Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/753384
Kinner:BettyKinner,90, of Red Bluff died Thursday, Nov. 17at her residence. Arrangements are under the direction of Blair's Cre- mation & Burial. Published Saturday, Nov. 19, 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. Deathnotices intoSkidmore'scar. Skidmore was killed in the wreck. Carlin suffered major injuries and was taken Enloe Medical Center in Chico. Vuoso complained of pain to his right shoulder and also was taken to En- loe. CHP Officer Jeff Cobb said it was not immedi- ately known why Carlin was traveling the wrong way on the freeway. Whether alcohol or drugs may have been factors in the crash also was not im- mediately known. Cobb said the crash re- mained under investiga- tion. No arrests were re- ported. The southbound lanes of the freeway were fully opened about 8 a.m. Fri- day. Crash FROM PAGE 1 seats as a requirement for those one year old and younger and 20 pounds or less, but National Highway Traffic Safety Administra- tion studies have shown that if car seats are turned around too soon children involved in crashes are re- ceiving major spine and head injuries. It's also un- safe if the children are too long or heavy for the seat, Hurlbert said. The new rule in January extends the time a child must be in a rear-facing seat to be two years old, 40 pounds or 40 inches. There was a mobile van where veterans could seek help for PTSD and a new group, DLB Ranch in Cot- tonwood, which attended to connect with veterans in the area interested in equine assisted learning. Jim Busher, vice pres- ident of DLB Ranch, and Joni Maggini, president of DLB, were on hand with Shiloh and Dusty to talk with attendees about what they do. "Horses are very sensi- tive," Busher said. "They pick up what's going on with you. What we do is equine assisted learn- ing. We start out by join- ing their space and letting them get used to us and eventually move into en- gaging with them." The group, which also has various other pro- grams through DayStar Ranch, work with not just veterans. They also work with people who are emo- tionally broken, corpora- tions on things like team building and couples on learning non-verbal com- munication. "Horses are honest," Busher said. "A lot of times the veterans and horses see something in eacho- ther and gravitate toward each other. It's a natural connection." A lot of the veterans are hypervigilant for years af- ter their experience in the military, especially those who were young when they went to war because it was one of their first ex- periences as an adult and with each experience the layers piled on top and the emotional hole they found themselves in be- came deeper, Busher said. "We help them find a way out," Busher said. "They relate to the horses and are able to learn com- munication, the value of working together, gain confidence and self esteem as well as find a calmness to life." For more information on LIFT Tehama, visit the group's Facebook page. Tehama FROM PAGE 1 CHP press release. Goodin was extricated from the pickup by fire personnel and efforts to re- vive her were initiated. She was taken by ambulance to St. Elizabeth Community Hospital, where she died of her injuries. Whitmire was taken to St. Elizabeth by private ve- hicle and treated for minor injuries. Westbound Gyle Road was closed for an hour and half for rescue and clean- up efforts with traffic uti- lizing one-way traffic in the eastbound lane. It is unknown whether drugs or alcohol were a factor in the collision. The incident is under investi- gation. Anyone with informa- tion about either incident is encouraged to call the Red Bluff CHP office at 527-2034. Fatality FROM PAGE 1 of 45 regions in the state with 313,500 people in the labor work force, 294,700 employed and 18,900 un- employed in October. The unemployment rate for these counties totals 6 per- cent, same as in Septem- ber. The data showed a 13.2 percent increase in total farm jobs while state gov- ernment jobs decreased by 7.5 percent in a month. In California there were 19,463,400 people in the la- bor work force, 18,432,400 people employed and 1,031,100 people unem- ployed with a total of 5.3 percent unemployment rate in the state for Oc- tober. The unemployment rate remained the same in a month. In the United States the unemployment rate de- creased by 0.1 percent to 4.7 percent. The counties with the lowest unemployment rate in October were San Mateo at 3.1 percent, Marin at 3.3 percent and San Francisco County at 3.4 percent. The counties with the highest unemployment rate were Imperial at 22 