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Tuesday, 19 May 2009 00:37

Caples Lake Restocking

slide5.pngAmador County - The El Dorado Irrigation District board of directors approved an amendment to the Caples Lake fish restocking plan during the board’s May 11 meeting. The action cleared the way for the California Department of Fish and Game to deliver fish to the lake before Memorial Day. “This is an important part of our commitment to restore a trophy fishery in the lake,” said board president George Wheeldon. “We had to draw the lake down last year for emergency repairs to the Caples main dam outlet works, and Fish and Game was not sure any fish would survive in the small amount of water left. The good news is that some fish did make it through the winter…and the lake level has risen beyond expectations, to the point that the fish should have a good start.” Dan Corcoran, the District’s environmental division manager, told the board that “according to the plan, intensive restocking will continue through the 2009 fall season.” Then EID will continue to plant fish over the next nine years in coordination with partners in the area. Corcoran reported that the initial restocking plan approved last year had to be modified because, according to Fish and Game, one of two hatcheries contracted to restock the lake tested positive for the parasite that causes whirling disease. This unanticipated development will also have region-wide effects, since the hatchery holds stocking contracts throughout the state. “Fish and Game has been extremely helpful in assisting EID through this challenging situation,” Corcoran said. The goal is to restore the sport fishery at Caples Lake. The amendment the board adopted today does that with minor adjustments to the initial plan related to the proportions of species and sizes to be stocked. In addition, 9,000 pounds of trophy fish will be stocked by an out-of-state hatchery in June. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Friday, 15 May 2009 00:44

Bedbug Challenge

slide5.pngAmador County - They ran, walked, volunteered, donated and in the end, participants in the Bedbug Challenge raised over $5000 for the Ione schools. The Bedbug Challenge 10K run and 5K walk was held on Saturday, May 9 during the 133rd Annual Ione Homecoming Weekend. Entry fees and major donations from the business community, service groups and individuals raised $5,535 for Ione schools. Distribution of funds was based on a percentage of participation by each school, with the Elementary School receiving 70 percent of the donations, and the Jr. High School 30 percent. There were 58 runners and over 120 walkers registered for the event. Ione Elementary School Principal Laurie Amick led the way for the 5K walkers. The first runners to cross the finish in the 10K were David Anderson of Sacramento with a time of 38:48 and Erin Devlin of Jackson with a time of 41:03. Staff Report This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
slide1.pngJackson – The Board of Supervisors continued their discussion Tuesday on the feasibility of becoming a qualified donee for over 4,500 acres of regional land made available for stewardship through a PG & E settlement. The proposed plan dates back to 2000, when a bankruptcy settlement agreement with the state required PG & E to donate their surplus lands to public entities or non-profit organizations. After concern was expressed over how stewards would be chosen, a Pacific Land and Forest Stewardship Council was established to spearhead designation of donees. Donees can be land owners or conservation easement holders with a say over land use, but not both. It is expected that approximately half of the 140,000 acres of PG & E lands will ultimately be donated. Consultant John Hoffman said the county is competing with many other interested parties. Mary Adelzadeh, Regional Land Conservation Manager with the Stewardship Council, said “our primary purpose is to conserve and enhance these watershed lands.” She said “we’re seeking organizations interested in holding fee title” as well as “organizations interested in a land conservation role.” She said the primary role of a title holder “is really monitoring, with no management involved.” Amador County is among 19 entities interested in fee title on parcels of approximately 2,607 acres of land in the North Fork Mokelumne area, 914 acres in the Lower Bear area and 1,028 acres in the Blue Lakes area. Other applicants include the Amador Water Agency, the California Department of Fish and Game and the US Forest Service. Supervisor Richard Forster made clear his opinion that the lands would be better managed under local control, versus control by the state or federal government. “If the interests are held by Amador County groups then obviously they’re going to care more about what happens to that land,” said Forster. “We don’t want someone like fish and game coming in where they have so many conservation easements that they can’t “do a good job managing them.” Board Chairman Ted Novelli asked if it was possible for PG & E to change the acreage. Adelzadeh said they can, and “PG & E has an application pending with the Federal Energy Commission to build another (water) plant in the Lower Bear area.” Adelzadeh said the Stewardship council is already in the process of screening and reviewing applicants. Hoffman said there is a meeting scheduled for August 20 for all those interested in owning the land. Hoffman said the Stewardship Council will be meeting on September 18 to visit various properties under consideration. He said there will be a workshop to be scheduled in October to solicit the public input. “These decisions are going to effect ecology, wildlife and the ability to transfer water back and forth,” said Forster. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Monday, 10 August 2009 01:11

