Board’s Deadlock Means They Will Not Participate In Arbitration
Potential Pipe Bomb Near Kirkwood
A discovery by a CalTrans worker on the side of the road near Kirkwood
resort resulted in a call to the Calaveras County Bomb Squad. According
to Craig Harmon, the CHP’s Public Information Officer, the worker reported finding a device that may have
been a functional pipe bomb late Tuesday morning. The Calaveras Bomb Squad,
based in San Andreas, shut down Highway 88 in both directions for approximately
2 hours and 40 minutes. The Bomb Squad used additional explosives to
detonate the device. The Amador and Calaveras County Sheriff Departments are
investigating the supposed bomb and how it got there.
Stockton Official Tried in Amador County Case
Amador County prosecutors
are taking the reigns in a rare criminal case that involves both a Stockton
City Council Candidate and a Stockton employee. The Stockton Record reports
that the people vs. Leonardi,
an Amador County case, involves a death, a seriously injured council candidate,
and Dino Leonardi, the community and cultural services superintendent
with Stockton Parks and Recreation. Leonardi is charged with misdemeanor
vehicular manslaughter for his alleged role in a fatal 2007 accident on Highway
88 near Jackson, killing a man named Alston. He publicly disputes the charges
against him. Leonardi allegedly caused a fatal two-vehicle accident by passing
and in turn cutting off another vehicle, resulting in that vehicle’s driver
losing control.
Leonardi disputes the charge. Besides a city supervisor's involvement, what gives the
case a public profile are the other occupants of the car in which Alston died:
Mark and Jennet Stebbins. Mark Stebbins, a Stockton councilman in the
1980s, recently declared candidacy for the District 6 council seat. Jennet
Stebbins is challenging Davis Assemblywoman Lois Wolk for the Democratic
nomination for the 5th Senate District seat. After the accident, Leonardi
reportedly drove on. Leonardi said he was unaware of the accident. He dialed
911, remaining until interviewed and allowed to go. Leonardi, whose license is
suspended, has continued at his job, overseeing special events, the Children's
Museum and Pixie Woods. He carpools to work. "My attorney has advised me not to comment on
anything as regards to the accident," said Leonardi. He added, correctly:
"You're innocent until proven guilty."
State Assembly Tries To Ease Effects Of Interest Costs
The state assembly
tried to send some relief to local governments reeling from higher
interest costs Monday with
approval of a bill that allows cities, counties and other bond issuers to buy back their own bonds. The Assembly approved
Senate Bill 344 by Senator Mike Machado, a Democrat from Linden, on a vote of
67 to 1. The bill affects Amador
County and will now go to the Senate. Markets for two types of municipal bonds
have been hit with turmoil in recent
weeks as a side effect of the
meltdown in subprime mortgages. The bonds are sold at short intervals, from weekly to monthly,
to investors looking for short-term returns.
But when the companies that insure the bonds were shaken by losses
in mortgage-based securities, the municipal market was also rattled, leading to
higher interest rates. Senate
Bill 344 makes it clear that local entities, including governments, hospitals, utilities
and universities – can shelter themselves from the interest rate volatility by
buying back their own bonds without “extinguishing” the debt. The
agencies can then resell the bonds if the market is down, or switch to more traditional
forms of debt. Without
that clarification, bond issuers have lost their bond insurance or been forced
to go back to voters to reauthorize the debt.
The bonds could have been
stripped of their tax exempt status. Treasurer Bill Lockyer, who sponsored the legislation, said that
taxpayer’s don’t create the financial turmoil, “Yet they are the ones who pay
the price.” In the local area, public agencies have been scrambling to
get out of the “auction rate” and “variable rate demand” markets as interest
rates have spiked. Officials say that for years, the little-known markets
allowed them to borrow at unusually low interest rates.
Forest Service Seeks Local Contractors
The U.S. Forest Service will be hosting a
workshop on reducing fuels in
the El Dorado National Forest using Stewardship Contracting. The target
audience for the workshop is prospective contractors in Amador and El
Dorado counties who wish to learn more about how stewardship contracts work and
how to bid. Stewardship contracts were authorized by Congress in
the 2003 Appropriations Bill and allow the Forest Service to exchange
goods for services. For the past four years, the Forest Service has been using
the value of commercial timber from forest thinning projects in the El Dorado
National Forest to offset the cost of reducing fuels on the ground and removing
small trees growing under taller trees that create “fire ladders.” “Stewardship contracts reduce the
Forest Service’s reliance on tax dollars to accomplish vital fuels reduction in
the National Forests,” said El dorado National Forest Contracting Officer
Patricia Ferrell.
Ferrell says fuels reduction isn’t the only work that
can be accomplished in the National Forest using stewardship contracts. Many kinds of projects can be undertaken with this contracting
authority including watershed restoration, wildlife habitat and forest health
improvement, and noxious weed control. “Like anything new, there is
apprehension in potential contractors.
We plan to help educate our prospective contractors so they can effectively
bid on these projects,” said Ferrell. For more information about the workshop,
contact El Dorado National Forest Contracting Officer Patricia Ferrell at (530)
642-5146.
Jackson Rancheria Chefs Are People’s Choice
Four Chefs from Jackson
Rancheria Casino & Hotel won the prestigious People’s Choice award at the recent Taste of Elegance Pork
Competition. The competition, held March 10 in Sacramento, featured tops
chefs from throughout the area offering dishes designed to use pork in
innovative ways. The Jackson
Rancheria team won for their Pork Indian Tacos, similar to the dishes served in
the casino’s Miwuk Indian Taco restaurant.
Members of the award winning
team are Executive Chef
Michael Golsie, James McGrath, Raymond Jursnich, and Julie Munson. Of those in
attendance, Jackson Rancheria’s team was voted the People’s Choice winner.
The event is produced by the National Pork Board and the California Pork
Producers and is one of more than 20 regional competitions held each year.
Jackson Rancheria Casino & Hotel is located at 12222 New York Ranch Road,
Jackson, CA 95642. For more information, call 800-822-WINN or visit
jacksoncasino.com.

