so much.
We took the "recycled" jeep over to display during the Folk Festival. I think people enjoyed it. Its next stop, Easter Jeep Safari on Potato Salad Hill.
Still doing lots of "freecycling" and cleanups. On the 18th a few of cleaned up the parkway before the annual "Turkey Trot". We found loads (more than 20) of quart bottles of beer as well as aluminum, plastic and other smaller glass bottles. The trash was minimal in comparison to what we could recycle, which is usually the case. I fear that there are camps cropping up on certain areas of the parkway and I will go out soon with a couple of people and try to find them.
Come join us in a cleanup! We'd love to have your help and company.
OCTOBER 2016
Things are going great over in Mill Creek Canyon. I had the great fortune to meet a professional trail worker and had grant money to pay her. She has been erasing trails and fixing things for the last few weeks. We are starting on the front section, before the Powerdam, and will work our way back. It is amazing to see a pro in action. Thanks Shannon!
I went in and did some trail maintenance on the 2nd. Large limbs were down on the trail and some of the caging has to be repaired around some of the cottonwoods, but things otherwise aren't too damaged.
We had a very successful Volunteer Vacation with the Solihull Society in late September. It was a very windy day, but 7 of us managed to pick up almost 500 containers from just over a mile of roadway. We started at the Ken's Lake turnoff and headed to the mountains. A couple of folks who came late headed down to Ken's Lake, and I drove the truck to go collect full bucket loads of trash and recycling. The trash amounted to less than a quarter bag, while the recycling was at least two bags full! See the photo of the finished artwork created by the volunteers, with the unsorted recycling in front of it at the top of this page.
September 2016
This month is dedicated to Carli. She left this world on September 3. A constant companion, along with Chevy and Rascal, the three of us spent some part of everyday in Mill Creek. In fact, if not for getting these dogs off the chain, I never would have started going to the canyon every day. It was their need to run and explore after being chained up for a year that took me there. That I already was in love with removing trash and recycling from the land was a perfect fit for all the littered items I found there. We all walked together and I would pick up trash and recycling from the Tea Cup to the Waterfall and everywhere in between. I eventually started doing trail work, removing weeds, and working with the BLM to protect the place. Our formal agreement to run the Mill Creek Partnership came about in February of 2011.
In a very real sense, all the successes over at Mill Creek are because of the dogs. I honor Carli's memory every time I visit the canyon.
We have a volunteer vacation project coming up later in the month. We will be removing the recycling and trash from Spanish Valley Drive headed toward the loop road with an off-road group called The Solihull Society. But this cleanup has a twist. We will be stringing together and/or making some other piece of art to show the enormous numbers of recyclable items left on our roadways. This is something I have long wanted to do and was inspired by a fellow cleanup artist to attempt this. I will be calling out to local artists and other volunteers so we can really try to demonstrate just how bad this problem is, and how instructive it can be. For example, in a recent cleanup we picked up over 100 aluminum cans on Spanish Valley Drive just past Packard's. Most of those were alcohol containers. Not cool.
August 2016
July was hot, busy, and challenging, but the heat promises to break and we are re-energized to do all we can to help heal the earth and help people in need.
The Salvation Army unit I volunteer for had over 30 calls in July. Some calls are easy to handle, others can be very complex. Moab Solutions, in partnership with The Salvation Army, is working on getting our 18th person into rehabilitation, and are happy about that.
In fact, we just heard from a man who we sent to rehab twice! He graduated for the second time seven months ago. He is living in Denver and volunteers to help the homeless, works as a chef, and is enrolling in writing classes. Congrats Pat!
We are not happy about the state of Mill Creek Canyon and what we feel is the new normal all over this region. There are so many visitors that the shear numbers are having a very negative impact on the land. In Mill Creek, there are user-created trails off of user-created trails off of user-created trails. We can barely keep up with trying to brush them out and naturalize them, but we are hoping that Trail Mix will work with us in a massive autumn work party to get the front areas of the canyon healed up. Then I need to get working on the trail to the left hand waterfall and cut back brush so that the main trail is clear as a bell. That helps prevent user-created trails somewhat...
In the meantime, we are working on presenting an idea for a pilot project on the in-town parkway system to the City. We want to go herbicide free on parkway lands and are picking a small area to do this first pilot project. If it all works out, and the City approves it, we hope to expand the techniques all over the parkway and have an extremely healthy and vibrant ecosystem along the creek. Jeff Adams of Terrasophia has been kind enough to take the lead on this. Moab Solutions, which celebrates 14 years of Friends of the Parkway, is excited to be involved in this wonderful project.
We'd love to hear from you! Do you have ideas for projects or would you like to volunteer with us? Go to the "Contact Us" page.
July 2016
Work continues in Mill Creek Canyon, but the number of visitors is so great that lots of damage is occurring. We have been working to naturalize and fill in user created trails which are appearing as fast as we try to rehab them! Weeding continues as does the never ending job of removing littered trash and recycling. We are trying to figure out ways to encourage the "pack it in, pack it out" mentality and especially the "Leave No Trace" philosophy. Send us your ideas!
FreeCycling sites are filling with recycling almost as fast as I can empty them. There is a deep satisfaction that comes from realizing that you are part of keeping hundreds and hundreds of recyclable containers from the landfill, but there is also a lot of sadness about the huge problem of wasting.
We are working on an awareness campaign to bring the community up-to-date on the ever-changing landscape of recycling. We want to encourage more people to step up their recycling or to start recycling. Stay tuned for that!
