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Hawkins:DouglasWil- lard Hawkins, 77, of Anderson died Wednes- day, June 15at Shasta Regional Medical Center. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt- Cole Chapel of the Flow- ers. Published Friday, June 17, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Odle: Mary Pauline Odle, 79, of Red Bluff died Tuesday, June 14at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers. Published Fri- day, June 17, 2016in the Daily News, Red Bluff, California. Yde: Glen Yde, 66, of Red Bluff died Sunday, June 12at his home. Arrangements are under the direction of Hoyt- Cole Chapel of the Flow- ers. Published Friday, June 17, 2016in 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. Death notices The first change or- der, submitted to Ken- del Trent Construction, must be implemented in order for the project to comply with the Amer- icans with Disabilities Act. It involves slope and grade requirements within the crosswalks at the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth streets intersec- tions of Solano for a cost increase of $232,769.82. According to Tues- day's agenda report this change order would eliminate the first con- tracted additive bid, which is the block lo- cated between Sixth and West streets on Solano, decreasing the contract amount by $329,896.94. Overall this change or- der will decrease the contract amount by $97,100.12. Another change or- der was requested to add valve boxes for the trees that were installed in separate boxes out- side of the tree well in the sidewalk, due to not fitting in the current lo- cation. This will cost an additional $7,863.95. Both change orders were approved and caused the contracted amount to decrease to $1,205,972.40 from $1,295,208.57. Street FROM PAGE 1 During the exercise, of- ficers were given informa- tion that a 5-year-old girl went missing from the area of Vista Preparatory Acad- emy about 7:50 a.m. during which time a blue Jeep Lib- erty was seen in the area that was classified as a vehi- cle of interest, Borden said. New information was pre- sented to the team through- out the day. The team had to interact with a man por- traying the father of the girl showing up unexpect- edly at the Community Cen- ter, where the incident com- mand center was. Possible sightings and other tips were called in to three tip lines set up, includ- ing a sighting on Hornbeck Street where the suspect was positively identified and a felony traffic stop was made, Daugherty said. The child was located and after being medically cleared was reunified with her family. The goal was to make the training as realistic as pos- sible, including having the CHP helicopter circle over the area, flying low. Officers were tested on establishing the command center with logistics team, a planning team and financial team to work on everything from getting flyers together to keeping track of what was spent, Borden said. If certified, the team will have to either be de- ployed in a real incident within the year or stage an exercise to test the team's skills. The team wouldn't necessarily be deployed for all missing children, only those that are suspicious enough to rise to the level of an Amber Alert being is- sued. If Tehama County has enough resources available it could deploy just the Te- hama County component or call in Siskiyou and Shasta resources as needed. According to information from Amber Alert, there is often a two-hour delay in reporting missing children and about 46.8 percent of children are murdered within the first hour. That number rises to 76.2 per- cent within the first three hours and 88.5 percent within the first 24 hours. Only 1 percent survive if it has been longer than a day and about 40 percent of children are dead before they are reported missing. "Time is of the essence, which is why we need to practice so when it's real we cangetthingsdone,"Borden said. "We just want to help our citizens and families. Thiskeepsusonourtoesand gives us practice. It's impor- tanttobeabletogethereand get involved quickly." Situations in which a child goes missing are a part of real life that can and does happen, Red Bluff Po- lice Chief Kyle Sanders said. While there have been mul- tiple exercises, the Northern California team also has been deployed to real sce- narios in both Shasta and Tehama counties. The exercise had about 100 participants including volunteers from the Sher- iff's Team of Active Retired Seniors, Tehama County Search and Rescue, Red Bluff Police Volunteers In Police Services and the Vol- unteer Organizations In Active Disaster based out of Shasta County, Daugh- erty said. "I'd like to give a spe- cial thanks to our volun- teers who assisted and the Salvation Army for feeding everyone," Daugherty said. "It was a great coordinated team effort of all the agen- cies in solving the case, but we couldn't do it without our volunteers. I can't say enough about them." CART FROM PAGE 1 Morehouse kicked off the event by congratulat- ing all the graduates who attended. The graduates were able to hear from college stu- dents about how to stay safe, survive homesickness and deal with roommates and other concerns they may have going into their first year of college. Some of the main con- cerns of the graduates were how to adapt to a new envi- ronment when they haven't lived somewhere else be- fore; branching out and in- teracting with a more di- verse group of people; jug- gling school, work and a social life; navigating big cities and how to best take advantage of all kinds of re- sources at college. The main concerns of parents were safety on the campus; how to encourage their student to get involved and make connections early and the ins and outs of fi- nancial aid, scholarships, internships and work study opportunities, said Kathy Garcia, a member of the leadership team for Expect More Tehama. Garcia's daughter, Kar- lee Garcia, a junior at the University of San Diego, spoke with the graduates and college students while Kathy Garcia spoke to the parents and addressed their concerns. "We played a game and then talked about differ- ent things like living with a roommate, commuting to campus and the impor- tance of getting involved in activities and getting con- nected with