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Mosquito that can carry yellow fever detected in San Jacinto

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An invasive mosquito that has the potential to carry yellow fever and other diseases has been detected in San Jacinto, one of 35 California cities where it has been located, according to a Riverside County press release.

A resident in south San Jacinto brought an adult mosquito to the Riverside County Vector Control program staff last week. Because the mosquito appeared to be an Aedes aegypti mosquito, traps were set in the area and eight more adult mosquitoes and several larvae were collected.

County staff and the California Department of Public Health were able to positively identify them as Aedes aegypti, which is not native to California.

The black-and-white mosquito prefers to feed on humans during the daytime and can transmit dengue and Chikungunya viruses. While there is no indication the viruses currently are transmitted by mosquitoes in California, there is potential for the viruses to be introduced by infected international travelers who return home, potentially to become sources for local transmission.

The Aedes aegypti mosquito is different from native California mosquitoes. It lays eggs just above the water surface in small containers, such as flower pots, pet bowls, discarded tires and bird baths. Because these mosquitoes can breed in amounts of water as small as a bottle cap, residents are reminded to eliminate all standing water on their property. The species’ eggs can survive on surfaces even after water has been drained, so residents should drain all stagnant water and then scrub all items that contained the water.

The vector control staff will continue surveillance in areas surrounding the point where the mosquitoes were found. These efforts include door-to-door inspection of residential and commercial properties for mosquitoes and habitat.

Contact the Riverside County Vector Control program at 951-766-9454 to report mosquito problems or report neglected pools or standing water as potential mosquito sources. Visit the department online www.rivcoeh.org/Programs/vector for more information.

5 perihal yg mesti KALIAN HINDARI waktu main POKERQQ ONLINE

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Sekilas seandainya bicara soal permainan judi pokerqq online, bisa jadi kamu yg sempat coba main-main pasti telah paham bagaimanakah trik mendapati kemenangan tiap-tiap harinya dgn duduk dimeja judi pokerqq. Nah kepada peluang yg indah ini, kami dapat sharing info menarik yg wajib buat kamu ketahui yang merupakan penggemar permainan pokerqq. Bukan soal menang & kalah dalam main tapi sekian banyak aspek mutlak yg mesti kamu pahami maka tak terjerumus ke dalam kekalahan terus-menerus. Sebelum kita masuk ke topik inti, bisa saja alangkah lebih baiknya kalau kamu menyimak kabar singkat di bawah ini.

Pokerqq adalah salah satu tipe permainan judi yg pass ternama sampai dikala ini, bahkan di Indonesia tidak sedikit sekali ditemukan penikmat pokerqq yg dapat mendatangkan kemenangan dalam jumlah agung. bila kamu tanya apa yg menyebabkan mereka sanggup menang tidak sedikit bukan dana gede jawabannya melainkan skill yg mesti dikuasai bersama amat sangat baik. maka sanggup diartikan kalau kamu mau meraih kemenangan agung, bukan soal dana yg mesti kamu siapkan namun skill & kapabilitas kamu dalam main pokerqq online. mencoba kamu simak sekian banyak aspek mutlak yg sebenarnya mesti kamu hindari diwaktu main-main pokerqq di bawah ini.
5 factor utama yg mesti Dihindari Pemain Pokerqq Online
Deposit jumlah akbar ( efek pun akbar )

umumnya sebagia penikmat permainan judi pokerqq online, player senantiasa deposit agung dgn angan-angan mampu memperoleh kemenangan yg tidak sedikit serasi bersama jumlah atau 2 kali lipat dari nilai deposit mereka. aspek semacam ini telah terpikirkan sebelum player deposit ke akun mereka, padahal bukan jadi jaminan 100�hwa bersama deposit dalam jumlah gede pun bakal memperoleh kemenangan yg agung juga. satu orang pemain pokerqq profesional sanggup memenangkan tiap-tiap putaran cuma dgn bermodalkan insting & pengalaman bukan dikarenakan jumlah deposit yg besar.

memakai Insting ( tak tepat buat PEMULA )