June 2016
Work continues in Mill Creek even as things heat up fast! We are doing lots of weeding - in the parking area, on the steps down to the lower trail off the parking area, and then down the canyon to the Powerdam and beyond. Visitors are flocking to the canyon, so many over Memorial Day weekend that the cars were parked all the way down Powerhouse Lane to Mill Creek Drive! A few of us want to look for some solutions that would keep things open for people to enjoy while protecting this fragile gem of a place. Stay tuned!
Through our project, Volunteer Vacation, we will be working with a group from St. George arriving here on June 8th. Since there will be 25 people in total, we will split into a couple of groups in order to remove trash and recycling from the in-town Parkway system. We appreciate it when visitors want to give back. And many hands.....
Recycling Advocacy continues. I have been servicing our "FreeCycle" sites all over town and it is challenging, but rewarding to think of all the things that get a chance to be remade into something usable instead of being sent on a one-way trip to the landfill!
Also, we are reworking the Green Guide because so much of the information is dated. We are going to use this opportunity to take the guide well beyond recycling, as we feel that the worst impacts of climate disruption need to be dealt with by as many of us as possible, as much of the time as we can. We will be calling out for your ideas to include in the guide.
MAY 2016
As we head into spring, work abounds in the canyon and along the in-town parkway system. We are holding work parties in Mill Creek Canyon, and I have some folks doing regular cleanups from the parking area to left hand waterfall, including the tea cup area. Once the hot weather comes, we find at least a diaper a day, along with all the other trash and recycling. The canyon is looking good. Self seeding with some natives. We have loads to do to get the Ravenna Grass out, but keeping the seed stalks cut helps reduce their spread.
Earth Day on the Parkway was great. The lower grades of the Moab Charter School came to help with the cleanup and they got into all the nooks and crannies that is a bit more challenging for us older folks. It was wonderful to see their energy and enthusiasm. Thanks Moab Charter School!
We continue the work with the homeless and others in need. We feel that we are making progress on some fronts, as organizations work together to try to meet the needs, and on the other hand, we just don't have the services here that some people require. Maybe some day!
Enjoy the slide show below, from Potato Salad Hill, March 2016. (The slideshow is on the current monthly diary page.)
APRIL 2016
BEST YEAR EVER! Thanks to a confluence of good timing, excellent cooperation with the Grand County Sheriff's office, money donated by ORBA, the Off-Road Business Association, skilled staff and the weather, we had the best year ever on Potato Salad Hill. There was almost no damage to the land outside the rock-outlined areas, and almost ever recyclable container was recycled. It was a bit on the cool side, and windy, so there weren't as many people out there as usual, but it was still jam-packed. Huge thanks to Linda Whitham, Abby Scott, Hillary Mead, Jane Butter, Carey Jones and Peter Stevens, for paid and volunteer work, prep and cleanup. I am excited to see this model project enjoy such success after 12 years of efforts. We are looking forward to an even better 2017!
FRIENDS OF THE PARKWAY This project has been in operation since August of 2004. I have been out and about walking areas of the parkway and doing cleanups, whenever possible and plan to look for more people who want to do occasional cleanups along our beautiful Mill Creek and Pack Creek parkway system.
PEOPLE IN NEED Through Moab Solutions' work with The Salvation Army, we helped over 30 people in March. We handled 16 cases, some single men, single women, and families. We are on call 24/7 and are honored to be available to help those with dire needs. The assists we gave in March ranged from car repair for a single parent, to bus tickets for stranded people, to food for a family burnt out of their home, and more.
MARCH 2016
The work is underway at Potato Salad Hill. I was just out there with an assistant, refreshing rock outlines, so people can easily see where the trail is. I will be out there fairly often from now until after Easter Sunday. We will be refreshing rock outlines, raking out any off-trail tracks, and removing any trash and recycling we come upon.
We are also preparing for our first work party in Mill Creek Canyon. Visit the Mill Creek Partnership website to learn more about our ongoing work there.
I am about to get my second Easter Seals trainee. Easter Seals pays the salary for a qualified person I can train on a variety of jobs, in the hope that the person will find satisfying employment. This is what happened with the first trainee I was fortunate enough to work with, and I hope it will be the same with the second! I will be teaching my trainee how to maintain recycle systems, search out camps on the in-town parkway so we can do outreach and offer assistance, and also do cleanups on the parkway and other areas around Moab.
FEBRUARY 2016
We got great news! We will be receiving a $2,000 donation from ORBA, the Off-Road Business Association to be used for our work at Potato Salad Hill. It will go toward the shuttle, ads for the shuttle, paid staff, and other essentials. We'd love your help with cleanups during the event, or prep work - like refreshing the rock outlines, raking out errant off-trail tracks, and the like, leading into the event.
Click here for more info on Common Thread.
We are out and about again on the in-town parkway system, trying to find any lost trash and recycling and give it a better home. We'd love your help there too. It is so beautiful to walk along the creek and see the deer, wild turkeys, and the occasional fox. The sounds of birds singing and water flowing makes for a great sound experience.
JANUARY 2016
LOTS GOING ON even in the dead of a cold winter. After catching up with life (and paperwork) after the intensity of fund raising for The Salvation Army, I will start gearing up for Easter Jeep Safari, which starts 10 days before Easter. That is on March 27 this year. We need to refresh the rock outlines, rake out tracks, make plans for the free shuttle system, add to our displays, and get the recycle station bins and signs ready. After 12 years of working out at Potato Salad Hill we are seeing very positive results as far as land saved from damage, recycling reclaimed, and trash removed from the gorgeous landscape.
