Friday, January 25, 2008

Tornado Warning Issued for Southwest L.A. (LA Times Jan. 24, 2008) Must Be Global Warming!!

BS Ranch Perspective
WOW A Tornado Warning in South West Los Angeles, that is weird, Snow. all this COLD WEATHER!! It has to be Global Warming!! The cold weather, and everthing like this is just aweful, the need for alternative fuel vehicles is needed right away. I know I am just so stupid in this area, but gosh, I guess the Carbon Monoxside is so high, I guess what we have to blaim is the people on the planet, becuase after all that is the main biproduct of what we exhaile everytime we breath out!!!
BS Ranch

Tornado warning issued for southwest L.A.

Big rigs
Al Seib / Los Angeles Times
Trucks braved the snow Thursday morning along Interstate 5, where inclement weather continued to snarl the major north-south artery. By afternoon the snow-clogged south- and northbound lanes in the Grapevine area remained closed indefinitely; another storm was expected by evening.
From the Associated Press
9:31 PM PST, January 24, 2008

CASTAIC, Calif. -- A blustery winter storm peppered Southern California with heavy rain and hail Thursday, while layering a blanket of snow in local mountains and forcing hundreds of drivers to be stranded in a high pass north of Los Angeles.

The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning late Thursday for southwest Los Angeles County, including Malibu, Pacific Palisades and the Topanga area. The weather service said a strong rotating thunderstorm was spotted over the eastern half of Malibu, moving north-northeast at 20 miles per hour. No damage was immediately reported.

Many areas reported at least an inch of rain by nightfall. In Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, some areas reported between two and three inches of rain.

Heavy rain was reported Thursday evening over the Los Angeles area.

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning for the Santa Barbara County mountains through 10 p.m. Friday. The snow level was expected to drop to between 2,000 and 3,000 feet Thursday night, and down to 1,500 feet during heavier showers or thunderstorms.

The storm forced the California Highway Patrol to shut down Interstate 5 late Wednesday on each side of the notorious Grapevine section of Tejon Pass, which rises to an elevation of more than 4,000 feet between the Los Angeles Basin and the San Joaquin Valley.

An estimated 300 to 500 trucks and cars were stuck overnight in a 40-mile stretch of the major north-south artery but most had been guided out by morning, said CHP Officer Mark Ehly.

"We were taking cars out pretty much one at a time" through the night, he said.

A roughly 40-mile stretch of the icy interstate remained closed Thursday evening. There was no estimate as to when it would reopen, said CHP Officer Patrick Kimball.

About 70,000 vehicles normally use the Grapevine section of I-5 each day, but its high elevation in the Tehachapi Mountains makes it susceptible to winter storms.

In Orange County, crews placed K-rails against several homes in fire-scarred Modjeska Canyon Thursday. Up to 1 1/2 inches of rain fell Wednesday night in the area burned by October's Santiago fire, said Capt. Mike Blawn of the Orange County Fire Authority.

"The rain resulted in a few minor debris flows behind a few houses but as far as I know there was no structural damage," Blawn said.

Authorities are more concerned about a bigger storm forecast to hit the area over the weekend. Forecasters are predicting 4-6 inches to hit south and southwest facing mountain slopes between Saturday night and Sunday morning. Blawn said the county's emergency operations team is keeping a close look on the situation.

Heavy rain and overnight hail prompted the Santa Anita horse track in Arcadia to cancel races Thursday, the fourth time this month. Its synthetic track has had drainage problems.

The storm was not expected to improve local water supplies. One of the driest rain seasons on record left reservoirs so low last year that several cities called for voluntary water conservation.

"It's a drop in the bucket compared to the levels that are really needed," said Ann Erdman, a spokeswoman for the city of Pasadena, which last month officially projected a water shortage.

Still, the storm and another on the way could prove beneficial, said Arthur Hinojosa, chief of the hydrology branch of the state Department of Water Resources.

"Every drop helps, especially when you've had a year like we did last year when we were shy and drew down a lot of reservoirs ... and groundwater," he said.

He noted that the West has been in a mild La Nina condition, referring to a change in ocean temperature that usually brings drier weather.

"You get a couple more systems like this ... and things might look a lot better," he said.

The storm dumped several feet of snow in local mountains, to the delight of ski resorts.

However, its impact was less clear on the crucial Sierra Nevada snowpack that, when it melts, is a major water supplier for Southern California.

The first large-scale survey of the snowpack in the region is planned for next week, Hinojosa said.

By late Thursday, downtown Los Angeles had recorded 1.39 inches from the storm, raising its seasonal total above 7 inches, more than usually has accumulated to date. But city has a long way to go in order to meet the average total of 15.14 inches for the whole season, which began on July 1 and runs through June 30

Work to Close Rialto Bridge (San Bernardino Sun Jan. 20, 2008) Road Widening Will Jam Traffic!!

BS Ranch Perspective

Later this year, anyone that drives, or tries to drive, across the I-10 Riverside Bridge after they start the expansion Construction, Should have their head Examined!! Seriously, the crazy days are coming that the bridge across the Interstate 10 Freeway, @ Riverside Ave, one of the Busiest Freeway Bridges that Crosses the I-10. I mean since Riverside Ave is a Short cut to the I-60 from there and Now it is a Shortcut from there to the I-210, so then it will be terribly congested and just an awful way to go when the construction starts. If it is like the Rest of the bridges then it will take at least 11 to 15 months for the Concrete to dry and it will just be terrible, and just awfully congested and miserable. 

But having said that, the Congestion around Sierra Ave had gone down and was a whole lot better when the bridge was finished!! Now, I hope that the Engineers that put the whole plan together for the expansion have a better Idea for Riverside then they did for the Traffic that is W/B on the I-10 intending to turn Right N/B on Riverside. You know the ones that have the idea to make an Immediate Right on Riverside and then an Immediate Left on Valley so that they can go down to Willow, Lilac, or Cactus, or even all the way into Bloomington and make a N/B turn onto Maple since it would be better if they used Cedar Ave. Yet they have the time to sit in the middle of traffic and wait until all of Riverside Ave to clear so that they can make it over to the Center of N/B Riverside and turn Left on Valley Ave. 

People have got to learn how to get to their house other then the one way that they learned when they purchased their home!! 

BS Ranch


Work to close Rialto bridge
Road widening will jam traffic
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - More vehicles are about to squeeze onto already packed north-south roads crossing the 10 Freeway.

Later this year, workers will close Riverside Avenue over the 10 to widen the road and the on- and off-ramps. Drivers will still be able to get on the freeway from Riverside Avenue from each direction.

Once the road reopens, it might not stay open long. In the next five years, officials expect to widen the Riverside Avenue bridge over the Union Pacific rail lines just south of the freeway bridge.

"It's really a bad situation," said Councilman Ed Scott, who said the city couldn't get the money to widen both bridges at once.

Although the freeway bridge will be widened from four to six lanes, it will merge back into four lanes to cross the railroad tracks until that bridge is widened as well, said Rialto's public-works director, Ahmad Ansari.

Ansari came to the city after plans for Riverside Avenue had been set.

"To say that it is not going to be a bottleneck, I would be lying to you," he said.

Nevertheless, congestion on Riverside Avenue should be eased after the initial $37 million bridge project because the on- and off- ramps, which generate much of the traffic, will be wider, Ansari said.

He said he hopes work can start on the second bridge within five years. It's not clear whether that work will require a full closure of Riverside Avenue.

Larry Mitchell, general manager of Hometown Buffet 

just north of the 10, wasn't happy when he heard another bridge needs work on Riverside.

But he said his business will survive if the work is spread out enough.

"I think our patrons, our guests, will find a way if they want to come to Hometown Buffet," he said.

Greg Lantz, Rialto's economic development manager, said the bridge over the railroad could be widened as part of a project to widen Riverside Avenue to three lanes in each direction. A planned north-south route between Riverside and San Bernardino counties could dump out around Riverside Avenue, making the longer widening necessary.

The good news is that Riverside Avenue on- and off-ramps will get traffic signals as part of this year's project, Ansari said.

Councilwoman Winnie Hanson said that as a rule, work to improve the city's infrastructure won't be easy.

"I think our infrastructure is just way, way, way beyond quick solutions," she said.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Obama's Minister Honored Farrakhan (NewsMax.com Jan. 14, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

I found this article to be very interesting, the most reverse racist Reverend Farrakhan is one that is in the center circle of Barrack Obama! I don't know how close to the center or what kind of influence to the leader that the All Mighty Farrakhan would be to Obama, But I can say that Obama's Minister which has to be a very close person or advisor to Obama, is a close personal friend of the Rev. Farrakhan. Which to me would make this person very close to the leader Obama if he was elected to be the President of the United States of America. I don't know about you, But Farrakhan is a Anti Semite, and very much against the White Race no matter who is in that skin!!

