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Thursday, November 14, 2013 – Daily News Obituaries Police seek info in apartment fight The Red Bluff Police Department is still looking for details regarding a WARREN E. PEDEN, JR. Monday night incident near the BrickWarren E. Peden, Jr. passed away at the age of 83, on November 10, 2013, at St. Elizabeth Hospital. Warren was yard Creek Apartments. Police officers responded to an born in Mobridge, South Dakota, to Warren and Myra apartment complex on the 1200 block Peden on July 11, 1930. Warren worked as a Range Conservationist for the Soil of Walnut Street around 10:43 p.m. for Conservation Service for 30 years, the last 5 1/2 yrs. as a report of a physical disturbance State Range Conservationist in Davis, CA., upon retire- between several people, according to a ment he did much volunteer work, including Passages and was a member of S.T.A.R.S. He was active at his church St. Paul Lutheran serving many years as Elder. He is survived by wife Evelyn, daughters Gail Westfall and Julie Cox, and son James, 9 grandchildren and 6 great grandchildren, who loved him very much. Services will be held at St. Paul Lutheran church, Monday, November 18th, 11a.m. Burial at Oak Hill Cemetery with reception to follow at the church hall. department press release. Officers also learned a man was lying on the ground. Officers arrived to locate a 37-yearold man, who was bleeding heavily from a large laceration on his left cheek and had a great deal of blood on his shirt. The man refused to provide officers PAIR interstate and at Gyle Road and stopped. Deputies took the driver, Continued from page 1A Charles Munsterman, a 25year-old transient, into cusspeeds of 100 mph. Deputies pursued the tody. vehicle until it exited the But when they tried to It is recommended that you type in the www.coveredca.com web address directly into your address Continued from page 1A bar when you are online. Using a search engine can bring up a lot of together the website to get people sites that don't actually give people connected, you will be enrolling the subsidy and cost sharing assiswith a private insurance company. tance that come through the Afford- MORE July 16, 1923 - November 4, 2013 Dr. Andy, 90, passed away November 4, 2013, at home surrounded by family. He was born in Alameda, CA to Andrew and Blanche Giambroni, July 16, 1923. Andy attended Colorado State University A & M, Fort Collins, Colorado and received a degree of Doctrine of Veterinary. He was a Sgt. in the U.S. Army, and served in the Battle of the Buldge. Andy served on the Tehama County Fair Board for 16 years, he was a member of the California and Tehama County Cattlemens, Wool Growers, and was a Red Bluff Elk's Club member for 60 years, and was a member Red Bluff Chamber of Commerce and a Sonoma County Trailblazer since 1965. Andy was involved in many community activities, escpecially the Ag Industry. Andy enjoyed Deer, Duck, Dove and Pheasant hunting and raising game birds. He had a strong Christian faith. Andy is survived by his wife of 55 years Beverly, sons Joe and Jess & wife Jen Giambroni, sister; Eleanor Giambroni Smith, sister-in-laws; Pat Giambroni and family, Barbara Wood and family, many nieces, nephews and cousins. Andy is preceded in death by his parents, Andrew and Blanche, brothers; Joseph and Francis, sister; Jessie Giambroni Cambra. Andy's family would like to thank the staff of St. Elizabeth Hospital, Red Bluff Health Care and Hospice, and all of Andy's wonderful friends that have been there for us. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Red Bluff Elk's Club, 350 Gilmore Rd., November 16th at 1:00 pm. Graveside services will be held November 23, at 11:00 am, at Oakhill Cemetery, Cemetery Lane, Red Bluff. Charitable donations may be made to the Verteran's of Corning, 1620 Solano St, Corning, CA and The Calvery Chapel of Red Bluff, 12375 Paskenta Rd., Red Bluff, CA. 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. Teresa Gonzalez Teresa Gonzalez died Tuesday, Nov. 12, at her Redding home. She was 59 Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Alice Polly Mansfield Alice Polly Mansfield died Wednesday, Nov. 13, at her home in Red Bluff. She was 80. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Nathan Shryock Nathan Shryock, of Redding, died Monday, Nov. 11, in Redding. He was 28. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Thursday, Nov. 14, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Body found in Corning canal identified The identify of a body found floating Sunday afternoon in the Tehama-Colusa Canal near Gaylord and McClane has been released. The deceased was 19-year-old Rudy Alberto Arreola. Tehama County deputy coroner Chris Sharp said a cause of death has not yet been determined. Arreola's family reported they had last seen him on Oct. 10. A 66-year-old man reported finding Arreola's body at 3:18 p.m. Sunday, according to Tehama County Sheriff's logs. A coroner was requested a few minutes later. Wednesday sets temp record The National Weather Service reported that Wednesday Red Bluff set a new high record temperature for Nov. 13. The previous record of 82 degrees was eclipsed