tthe lingle guidehe lingle guide1 day ago  · rights in the state did not receive a hear-ing in the...

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228 Main Street; Lingle, WY 82223 Phone (307) 532-2184 Your Trusted Community Connection! Print Web Mobile Social SUBSCRIPTION RATES Enhanced Value Plan 12-weeks auto pay -Goshen County - $9.99 12-weeks auto pay - out of county - $13.99 Annual Plan 1-year auto pay - Goshen County - $39.99 1-year auto pay - out of county - $49.99 Periodicals paid at Lingle, WY 82223 (UPS 231440) Postmaster: send address changes to the 228 Main Street; Lingle, WY 82223 Fax: 307-532-2283 • Online: www.lingleguide.com CONTACT US VIA E-MAIL Rob Mortimore - [email protected] Logan Dailey - [email protected] Jennifer Sterkel - [email protected] The Lingle Guide STAFF Publisher - Rob Mortimore Editor: Logan Dailey Office Manager - Jenn Sterkel Graphic Arts - Julie Carr DEADLINES News releases, legals, display & classied advertising are due Thursday at 12 p.m. 2021 MEMBER You will nd it all right here in Lingle and Goshen County. These local business people have PRIDE IN OUR PAST and FAITH IN OUR FUTURE. Our lives are enriched with the services they provide, the business relationships and friendships that are developed through the course of time. Look here – to your FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS – for goods and services. Extend that pride in our past and faith in our future. There has never been a better time to Do Business Locally. COOL CUSTOMS COOL CUSTOMS COOL Auto Worx COOL Auto Worx Gary D. Hunter • Owner r G G Gar G Gar Gar r G G Ga Ga ar r ry y y D y D y D y D y D y D y D y D y y y y D D D D H . . . . unt nter Owner Phone (307) 532-8808 Dan Heilbrun - Mechanic Phone (307) 532-8809 Hours: Mon-Fri 8:30am-6:00pm 2017 Campbell Dr. • Torrington, Wyo 82240 307-532-4448 www.pieperdentistry.com Timothy J. Pieper DDS, MAGD Britton M. Marsh DDS Always Accepting New Patients! Pieper & Marsh Family Dentistry 1542 South Main St.,Torrington, WY 307-532-3401 Your full service grocery store 1542 South Main St.,To T T rrington, WY 307-532- 34 3401 Your full serv vi ic c ce e e g g g gr ro ocery store Main Street Market W. Hwy 26 Torrington, WY 82240 307-532-4118 205 Main St. • Lingle, WY 82223 (307) 837-2113 Lunch 11:30am RSVP by 8:30am When you want more... When you want more... The Lingle Guide The Lingle Guide 689 WEST 15TH AVE. TORRINGTON, WY 82240 689 WEST 15TH AVE. TORRINGTON, WY 82240 www.lingleguide.com For Results In Advertising Call 532-2184 Bob Moorehouse B B B Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bob b b b b b b b b b b b b b M M M M M M M Mo Mo Mo Mo Moor or or or oreh h h eh h h eh h h h ehou ou ou u ou ous s se se se se 1442 West B Torrington, WY 82240 307-532-2264 • ( cell) 307-534-6567 Free Estimates, Licensed and Insured B2 LINGLE GUIDE FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 2021 LINGLE NEWS brought about by a procedural deadline. Monday was the final day for bills to gain initial approval in their chamber of origin, and more than two dozen piec- es of legislation that had gained com- mittee approval were not heard by that deadline. The list of bills brought before the bod- ies is typically determined by House Majority Floor Leader Albert Sommers, R-Pinedale, and Senate Majority Floor Leader Ogden Driskill, R-Devils Tower, in consultation with legislators and members of the public. The Wyoming Tribune Eagle has com- piled a list of noteworthy bills that died through the procedural process without a vote. After generating roughly four hours of testimony in a committee meeting ear- lier this month, a bill authorizing the le- galization and regulation of marijuana in Wyoming died without any discus- sion on the House floor. Sponsored by Rep. Jared Olsen, R- Cheyenne, House Bill 209 was pitched as a way for state officials to address the topic of marijuana legalization proac- tively, rather than waiting for possible federal actions that could catch Wyo- ming ill-prepared for a new regulatory landscape. With a 30% excise tax on marijuana products included, bill proponents also argued the measure could bring consid- erable revenue to the state, noting ini- tial estimates that the measure would bring roughly $47 million annually to Wyoming. The House Judiciary Committee ap- proved the bill by a 6-3 vote, with two lawmakers who voted in favor stating they were opposed to legalization but wanted to bring the discussion to their colleagues on the House floor. However, that debate will have to wait at least an- other year following the cutoff deadline Monday. Another marijuana bill, a proposal re- quiring state health officials to compile a report on medical marijuana in Wyo- ming, gained committee approval last week, but it also failed to receive a hear- ing in the House prior to Monday night. A pair of revenue-raising propos- als, one to increase the state’s fuel tax rate and another to hike its tobacco tax rate, failed without consideration in the Wyoming House of Representatives, the chamber where revenue measures are required to begin. House Bill 26, which gained approval from the House Transportation, High- ways and Military Affairs Committee last month, would have raised the state’s fuel tax from 24 cents per gallon to 33 cents and marked the first fuel tax hike since 2013. Had it passed the full Legis- lature, the bill was estimated to gener- ate roughly $61.4 million in annual rev- enue, divided between the Wyoming Department of Transportation and local governments. The measure was pitched as a way to aid the long-term budget struggles of the Wyoming Department