Red Bluff Daily News

November 05, 2015

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Bradford:BernieceBrad- ford, 91, of Chico, died Sat- urday, Oct. 31, at Windsor Chico Creek. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thurs- day, Nov. 5, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Dorsey: Mary Missy Dorsey, 66, of Red Bluff, died Tuesday, Nov. 3in Red Bluff. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Judson: Ronald Judson, 82, of Red Bluff, died Satur- day, Oct. 31, at his home. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Meyer: Thomas Meyer, 72, of Red Bluff, died Friday, Oct. 30at Mercy Medical Center in Redding. Arrange- ments are under the direc- tion of Blair's Cremation & Burial. Published Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Deathnoticesmustbe 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. DEATHNOTICES dividualssoon." Thesecondarypartofthe expansion of services to the south county will include between 12 and 15 individ- uals, which will create an- other 15 jobs as the clients in the medically fragile pro- gram need one-on-one care, DeFreece said. "We hope to create 50 new jobs over the next few months," DeFreece said. "This project was truly a co- operative and collaborative effort and an example of what public and private can do together." According to the staff report accompanying the agenda, the county initially sent in a letter of interest toward possibly purchasing the building July 16, 2013 and again in January 2014, pending a new appraisal. At thattime,thestatesentalet- ter that the county received in May 2014 with the infor- mation that the property had been appraised again and was valued at $275,000 at the time. "The county has entered an agreement with the Ju- dicial Council of California of a lease for real property for $1 a year and we in turn will be leasing the build- ing to North Valley Ser- vices through a public ben- efit least at market rate," Tehama County Chief Ad- ministrator Bill Goodwin said. "They want to use it for their south county head- quarters. The lease is for 10 years. If the state does de- cided to sell it, the county will move forward to pur- chase the building." There is concern that if thebuildingweretosellnow the money would go to the generalfundandthecouncil would like to see the money from the sale stay with the judicial courts, Goodwin said. The lease will allow time to figure out whether that is possible. The building has re- mained vacant since the court moved. Accordingtothecontract accompanying the Oct. 20 agenda, the county will sub- lease the building from Nov. 1, 2015 to July 31, 2017 with a total of eight accompany- ingautomaticrenewalsgood through July 31, 2025. NorthValleyServiceswill pay $2,376 per month from Nov.,1,2015throughOct.20, 2016. The rate will increase to $2,808 per month from Nov.1,2016throughOct.30, 2017 and from Nov. 1, 2017 through July 31, 2025 will be set at $3,240 per month. Expansion FROM PAGE 1 gions of the country. The event is open to the public each day and the tests are gallery-friendly. Food will be available on-site. The club hosted the Mas- ter National Hunting Re- triever Tests in October of 2010. For more information, call Brad Henman at 520- 9464 or write to bradhen- man@sbcglobal.net. Retriever FROM PAGE 1 the theater, the release said. "This project was part of the welding program's con- tinuing effort to provide students with a learning environment that expands their work-based experi- ence while further devel- oping Butte College's busi- ness partnerships," Carde- nas said in the release. The college welding pro- gram has received the Na- tional Association of State Directors of Career Techni- cal Education Consortium's 2015 Excellence in Action award, to the release said. Butte College was one of nine schools to receive this national award and the only one in the career technical education category. Theater FROM PAGE 1 received from the Corn- ing, Red Bluff and Tehama, and the El Camino Irriga- tion District, Rio Alto Wa- ter District and the Gerber- Las Flores Community Ser- vice District. The Sustainable Ground- water Management Act be- came effective on Jan. 1 and established a new structure for managing California's groundwater resources at a local level. Within that act it states that all basins within acountyhavetobemanaged by an agency by June of 2017. Each agency will then de- velop a sustainability plan by the year 2022, that will include measurable objec- tives and milestones that assist the agency in achiev- ing groundwater sustain- ablity in 20 years of the