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State Route 371 left turn lane project to begin Monday, July 11

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The California Department of Transportation will begin work next week on the State Route 371 left turn lane project.

The work will be from 0.2 miles west of Bahrman Road and 0.03 miles west of Bailiff Road. The project will construct left turn lanes for both directions of travel on SR-371.

The $520,000 project, which was awarded to All American Asphalt, is expected to end by the beginning September 2016.

The contractor will begin potholing for underground utilities and clearing and grubbing on Monday, July 11 and will continue to July 15. There will be reversible traffic control with flaggers in effect from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day.

View traffic conditions at quickmap.dot.ca.gov.

Readers Write: Open letter to Idyllwild Christians

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Editor: 

We live in perilous but predicted times. As the affairs around us grow darker, in unbelievable speed, we, as Judeo Christians, are supposed to grow brighter. There has never been a more important time since the foundation of our great country for Christians to stand up to protect our Christian values.

Our values are being stripped while we shake our heads in disbelief, talk about the injustice and do nothing.

Did you know that in the last presidential election, 25 million registered voters failed to vote? Where were you? Those votes would have made a big difference in the outcome. Every vote does count. Go to the polls and vote your faith because our faith matters.

There is so much attack on our Christian beliefs. What is wrong with the following pictures? Our children are not permitted to start their school day in prayer, our teachers are not allowed to keep a Bible on their desks, while non-gender bathrooms are installed and foot-washing facilities are installed in the schools.

Military chaplains are instructed not to use the name of Jesus in their services or at military funerals or face discharge. Servicemen and women are not permitted to talk to other active military about Jesus or carry a Bible on their person while in uniform.

We have come a long way from when the Holy Bible was the schools’ primary reader or the Holy Bible was issued as part of the military gear to our servicemen and women.

I write all this to try to stir up a desire to use your voice at the polls. It is a God-given right — use it wisely. Pray for your part of participation. The future of our children and grandchildren is at stake.

There is no perfect candidate for they are mere humans. Our choice of candidates may look dismal when we forget that our Almighty God is in control. God bless America.

Retired Navy Chief 

Frank A. Thompson Jr. and Harriet Thompson

‘Transparency’ can be foggy

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The purpose of the Ralph M. Brown Act, which is California Government Code sections 54950 through 54963, is to mandate transparency in local government. The Brown Act is not perfect. It requires a good deal of transparency when it comes to the legislative bodies of our local public entities — i.e., councils, boards, commissions, committees, etc. — but very little with regard to their administrative staff.

Contrary to what some people have expressed, it is not a violation of the Brown Act for the administrators of two local public entities to communicate freely with each other, even if done entirely secretly.

So, the fact that IFPD’s chief and battalion chief communicated extensively with San Jacinto’s city manager and city attorney does not violate the Brown Act. These administrators were free to plan a proposed Joint Powers Authority in great detail before they presented their proposition to their respective boards. The administrators could even include two members of their respective boards in their ongoing discussions without violating the Brown Act — as long as no one, either directly or through intermediaries, passed any part of their discussions on to any of the other members of the board and city council. (Gov. Code, § 54952.2, subds. (a) & (b).)

This, in the main, is what IFPD and the city did in setting up their proposed JPA. This was not a violation of the Brown Act ... but was it “transparency”? A visit to the main page of IFPD’s website shows that “Transparency” has its own first-page hot link, indicating that IFPD deems its transparency to be important. But IFPD administrators developed their proposed JPA with no input from the IFPD board — sitting as a board — or from the public IFPD serves.

On May 9, 2016, IFPD administrators issued a press release announcing the proposed JPA with a start date of July 1, 2016 — seven-and-a-half weeks later. They also posted online employment information for three classes of JPA personnel, stating that the application period opened on May 5 and would close on May 20.

All of this happened supposedly before the majority of the IFPD board or the majority of the San Jacinto City Council knew anything about the JPA — yet Chief Patrick Reitz commented on May 10, “This is a big deal, very big.”

