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Supervisors consider pay raises for county officials

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Raises for top Riverside County officials were on the agenda for the Board of Supervisors Aug. 5 meeting. The board considered increases for themselves as well as the other elected county officials — assessor/county clerk/recorder, auditor-controller, district attorney, sheriff/coroner and treasurer/tax collector.

State law authorizes each county’s supervisors to set their own compensation. The Riverside board members have received no increases since 2007. Their current annual salary is $143,031.

In 1998, a Blue Ribbon Salary Review Committee recommended that county supervisors’ salary be set at 80 percent of the salary for a state Superior Court judge. Judges have recently received 1.4-percent and 1.83-percent increases.

If approved, the Riverside supervisors’ salaries would increase $4,656 — to $147,688.

Elected officials would receive increases between 20 to 22 percent. The sheriff’s and district attorney’s annual salaries would increase by 22.33 percent to $273,000 annually from the current level of $223,200. Other elected officials would receive a 20.68 percent raise — to $200,000 annually. Their current salary is $166,700.

The new salaries would be effective Sept. 18. District Attorney Paul Zellerbach would enjoy only a few months of the raise before he leaves office in January for Michael Hestrin who won the June election.

 

Fire and Forest: Fire Adapted Communities …

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A fairly new term in wildfire policy is “Fire Adapted Communities.” Important fire organizations have placed a new emphasis on this concept over the last few years and I think it leads us all in the right direction regarding the challenge of wildfire.

To begin with, by referring to adaptation, the term leads us to think of natural systems, and of the challenges presented to life within any particular ecosystem. For example, all the life we see around us in these mountains has successfully adapted to long dry summers when water is scarce.

If we are also going to live here successfully, we also need to accept that fire is a natural feature of our ecosystem and has been for millennia.

So a Fire Adapted Community is one where everyone accepts that fire is a feature of their landscape. Consequently, the community as a whole takes regular and consistent action to prepare for its occurrence.

Preparation involves several features. Foremost among them is reducing fuel within and around the community. This fuel reduction involves both the actions of homeowners cleaning their properties of hazardous vegetation as well as the actions of land managers creating and maintaining fuelbreaks at key points around the community.

Hardening homes is another important aspect. If we accept fire as an inevitable landscape feature, it makes sense for us to build and retrofit homes and other buildings in the area to be made increasingly difficult to ignite.

Another characteristic of an FAC is the creation and implementation of a Community Wildfire Protection Plan. This plan is put together by multiple parties to provide an overall view of fire prevention work in and around the community, including fuel reduction priorities, and to keep track of specific projects aimed at reducing community risk. It is intended to be a collaborative effort from public and private organizations, as well as area residents.

For action in response to the inevitable fire, another aspect of an FAC is public awareness of the “Ready, Set, Go” program. This program encourages residents to prepare their properties through abatement and ignition resistance, to prepare an evacuation plan by thinking about what one would take, and to be ready to leave immediately if an evacuation order is given.

I am very pleased to note that our mountain community has taken action in all these areas. The land management agencies, the U.S. Forest Service, Cal Fire and the Bureau of Land Management have long been active in creating and maintaining fuelbreaks.

The Mountain Communities Fire Safe Council has been assisting homeowners with education and grant funds for abatement for a decade as well. Recently, MCFSC began implementing the first hardening grant on the mountain, assisting homeowners in replacing vulnerable wooden roofs with Class A fire-resistant shingles and ember-resistant vents.

Our mountain also developed its own CWPP several years ago, and participating groups are now engaged in updating the plan. We should have an accurate and useful update by the holidays.

The essential systems theme that underlies the idea of the Fire Adapted Community is all based on the need for effective collaboration among all key stakeholders in the community. This idea is represented here by the Mountain Area Safety Task Force, which has been and continues to be an effective collaborative group. People who attend MAST understand that successful adaptation to fire involves just about everybody.

Motorcycle crash on Highway 243

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According to CHP Officer Mike Murawski, Peter Jackson, 72, of Rancho Mirage crashed his rented red Ducati motorcycle at about 11:10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 8, on Highway 243 near Black Mountain Trail. Jackson was traveling southbound when he hit gravel and lost control. Jackson skid across the highway coming to rest in the northbound lane. Jackson was transported by Idyllwild Fire with road rash to both knees, hands and his right shoulder to Desert Regional Medical Center. Photo by Jenny Kirchner

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Readers write: Faith in IFPD …

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Editor:

I recently had a medical emergency at the end of July.

