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Wednesday, 05 August 2009 00:51

Sutter Creek City Council

slide1.pngAmador County – Facing a $200,000 budget deficit, Sutter Creek City Council avoided declaring an impasse Monday in negotiations with 2 unions. Instead, the finance committee will resume talks with the Sutter Creek Police Officers Association, and the Service Employees International Union. Mayor Gary Wooten said the city is “looking at a 10 percent cut for employee costs” and “eliminating some management positions.” SEIU Local 1021 Representative Mike Fouch said “we are prepared at this time to go back to the table.” Wooten agreed to meet with Fouch Tuesday, while the committee will meet with POA August 12th. Councilman Pat Crosby said: “I don’t see how Sutter Creek is going to move forward unless we drastically reduce our number of employees.” He said “indirect labor costs are running at 125 percent.” Crosby said: “We don’t know what we are doing here. As far as I’m concerned, it’s time to start over.” Crosby said they should give “termination notices” to all city employees, then “start from scratch.” He said: “We’ve got to cut our labor in half. I see no other way to balance our budget.” Wooten disagreed, saying if the budget balances this year, it will help next year. Wooten said they need to negotiate a fair agreement with unions. Crosby said “you’re talking about $600,000 in 2 years,” another $400,000 next year, “puts us at a million bucks.” Crosby made a motion to terminate all city employee contracts. A man in the audience then said: “I make a motion to kick his ass.” Wooten said the item was for discussion only and no action. The room was filled with city employees including maintenance, city hall and police. City Clerk Judy Allen, her voice breaking, said “Sutter Creek is the only city that doesn’t have a full time city clerk” and it needs one. She said Natalie Doyle “is kept busy doing my job,” and she couldn’t “believe you have Natalie’s job as one to be eliminated.” City Clerks from Jackson, Giselle Cangelosi, and Ione’s Janice Traverso, both urged the council to make it a full-time post. Wooten said Sutter Creek police were probably among the lowest paid in California, but like he did when a policeman, “they took an oath to lay down their lives rather than sway form the path of duty.” Councilwoman Sandy Anderson said city employees “are not over-benefitted.” She said “we need to make cuts and we will make the cuts to make the city solvent.” Wooten said: “I’m going to shut this down. It’s very stressful, very emotional, and it affects everyone in this room.” Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Wednesday, 05 August 2009 00:48

Buena Vista Rancheria

slide2.pngBuena Vista – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is issuing a proposed notice today that could permit the Buena Vista Rancheria casino near Ione to discharge treated effluent into an unnamed tributary of Jackson Creek. The EPA announcement marks the beginning of a public comment period between August 5 and September 4. The notice of action under the Clean Water Act would allow the issuance of a Proposed National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit, or NPDES. With the construction of a new $150 million casino in Amador County growing more and more likely, the tribe is pursuing all permits necessary. The associated wastewater treatment plant would accommodate an annual average flow between 100,000 and 200,000 gallons per day, depending on the day of the week. Jackson Creek subsequently flows into Dry Creek and to the lower Mokelumne River. The permitting process stretches back to early 2006, when the EPA received comments on the matter from approximately 30 parties at a public hearing in Ione. Since the initial public notice, the tribe has completed all the necessary legal requirements, including the completion of a final Tribal Environmental Impact Report. Tribal Administrator Paul Tupaz, speaking on behalf of the Buena Vista Rancheria of Me-Wuk Indians, issued no comment on the NPDES. The construction of the casino remains a contentious issue in Amador County. The Amador County Board of Supervisors has consistently opposed any Indian gaming expansion in Amador County - and specifically oppose the establishment of the Buena Vista Casino near Ione. To submit public comments on the NPDES, or to obtain information including a copy of proposed permit and administrative records, contact John Tinger of the EPA at (415) 420-2217 or email him at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Wednesday, 05 August 2009 00:41

