Red Bluff Daily News

May 11, 2016

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Tehama County Su- pervisor Candidate Fo- rum scheduled for May 16. Super v isor can- didates Sandy Bruce, Candy Carlson, Steve Chamblin and Richard Lawrence have accepted invitations to partici- pate in a candidate fo- rum beginning with candidate introduc- tions at 7 p.m. Mon- day, May 16 at the Red Bluff Veterans Hall lo- cated at 735 Oak Street. The doors will open at 6 p.m. The public is encouraged to attend and to submit writ- ten questions by 6:45 p.m. to avoid duplica- tion and insure ques- tions from all attend- ees are addressed. The event is co-sponsored by the Red Bluff / Te- hama County Chamber of Commerce and Red Bluff Sunrise Rotary. ChamberBusiness Training Small Business Devel- opment Center at Butte College and the Red Bluff Chamber of Commerce present..."Strategies for Completing A Success- ful Business Plan", 9 a.m. to noon, Thursday, May 19 at the Holiday Inn Ex- press 2810 Main Street. There is no charge in honor of "Celebrating Small Business Week". •Learn to have a guide and strategy in place to start and grow your business successfully. •Have a defined strat- egy for direction and to share with employees, key partners and lenders. • Learn how to create a well-constructed business plan. You will be introduced to the key elements of a busi- ness plan including: State- ment of Purpose, Business Description, Facility, In- dustry, Product and Ser- vice, Market Analysis and Strategies, Competition, Management and Person- nel, Financial Data, and how to complete your fi- nancial projections for best practice budgeting, financial management, and access to capital. To register, please log onto our website, complete one form per attendee and drop in the mail, or fax to: NEC Small Business Develop- mentCenteratButteCollege ~ 2480 Notre Dame, Blvd., Chico, 895-9017 (Phone) ~ 566-9851(Fax) ~www.bc- sbdc.org New member Welcome Holliday Car- pet Cleaning, Ryan Hol- liday, PO Box 063, 1711-B Bruce Street, Anderson, 227-3304, hollidaycarpet- cleaning@gmail.com Chamber Certified Farmers' Markets gearing up Calling all farmers and vendors! The Red Bluff- Tehama County Chamber Certified Farmers' Market opens in just a few weeks. If you have fruits or vegetables to sell or have great merchandise please register today for our fan- tastic markets. Our Saturday Mar- ket begins June 4th and our Wednesday night Farmers Market begins on June 15. Red Bluff Parks and Rec will be once again hosting kids activities at our Wednesday Night Mar- kets. We look forward to seeing you as part of an- other amazing year. For questions or more info or questions visit www. redbluffchamber.com or call our Market Manager, Jason Bauer at 527-6220 x 301 REDBLUFFCHAMBER PhotofrompreviousChamberCandidatesNight. RedBluffChamber:CandidatesNightand Business Class both slated for next week The Red Bluff Cham- ber of Commerce and the NEC Small Business De- velopment Center at Butte College are teaming up to bring a free 3 hour train- ing, "Strategies for Com- pleting a Successful Busi- ness Plan" on from 9 a.m. to noon Thursday, May 19 at the Holiday Inn and Ex- press Suites . Registration/ Continental breakfast will take place 8:30-9 a.m. Each year, since 1963, the President of the United States has issued a proc- lamation announcing Na- tional Small Business Week. This year the theme of the National Small Business Week is "Dream Big, Start Small." National Small Business Week recognizes the sig- nificant contributions that America's small business owners and entrepreneurs bring to our economy and communities. In celebration of this, the Red Bluff Cham- ber of Commerce and the SBDC are excited to offer this free training to assist local business owners and individuals thinking about going into business in cre- ating a guide and a strategy to start and/or grow their businesses. It is vital for businesses to have a strategic busi- ness plan in place to help steer their businesses and share with employees, key partners and lending in- stitutions. In this training, you will learn how to cre- ate a well-constructed busi- ness plan. You will be intro- duced to the key elements of your business plan includ- ing: Statement of Purpose, Description of the Business, Facility, Industry, Product or Service (what you sell), Market Analysis & Strat- egy (customer — who buys what you