Red Bluff Daily News

June 19, 2012

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Local Calendar Submit calendar items to P.O.Box 220, Red Bluff, 96080 or clerk@redbluffdailynews.com. TUESDAY, JUNE 19 Red Bluff Bend School Board, 4:30 p.m., 22270 Bend Ferry Road Book Club,6 p.m., Tehama County Library City Council, 7 p.m. City Hall, 555 Washington St. Cribbage Club, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, 259 So. Main St., 527-6402 Diabetic Education, 12:30 p.m. St.Elizabeth Com- munity Hospital, Columba Room, 529-8031 Fun Senior Aerobics with Linda, 8-9 a.m., $1 per class, Red Bluff Community Center, 1500 South Jack- son Street 527-8177 PAL Kickboxing, 6 p.m., 1450 Schwab St., 529- 8716 or 200-3950 P.E.T.S. (Providing Essentials for Tehama Shel- ter), 6 p.m., Cozy Diner, S. Main St., 527-8702 Pinochle for Seniors, 12:30-3:30 p.m., 1500 S. Jackson St., free, 527-8177 Playtime Pals Playgroup, 10 a.m., Family Resource Center, 220 Sycamore St., Ste. 101, 528- 8066 Providing Essentials for the Tehama Shelter, 6 p.m., Cozy Diner Red Bluff Emblem Club Dinner, 5 p.m. at Elks Lodge, 355 Gilmore Road Red Bluff Rotary, noon, Elks Lodge Take Off Pounds Sensibly — TOPS,10 a.m., First United Methodist Church, 525 David Ave., 824-0556 or 529-1414 Tehama County Arts Council Board of Directors Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Tehama County Department of Education Tehama County Board of Supervisors, 10 a.m., board chamber, 727 Oak St. Tehama County Health Partnership, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., 1135 Lincoln St. 527-6824 Tehama County Resource Conservation Dis- trict, 8:30 a.m., USDA Service Center, 2 Sutter St., Ste.D Tehama County Tea Party Patriots,6 p.m., Grange Hall, 20794 Walnut St. Tehama District Fair board, 1 p.m., Tehama Room, Tehama District Fairground, 650 Antelope Blvd. Weight Watchers meeting, 9 a.m., 6 p.m., weigh- in starts half-hour before meetings, 485 Antelope Blvd., #N, next to Bud's Jolly Kone, 1-800-651-6000 Corning Bible reading and noon day prayers for the community, 12:15 p.m., St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 820 Marin St., Sr. Warden Charles Rouse, 824-2321 Corning-Area Red Cross Disaster Volunteers, 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Corning Fire Department, 814 Fifth St., 1-800-934-5344 or arcnec.org Domestic Violence Information and Support Group (Spanish language), 10 a.m. to Noon, Olive Room at the Corning Healthcare District, 275 Solano St., 528-0226 Dance with Juana, noon to 1 p.m., Family Resource Center, 1488 South St., 824-7670 ESL, 9 a.m., Family Resource Center, West and South streets, 824-7670 Healthcare District, 6 p.m., district office building, 145 Solano St., conference room Planning Commission, 6:30 p.m., city hall, 794 Third St. Red Cross Disaster Volunteer meeting, 6 p.m., Corning Fire Department, 814 Fifth St., 800 934-5344 Soccer training, 4-6 p.m., except for holidays and rain, Woodson School Soccer Field, 150 N Toomes, 824-7680 Cottonwood Cottonwood Community Library Readers Club, 4 p.m., 347-4818 Los Molinos Bingo, doors open at 4:30 p.m., dinner, Early Bird round at 6:15 p.m., regular session 6:30 p.m., Los Molinos Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, 7900 Sher- wood Blvd., 384-2738 Los Molinos School Readiness Play Group, 10-11:30 a.m., up to 5 years, free, First Steps Family Resource Center, 7700 Stanford Ave., 384-7833 Paskenta Elkins School Board, 5:15 p.m., 2960 Elkins Road WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20 Red Bluff Red Bluff Community Blood Drive, 2-6 p.m., sponsored by Red Bluff Emblem club, at Red Bluff Veterans Memorial hall, Oak and Jackson Over 25 years of experience The North State's premier supplier of stoves STOVE JUNCTION Wood Burning Stoves Did you know? We've Got Exempt From No Burn Days! Serving Butte, Glenn & Tehama Counties Tues-Sat 9am-5pm • Closed Sun & Mon 22825 Antelope Blvd., Red Bluff 