


Gooding Community Newsletter
January 2024; #71
Wishing you a Happy New Year with the hope that you will have many blessings in the year to come.
Congratulations to Officer Nic Martin & Officer Darwin Lenker!
The City of Gooding and Gooding Police Department would like to congratulate our most recent Police Academy graduates. Officer Nic Martin (left) and Officer Darwin Lenker (right) attended and have passed the Fall 2023 session at the College of Southern Idaho.
Operation Facelift in Gooding
Flower baskets will be hanging along the Main Street in the spring. This project was unique because students at the High School in Mr. Woodlands class helped to create the brackets. Each bracket will have an encouraging word as you walk by. This project was sponsored by Glanbia Nutritional's.
Meet Janell T.
Janell is bringing her knowledge, skill set and healing touch to Gooding and the surrounding areas. Janell offers customized massages, manual lymphatic drainage massages, prenatal massages, and reiki massages.
Let Janell help you! Book today.
Soldier Mountain Ticket Sale⛷️
❄️25% off tickets. Let's start the 23/24 season off right❄️
Pickles Bar & Grill is Hiring!
Gooding Senior Center
Gooding Senior Center meals are available to the entire community.
Lunch is served at noon Monday - Thursday. The cost is $6.00 per person. Meals for children 12 and under are $3.00 per child. Breakfast is served on the 1st Saturday of each month from 7:30 am - 9:30 am.
New menus are available the 1st serving day of each month.
There are also several activities offered:
Pool: Monday - Thursday at 9:30 am and 1:00 pm. Pool dues are $10.00 for 3 months.
Pinochle: Every Monday and Thursday right after lunch, so anywhere between 12:30 pm and 1:00 pm. The cost is $1.00.
Hand and Foot: Every Tuesday at 1:00 pm. The cost is $1.00.
Bingo: Friday nights at 6:00 pm. The cost is $1.25 per card and 10 games are played.
Foot Care: Every 3rd Wednesday of each month at 11:00 am. The cost is $10.00.
Fit and Fall Proof: Every Monday and Wednesday from 10:30 am - 11:15 am. All equipment is provided and there is no charge.
Energy Assistance Councilors help with utilities, call (208) 934-5504.
The Senior Center building is available to rent for private parties. For reservations call (208) 934-5504.
The Gooding Senior Center is a 501(c)(3) non-profit. Your donations are important to the Center and will ensure that we can continue to provide life-enriching programs, activities and meals to the seniors in Gooding.
No donation is too small. We appreciate your support and thank you for your generosity!
Donations can be mailed to:
Gooding Senior Center
c/o Lynn Corbett
308 Senior Ave
Gooding, ID 83330
Message From Mayor Diane Houser
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR
DIANE HOUSER, MAYOR
I HOPE YOU ALL HAVE A VERY Merry Christmas. This year has flown by so fast. In a few more days we will be celebrating the New Year. In our city this year we have had so many different projects …An outdoor gym that was completed in the West Park. We are midway in the building of our Wastewater Treatment Plant and we are in the planning phase of our new BMX Park next to our Skate Park as well. This should be a great area for our town to come and ride the trails and jumps in the BMX Park and skate in the same area.
Our Public Works Director, Larry Bybee, has been working diligently with Idaho Transportation on the renewal of the highway (Main Street) through town and working with the Army Corps of Engineers on the river wall. This construction will continue for the next few years. We will be sure to keep you up to date when these projects will be occurring. We wish it could be completed tomorrow but as you know…these things take time.
On behalf of our City, I would like to express our appreciation to the Gooding Chamber of Commerce as they did a great job with the community lighting of the Christmas tree and the Parade of Lights. Glanbia won brightest of lights and Billie Miles’s semi with the reindeer pulling a racecar won Best of Show. We had a great turnout and Santa Claus was the star attraction. I understand the Grinch also made an appearance this year as well. Guess you never know when he will pop up. Thank you to Gooding County for allowing the front foyer to be open to the public to stay warm in during the tree lighting. Karl Souza, thank you for all your hard work. In addition, a big thank you to Clay Jackson, DBA Broken Bonez BBQ, and Heather O. Day, DBA Buzz Thru Daily, for their support to the Gooding Senior Center and their hard work in involving community, business support, and fund raising to support the Senior Center. Fantastic job, well done! It nice to see our community come together.
In the past year, we have had several new businesses come into Gooding. Duane and Tonya Burg have opened an Airbnb/event location called the Schubert Inn on Main. We have a new RV Park being completed on the south end of town. Les Schwab’s new facility is well underway. Pocket Sinclair, Farm Bureau Insurance, Horse Creek Taxidermy, Idaho Therapy in Motion, a new owner at the Shell Service Station, and we may have some additional construction in the future on 3rd Ave E, just to name a few.