His speeches over the Years have truly shown that he is a very Hateful person, and he has a very large portion of the Minority Races that will walk at his calling. I know that he is getting older, and the likelihood that he will pass on soon is close is upon us. Mark my words, Farrakhan has trained a very willing leader to take his place, one that has learned what his calling is and what he wants to do with the Parish when Farrakhan is past and gone.

BS Ranch



Obama's Minister Honored Farrakhan




Barack Obama prays during services at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.
Barack Obama’s longtime minister, mentor, and sounding board has been a key supporter of Louis Farrakhan and last month honored the Nation of Islam leader for lifetime achievement.

Farrakhan has repeatedly made hate-filled statements targeting Jews, whites, America, and homosexuals. He has called whites “blue-eyed devils” and the “anti-Christ.” He has described Jews as “bloodsuckers” who control the government, the media, and some black organizations.

“Do you know some of these satanic Jews have taken over BET [the Black Entertainment Network]?” Farrakhan said in a speech on Nov. 11, 2007. “Everything that we built, they have. The mind of Satan now is running the record industry, movie industry, and television. And they make us look like we’re the murderers; we look like we’re the gangsters, but we’re punk stuff.”

The month after that speech, Obama’s minister and friend, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. and his Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, honored Farrakhan at a gala, bestowing on him its Rev. Dr. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. Lifetime Achievement Trumpeteer award.

Obama has said he found religion through Wright in the 1980s and consulted him before deciding to run for president. He prayed privately with Wright before announcing his candidacy last year.

In the November/December issue of his church’s magazine, Trumpet, Wright heaped praise on Farrakhan, whom he helped in organizing the Million Man March in Washington in 1995. Wright lauded Farrakhan as one of the giants of the African-American religious experience in the 20th and 21st centuries.

“When Minister Farrakhan speaks, black America listens,” Wright said. “His depth on analysis [sic] when it comes to the racial ills of this nation is astounding and eye-opening. He brings a perspective that is helpful and honest.”

Hailing Farrakhan’s “integrity and honesty,” Wright said, “His love for Africa and African-American people has made him an unforgettable force, a catalyst for change, and a religious leader who is sincere about his faith and his purpose.”

A video quoting some of Wright’s opprobriums ran at the gala at the Hyatt Regency Chicago and appears on YouTube. However, while the mainstream media have hammered Mitt Romney over his religion, they have ignored or else downplayed Obama’s ties to Wright. No stories have appeared on Wright’s award to Farrakhan in December.

Wright’s church occupies a brick building at 400 West 95th Street near a public housing project and railroad tracks. Since becoming pastor in 1972, Wright has seen the church’s membership grow from 80 to more than 8,500. The church is the largest congregation in the United Church of Christ, a predominantly white denomination known for its liberal politics. Obama’s church runs an outreach program to attract gay and lesbian singles.

Born in Hawaii, Obama is the son of a white Christian mother from Kansas and a Kenyan father who was a Muslim but was not religious. From age 6 to 10, Obama lived in Indonesia, where he went to a Catholic school. For a year, he went to a public school where he attended Islamic religion classes.

Obama says he found religion and Jesus Christ through Wright, whom he met in the mid-1980s. Obama has been attending Wright’s church regularly since 1988. Wright warned Obama that getting involved with Trinity, with its radical reputation, might turn off other black clergy. But in 1991, Obama joined the church and walked down the aisle in a formal commitment of faith. Wright later married Obama and Michelle Robinson and baptized their two daughters.

The title of Obama’s bestseller “The Audacity of Hope” comes from one of Wright’s sermons. Wright is one of the first people Obama thanked after his election to the U.S. Senate in 2004.

For a Jan. 21, 2007 story in the Chicago Tribune, Obama said that Wright keeps his priorities straight and his moral compass calibrated.

“What I value most about Pastor Wright is not his day-to-day political advice,” Obama told the paper. “He’s much more of a sounding board for me to make sure that I am speaking truthfully about what I believe is possible and that I’m not losing myself in some of the hype and hoopla and stress that’s involved in national politics.”

However, Obama has said that in the fall of 2006, he broached the subject of a run for the presidency with Wright, who encouraged him to go ahead.

As noted in a Jan. 7 Newsmax article, “Barack Obama’s Racist Church,” in sermons and interviews, Wright has equated Zionism with racism and has compared Israel with South Africa under its previous policy of apartheid. On the Sunday following 9/11, Wright characterized the terrorist attacks as a consequence of violent American policies. Four years later, Wright suggested that the attacks were retribution for America’s racism.

“In the 21st century, white America got a wake-up call after 9/11/01,” Wright wrote in Trumpet. “White America and the Western world came to realize that people of color had not gone away, faded into the woodwork or just ‘disappeared’ as the Great White West kept on its merry way of ignoring black concerns.”

In one of his sermons, Wright said to thumping applause, “Racism is how this country was founded and how this country is still run! ...We [in the U.S.] believe in white supremacy and black inferiority and believe it more than we believe in God.”

In an op-ed in the Philadelphia Tribune, Wright said that war is about “making the world safe” for American business interests. “When one goes against the war, one tampers with the financial institutions and the financial system that was put in place by the Founding Fathers of this country to keep the rich, rich!” he said. “The rich can only stay rich by keeping the poor, poor.”

As for Israel, “The Israelis have illegally occupied Palestinian territories for over 40 years now,” Wright has said. “Divestment has now hit the table again as a strategy to wake the business community and wake up Americans concerning the injustice and the racism under which the Palestinians have lived because of Zionism.”

Those views run parallel to Farrakhan’s, who said in an interview this month with FinalCall.com that there will be “no peace for Israel, because there can be no peace as long as that peace is based on lying, stealing, murder, and using God’s name to shield a wicked, unjust practice that is not in harmony with the will of God.”

Just before Obama’s nationally televised campaign kickoff rally last Feb. 10, the candidate disinvited Wright from giving the public invocation. Wright explained: “When [Obama’s] enemies find out that in 1984 I went to Tripoli” to visit Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, “a lot of his Jewish support will dry up quicker than a snowball in hell.”

According to Wright, Obama then told him, “'You can get kind of rough in the sermons, so what we’ve decided is that it’s best for you not to be out there in public.” Wright is retiring as senior pastor of the church in May. He asked his successor, Otis Moss III, to speak instead, but he declined. However, Obama and his family prayed privately with Wright just before the presidential announcement.

The media blackout on Obama’s radical minister is in striking contrast to the coverage of Romney. Nearly half the references to Romney in the media include a discussion of his membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

If Romney’s church proclaimed on its Web site that it is “unashamedly white,” the media would pounce, and Romney’s presidential candidacy would be over. Yet that is what Obama’s church says on its web site -- except in reverse.

“We are a congregation which is unashamedly black and unapologetically Christian,” says the Trinity United Church of Christ’s Web site. “We are an African people and remain true to our native land, the mother continent, the cradle of civilization.”

Moreover, the church has a “non-negotiable commitment to Africa,” according to its Web site, and the church and its pastor subscribe to what is called the Black Value System.

While the Black Value System encourages commitment to God, education, and self-discipline, it refers to “our racist competitive society” and includes the disavowal of the pursuit of “middle-classness” and a pledge of allegiance to “all black leadership who espouse and embrace the Black Value System.” It defines “middle-classness” as a way for American society to “snare” blacks rather than “killing them off directly” or “placing them in concentration camps,” just as the country structures “an economic environment that induces captive youth to fill the jails and prisons.”

In two exceptions to the media blackout, Tucker Carlson of MSNBC described Trinity as having a “racially exclusive theology” that “contradicts the basic tenets of Christianity.” Sean Hannity of Fox News confronted Wright on TV and asked how a black value system is any more acceptable than a white value system.

If a white presidential candidate’s church had a similar statement and “you substitute the word black for white, there would be an outrage in this country,” Hannity said. “There would be cries of racism in this country.'”

In response, Wright repeatedly asked Hannity how many books he had read by James Cone and others about black liberation theology. Cone, who is widely admired at Wright’s church, was quoted in the May 29, 2007, issue of The Christian Century as saying, “Theologically, Malcolm X was not far wrong when he called the white man ‘the devil.’... Any advice from whites to blacks on how to deal with white oppression is automatically under suspicion as a clever device to further enslavement.”

On a few points, Obama has sought to distance himself from Wright’s teachings or to explain them away. While Wright is his pastor and friend, Obama has said, they do not see eye to eye on everything. Without addressing Wright’s denunciations of Israel and Zionism as racist, Obama has said he “strongly disagrees with any portrayal of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that advocates divestment from Israel or expresses anything less than strong support for Israel’s security.”

