Red Bluff Daily News

August 10, 2013

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Saturday, August 10, 2013 – Daily News Obituaries LaVONNE OLIVE SCHAUL March 21, 1921 - July 6, 2013 Born on March 21, 1921 in Los Angeles, CA, passed away July 6, 2013 in Davis, CA. LaVonne passed away peacefully from Complications from pneumonia with most of her family by her side at Sutter Davis Hospital. She is survived by two sons, Chris and Brian, their spouses and grand and great grand children. LaVonne was a pioneer for women! A member of Beta Sigma Phi starting in the 1940's and a proud member of the Business and Professional Womens Club in Northern California! One of the first Licensed Administrators for a Convalescent Hospital in California. She had a passion, knowledge and foresight for Real Estate like no other! A family graveside service is scheduled on August 16th, at 10:30 a.m., friends and family are invited to honor this beautiful Lady at a celebration of life at the Red Lion Hotel in Redding, CA, August 17th at 11:30 a.m. Spartan Kick-off Arena Red Bluff Union High School hosted its inaugural Spartan Kick-off Arena Tuesday. Hundreds of 10th through 12th grade students and their parents had the opportunity to get their class schedules, PE clothes, buy their 2013-14 Yearbooks and ASB Cards, register for ParentVue, complete health and cafeteria forms, update student demographics, receive information on school clubs, activities, senior trip and Sober Grad, sign-up for the Spartan Booster Club and schedule appointments for senior and class pictures. Counselors were available after the arena to assist students in making class schedule changes. "The event was highly successful and far exceed- FEES Continued from page 1A NICHOLAS BURLEY US ARMY SPC. Nicholas Burley was killed in action while serving in Afghanistan on July 30, 2013. Nicholas is survived by his mother Tammy Kneebone of Red Bluff, and father Mike Burley of Foresthill. Brothers Michael Collins (Heather), Zachary Miller and Will Burley. Grandparents: Joe & Judy Gregonis, Ed & Marcia Kneebone, Carole LaDue and Bill Burley. Extended family includes: Jesse Davis, Jeremy Davis, Leila Collins, Dominic Collins, Cindy Nelson, Don & Donna Bostwick, Sean & Lindsey Staples, Andrew & Joanna Bostwick and Christine Bostwick. Nicholas was a member of American Legion Post 587 in Foresthill and One Track Mind Snowmobile Assoc. Nick also loved spending time riding horses with his mother. Services to be held 10 am August 13 in Nevada City at Hooper & Weaver Mortuary followed by a public celebration of his life at 1 pm at American Legion Post 587 in Foresthill. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking for donations for care packages to Nicholas's platoon. Contact American Legion Hall in Foresthill or the Military Outreach at Bayside Church, Granite Bay. Death Notices Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper's website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Lisa Mary Ann Tidrow Lisa Mary Ann Tidrow died Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2013 at her home in Cottonwood. She was 45. Arrangements are under the direction of Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service. Published Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. FOOD Continued from page 1A healthy life. Food From the Heart started four years ago as an annual Red Bluff food drive championed by Jessie Wood's of the Gold Exchange and sponsored by the Downtown Red Bluff Business Association (DRBBA). Based on the success of those food drives, Jessie and the DRBBA decided to accept the support of the North State Food Bank, Community Action Agency, Sunrise Rotary, Democrats of Tehama County, Cornerstone Community Bank and Tehama Together to expand the program countywide and to collect funds to support local food charities. With these sponsoring partners covering the costs, 100 percent of donations are able to go for hunger relief. By partnering with the North State Food Bank, local food pantries will be able to purchase food to restock their shelves for 18 cents per pound. With the $8,000 collected, the 18 food programs will each receive $444 to provide a small food safety net to assist food insecure families throughout the County – Corning, Los Molinos, Gerber, Red Bluff, Rancho Tehama, Manton and Paynes Creek. Benefiting food relief charities include Alternatives to Violence, Bridgeway to Hope Ministries, Channel of Love Ministries, Corning Christian Assistance, First Baptist Church, Hands of Hope Rescue Mission, Harvest Christian Center, Hope fees will have accumulated. Air Pollution Control Officer Alan Abbs had advised the board that the amount collected was unlikely to generate any interest in a mitigation project. The board has delayed the full implementation of the fee schedule several times since passing the Indirect Source Rule in October 2010. The fees are being collected at 50 percent of what they are listed at, with full implementation delayed car was found Friday morning. There have been no other reported sightings of the pair since Wednesday. San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said when the riders saw the two, the girl, Hannah Anderson, did not appear as if she was being held against her will. He did not elaborate. She and the suspect, James Lee DiMaggio, 40, seemed healthy. Brett Anderson, Hannah's father, said he was ''very happy'' that Hannah was spotted alive. He said he couldn't explain why his daughter didn't ask the ed our expectations," said Associate Principal Jody Brownfield. "We introduced the idea to staff last spring, and everyone agreed that this was another way of preparing our students for the college arena system. Our goal is to make this event even bigger and better next year." until Jan. 1, 2014. The Air Pollution Control District waived and reduced fee requirements on several commercial projects in the past year. Fees were waived for the new CVS pharmacy on South Main Street in Red Bluff because the project involved demolition of a building previously used for retail and automotive servicing. The demolished square footage was greater than that of the new building. Dollar General approached the Air Pollution Control District with three projects. A remodel of the former Holiday Market on Antelope Boulevard did not meet requirements of the air rule and therefore no fees were collected. Fees were reduced at the Walnut Street location in Red Bluff as it involved a building demolition used for commercial projects. The Los Molinos Dollar General location did not receive a waiver. In total Dollar General was assessed fees totaling $5,040. Fees for a Sierra Pacific Industries project to build a truck wash at one of its existing facilities were waived as the Air District found overall vehicle travel would be reduced as the company would no longer need to make trips