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National Women’s Health Week observed

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An annual local health fair in observance of National Women’s Health Week featured free blood pressure and sugar screenings, BMI testing and other services on Tuesday.

Booths from 28 agencies lined the parking lot of the Women’s Health Center and part of B Street as representatives handed out information about health insurance, hospitals, behavioral health, nutrition, fitness and convalescent services, among other resources.

Organized by Camarena Health, the event aims to celebrate National Women’s Health Week, an observance led by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Women’s Health to encourage women to make their health a priority.

About 350 people attended, which is the average yearly turnout, said organizer Lizette Contreras, the director of community development...


Special needs person tied to desk

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Woman charged with imprisonment and abuse

A woman will face felony imprisonment charges in court next month for allegedly tying a 22-year-old person with special needs to a desk outside a home on Sunnyside Avenue last week for at least two hours, Madera County Sheriff spokeswoman Erica Stuart said.

Maria Duarte, 48, is charged with false imprisonment and abuse of a dependent adult, Stuart said. Duarte is from Southern California but recently moved to Madera.

Duarte is scheduled to appear in Madera County Superior Court at 8:30 a.m. June 2. On the afternoon of May 7, deputies responded to a jogger’s tip that he saw a what appeared to be a teenaged child in a sweatshirt and helmet tied to a desk outside a home on Sunnyside Avenue, Stuart said.

Witnesses told deputies the dependent adult had been tied to the table for at least two hours. One end of the rope was attached to the victim’s belt loop, with the other end attached to a desk drawer, Stuart said...

District 1 candidates respond to questions

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Forum features 4 of 5 would-be supervisors

Four of the five candidates for Madera County supervisor in District 1 appeared at a forum Monday night to answer questions from a panel made up of GOP and Tea Party members.

The top vote-getters in the June 3 primary will vie in the November election to replace Supervisor Manuel Nevarez, who decided not to seek the office to which he was appointed last year.

Hopefuls Mona Diaz, Brett Frazier, Ray Krause and Rochelle Noblett responded to questions and short speeches from panelists Chris Green, Leslie La Brucherie and Jim Watkins. District 3 County Supervisor Rick Farinelli, who organized the forum, was timekeeper while former Madera City Councilman Herman Perez was moderator.

Candidate Gary Johns was absent...

Murder victim, suspect identified

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A Madera native killed in the city’s second homicide of the year was identified by police Tuesday as Leonardo Noriega Salas, 27, allegedly shot and killed by Jose Alfredo Osorio, 21.

Police responded to shots fired near Olive Avenue and I Street around 8:30 p.m. Monday, Det. Sgt. Robert Salas of the Madera Police Department said, where they found two residents applying first aid to the victim.

Salas — with no relation to the detective — was taken to Madera Community Hospital but died from his wounds shortly after.

After an extensive investigation, Osorio, of Oaxaca, Mexico, was arrested Tuesday and booked on charges of murder and drug sales. He was found to be in possession of a loaded gun and a large amount of packaged methamphetamine, said Madera Police Det. Daniel Foss...

Dam water to be tapped amid California drought

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FRESNO (AP) — Officials said Tuesday that, for the first time in decades, they plan to tap water stored behind a dam east of Fresno, as they try to help California farmers through the ongoing drought.

Pablo Arroyave of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said in a conference call with reporters that low water levels in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta have forced officials to turn to Friant Dam on the San Joaquin River. The dam forms the Millerton Lake reservoir.

Millerton Lake water is needed to meet the bureau’s contractual water obligations to the San Joaquin River Exchange Contractors Water Authority, which holds senior water rights. The exchange provides irrigation water to about 240,000 acres of farmland between Patterson and Mendota.

The bureau has relied solely on Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to meet the exchange’s needs. The additional water will begin to flow through the Friant Dam on Thursday, Arroyave said.

“We continue to be in a very serious drought with very serious impacts,” Arroyave said. In 1939, the federal government reached an agreement with the exchange to take its water from the Delta rather than the San Joaquin River, unless the Delta couldn’t meet the need. In the drought, the Delta cannot provide enough water, marking a first since the agreement was struck.

Steve Chedester of the exchange said that more water is always good news for the 2,300 farms he serves. But he noted that the government says it will provide an increased amount of water through October. He worries about November and December, adding that the bureau says it remains committed to finding supplies for the exchange then, as well.

“We are committed to helping the bureau try to find that water,” he said. “In our perspective, it needs to be the full amount for the full year.”