As for Wright’s repeated comments blaming America for the 9/11 attacks, Obama has said it sounds as if the minister was trying to be “provocative.”

But Obama’s close association with Wright over more than two decades and the minister’s close ties to Farrakhan cannot be explained away so cavalierly. If Obama rejects Wright’s warped view of this country, why does he continue to attend his church? If Obama disagrees with Farrakhan and his anti-Semitic and anti-white statements, why doesn’t he denounce him rather than continue to associate with a minister and friend who is one of his advocates and who gave him an award for lifetime achievement? Does Obama secretly agree with some of their hate-filled, radical statements while publicly avoiding race-specific appeals as part of his candidacy?

That comports with Obama’s habit of not showing up for controversial votes or tackling tough policy issues, allowing him to broaden his appeal through charisma alone. Farrakhan himself recently spoke approvingly of Obama’s strategy, which is crucial to inviting whites to support him.

“Barack Obama has been very careful not to position himself as Rev. Jesse Jackson or Rev. Al Sharpton as a promoter of ‘The Black Cause,’” Farrakhan said in the interview with FinalCall.com. “He has been groomed, wisely so, to be seen more as a unifier, rather than one who speaks only for the hurt of black people.”

At the least, Obama’s membership in Wright’s church and close ties to Wright himself suggest a lack of judgment and an insensitivity to views that are repugnant to the vast majority of white Americans who are not bigots or anti-Semites.

That same lack of judgment has shown up in Obama’s gaffes -- threatening to invade Pakistan and offering prompt negotiations with anti-American despots. More frightening, Obama voted last August to give Osama bin Laden and other terrorists the same rights as Americans when it comes to intercepting their overseas calls in order to pick up clues needed to stop another attack.

To evaluate what Obama’s ties to Wright mean, picture America’s reaction if President Bush’s minister, mentor, and moral compass had the views of Wright and was an admirer and supporter of Farrakhan.

“He that lies down with dogs, shall rise up with fleas,” Benjamin Franklin said.

Obama may be a gifted orator, but his choice of a friend and advisor suggests he is masquerading as a moderate. While the liberal media have already decided Obama will be our next president, Americans may have a different view when they consider what his ties to Wright tell us about the presidential candidate’s true opinions and character.

Ronald Kessler is chief Washington correspondent of Newsmax.com. View his previous dispatches and have them sent to you free via e-mail. Go here now.

© 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


Analysis: Fixing Economy Won't Be Easy

BS Ranch Perspective

The idea that the economy of the State let alone the Federal Government will be easy with the current tax brackets has to have their head examined!! See the current Tax Table is so screwed up that the loop holes alone allow so many people to get out of paying so much money to the government. And to have our California Governor who has never balanced a checkbook in his life especially since he started to make over $20Million a picture when he was making movies, now the money he was making is making over or around about $57,000 a month. I believe that they can fix some of the money problems with a lot of other thins other then ripping off the Indians again!!

BS Ranch


sacbee.com - The online division of The Sacramento Bee

This story is taken from Sacbee / Politics.


Analysis: Fixing economy won't be easy

By Kevin G. Hall - khall@mcclatchydc.com
Published 12:00 am PST Saturday, January 19, 2008

WASHINGTON – The economic growth package being prepared by President Bush and Congress may help ease the sting of an economic downturn or soften the blow of a recession, but it won't fix the deeper structural problems that are menacing the economy.

That's because the U.S. economy has rarely faced such a combination of challenges all at the same time.

First, the economy is mired in what arguably is the worst housing slump since the Great Depression. Just last August, President Bush told economic reporters that he saw a "soft landing" for the housing sector. On Friday, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson offered this grimmer view: "This market needs to correct. We've had unsustainable growth for some period of time. We're not trying to prolong that – it needs to correct."

New housing starts in 2007 fell 24.8 percent to their lowest level since 1980; building permits fell 25.2 percent. Median home prices in hard-hit California fell more than 15 percent last year, and no one's quite sure where the bottom is there or in the other troubled states such as Florida and Nevada.

Related problems in housing finance have spilled over, infecting the broader credit markets and roiling Wall Street. Because investment banks packaged mortgages into special bonds sold to investors, they're taking it on the chin now that the housing market is sinking.

Mammoth investment banks Citigroup and Merrill Lynch this month announced fourth-quarter losses of $10 billion and $9.8 billion, respectively, and write-downs of $18.1 billion and $11.5 billion for bad bets made on mortgage-related bonds.

Now fears are mounting that insurance companies, which issued policies to protect Wall Street firms from losses on those mortgage bonds, don't have enough money to pay up. The foundation on which housing finance rests is becoming ever more unstable.

If that weren't enough, oil prices flirted with all-time highs this month, and inflation, which erodes the earning power of an American paycheck, remains a hair away from being a problem.

The U.S. economy is resilient, but many mainstream economists believe the chances of recession are 50 percent or better.

"I think it's going to boil down to the unemployment rate. If it keeps rising, it's going to undermine spending," said Mark Zandi, the chief economist for Moody's Economy.com, an economic forecaster in West Chester, Pa.

Much of today's uncertainty rests on December's weak job growth of only 18,000 jobs. Other economic indicators showed signs of a slowdown, but until December, job growth was steady – a fact that had been cause for relief.

Now, if anemic job growth continues, it would signal recession.

Ken Goldstein, a veteran labor economist with the Conference Board, an economic research group in New York, said the December job tally sobered people.

"The question is how bad a hit will consumer confidence take because of this," he said.

Consumption drives roughly two-thirds of the U.S. economy, so the jobs question is important. People with jobs spend money. People without them, or afraid they'll lose theirs, don't.

That's why, although the stimulus plan being drafted in Washington seeks to get cash into people's hands, Goldstein doubts that it'll have much impact.

"People are in a mood that … if the refrigerator isn't broken, we're not going to replace it right now. If the sofa has four legs, we're not going to replace it right now," he said.

Greater certainty about the job market would revive consumer confidence – but Goldstein doesn't think that will happen.

"There's no reasonable expectation that the labor market is going to be strong for at least the next 16 months," Goldstein said.

If the U.S. economy enters a mild recession, it likely would reduce demand and thus drive down oil prices. After flirting with $100-a-barrel prices on Jan. 2, contracts for future delivery of crude oil have fallen to $90 and seem ready to settle below that.

The dollar's plunge against world currencies over the past year has boosted U.S. exports and offset the drag from housing. But it also raises the price of imported consumer goods, pushing up inflation. Inflation in 2007 – 4.1 percent – was the highest since 1990.

Core inflation, which strips out the more-volatile food and energy prices, remains at the upper end of the Federal Reserve's comfort zone, and if it doesn't subside, it could limit the ability of the Fed to lower interest rates aggressively to spark economic activity.

But the biggest problems have no simple solutions.

"Over the next year, the biggest problem to get over is the housing and credit markets and the fallout from that," said Martin Regalia, the chief economist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "The best way to do that is keep the economy growing and let it work its way out."


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Community Meetings To Start (San Bernardino Sun Jan. 14, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

This is new and Rialto has not had this before, it is something that the New Chief Mark Kling has probably brought with him from Los Angeles and Baldwin Park Police Department where he worked Before in order to gain a feel for what the people in the different area's needs are and what the crimes are, not to mention the complaints that one neighbor has against another, and what basic complaints that one has or what they might be doing right in that area. All of which they would hear at these meetings. I know that the Sheriff's Department Hears these things at our Neighborhood MAC (Municipal Advisory Council) Meetings that we have each month.

These meetings have to be similar to the M.A.C. Meetings of the County, and maybe the Chief took the Idea from the County and he only carries these meetings out each quarter where the County has them each month before each Supervisor's meeting so that the report from the meeting can be fresh in the mind of the Supervisor when the Supervisor's meet Each Month.

The Chief at Rialto has the right idea, but will they use the information that they get from their Citizens to make Rialto a Better place for the citizens to live and work?? That is the question that has to wait to be answered.

BS Ranch

Community meetings to start
By Canan Tasci, Staff Writer

RIALTO - Want to know what's happening with the new utility-tax bill?

Neighbors' parties keeping you up late at night?

Want to start a Neighborhood Watch Program?

If any of these topics spark an interest or if there are other questions about Rialto you want answered, then Area Command meetings are where you should be.

Beginning tonight, the first- quarter Area Command meetings will provide residents an opportunity to share and gather information with the Police Department's area commanders and other city personnel.

Residents are encouraged to attend and participate.

"We want to be able to interact with the community and its citizens more so than we have in the past," said Lt. Joe Cirilo, commander of Area 1.

Issues to be discussed include area-specific crime statistics, new city policies and information on public works, traffic and construction.