to offsite truck washes. A new church office, and a new medical facility in Los Molinos were assessed a total of $764.51 in fees. The remaining $3,148.75 in collected fees came from the residential sector. The Air District received 17 applications for single family residential homes and 15 for mobile homes in the past year. The district waived fees on a total of 11 projects, many coming as a result of rebuilds after the Ponderosa Fire in Manton. UPGRADE Continued from page 1A changing out registers and transmitters, was completed over several years. The second phase, which includes replacing older meters, is slated for completion in 2015. "We are able to handle the installation ourselves as time allows, which makes it very economical," Eckels said. "For the majority of meters, we simply took off the existing register and replaced it with a new one. Now, we are changing out the manual meters that require a complete meter replacement." Rescue Mission, The Lord's Table, Food For The Hungry, Mercy Housing, New Covenant CDC, Northern California Dev. Head Start, Northern Valley Catholic Social Services, Salvation Army Red Bluff, Sunshine Schoolhouse, Tehama County Gleaners and Vineyard Christian Fellowship. Special recognition is extended to those groups that contributed $200 or more: Sunrise Rotary, DRBBA, State Theatre, North Valley Baptist Church, Knights of Columbus, Soroptimists International and Max and Denise Froome. Appreciation is also extended to the 43 businesses which collected $100 or more in their collection cans and to all the other 94 businesses which were donation sites. Also thanks to SERRF, Car in missing teen case found in Idaho CASCADE, Idaho (AP) — A car belonging to a man suspected of killing a California woman and her young son and then fleeing with the 16-year-old daughter was found in the Idaho wilderness on Friday after horseback riders reported seeing the man and girl hiking in the area two days earlier, authorities said. The riders reported seeing the two near Morehead Lake, an extremely rugged area about 70 miles northeast of Boise, around noon Wednesday, according to Ada County Sheriff's Department spokesman Patrick Orr. They didn't report it until later, after seeing news reports and realizing the pair was being sought. Idaho authorities started searching Thursday and the 9A horseback riders for help. ''We don't know what kind of frame of mind she was in or what he told her,'' Anderson said. ''Maybe if she acted differently, there would be more dead people.'' Hannah's grandfather, Christopher Saincome, also was relieved and refused to try to explain the girl's reaction to the riders. ''He could have strapped something to her and told her it was a bomb. He could have had her tethered to him,'' he said. ''I'm sure she's totally in shock.'' The estimated battery life is 20 years. Eckels said the meters make it easy to detect when customers have leaks. "There is a small dial in the middle of the meter, and if it's moving when there is no water turned on in the home, that signals a leak in the system," he said. "When we begin reading meters more frequently, we will be able to identify leaks quicker." The next step in Red Bluff's water system improvements will include replacing its billing software with Orion ReadCenter Analytics. This will enable the city to Mercy High, West Street Elementary Parents Group and Sacred Heart for the collection and preparation of the cans. Plans are underway for expanding the program for next year. Bobie Hughes, local Soroptomist International president, has offered a challenge to all county service clubs to see who can provide the most support for the 2014 food fund drive. Businesses are being asked to consider the Food From The Heart program when they are preparing 2014 budgets. To learn more about the program, visit www.foodfromthehearttehamacounty.com. To make suggestions for next year's program, contact Orle Jackson at Tehama Together, ojackson@tehamatogether.org or (530) 736-5200. DOG Continued from page 1A The center is at 1830 Walnut St. in Red Bluff. Care Center hours are 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday . Adoption hours are 10 a.m. to noon and 14:30 p.m. If you would like more information regarding adopting, fostering or becoming a volunteer, call McClintock at 530527-3439 or email her at cmcclintock52@sbcglobal.net. Rich Greene can be reached at 527-2151, ext. 109 or rgreene@redbluffdailyne ws.com. take full advantage of the benefits the system offers, including monitoring and automated leak detection. When it runs monthly billing reports with the new software, the city will be able to flag potential leaks. Then, it can check the meter and notify the customer if a leak is suspected. In addition to the software upgrade, once the meter upgrades are complete the fully automated meter reading will help Red Bluff to maximize the efficiency of its new system. "We've had many other cities and counties come and visit us to see how our system runs," Eckels said. SPEED Continued from page 1A include mobile digital computers for patrol cars, enhanced GPS dispatching and remote access for the school resource officer. The police department has 26 of the 71 computers utilized at City Hall. City Manager Richard Crabtree said he supported the upgrade from a practical and legal standpoint so the police department could meet the DOJ standards. He said another benefit of the increased bandwidth could be online audio and video streaming of City Council meetings in the foreseeable future. Elsewhere on the agenda • The council authorized Fire Chief Jon Bennett to apply for a temporary staffing grant through the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Bennett's application will seek three full-time firefighters be funded under the Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response grant for a period of two years. FEMA would pay the salary and benefits over the two years in the amount of $471,963. The city would have to pay new hire orientation costs in the amount of $3,430. The city would be under no obligation to maintain employment after the grant cycle ends in 2015. The fire department has been struggling with staffing needs in the past year. "When I saw this I thought 'way to go,'" Mayor Wayne Brown said. "This would be awesome if you could get this." • The council waived a 60-day notification requirement, allowing Tehama County to move forward with the purchase of properties at 1509 and 1515 Schwab St. and 1820 Bidwell St. The county is going to incorporate the property to improve its transit facility for TRAX busses. The council agreed with a finding by the Planning Department that the purchase and site plans fit into consistency of with the city's General Plan. Rich Greene can be reached at 527-2151, ext. 109 or rgreene@redbluffdailyne ws.com.

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