Friday, December 27, 2013

 North Ogden City 
Welcomes Jami Jones
as the new City Treasurer

Jami comes to us from South Weber where she has worked as Treasurer for the past six years.  She grew up in Ogden.  Jami has two teenage children whom she adores.  Her family loves to travel as much as possible.  She enjoys the outdoors, cooking, football and tennis.  

Speaking of her new responsibilities in North Ogden, Jami said:  "I am excited to be in North Ogden and serve a great community." 

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

To All North Ogden Residents:

Have a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

From the Staff at North Ogden City

Wednesday, November 27, 2013


 SANTA CLAUS 
IS COMING TO
NORTH OGDEN


Monday, December 2nd a North Pole Express mailbox will be placed at Bicentennial park at Noon.  Letters mailed by Noon on December 19th will receive a response from Santa.  To help Santa save on postage, all letters must include a self-addressed, stamped envelope

Santa will be at Bicentennial Park at the following times.

Saturday, Dec.  7th:  6 pm - 7 pm
Tuesday, Dec.  10th: 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Saturday, Dec. 14th: 11 am - 3 pm
Monday, Dec.  16th:  5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Saturday, Dec. 21st:  11 am - 3 pm

Pictures used with permission from Microsoft

Friday, November 22, 2013

2013 NORTH OGDEN CHRISTMAS TREE
LIGHTING

Join with the North Ogden Civic League as we begin the Christmas Season with the lighting of Bicentennial Park, Washington and Pleasant View Drive.  The program will include entertainment, refreshments and a visit from Santa!

Monday, November 11, 2013

Hello!  We are your North Ogden City Parks and Recreation Department.  We are dedicated to developing and maintaining the beautiful parks and open spaces of North Ogden for you to use and enjoy, and providing a wide range of sports, recreational activities and special events for the entire community. 

Our office is located just to the north of North Ogden Elementary at 2705 N 550 East, but you will also find us at the local ball fields directing sporting events, maintaining the grass, trees, sprinklers and turf at the parks and trail systems, training lifeguards at North Shore aquatic center, taking registrations for activities at our office, and helping with events such as the Christmas tree lighting and Cherry Days

Parks
North Ogden City has 11 City parks with over 100 acres of open space that are maintained by our Parks Crew.  Visit our website (www.northogdenrecreation.com) to see pictures of all of our beautiful parks.

Assistant Parks Supervisor (Facilities) - Jesse Felter
Parks Worker - Byron Dallinga
Parks Worker - Ron Freestone
Seasonal Parks Workers - Tony Vigil, Nate Urban, Chase Ragan and Gavin Burke

Aquatics
North Shore Aquatic Center is North Ogden’s swimming facility (open Memorial Day to Labor day each year) offering numerous aquatic activities ranging from swimming lessons, water aerobics, age group swimming, lap swimming, facility rentals and open swimming for the you to enjoy. 

Aquatic Center ManagerJeff Diamond
Assistant Parks Supervisor (Aquatics) – Ken Young

Recreation
North Ogden has a wide variety of youth sports and programs including football, day camps, basketball, baseball, softball, kickball, racing events, volleyball and snowshoeing. 

Recreation SupervisorBecca Godfrey

Office & Special Events
Stop by our office to register for sports, learn more about special events, the community garden, Christmas lighting, or Cherry Days activities. 

Administrative AssistantTeresa Gray

If you have any questions about your parks, trails, recreation programs, aquatic center, or special events, feel free to stop by and visit or give us a call.  I hope you enjoy the beauty of North Ogden City and the many great things there are to do here.

Sincerely,

Parks and Recreation Director
801-737-0587

tstaheli@nogden.org

Monday, November 4, 2013

North Ogden Business of the Month
North Ogden City Corporation

Come into the office at 505 East 2600 North and meet the staff.  Much of the work by these North Ogden employees is behind the scenes and, although not seen, they contribute greatly to the effectiveness and efficiency of the City operations.  Housed in the City office is the Administration, Finance and Community Development Departments. 

The Administration Department is headed by Annette Spendlove.  They maintain the City records including the City website, newsletter, blog and Facebook.  They bill, collect and maintain utility accounts. They prepare minutes and agendas for City meetings, provide Notary Services, run the Municipal Elections and process annexations.  This department is also responsible for Human Resources and Risk Management.

The Finance Department is headed by Bryan Steele.  Bryan leads a staff of three who prepare all budgets, maintain financial records, invest City funds and pay City bills.

The Community Development Department is led by Craig Barker.  Craig and his staff of three are responsible for all planning and development in North Ogden.  They work with residential and commercial developers, inspect building constructions, create and maintain the City mapping records and process business licenses.