percent, Tulare at 10.8 per- cent and Colusa County at 10.7 percent. The unemployment rates for the counties near Tehama County were Butte at 6 percent, Shasta at 6.4 percent and Glenn at 6.7 percent unemployed. Jobless FROM PAGE 1 PROTESTS MIKE MCCLEARY — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Michael Giron, from California, is arrested by law enforcement as he was leading a procession of Dakota Access Pipeline protesters at one of the Wells Fargo Bank branches in Bismarck, N.D. on Thursday. By John Mone and Blake Nicholson The Associated Press DALLAS The head of the company building the Da- kota Access oil pipeline said Friday that it won't be re- routed but that he'd like to meet with the head of an American Indian tribe to try to ease the tribe's con- cerns about the project. Kelcy Warren, the CEO of Dallas-based Energy Trans- fer Partners, told The Asso- ciated Press that the com- pany has no alternative than to stick to its plan for the $3.8 billion pipeline, which would ship oil from North Dakota to Illinois and which is nearly com- pleted. "There's not another way. We're building at that loca- tion," Warren said. Warren said he would welcome the chance to meet with Dave Archam- bault, the chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux, to ad- dress the tribe's concerns that the pipeline skirting its reservation would en- danger drinking water and cultural sites. Archambault, who was with celebrity sympathizers who toured the tribe's pro- test encampment Friday, in- cluding the actors Shailene Woodley and Ezra Miller, said he'd be willing to meet with Warren but that he doesn't think it would make a difference. "We already know what he's going to say — that this is the cleanest, safest pipeline ever," the chair- man said. "What he doesn't know is that this is still an issue for Standing Rock and all indigenous people." The 1,200-mile, four- state pipeline is largely complete except for a sec- tion that would pump oil under Lake Oahe, a Mis- souri River reservoir in southern North Dakota. The Standing Rock tribe fears that a leak could con- taminate the drinking wa- ter on its nearby reserva- tion and says the project also threatens sacred sites, which Warren disputes. President Barack Obama earlier this month raised the possibility of rerouting the pipeline, and Archam- bault has told the AP that would be acceptable to the tribe as long as the new route wouldn't take it near the reservation. Warren noted that the Dakota Access route par- allels the existing North- ern Border Pipeline, which crosses the Dakotas as it carries natural gas from Canada and the U.S. to the Chicago area. "We're going to cross the river at that location," he said, calling it the "least im- pactful" site. The Army Corps of Engi- neers in July granted ETP the permits needed for the crossing, but the agency decided in September that further analysis was war- ranted given the tribe's concerns. On Monday, the Corps called for even more study and tribal input. ETP responded the next day by asking U.S. Dis- trict Judge James Boas- berg to declare that it has the right to lay pipe under Lake Oahe. The judge isn't likely to issue a decision un- til January, at the earliest. The matter might linger until after President-Elect Donald Trump takes office. Trump, who owns stock in ETP, has said he wants to rebuild energy infrastruc- ture. "Do I think it's going to get easier? Of course," War- ren said of the incoming ad- ministration. "If you're in the infrastructure business ... you need consistency, and you need rules and (regu- lations). And we need to follow those — everybody needs to follow them, in- cluding our own govern- ment. That's where this pro- cess has gotten off track." In the meantime, the months of protests against the pipeline continue. There have been demonstrations at the protest encamp- ment near the site of the proposed reservoir cross- ing and elsewhere, includ- ing at the state Capitol and state-owned Bank of North Dakota. About 500 people have been arrested, in total. Protester Kendrick Ea- gle, who was with the ac- tors on Friday, said he was part of a group that met with Obama when the pres- ident visited the reserva- tion in June 2014 and that Obama promised to stand with the tribe. "Now is the time. We need him more than ever for this pipeline," Eagle said. Gov. Jack Dalrymple held a news conference Friday to reiterate his frustration with what he considers un- due delays by the Army Corps of Engineers and with increasingly frequent protests in and around the state capital, Bismarck. He called it "a tremendously challenging, tremendously