plans adoption, according to the staff report prepared by Teubert. For more information on the act visit groundwater. ca.gov. Approved FROM PAGE 1 North Valley Services will pay $2,376 per month from Nov., 1, 2015 through Oct. 20, 2016. The rate will increase to $2,808 per month from Nov. 1, 2016 through Oct. 30, 2017. By Sudhin Thanawala The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO A fed- eral appeals court refused Wednesday to toss out evi- dence of child pornography used to convict a Washing- ton state man, though it found the evidence was ob- tained through illegal gov- ernment surveillance. The surveillance by a U.S. Navy investigator that led to Michael Drey- er's conviction violated a prohibition on the use of the military in civilian law enforcement activities, an 11-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals said. But the military was taking steps to ensure the violation didn't occur again, so suppressing the evidence was not needed, the panel held. "The military is best suited to correct this sys- temic violation, and it has initiated steps to do so," Judge Morgan Christen wrote. "Therefore, on this record and at this juncture, we conclude that the facts of this case do not demon- strate 'a need to deter fu- ture violations' by sup- pressing the results." The ruling rejected a smaller 9th Circuit pan- el's determination that the evidence should be sup- pressed. A call to Dreyer's attor- ney was not immediately returned. Dreyer was arrested in 2011 after local police alerted by the Navy found child pornography on his computer. Special agent Steve Logan had been asked by the Naval Crim- inal Investigative Service in Washington to investi- gate computers in the state sharing child pornogra- phy and used software to search a file-sharing net- work. The software led to an Internet Protocol ad- dress linked to Dreyer, and an NCIS agent passed that information to the Algona police department, which searched Dreyer's com- puter, according to the 9th Circuit. A U.S. Homeland Secu- rity agent also searched the computer. The 9th Circuit's ruling on Wednesday said Logan may not have violated the law if he had restricted his search to members of the military, but his search had no such limitation. ILLEGAL SURVEILLANCE Court refuses to toss out evidence in child porn conviction "The military is best suited to correct this systemic violation, and it has initiated steps to do so. Therefore, on this record and at this juncture, we conclude that the facts of this case do not demonstrate 'a need to deter future violations' by suppressing the results." — Judge Morgan Christen RONALDSCARLETTJUDSON April 14, 1933 ~ October 31, 2015 It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Ronald Scarlett Judson, loving son, father, husband, brother, uncle and friend. Ron was 82 years old and a longtime resident of Red Bluff, California. Ron leaves behind his daughter Denise Lynn Hatcher, son Steven Walter Judson and loving best friend Bonnie Lewis. He is also survived by sister Olga Barker-Rowley, daughter-in-law Donna Easley Judson, six grandchildren Stephen (Sporty) James Pair, Chere' Nicol Pair, Kathryn (Katie) Ann Knight, Marc David Harrington, Bryan John Harrington, Lindsey Nicole Muto, granddaughter-in-law Corban Harrington, grandson-in-law James Muto, great grandchildren Cayla Pair, Orion Pair, Isabelle Pair- Gilmore, Scotty Swett, Becket Harrington and Mikaela Muto. Ron was preceded in death by his wife Shirley Ann Judson, daughter Kathryn Ann Pair, his mother Ger- trude Evelyn Judson, father Herbert Sidney Judson and eleven brothers and sisters Alan Judson, Norman Judson, Sidney Judson, Bruce Judson, Nancy Chalmers, Oreti Aar- on, Pat (Hattie) Maxwell, Marie Dondero, Gary Judson, Ivan Judson and Thomas Judson. Ron was born in San Francisco, California where his mother and father emigrated from New Zealand. His early years found him living in a wall tent with four brothers in the back yard of their family home during World War II where they often had to go dark due to potential enemy air raids. He attended Castlemont High School where he met his future bride Shirley Lofstrom then attended San Mateo Junior College where he played guard alongside the legendary Bill Walsh. Ron served in the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict where he planned to see the world. As it turned out he served as part of the Honor Guard at the Presidio in San Francisco and never left the city of his birth. After serving his tour in the military Ron attended Chico State College where he earned his Bache- lor's degree