Thursday, 12 July 2007 00:18
Board of Supervisors Day Late To Comment On Sierra Resource Management Plan
On Tuesday the discussion surrounding the Bureau of Land
Management’s Sierra Proposed Resource Management Plan seemed to be an item of
contention for some of the Supervisors as it was learned that the County had
missed the deadline to comment on the plan by a day. The plan provides direction and
guidance for more than 230,000 acres of public land located primarily in
nine central California counties including
Amador, Calaveras, El Dorado, Mariposa,
Nevada, Placer, Sacramento,
Tuolumne and Yuba counties.
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Thursday, 26 July 2007 01:37
Jackson City Council Discusses CBDG Program
On Monday night the Jackson City Council held a
public hearing for the Community Development Block Grant Program. City Manager Mike Daly explained
that the program, also known as CDBG, provides income that is used to support
housing rehabilitation activities. The City generates income by previous
CDBG housing rehabilitation loans being paid back by the borrower. The borrower
must meet specifically targeted income guidelines before they can be approved
for the loan.
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Tuesday, 13 February 2007 00:25
Save Mart Supermarkets, purchased Albertson's
Save Mart Supermarkets,
based in Modesto, recently purchased 132 Albertson’s stores in Northern
California, including the Amador County store. It was announced last week that the
Sonora store will be closed this coming Saturday leaving the Sonora area’s 65
employees without jobs. According
to Save Mart spokesperson Alicia Rockwell the Jackson store will remain open
and will slowly be converted over to a Save Mart store. Customers will
not see a big difference in the store for at least three to four months.
Employees here are also safe, says Rockwell, the purchase agreement for the
stores included the employee positions and each employees now a Save Mart
employee. There are no major plans to change the operations of the Amador
County store, with the exception of the change of name and product content.
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Thursday, 19 July 2007 01:20
The Road To The Rancheria: Ridge Rd Versus Hwy 88
Residents of Jackson and Ridge Road
seem to be at odds at the moment over Casino traffic. The Jackson City Council,
at their last meeting discussed agenda items at both the Board of Supervisors
and Jackson City Council meetings, over traffic coming to and from the Jackson
Rancheria Casino. The
Ridge Road Coalition reported to the Board of Supervisors recently that while
they were told that the Rancheria had directed all service deliveries, tour
busses and employees to use the Dalton Road access off
of Hwy. 88, casino patrons are continuing to use Ridge Road
to New
York Ranch Road
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Thursday, 26 April 2007 23:55
Mandated Pet Spay and Neuter Bad Policy For County Says Supervisors
The BOS reviewed an
addendum to their agenda and then took a position on Tuesday regarding Assembly
Bill 1634. GSA Director John Hopkins and Animal Control
Director John Vail explained the main direction of
the bill. The Bill would prohibit any person from owning or
possessing any cat or dog over the age of 4 months that has not been spayed or
neutered, unless that person possesses an “intact” permit. The bill
would establish an intact permit fee in an amount yet to be determined by a
local jurisdiction, and would then require the revenue from these fees to be
used for the administration of the local jurisdiction’s permit program. The
Bill would make a violation of
these provisions punishable by a prescribed civil penalty. Hopkins pointed that
many people are, or will be, opposed to this bill as it takes away “people’s
rights or perceived rights.”
Hopkins then went over the fines and fees portion of the bill. The bill
states that any person in violation of the law shall be fined $500 for each
animal for which the violation occurs as well as for each applicable period of
noncompliance. The penalty shall be imposed in addition to any other civil or
criminal penalties imposed by the local jurisdiction. Because the local
jurisdiction is responsible
for the enforcement of this law that leaves the question of who is going to
fund such a program and oversee its implementation?
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Tuesday, 19 June 2007 23:06
Suit Filed By Environmentalists Could Impact Amador County Ag Water Program
Monday an environmental group filed suit against
the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board claiming that tens of
thousands of farms have been illegally exempted from laws requiring the
monitoring and reporting of toxic water runoff. The lawsuit targets the Central Valley Regional Water
Quality Control Board's "ag waiver" program, which allows farmers to
join coalitions rather than test their own runoff. According to the
suit, millions of pounds
of pesticides and fertilizers are applied to farmlands, later washing into
creeks and streams and, ultimately, into the Delta. There, the toxins
threatened fish such as the Delta smelt, environmentalists say.
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Thursday, 01 February 2007 02:24
CHP Receives Grant To Crack Down On Drunk Driving
The California Highway Patrol (CHP) has secured a
grant from the Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration entitled “Statewide Driving Under the Influence (DUI)
Reduction Effort.” This grant will provide funding for DUI
enforcement in an effort to remove impaired drivers from California’s
roadways. CHP personnel will be deployed
on an overtime basis with the mission of apprehending impaired drivers. In addition to enforcing DUI laws, officers will also enforce all
other traffic safety laws such as, speeding, unsafe passing, and occupant
restraint violations. Utilizing project-funded overtime, the CHP will
conduct a minimum of 200 sobriety checkpoints, 45 DUI task force operations and
deploy DUI roving enforcement patrol operations statewide.
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Friday, 08 December 2006 08:22
Ione City Council Looks To Addition Of New Engineer For Waste Water Projects
This
week the city of Ione ceremonially swore in three new city council leaders;
those being the top three vote getters in the recent election. Lee Ard, Jeff
Barnhart, and Jim Ulm were welcomed warmly by Ione citizens, with a
room full of onlookers extending all the way to the doorway.
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Tuesday, 17 April 2007 01:13
Jackson Planning Commission Approves Delay In Parking Lot Changes For New York Ranch Rd Complex
The Jackson Planning
Commission held their two year
review of the New York Ranch Center, Inc. parking. When originally
approved on April 18th 2005 the Planning Commission granted a
request by the applicants, New York Ranch Center, Inc., to postpone the
reconfiguration of their parking lot in accordance with their Planned Development
for a period of two years. The purpose for the delay was to allow completion and occupancy of the remaining
building to better determine the parking needs.
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Wednesday, 13 June 2007 23:59
Ione City Council Announces The Selection New City Manager
The
Ione City Council announced today the selection of Kimberly A. Kerr as the next
permanent City Manager. Kim Kerr will
start work in Ione on July 16, 2007. Her employment contract with the City of Ione is now being
finalized and will appear on the agenda for the City Council meeting of June
19th. Kim Kerr has been
employed by the County
of Humboldt since 1997 in
various capacities and is currently the Risk Management Director and Deputy
County Administrative Officer.
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