Red Bluff Daily News

June 07, 2010

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FAIR Continued from page 1A service to make a com- plaint about their caretak- er, she said. But taking calls from those attendees may also mean she has to find ways to make her point clear, she said. It is a strategy organiz- ers said they hope to con- tinue next year. This year was funded by the State Council on Developmen- tal Disabilities Area II board. Funding has not been lined up for next year, but the CCDD has plenty of time to follow its own advice — and be prepared. More information is available by calling 528- 2829. ——— Geoff Johnson can be reached at 527-2153, extension 114 or gjohnson@redbluffdailyn ews.com. Monday, June 7, 2010 – Daily News – 9A Paid Political Advertisement CANDIDATE COMPARISON FOR JUDGE OFFICE 1 PART 1 Legal Experience Area of Law Lisa Muto Skillman Criminal Prosecution Felonies ✓✓ Misdemeanors ✓✓ Infractions ✓✓ Criminal Defense Felonies Daily News photo by Geoff Johnson Pictured, from left, are Red Bluff-Tehama County Chamber of Commerce member Bill Moule, Tehama County Planning Director Scot Timboe and Red Bluff Downtown Business Association President Tod Dolling, who all volunteered to trim plants and pull out weeds Saturday in downtown Red Bluff. WEED Continued from page 1A tems as the heat grows. Moule and Dolling were joined by Mayor Jeff Moyer, members of the City Council, Juvenile Justice Center inmates, Northern Valley Services employees and a number of volunteers who set to work at 8 a.m. to clean up downtown. The team transformed the bushy, overgrown clusters of plants creeping into the TRAX parking lot, but the origi- FEES Continued from page 1A in annual benefits. The net cost to the county would be just more than $2,100 a year, according to a staff report. Benefits for Robson could include a monthly $100 stipend and an addi- tional four days’ time off, both of which were included in other recent contract renewals, Chief Administrator Bill Good- win said. “We’re just trying to make people as equitable as possible,” Goodwin said. Most contracts the county considers last three years. This one would only last one year in case it needs to be renegotiated. FARM Continued from page 1A Saephan said the market is not the only place to enjoy his family’s efforts. The family maintains a stand on Live Oak Road. Not everything at the market has to be hauled home and cooked before it can be enjoyed. Bryon Burrows, a Humanities professor who teaches film classes at Shasta College, carted his Dogfather brand of hot dogs to the mix. Boasting quarter-pound franks in DUI Continued from page 1A ical Center in Chico for major injuries after enter- ing a ditch and being thrown from a quad about 7:30 p.m. on her property in the 24800 block of Fos- ter Road east of Hall Road. The final arrest of the nal plan had been to cover an area stretching beyond the parking lot to the railroad tracks and south to Oak Street. Moule said the low-cost solution involving little more than a determined community was still successful enough to be used again. He hopes to make the event at least a twice-yearly attack on downtown overgrowth, he said. More information is available by call- ing Moule at 529-0260. ——— Geoff Johnson can be reached at 527-2153, extension 114 or gjohnson@redbluffdailynews.com. It marks the first county contract to require a CalPERS contribution from staff, Goodwin said. Business boost Sometime after the contract vote, a presenta- tion is scheduled on the Business Incubation Pro- gram, a grant-funded pro- gram designed to provide business consulting ser- vices to small businesses. Fees At 10:30 a.m. or later, the board has scheduled a vote to finalize above- ground petroleum storage tank inspection fees. The fees, required on an annual basis, would pay for inspections of tanks on properties where the aggregate is 1,320 gal- lons or more. Farms, logging opera- tions and nurseries would be exempt as long as no single tank exceeds 20,000 gallons. The fees would begin at $350 and go up to $1,050, depending on the total number of gallons in a given area. Environmental Health Director Tim Potanovic has previously said similar fees used to be charged by the State Water Resources Board, but the board has since transferred the responsibility for inspec- tions over the county. More information The Tehama County Board of Supervisors meets at 10 a.m. Tuesdays in its chambers on 727 Oak St. More information is available by calling 527-4655 or visiting co.tehama.ca.us. Reservoir Dog, Soprano and Goodfella varieties, Barrows serves up his cooking on weekend nights in downtown Red Bluff. “Everybody loves a good dog,” he said. Ordained Minister Wayne McGraw, meanwhile, hammers out everything leather — including a wallet to carry your cash to market. “I can make anything you want,” said McGraw, owner of Wayne Leather. The Red Bluff Farmer’s Market is held Saturdays, from 8 a.m. to noon through the summer. More information is available at 527-6220. campaign was Don Hart, 50, of Red Bluff, who was arrested Monday by the California Highway Patrol. Law enforcement was expected to continue anti- DUI efforts Friday with five Avoid The Five satu- ration patrols in southern Tehama County. The next big campaign is set for the Fourth of July weekend and an 18-day campaign planned for August that will end on Labor Day weekend. For more information on Avoid The Five and local statistics visit the Web site: www.californi- aavoid.org. ——— Julie Zeeb can be reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews. com. Shasta Farm Bureau manager stole REDDING (AP) — The former manager of the Shasta County Farm Bureau faces charges of stealing more than $78,000 from the nonprofit. Shasta County prosecutors say Melissa Lockie stole the money over a period of seven years, from January 2002 to August 2009. The president of the Palo Cedro- based farm bureau says he and other board members had trusted Lockie. Lockie resigned last August after Juvenile Law Delinquency (602 cases) ✓ Child Neglect (300 cases) ✓ Real Estate Law Boundary Disputes Quiet Title Actions Evictions Landlord Rights Tenants Rights Lease Disputes Injunctions Civil Law Personal Injury Products Liability board members planned to question her at a board meeting. However, she didn’t show up for the meeting. That prompted an audit and an investigation by the Shasta County Sheriff’s Department. Lockie is scheduled to be arraigned Monday in Shasta County Superior Court on charges of embezzlement and theft. Lockie could not be reached Satur- day by The Associated Press. Sales of Small Business ✓ Sale Contracts Leases ✓ ✓ ✓ Federal Social Security ✓ Tax Disputes Labor Board Disputes ✓ Lisa Muto ✓ ✓ Skillman ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ Misdemeanors Infraction Calif. Fish & Game Family Law Child Custody Child Visitation Child Support Divorce ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ Spousal Support Paternity Probate Law Conservatorships Guardianships Will Disputes Power of Attorney Property Division ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓

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