While at the City offices you will also run into Mayor Richard Harris and City Manager Ron Chandler who always welcome visitors and love to talk City business.

If you call or visit the North Ogden City office, you will most likely talk with Stephanie Valdez.  Stephanie has worked for North Ogden since November 17, 2012.  She is usually the first to interact with customers and is always kind, patient and helpful.  Stop by this month and wish Stephanie a happy anniversary.



 NORTH OGDEN CITY INSTALLS PEDESTRIAN ACTIVATED CROSSING LIGHTS!

To increase the safety of North Ogden children the City Public Works department installed pedestrian activated crossing lights on 575 East in front of North Ogden Jr. High School.  This is the second set of lights the City installed at the the school.  The first lights were installed last fall at the intersection of 575 East and 3100 North.

We encourage all parents to remind their children to use these lights when crossing these streets, especially during the time school is in session.

This is an ongoing effort by the City to protect our children.  In recent months the City also hired a new crossing guard for North Ogden Elementary School.

Friday, November 1, 2013


NORTH OGDEN BUSINESS OF THE MONTH:

NORTH OGDEN CITY CORPORATION

Welcome to North Ogden City!  North Ogden was founded as a town in 1934, with a population of only 600, and has now flourished to nearly 18,000 residents!  The City provides many services for its residents from quality drinking water to cultural arts.  The City Office building can answer questions regarding your culinary water, sewer and garbage.  They also provide notary services and record requests.  The Building and Zoning Department issues building permits, conducts inspections, issues business licenses, and answers your zoning questions.  They also have many different city maps.  Public Works is responsible for maintenance of the City’s water, storm water, and sewer lines.  They maintain the roads and garbage cans as well.  The Police Department does an exceptional job keeping our City safe and informed.  Community Services is here to assist you with reservations of the City’s beautiful parks.  This department works diligently to keep the parks looking great and they oversee the recreation programs throughout the year.  Be sure to check the City website, www.northogdencity.com, to stay current on all the City’s events!  Also check out the City’s blog, Ron’s Report, every week for City news and updates.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Two North Ogden Teams will Participate in the Northern Utah Mini-Bowl on Saturday

The North Ogden Warriors - age 9 and the North Ogden Warriors - age 13 who participate in the Wasatch Front Football League sponsored by North Ogden City Recreation won their respective playoff games and will participate in the Northern Utah Mini-Bowl against two teams from Syracuse.  The Mini-Bowls will be held at 3:30 p.m. (for the 9 year olds) and 5:30 p.m. (for the 13 year olds) on Saturday, October 26th in the Weber State University Stadium.  This is the first time since 1996 since a North Ogden Team played in the Mini-Bowl.  GO WARRIORS!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013


Early Voting Has Begun 
and
Will Continue Monday - Friday
Through November 1st 
at
the North Ogden City Offices
505 East 2600 North
Hours: 9:00 am to 4:00 pm
except 
November 1st that will be 9:00 am to 5:00 pm

North Ogden City Ballot

North Ogden City Mayor - Vote for One -
Brent Taylor
Wade Bigler
Write-in

North Ogden City Council - Vote for up to Two -
Phillip Swanson
Lynn Satterthwaite
Brian G. Russell
James D. Urry
Write-in

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

ELECTRONICS DUMP

October 24th and 25th
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

North Ogden City will hold an electronics dump day for City residents.  Bring any electronics to be recycled to the Municipal Building at 505 East 2600 North.  


GREEN WASTE PICK-UP

North Ogden has scheduled the fall Green Waste Pick Up for October 21st - 25th. Collection will be on your regular garbage day.  The volume of material may, however, delay collection.

The regulations mentioned below must be followed when placing material out for collection.  All materials must be in bags, boxes or containers.  Bush clippings and small tree limbs must be bundled and no longer than 5 feet in length.  Weight limit is 75 pounds.  Place materials in parkways, not on curb or waterways.
This is Green Waste Clean-Up Only.

We appreciate citizen participation and encourage your use of the compost facility.  For that reason the compost facility will be open for your use at NO CHARGE the entire clean-up week (Monday - Friday) from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm and Saturday from 9:00 am to noon.

If you have questions contact the City Shop at 801-782-8111 or email srobison@nogden.org.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

The well needed road construction on 450 East from 2600 North to Elberta Drive continues.  Thank you for your patience while we resurface this road.



Thursday, September 5, 2013

Press Release by Standard and Poors - September 3, 2013

Rating Raised to 'AA-' On North Ogden, UT Sales Tax Revenue Bonds on
Very Stong Coverage, Lack of Additional Debt Plans

SAN FRANCISCO (Standard & Poor's) Sept. 3, 2013--Standard & Poor's Ratings
Services raised its underlying rating (SPUR) to 'AA-' from 'A+' on North Ogden,
Utah's series 2004 sales tax revenue bonds.  The outlook is stable.