At just about the same time, the Mill Creek Partnership will go through the canyon and make sure the trail from the parking area to left hand waterfall is clear and easy to follow.
I will be going out at the end of the month to do the yearly Point in Time count, something I have done for the last few years. The PIT is a nationwide count of homeless, based on where someone slept the night of January 27. I will go out three mornings in a row looking for people to count. I count the unsheltered homeless. I start contacting law enforcement and calling out to the community to see if people know where there are homeless.
Come join us for some fun at Potato Salad Hill!
DECEMBER 2015
Many challenges this month - I am in the midst of 28 days of fund raising for The Salvation Army Unit I volunteer for. The money that goes in the red kettle, and any private donations and grants we receive, must last us all year. We have been getting more calls each year, and we want to be able to help everybody who truly needs help.
We are amazed at the generous spirit that lives in this community. We usually raise over $10,000 in that kettle, and, so far, have grants and private donations totaling $6,000. Wish us luck!
Moab Solutions is preparing to fund raise for ourselves. We really want to raise enough for me to be able to hire an assistant so that our projects can continue on past my time with the organization. Board members Mary and O'B O'Brien are working with me on a fund raising letter and Moab Solutions fact sheet.
Easter Jeep Safari is March 19th to 27th this year, so I have to get busy soon, repairing the rock outlines at Potato Salad Hill (PSH), meeting with the working group, fund raising for the paid staff that is on-site Friday and Saturday evenings, and for the free shuttle service to the "hill". Last year we had a wonderful response to our efforts, and we look forward to doing even more this year. Check out our Programs and Projects page to learn more!
NOVEMBER 2015
October went by so fast it was near the end of the month when I realized I hadn't done an entry for the month!
Sad news in the homeless community in late October. Dani Miller, a woman I worked with off and on for years, passed away in a jail cell in Cortez, CO. She had been living over in Cortez for the past year or so. Dani was very proud of the work she did with us on here in Moab on cleanups and recycling. Once she moved, she called me every few weeks to let me know what was going on and to tell me about her cleanup and recycling efforts in Cortez. She had a tragic life in many ways and we ask you to keep a good thought for Dani.
We kept busy in the canyon cutting seed heads off the Ravenna Grasses, most of which are along the banks of the creek, so we had to stand in water a lot. Sadly, my cell phone fell in the water during one outing but I was able to have it repaired!
A super volunteer, Sandy Hultgren, helped me cut seed heads on dozens of the grasses located in town. We got permission from the county to work on the plants on in town county buildings. Sandy also cut back, then dug up, a grass that had planted itself in my yard. I will keep an eye on the site to see if the plant tries to grow back, but the non-herbicide approach made me happy!
In case you are wondering, Ravenna Grass is an imported, highly invasive and competitive grass that grows right over native plants and along the banks of waterways. It is classified as a weed in many states and efforts are being made to eradicate this "alien invader" before it causes even more harm. If you would like more information about this plant, visit the home page of the Mill Creek Partnership. There is a brochure there that gives a lot more information about this grass.
The beaver dams have been holding and doing the great work they do to improve the environment around them. The beaver even helped out a bit by cutting down some Russian Olives. One of my board members remarked that we were getting "free labor" out of the beavers! To learn more about the absolutely great work beaver do, check out this article written by board member Mary O'Brien.
This month we have to do some reveg work around where a bathroom was installed near the parking area. We still have seed heads to cut, and user created trails to rehab, but the canyon is returning to a quiet time, and it is absolutely lovely to be there.
I am continuing public recycling in several places, and working with installations in agencies. I just need to learn how to present the WHY recycling is so important. Even though reducing over recycling, recycling over landfilling is how I like to see it.
We are getting ready to coordinate the annual fundraiser for The Salvation Army. I volunteer with the unit and it is when we raise most of the money we use to help hundreds in need throughout the year.
SEPTEMBER 2015
This month is zipping by! Cooler mornings and evenings make the hot afternoons tolerable, and soon enough my favorite time of year for hiking, winter, will be upon us.
In the meantime, work continues in the canyon. We are cutting seed heads on Ravenna Grass left and right, keeping the canyon clean from the road up to the parking area to the left hand waterfall, and keeping the trails clear and easy to navigate.
I want to start doing lots of cleanups along Mill Creek Drive, and Spanish Valley Drive, up to the mountains. There are truckloads of recycling and trash along the roads. It is hard to see until you get out and walk - that is when you see the staggering amounts.
We continue working with the homeless and people in need through Moab Solutions and through my volunteer work with The Salvation Army. It is a never ending process.
If you'd like to join me for a peaceful roadside cleanup, give me a call! 435-401-4685. If you want to learn more about Ravenna Grass and how to help curb its invasion of the area, go to
http://www.millcreekpartnership.net/ and click on the photo of Ravenna Grass on the home page.
AUGUST 2015
Lots of work going on in the canyon and it is looking good. My leg has healed enough that I can finally (!) go back to the waterfall area. We will get to the poison ivy the week of the 20th, and start cutting the seed stalks off Ravenna Grass soon after that.
I took a little break from the canyon and went out to Ken's Lake the other day. It was the definition of peaceful. Very quiet, gorgeous views. I did get a huge bag of dog waste, and little bits and pieces of other left behind items. It was very refreshing.
I trained some of the folks at The InterAct Club on how to maintain their newly installed recycle system. People are really starting to get it and the bins are full of recycling that are then taken to the outside recycle station. When those bins get near full club members will take the recycling up to the Community Recycling Center. Great job, InterAct!
