Red Bluff Daily News

January 13, 2015

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/445640

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 2 of 15

NickEmighandJohnna Soulliere are pleased to an- nounce their engagement as of Oct. 1, 2014 in Fort Bragg. The groom to be is the son of Mark and Cindy Emigh of Red Bluff. He is employed by the U.S. For- est Service The bride to be is the daughter of Ron and Deb- bie Soulliere of Red Bluff. She is employed by The Green Barn Steak House. The couple plans to wed in April at Sacred Heart Catholic Church and make their home in Red Bluff. ENGAGEMENT Sheriff Jud W. Boyd re- ceived a telegram from the Sacramento authori- ties yesterday stating that Thomas J. Wright, aged man of this city, has suffi- ciently recovered from an illness caused by drink- ing insecticide in the local county jail to be taken to prison. Either Sheriff Boyd or Under Sheriff C. A. Lange will go to Sacramento to- day and take Wright to Folsom Prison, where he will begin serving a 10- year sentence. — Jan. 13, 1915 100 YEARS AGO... T.J.Wrighttobe taken to Folsom The following infor- mation has been com- piled from Red Bluff Po- lice Department, Tehama County Sheriff's Depart- ment, Corning Police De- partment and California Highway Patrol logs. Arrests DanielColemanCa- halan:30,LosMolinos was arrested Friday at Antelope Boulevard and Sale Lane on outstanding charges of felony pos- session of a controlled substance and misde- meanors of paraphernalia, driving on a suspended license and two counts of failure to appear. Cahalan is on Post Release Com- munity Supervision. Bail was $3,000. Francisco Cruz-Soto: 26, Corning was arrested on suspicion of felony lewd and lascivious act with a child under 14 and sex with a foreign object Friday on the 900 block of First Street. Bail was $200,000. Rachel Liane Garris: 30, Los Molinos was arrested Friday at Sherwood and Lee on outstanding charges of felony pos- session of marijuana for sale, selling marijuana, possession of a con- trolled substance and misdemeanor driving on a suspended license. Bail was $25,000. Juan Lee Glidewell: 54, Chico was arrested on suspicion of felony pos- session of a controlled substance and misde- meanor paraphernalia Friday at Liberal and Orchard. Glidewell has outstanding charges of felony possession of can- nabis concentrates and misdemeanor driving on a suspended license. Bail was $20,000. Francisco Vasquez Guz- man: 29, Red Bluff was arrested Friday at Elm and Washington streets on an outstanding charge of felony possession of a controlled substance. Jeremy Michael Ste- phens: 24, Columbia, Missouri was arrested on suspicion of felony pos- session of marijuana for sale and selling marijuana Friday on southbound In- terstate 5 south of River- side. Bail was $60,000. Jamal Rashad White: 20, Columbia, Missouri was arrested on suspi- cion of felony possession of marijuana for sale and selling marijuana Friday on southbound Interstate 5 south of Riverside. Bail was $60,000. Burglary 20000 block Pebble- stone Drive: A motor- cycle was reported stolen from a garage. POLICE LOGS YREKA The Klamath Na- tional Forest will host a job fair 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Sat- urday at the Forest Head- quarters office, 1711 S. Main St., Yreka. Current and upcoming temporary and permanent job opportunities with the Klamath National Forest include positions in fire, botany, archeology, busi- ness administration, wild- life, recreation trail crew, timber and engineering equipment operator. Help will be available to explain the hiring process and how to complete the online job application. Candidates submit their applications on the USA- JOBS website at https:// www.usajobs.gov/. Com- puter workstations and technical assistance will be available at the job fair. Interested applicants should come prepared with appropriate docu- ments such as resume, employment history, refer- ence contact information, letters of recommenda- tion, post-high school tran- scripts, DD214s for veter- ans and IQCS Master Re- cords for firefighters. For more informa- tion, call the Klamath National Forest at (530) 842-6131. KLAMATH FOREST Job fair set for Saturday in Yreka COURTESY PHOTO Nick Emigh and Johnna Soulliere Soulliere-Emigh to wed BloodSource is coming to Red Bluff 2-6 p.m. Wednes- day Jan. 21, and the third Wednesday of every month, to hold a blood drive at the Veterans Memorial Hall, 735 Oak St. The blood drive, which is sponsored by the Em- blem club, has been hap- pening in Red Bluff the third Wednesday of every month for decades. Hosting a blood drive in the commu- nity is right in line with the Emblem club's mission and members have been dedi- cated to it for more than 50 