I had fainted and the Idyllwild Fire Department was called.

With a quick response and a right decision made, a life-changing event came out on the right side for me. I just want people to have faith in our department.

Irene Ledbetter
Fern Valley

 

Mountain Folk: University Graduate and Honors

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Prema Laurence of Idyllwild has received his/her bachelor’s of science degree in business management from Western Governors University. The university held its 27th semi-annual commencement  ceremony in Salt Lake City on July 12 and celebrated the graduation of  more than 5,500 graduates.

Graduates reside  in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, as well as overseas in the Armed Forces.

Under Secretary of Education Ted Mitchell delivered the commencement  address. Students not able to attend the ceremony in were able to watch the event via live video stream on the WGU website.

Western Governors University is the only university in the U.S. offering  accredited, competency-based bachelor’s and master’s degree programs at  scale. Founded in 1997 by 19 U.S. governors, WGU has grown to become a  national university with more than 46,000 students and 33,000 graduates in all 50 states.

Recognized by President Obama as an innovative university  that “awards credits based on learning, not seat time,” WGU has been named  one of  Fast Company’s “Most Innovative Companies for 2013,” and has been featured on NPR’s “All Things Considered,” The NBC Nightly News with Brian  Williams, CNN’s “Schools of Thought,” and The New York Times …

 

Erec VonSeggern, son of Paul and Merrie VonSeggern of Idyllwild, has been named to the 2014 Lawrence University dean’s list for maintaining a 3.4 grade point average or higher for the full 2013-14 academic year. VonSeggern is a 2013 graduate of Hemet High School.

Founded in 1847, Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, integrates a college of liberal arts and sciences with a nationally recognized conservatory of music, both devoted exclusively to undergraduate education. It was selected for inclusion in the Fiske Guide to Colleges 2015 and the book “Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think About College.” Individualized learning, the development of multiple interests and community engagement are central to the Lawrence experience. Lawrence draws its 1,500 students from nearly every state and more than 50 countries.

 

Garcia and Stone battle for votes and dollars

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The June 3 primary election determined that Republicans Bonnie Garcia and Jeff Stone would be competing against each other to fill the vacant State Sen. District 28 seat.

If the primary race was an indication of the level of competition, summer and fall will see a major battle between these two candidates.

Entering the campaign, Garcia has $36,200 in cash available, slightly more than Stone’s $15,600. But fundraising for both candidates took a respite after the June 3 primary.

Since beginning the campaign, both candidates have received about the same amount of contributions. Stone’s total since 2013 is $436,700 and Garcia has collected $417,200. The competition for more funding will be intense over the final months.

Nearly 95 percent of contributions to Stone have come from California, including nearly $2,000 from Idyllwild residents. The largest amount from outside California is $9,200 from Arizona contributors.

About 87 percent of Garcia’s contributions are from California. The 12.5 percent from other states includes $13,200 from Phillips 66 and AFSCME in the District of Columbia, $12,100 from Tennessee donors, including Federal Express, and $9,500 from Florida contributors.

Another significant difference between the contributors to the two candidates is the overwhelming support Garcia has from the local Indian tribal bands. Nine different bands, including the Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians and the Morongo Band of Mission Indians, have given her $34,000. Stone’s lone contribution is from the Pechanga Band of Luiseno Indians, who gave him $4,100 and the same amount to Garcia.

Garcia has also garnered support from several local Republicans, such as former state Sen. Bill Emerson and Assemblyman Brian Nestande.

Since the primary, the third Republican in the race, Glenn Miller, has endorsed Stone while the fourth, Democratic candidate Anna Nevenic, has announced her support for Garcia.

Contributions

Candidate, 2014 Jan through Jun. 30, Total Cash Available

Bonnie Garcia $164,600, $ 36,200

Jeff Stone  $329,400, $15,600

Pine Cove Water postpones board meeting

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Pine Cove Water District has rescheduled its Wednesday, Aug. 13 meeting to 10 a.m., Wednesday, Aug. 20, according to General Manager Jerry Holldber.

Pinyon murder suspects’ trials separate or combined?

