Red Bluff Daily News

August 23, 2014

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Graham:JackEarlGraham Sr., 74, of Red Bluff died Friday, Aug. 22at Valley West Care Center in Wil- liams. Arrangements are under the direction of Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service. Published Saturday, Aug. 23, 2014in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Deathnoticesmustbe provided by mortuar- ies to the news depart- ment, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic informa- tion about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Clas- sified advertising depart- ment. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortu- aries or by families of the deceased and include on- line publication linked to the newspaper's web- site. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Deathnotices so, please help us protect your property by provid- ing and maintaining a de- fensible space around your structure," according to a Red Bluff Fire Department press release. "Keep rain gutters free of debris, and keep wood piles and flam- mable materials at least 30 feet from the home." Reward FROM PAGE 1 That is unless the food vendor truly is mobile. The ordinance only ap- plies to operations that sit in a single location for more than one hour at a time Moore said the county's hope is that taco trucks return to the days where they were actually mobile. With an obtained use permit, mobile food ven- dors would only be able to operate in commercial and industrial zoning districts. They would also have to comply with local and state health standards. The largest hurdle for some to overcome may be a stipu- lation that a restroom and hand washing facilities be located within 300 feet of the operation. Moore said that stipula- tion could be met with a mobile facility. He said in Sacramento some mobile food vendors bring a por- table hand sanitation sta- tion with them wherever they set up. Commissioner Delbert David said the county needed to be careful that it didn't put into place rules that would force the clo- sure of taco trucks. He said many of the trucks in op- eration within the county provided the financial sup- port for a family and he did not want regulation to lead to people being put on to welfare. Moore said a hearing notice was mailed to ev- ery vendor registered with the county's environmen- tal health department. Mobile FROM PAGE 1 Doug Dais, an Eng- lish teacher at the high school, will be in charge of the program, while many other staff members as well as teachers will also help. The program is com- pletely free, completely voluntary and, according to Dais, a great way to get ahead in classes and get involved at the school. The program will in- clude various clubs for students to participate in. Examples of the clubs in- cluded are Weight Train- ing, Math and Science Club, Movies Club and Gamers Haven. Transportation, even for students who normally take the bus, is included free of charge. The program is able to expand and grow through student involvement. "The cool thing about the program is that the more student involvement we get the more it grows and the more we can offer," Dais said. The program is open to input from students. "If you and your friends have an idea for a club you'd like to start up, you let us know and we figure out how to make it hap- pen," Dais said. As long as the school is able to abide by the guide- lines, the program should be able to be kept at Red Bluff Union High School for the next five years. Registration forms for ASSET, which starts Sept. 15, are available in Room 314 at Red Bluff Union High School. This story was origi- nally published in the Aug. 22 edition of Red Bluff Union High School's newspaper The Bluffer. It is reprinted here with permission. Program FROM PAGE 1 PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. Thank you! By Rich Greene rgreene@redbluffdailynews. com @richgreenenews on Twitter RED BLUFF A 14-year-old Red Bluff girl who was last seen by her family on Tues- day was located at a Los Molinos residence Friday afternoon. No suspicious activity was reported. Kyleeanne Renee Wil- liamson was reported as a runway from the 20000 block of Reeds Creek Road. She was last seen early morning Tuesday and her photo and description were sent by the Red Bluff Police Department to the media Thursday. Red Bluff Police Detec- tive Aaron Murray obtained information on William- son's whereabouts and re- sponded to a Los Molinos residence where he found the girl, according to a de- partment press