Red Bluff Daily News

April 24, 2014

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Contributed photo Soroptimist's 14th annual Spring run that was held on April 12 at Sacramento river discovery Center. Soroptimist International of Red Bluff extends a heart- felt thank you to event and regular sponsors and volun- teers. A special thank you to all who participated and helped with the 14th annual Spring Run that was held on April 12. Forty-nine runners en - joyed a day at the Sacra- mento River Discovery Cen- ter. The theme was west- ern dress to kick off the Red Bluff Round Up week. Added enthusiasm was provided by two young girls from nearby campgrounds cheering on the runners. The following are the first place winners by age group: 1 mile Brooke Shackelford, of Red Bluff, 00:37:12 5K Men 1-12, Trey Hughes, of Red Bluff, 00:26:41 Men 20-29, Jose DeClusia, 00:29:01 Men 30-39, Shawn Sabo, 00:28:00 Men 40-49, Jeff Holland, of Corning, 00:34:12 Men 50-59, Dan Keck, of Corning, 00:19:03 Girls 1-12, Aura Wellen, of Red Bluff, 00:41:06 Girls 13-19, Sharon McK - enna, of Red Bluff, 00:27:36 Women 20-29, Jenna Ksi- cizek, 00:29:00 Women 30-39, Denise Leo, 00:27:02 Women 40 - 49, Rach - elle Exum, of Red Bluff, 00:33:06 Women 50 -59, Karrie Roth, of Red Bluff, 00:26:49 Wo m e n 70 - 9 9 , L o - ren Holmes, of Red Bluff, 00:36:30 10K Men 20-29, Edgar Madri- gal, of Red Bluff, 00:47:14 Men 40-49, Kyle Younk- ers, of Red Bluff, 00:40:42 Men 60-69, Edward Or- dorica, 01:02:30 Women 30-39, Thereas R ag udo, of R ed Bluff, 01:01:13 Women 40-49, Bonnie Cox, 00:49:26 Women 50-59, Annelyse Hays, of Red Bluff 00:44:41 Spring Run finishers listed Today Red Bluff California HeAT Chorus - Sweet Adelines: 7 p.m., Meteer School room 26, 695 Kimball road, 895- 0139 Childbirth Class: 6:30 p.m., St. elizabeth Com- munity hospital, Columba room, Anita 529-8377 fun Senior Aerobics: 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Com- munity Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. 527-8177 Good morning Red Bluff: 7:50 a.m., Kelly-Griggs house Museum, 311 Wash- ington St. imagination Train sto- ryhour: 4 p.m., tehama County Library Kelly-Griggs House mu- seum: 1-3 p.m., 311 Wash- ington St., group tours by appointment, 527-1129 live country music, din- ner: 5-7 p.m., Veterans hall Painting session, Red Bluff Art Association: 10 a.m., tehama district Fair- ground, 529-1603 PAl martial Arts: 3-5 p.m., ages 5-18, 1005 Vista Way, Ste. C, free, 529- 7950 Penny Bingo: 9:30 a.m., Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. Phoenix Community Support Group for those getting over chemical dependency: 11:30 a.m., presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St., 945-2349 Pinochle for Seniors: 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Red Bluff exchange Club: noon, M&M ranch house, 645 Antelope blvd. #1 Rock Choir: 4 p.m., 601 Monroe St., free, all wel- come Senior Chair Volleyball: 1 p.m. Community Center, 1500 S. Jackson St. Sunrise Speakers Toast- masters: noon, 220 Syca- more St. Swinging Squares Square dance Club: 7 p.m., Com- munity Center, 1500 S. Jackson St., for beginner or review classes, call 529- 1615 Widowed Persons dinner: 5 p.m., call 384-2471 for location CoRninG Cal-fresh and Healthy family Appointments: 1-3 p.m., Family resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 dance with Juana: noon to 1 p.m., Family resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 degree of Pocahontas Silver Cloud Council # 168: 7 p.m. independent Grange 470, 20945 Corn- ing road, bernie 824-1114 or Kathy 586-1065 dual diagnosis Group: 1:30-3 p.m., 1600 Solano St., 527-8491, ext. 3309 Soccer training: 4-6 p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 n toomes, 824- 7680 Women's Support Group: 6 p.m., Family resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Friday Red Bluff Celebrate Recovery: 7 p.m., bethel Assembly of God, 625 Luther road, 527- 0445 or 366-6298 Hospice Second Hand Store half price sale: all day, riverside Shopping Center nutrition Classes: 12:30- 2 p.m, northern Valley Catholic Social Service, 220 Sycamore #101, 528- 7947 Red Bluff Rotary Club Sunrise: 7 a.m., M&M ranch CoRninG Car Show: 5-9 p.m., bar- tel's Giant burger, 22355 Corning road, local car clubs welcome, 824-2788 CoTTonWood Singles friendship Social: 7-8:30 p.m., at a church we rent, Assembly of God Church, 20404 Gas point road, for unmarried adults ages late 30s to mid 60s, 347-3770 Saturday Red Bluff Battle for dog island Civil War battle reenactment: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., battles at noon and 3 p.m., Samuel Ayers park frontier Village farmers market: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., 645 Antelope blvd. ebt accepted Tehama County Young marine drills: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., 1005 Vista Way, Ste. C. 366-0813 CoRninG Vintage Trailer Rally: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Woodson bridge rV park TeHAmA Tehama County museum: 1-4 p.m., 275 C St., groups by appointment, 384-2595 Calendar SOROPTIMIST SACRAMENTO » The Bureau of Reclamation this week re- leased the final environmen- tal documents for the trans- fer of Central Valley