California's Prisons

slide3.pngSacramento – Three judges ordered Tuesday the release of nearly 43,000 prisoners in California over the next two years, citing a violation of inmates’ constitutional rights. The 185-page opinion handed down by a federal court panel followed up on a tentative ruling that found overcrowded prisons to be the primary cause of health care issues in California prisons. The ruling comes on the heels of multiple legislative proposals in order to help close the state’s 26.3 billion budget deficit. Governor Schwarzenegger has been a leading advocate for a reduction. In late July, California lawmakers passed $1.2 billion in cuts to the state prison system that envisioned some early releases of inmates. The judges also accused the state of fostering “criminogenic” conditions and feeding a cycle of recidivism. The panel gave state officials 45 days to submit a plan that would lower the population of the state’s 33 prisons from 150,000 to 110,000 within the next two years. The court said this could be achieved by increasing reductions for good behavior and ending the process of automatically returning parolees to prison for minor parole violations. California’s prisons are designed to hold up to 84,000 inmates, now house 158,000. Many prisons have been forced to construct makeshift facilities in gymnasiums and cafeterias in order to house the extra inmates. California Attorney General Jerry Brown has spoken out against the latest ruling as a federal intrusion into state affairs, and is expected to appeal Tuesday’s ruling. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Wednesday, 05 August 2009 00:39

Congressman Dan Lungren

slide4.pngPlymouth – Congressman Dan Lungren focused on health care and Capitol Hill battles over health care reform in a speech before the Plymouth Rotary Club Tuesday morning at the 49er RV Village in Plymouth. “A government system would ration health care,” said Lungren, standing before an audience of approximately 30 Rotarians. “We’re already $1 trillion in debt, and I don’t see how we can take on another trillion-dollar program,” he said. A number of Rotarians were in attendance, including individuals from the Amador Water Agency, the Ione Band of Miwok Indians, the Plymouth City Council and the Amador City Council. Audience members stood and applauded at the start and conclusion of Lungren’s nearly hour-long speech. He said “health care could mean more to the United States than any other single issue today.” He criticized President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Democrats for trying to push through a health package that will require more government oversight and spending. He called Joe Biden “an interesting guy you’d like to watch a football game with, but by half-time you’d be telling him to shut up.” Marilyn Hoopes, a resident of Sutter Creek, said her rates as a small employer have gone up 50 percent and asked if it isn’t better to have some sort of government competition. She also said she is happy with the Medicare system. Lungren said Medicare is going to go broke by 2040. “My fear is that if we go in the other direction, Medicare will break us,” he said. He said “I will never give up on this country, but I do give up on some of the people who say we can do things (the same old way.)” Lungren ended his speech by quoting French theorist and economist Frederic Bastiat, who said: “The state is the great fictitious entity by which everyone seeks to live at the expense of everyone else.” Lungren represents California’s 3rd District, which includes Amador County. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Wednesday, 05 August 2009 00:34

H1N1 Global Pandemic

slide5.pngSutter Creek - Amador County Health Officer Robert Hartmann released a brief Tuesday afternoon cautioning residents to “expect a significant increase in the number of Novel H1N1 cases in the United States in the fall.” The most recent strain of H1N1, commonly known as swine flu, was first reported in Mexico earlier this year. The US now has 37,000 documented cases and 211 documented deaths from H1N1. One case of the virus was discovered in an Amador County man who returned from Mexico in mid-April, but Amador County Health Officer Dr. Robert Hartmann assured that that case was mild and the man recovered to full health without any spread of the illness. On June 11, the World Health Organization raised the worldwide Pandemic Influenza Alert Level to Phase Six, the highest such designation for a flu outbreak. Hartmann said “heavy case counts are present in the southern hemisphere of the world.” He said Amador County Public Health is collaborating with local partners to prepare for Fall 2009 flu season. The partners are the Amador County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services, Sutter Amador Hospital, Department of Corrections, and Amador County Unified School District. He also said seasonal flu vaccinations will occur earlier this year. Vaccinations will be available in doctor’s offices by early September. Upcoming flu vaccine clinics will be offered by the Public Health Department. Hartmann said previously at a Board of Supervisors meeting that the Health Department’s goal is to be “first, fast and accurate” in relaying health information to the public and gaining the public’s trust. Amador County Public Health Director Angel LaSage said the county is utilizing a recent $150,000 state grant to prepare for the future by purchasing pharmaceutical type refrigerators and staying abreast of new science and information. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 30 July 2009 00:25