The bureau also announced that it is increasing from 40 percent to 65 percent of normal the amount of water to wildlife refuges south of the Delta.

Aside from these changes, the allotment of irrigation water to many Central Valley farmers who aren’t considered senior rights holders is expected to remain at zero for the rest of the year, officials said.

ShowBiz Minute: Baldwin, Cannes, Prince William

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Actor Alec Baldwin arrested; Cannes Film Festival kicks off with Grace Kelly biopic; Prince William holds charity dinner with celebrity guests

AP top stories for May 14, 2014

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Here's the latest news for Wednesday, May 14th: Protest erupts in Turkish town where 245 died; Manning, seeking gender treatment, OK'd for move; 2 Orlando hospital workers test negative for MERS; Bill Clinton vouches for Hillary's health.

ShowBiz Minute: Kidman, Jay Z, BET Awards

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Nicole Kidman's new movie, 'Grace of Monaco,' kicks off Cannes Film Festival; Hotel fires person who recorded Jay Z attack video; Beyonce, Jay Z and Drake lead at BET Awards


AP top stories for May 15, 2014

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Here's the latest news for Thursday, May 15th: the 9/11 museum is dedicated at ground zero; Calls mount for Veterans Affairs secretary to resign; Fast food workers demand pay hike; and Pearl, the green turtle, returns to the sea.

Half Dome cables to open Friday

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The cables to the summit of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park will be reset and open Friday — a week earlier than previously scheduled due to the low snowpack.

Hikers wishing to ascend the cables between May 16 and May 22 can apply online at www. recreation.gov for a first-come, first-served, permit. These early season permits are required, non-refundable and non-transferable.

The regularly scheduled Half Dome season will commence May 23. Permits for the regular season were available through a lottery during the month of March. Approximately 50 permits per day will be available on a daily basis through a two-day in advance lottery beginning Wednesday. Visitors wishing to obtain a permit can make reservations at www.recreation.gov or call 877-444-6777.

For information regarding the lottery and the Half Dome cables, visit www.nps.gov/yose /planyourvisit/halfdome.htm...

Tips for high yields in a garden

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By Jennifer Forker

How can you get the most yield from a garden where space is limited, and water is too? Plant smart, and pay attention to the soil.

“Your garden is only as good as your soil,” says David Salman, chief horticulturist at High Country Gardens, a Santa Fe, N.M., catalog that specializes in native and low-water plants.

Find out what nutrients your soil has — and what it’s missing — with a soil test, available through local cooperative extension offices at a nominal fee (home soil-test kits are less reliable, according to the Colorado State University Extension).

Encourage plant health by fertilizing with natural, organic fertilizers, which include fish emulsion and liquid seaweed, says Salman. Limit the use of chemical fertilizers because they don’t help build the soil.

“You will have more nutritionally complete vegetables if you have healthy soil,” he promises.

One trick Salmon recommends, especially for gardeners living in new housing developments, is adding a soil inoculant called mycorrhiza, a beneficial fungi. It’s found naturally in healthy soil, but often needs to be added to a new garden.

“New gardens in new subdivisions, their soil is scraped off as part of construction,” says Salman. “You need to put beneficial fungi back in.”

Peas, beans and soybeans could benefit from legume inoculants, which are species-specific (a soybean inoculant cannot be used to improve peas’ growth). Read product labels carefully or ask your gardening center for assistance.

“Your beans will do OK (without it), but if you really want to crank out the beans, you can do that with the inoculant,” says Salman. “It’s kind of a ‘grandma’s secret’ to growing great beans.”

Plants that can offer high yields with low watering include leafy vegetables such as kale, lettuce and spinach; beans, snow peas and sugar snap peas; and some varieties of cucumbers and squash, he says. Plant vining beans and peas if you have space or can grow them up a fence or trellis; plant bush beans and peas in large pots if space is limited.

Sarah J. Browning, an extension educator for the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, suggests planting radishes, carrots, peppers, zucchini and summer squash for summertime bounty. Peppers grow well in dry conditions, says Browning, and root crops such don’t need frequent watering.

“If you watered them well and then mulched them, I think you could get a crop with fairly small amounts of water input,” she says.

Plant radishes early in the season or in part shade, and mulch them and other plants to retain moisture and combat weeds.

Browning recommends the cherry tomato cultivar Sun Gold and the slicers Big Beef and Celebrity as great-tasting high producers. Also look for disease-resistant tomato varieties, which are easier to grow. Browning refers tomato lovers to Pennsylvania State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences Extension’s “Tomato Report 2011,” which lists the best varieties in its tomato trials.