Berikutnya poin utama yg mesti kamu tonton disaat main-main judi pokerqq online merupakan menyangkut insting yg kadang tak tepat dgn yg kita harapakan. seluruh player pasti mempunyai maksud yg sama diwaktu main-main judi online merupakan kemenangan, tetapi tiap-tiap kali mengandalkan insting senantiasa tak serasi & mogok bersama kekalahan. Bagi kamu seseorang pemula janganlah sekali-sekali mengandalkan insting & lebih baik pakai pengalaman & analisa yg jauh lebih baik. kebanyakan pemakaian insting cuma husus utk kamu yg telah paham betul seperti apa main-main judi pokerqq di internet.

janganlah enteng Terkecoh

seterusnya point ke3 saat kamu sedang main-main pokerqq online, sehingga lebih baik main dgn hati-hati & pikiran yg kalem. lantaran waktu kamu main dengan cara emosi sehingga gede mungkin saja cuma dapat mendapati kekalahan konsisten menerus. bisa jadi kamu sempat menyaksikan ada player yg main dgn kiat mengecoh, mereka main bersama mengukuti tiap-tiap taruhan yg di pasang & kala penutupan card ke 5 all in. inilah yg namanya permainan yg enteng mengecoh lawan.

pilih Meja 8 Orang

memang lah benar disaat main di meja 8 orang peluang utk mendapatkan jackpot jauh lebih gede di bandingkan main-main di meja 4 – 6 orang. tetapi elemen utama yg mesti kamu ketahui bahwa peluang buat mendapatkan card keren serta mungil peluangnya, buat itu mencoba pelajari apalagi dulu main-main di meja 6 orang – 8 orang, mana yg kamu rasa mampu memberikan keuntungan.

tak Tahu system Permainan Pokerqq

kepada point akhir ini mungkin saja kamu mesti banyak-banyak lagi menuntut ilmu menguasai system permainan pokerqq supaya lebih gampang mendapatkan kemenangan.
begitu info berkenaan 5 perihal mutlak yg mesti di hindari oleh para penggemar pokerqq online. mudah-mudahan berita ini sanggup berguna utk kamu & kita seluruh. Terimakasih.

County seeks CSA 36 Advisory Council members: Will give recreation users a forum to review finances and policies

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Verne Lauritzen, 3rd District Supervisor Chuck Washington’s chief of staff, confirmed that Washington has decided to reconstitute the County Service Area 36 Advisory Council (Idyllwild). The council, which operates to inform the supervisor on specific matters, has been at the point of dying without regular meetings.

By reconstituting the council, residents of CSA 36 will have a forum for reviewing finances and policies for local recreation and street lights. In the past, CSA 36 Advisory Council meetings required county representatives to give regular financial reports and provide information about local recreation programs and policies. CSA 36 recreation and street lights are funded by property tax levies on residents within the district.

The council is not a policy-making organization. It exists to advise the supervisor and act as his eyes and ears in the community regarding the matters within the committee’s purview, in this case, recreation and street lights.

In the recent absence of council meetings, residents have complained they lack information about recreation finances, programs, staffing and overall handling of recreation within the district. This has been complicated, residents have said, by a transfer of recreation management from the Economic Development Agency to County Parks and Open Space. Residents fault Town Hall staff turnover and management’s lack of familiarity with the community’s recreation needs and desires as reasons for recent missteps in delivery of recreation services. With a reconstituted council, residents will have a public forum to question county representatives and discuss community recreation needs.

The council has five seats available. Interested residents should contact Opal Hellweg at 951-955-1030. Applicants should either reside in or own businesses within the district. Initial terms are for two years. Applications will be accepted through Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2015.

Tax bill clarification

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Pam Elias, Riverside County Office of Auditor/Controller property tax division chief, spoke to CSA 36 residents’ concerns over mistakes in a recent property tax billing.

District residents recently received a corrected tax bill with the right CSA 36 line item billing for lighting, parks and recreation.

An initial tax bill contained an incorrect line item for “CSA 27 lighting.” CSA 27 is in Cherry Valley.

Readers have asked about payment of their tax bill prior to the reissuance of the corrected bill. Elias stated funds would still go to CSA 36, even if the tax bill was paid prior to reissuance of the corrected version. “The description [on the first tax bill] was wrong,” said Elias. “Payment will still go to the right district. The district number [which did not show on the first tax bill] was correct even though the description [CSA 27] was not. CSA district numbers do not appear on residents’ tax bills.”