One of the formerly homeless men I started working with in 2008 has been in housing since last December and now has a full-time job. He pays his own way, with pride. I engage him to patrol the parkway looking for camps and recycling/trash about once a week. I will soon be back on my beloved parkway, scrambling through the bushes and climbing down the hillsides to get that aluminum can or fast food wrapper.
I'd love to meet you there and do a cleanup! Call me.
JULY 2015
As my leg heals work heats up in the canyon and elsewhere. We got some funding from BLM to have paid crews work with volunteers in the canyon. We are busy maintaining the main trail from the parking area to the waterfall (lots of pruning!) and closing off user-created trails. The poison ivy came back with a vengeance, so we hope to remove that from along the trail very soon. We are also going to collect native seeds from canyon plants and spread them as we remove tumbleweeds and other weeds.
We have sent our 14th and 15th to rehab in Denver. One is a repeat customer. He had completed the program (six months), stayed in Denver in a sober living house, but relapsed when he came back here. He was very eager to get back on the sober track, so wish him well!
I lost my Easter Seals trainee, but for a great reason. He got a full-time job doing something he loves! So I am back to patrolling the parkway alone, and maintaining a bunch of recycle bins in a lot of places around town.
MARCH 2015
Common Thread/Operation Cooperation: March 28-April 5, 2015
Things are moving along in our efforts at Potato Salad Hill (PSH). during "Jeep Week," which will take place from March 28 until Easter Sunday, April 5. This year we are expanding our manned recycle station and informational display area to include a free shuttle service from a nearby location to PSH. This will go a long way toward protecting natural areas in this fragile desert environment while allowing full enjoyment of the areas open for hill climbing.
We can always use a few more volunteers! Read more about the Common Thread/Operation Cooperation Project, or reach us through our Contact us page.
Mill Creek Canyon
We will be scheduling our first work party soon. There are a couple of user-created trails we need to close and make sure the main trail to the waterfall is clear. We will install a few new signs, and begin removing weeds so the native plants can thrive.
There are at least five new beaver dams within a half mile of the parking area. They create wonderful habitat for other creatures as the ponds in the stream they nourish the banks. I hope they survive the spring flooding.
Check out the Mill Creek Partnership website for more information about the work we are doing in the canyon.
Recycling and Cleanups
The recently installed recycle system at the InterAct Club is going very well. Now that it has been in place for awhile, we are going to do a training with staff, and then the clients, to explain why recycling matters, and what items can be recycled. We also want to thank them for taking the time to care about recycling.
Warmer weather found us out and about in places where we discovered massive abandoned homeless camps and/or drinking spots. I have been working with a couple of community service workers to get them cleaned up and make sure all the recycling goes where it is supposed to - the Community Recycle Center.
Helping people in need
We are continuing street level outreach trying to get everybody the help they need. Very few people had to stay out during this - thankfully mild - winter. I recently had a call from a man about to graduate from the six month rehab in Denver, CO. He is so happy to be sober and is looking forward to a vibrant life. We wish him all the best.
Thanks to all the people working together to help those in need!
The canyon is getting busy and so are we! I am very fortunate to have funding so I can have trail workers help me with trail maintenance, so we can make it easy for folks to get to the waterfall without creating numerous other trails. The Russian Olive removals and new native tree plantings are creating an increased beautiful feeling in the canyon. There are several beaver dams, and they are working their magic. The Great Blue Herons and ducks are often sighted near the ponds created by the beavers. Not sure if beavers are good for the world? Check out this great article. It will give you a whole new perspective on the situation.
The Clean Up Moab Facebook page is up and going. We hope to be able to devote time to that regularly and get some area-wide and regular cleanups going. Check it out on Facebook.
As soon as we get our editorial going, we will be placing ads and promoting our www.moabrecycles.org website. Have you seen it? Check it out and let us know what you think.
APRIL 2017
We have three big projects going - getting ready to kick off a community-wide recycle campaign, filming a movie and creating a Facebook page to get more folks involved in doing cleanups of the highways, byways, trails and streams all over this region, and getting ready for the 10 days of Easter Jeep Safari.
We have been working on a website for the recycle campaign. Check it out at moabrecycles.org.
MisoMedia filmed some cleanups we did in the washes of Potato Salad Hill and along the highway. It is being edited now and we will publish it as soon as we have it.
We are always looking for volunteers to help prepare Potato Salad Hill and help during the event. Give me a call if you want to volunteer! 435-259-0910.
Thanks!
MARCH 2017
March has been very active. Warm weather has brought thousands to the area as I scramble to keep up with my freecycle sites, get ready for "Jeep Week", work with those in need, and continue with trail and restoration work in Mill Creek Canyon.
A bright note! Marsha Marshall asked to volunteer with me to do cleanups. We have worked in a few areas and posted what we were doing on Facebook. We received a great response and offers to help, so we are going to create a Facebook page just for cleanup activities, photos and the like. Miso, a local filmmaker, is doing a short movie showing what a cleanup is like, and we will post that on Facebook. We hope to find lots of folks who love working directly with the earth, removing trash and recycling and restoring the natural beauty all around us. Stay tuned!!!
FEBRUARY 2017
The month is almost over as I write this! Well, half over. We have been enjoying the warmer weather and making plans for our project over at Potato Salad Hill, called Common Thread/Operation Cooperation. We have been doing cleanups with some enthusiastic new volunteers, working with the new crop of homeless, and trying to get the canyon ready for the hoards. We reported a huge panel of graffiti that we want to work on eradicating, but what we really wish is that people would just enjoy the amazing natural features of this gorgeous planet and not alter them. I think it is part of the disconnect with nature that causes this....the more we reconnect, the more we strive to restore and protect our precious earth.
