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Canyon Echo

A Journal of Southeastern Utah

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Rumor Mill: Transfer Station Activity

A Canyon Echo reader writes, “What the hell is going on out east of the old transfer station? Tons of equipment out there.”

We don’t know but we’re looking into it. If you have information related to this matter, please get in touch.

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Related

Posted on January 28, 2019January 30, 2019 by zpodmorePosted in Bluff Rumor MillTagged rumor.

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Previous Previous post: San Juan School Board Votes Down CRA Proposals in Bluff and Blanding
Next Next post: SITLA cancels oil and gas lease sale within original boundaries of Bears Ears National Monument

Bluff Area Mutual Aid (Coronavirus)

The Canyon Echo will be publishing updates on the coronavirus pandemic as it relates to southern San Juan County. We’re also hosting info about a local mutual aid group for those in need. Click here for more info if you need help or if you want to volunteer.

Click here for San Juan County outbreak news updates.

Bluff Rumor Mill (About)

Over in Cortez, they have their “Crime Wave Continues” column. Here in Bluff, like any good small town, we have a local rumor mill. As Canyon Echo works to reestablish itself as a community forum, we hope to streamline the rumor manufacturing process. Want to report something you’ve heard floating around town? We’ll investigate it. Want to clear up a bit of misinformation? We’ll post it. Or you can come here to share events, announcements, or gripes (so long as they’re relatively polite). Just want to thank someone for a good deed? We’ll allow that too.

—CLICK HERE to Submit

Statement of Intent

The Canyon Echo is from a place diverse in cultures and landscapes. Perhaps we are Diné, Anglo, or Ute. Whoever we are, we are here together. Where we live, water comes as sudden news to desert mesas and winds its way through arroyos and canyons, the neural network that informs and nourishes this country and its inhabitants. Canyon Echo listens to what reverberates through these canyons on the middle and lower stretches of the San Juan River, hoping to echo with clarity for those who call desert and river home.

–Editors of the Canyon Echo, 1994

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Canyon Echo Photo Stream

Winter light on crumbling cliff'Con Te Partiro' Andrea Bocelli skyLearning to flyLost track
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Recent Posts

  • The Utah Navajos Relocation in the 1950s: Life Along the San Juan River (originally pub. July 1996)
  • Free coronavirus testing returns to Montezuma Creek April 30 – May 1
  • Free coronavirus testing available this week in Navajo Mountain and Monument Valley
  • Coronavirus cases in San Juan County rise to 6, curfew implemented on Navajo Nation
  • San Juan County has its first confirmed case of COVID-19, camping banned for non-residents
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