Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/98917
Friday, December 14, 2012 ��� Daily News 9B District completes work on fuel break The Tehama County Resource Conservation District has recently completed work on the Platina Community Fuel Break project in southwestern Shasta County. Construction of the project around the communities of Platina and Beegum began in 2010 and consisted of removing vegetation on approx- imately 144 acres using a variety of methods, including hand piling vegetation. These vegetation piles were scheduled to be burned at a later date, when weather conditions permitted, however, they remained in the project area until 2012. In October, the district was contracted by the Cottonwood Creek Watershed Group to manage and coordinate the work of CalFire and CalFire inmate crews to complete the burning of the hand piles developed in connection with the fuel reduction work within the Platina Community Fuel Break project area. The work began Nov. 5; crews worked for a total of 7 days and burned 100 vegetation piles, totaling around 9 acres located along Beegum Gulch Road above Platina. The completion of the pile burning work helps to fulfill the work-scope of the grant obtained by the Cottonwood Creek Watershed Group and which funded the construction of the fuel break project. This was a project of the Cottonwood Creek Watershed group and was funded through a grant from the California Fire Safe Council. The district is a nonprofit special district created to assist people to manage, conserve and improve the natural resources of Tehama County. It is involved with many different projects and educational endeavors ranging from free irrigation system testing and water quality sampling, to exotic plant removal and hosting hands-on workshops. For more information on the district, visit www.tehamacountyrcd.or g. Feds probe brain operations at California hospital DAVIS (AP) ��� A federal report questions whether two surgeons at a Northern California hospital contributed to the death of at least one of three patients who underwent what was called an untested surgical procedure, a newspaper reported Tuesday. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services report also criticized the University of California, Davis hospital for failing to monitor the surgeons, the Sacramento Bee (http://tiny.cc/22z5ow) said. The federal agency has the authority to block the hospital from receiving Medicare and Medicaid funding. The hospital received $275 million from the Medicare program in the past fiscal year, representing about 20 percent of its total revenue of $1.3 billion. The center launched an investigation after the surgeons introduced bacteria into open head wounds of three patients who died in 2010 and 2011, the report states. The report questioned whether the doctors might have been responsible for ������contributing to or causing the death of at least one patient,������ the newspaper reported. The federal agency���s report called the surgeries ������non-standard, experimental treatments.������ The report stated that patients were sickened with ������a type of live bowel bacteria������ that was brought to the hospital in a Styrofoam cooler from ������a university campus animal research laboratory.������ The doctors said they hoped to trigger an immune system response to help fight cancer. The procedure has not been approved by federal regulators, the newspaper said. UC Davis officials have rejected some of the report���s toughest findings. ������We���re providing high-quality care,������ hospital chief Ann Madden Rice told the paper. Investigators said they were troubled by management���s response to the surgeries, noting that lead researcher Dr. J. Paul Muizelaar planned on trying his theory on five more patients before he was halted. The center also noted the hospital allowed him to keep working despite ������more than 200 patient complaints and misconduct and competence concerns by other medical staff members.������ Muizelaar took a leave of absence last week after he was named in a fourth malpractice lawsuit in the past year. He didn���t immediately respond to a message left by The Associated Press at his Sacramento medical office. The Bee reported that an inspection team from the California Department of Public Health arrived at the 619-bed hospital unannounced on Monday to aid the federal agency with its investigation. ��������� Information from: The Sacramento Bee, http://www.sacbee.com