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slide2-3_candidates_compete_for_1st_senate_district_primary_seat.pngAmador County - Three candidates have announced their run for the 1st Senate District seat formerly held by Senator Dave Cox. Analysts predict a tight race between the two Republican candidates: Roger Niello, representing the 5th Assembly District, and Ted Gaines, representing the 4th Assembly District. Both are competing for this seat during a time in which many Republicans are being challenged to show what makes them truly conservative. Niello’s record of public service stretches back to 1995. He is a longtime friend of the Cox family, and received a campaign gift of $7,800 from the late Senator shortly before his death earlier this month. Cox passed away after a long battle with prostrate cancer. Niello’s campaign received another big boost August 17th when Maggie Cox, Dave’s widow, announced her support for Niello’s campaign. “Dave knew that Roger would be the only choice to continue on his legacy of public service – of ensuring that every person that lived in his district would be listened to, cared for, and represented,” she said. On his website, Niello’s top issues include fighting for budget reform, fighting higher taxes, and standing against illegal immigration. Ted Gaines began his service in local government on the City of Roseville's Planning Commission in 1997, and has since worked his way up the political ladder to his current position. He received a big endorsement last week from Tom McClintock, a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from California's 4th congressional district. “Ted Gaines is the conservative in the race and the one candidate who voters can trust to never raise their taxes,” said McClintock. According to his website, Gaines is pushing for “no tax increases – period,” creating private sector jobs and balancing the state budget by limiting spending. The third candidate is Rancho Cordova Mayor Ken Cooley, a Democrat and principal consultant for the state Senate Committee on Banking, Finance and Insurance. Although Republicans outnumber Democrats 43 percent over 34 percent in the 1st Senate District, Cooley believes his background as a moderate Democrat and his strong family values will appeal to voters no matter their political party affiliation. He has served on the Rancho Cordova city council since the city’s incorporation in 2002. He ran unsuccessfully in the 2002 Democratic primary for the 10th District Assembly seat, which was won by Republican Alan Nakanishi. All three candidates can’t officially file for the election until August 31st. The primary election takes place on November 2nd. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
slide5-chp_prepares_statewide_dui_crackdown_enforcement_period.pngAmador County – The state office of the California Highway Patrol announced Monday that its officers are preparing for the “final maximum enforcement period of the summer driving season,” beginning Friday, September 3rd. Fran Clader of CHP media relations in Sacramento said roadside sobriety and license checks will begin 6 p.m. Friday for the Labor Day “maximum enforcement period.” The holiday enforcement initiative continues through to midnight Monday, September 6th. CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow said he hopes “everyone enjoys the Labor Day weekend by keeping safety in mind.” He said the holiday should contribute to highway crowding “with many families headed for fun.” Farrow said: “Mixing these factors with alcohol, speed and not wearing a safety belt can lead to a deadly consequence.” Although last year’s road fatalities “were far lower than previous Labor Day weekends,” he said last year there were 12 people killed in crashes on California roadways. CHP said 75 percent of all fatalities in the state involved someone not wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash. Clader said besides the Labor Day maximum enforcement period, CHP is “in the midst of an aggressive crackdown on impaired driving.” The statewide crackdown began August 20th. She said a national campaign, “Drunk Driving, Over the Limit, Under Arrest,” is a “coordinated effort of law enforcement agencies throughout the country and continues through the holiday weekend.” Last year’s Labor Day weekend crackdown statewide made 1,417 arrests for driving under the influence, Clader said. Farrow said if the CHP finds an impaired driver, “we will arrest you, no exceptions.” He said driving under the influence “is a careless disregard for human life.” Clader said the CHP encourages motorists to call 9-1-1 if they encounter a suspected drunk driver, and “to help law enforcement intervene, callers should be prepared to provide dispatchers a description of the vehicle, its location and direction of travel.” Farrow said: “Take care of yourself and your loved ones. Designate a driver in advance, always wear your seat belt, don’t speed and be sure to pay attention to the road.” Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