Melissa Ozawa, a features editor for gardening at Martha Stewart Living magazine, recommends growing okra and Swiss chard; both are heat- and drought-tolerant. Melons also can handle less water once established because of their deep root systems, she says.

Not all vegetables grow well in all regions, so read seed packets, matching days to maturation to your region’s growing season, Salman advises.

“One of the big problems with horticulture in this country is everyone tries to be one-size-fits-all, and this is just too big of a continent to do that,” he says. “You don’t want to grow a 120-day watermelon in Denver. They can grow those in Texas, but the maturation period in Denver is much shorter.”

Prolific, water-wise herbs include basil, oregano, parsley, thyme and rosemary, says Browning.

Salman offers space-saving planting tips for herbs: Plant lavender and oregano along the dryer edges of your garden, since they’re the most heat-tolerant, and plant Greek oregano and dill, plus annual herbs such as basil and cilantro, among the root vegetables.

Try growing perennials such as rosemary, English thyme, tarragon and lavender in your ornamental beds. They don’t require your vegetable garden’s mineral-rich soil, says Salman.

Drought-tolerant flower varieties include coneflowers, hummingbird mint, salvia and blanket flowers, according to Ozawa. Other cutting-garden winners are cosmos, zinnias, sunflowers and larkspur, says Salman. His favorite late-season bloomer is the Mexican sunflower.

“If there’s a bee or butterfly in a 10-mile radius, they’ll find that Mexican sunflower,” he says.

Pizza owner living out his dream

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Since coming to the United States in 2003 from India, Bal Singh has always worked in the food industry with an eye on opening his own restaurant.

He spent the last 10 years working at a Subway restaurant and managing a pizza place, knowing that he would eventually open a pizzeria of his own.

Singh’s dream came true in November when he opened Premier Brick Over Pizza in the former home of other long-gone pizza places at 1628 Howard Road.

“I saw this place and the community around here,” Singh said. “It’s pretty nice. When I came inside, everything was ready to go. I didn’t have to start from scratch. My dream has come true. I always wanted to open a pizza restaurant.” ...

Why writer will vote for Hall

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I wish I could take credit as a member of the Board of Supervisors in hiring Marcia Hall as our Madera County auditor-controller. Marcia has the tenacity and skills to finish up what Janet Kroeger started and James Boyajian stated in his letter telling of Hall’s accomplishments while in office.

Because of Marcia Hall, other departments in the county are starting to be accountable for their everyday checks and balancing, something that has not happened for decades.

As many of you know I come from over 40 years of experience in the private sector in which checks and balances had to be done monthly, quarterly and yearly.

Government, with all the grants, bonds and taxpayer money, is the most complicated system of accounting that I have ever been involved in.

We finally have a person that has the tenacity and skills that actually loves her job. Marcia has pulled through the rhetoric of internal politics to get the job done.

Please, along with me, vote for Marcia Hall for auditor-controller. I guarantee she will make Madera County proud.

Rick Farinelli,
Supervisor, District 3

Why big stores don’t move here

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I have noted from time-to-time laments by readers of the Tribune concerning the lack of big box stores or shopping centers in Madera. I share in these laments.

At times, however, the lack of these facilities is attributed to ineffectiveness on the part of elected officials. Working for a number of chain stores over the past 35 years, I can attest to the fact that the willingness of elected officials in a particular area has very little to do with the decision to position a retail unit. Although it is true that the local tax structure and initial construction costs have some impact on the decision, ultimately the decision is based upon socio-economic factors.

When examining potential sites there are a number of factors that companies use. These factors include but are not necessarily limited to the size of the community and its surrounding area, census data, and physically visiting the community under consideration. Predominant factors that are considered for the positioning of mid to upscale retail units include:

  1. Economic factors relating to the average or median income of families living in and around the community.
  2. The educational level of potential customers living within a particular radius of the community. It is assumed that the higher the level of education the greater the expendible income and the greater the likelihood that specialized retail units will succeed.
  3. The potential of a return-on-investment within a specific period of time.
  4. Projected economic growth of the community over the next five to 10 years.
  5. Success or failure of various types of retail units built over the past five to 10 years. Questions related to this criteria include the types of retail units that are successful as well as the companies that have decided to leave the community.
  6. Availability of a labor force that meets the criteria of the company.