Ione Planning Commission: General Plan

slide2.pngIone – The Ione Planning Commission voted to recommend the city’s draft General Plan Wednesday, and sent the document to the City Council. The commission requested more staff work on the zoning portion of the plan, and for definitions of the different zones. Commissioners Stewart Wilkerson, Mike McDermed and David Jenkins voted 3-0 to recommend the draft, with changes and clarifications made after comments were received, some as late as Wednesday. Ron Smylie and other members of the audience were concerned about the definition of the zoning, and McDermed said they were asking staff to clarify and define the different zones. Wilkerson said as a land owner, who lives close to Smylie, he said he is concerned about the effects of zoning on landowners’ rights. But he said the commission was also there and working for everyone in the city. Among additions to the draft General Plan, the commission added a map showing “existing conditions and anticipated future conditions for noise generated by vehicle traffic on major city roads.” City Planner Christopher Jordan submitted an edit to the housing element related to “very low-income housing,” with new text noting that “rental prices for 3- and 4-bedroom apartments, condos and homes were renting from $975 to $1,400, and therefore are out of the affordability range for these households.” A population density table was also added to the housing element, with ranges of minimum and maximum dwelling units and population allowed in each of 6 land use designation categories. Those were Rural Residential; Low, Medium and High Density Residential; Central Business District; and Downtown Transition. Density unit maximums in the latter 3 categories were 25 units per acre, and Jordan noted that “density bonus consistent with state law may be allowed to exceed the 25-unit per acre maximum.” Maximum population density was 39 people per acre for the latter 3 categories. The table include a maximum total estimated population of 17,258 people, and staff based its assumptions on data from the 2000 U.S. Census, which uses 2.64 people per singe-family household; and 1.56 people per multi-family units. The commission also added an “Action” section item on a “Child Care Program,” which said “In cooperation with private developers, the city will evaluate on a case-by-case basis, the feasibility of pairing a child care center in conjunction with affordable, multifamily housing developments or nearby to major residential subdivisions.” The program listed the city manager, planner, planning commission and city council and responsible for the program, and funding from the General Fund. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Friday, 07 August 2009 01:20

Sutter Creek City Council

slide2.pngSutter Creek – The City of Sutter Creek City Council on Monday directed staff to continue working with city employee representatives for 3 week to try “to come to an agreement on the expired contracts for each union.” The finance committee, made up of Mayor Pro Tempore Tim Murphy and Councilwoman Linda Rianda, will join Rabe and City Manager Rob Duke as the negotiation team for the city, to work to resolve contract disputes with the Service Employees International Union and the Sutter Creek Police Officer’s Association. POA was to meet with the committee next week, and SEIU representatives were to meet this week. Rabe said the negotiation team has been meeting on a regular basis with the 2 associations since early June. The city council’s original deadline to finish negotiations passed without resolution July 15th. Rabe said “while progress was being made” in talks, the latest “did not provide any movement on either side.” As a result, the POA declared an impasse July 29 and sought the council to do the same. The SEIU did not declare an impasse as of Monday, and the council did not declare an impasse with either group Monday. Had the council declared impasses, it would have activated the negotiations’ “last and final offer” for a contract to each union. The council instead “directed the finance committee to continue working with each group for a period of 3 weeks, with the ultimate goal of coming to an agreement with each association.” Rabe said: “the Council recognized that we are very close to an agreement.” The council took “several steps to decrease the General Fund deficit,” he said, including: “termination of two management positions; consolidation of department head duties” under Duke and Rabe; and leaving vacant a Public Works Director post, with duties to be absorbed by Rabe. The council also revised a purchase agreement for the Knight Foundry to prevent any General Fund expenditures from being used for the purchase. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Tuesday, 04 August 2009 01:09