"Even if someone from the community attends the meeting and doesn't have a problem they want to talk about, this will give them a chance to know what the future holds in Rialto," said Lt. Reinhard Burkholder, commander of Area 2.

He said that since the community meetings began in July 2006, citizens have been very receptive. The meetings average 30 to 40 people.

"(When) more citizens attending the meetings, we get a better feel of what problems are in the area, and we're able to give them answers and provide a possible solution," Burkholder said.

"It's a win-win for everyone."

canan.tasci@dailybulletin.com

(909) 987-6397, Ext. 425


IF YOU GO

Area 1 meeting:

7 to 8:30 tonight at Preston Elementary, 1750 N. Willow Ave. Information: (909) 820-2594

Area 2 meeting:

7 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at Curtis Elementary, 451 S. Lilac Ave.

Information: (909) 820-2669

Area 3 meeting:

7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday at Boyd Elementary, 310 E. Merrill Ave. Information: (909) 820-2647

Defaults. Foreclosures Skyrocket in Sacramento, State (Sacramento Bee Jan. 22, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

I believe that this is still just the start or the first quarter of the losses in the REAL ESTATE PROBLEM. I am sure that the Real Estate people meant well by wanting to put people into homes, After all that was and is the "American Dream" to own your own piece of property!! I know it was my dream to own my own piece of property. It is the only way to go, owning your own place.

Looking at this report is basically the start of the losses, I believe that there will be some Prominent Real Estate Companies that will Fold before to long. Ones that will not be Saved by the Massive Banks, like "Bank of America".

Watch and see, you will be able to purchase a 2500 sq. ft. home again in California for just $100,000 in no time, just wait it will happen, right here in California.

BS Ranch



sacbee.com - The online division of The Sacramento Bee

This story is taken from Sacbee / Breaking News.


Defaults, foreclosures skyrocket in Sacramento, state

By Dale Kasler - dkasler@sacbee.com
Published 10:34 am PST Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Foreclosures and defaults soared to stratospheric levels in Sacramento and the rest of the state last year.

As the Federal Reserve made an emergency interest rate cut of three-quarters of a point Tuesday in an effort to stop a panic in global stock markets, new statistics from DataQuick Information Systems showed that California's real estate problems continue to deepen.

Notices of default - a sign that homeowners are falling behind on payments and are in danger of foreclosure - jumped 114 percent in the fourth quarter in California to 81,550. That's the highest level ever recorded by DataQuick, which has been tallying defaults since 1992.

Actual foreclosures statewide rose fivefold in the quarter, to 31,676, DataQuick said.

The results were dismal in Sacramento as well. Notices of default in the eight-county Sacramento region, stretching from Amador to Nevada counties, were up 106 percent in the quarter.

For all of 2007, foreclosures in greater Sacramento were up an astonishing 496 percent, to 10,049, DataQuick said.

The latest numbers underscore the enormous challenge facing the state and national economy. The Fed's rate cut may not stave off a recession, said Scott Anderson, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co.

"It could get ugly very quickly and this is what the Fed is responding to," he said. The cut "is not going to be a panacea" but could help bring the economy out of a recession more quickly, he said.

He said there's at least a 50 percent chance of a recession this year.

At least one Sacramento real estate agent welcomed the Fed's move.

"When I heard that, I thought, 'Right on, good,"' said agent Warren Adams, who specializes in selling properties that have been foreclosed. "That'll get more buyers out there to buy."

Adams said he believes prices might continue to decline although "I think by far the worst is behind us." He acknowledged that his is a minority view, and most experts believe that prices will continue to drop substantially.


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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Patriots Reach 4th Super Bowl in 7 Years (Associated Press Jan. 20, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

Many people say that the Patriots did a great thing, well if we remember right at the beginning of the season when the Coaching Staff was Caught Cheating, well it is my belief that they have and did Cheat this whole season! If I ever meet any of their coaching staff or any of their players they may punch my eyes out, but that is my belief, Once a Cheater always a cheater, one does what works for them to win. Now the Coaching Staff might be able to pull the cheat move off without the Player's Even knowing what or if the Coaching Staff was even Cheating at all!!

So even if they got a full 19 Win's in this season, and this whole 18 record winning season, the fact is that they were caught cheating and the National Football League didn't do anything about it except a minimal fine, and that was all. The people that was involved in this should have been kicked out of being involved in the National Football League all together!! EXPUNGED!! Completely expunged from the National Football League.

BS Ranch



Patriots reach 4th Super Bowl in 7 years

By BEN WALKER, AP National Writer 34 minutes ago

"Now we can look ahead." Bill Belichick, a coach of few words, said it all with that sentence after his New England Patriots claimed the AFC championship trophy. Looking ahead means only one thing: A trip to the Super Bowl, and a chance to give their perfect record a whole new meaning.

Despite a shaky Tom Brady, the Patriots were still too much for the banged-up San Diego Chargers, pulling out a 21-12 victory Sunday that sent them back to the NFL title game for the fourth time in seven seasons.

"There was history on the line," Patriots linebacker Tedy Bruschi said. "We recognize it, we acknowledge it."

Brady made several stunningly poor throws that fluttered in the wind, Randy Moss was a non-factor for the second straight game and the highest-scoring team in NFL history sputtered all afternoon. Instead, the Patriots (18-0) relied on Laurence Maroney's spins, cuts and helmet-rattling runs.

With injured Chargers star LaDainian Tomlinson reduced to mostly watching in a parka, the Patriots moved on to a Feb. 3 matchup in Glendale, Ariz., against the New York Giants.

The Giants beat Green Bay 23-20 in overtime for the NFC championship. New England closed out its regular season by beating the Giants in a 38-35 thriller.

Yet for all the Brady Bunch has accomplished — they're the only team in NFL history to start out with 18 straight victories — the Patriots are well aware they must win that final game to avoid being relegated to a footnote.

"We'll try to elevate our game for one last performance," said Brady, MVP in two of the three Super Bowls he's won.

Brady, coming off a record-setting 50 TD passes, threw for two scores. He also tossed a season-high three interceptions.

No matter, New England took care of the nuts and Bolts on a most chilly day. The sellout crowd at Gillette Stadium chanted "Super Bowl! Super Bowl!" in the closing minutes, anticipating the Pats' first appearance in the big game since the 2004 season.

Belichick's team eclipsed the 17-0 mark of the champion 1972 Miami Dolphins, and he'll soon try for his fourth NFL title.

"I think there will be a time to sit back and reflect," Belichick said. "We'll certainly enjoy this for a few days."

Brady earned his 100th career victory and advanced without a hint of girlfriend drama — taking notes, Tony Romo? The dimpled Patriots quarterback will bring true glam to Super Bowl: Imagine the paparazzi buzz if Brady is sighted with Gisele Bundchen.

A model of success in the late season, the Chargers (13-6) fell short minus Tomlinson. He was hurt last week in the playoff upset of the Super Bowl champion Indianapolis Colts, and was mostly a spectator as San Diego's eight-game winning streak ended.

Tomlinson carried on the first two San Diego plays, and did not run it again because of a bad knee. Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers hung in despite a torn ligament in his knee and star tight end Antonio Gates did his best with a dislocated toe.

"From getting it reinjured the first play, I just knew I didn't have it," Tomlinson said. "I'm kind of at a loss for words."

San Diego coach Norv Turner needed to improvise without Tomlinson, a two-time rushing champ. Even so, the Chargers never could get into the end zone, and that cost them dearly.

"He really couldn't get started," Turner said. "He went and tried to go and just didn't have the power to push off."

Routed 38-14 at New England in September, the Chargers gave a better performance. They trailed just 14-12 midway in the third quarter this time, but Brady's 6-yard TD pass to Wes Welker early in the fourth period was enough for New England.

Maroney ran for 122 yards to help hold the lead.

"It felt like everything was a struggle today," Brady said. "We didn't perform the way I thought we were capable of."

The Patriots seemed poised to pull away late in the third quarter, but a terrible throw by Brady cost them. On third-and-goal at the 2, Brady tried a touch pass over the middle that NFL interceptions leader Antonio Cromartie easily picked off standing on the New England logo in the end zone.

Nate Kaeding's fourth field goal, a 24-yarder midway through the third period, pulled San Diego to 14-12. Too bad for the Chargers, that was the story of their afternoon — they'd drive close, only to wind up settling for four kicks.

"I think we gave ourself a chance today," Rivers said. "It's unfortunate we couldn't score in the red zone."

It was 23 degrees at gametime, making for frosty breaths on the field and putting the Patriots cheerleaders in parkas. Most players chose to ignore the cold and came out in short sleeves.

The brisk wind caused more noticeable problems. The goal posts shook with every gust while passes and punts sailed in crazy directions.