while hunting and fishing to support his wife and two daughters. His senior year in college his wife gave birth to their son and soon thereafter he graduated at which point in time he started a career in the insurance industry. Ron became interested in a career with the California Highway Patrol and on July 11, 1960 he officially became a patrol officer for the CHP. His career started in Bakers- field then soon was relocated to Lebec where he chased speeders off the Grapevine on Interstate 5. Ron and his family moved around the state to several different loca- tions where he made life-long friends. His career took him to San Jose, Lake Tahoe, Yuba City, Redding, Sacra- mento, Banning, Oakland, Yreka and then finally the Red Bluff Area Office where he retired as a Captain. As part of his training, in 1976, the CHP sent Ron to the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia which turned out to be one of the highlights of his career. During the time that he was in management positions with the CHP Ron became active in the communities he served. He was a 37 year member of Rotary where he served as President of the Red Bluff Club in 1987, he was President of the Shasta County Board of Education in 1977 when they established the Schreder Planetarium. Ron served as the President of the United Way of Tehama County in 1985 and was appointed to the Board of Direc- tors for the 30th District Agricultural Association in 1986 by Governor George Deukmajian. Ron has been a 50 plus year member of the Elks where he has enjoyed the com- radery and great deeds of the organization. Ron had a zest for life and was like the energizer bunny constantly on the go. He had many passions in life hunt- ing and fishing being high on the list in his younger years. He and his wife Shirley loved to travel and togeth- er discovered many parts of the globe as well as every state in the union. Through his joy of community service Ron, with Shirley by his side, brought chili cooking back to Red Bluff. The pair loved to cook competition chili and through the International Chili Society they each competed in over ten national championship events and gained innumerable life friends along the way. When his wife of 52 years passed away in 2006 Ron continued to carry on his enthusiasm for life and over time was blessed by meeting Bonnie Lewis who would become his best friend and companion until the day he passed. They enjoyed many wonderful years together and Bonnie was his rock during his extended illness. Ron will be missed by all. Services will Be held Friday November 6, 2015 at First Christian Church, 926 Madison Street, Red Bluff, CA at 1:00 PM. There will be a viewing at Thursday night from 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM November 5, 2015 at Chapel of the Flowers, 816 Walnut Street, Red Bluff, CA. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Red Bluff Elks Lodge, 355 Gil- more Road, following the graveside ceremony. In lieu of flowers you can make donations to the Red Bluff Rotary Foundation at P.O. Box 507, Red Bluff, CA 96080. William "Jackson" Williams July 11, 1926 ~ October 27, 2015 Our Dad William "Jackson" Williams, beloved husband of late wife Nora Lee, passed away October 27, 2015. Jack was father of 9 children; Sharon (Christopher), Billy, Ann, Don (Joy), Jerry (Terri), Lynn (David), Dotti (Ray), Robin (Tom) & Julie (John). Grandfather of 31, great-grandfather of 68 and great-great-grandfather of 2. Jack moved to California in 1941 with his parents Ollie & Ruth and his younger siblings; Jim, Lora, Gene, Roger, Leona & Sylvester. He met his future wife Nora Lee Wal- den in Dunsmuir while working on construction of the Shasta Dam. Jack & Nora married August 26, 1943 in Dai- ryville, CA at the Triangle Roadhouse. Jack was a veteran of WWII and Korea. He was master of many trades, in- cluding construction, logging and trucking. He loved playing his guitar, singing and fishing with his children, brothers & in-laws. He will be sorely missed, but we will see him soon. Jack was preceded in death by parents Ollie & Ruth, sis- ters, Helen Lorene, Leona Hintz, daughter Sharon Lee Nichols, granddaughter Bathsheba Ruth Williams and great-grandson Preston Alexander Nichols. Please join his family for services at Trinity Missionary Baptist Church in Red Bluff at 2:00 pm November 7, 2015. Jack and his life long love Nora will be laid to rest to- gether at Oak Hill Cemetery, Red Bluff following the serv- ices. THOMAS M. MEYER January 15, 1943 ~ October 30, 2015 Tom Meyer passed away October 30, 2015 at Mercy Hospital in Redding