Plymouth City Council

slide1.pngAmador County – The Plymouth City Council last week approved a $1,500 dollar reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or people who vandalized the city’s water storage tank. The main water storage tank holds the city’s potable water after it is treated at the city plant. The reward was approved by the council Thursday. The city’s maintenance staff found bullet holes in the tank last week, and found shell-casings on Fiddletown Road after that. The tank has since been repaired. Also last Thursday, Plymouth City Manager Dixon Flynn said state funding to remodel Lodge Hill has become available to the city, in a reimbursement format. Flynn told the Plymouth City Council last Thursday that the state had notified his office and told him the funds are there. Flynn said a state official told him that “about 3 weeks ago, they made the money available.” The official said “if we mail an “invoice to her, she will get us immediate reimbursement.” City Finance Director Jeff Gardner said the funds totaled $220,000 dollars, in Proposition 40 funding, for the purpose of remodeling the main level of the old Lodge Hill. Flynn told the council: “I’ve instructed Terry (Cox, city grant writer) and Roark (Weber, city engineer) to get an invoice together so we can get some money up front. This money is already set aside and they’ve assured me they have the money for us to move forward.” Flynn said the state water board “wanted a cultural resource analysis,” to look for the presence of American Indian significance and impact, before proposed repairs at the city water treatment plant. He said the cost is $4,000 dollars, and the amount of studies “they have had to do to get this done has been unreal.” He said they were requirements to get $1.8 million dollars in funding for the treatment plant work, and the city should learn by the end of August if it gets the money. Councilman Mike O’Meara said the city has water flowing into town and the Amador County Fair Grounds through the Arroyo Ditch. Said water was being used to green-up the fairgrounds. O’Meara said: “We’ve got a lot of water running down there. At least someone is really green. It looks really nice.” Meanwhile at the other end of the county, Thursday morning, Amador Water Agency contractors and workers were laying pipe perpendicular to Ridge Road, across the road from the Tanner Water Treatment Plant. The potable water line is expected to be online in the fall. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 30 July 2009 00:22

Jackson City Council

slide2.pngAmador County – The Jackson City Council on Monday heard a request from homeowners in Rollingwood Estates mobile Home Park to extend or delete the existing rent control ordinance. According to a letter submitted by park residents Shirley Dajnowski and Dennis Hern, “homeowners in Rollingwood were being subjected to exorbitant rent increases and realized if this continued without some form of control we would lose our homes.” For the past decade, the rent control ordinance has been based on the latest Consumer Price Index using the San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose All Urban Consumer index. The City of Jackson would then review the rent adjustment calculations for accuracy and send an approval letter to the park manager. Tenants on leases negotiate their agreements independently. Highlands Mobile Home Park in Jackson falls under the same regulations. One question that arose is whether these rent control laws apply to 60 units added to the park during the past seven years. City Manager Mike Daly said the City of Jackson is bound by the California Mobilehome Residency Law in the California Civil Code that exempts rent control from being applied to any new construction after January 1, 1990. Dajnowski and Hern said “mobile homes have always been considered ‘affordable’ housing. Without rent control, ‘affordable’ is a meaningless word.” They referred to the current park owner as “fair and just”, but “ should he be unable to continue as the park owner either by choice or circumstance, we could wind up paying whatever the new owner would charge, if we do not have rent control protection.” The original ordinance had a “repealer” section extending rent control to July 12, 2010. Rollingwood homeowners presented the city council with a petition to either delete the repealer section or extend the ordinance for an additional ten years. Daly said park owners would have the opportunity to comment should the City Council direct staff to bring forth an ordinance to amend the “repealer” section. The City Council decided upon a public hearing to be held August 24th at 7 pm to allow residents to comment. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 30 July 2009 00:19