"I didn't think it was that bad," Belichick said. "It wasn't a balmy day, I'm not saying that, but it wasn't bad."

Normally solid in chilly weather, Brady took a while to adjust to the conditions.

"Now we're going someplace warm, because I'm freezing my you-know-what off," Brady said.

He badly missed his first two passes — he threw a total of two incompletions in 28 attempts last week in the win over Jacksonville.

A few minutes later, Brady lofted a poor toss that Quentin Jammer intercepted. Belichick talked this week about the Chargers' "ball disruption" and turnovers certainly were a focus — San Diego led the league in takeaways, the Pats had the fewest giveaways.

San Diego turned Jammer's pickoff into Kaeding's 26-yard field goal with 2:55 left in the period for a 3-0 lead.

This wasn't what the home fans expected, and they grew silent as the Chargers refused to back down, engaging in several post-play scuffles with the heavily favored Patriots. Tomlinson stepped in to calm hard-hitting former teammate Rodney Harrison after some early roughhousing.

Maroney plunged in from the 1 barely over a minute into the second quarter and, with very light flurries falling, the Patriots were ahead for good.

Brady later hit Jabar Gaffney over the middle for a 12-yard TD and a 14-6 lead, prompting several of the Patriots to celebrate. Brady merely walked off the field with his head down.

"We're not going to get all carried away with the undefeated season," linebacker Mike Vrabel said. "We did that in the regular season."

Notes:@ This marked the first time in more than 100 years that a team in the four major pro sports opened a season with 18 straight victories. The record for wins to start a season was set in 1884 by St. Louis in baseball's Union Association, the Elias Sports Bureau said. ... Brady threw a TD pass in his 14th straight postseason game. ... Maroney has scored a touchdown in five straight games. ... The Chargers beat the Boston Patriots 51-10 for the 1963 AFL championship at old Balboa Stadium. The Patriots played that season at Fenway Park.

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Housing Crash Delays Rialto Project (San Bernardino Sun Jan 19, 2008) Who Knows when they will consider to Re-up the case and start the devlopement again. Maybe in two years when the bubble forms again.

BS Ranch Perspective

I know that the City of Rialto wants to get all the money that they can for the property that they have created through the seeming use of loop holes, to close the Rialto Airport. A Closure that was Brokered over a Breakfast Meeting in a Cocoa's Restaurant in Whittier, with a House Representative that just happens to have a Development Company, that got the job to develop the acreage as soon as the City Council, and City Planning decides that the time is Ripe to get the best price for the property that is there in Rialto.

It is the belief of this writer that the City has made their bed!! They should be able to lie in the bed, No matter what the market. So they should get on with the payment of $25 to $28 million to the City of San Bernardino for the moving of the Current Businesses that are at Miro Air Field or Rialto Airport.

Rialto City Council & Rialto City Planning has made their bed, lets see if they are going to lay in it at least a little, I doubt that the airport will close for at least the next five years.

BS Ranch


Housing crash delays Rialto project
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - Though plans for the city's premier development are moving forward, they have fallen about a year behind schedule.

While the city still has to finish negotiations with Caltrans as well as the Federal Aviation Administration, the main reason for Renaissance Rialto's delay is the housing-market slowdown.

Last year, the project's developers - a team consisting of the Lewis Group and Ross Perot Jr.'s Texas-based Hillwood - redrew the project to cut half the housing.

"Even though we looked like we were on a fast track, I think the mud's gotten deeper," said Councilwoman Winnie Hanson, who thinks the alterations could make for a better project.

Renaissance Rialto, on 1,500 acres next to the 210 Freeway, will be developed into houses, retail and industrial space.

The heart of the retail center - which will be anchored by a SuperTarget - can't be built until the city closes Rialto Municipal Airport.

Officials originally planned to close the airport last year, but it looks like it won't happen until next year, said Rich Scanlan, airport director.

Four or five of about 200 tenants have left Rialto Municipal Airport, he said.

Rialto will eventually relocate many of the airport's tenants to San Bernardino International Airport.

By the fall, the Rialto City Council could approve plans for the Renaissance Rialto project and an environmental impact report, said Greg Lantz, the city's economic development

manager.

City staff will spend the next month reviewing and refining a draft plan for the project, he said.

The city and developers can then begin relocating tenants. Once they are relocated, construction can begin.

Stores could start opening in 2010, but not in time to meet the original goal of the 2009 winter holidays.

City officials would like to start developing the area to the west around Alder Avenue and the 210 Freeway even sooner. The area is far enough away from Rialto Municipal Airport that construction can begin before it is closed, Lantz said.

Though Congress passed legislation in 2005 allowing Rialto to close the airport, the FAA still hasn't given the OK to shut things down.

Before the airport can be closed, the FAA has to agree to a closure plan that it is reviewing, said Ian Gregor, an FAA spokesman.

He said the plan has to agree with Rialto and the San Bernardino International Airport Authority regarding airport land values.

An escrow account also needs to be established so revenue from the sale of the airport property can be transferred to the Small Business Insurance Agency for improvements.

In the next three to four months, Lantz said, Rialto also hopes to settle some land-rights issues with Caltrans.

Most notably, Rialto needs to get control of Easton Street from the state, so the city can move Easton a few hundred feet to the south to make room for the Target-anchored center.

If the city can this year get a sewer line built around Alder, Lantz said, development on that end of the project can quickly begin.

LA County Developers Taking on San Bernardino's Caroucel Mall (Press Enterprise 011508)

BS Ranch Perspective

Looks like they are going to turn the Central City Mall into a Mexican City Center to make it into a whole shopping center that will make it a whole shopping center and a place with living quarters, such as a apartments or a Condominiums instead of all stores, and shops. This might work. They it sounds like it would have a huge amount of small businesses in the under area and then the upper area would have condominiums in the top stories, However I believe that it would work that the stores and the people that live in the Condos would look after the businesses when they are closed, because they are there living right there and looking after the businesses and they don't want their place to drop in value.

However, Seeing what the City Council is saying, they just might be right that the Condominium idea right now might not work, because the Real Estate Market is just at the beginning of dropping off, at my opinion, and they will be dropping further, the cost of homes will drop down to the prices that they were at the summer of 1994, which was that you could purchase a 1/4 acre of land with a 1935 sq ft home with 4 bdrm 3 bath 2 car garage, for a huge price of $125,000. Now that is not close to what the market is at right now, but they will get there soon. Mark my words. I believe that they will be. This is based upon the sound of all that air coming out of the Real Estate Balloon!!

BS Ranch


LA County developers taking on San Bernardino's Carousel Mall


10:13 AM PST on Tuesday, January 15, 2008
By JOSH BROWN and CHRIS RICHARD
The Press-Enterprise

Video: A visit to Plaza Mexico in Lynwood

Video: Merchants express hope following the recent sale of Carousel Mall

Just a few hundred feet off Interstate 105 in Lynwood sits a Mexican-themed outdoor mall with lavish landscaping, fountains and sculptures. It's almost Disneyesque in appearance.

An Anna's Linen store sits just across the breezeway from the Hispanic-focused department store La Curacao, with a high-end Mexican restaurant beside it. Nearby, a Chuck E Cheese restaurant is across the parking lot from Mexican tourism offices.

This quirky retail center is Plaza Mexico, the best-known development of Donald and Min Chae, who 11 days ago bought the Carousel Mall from LNR Property Corp. for $23.5 million.

Story continues below

Although the Chaes are mum about their plans for the struggling 36-year-old downtown San Bernardino mall, the Lynwood plaza's mix of retail neighbors may hold some clue to what the Chaes could bring.

"These normal shopping centers don't appeal to us," Min Chae, 52, said in an interview Friday at M & D Properties' office at the mall. "We want to see change."

The Chaes said they hired Mexican designers to re-create a traditional town center. Cuban palm trees, statues and fancy benches line the mall's main corridor.

On a bench outside the company's office, an old man snoozed in the midmorning sun Friday. He stirred as visitors strolled by, offering to take their photo next to a painted zebra statue.

Nearby, workers and shoppers meandered around what once was the entrance to a Montgomery Ward department store, now transformed into a mini mall occupied by clothing and shoe shops, produce and meat markets, and even a pet store. An ornate façade replicates a Mexican city hall.

Plaza Mexico stands in stark contrast to the Carousel Mall, which has been languishing since its major anchors fled a decade ago.

A Place to Thrive

The Chaes began construction on Plaza Mexico in 2000 and opened the majority of the center in 2003. They still own and operate the center and have proposed a second phase that would add 600 to 800 residential units.

Min Chae said if he can build a successful shopping center in Lynwood, an area rife with gang violence and poverty, revitalizing an old mall in San Bernardino will be easy.

