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News Archive

News Archive (6192)

Thursday, 05 February 2009 00:08

Forest Service Announces More Prescribed Burning

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slide4.jpgAmador County - The El Dorado National Forest Service announced yesterday that it anticipates burning 135 acres of El Dorado National Forest lands located south of Omo Ranch Road and 5 miles west of Highway 88 on Scott Creek. The location is just North of Fiddletown on the Amador County border with El Dorado County. Recent burns in this area caused some alarm when unexpected wind patterns shifted huge billows of smoke into the Plymouth and River Pines area, creating a hazy fog. Smoke management is part of every prescribed fire burn plan, but according to Kristi Schroeder, Assistant Public Affairs Officer with the El Dorado Forest, unpredictable wind patterns can carry smoke great distances. “There’s a whole set of variables that we look at before each burn, including fuel moistures, humidity and temperatures,” she said after receiving dozens of phone calls from alarmed residents during a prescribed burn last November. The Forest Service insists that residents are in no danger from the fire. “Fire is a natural part of the ecosystem,” said Jennifer Boyd, Fuels Specialist. “Prescribed burning allows us to reintroduce it back into the forest under carefully controlled conditions after 100 years of fire suppression resulting in a healthier and safer forest,” she added. Smoke management is part of every prescribed fire burn plan, and efforts will be taken to reduce actual or potential smoke impacts on community areas. For more information on the Fuels Projects on national forest land planned for this fall and winter visit our website at www.fs.fed.us/r5/eldorado. To be added to the smoke notification list contact Jennifer Boyd, Forest Fuels Specialist, at 530- 622-5061. Story by Alex Lane (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Tuesday, 06 January 2009 00:21

Stolen Truck Ends With Suspect At Large

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slide1.jpgAmador County - A man suspected of vehicle theft fled after an Amador County Sheriff’s Deputy approached him during a routine patrol Saturday, January 3 in Plymouth. During a patrol of the Shenandoah Valley area, the deputy approached a suspicious-looking white truck in a remote area off of Bell Road. As the deputy came close to the vehicle door, the driver drove down a rocky, wooded trail, before abandoning the truck after failing to navigate a high dirt barrier in the road. The encounter evolved into a full-fledged, cooperative manhunt between Amador, El Dorado and California Highway Patrol officers. Despite additional help from CHP air support, the suspect had all but vanished into the woods. Upon further investigation, it was determined that the pickup truck had been stolen from the Placerville area earlier that morning. The suspect is still at large and the investigation is ongoing. Story by Alex Lane (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Wednesday, 03 December 2008 23:22

Rash of Window Vandalism Across The County

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slide1.jpgAmador County – Two local businessman reported what seemed to be another rash of window vandalism Tuesday night on Sutter Hill and in Jackson. Mark Borchin, owner of Glass Doctor in Martell, said he had received 17 calls from people with windows broken on vehicles and some storefronts around Amador County, the second such incident reported in the last week. A vandal or vandals reportedly struck last Saturday night in downtown Sutter Creek. Borchin said he fixed windows at Backroads Café and the antique shop next door. This time, reports are mostly broken back windows and side windows of vehicles left parked mostly between Broad Street and Clinton Road in Jackson. Authorities asked him to notify them if he comes across any evidence he finds when cleaning up the shattered windows. He said the “more evidence they have, the more helpful it will be for them to prosecute the perpetrators.” Mike Sweeney, Executive Director of ARC of Amador & Calaveras County, said ARC also sustained damage to vehicle windows Tuesday night. The rear windows of two white transportation vans were window-less Tuesday afternoon. Borchin said he made an appointment to make the repairs today, Thursday, December 4th. He has 4 technicians and himself as backup in case they can’t do all the jobs that come in. He said people sometimes must have appointments made because of the varied specifications of car windows. Specs include year, make, model, number of doors, hatch back, color, whether it has a heat element. Borchin said “6,000 pieces of automotive glass are available – it’s just too hard to have all those pieces here on the shelf. We have it all out at the warehouse,” in Sacramento. He said they had received reports from the Jackson Rancheria, the Rancheria apartment complex, a business next door to Umpqua Bank and one each in Camanche and Plymouth. Jackson Police Department said it would release information today on the incident. Story by Jim Reece (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Tuesday, 18 November 2008 00:28

