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Live Free or Die if You Must, Say 欧美口爆视频 Urbanites 鈥 But Not in My Hospital

Original article can be found at听
Originally published on December 28, 2020By Rae Ellen Bichell

ERIE, Colo. 鈥 Whenever Larry Kelderman looks up from the car he鈥檚 fixing and peers across the street, he鈥檚 looking across a border. His town of 28,000 straddles two counties, separated by County Line Road.

Kelderman鈥檚 auto repair business is in Boulder County, whose officials are sticklers for public health and have topped the county听听with instructions on how to report COVID violations. Kelderman lives in Weld County, where officials听听to enforce public health rules.

Weld County鈥檚 test positivity rate is twice that of its neighbor, but Kelderman is pretty clear which side he backs.

鈥淲hich is worse, the person gets the virus and survives and they still have a business, or they don鈥檛 get the virus and they lose their livelihood?鈥 he said.

Boulder boasts one of the听听populations in the nation; Weld听听about its sugar beets, cattle and thousands of oil and gas wells. Summer in Boulder County means concerts featuring former members of the Grateful Dead; in Weld County, it鈥檚 rodeo time. Boulder voted for Biden, Weld for Trump. Per capita income in Boulder is nearly 50% higher than in Weld.

Even their COVID outbreaks are different: In Boulder County, the virus swirls around the University of 欧美口爆视频. In Weld County, some of the worst outbreaks have swept through meatpacking plants.

It鈥檚 not the first time County Line Road has been a fault line.

鈥淚鈥檝e been in politics seven years and there鈥檚 always been a conflict between the two counties,鈥 said Jennifer Carroll, mayor of Erie, once a coal mining town and now billed as a good place to raise a family, about 30 minutes north of Denver.

Shortly before the coronavirus hit 欧美口爆视频, Erie鈥檚 board of trustees听extended听a听听on new oil and gas operations in the town. Weld County was not pleased.

鈥淭hey got really angry at us for doing that, because oil and gas is their thing,鈥 Carroll said.

Most of the town鈥檚 businesses are on the Weld side. To avoid public health whiplash, Carroll and other town leaders have asked residents to comply with the more restrictive stance of the Boulder side.

The feud got ugly in a dispute over hospital beds. At one point, the state听听Weld County had only three intensive care beds, while Weld County claimed it had 43.

鈥淚t made my job harder, because people were doubting what I was saying,鈥 said Carroll. 鈥淣obody trusted anyone because they were hearing conflicting information.鈥

Weld鈥檚 number, it turned out, included not just the beds in its two hospitals, but also those in 10 other hospitals across the county line, including in the city of Longmont.

Longmont sits primarily in Boulder County but spills into Weld, where its suburbs taper into fields pockmarked with prairie dog holes. Its residents say they听can tell snow is coming听when the winds deliver a pungent smell of livestock from next door. Longmont Mayor Brian Bagley worried that Weld鈥檚 behavior would deliver more than a stench: It might also deliver patients requiring precious resources.

鈥淭hey were basically encouraging their citizens to violate the emergency health orders 鈥 with this cowboy-esque, you know, 鈥榊ippee-ki-yay, freedom, Constitution forever, damn the consequences,鈥欌 said Bagley. 鈥淭heir statement is, 鈥極ur hospitals are full, but don鈥檛 worry, we鈥檙e just going to use yours.鈥欌

So, 鈥渇or 48 hours, I trolled Weld County,鈥 he said. Bagley asked the city council to consider an听听Weld County residents鈥 ability to receive care at Longmont hospitals. Bagley, who听听proposal the next day, said he knew it was never going to come to fruition 鈥 after all, it was probably illegal 鈥 but he wanted to prove a point.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to be irresponsible? Fine. Let me propose a question,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f there is only one I欧美口爆视频 bed left and there are two grandparents there 鈥 one from Weld, one from Boulder 鈥 and they both need that bed, who should get it?鈥

Weld County commissioners volleyed back, calling Bagley a 鈥渟imple mayor.鈥澨齮hat the answer to the pandemic was 鈥渘ot to continually punish working-class families or the individuals who bag your groceries, wait on you in restaurants, deliver food to your home while you watch Netflix and chill.鈥

鈥淚 know we鈥檙e all trying to get along, but people are starting to do stupid and mean things and so I鈥檒l be stupid and mean back,鈥 Bagley said during a Dec. 8 council meeting.