of Transportation and local governments. For WYDOT, a report released late last year found the department is facing an annual fund- ing shortfall of roughly $354 million in unmet needs, with more than $100 mil- lion of those needs for the preservation of Wyoming’s roads and bridges. Meanwhile, a proposal to raise Wyo- ming’s tobacco tax by 24 cents per pack of cigarettes faced a similar fate as the fuel tax proposal. The legislation, which the House Revenue Committee endorsed during a virtual meeting in January, also would have increased the tax on moist tobacco snuff from 60 cents to 72 cents per ounce. The tobacco tax increase was estimat- ed to generate roughly $6 million annu- ally for the state’s general fund. During the committee meeting in January, pro- ponents of the proposal argued it would bring significant public health benefits to the state, potentially saving tens of millions of dollars in health care costs by encouraging smokers to quit. However, other associations, includ- ing the Wyoming Taxpayers Association, were opposed to the bill, arguing it was a regressive tax and doubting whether higher taxes on cigarettes would lead to long-term changes in individual behavior. Both revenue proposals died without a hearing in the House by Monday. In the Senate, a bill allowing law en- forcement to pull over drivers in Wyo- ming solely for not wearing their seat belts – a proposal designed to address the rising number of highway-related deaths in the state – was not considered by the body prior to the Monday deadline. Senate File 11, which was advanced by a legislative committee in January, would have joined Wyoming with more than two-dozen other states that have a primary seat belt law in effect. During the committee meeting earlier this year, officials from the Wyoming Department of Transportation and the Wyoming Highway Patrol spoke of the need for a primary seat belt law in the state, not- ing a recent study that found the number of Wyoming drivers who wear their seat belts had dipped from 2018 to 2019. Although the proposal was also backed by the Wyoming Trucking Association and the Wyoming Public Health Asso- ciation, it was not heard by the Senate prior to the cutoff deadline. Driskill, the Senate Majority Leader, mentioned the public push- back to the propos- al during a discus- sion with reporters earlier this month. “We know 100% that if you wear seat belts all the time you’re going to have less high- way deaths, so how do you explain that we don’t have a mandatory seat belt law?” Driskill said. “And that the majority of our population has made a choice that they want it to be a choice whether they wear it or not.” The proposal was not the only legisla- tion aiming to ad- dress highway safety that failed during this session. House Bill 11, a proposal re- quiring infants under the age of 2 to be in rear-facing car seats, was rejected by a 34-26 vote in the House of Representa- tives earlier this month. Although several bills that would re- strict abortions in Wyoming continue to move through the Legislature, a pair of House bills addressing reproductive rights in the state did not receive a hear- ing in the chamber prior to the Monday deadline. Titled “Abortion-Informed Consent,” House Bill 70 would have required doc- tors to offer women an opportunity to view an ultrasound or hear a heartbeat prior to performing an abortion proce- dure. Doctors also would have been re- quired to outline the risks and alterna- tives to obtaining an abortion, with any violation of those requirements posing the possibility of revoking a medical license. Another abortion-focused proposal that failed to receive consideration, House Bill 134, would have prohibited any abortion from being performed in Wyoming after a fetus has a detectable heartbeat. Sponsored by Rep. Chuck Gray, R-Casper, the legislation was co-sponsored by nearly a third of law- makers in the House, as well as seven senators. While Gray’s proposal did not move forward, there was a last-ditch effort to put the bill up for a House vote Monday night. With just a few minutes left prior to the deadline – and a high-profile Medicaid expansion bill up next on the docket – Rep. Mark Jennings, R-Sher- idan, made a motion to immediately consider HB 134 instead. Such a motion to override the legislative rules would have required a two-thirds approval from the House members, and it failed to gain the necessary votes. Although HB 70 and HB 134 will not move forward in the remaining days of the legislative session, several anti- abortion bills continue to move through the Wyoming Legislature, which is ten- tatively scheduled to wrap up its gen- eral session April 2. Three bills have gained final approval in the Senate and await further consid- eration in the House – one to require physicians to attempt to save any infant born alive following an abortion, anoth- er that would create additional crimi- nal penalties on a murder charge if the victim was pregnant and a third that would prohibit drug-induced abortions in the state. In the House, legislation that would prohibit the University of Wyoming and community colleges from using state funds on group health insurance plans that cover abortions is likely to receive a final vote from the body Wednesday, the deadline for bills to gain final approval from their originat- ing chamber. Another House proposal, one that would prohibit any abortions being sought solely due to a fetus’s sex, race, color, national origin, ancestry or diag- nosed disability, has gained initial sup- port from the body and awaits a final vote Wednesday. FUNDRAISER State: FROM PAGE B1