JANUARY 2017
The new year brings a deeper determination to expand and refine our projects. We are currently working on a recycling/zero waste campaign and will soon launch a website with an easy-to-use guide on how to reduce, reuse, and recycle anything that is possible to recycle. We will be giving away a few six-month curbside recycling services from Green Solutions and featuring lots of local recycling heroes on the site.
We are also working toward finding all the good souls out there who do trash/recycle clean ups and try to start a monthly group cleanup somewhere in the area, while highlighting the ongoing work these individuals do.
The Salvation Army/Moab Solutions has been very busy with requests for help this month. We have had over 26 calls for assistance to date, (1-21-17), and expect a few more before the month is over. We are so grateful to the community for donating $13,198 to our red kettle during the fund raiser.
There are a few homeless out there that we know of, and we are working to find them and help them move forward in life if they so desire.
We'd love to have you join us for a cleanup!
DECEMBER 2016
This is far too busy a month to go into detail, but we are in the midst of a 29 day fund raiser for The Salvation Army at City Market, which takes a lot of time every day. We are also getting a lot of calls for assistance, and are aware of several new homeless in town. When we are done bell ringing at the red kettle, we will look for the camps and see what, if any, assistance we can offer. We have had a lot of calls regarding extremely mentally ill people and that is very challening. Mixed in with those are calls for utility payments, rent, and food.
In the meantime, we go to the canyon every morning and keep it clean while enjoying the beauty of the place. Now that the tourist season is quiet, multiple walks a day in area spots is the remedy for stress. We are so fortunate to live in such an incredibly gorgeous area.
We are also getting ready to launch our recycling campaign, aiming to get more people recycling and helping their friends and neighbors recycle. Stay tuned!
This community is so giving, we are moved by the generous spirit of those giving and those helping raise funds. So sweet!
NOVEMBER 2016
We are finishing up a few projects in Mill Creek before it gets too cold. We have had a much warmer than usual October and November (so far, I write this on the 19th!), but the cold weather is coming. We have transplanted some large grasses and laid down seed in disturbed areas, and are still erasing user-created trails. It takes months to undo what a few misplaced footsteps do in a couple of weeks.
The Salvation Army bell ringing starts the day after Thanksgiving. I have called over 50 people who rang last year to see if they want to ring again and mostly all have said "yes". We have a very caring community here which is one of the many reasons I love Moab so much.
We took the "recycled" jeep over to display during the Folk Festival. I think people enjoyed it. Its next stop, Easter Jeep Safari on Potato Salad Hill.
Still doing lots of "freecycling" and cleanups. On the 18th a few of cleaned up the parkway before the annual "Turkey Trot". We found loads (more than 20) of quart bottles of beer as well as aluminum, plastic and other smaller glass bottles. The trash was minimal in comparison to what we could recycle, which is usually the case. I fear that there are camps cropping up on certain areas of the parkway and I will go out soon with a couple of people and try to find them.
Come join us in a cleanup! We'd love to have your help and company.
OCTOBER 2016
Things are going great over in Mill Creek Canyon. I had the great fortune to meet a professional trail worker and had grant money to pay her. She has been erasing trails and fixing things for the last few weeks. We are starting on the front section, before the Powerdam, and will work our way back. It is amazing to see a pro in action. Thanks Shannon!
I went in and did some trail maintenance on the 2nd. Large limbs were down on the trail and some of the caging has to be repaired around some of the cottonwoods, but things otherwise aren't too damaged.
We had a very successful Volunteer Vacation with the Solihull Society in late September. It was a very windy day, but 7 of us managed to pick up almost 500 containers from just over a mile of roadway. We started at the Ken's Lake turnoff and headed to the mountains. A couple of folks who came late headed down to Ken's Lake, and I drove the truck to go collect full bucket loads of trash and recycling. The trash amounted to less than a quarter bag, while the recycling was at least two bags full! See the photo of the finished artwork created by the volunteers, with the unsorted recycling in front of it at the top of this page.
September 2016
This month is dedicated to Carli. She left this world on September 3. A constant companion, along with Chevy and Rascal, the three of us spent some part of everyday in Mill Creek. In fact, if not for getting these dogs off the chain, I never would have started going to the canyon every day. It was their need to run and explore after being chained up for a year that took me there. That I already was in love with removing trash and recycling from the land was a perfect fit for all the littered items I found there. We all walked together and I would pick up trash and recycling from the Tea Cup to the Waterfall and everywhere in between. I eventually started doing trail work, removing weeds, and working with the BLM to protect the place. Our formal agreement to run the Mill Creek Partnership came about in February of 2011.
In a very real sense, all the successes over at Mill Creek are because of the dogs. I honor Carli's memory every time I visit the canyon.
We have a volunteer vacation project coming up later in the month. We will be removing the recycling and trash from Spanish Valley Drive headed toward the loop road with an off-road group called The Solihull Society. But this cleanup has a twist. We will be stringing together and/or making some other piece of art to show the enormous numbers of recyclable items left on our roadways. This is something I have long wanted to do and was inspired by a fellow cleanup artist to attempt this. I will be calling out to local artists and other volunteers so we can really try to demonstrate just how bad this problem is, and how instructive it can be. For example, in a recent cleanup we picked up over 100 aluminum cans on Spanish Valley Drive just past Packard's. Most of those were alcohol containers. Not cool.
