Boat Ban Lifted
Ione City Council
Ione Recreation Commission
Fair Exhibit Dispute
Crowd Greets New AWA Board
Amador Water Agency Approves Pipeline Contract
Robin McCune Awarded By Governor
Fifth Annual Camp Out For Cancer
The group Amador Support, Transportation And Resource Services prepares for its fifth annual Camp Out For Cancer with its own little legacy. The group has a 4-year tally of 36,000 dollars that it raised for regional cancer research. That equates to 10 percent of the running total the last 4 years going to research, while the rest of the funds stay local. Executive Director Ginger Rolf said that STARS transports cancer patients to doctor’s appointments around the county and the region, and started its own walk-a-thon, the all-night Camp Out For Cancer five years ago. STARS had one cancer van at the time. Now they have four vans, purchased with the Camp Out funds. The other 10 percent goes to research at the Sutter Cancer Center, where Dr. Vincent Caggiano head research. The funds stay pretty local for research, Rolf said, because “patients from Amador County go for radiation and other things we don’t offer usually go to Sutter Cancer Center.” The hospital, at 2800 L Street in Sacramento, is part of the Sutter Hospital organization.
The STARS Camp Out For Cancer has 29 teams signed up, with 800 participants expected, Rolf said. The event will be held September 20th and 21st at the Argonaut High School football field, with teams walking around the Argonaut track, starting at 10 a.m. Saturday and ending at 9 a.m. Sunday. STARS has a Camp Out goal this year to raise 100,000 dollars. The event will have 7 bands and also a karaoke party. For information about the Camp Out For Cancer or to make contributions, call the STARS Jackson office at (209) 223-1246. Online, see www.AmadorSTARS.org.
Ione Miwok Tribe Protests County Jurisdiction
In a letter to the Amador County Board of Supervisors, Joan Villa, Vice President of the Ione Band of Miwok Indians Tribal Water Association is claiming that Amador County and the county’s Department of Environmental Health are interfering with “the efforts by Indian Health Service to upgrade (their) tribal water system and replace (an) aging water storage tank.” In the letter, dated August 19th, the band is charging that Amador County does not have any authority over their tribal lands, per a 1992 federal court order, which dismisses all claims to jurisdiction over tribal trust properties, including the band’s property on Jackson Valley Road in Ione. T
he Ione band is also claiming that Amador County has delayed the water upgrade project for more than two years, which they say has caused “irreparable harm,” and for which they may seek civil and/or criminal action “as allowed by law.” Villa has requested that the Board of Supervisors investigate the county’s involvement in the delayed water project, and that the matter be placed on the next regular board meeting agenda.
Mother Lode Youth Soccer League Season Starts Up
Mother Lode Youth Soccer League opening day in Howard Park showed some of the reasons the family-friendly league has become so popular among Amador County’s young families. Coach Megan Eckhart of the Dwight Jennings DDS Ione Blizzards and her players’ parents formed a bridge at the sideline for the Blizzards to run through. And their foes, the Pizza Factory Ione Bandits also ran through the bridge -- to cheers, despite the Blizzards winning the match, 3-0. Eckhart is a 12th year coach in the MLYSL. She said she didn’t even have her own kids when she started coaching. Now she has four children, including two in the league – Corey, 7, of the U-8 Blizzards, and another on the U-6 Guard Dogs.
Daniele Molin is another parent-coach, assisting with the Blizzards and the U-6 Guard Dogs. Her son, Micah is a Blizzard. And her future player, Corra, 4 weeks old, she held on the sidelines. Molin has been coaching for five years. Michelle Moreno has been involved in MLYSL soccer for 10 years, now with her sons, Christopher, 9, and Kyle, 11, playing on teams. Moreno is one of the volunteer board members and is registrar of the league. All of her children started in the league at age 4, including Cody, 16, now trying out for the Thundering Herd soccer team at Amador High School. Coaches among the league’s ranks include Argonaut High School varsity coach Roque (Rocky) Mireles (also a parent), Argonaut JV coach and volunteer board member Mark Herberger, and Amador head soccer coach Tod Ruslender and JV coach Barron Peterson. Ruslender is president of the board and a coach and Peterson is also a board member and referees matches in the Saturday league.