"When I approached the bankers about my idea, everybody turned it down," Min Chae said of the Lynwood project. "All the buildings were built on spec. Once they were built, the stores started lining up."

Laura Alderete, marketing manager for the city of Lynwood, said Plaza Mexico has had a positive impact on the community.

"It is the center of Lynwood now," she said. "It's a gathering place. It's improved the pedestrian experience. On a Sunday afternoon, you see families hanging out by the water fountains."

Larry Lazar, a consultant the Chaes hired to oversee a retail and residential project in Buena Park, will be the project manager for San Bernardino. The company already has interviewed about a dozen architects to get their ideas on what could be done at the Carousel Mall site, he said.

The San Bernardino project could incorporate elements of Plaza Mexico and expand on them, Lazar said.

"This would be really good for San Bernardino, to have a place for small businesses to thrive," he said.

Pro and Con

LNR purchased most of the mall property in February 2006 with the intention of helping the city transform its languishing downtown by building hundreds of town homes and condominiums.

After the housing market began to slump, LNR suggested a less dense development, but city officials resisted such a change. In September, LNR told the city that such an ambitious project would not work in the current housing market. The city later terminated the company's right to proceed with the project.

Councilwoman Esther Estrada, who traveled with San Bernardino Mayor Pat Morris' staff last week to visit Plaza Mexico, said she finds the Chaes' cautious approach reassuring.

Estrada, who represents the neighborhood around the mall, said she's confident the Chaes can capitalize on other downtown projects, including the development of American Sports University near City Hall and plans for a new county government campus and courts complex.

Story continues below
Photos By Stan Lim / The Press-Enterprise
Larry Lazar will be project manager for the recently acquired Carousel Mall in San Bernardino. Developers Donald and Min Chae already have interviewed about a dozen architects to get their ideas on what the Chaes' company could do at the Carousel Mall site, Lazar said.

But with the housing market slump, Estrada stopped short of demanding a mixed-use development for affluent residential and business tenants proposed under LNR's plan.

"Things went sour all over the place in the real estate industry, and that project couldn't happen," she said. "Does that mean it couldn't happen under another situation? I don't know."

At least one San Bernardino official is skeptical about the Chaes' chances.

In a Friday e-mail to city officials, Councilman Neil Derry questioned whether the Chaes have the experience or resources to meet the mall site's potential.

"M & D is not a Forest City (Victoria Gardens' developer), Majestic Realty (Citrus Plaza's developer), a Westfield or some other highly capitalized commercial/office developer with an extensive record of accomplishment," he said.

Derry criticized the Chaes' Lynwood development as "mom and pop stores and low-end retail."

"Plaza Mexico is not the track record we need for choosing a new development partner for the Carousel Mall project area," he said.

The Chaes also will have to deal with the owners of buildings around the mall's periphery, including the J.C. Penney, Harris' and Andresen buildings. Those structures account for almost 1 million square feet of space.

The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, which operates a casino near San Bernardino, is in escrow on the J.C. Penney building and in talks about purchasing the Harris' building, according to city officials and people familiar with the matter who could not speak on the record because of a confidentiality agreement.

In his e-mail, Derry said the city missed an opportunity to foster a project by the tribe, a local entity, rather than one from outside the community.

Jim Morris, the mayor's chief of staff, said the mayor had little influence on the sale.

"When a piece of private property changes hands, we don't get to say, 'You don't buy it,' " Jim Morris said. "The city doesn't get to choose that."

Hoping for Rebirth

On Monday afternoon, the Carousel Mall was as quiet as usual.

Annie Derghazarian, who works at Variety, the store owned by her husband, Neshan Derghazarian, said she would like to see a return to the days when the carousel was operating inside and there was a lot of life in the place.

Sundays were especially busy, she said.

"It used to be family gatherings after church," she said. "They'd come to eat, and the kids were on the carousel having fun."

The Chaes said they will spend three to six months talking with city officials before announcing any plans.

"The only thing I know for sure: This location has potential," Min Chae said. "And we are the right player."

Staff writer Julie Farren contributed to this report.

Reach Josh Brown at 909-806-3074 or jbrown@PE.com

Reach Chris Richard at 909-806-3076 or crichard@PE.com

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Rialto Selects Projects For Redevelopment Bond Funding (Press Enterprise Jan. 15, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

The Rialto Redevelopment Agency (Rialto City Council) has taken on a good Idea to extend Pepper Ave to Highland I-210, it will give access to Highland (I-210  Business route) and  on ramps/off ramps to the I-210 freeway that is one thing that is needed since there is currently Three accesses to Rialto from the I-210 Freeway (Alder Ave, Ayala Ave, & Riverside Ave.) All the signs on the freeway indicate that there is four off ramps to Rialto, but since Pepper was not competed there is just the three. That completion will also allow the people that live in the Eastern side of the city better easier Access to the I-210 rather then fight the traffic that the currently have to fight from Riverside Ave. to the Two Lane Road Easton Ave. and then to Sycamore Ave and beyond is very difficult and causes a great deal of Traffic problems in the morning and afternoon just from the traffic that is trying to get on the I-210 in the morning and back to their homes in the afternoon. Now It is still quicker for them to gain access on the I-210 then it was to drive all the way down Pepper Ave to I-10 and then to work from there, then it does for them to just gain access to the I -210 and get on their way, however the traffic is pretty bad and that does take them some time.

So there is a great need for the Pepper Ave extension, and  I believe that the extension will be invited once the construction starts.

BS Ranch

Rialto selects projects for redevelopment bond funding


10:00 PM PST on Tuesday, January 15, 2008
By MARY BENDER
The Press-Enterprise

RIALTO - The city Redevelopment Agency will issue $88 million in bonds to pay for several projects, including an extension of Pepper Avenue to connect to Highway 210 and an expansion of Frisbie Park, the board decided Tuesday night.

The Rialto City Council, which doubles as the Redevelopment Agency board, whittled down a long list of proposed public improvements to several that the city could complete within three years.

The council had earlier agreed to set aside $20 million in bond funds for assorted economic development projects and $28 million for several neighborhood-revitalization projects.

At issue Tuesday was how the remaining $40 million would be allotted. The biggest chunk of the bond funds, $14.8 million, will go to the proposed Pepper Avenue link to the 210.

The Highway 210 segment through Rialto and San Bernardino opened last summer with three access points in Rialto, but the planned Pepper connection has met delays.

Pepper Avenue would have to be extended roughly one-half mile north to reach the freeway. Between its dead-end, which is in a residential neighborhood a few blocks north of Base Line, and the freeway are acres of vacant land that might be a habitat for two endangered species, the San Bernardino kangaroo rat and the Santa Ana River woolly star, a plant. Both are native to Lytle Creek, next to the freeway.

Rialto needs approval from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in order to build the Pepper extension and 210 connection.

Redevelopment Director Robb Steel said Rialto recently received a credit rating of A-minus, good news for the Redevelopment Agency as it prepares to issue the tax allocation bonds, which are paid back by a property-tax increment that comes to the agency.

Such bonds are unlike general obligation bonds, which must be approved by local voters.

Mayor Grace Vargas missed the afternoon bond workshop but attended the City Council meeting on Tuesday night.

Councilman Joe Baca Jr. told Steel that he wanted $7 million of the bond funds used to develop sports fields and other amenities at Frisbie Park, and his colleagues agreed.

The council also allotted $5 million for rebuilding Fire Station 202, $4 million for expanding parking at the Metrolink Station and $4.7 million to go toward a project to widen the Riverside Avenue bridge over Interstate 10.

The Riverside Avenue bridge will be torn down later this year and rebuilt as a nine-lane road. The artery is Rialto's only connection to Interstate 10.

Fire Station 202 opened in 1963 on the northeast corner of Riverside Avenue and Easton Street, and it is now too small to accommodate some modern fire equipment. It will be rebuilt on vacant city-owned land across the street, and the current site will be sold.

The fire station is now next to the Riverside Avenue connection to Highway 210.

The Metrolink Station, which is at 261 S. Palm Ave., currently has 222 parking spaces. Initially, 154 spaces could be added, and the city eventually could build a 900-space parking structure.

Reach Mary Bender at 909-806-3056 or mbender@PE.com

Schwarzenegger Still Popular With Voters (LA Times Jan. 16, 2008) However I am not counted on this POLL!!!

