Volume XIV Issue 223 | Wednesday, June 8th, 2022
Happy Birthday Dad! :)
Why We Love This Place Wednesdays: Gary Felt Memorial Golf Tournament
By Terra Avilla

I have never been a golfer. Any sport (or truly any activity) in which the participants or viewers need to maintain decorum and their volume levels low, really isn’t in my lane.

So naturally, I tend to shy away from golf tournaments.
However, this past weekend was proof that when you live in our community an event can be something you wouldn’t normally like, but the people that are there make it wonderful.

This weekend, I was lucky enough to pop into the Gary Felt Memorial Golf Tournament, and let me tell, it will be something that I will volunteer at every year from here on out. Heck, I might even try to learn how to golf so that one year I can participate, because the other golfers looked like they were having so much fun.

This event, I think, truly symbolizes so many of the reasons I love this place. Not only was the tournament for a great cause, (The Salvation Army) but it was the collaboration of so many other wonderful people and things.

For instance – let’s start with the Raffle. I saw so many of our business willing to give. Like they always do. Gift certificates to Grocery Outlet, Joes’, Bottle and Brush, Les Schwab and Paws for Effect, to name just a few.

There were wonderful baskets donated by the Lassen County Cattlewomen Association, Treats, Forest Office Supply, etc. LMUD, and the list goes on and on.

It’s our businesses still giving even when times are hard for them, because they love the cause.

It’s Jolene Arredondo from the City, coming on her day off to help ensure everything was running smoothly and Kelly Ackley from the Chamber selling tickets.

But more importantly its those wonderful hearts at the Salvation Army who worked hard to put on a great event in honor of Gary. It’s Juanita and Carla and Tina and Charlette.

It’s people who still carry on the heart of service like Gary. It’s a community who continues to love a legacy of a life well-lived. It’s Susan Felt and her wonderful daughters in the golf tournament having fun, in honor of this great man.

The thing about our community is, yes, this is a specific golf tournament that I am referencing, but really, there are approximately two a month. And it is the same tale. Golfers come out and have fun, businesses and people sponsor baskets and holes for our great causes. The sense of community at the Saturday’s event made me so proud and happy to work here. To live here.

During the bag pipe ceremony before the golf tournament I saw a baby deer frolicking in the green. I saw my wonderful friends getting ready to tee off. I saw a community that always comes together. And for that brief moment, I saw my friend Gary again, in the love that was palpable at the event.

So next. Book it now – and you too will see why it is one of the reasons I love where we live.
Unofficial Election Results from the
Lassen County Elections Office
Lassen County Registrar of Voters Julie Bustamante has published unofficial local results from yesterday’s California Statewide Direct Primary Election.

According to Bustamante, out of 15,214 registered voters in Lassen County, 3,314 cast ballots in today’s election.

In the District 3 Supervisorial race Tom Neely received 370 votes, beating incumbent Jeff Hemphill’s 253.
Thomas Traphagan was the top vote-getter in the District 5 Supervisorial race with 281 votes, followed by Jason Ingram with 252 and JoAnn Sterling with 69.

Thomas Herrera narrowly beat Glen Yonan to retain his seat on the City Council.

Current Susanville Mayor Mendy Schuster successfully defended her council seat with 468 votes. Russ Brown won a second council seat with 331 votes.

Measure P, a tax initiative within the City of Susanville, received 557 yes votes and 465 no votes.

You can click here to download a pdf with the unofficial election results.
Fire Technology students train on the Lassen College campus – LCC Photo
PG&E Awards Grant to LCC Fire Technology Program

By Nicole Kelley
Lassen College Dir. of Development, Alumni & Community Relations

The Lassen College Fire Technology program was recently awarded $17,500 by Pacific Gas and Electric Company to use for scholarships and training equipment. The grant will focus on providing funding for tuition and other expenses to students seeking an Associate of Science in Fire Technology and will ideally benefit students who are from PG&E’s service area.

“PG&E is pleased to support students pursuing careers in fire service through the Lassen College Foundation. As California and other western states, continue to experience an increase in wildfire risk and a longer wildfire season, it is critical to have skilled and knowledgeable fire service professionals trained in wildland fire suppression and urban firefighting. We appreciate the opportunity to help increase and enhance the skills of our region’s future fire service workforce,” said Joe Wilson, PG&E Regional Vice President for the North Valley and Sierra.

To meet the need for entry level and advanced firefighters by public and private sector fire agencies and brigades, Lassen College provides multiple career opportunities to its students. A primary goal of the Lassen College Fire Technology program is to provide highly trained and educated candidates to fill those ranks.

