News

HCH board nixes fencing request, reviews health survey

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In their July 20 meeting, the Hemphill County Hospital Board rejected a request by Jocelyn Timmons to construct additional privacy fencing around the southwestern perimeter of the Mesa View Senior Living (MVSL) one-way circle drive. During the construction phase of the facility, in July 2019, Timmons made three requests of the board: a change in the compaction process for the site because of fears of cracks forming in her family’s residence which is situated west and downhill of MVSL; clarification of steps the builders were taking about drainage issues; and that a privacy fence be installed above the family’s property to obstruct the view of her backyard. All requests were granted and adjustments made.
Hemphill County Hospital

Secured by safety lines and a prayer

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Canadian’s population must have gotten a significant boost, recently, from the legions of construction crews replacing haildamaged roofs on homes and businesses all over town. This scene at the First Baptist Church on Main Street caught our eye early Wednesday morning, as a team of West Texas Roofers tethered themselves with safety lines to climb the sharply pitched surface. The church sign offered prayerful words, which can’t have hurt, either: “Faith is not knowing what the future holds, but knowing who holds the future.” We drove away thinking of one our favorite old hymns, sung Ry Cooder: “Jesus is on that mainline, tell Him what you want.” PHOTO BY LAURIE EZZELL BROWN
First Baptist Church

Finding a cure ... for coronavirus vaccine hesitancy

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The new buzzwords in the local medical community are “vaccine hesitancy,” a term that assumes an even more urgent undertone as the delta variant spreads, and Texas’ coronavirus test positivity rate is reported to have exceeded 10 percent, this week, for the first time since February.
This was the 200 Hall at Hemphill County Hospital in November of 2020. The entryway was draped in plastic, marked with signs warning visitors not to enter. The hall—which had been converted to serve as the hospital’s COVID Unit—was restricted to medical personnel and the acute care patients who were hospitalized there. Local doctors were warning the public that if they had a heart attack or stroke, and were taken to Hemphill County Hospital, they would not be transferred to an acute care unit elsewhere beca

While western states suffer, Texans relish respite from drought

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The U.S. experienced the extremes this week, with expansion of drought in the West, a robust monsoon in the Southwest, a tropical storm making landfall in the Southeast, and extreme flooding in Southeastern Texas. In the drought monitor maps at right, extreme to exceptional drought plagues much of the western part of the country, while most of Texas is unusually drought-free, with only 5 percent of the state experiencing drought conditions, ranging from abnormally dry to severe. Most of the Texas Panhandle has been richly blessed with rainfall this spring and summer. In Hemphill and surrounding counties, residents are enjoying lush, green vegetation; relatively pleasant temperatures; and welcome relief from the familiar threat of wildfires. In the five-day outlook from today to Monday, sunshine and warmer temperatures are in store for the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles, with a small chance for showers and thunderstorms over the weekend. It’s a pretty sure thing that no one will complain if it happens, either.
Drought Monitor

Last Cowboy’s Court welcomes area ranchers to July 4 branding event

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Hemphill County ranchers gathered Sunday afternoon at The Last Cowboy’s Court hotel for an opportunity to burn their brands into the cedar posts on the front porch of the hotel office. Limited tours of the hotel rooms—each of which is designed as a tribute to this area’s historic family ranches—were also offered to the guests.
Beth Ramp Sturgeon burns the Ramp Ranch brand into the main beam of the Last Cowboy’s porte cochere, as Joshua, Ella and Elsie Tubb, children of Wyatt and Anna Tubb, and grandchildren of David and Sue Tubb.

Rock of Ages

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Kyle Northcott (in photo above) reported last week that a small pine tree that had grown through a crack in a giant rock in the yard outside of his home had finally succeeded in busting the boulder and that emergency remediation was underway. We were curious to know more about its history, and Kyle shared this information:
Rock of Ages

EDC focuses efforts on marketing Canadian’s many assets and recruiting new residents

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Economic Development Council board members took a decisive step forward in its plan—now several months in development— to market Canadian and Hemphill County as a place to live and do business. On the recommendation of the newly-installed board president, Remelle Farrar, the council voted unanimously to appoint a seven-member team of local leaders and volunteers tasked with the job of marketing and recruitment.
EDC
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