BS Ranch Perspective

According to these Polls The California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is still popular with the people in California that elected him into Office. However I was not Polled as to how popular he might be with me. I disagree with several things that he has started to do, yet denies that he has been the one that has implemented the new charge the one that I am talking about is last year there was an increase of $11.00 to our Auto Registration, and this year another $11.00 was added to the Registration costs along with the Taxes of getting the vehicle Tested Every other year for Smog, Which is a Tax no matter how you look at it. The additional $22.00 that was added in the last two years to the Auto Registration was to assist in the California Budget and to pay for the California Highway Patrol, and California Correctional Officers. Yet, He is Releasing 22,000 Prisoners from Prison early on their sentences, therefore the California Correctional Officers that are getting all the $22.00 dollars are making it much easier had they not released all the prisoners.

The Prisoners that are being released are categorized as not being  a danger to themselves or others. In other words they were not  arrested and or convicted of any violent Crimes. I contend that most will be returning  because of a  more violent exchange that they will be involved in when they return to society! Schwarzenegger is adding fire to the surrounding poor and middle class neighborhoods and he doesn't realize it.  All he sees is that he is saving money, he does not see that he is really endangering the voter's that he is relying on to get him back into Office when he wants to run next time. The decision to release these prisoners again is a huge mistake  Just watch the city that has the largest population of prisoners released with which have been advertising REDUCED CRIME FOR THE YEAR 2007, and now Schwarzenegger is going to release these prisoners and the crime rate for just that short of time that it takes to get them on their second or third strike, will make the crime rate GO SKYWARD!!

The Crime Statistics that they have enjoyed that has been down will be up again, just like before Thanks to the one and only Governor that is just so popular!!

His Hidden raising of taxes will also soon bite him on the ass and make him very unpopular as well, just as soon as a Radio Talk Show picks up on the fact that the Governor is doing these things Arnold will not be a block buster in Politics or at the Theaters any more, when you start to take the way that Gov. Schwarzenegger is doing, you are not just taking from the so called upper 10%! You are taking from EVERYONE That Owns a Automobile/Pickup Truck Think about it if 2 Million who half of which own two cars in his Fleet, this total increase to the State of California would be a Grand total of $66 Million Dollars.

That fee is to everyone no matter what your income stature is, same with the new TAX that the Governor's Staff is calling a "Levey" to the people that own Property. The Levey of $170.00 a year would be added to every residential home owner and they are expected to pay this, the Governor is saying that the increase to the Taxpayer is only $14.17 a month. Why that is just about one trip for three to a Jack in the Box for dinner! That is not much.  

I am sick that he is pulling this, My situation is that I was Medically Retired not by my choice, but by the Choice of the draw that was placed upon me by the all mighty God, for me to walk in total pain 24/7. Now being that I am considered to be 100% disabled and living on a Fixed income, I don't get a very big COLA (Cost of Living Adjustment) to my wage which is not that great, all being that it works out to be about $22.00 or less a month.  The property taxes that I pay is terrible. Every year I struggle to make the payment, even though I save and save all year to make the payment on the first notification that the payment is due!! Now Schwarzenegger wants to increase it another $170.00 and then the added $22.00 to the vehicles in the last two years. The step up last year was $88.00, Now another $88.00 this year. I guess it might be time to sell my Motorcycles. I don't want to do that but I just might have to do that, to save more money to make my property tax increase that Schwarzenegger has done to me.

So am I happy about the job that Arnold has done? Not so much, Especially if the TAXES that he is asking for all gets passed!! THAT WILL REALLY SUCK!!

Arnold Schwarzenegger is Taxing Everyone across the board, no MATTER WHAT THE INCOME!! HE HAS YOU, IF YOU OWN A CAR, and a PEACE OF PROPERTY, no matter the income you will be charged.

Just yesterday the headlines that were being read on Channel Four News was that there is a Record number of people that are refusing to pay their property tax!! I'll have you say that they will be living in an Apartment Soon when the State takes their property from them. After all You never really own your land, The State, and Federal Government does.

BS Ranch




Schwarzenegger still popular with voters

Still popular
Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger shakes hands with students from Marvin Avenue Middle School in September after the campus was given an award for School of the Year by the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Spotlight in Los Angeles.
A poll finds Californians gloomy about the state's course but unwilling -- at least for now -- to blame the governor, who is still seen as an outsider. His proposed budget cuts could hurt him, though.
By Evan Halper, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 16, 2008
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger continues to enjoy high approval ratings among voters even as most think the state is heading in the wrong direction, a new poll shows.

The grim financial picture the governor presented last week, including proposed steep cuts to schools, healthcare programs and other state services, has not hurt his standing with Californians. He enjoys the approval of 60% of registered voters, according to a Times/CNN/Politico poll conducted by Opinion Research Corp. immediately after he unveiled the proposals as part of his blueprint for closing a $14.5-billion budget deficit. Interviews were conducted Friday through Sunday.

"He still rides the wave of the outsider trying to shake up the entrenched forces of government," said Barbara O'Connor, a professor of communications at Cal State Sacramento. "Voters really don't like the Legislature and tend to blame it for the state's problems, given the opportunity. They assume the governor is doing his best in an intractable situation."

Schwarzenegger's personal appeal seems to have insulated him from voter pessimism about the direction the state is heading. The poll shows that 58% of respondents think the state is on the wrong track. The negative outlook cuts across party lines.

Poll respondent Susan Erickson of Valencia, a Democrat who recently retired from her job as a supply chain manager after 35 years in the aerospace industry, said she was troubled by the governor's plan for balancing the budget but did not blame the state's fiscal problems entirely on him.

"He seems to have been more of a moderate than I expected," she said. "He is intelligent, and he has this image that I suppose is good for our state."

The generally gloomy outlook that voters have for the state, experts say, is more likely related to problems they blame on federal government mismanagement: the sub-prime loan crisis, stock market declines, a possible recession, the Iraq war.

But the governor's ability to maintain high marks from voters throughout a protracted fiscal crisis is far from certain. On Thursday, he unveiled his proposal for balancing the state's books. It includes releasing as many as 50,000 prisoners early, closing 48 state parks and cutting school spending by hundreds of dollars per child.

Schwarzenegger's vow to erase the deficit without new taxes may not sit well with voters, the poll suggests. Slightly more than half of registered voters would rather see the state collect new revenue than cut too deeply into government services.

"It surprises me it is that hard for a state this large to raise $14 billion," said respondent Bill Baker, an Irvine attorney and Democrat who recently moved to the state from Texas. "It is a rounding error on the Iraq war. . . . There are a lot of places the state could go to get that money. You could tax lottery sales. Tax liquor sales. Junk food. All the things people don't like."

"State services already seem to be pared down to the bare minimum," Baker said. "I get on the 5 Freeway and it looks like a Third World country. Signs are patched over. The landscaping is a wreck."

But the governor's anti-tax approach remains popular with Republican voters, 57% of whom want to see the budget balanced with cuts alone.

"The government spends way too much money," said Sue Miller, 81, of the Central Coast town of Nipomo. "I think teachers make too much money. I think the whole system is so overblown, and all they want is more."

The last time Schwarzenegger championed proposals that threatened permanent cuts in money for schools and other services, his approval rating took a beating. That was in 2005.

Mark Baldassare, president of the Public Policy Institute of California, notes that voters remained pleased with Schwarzenegger in the weeks after he unveiled those plans -- much as they do today, following the release of his tough budget blueprint. In 2005 it was months later, after the details sank in and opponents had organized their campaign against the governor, that Schwarzenegger's approval rating sank to 37%.

"We're following the same pattern that we did in January of 2005," Baldassare said. "When he rolled out his plans, they were surprising to a lot of people and not what they wanted, but they didn't initially take it out on him. As he started getting attacked by teachers and interest groups, his numbers fell."

Although the governor may face difficulty selling most voters on his budget cuts, his plan aimed at bringing health insurance to nearly all Californians is a hit, supported by 57% of registered voters.

"People without insurance are getting sick and showing up in the emergency rooms," said Tim Nicholson, a 43-year-old San Jose Republican who was laid off from his job at a semiconductor company Tuesday. "The cost winds up being much higher. Somebody is paying for it, whether it is the users of the medical system or taxpayers, through Medi-Cal and Medicare."

In the survey, 1,205 California adults were interviewed under the supervision of Times Poll Director Susan Pinkus; 1,054 of those were registered voters. The margin of sampling error for both groups is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

evan.halper@latimes.com

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

One Perchlorate Issue May be Near End (Daily Bulletin December 20, 2007)

BS Ranch Perspective

It seems that the County Claims that they have Just $15Million in Legal fees & Clean up Paid dedicated to Perchlorate clean up, but what this writer was wondering was that the City of Rialto has over $23 Million in Legal Fees and Clean Up Dedicated to Perchlorate, now how can a small City like Rialto have almost double the money in the clean up then the Largest County in the Continental United States? Is the City of Rialto's Attorney adding his fees a little to the heavy side in his favor? That is what I constantly wonder? Because Rialto has double and in some cases triple spent what most cities have had to spend to clean up this contaminant such as Perchlorate.

