Wednesday, 29 October 2014 05:22

Debra Goldsmith is on Amador Live Oct. 24, 2014

American Legion Post 108 Veteran's Day Parade on Main St. Jackson at 10AM.

Published in AML

Micah Malcolm and Ed Tracy talk up the Volcano Union Pub & Inn with Monique on TSPN TV

Published in Mondays with Monique
Wednesday, 29 October 2014 05:18

Amador Bonsai Society PSA

The next meeting of the Amador Bonsai Society will be held on Saturday, November 8th beginning at 9:00 a.m. at the Amador Senior Center in Jackson. A presentation will be made by ABS member Don Thomas who will talk about styling azaleas, so bring your azalea bonsai for styling help! This will also be the election of officers for 2015. The public is welcome to attend. For more information, call Juliene at 209-245-4016.

Posted by TSPN TV

Published in Local

Amador County – The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) will close State Route 124 (SR-124) from Jackson Street to SR-104 in Ione for the Halloween Parade on Thursday, October 30, 2014, from 5:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m.

 

Motorists should expect 5 minute delays. Alternate routes should be taken whenever possible.

 

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For the safety of workers and other motorists, please Slow For the Cone Zone.

Posted by TSPN TV

Published in Local

JACKSON, CA- Jackson Rancheria is bringing back their popular Karaoke Series starting in November 2014!

Every Wednesday night from November 5 to December 10, contestants will be able to compete to win cash prizes and a chance to face off in the Karaoke Finale on December 17, 2014!

All entries will be placed in a drawing drum and the Karaoke Host will choose participants at random.

Contestants will be judged on Vocal Ability, Entertainment Value and Audience Response by our panel of three judges. After all of the contestants have performed, the judges will tally the scores and the Karaoke Host will announce the winner on stage. The first place weekly winner will receive $300, the second place winner will receive $200 and the third place winner will receive$100.

Weekly winners who accept the invitation to sing in the Karaoke Finale will be battling it out for their share of $6,000! The top 10 finalists will be awarded! First place winner takes home $2,000, second place wins $1,500 and third place wins $1,000!

Doors open at 6 p.m. for all events. Contestants must be registered and have their song selection turned in by 6:45 p.m. to be eligible to compete. The contests begin at 7 p.m.

All ages are welcome to attend, but only 18 years or older to participate. Food and drink available for purchase.

Jackson Rancheria Casino Resort is located at 12222 New York Ranch Road, Jackson, CA 95642. For more information, call 800-822-9466 or visit JacksonCasino.com.

Located in the Sierra foothills town of Jackson, CA, Jackson Rancheria Casino Resort is owned by the Jackson Rancheria Band of Miwuk Indians, a federally recognized Indian tribe. A sovereign government, the Rancheria is dedicated to developing projects that not only enhance the tribe’s ability to remain self-reliant, but also reflect a commitment to be a good neighbor.

Posted by TSPN TV

Published in Local

SACRAMENTO—In an effort to improve community outreach and strengthen California’s interregional transportation system, Caltrans is seeking ideas from the public on how to improve transportation between regions of the state.

 

“California’s population is projected to grow to 50 million people in the next decade and a half, highlighting the need to not only preserve existing transportation infrastructure but also to invest in new transit modes that move ever-increasing numbers of people and goods,” said Caltrans Director Malcolm Dougherty. “We’re asking the public to share ideas about how to improve interregional travel in a way that is safe, sustainable, integrated and efficient.”

 

The purpose of the forthcoming “Interregional Transportation Strategic Plan” is to identify the best ways to invest in interregional transportation corridors to strengthen California’s economy and livability while reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change. Regions around the state have been adopting new “sustainable communities’ strategies” that shift investments to provide greater mobility choice. Meanwhile, the state must seek to improve interregional travel in a sustainable way that integrates well with these regional strategies.

 

For highways, the state will apply a “complete streets” approach where highways are designed to improve all modes of transportation. For rail, the state will explore improved integration of rail systems, including the high-speed rail system, to better serve interregional travelers. Caltrans will also look at the interregional systems of trails and bikeways, and where those can be improved to support active transportation.

