Bold Step Towards Reducing Traffic Accidents
ACPC’s Container Issues
The Amador County Planning Commission has announced they will hold two public hearings May 20 related to amendments to Title 19 of the Amador County Code. On May 16, 2006, the code was amended to include regulations relating to sea-land storage containers to encourage appropriate locations and uses for such containers and protect the visual quality of the county. Since the adoption of the ordinance, existing and potential situations have surfaced that suggested the ordinance may need to be updated. Because this matter has proven to be of great interest and concern to the community, the planning commission invites all interested persons to attend and participate in the public hearing. The meeting is seen as another opportunity for the public to voice concerns and offer possible solutions to the issues regarding the use of sea-land storage containers.
The second item is intended as a public workshop, but may result in a public hearing if the commission feels prepared to make a recommendation on the matter to the board of supervisors. Staff will present a proposed new county code to establish a design review process and associated standards for development of commercial, high-density multi-family residential and manufacturing zone districts. In other words, the design guidelines are intended to provide project developers and property owners with an understanding of Amador County’s goals for aesthetically compatible and appropriate development projects that fit the unique and storied character of Amador County. The hearings will be held at the County Administration Center's Board of Supervisors Chambers located at 810 Court Street in Jackson. The hearings are scheduled for 7 p.m. or as soon thereafter as can be heard. Copies of both proposals are available on the planning department's Web site at www.co.amador.ca.us/depts/planning or by contacting the department at 223-6380. Anyone unable to attend but wishing to comment on either of these items may submit written statements to the Planning Commission.
Fire Season, CalFire Get An Early Start
Gardening For The Hungry
Local gardeners from Amador and Calaveras county are now utilizing their skills to benefit others. Gardeners ranging from expert to amateur are working together with the Amador-Tuolumne Community Action Agency food bank, or ATCAA, by donating home grown produce to help curb a rising number of hungry and homeless. The idea is so simple it’s almost ingenious. "When you're out there putting out your garden, put in an extra row," said Lee Kimball, food bank director.
The effects of our current economic downturn have hit home, and the food bank representatives believe that personal contributions begin in your own backyard. The food bank can not take complete credit for the idea. The Plant-a-Row program is mentioned in the popular book, “Chicken Soup for the Gardener's Soul”.
Kimball thought it was a great idea and immediately went to work implementing the program locally. Additionally, people with chickens are encouraged to donate their extra eggs to supply more protein fortified contributions. In 2007, the ATCAA food bank was only able to provide an average of 2.25 pounds of food per person per month, Kimball said. They served an average of 11,000 people per month. Master gardeners will be available to answer questions and offer advice to people interested in participating. The food bank asks that all interested gardeners sign up by calling 984-3960. For more information on Plant-A-Row for the Hungry, visit www.gardenwriters.org.
Rabid Skunks In Jackson
Ione Homecoming Events Begin Saturday
What started as a reunion-style picnic on a hill in the outskirts of Ione on May 3, 1857, has now grown into four days of special events. Now known as the Annual Ione Homecoming, the event will be celebrating its 132nd year this May. On May 3, 1876, as part of the nation’s centennial celebration, the event was moved from that famed hill to the present-day Howard Park, where a then state-of-the-art racetrack and grandstand had just been constructed. Each year, the non-profit Ione Picnic Association, or IPA, which is the organizer of the entire homecoming, holds a fundraiser to help support the historic event.
This year’s was a showing of The Story of Seabiscuit, which brought to light the fact that the famous racehorse was owned by Charles Stewart Howard for whom Howard Park is named. In 1942, Howard bought 32,000 acres of land that is now Rancho Arroyo Seco, and included in the sale was the 89-acre parcel that is now Howard Park. Howard died in 1950, and the park land was sold to the City of Ione in 1995. The homecoming entertains with a different theme each year, with this year’s theme of “Mardi Gras Magic” paralleling that of the Amador County Fair.
According to the IPA website, the annual homecoming is “a bridge connecting our rich past and exciting future!” Another longstanding tradition is the homecoming’s mascot, “Benny Bedbug,” a cartoon bug invented in the early 1970’s by G. Lambert. Each year, Benny characterizes the theme of the event, which in past years has included 2001’s “Benny Goes Around the World,” 1980’s “Gold Fever,” and 1978’s “Fantasy World.” The 2008 Ione Homecoming runs May 9th through the 11th, in Howard Park and Downtown Ione, with the Miss Ione Scholarship Pageant this Saturday, May 3rd at Ione Elementary School. Tickets are available at Ione Auto, Coldwell Banker in Ione, the Rancho Arroyo Seco office, from Ione Picnic Association members, or by calling 209-274-2777. You can obtain more information about homecoming events on the IPA website at www.IonePicnic.com.
2008 Commercial Wine Competition
Enforcing Decade Old Regulations
San Joaquin Valley air regulators approved a plan Wednesday to clean up the region's soot-laden air so that it meets federal pollution standards set more than a decade ago. California's farm belt has some of the highest levels of airborne dust, smoke and soot in the country. In all, 26 of California's 52 counties with air-quality monitoring stations received failing grades for either high ozone or particle pollution days, according to an American Lung Association Report. Amador, Calaveras and Sacramento Counties were tops on the list. San Joaquin valley air is blamed for contributing to our local air problems, one Amador Air Control official said. The San Joaquin district's governing board voted 8-3 in favor of a plan that could keep families from using their fireplaces for up to 35 days each winter and require local employers to have a portion of their workers carpool.
Environmentalists said the proposal didn't go far enough, and unfurled white prayer flags outside the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District's meeting in Fresno to illustrate the premature deaths associated with the valley's polluted air. Community members wore paper dust masks as they testified about the effects of particulate matter pollution, which has been linked to respiratory problems, heart attacks and lung cancer. The plan is meant to comply with standards set in 1997 under the federal Clean Air Act that measure the highest levels of one kind of particulate pollution allowed over one year.
More rigorous standards were adopted in 2006, an issue that air regulators will have to address after meeting 1997 levels. Farmers speaking at Wednesday's meeting warned that a stricter plan would have risked job losses in the valley, the nation's most productive region for fruits and vegetables. Air quality advocates said the approved plan could have done more to regulate dairies, wineries and diesel pumps on farms, some of the many sources that contribute to the tiny specks of pollution. If the California Air Resources Board sanctions the plan, it will head to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for final approval.
Drug Testing Policy Faces Skepticism
School Board Talks Developer Fees
The Amador County Unified School District held a Public Hearing to discuss the proposed increase of Developer Fees Wednesday evening. The District recently requested a Developer Fee Study be completed by Williams and Associates LLC. The current fee for residential is $2.63 per square foot, with the proposed fee equaling $2.97. The current commercial fee is .42 cents per square foot with the proposed fee increasing to .46 cents. The board approved the increase unanimously and the fee will become effective June 23, of this year. The board was also presented with the Facility Inspection Tool findings. Between November of 2007 and January of 2008, each school site in the district was inspected by two maintenance workers, Facility Consultants MimiDene (Mee-Mee-Deen) Williams and Barbara Murray.
During the inspections each classroom, bathroom, storeroom, and custodial room were inspected for there cleanliness and safety in the context of functional school facilities. All sites in the district were given “good to excellent” reports. Plymouth Preschool received the only perfect score. However, during the inspections several issues were brought to light, including lax fire extinguisher inspections and Amador High Schools issue of hazardous materials on campus. These materials are part of the auto mechanics program held on site. 55 gallon barrels of oil were found during the inspections and had been sitting at the site for some time. They must be removed by the County’s Environmental Health Department.