with an 83 degree reading at Red Bluff Municipal Airport at 1:54 p.m. The previous record was set in 1936, according to Intellicast. Setting it straight –––––––– It is the policy of the Daily News to correct as quickly as possible all errors in fact that have been published in the newspaper. If you feel a factual error has been made in a news story, call the news department at 527-2153. Continued from page 1A time," Garcia said. "Can you imagine the first time you drove to San Francisco if you live in Los Molinos?" According to U.S. Census Bureau data, 12.6 percent of Tehama County residents hold a bachelor's degree or higher. That's compared to 30.2 percent of Californians that hold a bachelor's degree or higher. Garcia pointed out that while earning a college degree isn't the sole focus of the community collaboration, fostering a culture of expectation among students — whether it be attending a university or gaining employable skills — is the end game. Chief probation officer Muench said the community can no longer effect change by itself, and his department has been collaborating with the county's department of education to help juveniles who have gone through the probation department get back into mainstream education. But that's just a part of it. "The money that came to this town as part of AB109, well the intent is to reduce the people being sent to prison," he said. "If you look at prevention, if you look at breaking the cycle, if you look at training the parents to be parents and focusing on the TARGET Continued from page 1A bers and the fact that the federal government and California provided no details about who was signing up. If healthy people avoid buying insurance on the exchanges, it will undermine insures' business model and ultimately force premiums higher. During a Wednesday news conference, Lee said Covered California will have a breakdown of its enrollees next week. He said they tend to be ''older than average'' and are those who previously could not get any health insurance. If that trend holds, those who sign up for insurance on the exchanges this year are likely to face sticker shock in 2015 when their policies get more expensive, said Republican state Assemblyman Dan Logue, who represents a district north of Sacramento. ''Covered California is giving you the best-case scenario, but where's it going to be 12 months from now?'' he said. ''I'm pretty sure it's going to be with any details of the assault or say whether a weapon was used. An area check for other involved people did not lead to any results. The case is under investigation and the Red Bluff Police Department encourages anyone with information to call 527-3131. detain the passenger, Valeriy Munsterman was Shut, 54, San Francisco, the charged with evading a man resisted. peace officer. His bail was $50,000. Deputies were forced to break the vehicle window to Shut was charged with remove Shut from the truck, resisting arrest. His bail was the press release said. $3,500. FORUM ANDREW FRANK GIAMBRONI, DVM 7A able Care Act. Those who want to sign up for insurance under Covered California can also phone a call center, where state workers have been trained to assist people in understanding the plans and signing up. That toll free number is (800) 300-1506. juveniles themselves — those that are already in the cycle we may or may not be able to help — but those that aren't in the cycle yet, we can effect change." Champion said part of the magic that happens at the summit are the partnerships made. "It's our ability to work together to do more with less," Champion said as Muench joined the conversation. "We all agree we've got less, right. If I've got this much, and he's got that much, well, then, we've got more." The Tehama County Department of Education on Friday welcomed the new Lincoln Street School building at Lincoln and Union streets in Red Bluff. The building, which unsustainable.'' He also noted the 1 million people in California whose individual health insurance policies are being canceled because they don't meet the requirements of the Affordable Care Act. ''We have more people that don't have health coverage now than have signed up under Obamacare because they've been kicked off their plans,'' he said. The launch of the Affordable Care Act, also called ''Obamacare,'' has been plagued by technical problems with the federal government's website. Several states that run their own exchanges, including Oregon and Hawaii, also have experienced significant technical setbacks that have prevented people from signing up. At the same time, millions of Americans who buy individual policies are receiving notices from their insurance companies saying their policies will be discontinued because they do not meet the higher standards of the federal law. That is despite Obama's promise that people could keep their current policies if they were happy with them. houses the kindergarten through eighth grade school that has been around since the 1980s, is the first of a three-phase building project, Champion said. Phase two will be an opportunity for the housing of a new charter school in the community, and the third will result in a special education center. "All