Red Bluff Daily News

December 10, 2013

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Tuesday, December 10, 2013 – Daily News Obituaries 7A One dead in mobile home fire EMILY TERESA JOLIE March 5, 1939 ~ November 27, 2013 ON THE MORNING OF WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 27,2013 BELOVED EMILY JOLIE PASSED AWAY AT RED BLUFF SAINT ELIZABETH HOSPITAL SURROUNDED BY HER FAMILY. SHE WAS 74 YEARS OLD. EMILY WAS BORN TO ANGELO "JACK" D'AMICO AND GIOVANNA "JENNY" D'AMICO ON MARCH 5, 1939 EMILY 'S FIRST MARRIAGE WAS IN MAY 1959 TO ARTHUR LANGAKER. THEY HAD 3 DAUGHTERS TOGETHER. JEANI, ANNIE AND SUSAN. EMILY MARRIED ROBERT "BOB" JOLIE SR. ON HER BIRTHDAY MARCH 5, 1972. THEY HAVE BEEN MARRIED FOR 41 YEARS. THEY HAVE 3 CHILDREN TOGETHER, CHERYL, BARBARA AND THEIR SON ROBERT. EMILY IS SERVIVED BY HER TWO SISTERS, JEAN BIERS AND ANGELA FELDEN. HER HUSBAND BOB JOLIE SR., HER 5 DAUGHTERS JEANI, ANNIE, SUSAN, CHERYL, BARBARA, HER SON ROBERT AND DAUGHTER IN LAW SELENA JOLIE . EMILY IS GRANDMA TO 11 GRANDCHILDREN: BRENT, AUSTIN, MADISON, AIDEN, RYAN, KYLEE, KESTIN, BRENDEN, KAITLYN, BRIEANNE, AND NOELLE. BOB AND EMILY, AS EVERY KNOWS THEM, LIVED IN RED BLUFF FOR 27 YEARS. THE LOVE THEY SHARED BETWEEN THEM WAS THE STRONGEST OF BONDS AND EVIDENT TO ALL WHO KNEW THEM. EMILY WAS A MEMBER OF RED BLUFF SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH. EMILY WAS THE SWEETEST, MOST PATIENT PERSON. SHE LOVED TO DANCE AND LISTEN TO MUSIC FROM THE 50'S. SHE WAS A LOYAL, LOVING MOTHER, WIFE, GRANDMOTHER, SISTER AND FRIEND. SHE WILL BE GREATLY MISSED BY ALL WHO KNEW AND LOVED HER. PLEASE JOIN US IN A MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR EMILY. SUNDAY DECEMBER 15, 2013 AT 11:00 AM SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 720 SO. JACKSON STREET RED BLUFF, CA 96080 "WE WILL ALWAYS LOVE AND MISS YOU MOM" 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. Hazel Beatrice Brewer Hazel Beatrice Brewer died Friday, Dec. 6, at her Los Molinos home. She was 83. Arrangements are under the direction of Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service. Published Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Michael Covington Michael Covington died Friday, Nov. 29, at his Corning home. He was 47. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Irving Danis Irving Danis died Saturday, Dec. 7 at his Corning home. He was 77. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Sandra Malek Sandra Malek died Monday, Dec. 2 at her Corning home. She was 63. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Judy McFadden Judy McFadden died Saturday, Dec. 7, at her Corning home. She was 87. Arrangements are under the direction of Hall Brothers Corning Mortuary. Published Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013 in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Christmas Concert Mercy High School's music department will present its annual Christmas Concert under the direction of Liz Boone and Jason Oglesby at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 10 at the student center, 233 Riverside Drive in Red Bluff. Admission is $3 per person at the door. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. More freezing temperatures beset Calif. citrus EXETER (AP) — California citrus growers say six nights of freezing temperatures will likely damage this year's orange crop but no disruption is expected to supplies. California Citrus Mutual said Monday that damage to mandarin and navel oranges is expected in the Central Valley but not nearly at the levels seen during cold spells in 1998 and 1990 due to improved frost protection and weather forecasting. A spokeswoman for the growers' association says the prolonged nature of this cold snap has fatigued wind machines designed to elevate temperatures in the groves. Spokeswoman Alyssa Houtby says growers will need more fuel than usual to run the machines because cold weather is forecast through Wednesday morning. 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. Photo by Ross Palubeski Red Bluff Fire, CalFire and Tehama County Fire departments were dispatched around 5:15 p.m. Friday to a reported mobile home fire at 180 S.Main St. in Red Bluff. The first unit at scene reported a fully involved mobile home with immediate threat to other structures. The structure was a total loss with no damage to the other structures. PG&E and RBPD assisted. Units responded from Red Bluff City and Antelope. SPEAR Continued from page 1A The Red Bluff Police Department was called to both disturbances. When officers attempted to make contact with Loughmiller and the victim during the first incident, both had already left the area. During the investigation of the second incident, Loughmiller was uncooperative and the vic- tim was scared to say anything to police in fear of retaliation. Two officers left the scene, while a third remained near the residence and spoke with an apartment manager about the earlier incidents. As the officer was speaking to the manager, another domestic incident between Loughmiller and his girlfriend erupted. The police officer witnessed Loughmiller chasing the victim from the apartment. The officer lost sight of the victim, but heard screams for help. Loughmiller had been armed with a 3-foot stick with a large knife affixed to the end as he assaulted the victim. When Loughmiller saw the officer coming he ran away from his girlfriend and back into his house where he barricaded