 

A recently released California Household Travel Survey revealed that, statewide, 23 percent of household trips are made via non-car transportation, more than double than 10 years ago.

 

As part of the upcoming public outreach, Caltrans will host five 2014 public workshops and a webinar to solicit input and feedback on how to draft a modern transportation plan for interregional corridors. After incorporating public feedback, Caltrans will write a draft document for further public comment in February 2015.

 

·        FRESNO WORKSHOP - Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2014, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
Caltrans District 6, Manchester Office
Yosemite Room
2015 E. Shields Ave., Suite 100
Fresno, CA

  • WEBINAR - Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014, 1:30-2:30 p.m.

Please go to www.dot.ca.gov/hq/tpp/offices/oasp/itsp.html for further information. The event will also be posted here for viewing afterward.

 

  • SACRAMENTO WORKSHOP - Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
    California State Railroad Museum – Stanford Room
    125 I St.
    Sacramento, CA

 

  • REDDING WORKSHOP - Monday, Nov. 17, 2014, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
    Caltrans District 2 Office
    West Venture Lassen Training Room
    1031 Butte St. #118
    Redding, CA

 

  • SALINAS WORKSHOP - Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
    Salinas Cesar Chavez Library
    615 Williams Rd.
    Salinas, CA

 

  • FONTANA WORKSHOP - Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
    Caltrans District 8, Fontana Office 
    Management Center Independent Assurance Bldg.
    13970 Victoria St.
    Fontana, CA

 

Providing safe mobility for all users—including pedestrians, transit riders, bicyclists and motorists—supports the mission of Caltrans to “Provide a safe, sustainable, integrated and efficient transportation system to enhance California's economy and livability.” In an effort to increase the construction of multimodal local streets and roads, Caltrans recently endorsed National Association of City Transportation Officials guidelines that include innovations such as buffered bike lanes and improved pedestrian walkways.

 

Additional information on the “Interregional Transportation Strategic Plan” can be found atwww.dot.ca.gov/hq/tpp/offices/oasp/itsp.html, where the public can also submit written comments and ask questions.

Posted by TSPN TV 

Published in Local
Monday, 27 October 2014 04:05

ULA’s new, rising star

By EMMA PEREZ-TREVINO Staff Writer at Valley Morning Star

 

HARLINGEN — Tory Bruno found a box of old dynamite in his grandmother’s barn one day.

He was about 12 or 13 years old when he made the finding — and built his first homemade “rocket.”

Rockets have always fascinated Salvatore T. “Tory” Bruno, the new president and CEO of United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Corp. and the Boeing Co.

Bruno grew up in a ranch in California — in the sierras.

“I was kicking around in the back of the barn, you know, and I found this box with probably 80-year-old dynamite and blasting caps. I’m a dumb kid. I didn’t even know why it was all wet,” he recalled. Later, he learned, “because it was sweating the nitroglycerin out!”

“I took my penknife and I opened up these sticks of dynamite and I pulled the powder and the cloth down and I used them as my propellant to my homemade rocket and not only did my rocket fly, but I am still here and I have all 10 fingers!” he said, still in awe of the experience.

“So I’ve been interested in rockets ever since then,” he said. “What is cooler than a rocket?”

“Do not do this at home kids,” he urges.

Bruno grew up in Amador County. His grandmother raised him.

“She was an amazing woman. You’ve got to sort of picture her — about five foot inch and a quarter and you never cheated her out of that quarter inch. You’d ask her ‘how tall are you’ and she’d say five foot one and a quarter. She was an independent rancher and post master and county planning commissioner, president of the Amador County Business and Professional Women’s Association, just a really amazing woman — and tough as nails.”

“She was really something,” he proudly said.

He smiles recalling the time when she found out that he, at about 15 years old, had lied about his age to get a logging job. “I got the highest paid job on the logging crew as a kid because nobody else wanted it,” he recounted. “I thought I was pretty cool. I was a lumberjack and earning all this money and I was doing this tough job. I was there three or four days, but we lived in a small community. There were no secrets.

“Somebody ratted me out to my grandmother,” he recalled. “My grandmother showed up at the job site, dragged me off by my ear in front of all the real lumberjacks. It was very embarrassing.”