Amador County Fair

slide4.pngAmador County – The 2009 Amador County Fair – A Grape Time To Hukilau – saw an increase in some of its numbers, including an 18.1 percent increase for the Arena events, such as the rodeo, the destruction derby, and the tractor pull. Fair Board CEO Troy Bowers that Arena attendance was up 577 attendees over the 2008 Fair, but the numbers did not count reserved seats. Bowers said paid attendance was down slightly, 96 tickets shy of last year’s attendance, for a 7/100ths of a percent decrease. Gate attendance – not including passes, and comps – was down 466 tickets, or 2.8% compared to ’08. Total gate revenue was up $5,007 dollars, a 3.64% jump over 2008. The Junior Livestock Auction grossed $283,370 dollars, with 229 lots sold. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Monday, 03 August 2009 00:28

Amador Trash Haulers

slide2.pngAmador County – Amador County Public Works in a mid-July mailer announced an upcoming public hearing as the Amador County Board of Supervisors will be asked to raise garbage service rates for about 6,100 customers in the county’s three franchise billing areas. ACES Waste Service Incorporated is looking to raise rates for 5,200 customers in the Upcountry. Jim McHargue, Program Manager of Amador County Waste Management, said that includes a 7.75 percent hike for 4,400 total ACES customers in Franchise Area 3. ACES also seeks supervisors’ approval of a 4.83 percent rate increase in Franchise Area 2, which has about 800 customers. The other county hauler Amador Disposal Service Waste Connections, will be seeking a rate increase of 3.91 percent, in its only service zone in Amador, Franchise Area 1, with approximately 900 customers. McHargue said all rate increase requests will be handled in public hearings Sept 15th. McHargue announced the hearings in letters to customers July 17th. The ACES rate increase request notice includes the reason for the proposed increase. Franchise Area 3, in Amador County, includes Pine Grove, Pioneer and Upcountry areas and the eastern section of the county, McHargue said, “essentially everything east of Jackson and Sutter Creek city limits (and) up Shake Ridge Road”. McHargue in a letter said Area 3 rates were last increased October 1st, 2008, when rates went up 10 percent. The letter said of the 7.75 percent hike proposal, 5.4 percent of it “is due to an increase in ACES waste disposal costs at Kiefer Landfill in Sacramento County.” In Franchise Area 3, residential rate increases would be between $2 and $2.70 a month, depending on receptacle sizes; and commercial rate increases would range from $7.80 a month, up to $41.95 a month, also depending on bin sizes. If approved by supervisors, the rate increases would take effect October 1st. The public hearings are set for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, September 15th, at the supervisors’ chambers at 810 Court Street in Jackson. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Tuesday, 28 July 2009 00:01

Ione General Plan Update

slide2.pngAmador County – Ione City Council and Planning Commission have tentatively scheduled the final round of meetings for adoption of its General Plan update, with a series of public meetings starting next Wednesday. The city planning department announced the lineup Monday in a release. On August 5th, the Planning Commission will hold a special meeting to review the draft General Plan and Environmental Impact Report. At the meeting, the Planning Commission could make a recommendation to the City Council for adoption of the updated General Plan and certification of the EIR. The commission could also send along the documents without a recommendation, or make a recommendation to not adopt it. If the Planning Commission decides to make a recommendation at their August 5th meeting, the City Council would consider the draft General Plan and EIR at a special meeting on August 26. Concurrently with the General Plan update, the council will also be considering a number of amendments to the city’s zoning code and to the zoning map for consistency with the draft General Plan and land use plan. If the recommendation is not made, another planning commission meeting may be needed to finish the work. The Planning Commission meets 6 p.m. Wednesday, August 5th at Ione City Hall. The tentative City Council meeting would occur 6 p.m. Wednesday, August 26th. Planning staff said the “Ione General Plan Update is a blueprint for guiding and developing” the city’s future. It addresses land use, circulation, housing, natural resources, open space, community character, economic development and safety.” To learn more about the Ione General Plan Update, see www.ionegeneralplan.com. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Friday, 17 July 2009 00:37