Great job to the business owners, we have a prosperous town, and more expansion is welcomed in the future.
GOD Bless have a Happy Holiday and New Year.
Message From Police Chief Dave Fisher
The Gooding Police Department would like to wish everyone a Happy New Year. While enjoying the festivities, please be careful, and make plans for a ride home should you choose to drink.
Another hot topic lately is animal control, and specifically dogs within the City of Gooding. The City does operate a no kill shelter dog pound but is limited in space. We strive to return dogs to their owners as soon as possible due to the limited space available. One way we can do this is through dog licensing as required, name tags on dog collars, and finally through the use of a chip reader when tags are not present or lost. All dogs must be licensed in the City by the end of January for the current year. To accomplish this, the owner must show proof of rabies vaccination. This proof minimizes the medical and financial impact should the dog bite someone. No more than 6 dogs are allowed per residence, unless a variance permit is obtained through the City.
Owners are responsible to ensure that their dogs are not running loose upon any property other than that of its owner. This includes any public places such as parks or schools. Any time the dog is off the property of the owner, including going for walks, they must be on a leash. If at a park or school, that leash may not be longer than 10 feet.
Dogs must be maintained in such a way that they will not be a nuisance. Frequent, continuous or untimely barking, molesting passersby, chasing vehicles, attacking other domestic animals, trespassing upon public or private property, including sidewalks and streets, shall be deemed a nuisance. (Dogs must not be restrained to an area by a lead that encompasses the sidewalk or street).
When restraining dogs, the owner or keeper shall not restrain a dog using a tether, chain, tie, trolley or pulley system or other device that:
1. Is less than 10 feet in length.
2. Weighing in excess of 20 percent (20%) of the dog’s body weight.
3. Fails to allow the dog to move at least 12 feet if the device is a pulley system.
4. Allows the dog to reach a fence or other object that may cause the dog to become injured or die by strangulation after jumping the fence or object or otherwise becoming entangled in the fence or object.
5. Uses a prong, pinch or choke collar or similar restraint while unattended.
6. For more than 14 hours during a 24-hour period.
Dogs biting humans may be handled though the city code, but most likely will be handled using Idaho Code 25-2810 (Dangerous and At Risk Dogs), which offers more stringent penalties, requirements, and financial obligations for medical treatment as a result of such incidents. This section, however, only applies to dogs biting persons.
If you would like to access the Gooding City Code online click on this link - Gooding City Code
🐾 2024 Dog Licenses Are Available 🐕
Gooding Public Library District January Events
Wastewater Treatment Plant Update
Keller Associates and GSE Construction have been doing a great job with the WWTP upgrade. The anticipated completion date is April 14, 2024.
Work anticipated for December is to continue the installation and electrical connections for mechanical equipment for the process basins. Pulling and landing wires to electrical components, misc. work and door installation for the process building. Installation and temporary start up the new headworks screen and continue the installation of yard piping and electrical conduit including installation of poly chem lines and drain lines to/from influent lift stations.
Process Building Mechanical Install
Process Building - TPO Roofing Install
Process Basin Equipment
Precast Basin Installation
Process Basin - UV Installation
SS Process Piping Installation
Battery Safety Tips from Fire Chief Steven Bishop 🚒
2024 5th District Rodeo Dates
Women of the Wild West Horse Sale in Gooding
Contact: Kalena Webb (208) 880-0308
🌳 Wood River Soil Conservation District Tree Order Time!
South Central Community Action Assistance Program
Do you need help with your winter heating bill? South Central Community Action may be able to help you at no cost. Give them a call today!
You can also visit their website at www.sccap-id.org.
Modernization Boosts Service and Efficiency in Gooding City, Idaho
Pictured above: The team at Gooding City Water Works includes, from left, Paul Childs, water/wastewater operator; Noel Edwards, water/wastewater superintendent; and Pam Childs, Jase Stockham, Glen Neal, and Joel Eilers, water/wastewater operators.
Modern water meters, GIS system mapping, and improved water pressure monitoring led the way to award-winning performance for Idaho’s Gooding City Water Works
Quality service. Reliable supply. Low rates for customers.
Those are the objectives that drive Noel Edwards and the team at the Gooding City Water Works in Idaho. Substantial system improvements have been key to achieving those aims. They include adding advanced water meters with remote usage reporting capabilities, mapping the water infrastructure electronically, and using technology to detect and respond quickly to drops in water pressure.
Those enhancements, and others, helped the Gooding City utility earn the 2022 Drinking Water System of the Year from Idaho Rural Water Association. Deserving to win isn’t the same as expecting to win: News of the award win came as a surprise to the utility team.