His paternal grandfather was born in Sicily, immigrating to the United States in the 1930s. He joined the Navy, fought in World War II and settled in Monterey, California. His maternal great-grandmother immigrated from Germany.

Bruno attended grade school in Pioneer, California, with a population of 80, “not counting dogs and livestock.”

He attended Amador County High School in Sutter Creek: “The biggest senior class in the county’s history at 65 students.”

Subsequently, he had a 75-mile commute, each way, attending San Joaquin Delta Community College in Stockton.

He put himself through California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. He has completed graduate courses and management programs at Harvard University, Santa Clara University, the Wye River Institute, San Jose State University and the Defense Acquisition University.

The rocket maker has had many jobs: ranch hand, lumberjack, warehouseman for a beer distributor, commercial fisherman, handyman, painter, dishwasher, teacher’s assistant, math and physics tutor in college, planetarium lecturer, and physics lecturer.

Prior to joining ULA, he served as the vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin Strategic and Missile Defense Systems. Bruno joined Lockheed Martin in 1984. He previously served as vice president and general manager of FBM and ICBM, as vice president of the THAAD Missile, as vice president of engineering, as chief engineer for Strategic Missile Programs, as program manager for FBM Rocket Propulsion and in engineering positions involving design and analysis for control systems of rockets and hypersonic reentry vehicles. He holds several patents.

Bruno is a companion of the Naval Order of the United States, a member of the Navy League and a former member of the board of directors of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group. He served on the National Blue Ribbon Panel for Bettering Engineering & Science Education and as chairman of the Diversity Council of Lockheed Martin Space Systems. He is a recipient of the Order of Merit of the Sovereign Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem.

Bruno lives in the countryside outside Denver, Colorado. He is married to his college sweetheart Rebecca, also an engineer, and has two children, Arthur, 22, and Brianna, 20. Both are in college, studying engineering.

Bruno, 52, also is the author of two books titled “Templar Organization: The Management of Warrior Monasticism” and “Templar Incorporated,” two works that explore the organization of the medieval Knights Templar from the perspective of modern business management. A third and final book is planned.

“I’m a history buff and I ran across the Crusades. It was just such fun. It was filled with drama; people with intense ideas and people who are just in the highest of ideals and other people who had the lowest of motivations; just a fascinating period of history,” he said.

“The Templars fascinated me because they were a medieval organization 900 years ago that developed a very sophisticated business model way ahead of their time and were very successful for almost 200 years and then the environment changed around them and they just simply couldn’t grasp it. They would not adapt after 185 years of just being on top, number one. Within five years they were gone,” he related.

This has impacted his management style: “I’ve always felt that the business lesson there was that no matter how good you are at what you do, you need to keep your eye on what the environment is all about, what your customers really need, and you don’t serve the organization, you serve the customer. As long as you are willing to adapt and do the things that you can do, you get another 200 years.”

Photograph by David Pike/Valley Morning Star

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Published in Local

TheCharles Spinetta Winery generously provided scholarships to nine enthusiastic and outstanding Amador Unified School District educators to attend theCalifornia Foundation for Agriculture in the Classroom’s (CFAITC) annual statewide conference held in Santa Cruz this past week.  The scholarship covered both the registration fee and the hotel rooms for the attendees. Amador Unified School District stepped up to cover the transportation and meal costs, giving these well deserving educators an all expense paid educational adventure.

 

The Spinetta family supported this event because they understand the significance of agriculture within a community and the opportunities for learning provided by exposure to real world agricultural practices.

 

“We’ve seen the value of Ag in the Classroom,” said Charles Spinetta, “and we know that all students, whether they live in the city or the country, benefit from learning the origins of their food and their fiber.  We believe that students will recognize lessons from math, science, and home economics as they learn more about the role that agriculture plays in their everyday lives.”

 

The theme of the29th annual conference was “Common Core and California Crops” and focused on providing educators with resources and guidance to help meet Common Core and Next Generation Science Standards while engaging students through agricultural themed lessons.