BS Ranch

One perchlorate issue may be near end
By Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - A multimillion-dollar legal drama between the city and San Bernardino County over who is responsible for a toxic underground plume may be nearing an end.

The sides appear close to an agreement that would settle the city's lawsuits against the county, according to sources familiar with the situation.

"I'm expecting good results. I really am," said Rialto Councilwoman Winnie Hanson, a member of the council's perchlorate committee.

The city and county are wrangling over the extent of the county's role in the contamination.

A federal lawsuit filed by the city against the county and dozens of other parties won't go to trial until October 2008 at the earliest. If a settlement is reached, the suit still will go to trial, but the portion of it involving the county would be settled.

In a second suit filed in San Bernardino County Superior Court, the city alleges the county expanded a landfill in violation of a 1998 agreement made when the county was expanding the Mid-Valley Sanitary Landfill. The settlement would put an end to that lawsuit.

The county is one of dozens of parties Rialto says are responsible for perchlorate contaminating local drinking water.

In 1997, the county purchased property to expand the landfill, which is contaminated with perchlorate, a toxic industrial chemical. Rialto says the work done on the property after the expansion caused the contamination to spread.

Perchlorate is used to

produce explosives and can harm humans by interfering with the thyroid gland.

Earlier in the week, Councilman Ed Scott sounded a more pessimistic note about the settlement. He had been saying for weeks the two sides would reach a settlement by Thursday.

At Tuesday night's council meeting and then again by phone on Wednesday, Scott said a settlement agreement between the two sides died somewhere on the county's end.

"We were assured that we would have something in place by the 20th so we could have some good news for our citizens," Scott said.

But county officials say work on a settlement is still moving forward.

"The county's lawyers are working on the settlement with the city's lawyers and our insurance company," Bob Page, 5th District Supervisor Josie Gonzales' chief of staff, wrote in an e-mail.

Gonzales' district includes Rialto.

Last year, a tentative settlement called for the county to pay the city roughly $6 million in exchange for the city dropping charges against the county, but the two sides could never agree on specifics.

Meanwhile, Rialto and the county are continuing to rack up legal bills fighting each other.

At its meeting Tuesday, the county's Board of Supervisors approved spending $400,000 in additional legal services related to perchlorate. Much of that money will go to investigate the extent of pollution, not just to lawyers.

To date, the county has spent $2.2 million on legal fees and $15 million for investigation and treatment, said county spokesman David Wert.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Water Officials Tell Rialto That Perchlorate Levels Are Safe!! (SB Sun Jan, 11, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

I don't know about you, but just the idea that PERCHLORATE was, or might be, in the water that is coming out of the Tap, at my home, of which I have a filter on that would not even come close to catching any of the PERCHLORATE that was in the Tap water that I have at my home to drink. Especially knowing that PERCHLORATE contamination causes thyroid cancer and all kinds of other cancers that they don't even mention in any report, they just talk about the main thing that PERCHLORATE attacks and that is the thyroid gland.

I guess at the meeting the officials from the water department was trying to give us reassurance and say that the water at our homes is no longer contaminated with the PERCHLORATE because it has been removed from the water through osmosis filtration, however I know people in the City of Rialto that have lost family Members to the PERCHLORATE contamination and I don't think that they would believe anyone that the PERCHLORATE was removed 100%!!

BS Ranch




Water officials tell Rialto that perchlorate levels are safe
By Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - The water here is safe to drink. That was the message city officials pushed at a town-hall meeting at Frisbie Middle School.

The meeting this week focused on the chemical perchlorate, which is contaminating local drinking water.

Rialto and West Valley Water District officials - which together serve water to the vast majority of Rialto - told residents they don't have to worry about the water coming out of their tap.

"We run the systems until there's no detectable perchlorate," Bill Hunt, an engineering consultant for Rialto, said of the treatment systems at the Thursday meeting.

Perchlorate, a chemical used to produce explosives like rocket fuel and fireworks, is flowing through Rialto from an industrial site north of the 210 Freeway that dates back to World War II.

The panel at the meeting included City Council members Winnie Hanson and Ed Scott, who make up the perchlorate subcommittee, as well as medical, engineering and environmental consultants. For the first hour, the experts made presentations that at times confused people in attendance with talk of "resins" and "lag vessels."

Perchlorate can block the thyroid gland's access to iodine and cause an underactive thyroid, said Mary McDaniel, a doctor and lawyer with the firm McDaniel Lambert Inc. who reviewed a number of recent studies.

"So some of these studies make you worry a little bit more, some of them make you worry a little less. That's science," 

she said.

The thyroid is necessary for metabolism and brain development. It is not well understood how perchlorate affects sensitive populations like pregnant women and children.

McDaniel also pointed out that bottled-water companies do not have to test for perchlorate. If the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sets a standard for perchlorate in drinking water, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration might set a perchlorate standard for bottled water, according to the FDA's Web site.

The second half of the meeting was set aside for residents to ask questions.

People with relatives who have birth defects and thyroid conditions wanted to know if perchlorate could have caused them.

Kit Satre, who lives in Yucaipa but worked in Rialto starting in 1985, said she has two children with such serious birth defects that they have had 50 surgeries between them.

But McDaniel said she was not aware of perchlorate causing birth defects, and West Valley Water District board President Earl Tillman said his customers have never been exposed to high levels of perchlorate.

Thursday's meeting had a very different tone than past meetings, which city officials have used to attack San Bernardino County for its role in some of the contamination, as well as to question the safety of West Valley's water.

Scott on Thursday heaped praise on other elected officials, including Rep. Joe Baca, D-San Bernardino, and welcomed West Valley representatives.

"We're not serving any perchlorate," said Tillman, the president of West Valley's board.

If West Valley detects perchlorate in one of its wells, it takes the well offline or installs a treatment system, said General Manager Anthony "Butch" Araiza.

A West Valley well with a perchlorate level of 2 parts per billion is no longer online, he said.

Rialto officials say they do not serve water from wells if they detect perchlorate in the wells.

Fontana Water Co., the other big water agency in Rialto and a division of the San Gabriel Valley Water Co., does not serve water contaminated with perchlorate beyond the state's maximum level of 6 ppb, said Robert Young, assistant general manager.

Scott also told residents not to buy personal water treatment systems to clean out the perchlorate because the people selling them may be trying to scam residents.

He also encouraged people to write Marshall Larsen, the chairman, president and CEO of Goodrich, one of the companies Rialto says is responsible for the contamination. Scott said they should tell him to stop fighting Rialto.

jason.pesick@sbsun.com

(909) 386-3861

Rialto Working to Improve Parking at Jerry Eaves Park (Daily Bulletin Jan. 14, 2008)

BS Ranch  Perspective

Now this is the kind of Rialto Renaissance that I like to see. This is the expansion that is great, wonderful problem solving at the small scale that they are not trying to earn all the cities money all at once in one area through one huge Real Estate Deal!! The Closure of a huge Rialto Historical Icon such as the Rialto Airport, It will be sad once the Miro Air Field is closed down by the Rialto City Council and The City Council has Voted to pay out the over $30 million to the Businesses and other cities (San Bernardino Airport) for taking the Businesses that were at Rialto's Miro Air Field, Some for more then 20 Years!

Those people that had those businesses here in Rialto struggled to keep their families fed, and now they are forced to move their businesses to another Airport and make there way. Maybe they will make some money maybe not. There is not that many Air planes that take off and land as there is at Rialto's Miro Air Port!

It is my belief that the Miro Air Field is something that should stay in Rialto, it is a piece of Rialto's History! It is What has made Rialto what it is since before WWII!! I know that things are moved around for the times and when money is to be made it is time to move on to make that money, but I believe that that the decisions that the City Council is making in regard to the Rialto Renaissance is a costly mistake that will take years to to ultimately pay for itself. Rialto's Utility Tax will have to become permanent in order to keep the Renaissance alive and the city half way well.

This is just my prediction there is no science or any other thing behind it. I just get the feeling because of the way that the Real Estate Market has taken a dump and well the whole market is at a stall, if the City can just stay in a hold pattern they will be alright, and get through this recession okay!!

BS Ranch



10:54 a.m.: Rialto working to improve parking at Jerry Eaves Park
By Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

The city and its redevelopment agency have been trying to improve the parking situation at Jerry Eaves Park. More than 100 youth soccer teams use the park, and there isn't nearly enough parking to meet that need.

The redvelopment agency recently bought four and a half acres of land to expand the parking lot. Earlier this month, the City Council awarded $29,000 dollars to have a parking lot expansion designed. That's in addition to $65,000 that was already awarded. Once the design work is done, bonds will pay for the construction.

- jason.pesick@sbsun.com