Sep 29, 2009 | Glenwood Post Independent
The Grand Valley Quilt Show happens today, Sept. 26th from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday, Sept.
Glenwood Springs Post-Independent
Thomas Glover Cabin moved to new site in Battlement Mesa
The historic Thomas Glover Cabin was moved from its original site on Parachute Creek to a new home on Battlement Mesa this week, thanks to a joint project of the Grand Valley Historical Society and the Williams gas company.
Drilling slump hits school budgets
Administrators didn't expect students to fill the new Grand Valley Middle School to the brim when the doors first opened this school year.
Historic Parachute cabin saved
For more than one hundred years a log cabin has stood along Parachute Creek, near County Road 215.
Grand River Hospital District offers three flu shot clinics
Grand River Hospital District knows the importance of keeping its staff and others healthy.
Garfield County Public Health offers flu shot clinics
The best way to prevent seasonal flu is to get vaccinated, but good health habits can also provide protection against the flu.
Police Blotter, Sept. 14, 2009
A 19-year-old Battlement Mesa man was not injured when the GMC pickup he was driving crashed into a retaining wall Saturday afternoon near the intersection of Colorado Highway 13 and Rio Blanco Road 5. The man appeared to have fallen asleep while heading east on County Road 5. He failed to stop his pickup at the intersection with Highway 13 and ...
Grand River physical therap...
Amber Graby has been with Grand River Medical Center's physical therapy unit for nearly two years.
Williams' retroactive permit for Battlement Mesa drilling hits a snag
A natural-gas company that has been drilling wells inside the Battlement Mesa PUD without the proper permits may have a harder time clearing its slate than it once thought.
EnCana answers critics about Wyoming groundwater study
A natural gas company has hit back at its critics, at least indirectly, regarding possible groundwater contamination in a gas field in central Wyoming.
Lawsuit says tumbling gravestone severed boy's ear
Defendant Glenwood Springs says it isn't liable because the city doesn't install or maintain gravestones GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colorado - Glenwood Springs has asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a woman who says her son's ear was severed when a gravestone fell over at a city cemetery.
Unique case against Glenwood may be dismissed
It appears that a civil lawsuit against the city of Glenwood Springs, filed by a woman who's son lost an ear when a gravestone at Rosebud Cemetery fell on him, could be dismissed, because the city's attorney says that the city is not liable.