Project water by CVP contractors located north of the Sacra- mento-San Joaquin Delta. The water may be purchased by up to 13 Tehama-Colusa Canal Authority member agencies located north of the Delta. The proposed action in - cludes groundwater substi- tution and land idling/crop shifting transfers in 2014 that require Reclamation's approval. The transfers involve Base Supply and/or Proj - ect Water from 18 entities with Sacramento River Set- tlement Contracts located north of the Delta; a total of up to 155,000 acre-feet of wa- ter could be made available for transfer. Reclamation will evaluate each transfer proposal to de - termine if it meets state law and/or Central Valley Proj- ect Improvement Act re- quirements. The Environmental As- sessment/Initial Study and Finding of No Significant Im- pact were prepared in accor- dance with the National En- vironmental Policy Act and are available at usbr.gov/ mp/nepa/nepa_projdetails. cfm?Project_ID=16682. If you encounter prob - lems accessing the docu- ments, call 916 -978-5100 (TT Y 800 - 877- 8339) or send an email to mppubli- caffairs@usbr.gov. WATER Do cu men ts o n can al a ut ho ri ty t ra ns fe rs re le as ed Dear Mary: We are one month be- hind on our mort- gage payments and plan to catch up this month. We have told our credit union we will pay half on the 1st and the second half on the 13th. This will bring us current. They call all day, every hour. When we answer they say they have to call us constantly until the amount due is paid. That is their policy. I say this can't be true or allowed by law. It seems like harassment. -- Cindy, Maryland Dear Cindy: I can cer - tainly understand your frustration, but I can un- derstand your lender's pol- icy as well. I know of no laws they are breaking by calling you at reasonable hours during the day. (You may be confusing this with laws that protect you when a debt is turned over to a third- party collector.) Look, when you signed the original loan document, you promised to make your payments on time, every month, in accordance with the agreement. You failed to do this. It's not the end of the world, but you have to look at this from their stand - point. If you broke your prom- ise to make a payment on time, why should they be- lieve that you will keep your promise to catch up on the 1st and 13th? If you didn't have the money last month, what makes them confident you'll have it this month in addition to your regularly scheduled payment? Rather than feeling enti - tled to paying late on your terms, why not consider this through their eyes? Untold thousands of peo - ple in this country have de- cided to walk away from their mortgages. But do they tell the lender this fact? No. They stop making their payments and then lie when the lender calls. They remain in the home until the lender can make it through the complicated and expensive maze called foreclosure. The statis - tics are staggering. Many people manage to eek out years of making no pay- ments, while remaining in the home. You missed a payment, and that's a red flag for your lender. Here's an idea: Tomor - row, call them before they can call you. Be kind and once again express your re- morse for running late. Tell them exactly the day and time that you will be bring- ing them money, even if you've told them a dozen times. Then keep your promise. Show up in per- son. And be grateful for their long suffering. Dear Mary: Several years ago, I began follow - ing your advice to use cash, not credit or debit cards for day-to-day purchases. On paydays I'd stop at the bank and withdraw enough money to last until the next payday. I then challenged myself to have some of that money leftover in my purse, which would then go into a piggy bank at home. I just want to thank you because this has really worked well for me.I feel like I have won and all from a lesson learned from you several years ago. Keep up the good work.-- Carol, Cal - ifornia Mary invites questions at mary@everydaycheapskate. com, or c/o Everyday Cheap- skate, P.O. Box 2099, Cy- press, CA 90630. EvERydAy ChEAPSkATE Mortgage lender calling every hour all day online:For addi- tional information or to request copies of the documents, contact brad hubbard at 916-978-5204 or bhubbard@usbr.gov.. Mary Hunt Kindergarten & Transitional Registration Antelope School District Date: April 30, 2014 Time: 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM Place: Antelope School Office If your child turns 5 years old on or before September 1, 2014, you may register them for Kindergarten. If your child turns 5 years old between September 2 and December 2, 2014, you may register them for Transitional Kindergarten (TK). Please bring the following items: * Residential Verification * Birth Certificate * Immunizations If you have questions please call 527-1272 10,000 print distribution Full insert to The Daily News, Direct mailed to non- subscribing households, distribution through hotels, restaurants and visitor information centers through fall, 2014. Advertising Deadline: Friday, May 2 LIFESTYLES » redbluffdailynews.com Thursday, April 24, 2014 » More At fACeBooK.Com/RBdAilYneWS And TWiTTeR.Com/RedBluffneWS A4

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