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Steele to play the weekend at Quicken Loans

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Brendan Steele came back Friday with a 2-under-par 69 to shoot an even-par 142 on the Colonial Country Club course in Bethesda to make the 36-hole cut on the number. It was his 14th cut made in 18 events this season.

As usual, he gained strokes on the field tee-to-green, but gave back strokes with his putter. He sank two near 7-footers, but only one longer — an 11 foot, 6 incher at the 18th green, which he played in his first nine.

Brendan will be playing to climb the ladder Saturday and Sunday. He already has eight top-20 finishes in 17 tournaments this season. We’re guessing he will need perhaps a pair of 68s to accomplish his ninth top-20 this weekend.

B tees off Saturday morning at 5:13 PDT.

Jack can be reached at [email protected].

PHOTOS: This week in Idyllwild: June 23, 2016

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Soroptimist International of Idyllwild held an installation and awards dinner at Mountain Center Cafe on Wednesday, June 15. The new board of directors was installed and is pictured here. From left: Diana Kurr (corresponding secretary), Karen Doshier (director and outgoing president), Phyllis Curington-Brown (director), Suzi Schumacher (treasurer), Halie Wilson (recording secretary), Theresa Teel (president), Isabelle DuBois (Teel’s mother and former SI of Idyllwild club president) and Shelley McKay (vice president). Photo by Mary Morse
Soroptimist International of Idyllwild held an installation and awards dinner at Mountain Center Cafe on Wednesday, June 15. The new board of directors was installed and is pictured here. From left: Diana Kurr (corresponding secretary), Karen Doshier (director and outgoing president), Phyllis Curington-Brown (director), Suzi Schumacher (treasurer), Halie Wilson (recording secretary), Theresa Teel (president), Isabelle DuBois (Teel’s mother and former SI of Idyllwild club president) and Shelley McKay (vice president). Photo by Mary Morse

 

The Manzanita Moon Belly Dancers added some spice to Café Aroma dinners on Friday, June 17. Patrons enjoyed the fine dancing and elaborate costumes of (from left) Christina Nordella, Rachel Welch and Jessie Estrada. Photo by Tom Kluzak
The Manzanita Moon Belly Dancers added some spice to Café Aroma dinners on Friday, June 17. Patrons enjoyed the fine dancing and elaborate costumes of (from left) Christina Nordella, Rachel Welch and Jessie Estrada.
Photo by Tom Kluzak

 

The Arrangements played in Ferro’s outdoor seating area on Saturday evening, June 18. From left, Raoul Ranoa, Mark Cummings, Mike Gustin, Roger Tessier and Bob Richards put some rock on the menu for the large evening crowd. Photo by Tom Kluzak
The Arrangements played in Ferro’s outdoor seating area on Saturday evening, June 18. From left, Raoul Ranoa, Mark Cummings, Mike Gustin, Roger Tessier and Bob Richards put some rock on the menu for the large evening crowd.
Photo by Tom Kluzak

 

Town Crier food columnist Vic Sirkin (right) warmed the crowd at Higher Grounds Saturday when he joined Miles Thomas (left) in a tribute to Pedro Anderson, a weekly Higher Grounds musician, who died earlier this year. Photo by Peter Szabadi
Town Crier food columnist Vic Sirkin (right) warmed the crowd at Higher Grounds Saturday when he joined Miles Thomas (left) in a tribute to Pedro Anderson, a weekly Higher Grounds musician, who died earlier this year.
Photo by Peter Szabadi

 

Several hikers enjoyed the beauty and tranquility of Devil’s Slide Trail last week. Photo by Tom Pierce
Several hikers enjoyed the beauty and tranquility of Devil’s Slide Trail last week.
Photo by Tom Pierce

 

On Sunday, several local musicians, including Anne Finch (center), helped to celebrate Joni Carter’s birthday.Photo by Peter Szabadi
On Sunday, several local musicians, including Anne Finch (center), helped to celebrate Joni Carter’s birthday. Photo by Peter Szabadi

 

