
Beaver Creek Village Voice | 2005 -2010© All Rights Reserved | Member@BeaverCreekVillage.org





Bridge over troubled water... New residents dismantle footbridge siting liability and eliminating emergency access for area residents during flooding.
• 03.26.09
Dramatic rescue saves area residents from chilling Beaver Creek at confluence....
• 02.03.09
BCV-POA Membership Meeting - TBD
Beaver Creek Regional Council (BCRC)
1st Wednesday of each month - 6:00 p.m. at Montezuma/Rimrock Fire Station www.BeaverCreekAZ.org
Members, please attend this very important meeting & voice your concerns:
Tuesday Oct 26, 2010 - Community Meeting Yavapai County & U.S. Forest Service Officials
BC Adult Center - Lake Montezuma
(across from Crickets & Ranch House Restaurant)
Yavapai County Supervisor Chip Davis; Dev. Ser. Dir. Steve Mauk; Area Roads Sup. Verl Cook; & Coconino Nat. Forest Ranger Heather Provincio.
Road Improvement Update - Land Sales - Lot Splits - Area Activities - General Information contact:
Member@BeaverCreekVillage.org


Original Culpepper ranch house destroyed by fire. Fire fighters hampered by flooded creek crossing takes long way - through forest service parcel.
• 02.12.08

to the place where Arizona’s Dry and Wet Beaver Creeks meet.
Enriched by its long history from ancient Sinaqua cliff dwellers to modern day settlers, Lower McGuireville’s Beaver Creek meanders past America’s best preserved National Monument - Montezuma Castle to the Verde River at Camp Verde. Along with the national monument park, area private properties are neighbored by Coconino National Forest forest lands, Yavapai Apache Nation lands and the rural sub-divisions of Lake Montezuma.
Not withstanding it’s natural beauty, the area’s poor creek crossings, unimproved roadways and fractional easements challenge the serenity, safety and livelihoods of the area residents and land owners.

Foreclosures up in area... Poor roads and crossing contribute to area property value plummet...
The Beaver Creek Village Property Owners Association - BCV-POA, of Lower McGuireville was developed in response to poor and unsafe creek crossings and roadways used to access and transverse the area. The organization, formed in 2005 and reorganized in 2009, has the expressed mission of improving road and access infrastructures, while preserving its rural lifestyles, archeological integrity & land values.
Beaver Creek Village-
On Wet Beaver Creek
