News Archive (6192)
The Boy Scouts of America’s Amador County District will be filling Howard Park in Ione today through Sunday for its 2008 Fall Camporee. Some events are open to the public. The Scouts’ Amador District will hold the camporee to earn Emergency Preparedness Merit Badges, as scouts work through each required event. That includes a Saturday night campfire and show. The Ione and Jackson Fire Departments, California Highway Patrol, the Amador County Sheriff’s Office, the Amador Office of Emergency Services, the Cal-Fire, Civil Air Patrol and other agencies will be helping with events and putting on a midway display on Saturday afternoon. The public is invited to visit Saturday from 2 to 6 p.m. to see the Midway Displays, as well as emergency vehicles, helicopter and police and ambulance displays.
Amador County Supervisors last week approved a request by ACES Waste Service to switch transfer stations for the deposit of its Jackson garbage routes. The switch will allow ACES to take 40 tons of waste a week to a Pine Grove transfer station, instead of to the Buena Vista Landfill. Jason Craft of Amador Disposal Service Inc. said the loss of tonnage could cause a fee hike at his landfill, but the hike could mean out-of-county haulers would simply take their waste elsewhere. Supervisor Brian Oneto asked Craft if Amador Disposal also took its hauled waste to a different location, from El Dorado to Calaveras County, because it was more convenient. Craft acknowledged that was true. ACES owner Paul Molinelli Sr. said his company “was just trying to increase our cash flow,” with high fuel prices causing the need to make the hauling changes. The change would affect only waste picked up from customers in Jackson. A resident asked if the change would increase the number of trucks at the Pine Grove transfer station. Molinelli said it would increase trucks going out by 2 per week – that is, two 20-ton truck going out per week. He said it would have no additional trucks going into the station. The board passed the contract amendment with a 5-0 vote.
The Amador Measure M Campaign Committee selected Paul Molinelli Jr. as its chairman last week, and tabbed Amador County Planning Commissioner John Gonsalves at its co-chairman. Molinelli is a recent past president of the Amador Chamber of Commerce and a member of the Amador County Solid Waste Local Task Force. Members of the committee made the officer and core campaign committee selections at the group’s meeting Sept. 11 at the American Legion Hall in Martell. Joining Molinelli and Gonsalves, Bob Long was selected as committee treasurer and Holly Boitano was named as secretary. Core Campaign Committee members that were selected were Andrea Jones of Lockwood, Hal Gambel of Sutter Creek, Debbie Dunn of Upcountry and Lynette Lipp of Pine Grove. The Campaign Committee will also be looking to get someone from Ione and Jackson Valley area.
The committee last week reported that up next, it is now looking for campaign donations, putting together a mailer; gathering a coalition of organizations and individuals; formulating a campaign plan; and working on a regional representative, key messages and a calendar. Firefighters will be walking the streets to campaign and the committee said its big task will be getting the city of Ione to sign on. The biggest loss for the previous paid firefighter referendum item, Measure L, was in the city of Ione. 54 percent voted yes, 46 percent voted no. Ione plans to get paid fire personnel with or without Measure M.
Congressman Dan Lungren will be in Amador County today at a local pharmacy on a fact-finding visit. Lungren will be at Ione Pharmacy at 307 Preston Avenue at 10:30 AM to talk with owner and pharmacist John Stremfel. Specifically, the Congressman wants to discuss “the valuable services independent community pharmacies provide their patients,” and discover some of “the challenges facing the industry” that might be helped by the passing of two bills pending in the U.S. House of Representatives. The first, H.R. 3140, called the “Saving Our Community Pharmacies Act of 2007,” will hopefully remedy the reimbursement shortfalls being experienced in our nation’s small pharmacies.
According to Brian Anderson, State Relations Manager for the National Community Pharmacist Association, pharmacies have been shorted an average of 36% in prescription drug reimbursements. “This bill is basically the plight of the small business (owner),” says Anderson. The second bill up for discussion is H.R. 971, which is also referred to as “the Community Pharmacy Fairness Act of 2007.” This bill will bring fairness to the relationship between community pharmacies and the “giant administrators of the prescription drug plans” by allowing these small pharmacies to “band together in buying groups” says Anderson, an action that is now currently not allowed. Stremfel says he “is looking forward to Lungren’s visit.” We’ll have more on the outcome of that visit later this week.