From emails produced by IFPD in response to the Town Crier’s California Public Records Act request, we learned that Reitz and Battalion Chief Mark LaMont kept IFPD commission members Jerry Buchanan and Nancy Layton informed as to the evolution of their JPA discussions with the city — no Brown Act violation there since just Buchanan and Layton do not constitute a majority of any board or committee.

But on May 9, Layton exchanged emails with IFPD standing finance committee member Susan Weisbart in which Layton passed on to her a good deal about the JPA discussions. This would not have constituted a Brown Act violation either, since Layton and Weisbart were only two members of that five-member committee — except that Layton also copied that email to fellow committee members Calvin Gogerty and Mark Lonsbury. That constituted a Brown Act violation, relative to the finance committee. We know that Layton did not cc: Gogerty and Lonsbury inadvertently because at one point in her email she wrote: “Please, DO NOT discuss this among yourselves. Direct any questions or concerns you have to me or to Patrick. We cannot risk violating the Brown Act on this one!” Ironically, her own email did just that.

From Layton’s email we also learn that “[m]ost of the detail in this email is not yet for public consumption, but [for] your eyes only until we can hold a joint meeting with the San Jacinto City Council members and City Manager,” which Layton estimated would likely take place on May 20. So, the original intent was that neither the IFPD Board of Commissioners nor the San Jacinto City Council would meet on its own to discuss the JPA at any public meeting prior to their joint meeting down in San Jacinto.

That was changed for some reason. Both boards eventually held separate public meetings regarding forming the JPA, and then held their joint public meeting in San Jacinto. At that joint meeting, problems emerged regarding arranging for a dispatch service, which resulted in postponing the JPA, apparently for a year. So, it’s all out in the open now, anyway.

Layton’s Brown Act-violating email was not a material factor in the larger JPA formation matter. The real point is that the Brown Act can be gotten around by administrators meeting among themselves and keeping a mere minority of their governing boards advised of developments, all outside of public view. Layton wrote: “Because of the potential for CalFire (sic) to take various forms of retaliation, we really were hoping the cat could stay in the bag until the nuts and bolts were agreed upon and ready for signatures at a joint meeting.”

Did they really fear Cal Fire was going to “retaliate” against IFPD in some way? Well, Cal Fire knows about it now ... is it “retaliating”? Or does “retaliating” really just mean that Cal Fire might disagree and oppose?  What? We can’t have that?

Really, why do it this way? What of the concept of “transparency” that IFPD’s website counts among its virtues?

Could not the administrators on both sides have kept the entirety of their respective boards advised by continually reporting on the progress of their JPA discussions as agenda items at their respective public meetings? Why did Layton, in her email, deem it necessary that finance committee members “remain mum and we’ll all have to dodge JP’s questions [a reference to J.P. Crumrine, news editor of the Town Crier], as we’re already having to do”?

Why would they not want the public to know about this JPA until it was a done deal? According to the JPA’s organizational chart (since removed from the IFPD web-site) Reitz will be spending 40 percent of his time (and LaMont 60 percent of his) administering the JPA, and only their respective remaining times administering IFPD. Did they fear the Idyllwild public might object to losing their services at IFPD a combined 50 percent of the time?

Perhaps IFPD believed that a JPA would be faster and easier to form if the public didn’t have an opportunity to question it. Probably true. But doesn’t that say that IFPD values expediency above transparency?

A democratic republic — and the transparency that goes with it — isn’t easy. A quiet oligarchy is a whole lot easier. But is that what we expect from our local government? Is that what we want?

Write us a short letter to tell us what you think. We publish letters.

*****

[NOTE:  After this editorial piece was published, IFPD removed “Transparency” as a hot-link button on its website.]

County has new early warning system

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Victor Jimenez, Fern Valley Water District general manager. Photo by JP Crumrine
Victor Jimenez, Fern Valley Water District general manager.
Photo by JP Crumrine

Riverside County has implemented a new early warning notification system. The EWNS is used to alert and warn residents and businesses in the county of emergencies such as wildfires, floods, hazardous materials, severe weather and certain law enforcement incidents.