CSA 36 covers recreation and street lamps in Idyllwild only.

Forest Service still requiring Adventure Passes to park at Humber Park

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This sign is posted before the entrance to the parking lot at Humber Park.Photo by Jack Clark
This sign is posted before the entrance to the parking lot at Humber Park. Photo by Jack Clark

Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of articles regarding the U.S. Forest Service’s Adventure Pass and where and when it is required to be purchased and displayed.

The U.S. Forest Service says it still requires cars parked at Humber Park to display an Adventure Pass or equivalent pass. This, despite a February 2012 ruling from the federal 9th Circuit Court of Appeals (which includes California) and an April 2014 ruling from U.S. District Judge Terry J. Hatter Jr., Central District of California (which includes the San Bernardino National Forest), both rulings to the effect that the Forest Service may not charge a fee for parking without using facilities or services at a park.

The court rulings did not “outlaw” Adventure Passes; they are still required of persons who use facilities and services in Humber Park. But persons who only park their cars to go sightseeing, including hiking (applicable to both the Ernie Maxwell or Devil’s Slide Trails), or who engage in roadside or trailside picnicking, are not required to obtain Adventure Passes, ruled the courts.

The courts’ rulings are based on findings that the Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act specifically prohibits the Forest Service from charging fees
“[s]olely for parking, undesignated parking, or picnicking along roads or trailsides,” or for hiking through a park “without using facilities and services.” (16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1)(A), (D) & (E).)

The 9th Circuit held, “It is clear that the Forest Service cannot charge a fee from someone who does nothing other than park. … [¶] It is equally clear that the REA prohibits the Forest Service from charging standard amenity recreation fees for each of several activities in which … [persons] participate after they park: hiking without using facilities and services, picnicking on a road or trailside, or camping at a site that does not have a majority of the nine enumerated amenities.” (Adams v. United States Forest Service (2012) 671 F.3d 1138, 1145.)

Judge Hatter relied upon the REA and the Adams decision in his similar ruling in Fragosa v. U.S. Forest Service, which ruling applies to the San Bernardino National Forest.

Yet three years after the 9th Circuit’s ruling in Adams and a year and a half after Judge Hatter’s ruling in Fragosa, the Forest Service still maintains signage at Humber Park informing motorists that “parked vehicles must display a forest Adventure Pass” or an equivalent pass. [For example, the Forest Service’s Interagency Senior Pass (for sale to anyone age 62 or over for the lifetime fee of $10) may be displayed on a vehicle’s dashboard in lieu of an Adventure Pass.]

This writer has witnessed personnel at the Idyllwild office of the U.S. Forest Service informing visitors that they will need to purchase and display an Adventure Pass if they park at Humber Park just to hike the Devil’s Slide or Ernie Maxwell trails. They then sold Adventure Passes to those visitors.

Adding to the confusion, the 20-page San Bernardino National Forest Visitor Guide for 2014-15, which is currently being distributed at the Idyllwild Forest Service office, states on page 18 that an Adventure Pass is required when a vehicle is parked in certain “Designated Sites,” which, it says, are specifically listed in a box on the same page. But Humber Park is not so listed. Further, page 18 of that same publication also states that an Adventure Pass is not required for “incidental activities” such as stopping to take a photograph, visiting a developed overlook or — [oddly enough] — “using a restroom.”

But the Town Crier was informed by David Cruz, customer service representative at the San Bernardino offices of the Forest Service, that an Adventure Pass is required just to park at Humber Park. He asserted that the court rulings referred to above do not hold otherwise.

In an effort to understand this situation, the Town Crier contacted attorney Matt Kenna of Public Interest Environmental Law in Durango, Colorado. Kenna was the lead attorney representing the plaintiffs in both the Adams case and the Fragosa case, referenced above. Kenna related that the Fragosa judgment in favor of the plaintiffs was appealed by the Forest Service and that the matter may now possibly settle on appeal.