release. The girl said she had left home voluntarily. Williamson was placed into Tehama County Child Protective Services. FOUND Missing Red Bluff teen found safe in Los Molinos where it reached the semi- final round. Other festivities will in- clude live entertainment, three olive tours, arts, crafts and food booths, and an olive pit spitting contest, which all lead to the olive drop — a festival staple in which a waterfall of olives is dropped on the park at the event's end. The Corning Chamber of Commerce sponsors the festival, and a full sched- ule of events can be viewed on the Chamber's website at http://corningcacham- ber.org. Parade FROM PAGE 1 By Elliot Spagat The Associated Press SAN MARCOS Three Japa- nese college students were killed and five others in- jured when a car carrying them veered off a Califor- nia freeway and struck a power pole, officials said Friday. The eight students were trapped in the 2000 Honda Prelude after the crash late Thursday on state Route 78 in Oceanside, Califor- nia Highway Patrol Offi- cer Jim Bettencourt said. The car went down an embankment and struck the pole, shearing it in half and leaving power lines dangling, Betten- court said. The lines did not touch the ground. The 19-year-old male driver and two passengers — a man and woman — were pronounced dead at the scene. Two women and three men suffered moder- ate to major injuries. All were students and incoming freshmen in the international program at Palomar College in San Marcos, school spokes- woman Laura Gropen said. They were among 135 Japanese students at the San Marcos school and were staying with host families in the San Diego area, college President Robert Deegan said Friday. "We have lost three members of the Palomar family, and we are truly reeling from the loss," he said, adding that grievance counselors had been pro- vided for students, faculty and staff. The injured were hospi- talized but are expected to survive, Deegan said. He declined to release the names of the victims and said he didn't have any personal information about them. Deegan also said he didn't know the circum- stances of the crash but added that it raised obvi- ous questions about why so many people were in the car. Officers were trying to determine if any students were wearing seat belts, Bettencourt said. "With that many people, there are definitely going to be some people in that car that did not have a seat belt on," he told U-T San Diego. CALIFORNIA College mourns three students killed in crash GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Debris and a power pole lines the highway a er a fatal crash on Friday in Oceanside. By Judy Lin The Associated Press SACRAMENTO California lawmakers on Friday acted on bills that tackle firearm safety and add rules for ammunition sales. The Senate unanimously passed SB505 by Sen. Han- nah-Beth Jackson, D-Santa Barbara. It would require officers to search the state's database of gun purchases when checking on whether someone may be a danger to themselves or others. Jackson says searching the gun database could help prevent tragedies such as the May shooting rampage near the Univer- sity of California, Santa Barbara. Her bill now goes to the governor. "This bill would help en- sure that law enforcement agencies are using all the tools available to them to gather potentially life-sav- ing information for them- selves and others," Jackson said in a statement. Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office deputies were criticized for not searching Elliot Rodger's apartment during a wel- fare check in April after his parents became con- cerned about his postings on YouTube. The 22-year- old community college stu- dent killed six university students and himself in Isla Vista weeks later. A database search could have helped them better assess the danger Rodger posed to himself and oth- ers, Jackson said. Separately, the Assembly approved a bill creating a way to better track ammu- nition. SB53 by Sen. Kevin de Leon, D-Los Angeles, re- quires ammunition ven- dors to be licensed and people buying ammuni- tion to pass background checks. According to his office, the state Depart- ment of Justice will be re- quired to keep a list of all authorized ammunition purchasers to make sure ammunition will only be accessible to lawful gun owners and not danger- ous criminals. De Leon's office stated that while California has enacted legislation to keep guns out of the hands of criminals; little has been done to prevent them from getting ammunition. Sup- porters estimated that