Outgoing president and pilot Chuck Weisbart (left) passes duties on to new president and captain of the ship Marc Kassouf (right) at the Idyllwild Rotary’s annual Out ’n’ In Dinner Wednesday, June 15. Members and guests filled the Mile High Café as Kassouf was presented with a personalized life vest to help him with the “sink or swim” orientation to his new position leading the Idyllwild Rotary Club. Photo by Tom Kluzak
Outgoing president and pilot Chuck Weisbart (left) passes duties on to new president and captain of the ship Marc Kassouf (right) at the Idyllwild Rotary’s annual Out ’n’ In Dinner Wednesday, June 15. Members and guests filled the Mile High Café as Kassouf was presented with a personalized life vest to help him with the “sink or swim” orientation to his new position leading the Idyllwild Rotary Club. Photo by Tom Kluzak

Former local fire chief to oversee national program

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Shawna Legarza, former fire chief for the San Bernardino National Forest, will be the next national director of Fire and Aviation Management for the U.S. Forest Service, Chief Tom Tidwell announced Friday, June 17.

Legarza, who serves as the regional director of Fire and Aviation in the Pacific Southwest Region, California, will take on the leadership role to help create resilient landscapes, fire-adapted communities, while putting safety and lives first in responding to wildland fire.

The Forest Service has managed wildland fire for more than 100 years. While fire is a natural process necessary for the maintenance of many ecosystems, in the past two decades, extreme wildfire behavior has escalated, accompanied by significant increases in risk to responders, citizens, homes and businesses, as well as suppression costs and threats to communities and ecosystems.

“I have great confidence in the experience and professionalism Shawna brings into this vital role at the U.S. Forest Service,” said Chief Tidwell. “Shawna’s leadership within the wildland fire community and the relationships she developed throughout her career make her the best fit for the job.”

From the SBNF, Legarza was appointed fire and aviation director of the Pacific Southwest Region (headquartered in Vallejo). Region 5 experiences one of the most active and severe wildland fire seasons in the country.

In her new role, Legarza will oversee the Forest Service’s fire and aviation management, wildland fire operations, including hazardous fuel reduction, and will advance efforts to create a culture of safety and improved decision-making for wildland fire suppression.

In the release, Legarza was quoted as saying, “I am excited for this new opportunity and look forward to the challenges the Forest Service and fire management face today in light of the growing length and severity of our fire seasons. I am honored to represent the U.S. Forest Service and lead the best wildland firefighting organization in the world. Thank you to those folks that have contributed to my career and educational experiences; I am very thankful.”

Legarza launched her federal career with the Bureau of Land Management in 1989 as an engine crew member in Elko, Nevada. A short time later, she joined the Forest Service and worked as a hotshot crew member in Carson City, Nevada, and a hotshot superintendent in Durango, Colorado. She subsequently took on a number of leadership positions in fire and aviation that include district fire management officer on the San Juan National Forest in Colorado before coming to the SBNF.

She has represented the Forest Service at the regional scale, serving on the California Governor’s Task Force on Climate Change, the California Wildfire Coordinating Group and FIRESCOPE.

In addition to her fire experience, she worked at the World Trade Center 9/11 recovery efforts, Hurricane Rita and the Greensburg Tornado, with significant contribution to agency leadership curriculums in fire management.

Legarza earned a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in kinesiology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and doctorate of psychology at the University of the Rockies, Colorado Springs, Colorado.  She replaces Tom Harbour who retired in January after a 46-year career with the Forest Service.

Fire and Aviation Director Patty Grantham, forest supervisor on the Klamath National Forest, will replace Legarza in Region 5. Grantham has worked on six national forests across the West and holds a bachelor’s degree in Forest Science from the University of Washington.

Past Tense: June 23, 2016

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Seven years in the planning, one week in the construction, or such is the story of Ernie Maxwell’s new, all-purpose studio on San Jacinto Road. Friends from the local art community gathered to share a potluck party in June 1973 and to offer a toast to the roof shielding Ernie’s head as he sculpted, threw and painted among the pines. File photo/norwood hazard
Seven years in the planning, one week in the construction, or such is the story of Ernie Maxwell’s new, all-purpose studio on San Jacinto Road. Friends from the local art community gathered to share a potluck party in June 1973 and to offer a toast to the roof shielding Ernie’s head as he sculpted, threw and painted among the pines.
File photo/norwood hazard

65 years ago - 1951

Rev. Donald Warner conducted the services at the official opening of the Idyllwild Community Presbyterian Church.

60 years ago - 1956

Customers at Dutton’s Village Market and Corner Store in Fern Valley could make their own ice cream float for 19 cents.

55 years ago - 1961

Pinecraft Furniture company offered 22 pieces of original home furnishings for $999. Pinecraft furniture is now highly collectible.