A request for proposal to replace the former EWNS, commonly referred to as “reverse 911,” with a new system was issued in September 2015. Swiftreach Networks of New Jersey submitted the winning bid.

“There are more enhancements, including the ability to send notifications by email or text message,” said Kathleen Henderson of the county’s Emergency Management Department, who has been the lead on the project. “We can attach photos now, for example, of missing persons.”

Another new capability is the use of cell phones to manage the system. Henderson or any EMD duty officer can initiate the system from a cell phone. The need to be at the Emergency Coordination Center has been eliminated.

“We can launch from any desktop or from apps for our cell phone,” she added.

The EWNS serves the entire county. If residents or homeowners have a land line, then the county will have the phone number for that location. If residents have only voice over internet phones or cell phones, Henderson recommends they visit the EMD website, www.rivcoready.org/, and click the link for EWN to register your phone number.

Henderson has invested more than two years preparing the RFP, reviewing the responses and working with Swiftreach to implement the system. The project will cost $225,000 and is funded from a 2014 Homeland Security Grant for three years.

Green denied bail reduction, despite family support

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Marcus Green, 51, of Thermal, the driver of a car that went over the side of Highway 74 in May and resulted in the death of a 5-month-old child, had his request for a bail reduction denied.

At the June 29 bail review hearing, Green’s attorney, David Greenberg, brought four witnesses and 17 written statements from family and friends. They all sympathized with Green, lamenting the tragic incident. The writers attested to his devotion to family since being released from jail nearly four years ago.

Armani Green, the child who died in the crash, was the daughter of Green and Kristen Lauer, 22, of Rancho Mirage.

He was charged with vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence, willful harm of a child and infliction of great bodily harm.

Green’s bail is $1.86 million and his attorney was trying to get a reduction. After hearing the witnesses and reading the character statements, Judge Alfonso Fernandez denied the motion and the bail remains as before.

The next felony settlement conference is scheduled for Aug. 9.

Motorcycle crash on July 2

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One crash took place on Hill roads over the last week.

At 4:30 p.m. Saturday, July 2, Amanda Weilbacher, 26, of Murrieta, was riding her 2015 Kawasaki Ninja motorcycle westbound on Highway 74 about 1,000 feet east of McGaugh Road when she rounded a sweeping right curve, crossed over the double-yellow line and hit the embankment on the mountain side.

She was ejected from her bike and suffered moderate hip and ankle injuries. No other vehicles were involved in the incident. Weilbacher was transported to Riverside University Health System Trauma Center in Moreno Valley.

Pinyon resident accused of setting multiple fires

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Traci Farley, suspected arsonist. Photo courtesy Riverside County Fire Department
Traci Farley, suspected arsonist.
Photo courtesy Riverside County Fire Department

Cal Fire investigators made an arson arrest on Wednesday, June 29.

Traci Farley, 52, of Pinyon, was arrested for allegedly setting multiple fires in Pinyon, an unincorporated area of Riverside County. She was booked on 13 counts of arson, along with several pending additional arson charges.

Her arraignment was June 29 and she pleaded not guilty. A felony settlement conference is scheduled for Thursday, July 8.

Farley was transported to the Southwest Detention Center. As of Thursday morning, she was in custody with bail set at $1 million.

Natashia Deon’s first novel has stunning debut: Deon speaks at Eduardo Santiago’s Idyllwild Author Series

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Natashia Deon is the next author for Eduardo Santiago’s Idyllwild Author Series. Her first novel “Grace” has just been published and is already in its third printing. Reviews are glowing.         Photo courtesy Natashia Deon
Natashia Deon is the next author for Eduardo Santiago’s Idyllwild Author Series. Her first novel “Grace” has just been published and is already in its third printing. Reviews are glowing. Photo courtesy Natashia Deon

Practicing attorney and mother of two, Natashia Deon pleaded with her publishers not to release her first novel, “Grace,” this summer. “Are you kidding?” she said. “Nobody’s going to notice ‘Grace’ if you release it in competition with all those two-million-dollar books.”