Kenna stated that he was not at liberty to discuss the terms of the settlement, so he related nothing about it. [This writer’s best guess is that the parties may be reaching an agreement regarding detailed interpretations within the  confines of the Adams and Fragosa rulings as they apply to various situations persons may encounter at Forest Service-controlled facilities.]

The Town Crier will monitor this situation and report on further developments in future articles in this Adventure Pass series.

Fire & Forest: Lessons from 2015 fire season …

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At several of this summer’s larger vegetation fires, the Mountain Communities Fire Safe Council was represented. MCFSC Vice President Norm Walker was assigned as incident commander of So Cal Team 1, one of the Fire Management Teams are activated during major fires. Norm has had a 36-year career with the U.S. Forest Service as a fire officer, and continues to be part of their FMTs.

I asked him to offer some insight and comments on the fires with which he was involved this year. His observations of these fires’ behaviors and experiences during his presence there may give us some insight to what the potential for a fire in our forest could be.

The fires we experienced this summer were a reminder of how volatile vegetation can be in the western United States. Coupled with the ongoing drought, which leads to insect-caused tree mortality, the stage was set for a massive fire season. The only thing missing was an ignition source.

In late June, the Lake Fire broke out near Big Bear at about 7,000-foot elevation. Normally, a fire at that elevation and that early in fire season would be caught with the initial attack resources at 10 acres or less. However, the extremely low fuel moistures from the drought caused the fire to keep spotting out ahead of the firefighter’s hose lays and to expand rapidly through the understory and the timber.

A ridge coming off of San Gorgonio peak is called 10,000 Foot Ridge. At that elevation, the trees are small and sparse and, for the most part, there is little ground fuel. In the past, if a fire even made it up that high, it would go out by itself due to lack of ground fuel and the presence of snow (in June) on the north slopes. But not this year. The fire burned right through all of that, over the ridge and down toward the desert.

The good news on the Lake Fire was that it was the only major fire burning at the time and we were able to throw all the resources we wanted at it from the U.S. Forest Service, Cal Fire and local governments, so it was held to a reasonable size (about 24,000 acres.) with minimal structure loss compared to what was about to happen to California in August.

In August and early September, at least three major lightning storms moved through Central and Northern California. Burning conditions varied depending on wind and slope alignment, so some of the fires did benefit the environment. But many of them were very damaging and destroyed thousands of homes and hundreds of thousands of acres of standing timber.

A major difference between the Lake Fire and these fires was the lack of firefighting resources. Most agencies were tapped out by the third lightning storm, and many of the fires that had Incident Management Teams assigned to them had very few firefighting resources assigned. Most IMTs had between four and eight fires assigned to them and not only had to prioritize which fires to fight but what area of individual fires to fight due to lack of resources.

Homes and infrastructure were the priority and open forest was not. Some fires burning in wilderness areas were simply monitored with future plans made for when fire crews became available.

So this brings us to the point of fire abatement in communities. If there are a few fires burning in California, the chance of your home being protected by fire engines is pretty good. But when there is a siege going on, your home must stand on whatever abatement has been done prior to the fire.

It is one thing to pass your P.R.C. 4291 inspection in the spring; but it is another to keep up on that abatement throughout the year.

Once evacuation orders are in place, your  home’s ability to resist ignition is dependent upon what you did up until that time to keep grasses from growing back up to the structure and how well you managed the continuing pine-needle drop everywhere on your land.

Fire has no brain and no emotions. It is an exothermic reaction caused by the combination of fuel, heat and oxygen. We have ignitions every year and there is always oxygen, so the only thing under our control is fuel. We can remove fuel once a year to pass our fire inspection or we can be vigilant all year long, which may raise the odds in our favor.

As Santa Ana wind season approaches, please be vigilant. It’s the price we pay for the lifestyle we chose to live.

Don’t be scammed: Scammers claim to collect fines over the phone

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As the holiday seasons approach, the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department has issued a warning of continuing phone scams and frauds.

A notable and common scheme involves a caller who claims to be a member of law enforcement or an employee of the Riverside County court system. The victim is told he or she has a warrant for failing to appear for jury duty.

The caller demands payment for the warrant via credit card information or a Green Dot card. The suspect typically remains on the phone with the victim while he or she travels to the store to obtain the Green Dot card.