“This was a complete shock for all of us, especially there at the awards banquet,” says Noel Edwards, water and wastewater superintendent. “We weren’t expecting to win. I mean, there are a lot of good communities in our area, so we feel blessed.”
Quality source
Gooding is the county seat in a county of the same name. The water works serves about 3,700 people in an area covering 2.5 square miles. The distribution network consists of about 28 miles of pipe. “We produce from 200,000 gallons to 2.4 mgd, depending on the demand,” says Edwards.
The water source is groundwater, extracted from using three 200 hp pumps, and one 100 hp pump, 7322 BCBM models, from Nidec Motor Corporation. This water is discharged directly from the source to the pump and then into the mains with a direct-injection chlorine feed. The city has a 1 million-gallon reserve tank as a backup supply.
“We’re extremely fortunate,” says Edwards. “Our water source is really clean. We’ve been really blessed with not having to do much treatment for the community to provide quality drinking water.”
Notable improvements
The City of Gooding was established in 1907, and the water distribution system came online in 1920. “It’s over a hundred years old,” Edwards says. “Over that time, the city has made all kinds of improvements to the system.” The latest improvements are designed to keep costs down while maintaining water quality and availability. “These changes are going to save consumers money while ensuring service,” says Edwards.
The IRWA cited installation of Sensus Meter Transceiver Units (MXUs) at customer locations as the utility’s standout accomplishment in 2022. “They acquired and installed approximately 1,200 MXUs,” says the award citation. “These meters transmit a remote signal reporting water usage, which shortens the meter reading time by a day and a half each month and has saved the community over $300,000.”
“Reading signals remotely replaced taking three to four days to read meters manually,” says Edwards. “Now we do a drive-by and read them all in less than one working day.”
Next, the city took the guesswork out of locating water system assets by electronically mapping their positions using GIS. Edwards observes, “The GIS we developed with IRWA works on [the IRWA’s] SCADA system, which constantly monitors our remote sites.
“Using the GIS, our crews can go out in the field with tablets or cellphones and see the locations of sewers, manholes, waterlines, water valves and fire hydrants. In fact, we’re able to see everything in the field day or night. That really helps with response times and emergency calls.”
In the same vein, the SCADA system keeps a constant eye on pressure and water flows throughout the distribution network. Detecting pressure drops as they occur speeds up response time and troubleshooting.
Meanwhile, to ensure water delivery even when utility power fails, this utility has installed two Kohler Power Systems 250REZXB 260 kW backup power generators. “If a bad situation happens and the community loses power, we don’t have to worry about running out of water,” says Edwards.
An able team
To keep water flowing, Edwards works closely with a team of five operators responsible for the city’s drinking water, wastewater collection, and wastewater treatment systems. Edwards, has a Water Distribution 2 license and a Collection 1 license.
Paul Childs and Glenn Neal wastewater treatment operators, have those same qualifications. Pam Childs, water and wastewater operator, has a Collection 1 certification and is scheduled to receive her Distribution 1 license. Jase Stockham and Joel Eilers, water and wastewater operators, are working on their certifications. Hayden Peterson is the deputy city clerk who does the billing end of the water system in city hall.
“We try to be a team — not just coworkers, but an actual team,” Edwards says. “We spend a lot of time together. We depend on each other. With these people, when one struggles, the rest will pick up and help them through.”
Maintaining balance
Having access to a reliable and clean water source, plus up-to-date and well-maintained infrastructure and equipment, means the Gooding’s water works avoids getting stuck in crisis mode. But success doesn’t come without challenges.
“Our biggest challenges include just keeping up with the maintenance and demand while keeping the price low,” says Edwards. “We don’t want to raise rates. We just want to keep delivering quality drinking water in an adequate supply without affecting the community. And so every upgrade we do, we have to justify that it’s cost effective while providing benefits to the community.”
A case in point: “Our main booster pumping station that supplies our million-gallon tank is getting 30 to 40 years old.” Edwards says the team plans to add two smaller booster pumps, likely running at 25 and 50 hp, to support the existing 3,000 gpm booster pump. “They … will help us lower our power consumption and cut our energy costs.”
As for keeping up with future demand, the Gooding City Water Works has plenty of room to grow. “We added two new well sites three years ago. With those online we’re capable of providing 11.5 mgd for a community of 3,700 people. So we’re doing well on upgrading the system for future growth with those two new wells we’ve put in. We’re serious about continuing to provide Gooding with clean, reliable drinking water at an affordable cost.”
🎄Happy Holidays from Glanbia
Save The Date - Community Pesticide Workshop
Attention Small Business Owners!
If you own a small business and want a better understanding of healthcare coverage, register today! This class is presented by Teresa Yatzeck with Blue Cross of Idaho. This event will be on Zoom so that all can attend. If you have any questions, call 208-732-6450 or email idahosbdc@csi.edu