years. Was your New Year's res- olution was to help save a life? Would you like it to be? You can donate blood every eight weeks, every other month in your home- town. Blood Donations helped save the life of Sydney Fi- gone, who was diagnosed at age 21 with Stage 3 Hodg- kin's Lymphoma. Sydney received many pints of red cells, platelets and plasma to fight the disease. With aggressive chemotherapy and countless blood trans- fusions from donors, Syd- ney finally entered remis- sion in January 2012. As a BloodSource em- ployee, Sydney relishes the opportunity to thank do- nors for their generosity. BloodSource is proud to be the provider of blood for St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, helping countless lives in 2014. Start your year out right and give back this year by help support- ing your community blood supply. Call us at (530) 243-0160 for more information. Donating blood is safe, easy and takes about an hour. Donors must be healthy, weigh at least 110 pounds, be at least 17 years old or 16 with a signed BloodSource parent con- sent form. There is no up- per age limit for blood do- nations. Donors must bring a photo ID and should drink plenty of fluids be- fore donating. Potential marrow do- nors can register for Be The Match national marrow registry through Blood- Source. Find more infor- mation or schedule an ap- pointment by calling 866 822-5663 or visiting blood- source.org. RED BLUFF Bl oo d dr iv e sc he du le d Ja n. 2 1 at V et e ra ns H al l I am an author who has written six books, which are available on Amazon. The first time I saw one of my books available on the web, it was a giant sense of accomplishment. I poured a lot of time and energy into that process and while it wasn't easy, it was very sat- isfying. In November, I did a fun- draiser for local agencies and schools and sold more than 50 books from my children's series. Imagine, seeing your books in the hands of your target audi- ence. There is a huge sense of accomplishment when you know your message is out there where you always dreamed it would be. At the fundraiser a hand- ful of community mem- bers came to ask questions about becoming an author, the processes I used to hire an illustrator, get my books on Amazon and other book- based questions. We de- cided to meet as a group for a question and answer ses- sion where I could cover ev- erything I know to help oth- ers become authors. If you have had a de- sire to tell your story, get your idea onto the shelves at bookstores or have your own author's page on Am- azon, I invite you to meet with us on Wednesday, Jan. 14 at 6 p.m. at the new Starbuck's in Antelope for a question and answer ses- sion. There are many local authors among us, if you have interest in coming and sharing your knowl- edge, that would be all the better for those seeking in- formation. Our commu- nity is rich with novelists, non-fiction writers, histori- ans, children's authors and technical writers. It would be a blessing to pay forward some of the support I have been given and to hear from other authors who have reached their writing goals. One of the greatest cru- elties of life is for it to end with our stories still inside our minds. The graveyards are some of the richest places in our community, for in them lie gold mines of information, untapped information that will never help a single person. I imag- ine that the greatest stories have never been told. You owe it to the world to share your wisdom, your knowl- edge and your value. I hope to see interested parties at the Q&A and I hope you all remember to grab a cup of coffee and support Starbuck's as well. FaydraRector,MAisa mental health administra- tor, author, public speaker, educator and life coach who lives in Red Bluff. She can be reached at life- coach@shasta.com or view her blogs at faydraand- company.blogspot.com/ and allaboutdivorce.blogs- pot.com/. FAYDRA RECTOR Becoming an author 101 Findusonline! By Olga R. Rodriguez The Associated Press SANFRANCISCO Kaiser Per- manente mental health pro- fessionals throughout Cali- fornia went on a strike Mon- day to protest what they say is a lack of staffing that af- fects care. The health care provider's 2,600 psychologists, thera- pists and social workers be- gan the weeklong walkout to demand that Kaiser Per- manente offer timely, qual- ity mental health care at its psychiatry departments and clinics, said Jim Clifford, a union member and San Di- ego psychiatric therapist. Clifford said some pa- tients have to wait up to two months for follow-up ap- pointments, which prolongs the recovery process. "Kaiser purports to be the leader in health care, but it's continuing the history of discrimination against the mentally ill, and that's