Red Bluff Daily News

September 12, 2014

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MINERAL Lassen Volcanic Na- tional Park wants your ideas on managing the trails and to im- prove access in the Bumpass Hell basin area. While the Bumpass Hell ba- sin is a popular destination for many visitors to the park, includ- ing school groups, it is also a large hydrothermal area that exempli- fies the dynamic, ever-changing geologic environment found at Lassen. Visitors may travel by foot along the main trail from the Bumpass Hell parking area into the basin where they walk along a boardwalk that traverses a por- NATIONAL PARK By Andre Byik abyik@redbluffdailynews.com @andrebyik on Twitter CORNING The City Council on Tuesday accepted a $7,000 of- fer from a Corning resident for a 4,125-square-foot city property at 939 Sixth Ave., with the money said to benefit the Corning Volun- teer Fire Department. The 55-by-75 foot parcel, which was acquired by the city from the CORNING Council accepts offer for small city property $7,000saidtobenefit local volunteer fire department By Rich Greene rgreene@redbluffdailynews.com @richgreenenews on Twitter RED BLUFF The Tehama County Board of Supervisors Tuesday voted to start the process of ex- amining a rezone of around 36 acres at the Tehama County-Red Bluff Landfill. The Tehama County-Red Bluff Landfill Management Agency says the rezone to a Public Agency District would allow the agency to build a new on-site administra- tive building. Residents of the nearby West- gate Road Association are fight- ing the effort and were on hand Tuesday. Landfill Management Agency Manager Kristina Miller said the only purpose for the rezone is for the new office and accompanying storage facility. She said the lots, which front the north of property, would not be used for land filling. Around 36 acres is being con- sidered for the rezone. It was ac- quired by the Landfill Manage- ment Agency in a 2009 bank- ruptcy sale to create a buffer between the landfill and sur- rounding or future residential development. Association Vice President Paul Chambers said there is a trust is- sue with the landfill. "That buffer zone is there for a reason and we don't want to see any of it go," he said. Other neighbors questioned the cost of the project and the site lo- cation. The final design of the facility has not been completed, but it would be roughly a 3,000-square- foot office building with a drive- way entrance off of Snow Court. The price tag is around $900,000, although Miller said a good part of that is to pay for the construction of the new road leading to the facility. The construction would be funded through a loan from the Tehama County Sanitary Land- fill Agency, a separate although similarly named joint powers au- thority, and backed through tip- ping fees. The board adopted the reso- lution of intention for a rezone unanimously. Supervisor Burt LANDFILL Rezoningtobeginforbuilding By Chip Thompson and The Associated Press editor@redbluffdailynews.com @editorchip on Twitter RED BLUFF A solemn ceremony marked the 13th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 at 7 a.m. Thursday as a crowd of about 75 gathered to commemorate the occasion on the lawn in front of the Tehama County Court House. The ceremony, organized and performed by the Tehama County Young Marines, began with the national anthem and an invocation before the flag was raised and then lowered to half-staff. Pat Scott and Rich Reynolds performed Amazing Grace on fiddle and guitar and the Red Bluff Police Department Honor Guard fired a rifle salute. "It was a great ceremony," said Jaime Crane, advisor of the Young Marines. "We hope to get more (people) next year." In New York, the toll of a bell and a moment of silence was followed by family and friends of those who died reading the names of the nearly 3,000 peo- ple killed in New York, at the Pentagon and near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. The sad roll call was to pause only four times: to mark the times when the first plane struck the World Trade Center, when the second plane struck, when the first tower fell and when the second tower fell. Joanne Barbara, whose hus- band of 30 years, Gerard Bar- bara, was a FDNY captain who died, urged all to feel for not only the lost but "those who continue to suffer from the af- termath." "May God bless America, and may we never, never forget," she said. For the first time, the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum — which includes artifacts and graphic photos of the attacks — is open. Fences around the me- morial plaza have come down, integrating the sacred site more fully with the streets of Manhat- tan while completely opening it up to the public and camera- wielding tourists. "When I first saw (One World Trade Center), it really made SEPT. 11, 2001 CEREMONY MARKS 13TH ANNIVERSARY OF ATTACKS CHIPTHOMPSON—DAILYNEWS Members of the Tehama County Young Marines, le , and Red Bluff Police and Fire departments gather with the public to mark the 13th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001terror attacks Thursday. Community.....A3 Opinion............A4 Lifestyles........A5 Weather ........ A10 Sports.............. B1 Daily Break......B5 Index............... ## INDEX A local version of Dancing with the Stars is scheduled for Sept. 26as a fundraiser for the fairgrounds. PAGEA5 LIFESTYLES LocalDancingwiththe Stars competition The Top of the State Junior Golf Scholarship 4-person Scramble is set for Sept. 28at Wilcox Oaks Golf Club. PAGE B1 FUNDRAISER Golf scramble to raise scholarship money Gathering war against Islamic extremist violence casts pall on progress since World Trade Center attacks. PAGE A7 NATION Cloud over Sept. 11 anniversary ceremonies President Barack Obama is on pace this year to deport the fewest number of immigrants since at least 2007. PAGE A10 IMMIGRATION US sharply cutting migrant deportations DAILY NEWS FILE PHOTO Bumpass Hell OFFICE PAGE 9 COUNCIL PAGE 9 BUMPASS PAGE 9 SEPT. 11 PAGE 9 Lassen Park looking for input N EWS D AILY REDBLUFF TEHAMACOUNTY Spring-Summereditioncopiesstillavailableatthe Red Bluff Daily News. ExtracopiesarealsoavailableattheRedBluffChamberofCommerce 24/7 presence online for 6 months. Digital version available at http://www.ifoldsflip.com/t/9634 WATCH FOR THE FALL EDITION PUBLISHING SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25 FALL COUPON SPECIAL » redbluffdailynews.com Friday, September 12, 2014 50CENTS AN EDITION OF THE CHICO ENTERPRISE-RECORD 7 58551 69001 9 Volume129,issue211 Today's web bonus Remembering 9/11. redbluffdailynews.com SWIMMING Spartans beat Paradise in the pool Sports B1 SERRF Richfield students learn the R's Community A3 FORECAST High: 101 Low: 62 A10 LiketheDailyNews on Facebook and stay in the loop on local news, sports and more. VISITFACEBOOK.COM/ RBDAILYNEWS LIKEUSON FACEBOOK

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