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Page 1: TThe Lingle Guidehe Lingle Guide1 day ago  · rights in the state did not receive a hear-ing in the chamber prior to the Monday deadline. Titled “Abortion-Informed Consent,” House

228 Main Street; Lingle, WY 82223 Phone (307) 532-2184

Your Trusted Community Connection!

Print Web Mobile Social

SUBSCRIPTION RATESEnhanced Value Plan

12-weeks auto pay -Goshen County - $9.9912-weeks auto pay - out of county - $13.99

Annual Plan1-year auto pay - Goshen County - $39.99

1-year auto pay - out of county - $49.99Periodicals paid at Lingle, WY 82223 (UPS 231440)

Postmaster: send address changes to the 228 Main Street; Lingle, WY 82223

Fax: 307-532-2283 • Online: www.lingleguide.comCONTACT US VIA E-MAIL

Rob Mortimore - [email protected] Dailey - [email protected]

Jennifer Sterkel - [email protected]

The Lingle Guide

STAFFPublisher - Rob MortimoreEditor: Logan DaileyOffi ce Manager - Jenn SterkelGraphic Arts - Julie Carr

DEADLINESNews releases, legals, display & classi ed advertising aredue Thursday at 12 p.m.

2021 MEMBER

You will nd it all right here in Lingle and Goshen County. These local business people have PRIDE IN OUR PAST and FAITH IN OUR FUTURE. Our lives are enriched with the services they provide, the business relationships and friendships that are developed through the course of time. Look here – to your

FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS – for goods and services. Extend that pride in our past and faith in our future. There has never been a better time to Do Business Locally.

COOL CUSTOMSCOOL CUSTOMS COOL Auto WorxCOOL Auto WorxGary D. Hunter • OwnerrGGGarGGarGarrGGGaGaarrryyyy Dy Dy Dy Dy Dy Dy Dy Dyy y y DDDDyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy H.... untnter OwnerPhone (307) 532-8808

Dan Heilbrun - MechanicPhone (307) 532-8809

Hours: Mon-Fri 8:30am-6:00pm

2017 Campbell Dr. • Torrington, Wyo 82240307-532-4448

www.pieperdentistry.com

Timothy J. Pieper DDS, MAGDBritton M. Marsh DDS

Always Accepting New Patients!