mil- lions of rounds of ammuni- tion are being sold to crim- inals each year. The bill passed 42-26 and returns to the Senate. SACRAMENTO Lawmakers pass firearm safety, ammo bills By Juliet Williams The Associated Press SACRAMENTO Democratic state Sen. Ben Hueso was arrested for investigation of drunken driving early Friday in Sacramento, the latest black eye for the state's majority party and the 40-member chamber. Hueso, 44, of San Diego was arrested by the Cali- fornia Highway Patrol at 2:39 a.m. near midtown Sacramento and booked into Sacramento County Jail, sheriff's Sgt. Lisa Bow- man said. He was released shortly before noon after posting bail of nearly $1,500. "I think I have the right to pursue my innocence, and that's what I'm going to do," he told reporters, speaking softly, with a se- rious expression. Hueso wore gray slacks, a red-and-white pinstriped dress shirt and black shoes as he walked from the jail to a waiting black van. He would not comment fur- ther about the arrest or his whereabouts in the hours before the stop. The Senate had finished its business for the day about 5 p.m. Thursday. Hueso's seat was vacant when the Senate recon- vened Friday, a week be- fore the legislative dead- line. The end of the leg- islative session, when lawmakers pass hundreds of bills, is typically a fes- tive time after hours, with parties and fundraisers at bars and restaurants around the state capital. Hueso was among the guests at a dinner hosted Thursday night by the La- tino Legislative Caucus at a restaurant in downtown Sacramento, held to rec- ognize members who are being termed out or leav- ing for other offices, but the dinner ended about 9 p.m., said Roger Salazar, a spokesman for the caucus. "I left at 8:30, so I don't know if there was an after- party or not," said Sen. Ed Hernandez, D-Covina. The Senate sergeant-at- arms, the office that han- dles lawmakers' security, referred calls to the office of Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg. Steinberg's office did not immediately return calls or emails seeking more information about Hueso. California lawmak- ers have taken steps this year to repair their im- age in the wake of the le- gal trouble and suspension of the three senators. Sen. Rod Wright of Inglewood was convicted for lying about living in his district, while Sens. Ron Calderon of Montebello and Leland Yee of San Francisco are fighting unrelated federal corruption charges. CRIME De mo cr at ic s ta te s en at or a rr es te d a er D UI s to p UnavieLenoraGobin February 3, 1918 - August 9, 2014 On August 9, 2014 our wonderful Mother, Grandmother & Great Grandmother passed away at 96, into the loving arms of our savior, surrounded by her family at St. Eliza- beth Hospital in Red Bluff, CA. She was born Feb 3, 1918 in Chico, CA to John Henry & Kate Sherman Perkiss. Unavie was known as "Ebie" to all her friends & family. She is survived by her children, Carol (Bruce) Johnston, Gerber, CA; Larry (Fiesta) Gobin, Redding, CA; Don (Wendy) Gobin, Shingletown, CA; Gail (Clint) Pritchard, Gerber, CA. She is survived by her Grandchildren, Brad (Marita) Johnston, Chester, CA; Robin Jacobson, Chicago Park, CA; Robert (Sunni) Gobin, Bloomington, Indiana; Jeff (Tammi) Gobin, Huntsville, Alabama; Rebekah Harmon, McKinleyville, CA; Dawn (Dave) Nickals, Red Bluff, CA; Kristi (Randy) Waddell, Red Bluff, CA; Susanna (Andy) Waddell, Cottonwood, CA; Holly Gobin, Red Bluff, CA; Angel (Larry) Depee, McKinleyville, CA, Greatgrandchildrin, Jaymi & Mathew Jacobson, Chicago Park, CA; Emily Harmon, Carson City, Nevada; Sarah Har- mon, Eureka, CA; Rachel Harmon, McKinleyville, CA; Orry Gobin, Huntsville, Alabama; Cassie & Cody Clinger, Red Bluff, CA; Gavin & Danny Depee, McKinleyville, CA; Justin & Morgan Waddell, Red Bluff, CA; Hailee & Justin Nicholls, Red Bluff, CA; Colton & Connor Waddell, Cot- tonwood, CA. She is survived by sister-in-law, Peggy Perkiss, Red Bluff, CA & many nieces & nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents & siblings, Margie Conklin, Philip Rolex, James Rolex, Evelyn Cantwell & Bob Perkiss. Services will be held on Saturday August 23, 2014 at First Baptist Church, 501 Pine Street, Red Bluff, CA at 1:00 pm with John Enos officiating. In leu of flowers donations may be made to your favor- ite charity. Internment will be held at a later date at Chico, Cemetery, Chico, CA Obituaries SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 2014 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 9 A

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