ACCNET Celebrates Busy 1st Year

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slide1.pngAmador County - The Amador County Combined Narcotics Enforcement Team, or ACCNET, is celebrating its first successful year of operation in Amador County, and Sheriff’s office statistics show they’ve been keeping busy. “Taking into consideration the operational and administrative needs to bring the team into full operation, ACCNET has had (a number of) successes during its first year of operations,” said Undersheriff James Wegner in a press release. Most notable of these accomplishments are 100 felony arrests, 4 major methamphetamine laboratory seizures and the infiltration of 21 illicit marijuana growing operations. More than 10,400 marijuana plants were confiscated and destroyed during these busts. Another staggering statistic is the volume of drugs and weapons confiscated here in Amador County. Just over 105 pounds of marijuana, a half-pound of methamphetamine, a half gallon of hash oil and approximately 5, 315 different types of pills were among the drugs confiscated. A total of 42 weapons were seized and 90 searches conducted. ACCNET is a multi-agency narcotics enforcement team dedicated to fighting what has become one of the largest law enforcement issues throughout the foothill region in the past decade. ACCNET’s team is comprised of members from a nine separate Amador County and statewide law enforcement agencies, including the District Attorney’s Office, Amador County Child Protective Services, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the Department of Justice, the Highway Patrol and the Ione, Jackson and Sutter Creek Police Departments. The agency was the brainchild of Sheriff Martin Ryan and receives operational funding through the Anti-Drug Abuse and California Multi-Jurisdictional Methamphetamine Enforcement Team grants. ACCNET completed its first year on November 1st. Story by Alex Lane (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Wednesday, 15 October 2008 03:27

Pine Grove Maintenance Crew Honored With Safety Award

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slide4.pngBy Alex Lane - The Department of Transportation Pine Grove Maintenance Crew was recently recognized at the CALTRANS District 10 office in Stockton. CALTRANS Director Will Kempton presented the Governor’s Employee Safety Award, or GESA, to Mike Blake, Kyle Gaspard, John Kearns, Leonard Marsh, Dave McDaniel, Scott McKinney and Bruce Sage on behalf of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The prestigious GESA award was established in 1980 to highlight and encourage safety on the job by recognizing individuals and groups who have provided outstanding safety and health service to the State. Awards are presented to individuals or groups who have responded to hazardous or life threatening events, as well as those who have developed safety programs that are not part of their normal duties. Each Sate Agency only has the opportunity to provide two nominations per year. The Pine Grove crew was chosen for their brave and immediate response in preventing what could have been a catastrophic wildfire in the Pine Grove area. On August 9th, 2007, the crew was working on Highway 88 near Buckhorn Ridge Road when a bus transporting inmates and towing a portable restroom trailer passed the operation. A wheel from the trailer came off, igniting a grass fire near the road. The crew quickly coordinated efforts to contain the fire using several breaks until CAL FIRE could arrive. The crew also set up traffic control and cleared out civilians.
Tuesday, 21 October 2008 02:23

USDA To Continue Prescribed Burns

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slide6.pngStaff Report - The US Department of Agriculture Forest Service fire personnel intend to continue this year’s “prescribed burning” activities in the Eldorado National Forest during the fall and winter months. Approximately 9,000 acres of national forest lands are scheduled to be prescribed burned, in both pile and understory fire application. Pile burning begins after the rains have thoroughly dampened the forest floor and will continue throughout the winter months. Additional information on burn locations may be obtained by calling the local District offices. Three understory burn projects are of particular interest. The Cat–Anderson burn in the Amador district in the Leek Springs area will continue to reintroduce fire into the forest, reducing the heavy fuels in the area. The Van Vleck Meadow Restoration project has progressed with the removal of encroaching conifers that are filling in the meadows and will follow up with prescribed fire to clean up and rejuvenate the meadow systems. The Henrys burn near the Placerville District will link numerous hazardous fuels projects already completed and in progress that have occurred in and around the community of Grizzly Flats. According to the Department of Agriculture, prescribed fire helps reduce heavy fuel loads while simultaneously opening the forest structure and maintaining the health of the forest. It improves and regenerates wildlife habitat, enhances native plant communities, and is a critical part of the ecological process of western forests. Each burn is intended to remove brush, slash and small trees that can carry wildfire into the tops of taller trees. “The timing of the actual ignition of a prescribed burn project depends on weather conditions, moisture in the fuels we intend to burn, our ability to control the fires, and permission from the local air pollution control district”, said Jennifer Boyd, Eldorado National Forest Fuels Specialist. Every prescribed burn is designed to minimize smoke drifting into residential areas. Any one with respiratory illness or who thinks the smoke might adversely affect them should contact the nearest Eldorado National Forest Ranger Station to be placed on a “sensitive persons” pre-burn notification list. For additional information call Jennifer Boyd at (530) 621-5223. Detailed maps of the burn locations will be available on the Eldorado National Forest website.
Monday, 22 December 2008 03:07