sell), Competition, Management & Personnel, Financial Data (business costs, profit & loss state- ment, cash flow statement, balance sheet); and how to complete your financial projections for best prac- tice budgeting, financial management, and access to capital. Also available after the workshop is one- on-one customized busi- ness consulting for work- shop attendees, at no cost — by appointment only. At- tendees must register in ad- vance for training and con- sulting appointment. For registration and to schedule your one-on-one business consulting ap- pointment, please call SBDC at Butte College: 895-9017 or register online at www. bcsbdc.org WORKSHOP Red Bluff Chamber of Commerce hosting free business training May Madness The Corning Chamber of Commerce would like to take the time to thank all the attendees, volun- teers, registrants, and sponsors that were in- volved in the 20th Annual May Madness Car Show. We'd like to congratulate our event winners: Ron Warner, Dave and Carol Bock, Lindsay Carroll, Daryl Alberico, Randy Falk, Michael Silva, Daisy Marymee, Tom Daugh- erty, Rick and Patty Parker, George Herrick, and Best of Show winner, Doug Prentiss. Congratu- lations also go out to the winners of the model car contest: Eric Harding, Robert Fish, Jim Carri- gan, and William Nelson. Also to the winners of the Business Choice Preview: Corning Ford — Dave and Carol Bock; Les Schwab Tire Centers — George Herrick; Lucero Olive Oil Company — Doug Prentiss; Corning Senior Center — Sander Ander- son; Jamison Properties — Rick Summers; Red- ding Bank of Commerce — Tim and Joanne Car- rol; H&R Block — Daryl Alberico. A very special thanks goes out to all of the sponors who donated to make this event a suc- cess: Dignity Health, Les Schwab Tire Centers, Ra- bobank, Rolling Hills Casino, Jamison Prop- erties, Severn Trent Ser- vices, DM-Tech, Adven- tist Health, Bell Carter, PG&E, Corning Ford and Corning Chevero- let Buick, Redding Bank of Commerce, US Bank, Hometown Café, H&R Block, Corning Observer, Lucero Olive Oil, Hispana Americana News, JM Dis- tributing, TRAX, Inter- land Business and Gifts, Corning Senior Center, Rancher's Deli and Meats, Corning Rotary Club, Radio Mexicana, City of Corning — Fire, Police, Public Works and Volun- teers. Corning in the Evening Everyone is invited to attend the monthly Corning in the Evening at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday. The Corning Senior Cen- ter will be hosting. They are located at 1015 4th Av- enue. This is a great op- portunity to come out and have a good time getting to know about one of our local organi- zations. Don't forget your business cards for the raf- fle. Anyone interested in bringing a raffle gift is encouraged to do so. The Corning Patriots Patriots will be hold- ing a yard sale fundraiser from 7 a.m. till 1 p.m. on Saturday. Proceeds will go to help funding com- munity activities. The event will be located at 2157 Colusa Street. The 35th Annual Corning Junior Rodeo Rodeo will begin at 7 p.m. Friday, May 20 and at 5 p.m. Saturday, May 21. They will also be kick- ing off the weekend at 6 p.m. Thursday, May 19, with a Hospitality Mixer. Events of the evening will be the crowning of the Senior Queen, the Little Miss Rodeo Pageant, and Stick Horse Races, spon- sored by Rolling Hills Ca- sino & Equestrian Cen- ter, and the Corning Ol- ive Oil Company. This will be followed by a bar- beque and The Famous Cow Chip Bingo. Rodeo Events include activities such as mutton busting, steer riding, barrel racing pole bending, and many, many more. Buckles will be awarded for first place in each event, and saddles awarded for all-around senior boy and girl, and custom spurs awarded to all-around junior boy and girl. Slack time will be at 9 a.m. sharp on Sat- urday, May 21. For more information on the event, please call 514-9041 or 824-3777. Come Help Us Make Corning Even Better The Corning Cham- ber of Commerce is look- ing for volunteers inter- ested in serving on the planning committees for both the Farmer's Mar- ket this summer, and the Corning Olive Festival in August. Volunteers are needed to ensure that the events that drive people into our wonder- ful community grow and progress. For more informa- tion about these or other Corning Chamber of Commerce events please contact the chamber at 824.5550 or www.corn- ingchamber.org Also like them on facebook. CORNING CHAMBER Volunteers