
“The owner has done a lot to try and change and be accommodating but still run his business,” Carter said. The Brysons say they have tried to get ahold of the owner multiple times to ask that something be done about the noise, but nothing changes.Ĭarter at Tico Time said the owner has installed noise-reducing banners and buffers behind the stage to absorb reverb, limited music volumes at certain times and moved up the fireworks display to an earlier time. Mike Easterling can be reached at 50 or Support local journalism with a digital subscription.Tammie Carter, hospitality manager at Tico Time Resort, drives over the Animas River going from the campground that is located on a mesa down to the festival grounds along the river. Tuesday, March 15 in the Commission Chambers in the San Juan County Administration Building, 100 S. President Biden has signed an executive order signaling his commitment to the initiative.ĭuring the commission's March 1 meeting, Margaret Byfield, executive director of the American Stewards of Liberty, a Texas-based nonprofit organization that is described as being devoted to protecting private property rights, spoke against the initiative and asked the commission to adopt a measure expressing its opposition to the measure.Ĭommissioners also will enter into a closed session to evaluate the performance of Stark, the county manager. land and water from development by the year 2030. Tuesday's meeting also will feature presentations by Sarah Cottrell Propst, secretary of the New Mexico Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department, and State Forester Laura McCarthy in regard to the 30x30 initiative, a commitment to conserve 30% of U.S. He said disruptive and law-breaking guests were being kicked out of the resort. and restricted the use of certain kinds of sound equipment. Holmes said he had eliminated the late-night fireworks shows that upset some neighbors, banned the use of drums after 11 p.m. Holmes defended his park against the complaints to the commission and to The Daily Times, saying he had made good-faith efforts to mitigate the volume of the music and to eliminate the bad behavior by some guests that had drawn the ire of Riverside residents. Some also said that drunk, disorderly and nude patrons often ventured outside the park and on to their property, sometimes openly urinating or defecating in the river. They also took their complaints to San Juan County Sheriff Shane Ferrari, claiming that amplified music from the resort often continued until 3 a.m. The County Commission was drawn into the fray when Riverside residents showed up at a May 2021 meeting to voice their displeasure. More: San Juan County officials still working to cool long-simmering conflict over Tico Time River Resort Tico Time was the target of several dozen complaints last year from residents of the nearby Riverside neighborhood, who claimed that the noise and clientele from the resort had disrupted their quiet, rural lifestyle. Highway 550, will talk about his business, a 74-acre venture that straddles the Animas River. Rob Holmes, the owner of the Tico Time River Resort just south of the Colorado border on U.S.

FARMINGTON - A presentation by the owner of a controversial live music venue and RV park in far northern San Juan County is planned when the San Juan County Commission meets Tuesday, March 15 in Aztec.