"The raised rating is based on our view of the city's very strong coverage and lack of
plans to issue additional debt," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Jen Hansen.


Last week a mother, father and their young son stood outside the aquatic center.  The parents nudged the son, and encouraged him to go up to the front window.  He was barely tall enough to reach the window ledge, but walked over, reached up his arm and put a note on the countertop.  The cashier said hello, and he asked her to please give the note to Nigil.  She asked his name, and he replied “just please give it to him,” and then quickly went back over to his parents.  Nigil Bailey is our Head Lifeguard, and had rescued this boy earlier in the week.



"Dear Nigil  Thank you for saving me from drowning.  
From Deakon."

Thursday, August 29, 2013

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS NOTES


A 12 Point Program for Individual, Family & Community Preparedness


By Al Cooper


1.      Have an emergency plan


Develop, maintain and practice a written, comprehensive plan detailing how emergency contingencies will be mitigated, prepared for, responded to and recovered from.

Ask the question – “What would we do if. . .” a particular set of emergency circumstances were to arise? Think about possible and likely risks and areas of vulnerability, then identify desirable resources and possible options.
Consider how your plan correlates with school, work place and neighborhood plans. Keep in mind the fact that the very process of making a plan may well be more important than the plan itself.

2.      Get an emergency kit


Assemble and maintain a portable 72-hour emergency kit containing items designed to support each individual with vital health & personal items designed to support each individual with vital health and personal comfort essentials for two or three days away from home. Of the two most likely responses to a wide range of emergencies, the possibility of evacuation should drive this effort.

Keep your personal kit simple, light in weight, and easy to update according to seasonal and other variables. Any of a long list of
possible carrying options may prove practical, including a compact back pack which leaves hands free. Of primary importance is a flashlight and battery radio together with fresh backu-up batteries for each. Other impo rtant items often overlooked might include essential medications, some cash money (“plastic” might not work” and a list of key contact information. Position your kit(s) with quick access in mind.

3.      Have emergency food supplies

 Fortify home-base with food, water and other provisions designed to care for the regular daily needs of those resident there, anticipating the second of the two most likely emergency situations – one where for possibly extended periods of time, outside resources will    be unavailable or limited.

Don’t allow yourself to be daunted by the notion that there is magic” in the famous “one-year-supply.”

Begin with an inventory of what you already have, then set some practical, reasonable and
achievable goals for adding the things in form and quantities which make sense for you. This is not a
one-size-fits-all game plan. Build your program around foods which are desirable for you, have a long shelf life, and require a minimum of preparations. Date everything, and begin at once to put it into regular use, always maintaining and increasing based upon experience.


4.      Prepare to shelter-in-place


  Identify, outfit and prepare an area of your home base suitable for a “shelter-in-place” emergency, such as might arise from a hazardous material release. In such a case, evacuation might expose a population to a greater danger than “staying put.”

Select a room or space which is relatively easy to isolate from outside air intake, and which promises a
degree of comfort for a short period of time. In outfitting this space, assume that the emergency may involve a temporary interruption of electric power with the personal inconveniences which follow. A shelter-in-place kit should include a battery-powered radio and flashlight, along with pre-cut sheets of plastic and tape for helping to further proof the area against outside contamination. Some of the same thoughtfulness which goes into the 72-hour kit can help guide preparations here. A kit which fits under a bed or into a closet corner is sensible.



5.      Know your home


Make it your business to become familiar with the critical infrastructure of your homebase and learn how to operate electric circuits, natural gas service controls, culinary water main valves, outside air vents, etc. Locate necessary tools where they are handy for use in an emergency. Consult
appropriate experts if necessary. Knowing when to take in turn utilities off and on is important.

Remember during a “shelter-in-place” emergency to turn off air conditioner/heating systems which bring outside air into the building or space providing shelter. In schools and work places, this may require the services of a custodian.



6.      Take inventory


Inventory items of special value and importance and their location in the home base, assigning a priority to each. In the event of an evacuation order, there may be only minutes to take property with you. Limitations of time and space may suggest the need to pre-position and/or protect such belongings.

The very act of producing this list – like the basic plan itself may prove a useful minder of the things that really have value in our lives. Usually, it will be family records, genealogies, irreplaceable photos, etc. which rise to the top of the list. A plan
re
to consolidate the location and enhance the portability of high-priority items may result.



7.      Equip your car


Outfit the family vehicle(s) with items which will add to its safety and security in various emergency and everyday situations, with an eye to the changing of seasons and circumstances. Make it a matter f habit to keep the fuel level above the halfway mark.