difficult situation." Warren called protests that became violent "repul- sive," but he also said the company could have done some things differently. "I think we could have had communication with state government before we did," he said. "That di- alogue wasn't started un- til after we had a problem." Dakota Access oil pipeline developer won't consider reroute By Sophia Tareen The Associated Press CHICAGO Immigration hotlines are buzzing. Legal clinics are seeing an influx of clients. Public schools are fielding frantic ques- tions from parents and stu- dents. Since the election, Don- ald Trump's tough talk on immigration has stirred anxiety nationwide among immigrants regardless of legal status. They are turn- ing to lawyers, schools, ad- vocacy groups and congres- sional offices for help. "We're operating with a lot of unknowns, and a cer- tain amount of fear comes with that," said Vanessa Es- parza-López, a managing attorney at the Chicago- based National Immigrant Justice Center. In Chicago, a hotline run by the state's largest immi- grant-rights group received more than 330 calls in the week after the election, compared with the usual 100 or so. Denver school of- ficials sent a letter to par- ents in response to ques- tions about the election's effect on students living in the country illegally. The New York Legal As- sistance Group said it's re- ceiving 40 to 60 daily calls about immigration, up from 20 to 30. The Coali- tion for Humane Immi- grant Rights of Los Ange- les reported 19 walk-ins on a single day, all with citi- zenship questions. The most urgent inqui- ries have been from young people benefiting from a 2012 federal program started by President Barack Obama's administration that allows immigrants brought to the country il- legally as children to avoid deportation and get work permits. About 740,000 people have participated in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals system. Attorneys say the pro- gram is vulnerable because it was created by executive order, not by law, leaving new potential applicants second-guessing whether to sign up. Andrea Aguilera, a 20-year-old who attends a suburban Chicago college, feels in limbo with her DACA paperwork expiring next year. She was brought across the Mexican bor- der illegally as a 4-year-old and largely kept her immi- gration status secret until she was able to get a work permit through DACA four years ago. She's since worked as a grocery store cashier and as a finance of- fice intern at a Chicago or- ganization. Two of her sib- lings are in the program. Another is a U.S. citizen. "It's been hard to focus on school," Aguilera said. "I just don't know what's go- ing to come next for us." During the campaign, Trump pledged to deport the estimated 11 million im- migrants living in the coun- try illegally and to build a border wall. The Republi- can president-elect has not detailed how he will pro- ceed and recently walked back the number of antic- ipated deportees. WORRIES ABOUND Trump's election triggers flood of immigration questions KATHRYN(BUNCH)DANIEL March 5, 1928 ~ November 6, 2016 Kathryn (Katie) went home to be with the Lord on Sun- day, Nov. 6, at the age of 88 surrounded by loved ones at St. Elizabeth Hospital. She was born March 5, 1928 in Wickes, Arkansas to Leo- na and Berry Bunch joining three older siblings and later six younger ones. She married the love of her life Doug- las Daniel March 16, 1946 and celebrated close to 71 years together. Katie's fundamental belief in Jesus Christ shaped her en- tire life. She was a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother and great grandmother. Her love of people in general brought many friends into her life that loved her boldness and sense of humor. She encouraged those who needed it and lent a helping hand to those in need. Katie's talents were widespread. For years she crocheted heirloom afghans, doilies and made beautiful Christmas ornaments and wreaths. She also made painted ceramic pieces and did lots of sewing for family members. She had a wonderful interest in cooking, especially baking. Her cream pies were family favorites. They will be missed this holiday season. Katie is survived by her loving husband Doug, daugh- ters Paula (E. C.) Ross, Marla Daniel, her grandsons Todd (Kelly) Ross, Brian (Tami) Ross, five great grandchildren and her four younger brothers Duane, Dale, Jerry and Billy Bunch. Obituaries R ed Bluff Simple Cremations and Burial Service FD1931 527-1732 Now open longer hours 722 Oak Street, Red Bluff SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | NEWS | 9 A