Wildfire Protection Grants Suspended

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slide2.jpgAmador County – Amador Fire Safe Council and other agencies and non-profits may lose funds after last week’s suspension of Proposition 84-funded projects. Cathy Koos Breazeal, director of Amador Fire Safe Council received notice from the Sierra Nevada Conservancy on suspension of $100,000 in grants for wildfire protection plans for Pioneer, Pine Grove and Volcano. Jim Branham of SNC said suspensions were based on the “serious fiscal situation” in California. Branham said the suspension stops all Conservancy projects funded by Prop. 84 public bonds, which have become difficult to sell and “caused the Pooled Money Investment Board to freeze all bond funding. Based on PMIB actions, Branham said Sierra Nevada Conservancy “has been instructed to” … “suspend all grant-funded projects, and stop authorizing any new grants, including those awarded at the Dec. 4 SNC board meeting.” The letter said SNC asks grantees to “stop work on your project, unless you believe that you can continue using other funding sources.” The Amador Water Agency won a Dec. 4 SNC grant of $270,000 to develop a regional wastewater recycling plan. ln late November, AWA won a $247,547 “Local Groundwater Assistance Grant” for a sustainable safe yield analysis and a groundwater management plan for Lake Camanche Village. Both grants were Prop 84, which also finances the Amador Community Foundation and others in Amador. Koos Breazeal said Fire Safe Amador gets the bulk of its $54,000 budget from the Secure Rural Schools Funding Act, which was reauthorized this fall. She said funds normally paid through the board of supervisors will now come through the U.S. Forest Service. District Ranger Doug Barber of the Amador Unit said the Secure Rural Schools Act originally gave about 25 percent of logging proceeds from federal land to the counties for roads and school funding. That money now will be passed through a “Resource Advisory Council” and given to counties, with a high priority for fire prevention agencies, such as Cal Fire and Amador Fire Safe Council. Barber said he will head the Amador Resource Committee and it will be a “very public program,” once under way. He said Amador County will be getting about $250,000 from the program, “which is less than it received when the timber industry was really humming.” Story by Jim Reece (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Tuesday, 13 May 2008 01:55

Ione PD To Be Enforcing Seatbelt Law

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slide10.pngDrivers in Ione, be forewarned- police are on the lookout for seatbelt law violators. The Ione Police Department has just announced it will be aggressively enforcing the state’s occupant protection laws as part of California’s 2008 Click It or Ticket mobilization, May 12 through June 1. California’s primary seat belt law requires that every passenger in the car, including the driver, must wear a seat belt at all times. Motor vehicle injuries are the seventh leading cause of death in the United States, killing 40,000 Americans and disabling 1,800,000 each year. A wide range of study evidence has concluded that wearing a seat belt decreases the fatality rate. According to the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration, Click It or Ticket is the most successful seat belt enforcement campaign ever, helping create the highest national seat belt usage rate of 82 percent. The fine for a seat belt violation costs between 80 and 91 dollars, and over 350 dollars for failing to properly restrain a child under 16. If the parent is not in the car, the driver gets the ticket. According to Ione Police Chief Michael Johnson, officers will be on the lookout for those who are not buckled up and for teens and children not wearing proper belts and restraints. This will be a zero tolerance policy and may mean extra hours for officers. “Click It or Ticket” is a cooperative effort among the State’s traffic safety-related departments. Funding for officer overtime to support California's Click It or Ticket campaign was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Monday, 22 December 2008 03:13

Quiznos Robbery Suspects Arrested

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slide1.jpgAmador County – Two suspects have been arrested for the armed robbery of Quiznos Restaurant in Martell the night of Tuesday December 2. Jackson Police Department and the Amador County Sheriff’s Office, in a combined investigation, developed leads in the Quiznos armed robbery and several burglaries in the county area which led to the issuance of a search warrant. On Friday at 8 am, the Jackson Police Department executed the warrant at 21466 National in the city of Volcano with assistance from the Amador County Sheriff’s Office Swat Team and the Combined Narcotics Enforcement Team. 19 year old Nicholas Thomas and eighteen year old Caitlin McElwee were taken into custody in the Amador County Jail. Thomas was charged with armed robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit a crime and possession of stolen property. McElwee was charged with conspiracy to commit a crime and possession of stolen property. McElwee is an employee of the Martell Quiznos and was working at the Jackson Quiznos the evening of the robbery. Police think Thomas is the man who committed the robbery and pistol-whipped one of the employees in the head. Staff Report (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Friday, 29 August 2008 06:12

Amador School Board Renews Truancy Officer Position

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slide20.pngThe Amador County Unified School District board of directors on Wednesday voted to renew a school truancy police officer position for the upcoming year and discussed cost sharing with the cities of Ione, Sutter Creek and Jackson. The board voted 6-0 with one absence to give Superintendent Dick Glock the authority to sign a contract renewal for the resource officer position that is based in Sutter Creek. Glock said that Jackson officials had decided to not share in the cost of the truant officer, due to a 16 percent cut in the Jackson Police Department. Glock said Jackson Police Chief Scott Morrison had informed the district that the JPD “will continue to follow good policing procedures, increase patrols around the schools and in general continue a high level of responsiveness.” Finance director Barbara Murray said the resource officer would cost 24,500 Dollars. Murray said the officer’s salary was paid in part with a 10,000 dollar Karl Washington grant, a gift born from the aftermath of the Columbine High School shootings. Glock said the officer, based in Sutter Creek, could police school campuses in Ione and Jackson if those cities’ police chiefs give the OK. The current resource officer’s position was to expire Monday, September 1st, five days after the board’s meeting, prompting board members to seek renewal of the contract rather than letting it expire. Board member Terry A. Porray asked that “next year, please let’s do this a lot earlier.”