Such obvious items as a blanket, heavy-duty flashlight, container of drinking water, a collapsible shovel, a basic first aid kit and jumper cables are a start. Some high-energy snack bars and weather-conscious clothing items are good additons. A sharp- pointed rock hammer within the
driver’s reach may become a life-saving method of breaking through a window in a flood situation, and a spare cell-phone kept charged is a smart further step

8.      Prepare to go powerless


Prepare the home base to remain secure and reasonably comfortable during short or extended periods of electrical power failure. This is once of the most likely events to follow in the wake of both natural and man-cuased emergencies. Alternate lighting, communication, heating and food preparation resources should be part of the basic emergency response plan.

Battery-operated lights should be positioned strategically in different parts of a residence along with a program which insures a supply of back-up batteries. (Alkaline batteries have a long shelf-life, and LED systems operate frugally.) In the case of a prolonged outage, alternate-fuel lamps may prove important. Propane lanterns handy cartridge with replacement systems are easy to use and widely available. Kerosene-fueled lamps, such as the Aladdin design are economical to operate and
provide a soft, silent source of illumination while producing a minimum of fumes.
(Always plan for extra fresh air sources and ventilation when using any fueled device indoors or in a confined space. They all will consume some of the available oxygen supply as well as produce fumes.) Storing flammable fuels requires special attention, and kerosene is less volatile than others. Outdoor propane and charcoal grills are an excellent cooking alternative, as are camp stoves and Dutch oven systems. Extra blankets, sleeping bags and warm clothing should be a part of every non-electric plan. At least one adult family member should remain awake and on watch when alternate lighting/heating devices are in use, even with recommended ventilation. Make sure that the presence of charged A,B,C fire extinguishers and practice in using them correctly is a part of your basic emergency response plan. Gasoine or other combusibly-fueled generators may greatly extend the ability to compensate for loss of commercial power, but require a knowledge and planning to operate safely. Never position a generator indoors or where its exhaust fumes may migrate into a living space. Remember that the storage of adequate fuel supplies adds a certain safety burden, and limits the duration of this alternate source of power.

9.
Plan for pets

Plan for the care and disposition of pets and domestic livestock in the even of a range of possible emergency spawned contingencies.  Almost without exception, emergency shelters usually managed by the Red Cross do not welcome pets.  domestic pet plans might include larger quantities of food, supplies, provisions for automatic, gravity feed water  and food dispensers, multiple litter boxes, etc.  Arrangement for extended care by family members, friends or commercial service providers might also be considered. 






10.  Figure financial contingencies


Develop a comprehensive “Financial Contingency Plan” geared to your particular set of economic circumstances and designed to respond to the possible interruption of normal cash flow and debt retirement obligations.

Among those “emergencies” most likely to occur at some point, but least anticipated and planned for is the interruption of income occasioned by loss of employment, illness or even the unexpected death of a bread-winner. The economic consequences of a natural or manmade disaster may also effect cash flow in a temporary, or even long-term way, reducing our ability to dal with everyday affairs and activities. In addition to making use of food storage supplies already identified, and thereby freeing up financial resources, contingency plans might also include such goals as the accumulation of cash reserves on an ongoing basis, and the pre-payment of some key monthly obligations, ie. Home mortgages, car contracts, and medical insurance plans. “Buying time” thus becomes an important dimension of the
  overall emergency plan. While this may not be accomplished easily, or all at once, it is a worthwhile long-term objective well worth pursuing.


11.  Remember your health


Plan for the continuation of health and medical needs during a time of extended emergencies and special circumstances.

With an empmhasis on critical, life-supporting medications and supplies, and with the consultation of the prescribing physician where indicated, maintain a supply of such items sufficient to bridge an emergency response such as enforced evacuation or other interruption of normal access. Carry on your person

preferably, vital written prescriptions for eye glasses and other vital, medical needs, and a clear description of treatment requirements. An insulin-dependent diabetic, for instance, should anticipate having to leave home base with a small portable cooler, and a supply of insulin and syringes. Just as one shouldn’t allow the fuel in the vehicle to get below half, the person with a medication dependency, should not allow the supply to get below personal the 30-day mark. Make sure some other family member has a copy of your medical plan.

12.  Remember those with special needs


Include someone with special needs in your planning. Somewhere, probably nearby, is a neighbor or acquaintance who is handicapped, elderly, home-bound, or medically-dependent and alone. Be prepared to share your resources, and the security of your home base with that person, and to check on their well-being in a time of emergency.

It is an article of faith among those who have studied, or personally real disasters, that in the end, it is neighbor-helping-neighbor which most insures the “disaster-resiliency of a community.
endured