But people have noticed. “Grace” received extraordinarily glowing reviews from the New York Times and many other publications. Released only two weeks ago, “Grace” is already in its third printing and on the shelves of major book outlets.

“With her debut novel, ‘Grace,’ Natashia Deon has announced herself beautifully and distinctively,” said the Times reviewer. “[She] is not merely another new author to watch. She has delivered something whole, and to be reckoned with, right now.”

What Deon has delivered is a wrenching story of slavery in the antebellum South, and the cycle of abuse and violence that afflicted enslaved women. It is the story of a mother’s love that is so strong she continues to watch over her daughter after her own violent death. It is a story of an era in American history that unsparingly depicts the insurmountable obstacles faced by women caught in the iron vise of slavery — the virtual impossibility of escape and the degradation these women are forced to endure.

“Grace” spans 30 years encompassing the time before and after the Civil War, narrated beyond the grave by Naomi, the steadfast mother of the principal character, Josey. In reviews, Deon’s writing has been described as visceral, with a startling ability to make the reader feel present — feeling, touching, smelling the world of her characters — their terror, their rage and their hopeless sorrow.

Deon said she wrote the novel almost intuitively, understanding the arc of her characters’ lives and the reality of their world. “I needed to get the story out first,” she said. “There was no way to hold the entire novel in my head at one time. If a question came up, then I had to go to look for that, to research that.”

As an example, while her novel was being readied for publication, she clashed with her editors about whether the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 was something slaves in the South experienced as hopeful. “I felt that something was wrong, that the Emancipation Proclamation may have seemed hopeful but it wasn’t that way for the slaves trapped in the South who had almost no way to get to freedom. I had to research more history and go back and change the trajectory of the story.”

What stays with the reader in “Grace” is the intensity of a mother’s love for her daughter — as she watches her child experience the same brutality and debasement she had suffered. From the afterlife, Naomi could not slip away and leave Josey. “After the first few weeks, I thought I’d leave Josey’s side when I knew she was safe,” Naomi relates. “Then I decided I’d leave after I saw her lift her head for the first time. Then, after she’d rolled over, then babbled, then walked, then ran. Then when. Then when. Then when.”

Deon is the recipient of a PEN Center USA Emerging Voices Fellowship and has held residencies at Yale, Bread Loaf, Dickinson House in Belgium and the Virginia Center for Creative Arts. She was named one of 2013’s Most Fascinating People by L.A. Weekly. She has a master’s degree in fine arts from the University of California, Riverside in Palm Desert and is the creator of Dirty Laundry Lit, a popular Los Angeles-based reading series. “I wanted to create a place for writers to come together and be celebrated, to share and to party.”

Deon said she has always been a storyteller, from childhood. “I never thought I would be a writer,” she recalled. “But I always wrote and drew pictures. I had a little sister, and we did story time. When I tell stories I feel I become that story. I remember telling about Jonah and the whale. I could feel it — the water, the boat, something you saw and smelled.”

Deon opens her novel with Naomi explaining about justice — that justice is getting what you deserve, mercy is being spared the bad you deserve, and grace “is getting a good thing, even when you don’t deserve it.”

Deon said she is both surprised and gratified by the reaction to “Grace.” But, as reviewers have noted, it is a reaction well deserved because of the visceral power of her writing.

Deon appears with Eduardo Santiago at 4 p.m. Sunday, July 17, on the deck of Café Aroma. There is no charge for admission.

For more about Deon, visit www.natashiadeon.com.

SouthBound and Company return with Creedence Clearwater tribute

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SouthBound and Company return for a Creedence Clearwater Revival tribute to Ken Dahleen’s Idyllwild Summer Concert Series.Photo courtesy SouthBound
SouthBound and Company return for a Creedence Clearwater Revival tribute to Ken Dahleen’s Idyllwild Summer Concert Series. Photo courtesy SouthBound

Inland Empire-based SouthBound and Company was last here two years ago with a Buddy Holly tribute. They return in Creedence Clearwater form for Ken Dahleen’s 2016 Idyllwild Summer Concert Series.