Madera does not presently meet the criteria set by many retailers. The average income level and the average educational level in Madera and the surrounding area does not meet the basic critera set by many national chains or specialty stores. Failure to meet the first two criteria impacts negatively the potential return-on-investment. Utilizing historical data relating to population and income growth over the past five to 10 years, Madera’s projected economic growth over the next five to 10 years is not promising enough to positively impact the confidence level of national retailers as it relates to future economic growth.

The types of retail units operating successfully in Madera and the types and number of empty stores relate to the fifth factor taken into consideration.

Although I believe that we have in Madera and the surrounding area a labor force capable of meeting most retail company’s personnel critera, the availability of such a labor force is not in most cases the determining factor.

I am certain that our local politicians would love to have mid- to upscale retail units built in Madera. Unfortunately, Madera does not presently meet the criteria set by most national chains.

Mike deBoom,
Madera

Conflicts dogging hydrogen highway

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Looking for a new reason to distrust a state government that won’t even expel legislators when they’ve been indicted or convicted?

Then examine $46.5 million in grants announced by the state Energy Commission in early May for building refueling stations to serve the hydrogen-powered cars due to appear on California roads as early as next year. These grants thoroughly pollute the coming hydrogen highway.

Fully 58 percent of the money — $27.5 million — will go to one company if the commission gives its final approval. Action was due Wednesday, with the commission’s agenda estimating it would need just 10 minutes to dole out the funds.

What’s wrong with that? The company getting all that cash — from vehicle license fees — is FirstElement Fuel, which has never built or managed anything. Its co-president is Dr. Tim Brown, until last Oct. 1 a senior scientist in the Advanced Power and Energy Program at UC Irvine.

While there, Brown was the principal designer of the Energy Commission’s map for placement of hydrogen stations, most to consist of pumps added into existing service stations. Under a contract with UCI, Brown also trained Energy Commission staffers on how to use the material he developed for the commission. Some of those staffers evaluated grant applications this spring.

If these obvious conflicts of interest aren’t problematic enough, there’s also the fact FirstElement filed a 900-page grant application barely four months after Brown left UCI. It included commitments from more than 20 service stations to allow FirstElement to install hydrogen pumps. Officials of competing companies say it’s unprecedented to recruit so many stations and develop a 900-page proposal in so little time.

About one week after this column revealed in early March that Brown had applied for tens of millions of grant dollars under a system he essentially designed, the Energy Commission requested a written opinion from the state Fair Political Practices Commission on whether Brown was in conflict of interest. In its 40-year history, the Energy Commission never before requested such an opinion.

That opinion emerged as a rubber-stamp document filled with legal sophistry. Example: “Dr. Brown was an employee of UC Irvine while operating under a contract with the Energy Commission. The research and education that the Energy Commission gained during that contract might have informed (his grant application), but we cannot say the contracts are the same or even that one necessarily led into the other,” the FPPC said. Translation: the state’s ethics watchdog says Brown can receive the state money because it can’t prove he drew the map to benefit himself. Even if this was possible.

Of course, the state Supreme Court in 1980 ruled that conflict of interest laws are intended “not only to strike at actual impropriety, but also to strike at the appearance of impropriety.” The FPPC cited this passage, but then paid it no heed. FPPC general counsel Zackery (cq) Morazzini refused to answer questions about the ruling, as did Brown, his attorney and Energy Commission officials.

Then there’s the fact that FirstElement’s proposal exposed the new company as something like a surrogate for the large international commercial fuel firm Air Products and Chemicals, which saw grants of its own pulled back by the Energy Commission after this column in 2012 revealed a pattern of cronyism in that year’s awards.

FirstElement’s proposal says the company is a “consortium of partners,” with financing from Toyota Motor Sales and all equipment and hydrogen fuel to come from Air Products, which will also install the pumps. Executives of Air Products and Toyota for years have attended meetings of the California Fuel Cell Partnership (annual dues: $87,000) with Energy Commission staffers. This was part of what led to the earlier allegations of cronyism.

So contrary to the FPPC’s convoluted opinion, the large new grants to Brown and FirstElement reek of conflict of interest and a revival of cronyism.

Which means that if the Energy Commission, as expected, gives final approval to the announced grants, Californians will have a dirty hydrogen highway and one more multi-million-dollar reason to distrust state government.


Hawks complete comeback

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For the first four innings, the Liberty Hawks baseball team looked to be a bit tense.

Then, the sixth seeded Hawks were able to group six hits in the fifth for a come-from-behind 5-2 victory over the 11th seeded McLane-Fresno Highlanders at Liberty on Tuesday.