himself inside and attempted to destroy the improvised spear. Loughmiller was eventually talked into coming Christmas, Nayeli Paya, and U.S Rep. Doug LaMalfa also took to the parade route from Toomes Avenue to Third Street. Continued from page 1A Hometown Christmas festivities Corning's 2013 Little Miss started earlier in the day with a pan- CORNING WATER Continued from page 1A Water officials believe creating an alternative delivery method from the pumps — and restoring more than 100,000 acres of new habitat above ground — will help the fish rebound and keep the water flowing to customers. The plan also outlines how officials would conduct research and implement monitoring during and after construction of the tunnels to study the project's effect on dozens of plant and animal species. State water officials also say the ambitious project would generate billions of dollars in jobs, especially in construction, in the delta region. The release kicks off 120 days of public comment on the plan and environmental analysis. ''By meeting the state's dual goals ... of ecosystem restoration and water supply reliability, we will stabilize and secure against catastrophe the water deliv- eries that sustain our homes, jobs, and farms, and do so in a way that not only protects but enhances the environment,'' said John Laird, California's natural resources secretary. Funding for the roughly $16 billion tunnel part of the project will come from the water agencies that would benefit most from it, according to the state Department of Water Resources. Those same agencies would pay for maintenance and operation of the tunnel. A mixture of federal and state money would cover the remainder, including the possibility of general obligation bonds. But critics of the plan say it would actually harm fish and agriculture by siphoning off more water from the estuary. Dozens of conservation groups including the Sierra Club have been steadfast in their opposition, saying the project would ship more water from the delta south and create more environmental problems. Conservationists say out of his apartment and was arrested. He was booked into Tehama County Jail for domestic battery, criminal threats, destruction of evidence, auto theft, exhibiting a deadly weapon and being armed with a deadly weapon with the intent to assault. Bail was $76,000. The victim sustained minor injuries. Her vehicle was later recovered by the California Highway Patrol. cake breakfast sponsored by the Corning Volunteer Fire Department and Knights of Columbus. Craft and food booths, along with pony and carriage rides and an art exhibit rounded out the day. modern developments in water conservation and recycling can be used to reduce demand from southern California, and would be far more environmentally friendly than the tunnel project. ''We need a better plan for restoring the delta environment and making sure Californians all over the state get the water they need,'' Kathryn Phillips, director of Sierra Club California, said in a statement. Jay Lund, director of University of California, Davis' Center for Watershed Sciences, said the goal of the project is not to increase the amount of water being sent to thirsty cities and Central Valley farms, but to make the conveyance less environmentally damaging. Lund is one of the scientists reviewing the government's plan. ''This is really not about taking additional water from other water users ... it's just shifting the place of diversion,'' Lund said. ''You can never have no impact when doing (something like this), but you're changing the impacts and transforming them for something that's less bad for the native fish.'' And some other environmental groups are supporting the effort, saying major changes are needed to help restore the badly damaged delta ecosystem. The groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council and Nature Conservancy, stopped short of giving formal approval of the draft plan, saying they are reviewing the some 34,000 pages to see if previous concerns they raised were addressed. ''With California facing a possible third consecutive dry year and with poor environmental conditions in the Bay Delta, it is imperative that California makes significant progress on a comprehensive ecosystem and water supply solution,'' the coalition wrote in a joint statement. ——— The Bay Delta Conservation Plan: http://baydeltaconservationplan.co m/ Covered Calif has backlog of 25,000 SACRAMENTO (AP) — California's health insurance exchange has a backlog of 25,000 paper applications that must be processed by Dec. 23 for the applicants to get health insurance starting in the new year. Roy Kennedy, a spokesman for Covered California, said Monday some of the applications were from insurance agents who were unable to access the online portal in the first few days after the exchange opened on Oct. 1. He says the agency has added staff to help. Still, the California Association of Health Underwriters says Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service Now Offering Eco-Friendly urns at economy friendly prices. 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff, FD Lic. 1931 527-1732 those workers are only entering basic information, and insurance agents are being asked to check the site several times a day for clients whose applications need to be entered. Insurance companies also must bill the customers and receive payment by Jan. 1.

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