slide3-pollock_pines_man_injured_after_dui_crash.pngAmador County – The Ione City Council will host a joint meeting with the Amador County Board of Supervisors today (Tuesday, August 31st) to discuss an agreement for planning and development of lands within the Ione “Sphere of Influence.” The council and board will discuss a draft Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) prepared by City Planner Christopher Jordan and County Planning Director Susan Grijalva, who prepared a joint staff report recommending the board and council take public comment and provide staff direction. Ione made an August 19th application with the Amador Local Agency Formation Commission to amend its Sphere of Influence, and the city and county are required by state law to “meet and discuss the proposed new boundaries.” The law says the two must “explore methods to reach agreement on development standards and planning and zoning requirements within the sphere to ensure that development within the sphere occurs in a manner that reflects the concerns of the affected city and is accomplished in a manner that promotes the logical and orderly development of areas within the sphere.” The law does not require that the two entities reach an agreement, and the meeting satisfies all “requirements of law,” according to the report. Supervisors Richard Forster and Louis Boitano, Mayor Skip Schaufel and Vice Mayor David Plank met twice as an ad hoc committee “to go over the framework and review the draft agreement language,” the report said, and the committee recommended the full board and council consider the draft agreement and provide direction to staff. Jordan and Grijalva in the report said the city requested and prefers a MOU “because it makes the agreement formal and something that can be easily referred back to in the future,” and it “would not create any new agency” nor “new bureaucratic process.” The report said the MOU “would obligate the county” to impose land usage regulations on land within the city’s current or future sphere of influence, as recognized by LAFCO. It would “require a minimum 40-acre parcel size,” and “limit land uses to single-family residential and agricultural uses” with a “maximum 1 home per lot, plus second dwelling units allowed by right consistent with state law and county code.” The amendment to the Sphere of Influence requests the addition of properties along Old Stockton Road, 5 Mile Drive, and Irish Hill Road. The meeting is 6 p.m. today (Tuesday, August 31st) at Evalynn Bishop Hall. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Tuesday, 31 August 2010 06:17

Pollock Pines man injured after DUI crash

slide3-pollock_pines_man_injured_after_dui_crash.pngAmador County – A Pollock Pines man was injured after a vehicle crash Friday night in River Pines, when he reportedly fell and cut himself on a whiskey bottle he was carrying. The Amador County unit of the California Highway Patrol arrested Robert Hedrick, 54, of Pollock Pines after a 7:44 p.m. incident Thursday on Shenandoah Road at River Pines. CHP in a report Monday said Hedrick was under the influence of alcohol as he drove west-bound in a 1985 Mercury station wagon, and was crossing the bridge in River Pines at the El Dorado and Amador County line. CHP said: “He lost control at a right hand curve and struck a sign,” then his car went into a ditch. Hedrick “was seen stumbling while walking down Shenandoah Road with a whiskey bottle in hand.” The report said “as he was creating a scene, screaming and yelling at passing cars, he fell down, breaking his bottle and injuring himself on the broken glass.” He was arrested for a DUI at the scene and was release to medics and admitted to Sutter Amador Hospital due to his injuries. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
slide1-pioneer_couple_dies_in_apparent_murder-suicide.pngAmador County – The Amador County Sheriff’s Office released the details late Monday on a murder/suicide investigation in which a Pioneer man apparently shot his wife before taking his own life. On Sunday, August 29th at approximately 12:17 pm, the Sheriff’s Office received a 9-1-1 call from a reporting party who said they heard a woman screaming and multiple gunshots coming from a neighbor’s residence on Holiday Lane in Pioneer. The first deputy on the scene found a vehicle blocking the road to the residence and occupied by Holly Heather Hayden, 52. The Sheriff’s Office said in a release said “Hayden was deceased in her vehicle and had suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the torso.” It appeared Hayden was attempting to drive away from the residence at the time of the shooting. A witness on scene told deputies they observed Hayden’s husband, 54-year-old James Frederick Weber, walking away from the vehicle and back to the rear deck of the residence, after which they heard an additional gunshot. The release said: “A perimeter was established and additional resources, including the Amador Sheriff’s SWAT Team and the Amador Sheriff’s Investigations Bureau were activated. California Highway Patrol (CHP) Officers controlled traffic on Holiday Lane and a CHP aircraft was requested to conduct aerial reconnaissance of the scene in an effort to locate the suspect. The aircraft’s search efforts revealed no sign of the suspect.” SWAT team member deployed multiple electronic surveillance techniques in order to locate Weber within the residence. His body was eventually located by the team on the main level of the residence, “with an apparently self inflicted gunshot wound to the head.” The release said the Sheriff’s Office “has not previously responded to any reported domestic violence incidents involving this residence or the involved parties, although neighbors did tell Amador Sheriff’s Detectives of prior domestic disputes between the two.” CHP, American Legion Ambulance, Amador Fire Protection District and Cal Fire personnel also assisted with this incident. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.