High-Speed Internet Expansion

slide3.pngAmador County - Thousands more Mother Lode residents will now have high speed Internet access thanks to a $2.8 million California Public Utilities Commission grant. $2.7 million of that funding will go to Sonora-based Mother Lode Internet, who will in turn spend nearly $8 million over the next year and a half to build a high speed network utilizing pre-existing towers and frequencies. The Public Utility Commission, or CPUC, says the new, expanded network will provide Internet service to 14,629 households currently without access in Amador, Alpine, Calaveras, Mariposa and Tuolumne counties. “This fixed wireless broadband project shows tremendous innovation in bringing very fast broadband to…rural households in the Mother Lode region who have never had fast Internet access before," said CPUC Commissioner Rachelle Chong, a member of the state's Broadband Task Force. According to CPUC, the Mother Lode Broadband project will provide broadband service at an average speed of up to 14 mega bits per second for both download and upload. In December, 2007, the CPUC established a two-year, $100 million California Advanced Services Fund to provide 40 percent matching infrastructure grants to broadband providers who in turn put up matching grants of 60 percent. So far, $12.3 million in broadband infrastructure grants have been approved. Two other providers that lost out in the grant competition are also on board to provide experience and support. Golden State Cellular General Manager Dan Rule said his company will provide the region mobile broadband service before the end of the year. The CPUC estimates that nearly 2,000 California communities that are currently unserved and underserved by broadband. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 16 July 2009 00:35

Mike & Wendy Franchon

slide3.pngAmador County – A fire Saturday morning took the home and many belongings of the Frachon family of Pioneer. But Wendy Frachon said she was still happy. She said: “I’ve just been rejoicing. There’s sadness, but there’s no loss whatsoever because we all made it out.” She and her husband Michael, and their boys, Adam, 12, and Jacob, 6, all escaped the fire, with her grandson, and her daughter, Kylene. But they lost all of their furniture and many of their clothes and their rental home on Silver Drive was a total loss. Saturday the American Red Cross gave them a credit card to put clothes on their backs, to replace pajamas. At Jackson Lodge Wednesday, Wendy said she washed saved some clothes. And friends and strangers alike have offered much help. They said Cindy Turner was Number One on the long list of people they wanted to thank. That includes Amador Fire Protection District Battalion 10, of Pioneer and Kirkwood, where, Kylene worked as a volunteer. Wendy said “it was a nice personal touch having” Battalion 10’s Chief Ray Blankenheim and the crew there during the fire. She said: “You don’t feel so alone.” The family, and some adult house guests, just stood and stared at the fire. She said “it was all just so surreal.” Wendy said the fire started in a smoking area on the front porch, where a saved cigarette smoldered in a planter, then ignited the house’s siding. Kylene noticed the smoke and woke Michael, who went through bedrooms, yelling “fire.” Wendy said flames were shooting around the steel front door, which glowed beet red from the heat. They made it out through the garage, and she later saw that the only thing holding up the garage ceiling was the frame of the garage opener. Family friend Robert Jarrell arrived to help with two big trucks and trailers, to help load up the items they could save. Wendy said they lost all beds and furniture to water and smoke damage. They saved TVs, and old, irreplaceable photos. Mike said they also saved a refrigerator full of food. Jarrell started a relief fund for donations to be made, by donating the first $200 dollars at Wells Fargo. To donate, call Wells Fargo’s Lisa Jabs at 223-0113 and mention the Frachon Family Fire Victims fund. Wendy said the funding will help the family get into a new home. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.