Taking the stage at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 14, are SouthBound leader, lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Darryl Reed; guitarist and backup vocalist Michael Finn; drummer Mike Hunter; and new bass player Bob Dennis. Reed said a friend, sax player Rudy Villarreal, would be joining the four-man ensemble for its Idyllwild gig and that Villarreal also would fill in on keyboard.

Florida-born Reed said he loves the Southern rock sound that infuses the music of SouthBound and that he has “shared the stage” professionally with music notables Tim McGraw, Travis Tritt, Mel Tillis and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils.

Creedence fans can listen and dance to such hits as “Born on the Bayou,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Down on the Corner,” “Proud Mary” and “Who’ll Stop the Rain.”

There is no charge for the series that Dahleen and his ISCS board present as summer music and fun for locals. Each year, ISCS begins the summer with insufficient money to fund the series. Attendees are invited to bring food, beverages, chairs, blankets and money, especially money, to fill the donation jars passed around by concert volunteers.

Contributions to fund the series can also be sent to P.O. Box 1542, Idyllwild, CA 92549 or contact Ken Dahleen at 659-2229 if interested in being a series sponsor.

Dahleen started the series in 2000 beginning with four concerts, increased the series to five in 2001, to seven in year three and eight after the series moved to its present home on the Idyllwild Community Center site.

Opening for SouthBound at 6:15 p.m. is the local group Heard of Cats.

For more information about the ISCS series, visit www.idyllwildsummerconcerts.com.

Wine in the Pines – a thank you from ICF: Opportunity for community to say thanks, too

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Each year, the Idyllwild Community Fund allocates thousands of dollars to local organizations. The annual Wine in the Pines is both a celebration of this effort and a fundraiser to augment the coffers to increase the aid to the Hill.

The third-annual event is from 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday, July 9, at the Rainbow Inn.

The event is free and entertainment is led by emcee Conor O’Farrell. It also includes a silent auction and raffle. Two t’Suite — Nelms McKelvain on piano and Julie Holmes on cello — will soothe the environment during the afternoon with their repertoire from early Baroque through 1950s, 1960s and 1970s standards, Gershwin, Broadway’s finest, country, rock and today’s Top 40. Refreshments, including wine and craft beer, from local brewer Don Put will be available throughout the evening.

The celebration brings the community together to support the mission of providing grants to local nonprofit organizations to help them accomplish critical goals that enhance the quality of life for all our residents.

The Idyllwild School Youth Grantmakers is the principal beneficiary of Wine in the Pines. Youth Grantmakers was originally a program for high schoolers to learn about philanthropy. Five years ago, ICF’s parent organization — The Community Foundation — founded a pilot grant program at Idyllwild School for middle-school students.

Due to its success, the Community Foundation wanted to expand its efforts to other schools, which resulted in less funding available here. ICF uses the proceeds from Wine in the Pines to augment the Youth Grantmakers funding.

“It’s absolutely necessary to sustain the Youth Grantmakers program,” said ICF President Marshall Smith.

The silent auction is the source of the money. This year, some of the items include photo prints, a night at the Idyllwild Grand Lodge, two nights at the Creekstone Inn, season tickets to the Idyllwild Master Chorale performances and Jazz in the Pines tickets, according to Suzanne Avalon, ICF board member and organizer of the event.

“The community has been very cooperative,” she said. “Nobody has turned me down. All are very willing to help. A lot of nonprofits in town would not exist without the Community Fund assistance.”

The Idyllwild Youth Grantmakers consists of local middle-school students who review proposals, conduct site visits and recommend grants for funding as part of a comprehensive, multi-session, afterschool philanthropy program. The initial Youth Grantmakers award was $2,000 in 2012. The maximum allocation has been $4,000 and this spring, they award $3,000 to three separate local groups.

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