“It was a good win,” head coach Kevin Rosenwinkle said. “Our kids were a little nervous. They seemed, in the first couple of innings, kind of uptight.”

However, the Hawks grouped six of their seven hits in the fifth inning to score all the runs they would need with the help of three extra base hits...

Defense aids Coyote win

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Last week, the Madera Coyote boys volleyball team lost a four-set match with the Bullard-Fresno Knights after its best hitter was ejected from the match.

With Nate Moreno staying around for the entire match, the defensive pair of Henry Montiel and Cristian Ceja kept the eighth-seeded Coyotes in the match to record a 3-0 victory over the ninth-seeded Knights on Tuesday in the first round of the Central Section playoffs in Joe Flores Gym.

The defensive pair recorded 42 digs with Montiel getting 29 digs, including a number against Bullard’s top hitter, Jacob Kovacevich, who was limited to 12 kills.

Ceja and Montiel frustrated Kovacevich enough that he was forced to tip and try to find open places on the court to hit instead of hitting to the back corner where Montiel was placed...

Stallions advance to volleyball quarters

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After a successful run through the County/ Metro Athletic Conference, the Madera South boys volleyball team certainly didn’t want its season to end — especially on its home court in the first round of the section playoffs.

Led by senior Michael Mansker and junior outside hitter Jonathan Abraham, the No. 7 Stallions (24-15) played like a team that wasn’t eager to begin the offseason in a 3-0 win over the No. 10 Hoover-Fresno Patriots on Tuesday evening at Madera South’s East Gym.

Mansker was determined to keep the Stallions’ season, which continues tonight at defending champ No. 2 Clovis at 7, alive.

Playing inspired volleyball, Mansker recorded three aces, three kills, three digs and four blocks to fuel Madera South’s 25-19, 26-24, 25-18 playoff victory...

Brown seeks funds for prison medical unit

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SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown is seeking millions of dollars more to fix problems at an $839 million prison medical complex that was built to help end years of federal court oversight.

The California Health Care Facility in Stockton opened in July. Six months later, the federal overseer who runs the prison medical system abruptly halted admissions, citing a series of problems that have yet to be corrected.

The revised budget Brown proposed Tuesday requests $12.4 million to correct what it calls “unanticipated operational issues.” The proposal is “critical to fixing the deficiencies at the prison,” said Joyce Hayhoe, a spokeswoman for the federal receiver’s office.

Prison medical receiver J. Clark Kelso cited a lack of health care and support staff, problems with managing the food service, inadequate accommodations for disabled inmates, and logistical problems such as providing basic medical and personal hygiene products.

For example, he said an outbreak of scabies likely resulted from an inability to provide adequate hygiene supplies. Nurses also were not even given the proper keys that would get them into cells and other locations in the facility, he said.

Part of the additional money will go to hiring 106 additional employees, including 77 prison guards, said Deborah Hoffman, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

“The administration is committed to the continued improvement of CDCR’s delivery of health care services to inmates,” Hoffman said.

She said about $2.6 billion, or nearly 20 percent of the department’s budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, will go to providing medical, mental health and dental care to inmates.

California has been engaged in a lengthy and costly attempt to address federal court rulings that say its prisons provide substandard medical and mental health care. The judges have said reducing the overall inmate population is the most important way to improve care but also have ordered billions of dollars’ worth of Improvements to facilities and salary increases for professional medical and mental health workers.

The receiver’s office hired an independent consultant to recommend how many additional doctors and nurses are needed at the Stockton hospital, with a report due in June. Hayhoe said the office could seek additional money to hire more medical workers, depending on the consultant’s report. There is no target date for resuming admissions of sick inmates, she said.

The additional money proposed for the hospital is part of the corrections department’s $9.8 billion annual budget. Corrections accounts for nearly 9 percent of the governor’s $107.8 billion general fund spending plan.

Lawmakers must pass a balanced budget by June 15.

Education paths: a look at 3 Fresno State grads-to-be

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By Roger Munoz

David Aguilar’s inquisitive nature drove him to numerous accomplishments. Jaime Ceja wanted to better his life and his future. And Bianca Garcia had a burning desire to help others.

Aguilar, Ceja and Garcia — all born and raised in Madera — are among the 5,638 students who will graduate from Fresno State University on Saturday.

The university’s 103rd commencement ceremony will take place at the Save Mart Center from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.

Aguilar, 22, who is graduating with bachelor’s degrees in criminology and psychology, said the transition from high school to college was daunting; it took him awhile to adjust, but as time went on his confidence began to grow...

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