California with the comfort of his family. Tom was born January 15, 1943 and raised locally by Mary (Haas) and Carl Meyer. He was born in Redding California and moved to Tehama County and lived in Los Molinos, Corning and eventually settled down in Red Bluff. Tom grew up with his brothers Bill and Raymond Meyer but tragically lost Raymond to the Sacramento Riv- er. He graduated from Los Molinos High School where he met his wife, Anna Scribner and they were married for 49 years until she passed away in March of 2014. Tom was passionate about his hobby cars and was very talented in body work, painting and mechanical work which kept him very busy even into retirement. He always had sever- al projects going on at the same time and enjoyed chal- lenging himself. He married Delma Westfall December 2014 and felt happy for a second chance of marriage and they enjoyed traveling and camping with friends. Tom is survived by: Wife Delma, brother Bill Meyer, son John Meyer, daughter Anita Rice, son-in-law Bill Rice, step- daughter Darci Wilson, grandson Shane Keffer, granddaughters Desiray Keffer , Jessica Keffer, KC Middle- ton, Tashia Nichols, Marie Peterson, Tosha and Amanda Wilson and 15 great grandchildren. Services will be held at North Valley Baptist Church in Red Bluff, November 7th at 11:00 a.m. followed by a private graveside service at a later date. Richard Harris (Dick) Boone February 13, 1919 ~ July 28, 2015 Richard Harris (Dick) Boone, 96, died in Chico, CA on July 28, 2015. He was born in Keeler, CA on February 13, 1919 to Hazel I. and Frank G. Boone. He had a sister Shirley, 6, and a brother Melvin who was 4. Early school years were spent in the Imperial Valley, then the family moved to Dairyville. He followed Shirley and Mel through Red Bluff High School where he made lifelong friends and enjoyed playing team sports. Later in life he scored the first hole in one ever recorded at the Lake Almanor West Golf Course. Before graduating in 1937 he worked as a summer cowboy for Charlie Stover and his brother in law, Abner McKenzie, making the spring cattle drive to Chester and working the summer in the mountains. After graduation cowboying became a way of life and the 101 Ranch was home until the Army called him in 1941. De- cember of that same year after completing training he was part of the 159th infantry when he was involved in an ac- cident which left him in a coma with a severe skull frac- ture. Not believing in disability he began driving stock truck for Bordenave and Berkley Trucking in the fall of 1942. Trucks were new then but he was soon driving a Lou Fagile built truck with a large square box cab and Detroit engine complete with straight pipes, they were called "sage hoppers" then, now they are called Peterbilts. In 1945 he married Bettie Metcalf. It was the beginning of 67 wonderful years together. They settled in Chester where they raised two children. Dick started as a truck driver for Collins Pine Lumber Company in 1944 and over 34 years worked his way up to the Side Rod #3. He had a special place in his heart for the young men he worked with through the years. Moving to Chico after retirement, he was soon back on the road delivering motor homes and seeing new country. When Bettie retired from the Kalico Kitchen they bought their own motor home. Traveling, visiting friends, they es- pecially enjoyed time spent with nieces Bobby Lynn, Car- ol Gayle, Scott (Gay), Hazel (Hoppy) and nephews Burt (Pattie), McKenzie, and Bill (Lori) Metcalf. Also a special thank you to Robin Lee, his care taker, Hank Nave, Chris Souza, and the whole crew at the Kalico Kitchen who made every morning fun, especially this last 2 ½ years since the loss of Bettie. Dick lost his son Dan in 1995. He leaves behind great- grand children Beau, Hamylee, Natalya, and August; grandchildren Chris (Shassity), Joe, Brooke (Dustin), Mike (Katie) and Pete; daughter De and Jim Cagno. History calls 1919 the year Dick was born, the end of the Wild West. His life moved forward from driving chuck wagon for Charlie Stover, to being able to operate every piece of equipment, but the train, owned by Collins Pine. He was a pioneer in his own right. Please make memorial contributions to the Chester-Lake Almanor Museum. To share your thoughts and memories of Dick, go to Newton-Bracewell.com Obituaries R ed Bluff Simple Cremations and Burial Service FD1931 527-1732 Burials - Monuments - Preneed 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2015 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM |NEWS | 7 A

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