needed to help make Corning even better A safety workshop to be held 8:30 a.m. to noon, Thursday, May 12 at the Te- hama County Department of Education, 1135 Lincoln Street. Check in time will begin at 8:15 a.m. Cost is $30-$45 per person, conti- nental breakfast will be in- cluded. The safety of your em- ployees is always a top pri- ority, but... avoiding a fine while being safe is really the way to run a business. There will be two different consultants here to speak on safety tips and how to avoid being tagged with a fine from state safety en- forcement. Not only do in- juries hurt the employee but they also hurt the busi- ness. Costs go up and work- flow goes down. Identify the problem areas. Presenters are: Gary Fian is a highly recog- nized, OSHA certified oc- cupational and industrial safety and health manage- ment consultant with over 20 years of progressive re- sponsibility across a multi- tude of industries. Michael Alvarez is a Re- tired Annuitant Regional Manager of Cal/OSHA Con- sultation Northern Califor- nia. Register today at www. ceac.org/region-1/tehama- county-eac SAFETY TCEAC-CalOSHA Workshop: 'Safety First, Avoid the Fine!' set for Thursday The Job Training Center and the North- ern Rural Training and Employment Consor- tium invites the pub- lic to participate in a "State of the Workforce" discussion and break- fast, 7:30-9 a.m. Thurs- day May 26, at the Trem- ont Café & Creamery, 731 Main Street. Attendees' input will direct the regional work- force development strat- egy, and will be used to create a comprehensive plan to address work- force challenges and to strengthen efforts to re- spond to business needs. During this session, early findings from county labor market re- search, an employer sur- vey, and a scan of the workforce development partners and resources in the county will be pre- sented. Additional top- ics for discussion will include: • The greatest work- force needs in the county • Services, organiza- tions, and partners who are responding to work- force needs • Opportunities to improve services to job- seekers and businesses • Obstacles to collabo- ration among service or- ganizations or improv- ing service delivery • Vision for success of business and workforce services in the county For more information and to RSVP, please con- tact: Kathy Sarmiento, ksarmiento@jobtrain- ingcenter.org or call 529- 7000. INVITATION Workforce development discussion set for May 26 PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER. TUSCANPOOL SUPPLY hasmovedto 40 CHESTNUT AVENUE (530) 527-3262 Licensed, Bonded & Insured CLS#944446 SharonWilkes, Sole Proprietor Dropin&seeournewdigs We are no longer associated with Mike Jenkins. The Daily News will feature a special section of photos and write-ups on over 90 "Students of Distinction" from middle and high schools across the county. This project has been created in cooperation with the Tehama County Department of Education. Selections of students featured will be made by schools and Teachers. The supplement will be published as a special section of the newspaper and as a digital page-turn online edition on www.redbluffdailynews.com through May of 2017! To sponsor a student's photo and accomplishments is just $59 for 1 sponsorship and $55 each for multiples. Local businesses, professionals, educators, local citizens: All are welcome to support Tehama County's most accomplished students, and demonstrate support of local education in the process. SponsorDeadline: Friday, May 20 Sponsors will be identified in a 3" tall by 1 column wide space at the bottom of each student salute. This special will appear in the full run of the Daily News on Thursday, May 26, 2016 Daily News advertising representatatives can help you decide what to say. Limited opportunity to support students from individual schools. For further information, contact your Daily News advertising representative or Nadine Souza at Honoring Outstanding Tehama County Students (530) 737-5049 advertise@redbluffdailynews.com We Do Alignments, Brakes, Shocks, Struts, Oil Changes, Suspension, Trailer Repairs, Batteries & Wipers 530 529-0797 1375MontgomeryRd. Red Bluff, CA EVICTIONS Fast, Efficient & Affordable 530.527.2104 756 Rio St, Red Bluff www.atwellpropartners.com (530) 529-1220 100 Jackson St. Red Bluff UnlimitedTanning $ 25 .00 only MAY Tanning Special! 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