Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/20028
Saturday, November 20, 2010 – Daily News – 7A TALLY Continued from page 1A an overall 65.98 percent. Complete Tehama County results, including those for state- wide races, can be viewed at the elections department’s Web page through the county’s web- site at www.co.tehama.ca.us. Votes are listed by number and then percentage of total for each candidate. Winning candi- dates are in bold. CORNING UNION HIGH SD Gov Bd Mem 12/12 100.00% PAULETTA BRAY 2,179 23.13% JAMES BINGHAM 2,251 23.89% KEN VAUGHAN 1,634 17.34% JAMES SCOTT PATTON 1,797 19.07% GENE HARBAUGH 1,535 16.29% BUTTE Continued from page 1A rized disclosure of one patient’s medical informa- tion by one employee on two occasions. Friday afternoon, Sandy Goble, privacy RACES Continued from page 1A just 91 votes in Contra Costa Coun- ty, but county Registrar Stephen Weir said about 2,000 ballots won’t be counted there until next week. Alameda and Santa Clara counties had virtually finished their counts. San Joaquin officials did not return repeated telephone messages Friday. Write-In 24 0.25% Total 9,420 99.99% RED BLUFF JOINT UNION HIGH SD Gov Bd Mem 29/29 100.00% MARIANNE WILLARD 5,732 17.85% TIM BENTON 4,655 14.50% MATTHEW R. ETZLER 4,178 13.01% TOM EUBANKS 4,620 14.39% DANIELA M. SARTORI 3,092 9.63% BARBARA G. MCIVER 4,757 14.82% ELSA MARTINEZ- BAUTISTA 4,991 15.55% Write-In 80 0.25% Total 32,105 100.00% Mem 4/4 100.00% JAMES KEFFER 671 18.50% affairs officer for Oroville Hospital, said the inci- dents happened early in 2000. “Oroville Hospital always takes patient confi- dentiality very seriously,” Goble said. “We do our best to resolve problems as quickly as possible.” AARON GRAHAM 630 17.37% DAN BOONE 754 20.79% JOHN BOHRER 642 17.70% BHARAT D. ''BARRY'' JES- RANI 268 7.39% BRIAN HUMPHREY 650 17.92% Write-In 12 0.33% Total 3,627 100.00% ANTELOPE GOV BRD MEM-short 4/4 100.00% TONI BRUNELLO 604 43.14% JAMES (JAMIE) HICKOK 789 56.36% Write-In 7 0.50% Total 1,400 100.00% ANTELOPE SD Gov Bd Mem LASSEN VIEW SD Gov Bd 2/2 100.00% WILLIAM CRAIN 657 28.54% KATHY GARCIA 452 “The handling of the issue is confidential and protected,” Goble said. “We feel confident all appropriate actions were administered at the time.” The facilities are required to submit a plan of correction to the state Counties have until Nov. 30 to complete their ballot tallies. In the attorney general race, Democrat Kamala Harris had a more than 43,000 vote lead over Republican Steve Cooley with more than 9.3 million votes counted. Harris, who is San Francisco’s district attorney, led by a margin of half a percentage point over Cooley, who is lead prosecutor in Los Ange- les County. More than 600,000 bal- lots remained uncounted, according Daily News photo by Tang Lor Tea Montgomery and her dog Achilles participate in the Just Move It event, which promotes physical activity. After walking, jogging or running a route, participants received a footprint stamp on their Just Move It bracelets according to the color route they chose. The routes varied in length. Just Move It events will be the third of Friday of each month. Event organizers plan to host the event at different locations, although next month’s event will start at the same place as the one held Friday afternoon. The next event is 11:30 a.m. Dec. 17 at Body Projex. For information or to become an event sponsor, call Rene Timmons at 567-5528 or Avery Vilche at 200-2224. New parole team targets sex offenders SACRAMENTO (AP) — Michael Harden’s problems were just beginning when agents rolled up to his cluttered trail- er to arrest him for letting the battery in his GPS ankle bracelet run low, making it diffi- cult to track the movements of the paroled child molester. Then the agents found something even more disturbing: graphically sexual pho- tographs on his cell phone. Seven months after he left prison, the 44-year-old Sacra- mento man was on his way back. He was one of more than 285 paroled sex offenders swept up throughout Califor- nia this week by recently formed law enforcement teams, which were created partly as a response to agents fumbling their attempt to monitor paroled sex offender Phillip Garrido. Garrido is charged with kidnapping an 11-year-old girl, Jaycee Lee Dugard, and hiding her from parole agents for 18 years in a fenced-off area in the backyard of his Antioch home, where she bore two of his children. The teams are designed to apprehend parolees who have become fugitives or are otherwise violating terms of their release. ‘‘We’re going to look over the fences. We don’t want another Garrido,’’ Greg Shu- man, who supervises a Sacramento-based California Parole Apprehension Team, told agents heading out for one sweep. ‘‘It’s no- tolerance. Anything, any violation, they’re going to jail.’’ Five teams were created this year in dif- ferent parts of California, while five more Fibromyalgia? Please call Suffering With (530) 529-6544 Rory Lengtat, D.C. CORNING Mayor 3/3 100.00% DEAN COFER 700 46.17% GARY R. STRACK 807 53.23% Write-In 9 0.59% Total 1,516 100.00% Council 15.96% GENEVIEVE L. BOWEN 454 16.89% 21.84% 15.07% within 10 working days and implement the plan to prevent future inci- dents. Facilities can appeal the administrative penalty. Whether Oroville Hos- pital will appeal the deci- sion is still under investi- gation, Goble said. to the latest tally by the secretary of state’s office. Spokesmen for Harris and Coo- ley said her margin increased when Los Angeles County reported an updated tally Friday. Both predicted the contest could narrow again as other counties report updated vote counts next week. A victory by Harris would give Democrats a sweep of statewide offices. Just Move It kicks off fitness campaign Friday GERBER Continued from page 1A part of another, in the fire department and I hate to see it close and gone.” The board voted to approve an update to the Conflict of Interest Policy, which requires board members and staff to disclose any conflict that may affect a decision the board has to make. While the board has already been following the new policy going into affect in February 2011, which now includes staff members, the Tehama County Clerk’s Officer asked that a new policy be adopted since the last one on file was from 1976. The district was also asked to make sure the policy is re-adopted every two years, Murphy said. The board heard an update on Chairman Larry Long’s research on costs associated with running a dis- trict website, which would post meeting minutes and agendas for the public. Long has found a company out of Sacramento that charges $299 to get the site up and running and $20 a year for technical assistance. The sit would have to be maintained by staff, though. The item was tabled to allow for more time to research the options available to the district. The Gerber-Las Flores Community Service District meets at 6:30 p.m. on the third Thursday of each month in its office on San Benito Avenue next door to the for- mer fire hall. ——— Julie Zeeb can be reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews.com. Sonoma’s Infineon Raceway to get solar makeover SONOMA (AP) — Sonoma’s Infineon Raceway is getting a green makeover. Officials with the race track say they will soon install solar panels that will supply 41 percent of all their energy needs. The Santa Rosa Press Democrat reports that the installation is part of a sponsorship deal with Panason- ic Corp. of North America. Infineon will buy the solar array from Panasonic for $3 million. In return, Panasonic has agreed to a five- year sponsorship deal that includes installing a new message board on Highway 37 and promotional signs on several of the raceway’s buildings. The message board will be powered by solar energy. will start in January. Money to fund them comes from sav- ings created by a law that took effect this year. That law eliminated parole supervi- sion for thousands of ex-convicts, some of whom served time for serious crimes. It allows agents to focus on the parolees that state corrections officials consider the greatest risk to the public. Supervising fewer people lets agents concentrate their attention on sex offenders, gang members and violent criminals, said Robert Ambroselli, who heads the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s adult parole division. The specially trained apprehension teams also have their own intelligence units armed with $300,000 worth of com- puter software. Their job is to scan the Internet and electronic databases for clues to the whereabouts of some of the more than 13,000 California ex-convicts who have broken off contact with their parole agents. ‘‘We’ve specialized our work with these apprehension teams, intel units,’’ Ambroselli said. ‘‘They are really new for us and extremely groundbreaking.’’ Parole agents also search social network- ing sites for sex offenders trolling the Inter- net in search of potential victims. Since the teams were created in January, they have arrested more than 800 people for violating the terms of their parole, including about 370 sex offenders. They cleared another 600 cases in which parolees were found to have died or been deported. THANK YOU, SCOUTS! Cub Scout Pack #154 and Boy Scouts Troop #154 did their “Scouting for Food” project at Raley’s and Grocery Outlet on November 6, 2010. This nationwide food drive involves all of the Boy scouts and Cub Scouts in America. Thank you for restocking our food pantry! CORNING Mbr of City 3/3 100.00% JOHN D. RICHARDS 429 19.64% KATHY BRANDT 582 25.28% BRUCE E. LINDAUER 606 26.32% Write-In 5 0.22% Total 2,302 100.00% DARLENE DICKISON 468 17.41% Write-In 4 0.15% Total 2,688 100.00% RED BLUFF Mbr of City Council 7/7 100.00% WAYNE BROWN 1,349 16.76% JAMES E. (JIM) BYRNE 833 10.35% DANIELE JACKSON 1,440 17.89% LARRY STEVENS 803 9.97% ROBERT SCHMID 1,148 14.26% 10.26% JESSE H. LOPEZ 587 10.64% 9.58% KEN PRATHER 341 12.69% MELODIE POISSON 405 TIM MOREHOUSE 826 JEFFERY M. MOYER 857 JOSEPH S. DURRER 771 Write-In 24 0.30% Total 8,051 100.00% Pictures in the photo are Cubmaster David Ferreira, Palen Vise, David Vise, Storm Fuchs, Lance Ferreira, Marley Fuchs, Ivy Warnecke, Nathan Warnecke, Logan Warnecke, Margaret Gambetta, Ben Nichols, Richard Gambetta, Cullen Gambetta, & Reese Gambetta. Ed Harrison also rang the bell at Grocery Outlet. Contributions may be sent to: The Salvation Army, P.O. Box 935, Red Bluff, CA. 96080 www.redbluffsalarmy.org