530-528-2221 • Fax 530-528-2229 www.thestovejunction.com Steaks 7 days a week Best Homemade Pies in Town Ice Cream Prime Rib Dinner every Friday & Saturday Night Orders to go 731 Main St., 530.529.4012 open 7 days 5:30am-9pm Police reports The following infor- mation is compiled from Red Bluff Police Depart- ment, Tehama County Sheriff's Department, Corning Police Depart- ment and California Highway Patrol. Arrests • Richard Allyn Denny, aka Mark Richard Antho- ny, 26, Red Bluff was arrested at 99E at 5th Avenue for felony counts of possession of a con- trolled substance, two counts of possession carry or sale of a controlled substance, violation of parole and a misdemeanor of controlled substance paraphernalia Bail was $24,000. • Joanna Michelle East aka Jaana Michelle East, Joanna Breeze and Isabel, 35, Red Bluff, was arrest- ed in Shasta County for two felony counts of fail- ure to appear on a felony charge, a felony count of transport of a controlled substance, another felony count of transport or sell of a narcotic or controlled substance, a felony count of a special offense, a misdemeanor of false id and a misdemeanor fail- ure to appear. Bail was $95,000. • Melissa Marie Met- calf, 53, Red Bluff was arrested Saturday for the use of tear gas weapons. Bail was $15,000. •Paul Maxwell Pulido, 32, Red Bluff was arrest- ed Sunday for a felony count of threatening crime with the intent to terrorize and misde- meanor counts of batter and exhibiting a deadly weapon, not a firearm. Bail was $58,000. •Patricia Louise West- on, 59, Los Molinos was arrested Saturday on Oak Street for assault with a caustic chemical. Bail was $50,000. Animals • Someone reported Saturday their pony's mane was cut off on the 19000 block of Pine Park Road. Burglary •A burglary was reported Friday on the 800 block of Lassen. •A burglary was reported Friday on the 600 block of Walton. their bicycle was stolen while they were inside the Red Bluff Post Office Fri- day. The bicycle was described as a black and white BMX valued at $100. • Someone reported Friday their unlocked vehicle with keys on the dashboard had been stolen from their garage on the 2000 block of Stonybrook. Theft • Someone reported Lotto numbers SACRAMENTO (AP) — The winning num- bers drawn Saturday night in the California Lottery's ''SuperLotto Plus'' game were: 5-36-37-42-43. Meganumber: 24. A Full Service Nail Salon Debi Tips N Toes 20% Off to new clients Owner/Operator Antelope Blvd Suite "F" • Red Bluff Shop • Three daily doses of methadone were reported stolen from an unlocked vehicle on the 24000 block of Taft. Friday evening on High- way 99W that a person who left in a white Honda tried to steal skis from his barn. • Someone reported Vandalism •Three window screens were reported damaged on the 500 block of Lin- coln. The damage was estimated at $75. Love's Truck Stop on South Avenue reported Saturday receiving a counterfeit $100 bill. show a report at 3:34 a.m. Saturday on Houghton Avenue near Finnell Avenue and Gallagher Avenue of a vehicle fire with a subject trapped inside and CalFire enroute. Nothing further was available. Fires • Corning Police logs • A St. Elizabeth Com- munity Hospital ambu- lance responded to the 16700 block of Matlock Loop in response to reports that a structure Counterfeit • The manager at Tuesday, June 19, 2012 – Daily News 3A Is credit counseling for you? many people go hmmmm, it's the topic of credit counsel- ing. Many people still con- fuse credit counseling -- paying back all of what a borrower owes -- with debt settlement and negotiating pay- offs of 50 percent or less of what the borrower owes. Others assume incorrectly that credit counseling is the same as debt consolidation. Credit counseling is educating consumers on how to avoid incur- ring debts that cannot be repaid, and creating an effective debt man- agement plan and budget. Credit counselors are often able to negoti- ate lower interest rates and a more favorable payback schedule. Here's when a credit counselor's debt-management program may help you: 1. Your unsecured debt is mostly on credit cards. Debt-management plans typically can't deal directly with overwhelming medical bills, student loans or other similar debts. 