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A hearing last Friday to combine the trial of Robert Pape and Cristin Smith for a triple homicide in Pinyon in 2006 was rescheduled for Friday, Aug. 22.

According to other media accounts, at the request of Smith’s attorney, John Patrick Dolan, Riverside County Superior Court Judge Charles Stafford ordered medical tests for Smith because of a possible lump on his chest.

In July, the prosecution submitted a request to consolidate the trials, but Pape’s defense objected. A hearing on the motion is later this month.

The District Attorney’s office recommended that trials of Pape and Smith be joined based on California Penal Code 1098. “The present case grows out of the same event, occurring on the same date, involving similar behavior, and the elements of the three charges each defendant faces are the same … Given the similarities between the cases of the two defendants, a joint trial is consistent with the legislative intent behind Cal. Penal Code sec. 1098,” according to the brief submitted to the judge.

Pape’s attorney, Richard Blumenfeld, objected to the joining of the two trials for several reasons, which he argued would be prejudicial to his client. For example, Smith made a statement to Riverside County Sheriff’s Department investigators that he might not want admitted to his trial. Further, Blumenfeld feels “the case against Mr. Smith is forensically much stronger (there is an utter absence of forensic evidence implicating Mr. Pape) …”

On the night of Sept. 17, 2006, Becky Friedli, 18, her mother, Vicki Friedli, 53, and Vicki’s boyfriend, Jon Hayward, 55, were found dead on their Pinyon property. Becky’s body was found burning in a wheelbarrow outside the house. The other bodies were found inside the burning home.

On March 11 this year, both Pape, 26, and Smith, 25, were arrested and charged for these murders. They were high school friends.

 

Past Tense: August 7, 2014

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In August 1972, The Tahquitz Lodge, a group of Eagle Scouts from Riverside, performed the classic tale of the Tahquitz monster at Town Hall. The Scouts presented tales and dances collected from tribes inhabiting the Northwest Coast. They researched and made the colorful costumes, authentic in spirit and detail. Here, the peanut gallery takes an elevated look at the show from the Town Hall flat-bed wagon. File photo/Norwood Hazard
In August 1972, The Tahquitz Lodge, a group of Eagle Scouts from Riverside, performed the classic tale of the Tahquitz monster at Town Hall. The Scouts presented tales and dances collected from tribes inhabiting the Northwest Coast. They researched and made the colorful costumes, authentic in spirit and detail. Here, the peanut gallery takes an elevated look at the show from the Town Hall flat-bed wagon.
File photo/Norwood Hazard

65 years ago - 1949

The Women’s Guild of the Community Presbyterian Church was raising money via bake sales for a new roof for the manse.

 

60 years ago - 1954

Barbara Wilson was honored at a community bridal shower at the Idyllwild Inn. Her marriage to Bud Hunt was scheduled for October.

 

55 years ago - 1959

The matter of a liquor license for the Idyllwild Inn remained a hot topic in town. It was expected to reach the California Supreme Court soon.

 

50 years ago - 1964

Jean Farrar, “the happy yogi,” started yoga classes in Idyllwild.

 

45 years ago - 1969

Groundwater from the previous winter’s snow and rainfall had so saturated the ground that it hampered laying lines for the sewer project in town.

 

40 years ago - 1974

Idyllwild Fire Chief Bud Hunt reminded home builders that smoke detectors were being required on all new construction.

 

35 years ago - 1979

Locals were watching the night sky to view the largest annual meteorite show, the “Perseid Shower.”

 

30 years ago - 1984

Bids were opened for the construction of the new Idyllwild Fire Station.

 

25 years ago - 1989

The owner of the last septic tank pumping service on the Hill shut his business after the closing of the Anza septic ponds. He joined other local septic tank pumping business owners who refused to make the trip off the Hill, citing the danger of transporting heavy liquid loads.

 

20 years ago - 1994

Layoffs in the Riverside County public library system hit the Hill especially hard. All staff members at the Idyllwild Branch Library learned they were among those who had lost their jobs. Library hours were reduced from 20 to 12 per week.

 

15 years ago - 1999

Riverside County Sheriff’s Department personnel detonated some blasting caps found on national forest land near Royal Pines Estates.

 

10 years ago - 2004

Fire destroyed Arriba Mexican Restaurant.