50 years ago - 1966

The Izaak Walton League, headed by Ernie Maxwell, held its first Woodsman’s Breakfast of the summer season. Of the breakfast, Maxwell wrote, “[It] is an outdoor event designed for informal enjoyment of the forest, touched with the flavor of steaming coffee and cooked bacon.”

45 years ago - 1971

Memorial services were held for Edith Elliott, who with her husband, Richard, started the Desert Sun School in 1930.

40 years ago - 1976

The governing board of the Hemet Unified School District rejected a request made by local residents to open a secondary school in the Idyllwild-Anza area.

35 years ago - 1981

A survey of local camps made by the Town Crier showed that more than 17,000 children and adults were expected to attend some kind of recreational camp in Idyllwild over the summer.

30 years ago - 1986

In hopes of curbing and offsetting the cost of  damage in the San Bernardino National Forest by off-road vehicles, the Izaak Walton League voted for support of a public users’ fee for national forests.

25 years ago - 1991

Local residents and visitors were enjoying good-old mountain fun at the Lions Club Timber Festival, and the Soroptimist Barn Dance.

20 years ago - 1996

The Ragsdale cabin, a colorful piece of Hill history that sat at the summit of Santa Rosa Mountain, burned down. The cabin was built in 1937 by Desert Steve Ragsdale, desert developer, pioneer and storyteller.

15 years ago - 2001

Ken Dahleen and several others were seeking donations for the second-annual free Summer Concert Series, which would have six concerts that year held in the parking lot of The Ice House (now the site of the Village Centre shopping plaza).

10 years ago - 2006 

Idyllwild lost its beloved Santa, Dale Spickler, who passed away at home at the age of 75. Spicker was active on many boards and in many organizations, but was perhaps most well-known for wearing full Santa Claus regalia that suited his long white hair and beard, and twinkly eyes.

5 years ago - 2011

Bill Lowman left Idyllwild Arts to retire after 25 years as both president and headmaster of the academy.

1 year ago - 2015

PGA Tour golfer Brendan Steele showed off his Idyllwild hometown to CBS for a nationally televised show, “Coming Home.”

Creature Corner: June 23, 2016

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Sally
Sally

Last week in “The Days of Our Nine Lives,” the topic of discussion centered around the new kittens and their impact on the ARF cattery.

Ginger: (Bursting into the cattery.) Did you hear? Half the kittens are gone!kitten 2

Leia: To forever families, I hope.

Ginger: Yep. Cocopuff, Snoopy and the polydactyl Charlee all have their own families.

Leia: So, that leaves Peppermint Patty, Lucy and Sally.

Bill
Bill

Bobbie: Thank good- ness. All of that kitten activity is too much for me.

Bill: Bobbie, don’t you mean with the kittens, all the attention isn’t on you?

Lucy
Lucy

Bobbie: Hey, the facts are the facts.

Peppermint Patty: (Cautiously en- tering the cattery.) Excuse me. Will any of you play with me?

Bobbie: Us? What about your sisters or Mom?

Peppermint Patty: They’re all napping. We play so much that we wear out!

Leia
Leia

Lucy: (Sneaking up behind Patty.) Hi! I’m Lucy. Are we playing in here?

Sally: (Pushing in between her sisters.) Me, too! I want to play, too!

Bobbie: (to Leia) Where’s their Mom?

Lucy: Mom is still napping. She said she needs a break. And I think she’s kind of missing our brothers and sister.

Leia: But she must be so happy knowing they are with forever families.

Sally: We all are. Hey, why are all of you here? Didn’t anyone want you when you were kittens?

Bill: Well Sally, we all came to ARF when we were adults. We’re usually the last to be adopted.

Sally: Why?

Bill: Good question. We older cats aren’t as crazy as you kids, and human visitors can really see our personalities and qualities. I just wish these humans would take a moment to meet us.

When will Prudence, the kittens’ mama, join the rest of the cattery? Be sure to keep up with the animal antics of “The Days of our Nine Lives” each week. And please stop in to say hello to the entire adoptable cast at the ARF House, 26890 Hwy. 243,  Saturdays 10-4 and Sundays 10-2, or by appointment M-F by calling 951-659-1122.

Creature Corner is sponsored by Coyote Red’s & Chena.