Pieper & MarshFamily Dentistry

1542 South Main St.,Torrington, WY307-532-3401

Your full service grocery store1542 South Main St.,ToTT rrington, WY

307-532-2 343401

Your full servviiccceee ggggrroocery store

Main StreetMarket W. Hwy 26

Torrington, WY 82240307-532-4118

205 Main St. • Lingle, WY 82223 (307) 837-2113Lunch 11:30am

RSVP by 8:30am

When you want more...When you want more...

The Lingle GuideThe Lingle Guide

689 WEST 15TH AVE. TORRINGTON, WY 82240689 WEST 15TH AVE. TORRINGTON, WY 82240www.lingleguide.com

For Results In AdvertisingCall 532-2184

Bob MoorehouseBBBBoBoBoBoBoBobbbbbbbbbbbbbb MMMMMMMMoMoMoMoMoorororororehhhehhhehhhhehouououuouousssesesese1442 West B Torrington, WY 82240307-532-2264 • (cell)307-534-6567

,Free Estimates, Licensed and Insured

B2 LINGLE GUIDE FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 2021 LINGLE NEWS

brought about by a procedural deadline.Monday was the final day for bills to

gain initial approval in their chamber of origin, and more than two dozen piec-es of legislation that had gained com-mittee approval were not heard by that deadline.

The list of bills brought before the bod-ies is typically determined by House Majority Floor Leader Albert Sommers, R-Pinedale, and Senate Majority Floor Leader Ogden Driskill, R-Devils Tower, in consultation with legislators and members of the public.

The Wyoming Tribune Eagle has com-piled a list of noteworthy bills that died through the procedural process without a vote.

After generating roughly four hours of testimony in a committee meeting ear-lier this month, a bill authorizing the le-galization and regulation of marijuana in Wyoming died without any discus-sion on the House floor.

Sponsored by Rep. Jared Olsen, R-Cheyenne, House Bill 209 was pitched as a way for state officials to address the topic of marijuana legalization proac-tively, rather than waiting for possible federal actions that could catch Wyo-ming ill-prepared for a new regulatory landscape.

With a 30% excise tax on marijuana products included, bill proponents also argued the measure could bring consid-erable revenue to the state, noting ini-

tial estimates that the measure would bring roughly $47 million annually to Wyoming.

The House Judiciary Committee ap-proved the bill by a 6-3 vote, with two lawmakers who voted in favor stating they were opposed to legalization but wanted to bring the discussion to their colleagues on the House floor. However, that debate will have to wait at least an-other year following the cutoff deadline Monday.

Another marijuana bill, a proposal re-quiring state health officials to compile a report on medical marijuana in Wyo-ming, gained committee approval last week, but it also failed to receive a hear-ing in the House prior to Monday night.

A pair of revenue-raising propos-als, one to increase the state’s fuel tax rate and another to hike its tobacco tax rate, failed without consideration in the Wyoming House of Representatives, the chamber where revenue measures are required to begin.

House Bill 26, which gained approval from the House Transportation, High-ways and Military Affairs Committee last month, would have raised the state’s fuel tax from 24 cents per gallon to 33 cents and marked the first fuel tax hike since 2013. Had it passed the full Legis-lature, the bill was estimated to gener-ate roughly $61.4 million in annual rev-enue, divided between the Wyoming Department of Transportation and local governments.

The measure was pitched as a way to aid the long-term budget struggles of the Wyoming Department of Transportation and local governments. For WYDOT, a report released late last year found the department is facing an annual fund-ing shortfall of roughly $354 million in unmet needs, with more than $100 mil-lion of those needs for the preservation of Wyoming’s roads and bridges.

Meanwhile, a proposal to raise Wyo-

ming’s tobacco tax by 24 cents per pack of cigarettes faced a similar fate as the fuel tax proposal. The legislation, which the House Revenue Committee endorsed during a virtual meeting in January, also would have increased the tax on moist tobacco snuff from 60 cents to 72 cents per ounce.