August 2016
July was hot, busy, and challenging, but the heat promises to break and we are re-energized to do all we can to help heal the earth and help people in need.
The Salvation Army unit I volunteer for had over 30 calls in July. Some calls are easy to handle, others can be very complex. Moab Solutions, in partnership with The Salvation Army, is working on getting our 18th person into rehabilitation, and are happy about that.
In fact, we just heard from a man who we sent to rehab twice! He graduated for the second time seven months ago. He is living in Denver and volunteers to help the homeless, works as a chef, and is enrolling in writing classes. Congrats Pat!
We are not happy about the state of Mill Creek Canyon and what we feel is the new normal all over this region. There are so many visitors that the shear numbers are having a very negative impact on the land. In Mill Creek, there are user-created trails off of user-created trails off of user-created trails. We can barely keep up with trying to brush them out and naturalize them, but we are hoping that Trail Mix will work with us in a massive autumn work party to get the front areas of the canyon healed up. Then I need to get working on the trail to the left hand waterfall and cut back brush so that the main trail is clear as a bell. That helps prevent user-created trails somewhat...
In the meantime, we are working on presenting an idea for a pilot project on the in-town parkway system to the City. We want to go herbicide free on parkway lands and are picking a small area to do this first pilot project. If it all works out, and the City approves it, we hope to expand the techniques all over the parkway and have an extremely healthy and vibrant ecosystem along the creek. Jeff Adams of Terrasophia has been kind enough to take the lead on this. Moab Solutions, which celebrates 14 years of Friends of the Parkway, is excited to be involved in this wonderful project.
We'd love to hear from you! Do you have ideas for projects or would you like to volunteer with us? Go to the "Contact Us" page.
July 2016
Work continues in Mill Creek Canyon, but the number of visitors is so great that lots of damage is occurring. We have been working to naturalize and fill in user created trails which are appearing as fast as we try to rehab them! Weeding continues as does the never ending job of removing littered trash and recycling. We are trying to figure out ways to encourage the "pack it in, pack it out" mentality and especially the "Leave No Trace" philosophy. Send us your ideas!
FreeCycling sites are filling with recycling almost as fast as I can empty them. There is a deep satisfaction that comes from realizing that you are part of keeping hundreds and hundreds of recyclable containers from the landfill, but there is also a lot of sadness about the huge problem of wasting.
We are working on an awareness campaign to bring the community up-to-date on the ever-changing landscape of recycling. We want to encourage more people to step up their recycling or to start recycling. Stay tuned for that!
June 2016
Work continues in Mill Creek even as things heat up fast! We are doing lots of weeding - in the parking area, on the steps down to the lower trail off the parking area, and then down the canyon to the Powerdam and beyond. Visitors are flocking to the canyon, so many over Memorial Day weekend that the cars were parked all the way down Powerhouse Lane to Mill Creek Drive! A few of us want to look for some solutions that would keep things open for people to enjoy while protecting this fragile gem of a place. Stay tuned!
Through our project, Volunteer Vacation, we will be working with a group from St. George arriving here on June 8th. Since there will be 25 people in total, we will split into a couple of groups in order to remove trash and recycling from the in-town Parkway system. We appreciate it when visitors want to give back. And many hands.....
Recycling Advocacy continues. I have been servicing our "FreeCycle" sites all over town and it is challenging, but rewarding to think of all the things that get a chance to be remade into something usable instead of being sent on a one-way trip to the landfill!
Also, we are reworking the Green Guide because so much of the information is dated. We are going to use this opportunity to take the guide well beyond recycling, as we feel that the worst impacts of climate disruption need to be dealt with by as many of us as possible, as much of the time as we can. We will be calling out for your ideas to include in the guide.
MAY 2016
As we head into spring, work abounds in the canyon and along the in-town parkway system. We are holding work parties in Mill Creek Canyon, and I have some folks doing regular cleanups from the parking area to left hand waterfall, including the tea cup area. Once the hot weather comes, we find at least a diaper a day, along with all the other trash and recycling. The canyon is looking good. Self seeding with some natives. We have loads to do to get the Ravenna Grass out, but keeping the seed stalks cut helps reduce their spread.
Earth Day on the Parkway was great. The lower grades of the Moab Charter School came to help with the cleanup and they got into all the nooks and crannies that is a bit more challenging for us older folks. It was wonderful to see their energy and enthusiasm. Thanks Moab Charter School!
We continue the work with the homeless and others in need. We feel that we are making progress on some fronts, as organizations work together to try to meet the needs, and on the other hand, we just don't have the services here that some people require. Maybe some day!
Enjoy the slide show below, from Potato Salad Hill, March 2016. (The slideshow is on the current monthly diary page.)
APRIL 2016
BEST YEAR EVER! Thanks to a confluence of good timing, excellent cooperation with the Grand County Sheriff's office, money donated by ORBA, the Off-Road Business Association, skilled staff and the weather, we had the best year ever on Potato Salad Hill. There was almost no damage to the land outside the rock-outlined areas, and almost ever recyclable container was recycled. It was a bit on the cool side, and windy, so there weren't as many people out there as usual, but it was still jam-packed. Huge thanks to Linda Whitham, Abby Scott, Hillary Mead, Jane Butter, Carey Jones and Peter Stevens, for paid and volunteer work, prep and cleanup. I am excited to see this model project enjoy such success after 12 years of efforts. We are looking forward to an even better 2017!
FRIENDS OF THE PARKWAY This project has been in operation since August of 2004. I have been out and about walking areas of the parkway and doing cleanups, whenever possible and plan to look for more people who want to do occasional cleanups along our beautiful Mill Creek and Pack Creek parkway system.