un- acceptable to us," said Clif- ford, who has been with Kai- ser for 13 years. The mental health work- ers are represented by the National Union of Health- care Workers, which has been unable to reach a con- tract agreement with Kaiser since the union formed five years ago. Wearing red T-shirts and holding signs that read "Fair Wages Now" and "So- cial Workers for Quality Care," mental health work- ers picketed outside doz- ens of Kaiser medical cen- ters throughout California and vowed to continue their strike through next Monday. John Nelson, Kaiser's vice president of government re- lations, denied there is a shortage of mental health staff. He said the health plan has increased staffing statewide by 25 percent in the past three years, while membership grew by 8 per- cent during the same period. He said the false claims are part of the union's bar- gaining tactic. "They think that attack- ing Kaiser Permanente's reputation will get them a better contract," Nelson said. "It's frustrating, it's disappointing, but it's their strategy." He said that appoint- ments are being resched- uled and that during the strike, psychiatrists on staff will treat patients in crisis or with an emergency. Meanwhile, more than 18,000 Kaiser nurses and nurse practitioners in Northern and Central Cali- fornia are planning to strike Jan. 21-22. STAFFING JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters carry picket signs during a rally outside of a Kaiser Permanente facility in San Francisco, on Monday. Kaiser's 2,600 mental health workers strike in California Tehama District Jr. Livestock AnnualMeeting Thurs., Jan 14 th • 6pm held in the Tehama Room @ Tehama District Fairgrounds RUNNINGS ROOFING SheetMetalRoofing ResidentialCommercial • Composition • Shingle • Single Ply Membrane Ownerisonsiteoneveryjob ServingTehamaCounty 530-527-5789 530-209-5367 NoMoney Down! "NoJobTooSteep" " No Job Too Flat" FREE ESTIMATES CA. LIC#829089 Smog Check (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. starting at $ 29 95 + $ 8 25 certificate SERVICESATLOWERPRICES All makes and models. We perform dealer recommened 30K, 60K, 90K MembersWelcome www.RedBluffDailyNews.com Facebook:facebook.com/RBDailyNews Twitter: @RedBluffNews Customer service..................527.2151, Ext. 126 Fax.........................................................................................530.527.5774 Hours: 8a.m. to 5p.m. Monday through Friday Newsroom .............................................527.2151 Toll free................................................................................ 800.479.6397 A er hours.....................................................................................527.2153 Write to us........................................P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Office..................................545Diamond Avenue, Red Bluff, CA 96080 Home delivery subscription rates: Tuesday through Saturday: $4.48 per week; Business and professional rate: Tuesday through Friday, $2.19for four weeks. Subscription rates by mail: $12.20for four weeks in Tehama County; $17.29for four weeks all other areas. Pric- es include all applicable taxes. (USPS 458-200) The Red Bluff Daily News is an adjudicated daily newspaper of general circulation, County of Tehama, Superior Court Decree 9670, May 25, 1955. Published Tuesday through Saturday by California Newspapers Partnership. Postmaster: Please send addr ess changes to: P.O. Box 220, Red Bluff, CA 96080© 2012Daily News Postage Paid Periodicals NEWSROOM News Tips.......................527.2153 Sports................ 527.2151Ext. 111 Obituaries.........527.2151Ext. 101 Fax..........................530.527.9251 clerk@redbluffdailynews.com ADVERTISING Classified........... 1.855.667.2255 Gayla Eckels .. 527.2151, Ext. 108 Suzy Noble..... 527.2151, Ext. 103 Fax..........................530.527.5774 advertise@redbluffdailynews.com Production manager Sandy Valdivia..........................................sandy@redbluffdailynews.com Publisher, Advertising director Greg Stevens......................................gstevens@redbluffdailynews.com Editor Chip Thompson........................................editor@redbluffdailynews.com Sports editor Andre Byik................................................sports@redbluffdailynews.com Circulation manager Kathy Hogan.......................................... khogan@redbluffdailynews.com WeDo ALIGNMENTS We Do BRAKES 1375MontgomeryRd. Red Bluff, CA T:530 529-0797 StromerRealty 590 Antelope Blvd RedBluff (530) 527-3100 Specializingin Residential to Ranches TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |COMMUNITY | 3 A

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - January 13, 2015