Amador County

slide3.pngAmador County – The Amador County Planning Department will host a public scoping session in 2 weeks to take staff reports and public comment on the county’s General Plan Update and 8 of its 9 elements. County Planner Susan Grijalva in a release Wednesday announced a Notice of Preparation and Notice of Public Scoping Meeting August 13th. The public Scoping Meeting will be held at a joint meeting of the Amador County Board of Supervisors and Planning Commission to identify the scope of the Program Environmental Impact Report to be prepared for the adoption and implementation of the County’s General Plan Update. Grijalva said the Draft General Plan will consist of 9 elements, or chapters, that together meet state requirements for a general plan. The elements are: land use, circulation, economic development, conservation, open space, noise, governance, safety, and housing. The Draft General Plan will also include an introduction chapter and a glossary. Grijalva said “the Housing Element will not be considered in this EIR as it is proceeding on a separate timeline from the balance of the Draft General Plan Update.” Therefore, the “county will complete a separate environmental review process for the Housing Element Update.” The Draft General Plan represents the county’s policy for determining the appropriate physical development and character of Amador county, and establishes an overall future development capacity. Grijalva said the “environmental impact analysis in the Program EIR will be based on the change between existing conditions and those associated with likely development in accordance with the Draft General Plan by 2030, as well as at theoretical build out.” The Scoping Meeting is scheduled for 2 sessions, Thursday, August 13th. The 2 p.m. session begins with comments from public agencies, followed by public comment. “The 6 p.m. session will be a continuation of public comment though any agency may appear at that time as well.” Grijalva said “It is not necessary to attend both sessions.” Written comments may be submitted through the close of the “Notice of Preparation” period, ending 5 p.m. Monday, August 31st. Information pertinent to the meeting can be found at the planning department’s web pages at www.co.amador.ca.us, including Preliminary Goals and Policies, and a Draft Land Use Map. Copies of the Notice of Preparation are also available for viewing at the Amador County Library in Jackson and at the Planning Department office. The meeting will be held in supervisors’ chambers, 810 Court Street, in Jackson. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 30 July 2009 00:17

Amador Regional Planning

slide4.pngAmador County – The Amador Regional Planning Committee agenda next week includes “future agenda items.” The regional planning committee meets 7 p.m. Wednesday, August 5th at the Sutter Creek civic building on Church Street, and will get a report from Sutter Creek on its wastewater plant and operations. The agenda includes discussion and possible action on all items listed. The only item listed under the agenda was a presentation by the city of Sutter Creek on the Amador Regional Sanitation Authority Master Plan. Three issues were listed under future agenda items. They include: Recirculation of an updated MOU; presentations on General Plan updates and “current and proposed wastewater treatment and recycled water distribution facilities and programs.” They will also see a “draft of a program document supporting the sharing of revenues from major new and relocated commercial developments, and establishing a system to share personnel and material resources between jurisdictions.” Dates for those agenda items were not yet listed. Regional Planning Committee members are Sutter Creek Mayor Pro Tempore Tim Murphy, Jackson Mayor Connie Gonsalves, Amador County Supervisor Chairman Ted Novelli (District 1), Amador Supervisor Brian Oneto (District 5), Ione Councilwoman Andrea Bonham, Plymouth Councilwoman Pat Fordyce, and public member at large Renee Chapman. The meetings are open to the public. Story by Jim Reece This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Thursday, 30 July 2009 00:12

Veterans Donation

slide5.pngAmador County – The Jackson Rancheria and Hotel recently donated $2,100 in proceeds from the Divine Affairs Wine Tasting event to the American Legion Post 108. “We’re not usually the recipient of a donation. In fact, we’re usually on the giving side of things,” said Al Lennox, President and Chief Executive of post 108, located in Martell. Lennox said the Rancheria contacted his group and asked if they had any special services they could provide utilizing a donation. “The funds are earmarked for veterans and families in need in our area,” said Lennox, adding: “Basically, “if veterans express that they need help, whether it be a $200 donation or $1000 donation, we’ll be there.” The award was presented to Lennox in late May by Jackson Rancheria Special Events Director Ron Olivero. The 1,400 member Sutter Creek Post supports both local and national veterans as well as being very active in the community. They provide ambulance service to both Amador and Calaveras counties, and support a Scout Troop, two baseball teams, and numerous other youth programs. Olivero and the Jackson Rancheria said they are proud to support American Legion Post 108. Story by Alex Lane This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.