The suspect further instructs the victim not to tell anyone who they are talking with. After obtaining the serial numbers to the Green Dot cards, the money deposited to the card is immediately removed by the suspect.

The Sheriff’s Department urges vigilance and always to question unsolicited telephone calls from deceptive businesses, banking institutions, foreign countries, or government agencies where monetary promises or threats are implied or made directly.

No Riverside County Court or Sheriff’s Department employee will ever contact the public and ask for financial information or payment in lieu of attending court proceedings, or to make up for failure to appear for jury duty.

Other fraud schemes involve mortgage assistance, outstanding tax collection, foreign government assistance, and even promise to return lost money are impacting citizens throughout the county. These scammers almost always request money to be paid up front for illegitimate services, or the threat of arrest, eviction or property seizure is made.

For more information regarding other scams, visit www.riversidesheriff.org/crime/fraud.asp.

Readers Write: Wants more local control

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Editor:

It has been several years since the county of Riverside took over Town Hall. It is not being managed with much efficiency.

The first problem is the staff turnover. So many people have come and gone and I understand one of the biggest problems is the payment of wages. I have heard that the county still does not pay in a timely manner.

The front door has been broken for months. What does it take to fix a door? It can’t take more than a few hundred dollars and a few hours.

The Harvest Festival is next month. It would be nice to have the front door working.

They closed Town Hall for four days to fix the floor. In four days you would think they could have installed a new floor.That was not the case. They just repaired the cracks. They did not do a good job, because someone tripped on the crack. Again, what does it take to replace the floor?

The place is not very clean, especially the bathrooms.

It’s a sad commentary on what happens when we give up local control.

Susan Swanson  

Idyllwild

Readers Write: You don’t always get what you pay for

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Editor:

In the Oct. 22 edition of the Town Crier, there was a letter to the editor about the Idyllwild Fire Protection District which ended in the statement, “You get what you pay for.”

Well, when it comes to IFPD,  you don’t.

Pine Cove was finally able to get out from under a contract with IFPD for ambulance service.  The people of Pine Cove taxed themselves to pay IFPD for enhanced ambulance service.

IFPD said it had two or three vehicles to service this enhancement but it did not staff more than one.  An ambulance was supposed to arrive within 13 minutes of receiving a call but sometmes took longer, showed up with only the driver, and relied heavily on the paramedics at Cal Fire Station 23.

Then, to add insult to injury, by the time the fee from Pine Cove was up to $128,000, IFPD voted to charge Pine Cove residents an extra $300 for each call. Thanks to board member Pete Capparelli who listened to the outrage of  Pine Cove residents, the $300 was rescinded, but by then the damage was done.

Cal Fire has done a wonderful job in Pine Cove.  Their well-trained paramedics are always on duty.

American Medical Response took over the ambulance responsibilities earlier this year and charges Pine Cove the same it charges patients in all the other areas of Riverside County without gouging the residents for being “out of area.”

The Oct. 29 issue of the Town Crier had an article stating that IFPD is asking Idyllwild residents to tax themselves to keep IFPD afloat in a morass of accounting problems even the commissioners can’t explain.

Don’t do it.  Learn from what they did to your neighbors in Pine Cove.  We paid them more: they gave us less, and then added a surcharge.

Idyllwild, too, can have Cal Fire and AMR. County Fire Chief Hawkins said he could have Idyllwild covered within an hour of  Idyllwild residents demanding the better service provided by Cal Fire and AMR for the cost of your current county taxes. Even the IFPD unit fee of $65 to $265 on your property tax bill would go away.

Nancy Borchers

Pine Cove

Announcement: 60th Wedding Anniversary The Wilcoxes

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anniversary

Sunny and Bob Wilcox married Nov. 7, 1955, in Eugene, Oregon, where both attended high school and the University of Oregon.

After one college date, the couple married when Bob returned from U.S. Army duty in Korea.

One child, Elizabeth, died of cancer in 2009.

They continue to enjoy the social life at Shadow Mountain Golf Course in Palm Desert and at Royal Pines Mobile Home Park in Idyllwild.

s2Member®