The tobacco tax increase was estimat-ed to generate roughly $6 million annu-ally for the state’s general fund. During the committee meeting in January, pro-ponents of the proposal argued it would bring significant public health benefits to the state, potentially saving tens of millions of dollars in health care costs by encouraging smokers to quit.

However, other associations, includ-ing the Wyoming Taxpayers Association, were opposed to the bill, arguing it was a regressive tax and doubting whether higher taxes on cigarettes would lead to long-term changes in individual behavior.

Both revenue proposals died without a hearing in the House by Monday.

In the Senate, a bill allowing law en-forcement to pull over drivers in Wyo-ming solely for not wearing their seat belts – a proposal designed to address the rising number of highway-related deaths in the state – was not considered by the body prior to the Monday deadline.

Senate File 11, which was advanced by a legislative committee in January, would have joined Wyoming with more than two-dozen other states that have a primary seat belt law in effect. During the committee meeting earlier this year, officials from the Wyoming Department of Transportation and the Wyoming Highway Patrol spoke of the need for a primary seat belt law in the state, not-ing a recent study that found the number of Wyoming drivers who wear their seat belts had dipped from 2018 to 2019.

Although the proposal was also backed by the Wyoming Trucking Association and the Wyoming Public Health Asso-ciation, it was not heard by the Senate

prior to the cutoff deadline. Driskill, the Senate Majority Leader, mentioned the public push-back to the propos-al during a discus-sion with reporters earlier this month.

“We know 100% that if you wear seat belts all the time you’re going to have less high-way deaths, so how d o y o u e x p l a i n that we don’t have a mandatory seat belt law?” Driskill said. “And that the majority of our population has made a choice that they want it to be a choice whether they wear it or not.”

The proposal was not the only legisla-tion aiming to ad-

dress highway safety that failed during this session. House Bill 11, a proposal re-quiring infants under the age of 2 to be in rear-facing car seats, was rejected by a 34-26 vote in the House of Representa-tives earlier this month.

Although several bills that would re-strict abortions in Wyoming continue to move through the Legislature, a pair of House bills addressing reproductive rights in the state did not receive a hear-ing in the chamber prior to the Monday deadline.

Titled “Abortion-Informed Consent,” House Bill 70 would have required doc-tors to offer women an opportunity to view an ultrasound or hear a heartbeat prior to performing an abortion proce-dure. Doctors also would have been re-quired to outline the risks and alterna-tives to obtaining an abortion, with any violation of those requirements posing the possibility of revoking a medical license.

Another abortion-focused proposal that failed to receive consideration, House Bill 134, would have prohibited any abortion from being performed in Wyoming after a fetus has a detectable heartbeat. Sponsored by Rep. Chuck Gray, R-Casper, the legislation was co-sponsored by nearly a third of law-makers in the House, as well as seven senators.

While Gray’s proposal did not move forward, there was a last-ditch effort to put the bill up for a House vote Monday night. With just a few minutes left prior to the deadline – and a high-profile Medicaid expansion bill up next on the docket – Rep. Mark Jennings, R-Sher-idan, made a motion to immediately consider HB 134 instead. Such a motion to override the legislative rules would have required a two-thirds approval from the House members, and it failed to gain the necessary votes.

Although HB 70 and HB 134 will not move forward in the remaining days of the legislative session, several anti-abortion bills continue to move through the Wyoming Legislature, which is ten-tatively scheduled to wrap up its gen-eral session April 2.

Three bills have gained final approval in the Senate and await further consid-eration in the House – one to require physicians to attempt to save any infant born alive following an abortion, anoth-er that would create additional crimi-nal penalties on a murder charge if the victim was pregnant and a third that would prohibit drug-induced abortions in the state.

In the House, legislation that would prohibit the University of Wyoming and community colleges from using state funds on group health insurance plans that cover abortions is likely to receive a final vote from the body Wednesday, the deadline for bills to gain final approval from their originat-ing chamber.

Another House proposal, one that would prohibit any abortions being sought solely due to a fetus’s sex, race, color, national origin, ancestry or diag-nosed disability, has gained initial sup-port from the body and awaits a final vote Wednesday.

FUNDRAISER

State: FROM PAGE B1