Obituary: Ernest J. Edwards 1925-2016

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obit-edwardsErnest J. Edwards, 91, of Coralville, Iowa, passed away Friday, June 4, 2016, of heart failure.

He was buried at Hendersonville Memory Gardens in Hendersonville, Tennessee, next to his wife, Shirley.

Ernie was born May 6, 1925, in Evanston, Wyoming, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois.

Ernie enlisted in the U.S. Navy at 18 years old and served 20 years as a Navy hospital corpsman.

After Navy life, Ernie and his family stayed in California and later moved to Idyllwild where they owned Edwards Village Realty. He and Shirley moved to Gallatin, Tennessee, in 2002 and in 2010, Ernie moved to Coralville, Iowa, to be near family.

Ernie is survived by his three daughters, Talia Adar, Gale (Gary) Dykes and Lynn Young, as well as a grandson, Brandon Young. He was preceded in death by his wife, Shirley Carey Edwards.

Bill to end Daylight Saving Time takes step forward

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Last week, a state Assembly committee passed Assembly Bill 385, which would allow state voters to decide whether to retain Daylight Saving Time.

The Senate Committee on Energy, Utilities and Communications voted 9-2 to send the bill to its Appropriations Committee.

If enacted and if voters rescind Daylight Saving Time, California will be the third state to choose to decline observation of the time change.

“Daylight Saving Time is an institution that has been in place largely without question for more than half a century,” Assemblymember Kansen Chu (D-San Jose), the bill’s author, said in press release. “I think we owe it to the general public to be given the opportunity to decide for themselves whether or not it ought to be continued.”

Chu argues, “In addition to the lack of dramatic energy savings, there are also several public health issues that arise out of DST. For example, the number of recorded heart attacks, industrial and workplace injuries, and traffic accidents and fatalities also increase in the days following the time change.”

In 1949, 55 percent of the state’s voters approved Proposition 12, which established Daylight Saving Time in California from the last Sunday in April until the last Sunday in September.

According to the committee’s report, The California Energy Commission researched DST and published a paper in 2007 that examined whether and how much the Policy Act of 2005 changed daily electricity. The extension of DST to March 2007 had little or no effect on energy consumption in California, according to a statistical analysis. The most likely approximation is a 0.2-percent decrease during these three weeks.

The intended benefits, besides energy savings, created from the later daylight in the evening from Daylight Saving Time was to provide a boost to tourism and shopping industries, the report stated.

News of Record: June 23, 2016

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Fire log

The Idyllwild Fire Station did not report responses for last week.

Sheriff’s log

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department Hemet Station responded to the following calls Sunday to Saturday, June 12 to 18.

Idyllwild

• June 12 — Suspicious circumstance, 52000 block of Double View Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 12 — Petty theft, Wildwood Dr. Unfounded.

• June 12 — Noise complaint, address undefined. Handled by deputy.

• June 12 — Harassing phone calls, address withheld. Handled by deputy.

• June 12 — Alarm call, Cassler Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 13 — Vandalism, address undefined. Handled by deputy.

• June 13 — Harassing phone calls, address withheld. Handled by deputy.

• June 14 — Alarm call, Crest Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Man down, 52000 block of Double View Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Suspicious vehicle, address undefined. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Assist other department, address undefined. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Public disturbance, 26000 block of Hwy. 243. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Public intoxication, address undefined. Arrest made.

• June 16 — Alarm call, Country Club Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 16 — Burglary, Rockdale Dr. Report taken.

• June 17 — Alarm call, Humber Rd. Handled by deputy.

• June 18 — Public disturbance, 54000 block of S. Circle Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 18 — Danger to self/other, Maranatha Dr. Report taken.

• June 18 — Public intoxication, address undefined. Handled by deputy.

• June 18 — Incorrigible minor, address withheld. Handled by deputy.

Mountain Center

• June 12 — Area check, McCall Park Rd. Handled by deputy.

• June 13 — Suspicious vehicle, Vista Way. Handled by deputy.

Pine Cove

• June 14 — Harassing phone calls, address withheld. Unfounded.

• June 15 — Vicious dog, Rockmere Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — 911 hang-up from cell phone, Rockmere Dr. Handled by deputy.

Pine Meadows

• June 15 — Alarm call, 59000 block of Hop Patch Spring Rd. Handled by deputy.

Poppet Flats

• June 12 — Runaway child, Keyes Rd. Report taken.