 

CFAITC’s mission is to increase awareness and understanding of agriculture among California's educators and students. Our vision is an appreciation of agriculture by all,” said Judy Culbertson, Executive Director for CFAITC. “Incorporating agriculture into the classroom provides students with connections to the real world, helping them develop critical thinking and problem solving skills,”

 

The two-and-a-half day event included an afternoon at Life Lab, farm tours, presentations, workshops, and exhibits exploring how agriculture and Common Core go hand-in-hand.  The conference was also a great opportunity to network with fellow educators and agriculture industry experts.

 

“Our state is dependent upon the success of agriculture, yet today, we are faced with bigger challenges than ever before. Over the last century, children have become further removed from the land that feeds and clothes us. In fact, only 2% of the population is directly involved in production agriculture and many children, when asked where food comes from, will reply "the grocery store!" With more than 7 million students in California, it is essential that these children—the next generation of consumers, parents and decision-makers—grow up with an understanding of agriculture’s critical contributions to our society,” said Culbertson.

 

California is a special place for agriculture and our farmers and ranchers play a significant role in feeding people throughout our country and the world. More than 400 different crops are grown in California and we are the top producing agriculture state in the nation.

 

The nine Amador county teachers who attended the training are committed to dedicating time in their busy class schedules to teach their students about the importance of agriculture to help the next generation become more connected to their food, each other, and  the world around them.  

 

Amador County schools recognize the significant contributions that the Spinetta family has made over many years.  In addition to supporting agricultural education, the Spinettas established the Laura Spinetta Library Fund to support school libraries in Amador County, and members of the family regularly volunteer their  time for school projects.

 

For More information, please contact:

Kevin Hesser - Gardens to Grow In

Telephone:  209-418-9044

E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

or

Tony Spinetta -  Spinetta Family Vineyards

Telephone:  209-245-3384

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

or

Mindy DeRohan -  California Foundation for Agriculture in the Classroom

Telephone: 916-561-5625

E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 
Published in Local
Monday, 27 October 2014 03:58

Toni Linde's Retirement Party November 9

Toni Linde's Retirement Party

American Legion Hall, Sunday November 9th, 4 pm.
Dinner/Dancing/No-host bar

Send check for $35. per person to:
Susan Ross
PO Box 1972
Sutter Creek, CA 95685 by Nov. 3rd.

No tickets at the door and No gifts, please.

Posted by TSPN TV 
Published in Local
(Sutter Creek) The Amador Water Agency received notice this week that Amador County is poised to receive an award of $5,126,560 to pay for a critical water conservation project that has been pending for several years.

 

AWA applied for the grant from the California Dept. of Water Resources to install a small pipeline in a section of the open ditch Amador Canal that delivers raw, untreated water from Lake Tabeaud to New York Ranch Reservoir. The recommended award will cover 100 percent of the cost to construct the pipeline.

 

An estimated 1,800 acre-feet of water is lost from the canal every year through leaks and evaporation. For comparison, average homes in Amador County use one-third to one-half an acre-foot per year.

 

“If the current drought continues, water conserved through this project could mean the difference between meeting drinking water demands for the majority of AWA customers, or not,” said AWA General Manager Gene Mancebo.

 

The proposed Upper Amador Canal Untreated Pipeline Project will replace 18 miles of the earthen, unlined Amador Canal from New York Ranch Reservoir to Lake Tabeaud with a 6- to l2-inch diameter pipeline, reducing water loss, improving water supply reliability, and protecting water quality for the raw water users.

 

The pipeline is the second of two phases of the Amador Transmission Project, completed in 2007, that replaced a portion of the open canal Lake Tabeaud to Tanner Reservoir with 8.8 miles of 30-inch pipeline. Completing the piping of the canal has been on hold while the Water Agency sought a grant to cover the significant cost of construction.

 

Mancebo said the Water Agency will hold informational meetings on the project in the future. About 100 property owners currently receive raw water from the open canal.

 

According to Mancebo, the Agency is on a tight schedule to complete grant requirements, and Agency staff has proposed to hire outside engineering firms to complete final design, plans, and specifications for construction.
 
Posted by TSPN TV
Published in Local