PEOPLE IN NEED Through Moab Solutions' work with The Salvation Army, we helped over 30 people in March. We handled 16 cases, some single men, single women, and families. We are on call 24/7 and are honored to be available to help those with dire needs. The assists we gave in March ranged from car repair for a single parent, to bus tickets for stranded people, to food for a family burnt out of their home, and more.
MARCH 2016
The work is underway at Potato Salad Hill. I was just out there with an assistant, refreshing rock outlines, so people can easily see where the trail is. I will be out there fairly often from now until after Easter Sunday. We will be refreshing rock outlines, raking out any off-trail tracks, and removing any trash and recycling we come upon.
We are also preparing for our first work party in Mill Creek Canyon. Visit the Mill Creek Partnership website to learn more about our ongoing work there.
I am about to get my second Easter Seals trainee. Easter Seals pays the salary for a qualified person I can train on a variety of jobs, in the hope that the person will find satisfying employment. This is what happened with the first trainee I was fortunate enough to work with, and I hope it will be the same with the second! I will be teaching my trainee how to maintain recycle systems, search out camps on the in-town parkway so we can do outreach and offer assistance, and also do cleanups on the parkway and other areas around Moab.
FEBRUARY 2016
We got great news! We will be receiving a $2,000 donation from ORBA, the Off-Road Business Association to be used for our work at Potato Salad Hill. It will go toward the shuttle, ads for the shuttle, paid staff, and other essentials. We'd love your help with cleanups during the event, or prep work - like refreshing the rock outlines, raking out errant off-trail tracks, and the like, leading into the event.
Click here for more info on Common Thread.
We are out and about again on the in-town parkway system, trying to find any lost trash and recycling and give it a better home. We'd love your help there too. It is so beautiful to walk along the creek and see the deer, wild turkeys, and the occasional fox. The sounds of birds singing and water flowing makes for a great sound experience.
JANUARY 2016
LOTS GOING ON even in the dead of a cold winter. After catching up with life (and paperwork) after the intensity of fund raising for The Salvation Army, I will start gearing up for Easter Jeep Safari, which starts 10 days before Easter. That is on March 27 this year. We need to refresh the rock outlines, rake out tracks, make plans for the free shuttle system, add to our displays, and get the recycle station bins and signs ready. After 12 years of working out at Potato Salad Hill we are seeing very positive results as far as land saved from damage, recycling reclaimed, and trash removed from the gorgeous landscape.
At just about the same time, the Mill Creek Partnership will go through the canyon and make sure the trail from the parking area to left hand waterfall is clear and easy to follow.
I will be going out at the end of the month to do the yearly Point in Time count, something I have done for the last few years. The PIT is a nationwide count of homeless, based on where someone slept the night of January 27. I will go out three mornings in a row looking for people to count. I count the unsheltered homeless. I start contacting law enforcement and calling out to the community to see if people know where there are homeless.
Come join us for some fun at Potato Salad Hill!
DECEMBER 2015
Many challenges this month - I am in the midst of 28 days of fund raising for The Salvation Army Unit I volunteer for. The money that goes in the red kettle, and any private donations and grants we receive, must last us all year. We have been getting more calls each year, and we want to be able to help everybody who truly needs help.
We are amazed at the generous spirit that lives in this community. We usually raise over $10,000 in that kettle, and, so far, have grants and private donations totaling $6,000. Wish us luck!
Moab Solutions is preparing to fund raise for ourselves. We really want to raise enough for me to be able to hire an assistant so that our projects can continue on past my time with the organization. Board members Mary and O'B O'Brien are working with me on a fund raising letter and Moab Solutions fact sheet.
Easter Jeep Safari is March 19th to 27th this year, so I have to get busy soon, repairing the rock outlines at Potato Salad Hill (PSH), meeting with the working group, fund raising for the paid staff that is on-site Friday and Saturday evenings, and for the free shuttle service to the "hill". Last year we had a wonderful response to our efforts, and we look forward to doing even more this year. Check out our Programs and Projects page to learn more!
NOVEMBER 2015
October went by so fast it was near the end of the month when I realized I hadn't done an entry for the month!
Sad news in the homeless community in late October. Dani Miller, a woman I worked with off and on for years, passed away in a jail cell in Cortez, CO. She had been living over in Cortez for the past year or so. Dani was very proud of the work she did with us on here in Moab on cleanups and recycling. Once she moved, she called me every few weeks to let me know what was going on and to tell me about her cleanup and recycling efforts in Cortez. She had a tragic life in many ways and we ask you to keep a good thought for Dani.
We kept busy in the canyon cutting seed heads off the Ravenna Grasses, most of which are along the banks of the creek, so we had to stand in water a lot. Sadly, my cell phone fell in the water during one outing but I was able to have it repaired!
A super volunteer, Sandy Hultgren, helped me cut seed heads on dozens of the grasses located in town. We got permission from the county to work on the plants on in town county buildings. Sandy also cut back, then dug up, a grass that had planted itself in my yard. I will keep an eye on the site to see if the plant tries to grow back, but the non-herbicide approach made me happy!
In case you are wondering, Ravenna Grass is an imported, highly invasive and competitive grass that grows right over native plants and along the banks of waterways. It is classified as a weed in many states and efforts are being made to eradicate this "alien invader" before it causes even more harm. If you would like more information about this plant, visit the home page of the Mill Creek Partnership. There is a brochure there that gives a lot more information about this grass.