• June 13 — Follow-up, address withheld. Handled by deputy.

• June 14 — Follow-up, address withheld. Handled by deputy.

San Bernardino

National Forest

• June 13 — Petty theft, 56000 block of E. Hwy. 74. Unfounded.

• June 13 — Vehicle burglary, 56000 block of E. Hwy. 74. Handled by deputy.

• June 13 — Petty theft, 56000 block of E. Hwy. 74. Handled by deputy.

• June 15 — Alarm call, Robin Dr. Handled by deputy.

• June 17 — Public disturbance, 49000 block of E. Hwy. 74. Handled by deputy.

• June 18 — 911 call from coin phone, 56000 block of E. Hwy 74. Handled by deputy.

• June 18 — Vehicle theft, 56000 block of Hwy 74. Unfounded.

• June 18 — 911 hang up from cell phone. Handled by deputy.

Fire danger closes seven county areas

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On the recommendation of Cal Fire/Riverside County Deputy Fire Chief Glenn Patterson, the Board of Supervisors, at its June 21 meeting, approved the closure of seven potentially fire hazard areas.

The closures will remain in effect until further notice in the following areas:

• Avery Canyon (Gibbel Road east of State Street in Hemet)

• Minto (Sage)

• North Mountain and Indian Canyon (San Jacinto area)

• Nuevo/Lakeview (east of Menifee Road and San Jacinto Avenue)

• Ramona Bowl and Bautista Canyon (southeast Hemet)

• Whitewater Canyon (Cabazon, north of Palm Springs)

Riverside County Ordinance 7787 requires the Board of Supervisors to approve any closure that exceeds more than 15 days. The county fire chief considers the threat of large and damaging fires, cued to the continuing drought conditions, to justify these closures.

Ordinance 787.6 restricts public access to these identified hazardous fire areas unless private property access is required. Public roadway travel is permitted, providing travel is confined to those surfaces within hazardous fire areas. Violation of the order could result in a minimum fine of $100 for first-time offenses.

Maps for each of the affected areas may be located on the county fire department website at www.rvcfire.org.

For more information on the closure of these hazardous fire areas, contact the Cal Fire/RCFD Public Affairs Bureau at 951-940-6985.

Idyllwild Water adopts 2016-17 budget: Lower expenses mean more capital investment

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Last week, the Idyllwild Water District board adopted its fiscal year 2016-17 budget. The total budget (water and sewer programs) is expected to be $1.7 million, which is about $100,000 less than the current year. These amounts do not include capital program investments.

Revenues are estimated to be $2.3 million (the combination of both programs) compared to $2 million in the combined revenue budget for fiscal year 2015-16. However, actual revenue in the previous fiscal year was $2.3 million, according to the district’s audit.

“The district is in good financial shape based on your actions taken in previous years,” General Manager Tom Lynch told the directors.

IWD’s net operating margin would be about $550,000. The capital improvement program, which is estimated to require $800,000, will result in a combined net loss of about $260,000 for fiscal year 2016-17.

Capital investments are projected to be about $3.3 million. But federal and state grants and loans reduce IWD’s direct cost to about $800,000. The largest project will be completing plans and designs for the recycled water facility and, possibly the beginning of its construction. This project will cost nearly $2.1 million, all paid from grants and loans, according to Lynch.

At the urging of Director Steve Kunkle, the board added $100,000 for new well drilling next year. Also, Lynch had budgeted $225,000 for well rehabilitation to increase water supply.

The other major capital program is the planned pipeline replacement. Nearly a third of the total cost, $455,000, comes from a county grant.

While the dedicated reserve funds will decline from $650,000 to $390,000, IWD will still have about $2 million in other cash assets.

In water business, Lynch reported that the district is staying in Water Conservation Stage 2. Foster Lake remains empty, Lynch stated, and added that the groundwater level of several wells seems to be improving.

May’s water production was 6.4 million gallons, which was 112,000 gallons more than last May. Since January, production is 200,000 gallons less than the first five months of 2015.

May water revenues were $103,000, which is $7,300 more than the estimated budget and $12,000 more than May 2015, although production increased only 2 percent.

For the first 11 months of the fiscal year, production was 67.7 million gallons, which is about 10 percent less than the first 11 months of fiscal year 2014-15.

In other business, the district set July 20 as the date to hold a public hearing for its annual standby charges. These remain the same as last year, $30 per acre on unimproved property.

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