and to engage with teachers and teacher's aides," Karlee Garcia said. Karlee Garcia said stay- ing on top of each class is really important and study- ing throughout your time at college rather than waiting to study until a week before a test. Students were given a sample resume to refer to when applying for jobs and help with what to do be- fore, during and after an interview, including learn- ing about a company before the interview and answer- ing questions honestly and completely. Sending a thank you note or e-mail after an interview would make a good impression on a pro- spective employer. Kathy Garcia said there have been studies that show when older college students share their experiences and the fears they had going to college with incoming freshman, it helps the fresh- man realize their fears are not unique, but universal and, most often, temporary. There were college stu- dents home in Tehama Countyfor the summerfrom California State University, Chico, San Francisco State University, Shasta College and University of Califor- nia, Los Angeles, to name a few, present to give advice and share experiences. Maggie Tallan, a junior at San Francisco State, said the send off is a great event for graduates to get advise on the different aspects of college and learn from col- lege students first-hand what to expect. "For Expect More Te- hama, it is reaffirming that we must continue helping our students prepare for more than just a high school diploma, whether it's a cer- tificate, a vocational school, the military or a university," Kathy Garcia said. The Job Training Center will be hosting an informa- tion meeting at 10 a.m. Fri- day at the center for those interested in working for the Department of Educa- tion. It's an opportunity for job seekers to speak di- rectly with the hiring staff about the opportunities at the department, Kathy Gar- cia said. College FROM PAGE 1 HEATHER HOELSCHER — DAILY NEWS Karissa Morehouse, director of the Tehama Educational Talent Search, kicks off the Expect More Tehama Senior Send-Off event with a congratulatory introduction to the local graduates who attended. PHOTOS BY JULIE ZEEB — DAILY NEWS Tehama County Sheriff's Lt. Yvette Borden, serving as public information officer, puts together an information poster for media Thursday at the Red Bluff Community Center during a law enforcement exercise. Tehama County Sheriff's Department Sgt. Rod Daugherty and Lt. Dave Greer, who served as controllers, consult Thursday at the Red Bluff Community Center during a law enforcement exercise. By Maggie Michael The Associated Press CAIRO Egypt said Thurs- day it has recovered the cockpit voice recorder from the submerged wreckage of EgyptAir Flight 804, a ma- jor breakthrough in the in- vestigation that could help resolve the mystery of why the jetliner plunged into the Mediterranean last month and killed all 66 people aboard. The announcement came a day after officials said they had found the wreckage of the Airbus A320 and are putting to- gether a map of the debris on the seabed. Such images will help investigators de- termine whether the plane broke apart in the air or stayed intact until it struck the water, aviation experts said. The wreckage of the Paris-to-Cairo flight is be- lieved to be at a depth of about 3,000 meters (9,800 feet). Previously, search crews found only small floating pieces of debris and some human remains. The cockpit voice re- corder was recovered in "several stages" by the search vessel John Leth- bridge, operated by Deep Ocean Search and equipped with a Remotely Operated Vehicle, the Egyptian Air- craft Accident Investiga- tion Committee said. Although designed to survive a crash and fire, the recorder had sustained damage, and only its mem- ory unit — "the most im- portant in the recorder" — was recovered unharmed, it said, without elaborating on the extent of the dam- age. "This is a great achieve- ment in a short period of time," said Abdel-Fattah Kato, the former head of EgyptAir who is not in- volved in the investiga- tion. "We are close to find- ing out what happened to the plane." The device, which re- cords the pilots' conversa- tions and other noises from the cockpit, has been taken to the Egyptian port city of Alexandria, where it will be turned over to investi- gators for analysis. Experts say that it takes nearly 48 hours to retrieve informa- tion from the recorder. Search teams will con- tinue looking for the sec- ond so-called "black box" — the aircraft's flight data recorder, which carries such information as how a plane is functioning, in- cluding its airspeed, alti- tude, the status of key sys- tem and the pilots' actions. Both devices are kept in the tail of the plane. The voice recorder pro- vides investigators with cockpit interactions that "add a lot of insight into what occurred," said An- thony Roman, a pilot and president of the security consultants Roman & As- sociates. But he said the search teams will also want the flight data recorder, be- cause it will help put to- gether a "picture of events that occurred." Flight 804 disappeared from radar about 2:45 a.m. local time on May 19 between the Greek island of Crete and the Egyptian coast. Radar data showed the aircraft had been cruising normally in clear skies be- fore it turned 90 degrees left, then a full 360 degrees to the right as it plum- meted from 38,000 feet (11,582 meters) to 15,000 feet (4,572 meters). It dis- appeared when it was at an altitude of about 10,000 feet (3,048 meters). Leaked flight data indi- cated a sensor had detected smoke in a lavatory and a fault in two of the plane's cockpit windows in the fi- nal moments of the flight. No terrorist group has claimed responsibility, al- though Egypt's civil avi- ation minister, Sherif Fa- thi, has said terrorism is a more probable cause than equipment failure or some other catastrophic event. CRASH MYSTERY Cockpit recorder of crashed EgyptAir jet recovered from sea ACelebrationfor Sammy Therewillbeacelebrationoflifefor Hazel J. "Sammy"Williams Saturday, June 25, 2016 at 1:00 PM at the Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Rd, Red Bluff. This informal gathering will be a potluck for those people who knew and loved Sammy. 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