 

5 years ago - 2009

Three locals qualified for triathlon world championships at Australia’s Gold Coast Sept. 9 to 13. Brad Rechtfertig, Lee Piche and Bill Whitman qualified for the swim, bike and running competition to be held at the Southport Broadwater Parklands in Queensland, Australia. Piche, 52, and Whitman, 46, were going. Rechtfertig, 35, said for him it was not a good time to take a vacation.

 

1 year ago - 2013

The Strong Fire, reported shortly after noon Monday along Strong Drive in Fern Valley, was no match for human strength. Following on the heels of a mandatory evacuation because of the Mountain Fire in July, the 2-acre vegetation fire in Idyllwild brought panic but quick response as not only firefighters, but neighbors, readily quashed the blaze.

 

Three Idyllwild crashes with injuries mar the week

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At about 3:40 p.m. Saturday during a rainstorm, Madison Clowdus, 18, of Temecula, lost control of her vehicle and struck a tree and utility pole on Highway 243 just south of Riverside County Playground Road. She had to be cut from her vehicle and was transported to Riverside County Regional Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries. Photo by Peter Szabadi
At about 3:40 p.m. Saturday during a rainstorm, Madison Clowdus, 18, of Temecula, lost control of her vehicle and struck a tree and utility pole on Highway 243 just south of Riverside County Playground Road. She had to be cut from her vehicle and was transported to Riverside County Regional Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries.
Photo by Peter Szabadi

Three crashes, one a motorcycle, one a solo vehicle, and one a two-vehicle incident with serious injuries marred the week in Idyllwild. According to California Highway Patrol Public Information Officer Darren Meyer, the first took place at 11:50 a.m. Wednesday, July 30, on Highway 243 a mile and a quarter north of the Highway 74 intersection in Mountain Center. Rossen Chemelekov, 30, of North Hollywood, was traveling on his Honda motorcycle at an allegedly unsafe speed on a clear day, failed to negotiate a hard left turn and ran off the road. He was transported to Riverside County Regional Medical Center with minor injuries. According to Meyer, no drugs or alcohol were involved. At 3:40 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 2 during a rainstorm, Madison Clowdus, 18, of Temecula lost control of her vehicle and struck a tree and utility pole on Highway 243 just south of Riverside County Playground Road. Meyer reported Clowdus had to be cut from her vehicle and required transportation to Riverside County Regional Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries. A third incident, at about 4:45 p.m. Monday, Aug. 4, resulted in major injuries to driver and passenger near McCall Park Road on Highway 74 in Mountain Center. A green Honda Civic allegedly traveling at an unsafe speed swerved to avoid a big rig, hit the embankment on the right side of the highway and sustained major front end damage. Both the driver of the Honda, Shane Patrick Doughty, 21, of Hemet, and the passenger, Levante Hensley, 20, of Hemet, sustained serious injuries. Both were airlifted, Doughty to Riverside Regional Medical Center and Hensley to Desert Regional Medical Center. The driver of the truck, Benny Walter, 49, of Perris, was uninjured. No fault has yet been assigned, according to CHP. Editor's note: An earlier version of this story identified Walter as the driver of the Honda Civic and gave his age incorrectly.

According to CHP Officer Mike Murawski, two males suffered major injuries after losing control of their Honda Civic while traveling at a high speed eastbound on Highway 74 near McCall Park Road Monday around 4:30 p.m. The Honda crossed the double-yellow line, colliding with a Penske truck traveling westbound. Idyllwild Fire transported both men in the Honda to Keenwild Forest Service station where they were transported by Mercy Air to nearby hospitals. The truck driver was uninjured. Idyllwild Fire Chief Patrick Reitz said one man was seriously injured and the other critically.          Photo by Jenny Kirchner
According to CHP Officer Mike Murawski, two males suffered major injuries after losing control of their Honda Civic while traveling at a high speed eastbound on Highway 74 near McCall Park Road Monday around 4:30 p.m. The Honda crossed the double-yellow line, colliding with a Penske truck traveling westbound. Idyllwild Fire transported both men in the Honda to Keenwild Forest Service station where they were transported by Mercy Air to nearby hospitals. The truck driver was uninjured. Idyllwild Fire Chief Patrick Reitz said one man was seriously injured and the other critically. Photo by Jenny Kirchner
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