In another Longmont City Council meeting, Bagley (who suspects the commissioners don鈥檛 know what 鈥淣etflix and chill鈥 typically means) often referred to Weld simply as 鈥渙ur neighbors to the East,鈥 declining to name his foe. The council shrugged off his statement about withholding medical treatment but demanded that Weld County step up to fight the pandemic.

鈥淲e would not deny medical care to anybody. It鈥檚 illegal and it鈥檚 immoral,鈥 said council member Polly Christensen. 鈥淏ut it is wrong for people to expect us to bear the burden of what they鈥檝e been irresponsible enough to let loose.鈥

鈥淭hey鈥檙e the reason why I can鈥檛 be in the classroom in front of my kids,鈥 said council member and teacher Susie Hidalgo-Fahring, whose school district straddles the counties. 鈥淚鈥檓 done with that. Everybody needs to be a good neighbor.鈥

The council decided Dec. 15 to send a letter to Weld County鈥檚 commissioners encouraging them to enforce state restrictions and to make a public statement about the benefits of wearing masks and practicing physical distancing. They鈥檝e also backed a law allowing Democratic Gov. Jared Polis to听听from counties that don鈥檛 comply with restrictions.

Weld County Commissioner听听said his county doesn鈥檛 have the authority to enforce public health orders any more than a citizen has the authority to give a speeding ticket.

鈥淚f you want me as an elected official to assume authority that I don鈥檛 have and arbitrarily exert it over you, I dare you to look that up in the dictionary,鈥 said James, who is a rancher turned听. 鈥淚t鈥檚 called tyranny.鈥

James doesn鈥檛 deny that COVID-19 is ravaging his community. 鈥淲e鈥檙e on fire, and we need to put that fire out,鈥 he听. But he believes that individuals will make the right decisions to protect others, and demands the right of his constituents to use the hospital nearest them.

鈥淭o look at Weld County like it has walls around it is shortsighted and not the way our health care system is designed to work,鈥 James said. 鈥淭o use a crudity, because I am, after all, just a ranch kid turned radio guy, there鈥檚 no 鈥榥on-peeing鈥 section in the pool. Everybody鈥檚 gonna get a little on 鈥檈m. And that鈥檚 what鈥檚 going on right now with COVID.鈥

The dispute is not just liberal and conservative politics clashing. Bagley, the Longmont mayor, grew up in Weld County and 鈥渨as a Republican up until Trump,鈥 he said. But it is an example of how the virus is tapping into long-standing Western strife.

鈥淭here鈥檚 decades of reasons for resentment at people from a distance 鈥 usually from a metropolis and from a state or federal governmental office 鈥 telling rural people what to do,鈥 said听Patty Limerick, faculty director at the Center of the American West at the University of 欧美口爆视频-Boulder, and previously state historian.

In the 鈥90s, she toured several states performing a听mock divorce trial听between the rural and urban West. She played Urbana Asphalt West, married to Sandy Greenhills West. Their child, Suburbia, was indulged and clueless and had a habit of drinking everyone else鈥檚 water. A rural health care shortage was one of many fuels of their marital strife.

Limerick and her colleagues are reviving the play now and adding COVID references. This time around, she said, it鈥檒l be a last-ditch marriage counseling session for high school classes and communities to adopt and perform. It likely won鈥檛 have a scripted ending; she鈥檚 leaving that up to each community.