2. You are ready to get on a strict If there's one thing that makes budget. A debt-management plan requires you to turn over a certain dollar amount each month to the credit counselor, who distributes the money to your creditors. 3. You are determined to avoid bankruptcy. Credit counseling is designed to help you avoid bank- ruptcy or debt settlement. 4. You're not already in too deep. seling. For most of credit counseling's history, the industry has been domi- nated by the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, whose non- profit affiliates known mostly as Consumer Credit Counseling Ser- vices offer lower interest rates and payment plans for people who have fall- en behind. NFCC, offering credit counseling and financial rehabilitation since 1951, has become the gold standard in credit counseling. Recently, I spoke with Gail Cun- ningham of NFCC and asked her about NFCC's success rate. "In 2011, of the 2.5 million people NFCC counseled, one-third required only a number of counsel- ing sessions to get them back on track," says Gail. "Another one- third of that group required profes- sional intervention by means of our debt-management program." The final one-third were found to be better served by someone else. Unfortunately, people wait too long to seek aid. If you have enough income to pay the minimums on your bills and a little bit extra, you'll have the best shot at success with credit coun- Mary Hunt Everyday Cheapskate tified by NFCC, go to www.NFCC.org and look for "Click Here to Begin." Or call 800- 388-2227 to be connected to the counselor closest to you. About 53 percent of those who come to NFCC seeking help go on to a successful completion, which means unsecured debt is 100 per- cent paid off and they're back on their feet financially. What happens to your credit during counseling largely depends on how your lenders report your account to the credit bureaus. Some creditors report customers as delin- quent on their bills until they make three consecu- tive payments of the nego- tiated new minimums. Being reported as late or delinquent can certainly hurt your credit scores, but a simple notation about credit counseling probably won't. To be connected with a credit counselor that is cer- Mary Hunt is the founder of www.DebtProofLiving.com, a personal finance member website. You can email her at mary@everydaycheapskate.com, or write to Everyday Cheapskate, P.O. Box 2099, Cypress, CA 90630. 99W fire Courtesy photo by Ross Palubeski Firefighters were called around 7:51 p.m. Saturday to a a vegetation fire at Hwy 99W at Altube Avenue. The first unit at scene reported 1 acre burning in heavy jungle. The fire was contained at about 8:30 p.m. fire, reported at 2:53 a.m. Sunday, had victims trapped inside. All vic- tims were able to get out and there were no injuries reported. The residential structure fire did $250 damage with a $30,000 save before it was con- tained at 3:15 a.m. The cause is accidental. •A vegetation spot fire reported at 4:23 p.m. Sat- urday in the 16600 block of Richard Drive in the Bowman area was con- tained at 5:15 p.m. The mechanical-caused fire did $2,500 damage with no save. show at 8:14 a.m. Satur- day someone reported hearing a child crying or screaming in an orchard in the area of Fig Lane and West Street. An offi- cer responded and located a flock of peacocks, which made a sound sim- ilar to a child screaming. Proud cries • Corning Police logs Stray blimp • An employee at Corning Chevrolet Buick on Solano Street reported Friday afternoon that a 20-foot blimp w/ helium got away from them and was heading south. FAA in Sacramento was advised. The

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