funded by the state of California," he said. Cox, the building contractor from Trinity County, said he came to the summit to see how it's done. After the summit came to an end Cox, who works with the NoRTEC Youth Council, looked at the room full of people and said, "Pretty much everybody that is anybody is here." Most Americans receive health insurance through their workplace and are largely unaffected by the new health care exchanges. Under the president's program, people without access to coverage through their jobs can shop for subsidized, private insurance in the state marketplaces, or exchanges. The benefits begin Jan. 1. Another major piece is a Medicaid expansion to serve more low-income people. Not all states have accepted the expansion, partly because of concerns over the future cost. The problems with the exchange websites and confusion over the law led Obama administration and state officials to lower expectations for the early enrollment numbers. ''We were always expecting October would be a month when people would do some comparative shopping but not necessarily go through the entire process,'' said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, an advocacy group for the needy working closely with Covered California. ''You don't necessarily buy a car on the first trip to the lot.'' Napolitano seeks tuition freeze for UC SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — University of California President Janet Napolitano proposed a tuition freeze on Wednesday for the 2014-2015 school year in her first address to the Board of Regents. The freeze was among four ideas she presented at the meeting in San Francisco that she said aim to push the system into the future. She also wants to make UC a zero-net energy consumer by 2025; streamline community college transfers; and improve the process so innovations born from university research hit the market more quickly. Napolitano said the freeze would give the university system time to create a new fee policy to ''get it right.'' ''Tuition cuts right to the heart of accessibility and affordability — two of the university's guiding stars,'' she told the regents, adding later: ''I want tuition to be as low as possible and I want it to be as predictable as possible.'' Napolitano, the former secretary of Homeland Security, spent the past six weeks in her new job visiting many of the system's 10 campuses. She observed research at the Riverside campus on the olfactory receptors of mosquitoes and fruit flies that could produce a way to protect people from malaria. She also slept in a living laboratory at the Davis campus that is in the largest planned zero net energy community in the country. She said the visits contributed to her vision that ''UC teaches for California, and it researches for the world.'' Napolitano took over as the leader of the university system at a time when finances are improving but serious challenges remain, including rising costs for employee salaries and retirement benefits. After several years of deep cuts, Gov. Jerry Brown signed a state budget this year that boosts funding for UC. Napolitano wants the system to bring operational costs to a minimum to keep it affordable. Tuition has nearly tripled during the past decade as the state has slashed its budget. Undergraduate tuition has remained at $12,192 annually for the past two years and could remain at that level for a third year thanks to tax increases approved last year by voters under Proposition 30. Financial aid covers tuition fully for half of UC students. Another 20 percent receive some aid, paying an average of $6,500, Napoli- tano said. The regents are scheduled to vote on the 20142015 operational budget plan Thursday. Napolitano said in recent years the hikes have occurred primarily due to the recession and reduction in state funding. Now that the situation has improved on both fronts, Napolitano said UC needs to looks at grants, public-private partnerships, joint ventures and philanthropy, among other measures, to raise funds. UC raised a record $1.64 billion in private donations over the past fiscal year, according to the university's annual report on private support. The number of contributors also continues to increase, said Daniel Dooley, senior vice president for external relations. Streamlining community college transfers will require the system to grow to accommodate the increase in students. Napolitano also has pledged $10 million for recruiting and training graduate students and post-doctoral research fellows. Emphasis needs to be placed on speeding the implementation of ideas and inventions that address food scarcity, energy sustainability and other world problems, she told regents. Since her surprise appointment as the university's 20th president in July, Napolitano has moved to alleviate the concerns of campus activists who feared she would not advocate effectively for immigrants because of her background in Washington and as a former governor of Arizona. Napolitano has devoted $5 million to provide special counseling and financial aid for students living in the U.S. illegally. Still, several activists spoke in the public comment session Wednesday, demanding she step down.