The beaver dams have been holding and doing the great work they do to improve the environment around them. The beaver even helped out a bit by cutting down some Russian Olives. One of my board members remarked that we were getting "free labor" out of the beavers! To learn more about the absolutely great work beaver do, check out this article written by board member Mary O'Brien.
This month we have to do some reveg work around where a bathroom was installed near the parking area. We still have seed heads to cut, and user created trails to rehab, but the canyon is returning to a quiet time, and it is absolutely lovely to be there.
I am continuing public recycling in several places, and working with installations in agencies. I just need to learn how to present the WHY recycling is so important. Even though reducing over recycling, recycling over landfilling is how I like to see it.
We are getting ready to coordinate the annual fundraiser for The Salvation Army. I volunteer with the unit and it is when we raise most of the money we use to help hundreds in need throughout the year.
SEPTEMBER 2015
This month is zipping by! Cooler mornings and evenings make the hot afternoons tolerable, and soon enough my favorite time of year for hiking, winter, will be upon us.
In the meantime, work continues in the canyon. We are cutting seed heads on Ravenna Grass left and right, keeping the canyon clean from the road up to the parking area to the left hand waterfall, and keeping the trails clear and easy to navigate.
I want to start doing lots of cleanups along Mill Creek Drive, and Spanish Valley Drive, up to the mountains. There are truckloads of recycling and trash along the roads. It is hard to see until you get out and walk - that is when you see the staggering amounts.
We continue working with the homeless and people in need through Moab Solutions and through my volunteer work with The Salvation Army. It is a never ending process.
If you'd like to join me for a peaceful roadside cleanup, give me a call! 435-401-4685. If you want to learn more about Ravenna Grass and how to help curb its invasion of the area, go to
http://www.millcreekpartnership.net/ and click on the photo of Ravenna Grass on the home page.
AUGUST 2015
Lots of work going on in the canyon and it is looking good. My leg has healed enough that I can finally (!) go back to the waterfall area. We will get to the poison ivy the week of the 20th, and start cutting the seed stalks off Ravenna Grass soon after that.
I took a little break from the canyon and went out to Ken's Lake the other day. It was the definition of peaceful. Very quiet, gorgeous views. I did get a huge bag of dog waste, and little bits and pieces of other left behind items. It was very refreshing.
I trained some of the folks at The InterAct Club on how to maintain their newly installed recycle system. People are really starting to get it and the bins are full of recycling that are then taken to the outside recycle station. When those bins get near full club members will take the recycling up to the Community Recycling Center. Great job, InterAct!
One of the formerly homeless men I started working with in 2008 has been in housing since last December and now has a full-time job. He pays his own way, with pride. I engage him to patrol the parkway looking for camps and recycling/trash about once a week. I will soon be back on my beloved parkway, scrambling through the bushes and climbing down the hillsides to get that aluminum can or fast food wrapper.
I'd love to meet you there and do a cleanup! Call me.
JULY 2015
As my leg heals work heats up in the canyon and elsewhere. We got some funding from BLM to have paid crews work with volunteers in the canyon. We are busy maintaining the main trail from the parking area to the waterfall (lots of pruning!) and closing off user-created trails. The poison ivy came back with a vengeance, so we hope to remove that from along the trail very soon. We are also going to collect native seeds from canyon plants and spread them as we remove tumbleweeds and other weeds.
We have sent our 14th and 15th to rehab in Denver. One is a repeat customer. He had completed the program (six months), stayed in Denver in a sober living house, but relapsed when he came back here. He was very eager to get back on the sober track, so wish him well!
I lost my Easter Seals trainee, but for a great reason. He got a full-time job doing something he loves! So I am back to patrolling the parkway alone, and maintaining a bunch of recycle bins in a lot of places around town.
MARCH 2015
Common Thread/Operation Cooperation: March 28-April 5, 2015
Things are moving along in our efforts at Potato Salad Hill (PSH). during "Jeep Week," which will take place from March 28 until Easter Sunday, April 5. This year we are expanding our manned recycle station and informational display area to include a free shuttle service from a nearby location to PSH. This will go a long way toward protecting natural areas in this fragile desert environment while allowing full enjoyment of the areas open for hill climbing.
We can always use a few more volunteers! Read more about the Common Thread/Operation Cooperation Project, or reach us through our Contact us page.
Mill Creek Canyon
We will be scheduling our first work party soon. There are a couple of user-created trails we need to close and make sure the main trail to the waterfall is clear. We will install a few new signs, and begin removing weeds so the native plants can thrive.
There are at least five new beaver dams within a half mile of the parking area. They create wonderful habitat for other creatures as the ponds in the stream they nourish the banks. I hope they survive the spring flooding.
Check out the Mill Creek Partnership website for more information about the work we are doing in the canyon.
Recycling and Cleanups
The recently installed recycle system at the InterAct Club is going very well. Now that it has been in place for awhile, we are going to do a training with staff, and then the clients, to explain why recycling matters, and what items can be recycled. We also want to thank them for taking the time to care about recycling.
Warmer weather found us out and about in places where we discovered massive abandoned homeless camps and/or drinking spots. I have been working with a couple of community service workers to get them cleaned up and make sure all the recycling goes where it is supposed to - the Community Recycle Center.
Helping people in need
We are continuing street level outreach trying to get everybody the help they need. Very few people had to stay out during this - thankfully mild - winter. I recently had a call from a man about to graduate from the six month rehab in Denver, CO. He is so happy to be sober and is looking forward to a vibrant life. We wish him all the best.
Thanks to all the people working together to help those in need!
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