This goal is met through extensive training to achieve associate degrees and certificates of achievement that prepares students for careers in the fire service. The program also focuses on providing continuing education opportunities for career advancement and preparation.

Within the past two years, the Fire Technology Program has graduated fifty students into the firefighting workforce. Most of these students are graduates of the college’s new Cal Fire Basic Academy and hired primarily by Cal Fire and other local fire agencies.

In 2021, most of those students were assigned to hand crews and worked last summer’s Dixie Fire for much of the summer. Other graduates of the program worked on the numerous fires that burned around the state from northern California to the southern border of the state.

“Last summer’s Dixie Fire put a tremendous amount of strain on our area and proved exponentially the need for highly-trained and available firefighters,” said LCC Superintendent/President, Dr. Trevor Albertson.

“We are proud to continue with the success of the Cal Fire Academy and have added an additional academy based out of Alturas, Calif. The development and expansion of the LCC-Cal Fire Basic Academies in our local area have increased career opportunities in the fire service for local community members that will provide safety and protection to our community and resources.”

Albertson added, “Additionally, our partnerships with USDA, US Forest Service, Lassen National Forest and USDI, and Bureau of Land Management – Northern California District have bolstered the training and personnel needs of entry-and-mid-level firefighters for these federal agencies.”

For more than 20 years, Lassen College Fire Technology has nurtured and expanded partnerships with federal fire agencies, Cal Fire and all local fire districts to provide highly trained firefighters at all levels. Lassen College continues to seek out opportunities for training and employment for its students. On the job training is provided for volunteer fire departments that participate in the California Mutual Aid System by sending engines and crews when requested to any large fire in the state.

Additionally, the LCC Fire Technology Program continues to engage in a robust partnership with the California Correctional Center/High Desert State Prison Fire Department (aka the CCC Firehouse) to provide needed fire training for incarcerated CCC firehouse employees, which has enhanced emergency response in our local community.

The LCC Fire Technology Program has also expanded access to continuing Fire education for both incarcerated and non-incarcerated staff at the CCC Firehouse through enhancing pathways to our Fire Technology Certificate and Degree.

This access has not only enriched current fire training but has also been successful in providing the firefighting skills needed to be hirable in the fire service upon incarcerated employee release. Thus, increasing the number of well-trained firefighters entering the fire service.
Honey Lake Valley Resource
Conservation District Receives 2.5M Grant
The Honey Lake Valley Resource Conservation District received a $2.5 million grant from the USDA Forest Service to assist private forest landowners in much of Lassen County who were impacted by wildfires that occurred between 2019 and 2021.

The grant funds will be used to implement a wildfire recovery program that will consist of outreach to forest landowners, landowner recruitment to participate in the program, removal of dead trees and planting of tree seedlings.
“Assisting forest landowners recover their land following wildfire is important for the environment and an important service that the RCD can provide through this grant,” explained Jesse Claypool, Honey Lake Valley RCD Chair.

Landowner outreach and program recruitment procedures are being developed.

Future public announcements for how a forest landowner can participate will be made soon and will also be located on the RCDs website: www.honeylakevalleyrcd.us
Law Enforcement Special Olympics Torch Run Set for June 16th
A team comprised of local law enforcement professionals is raising funds and awareness for the Special Olympics with a torch run through Susanville planned for June 16th.

Here is how it works: The group of runners will carry the torch along a 1.9-mile course beginning at the old courthouse uptown and ending up at 2950 Riverside Drive; our job is to contribute to their cause and cheer them on!
You can follow this link to make an online contribution in the name of a runner, like Anna Townsend, Dusty Pemberton, Chief Jennifer Branning, Lesandra Rodriguez, Bradley Pon, Sheriff Dean Growdon or others and then line the course on June 16th to watch the torch go by!

So far, the team has raised $1,185 dollars, all of which will go to the Special Olympics of Northern California.
Venus Confused with Japanese Balloon
June 8, 1945
That shimmering object in the sky which had thrown Westwood, Chester and Susanville into a mild hysteria the past several days, isn’t a Japanese balloon after all. It’s the morning star, Venus.

Reports that the cylindrical object (the Japanese bomb balloons are reported longitudinal in shape) which some “experts” placed at 10,000 feet altitude, was variously reported over Lake Almanor, Herlong, Westwood, Susanville and Chester.

In Westwood no less than three balloons were noted.

In Susanville some observers declared that the object was parachute in shape.

That the “floating object” was the planet Venus was established by United States army airplanes who took to the skies to shoot the menace down.

Just over one month ago one woman and five children were killed in Bly, Oregon when a 13 year old girl discovered a Japanese balloon in a tree and tried to free it.
Japanese fire balloon taken
at Moffet Field in 1945
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