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Mike Adams, director of facilities planning for Mendocino College (center), buries a tomato for good luck at the site of the college's new Lake Center in Lakeport, Calif., during a groundbreaking on Thursday, October 20, 2011. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.





 


LAKEPORT, Calif. – The next chapter in Lake County's story of higher education got started on Thursday afternoon with hard hats, ceremonial shovels and a tomato.


The hard hats and shovels were the more traditional parts of the groundbreaking for the new Mendocino College Lake Center, to be built on 31 acres at 2565 Parallel Drive in Lakeport.


The tomato was, according to Kelseyville businessman Gary Olson, a tradition from his Spanish ancestors, who buried a tomato at the start of a project for good luck.


Olson gave the bright yellow tomato to Mike Adams, another Kelseyville resident and Mendocino College's director of facilities planning, who has been with the college for nearly 30 years and helped draft its master plan, which included the new college for Lake County.


After several people in the large crowd of several dozen community members and local officials began to chant, “Tomato, tomato,” Adams dutifully turned some earth over the tomato to get the project rolling.


Mendocino College President and Superintendent Kathy Lehner explained that Measure W, passed in November 2006 had made the new campus possible in this time of difficult financial pictures.


College officials have stated that the new facility will be ready for students in January 2013.


“I've been waiting for 23 years for this to happen,” Mark Rawitsch, dean of the Lake Center as well as Mendocino College's center in Willits, told the group.


He said when he was hired 23 years ago, he was told that construction on a new Lake Center was set to start within 18 months.


Rawitsch thanked voters, community members, the private sector, the city of Lakeport, public servants and students for making it possible.


“For those of us who may think our best days are behind us, look at the Lake Center and think again,” he said.


Adams said he and his wife came to Lake County 30 years ago and began farming. He said he never dreamed he actually would be growing an institution.


He said he felt he was helping to plant the last seed of the college's master plan for Lake County.


Wilda Shock, a member of the new Lake County Friends of Mendocino College Governing Council, said the project was “all about teamwork.”


She said the Lake County Friends of Mendocino College was composed of “your friends and neighbors,” and she guaranteed the community would be hearing more from the group as it worked to support the college's work in Lake County.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

 

 

 

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The architectural rendering of the new buildings planned for the Mendocino College Lake Center campus in Lakeport, Calif., is shown at the college site. Photo by Elizabeth Larson.
 

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – The Hayward Fault gave the Bay Area two strong earthquakes on Thursday afternoon.


The US Geological Survey reported that the quakes – both of which were centered in Berkeley along the Hayward Fault – measured 4.0 and 3.8 in magnitude, and occurred at 2:41 p.m. and 8:16 p.m., respectively.


The 4.0-magnitude quake was measured at a depth of 5.1 miles two miles southeast of Berkeley and two miles northeast of Emeryville, the US Geological Survey reported.


By early Friday morning the US Geological Survey had received more than 18,000 shake reports across about 280 zip codes on that initial quake.


The second quake occurred six miles deep one mile east of Berkeley and three miles east southeast of Albany, according to the US Geological Survey, which received nearly 15,000 shake reports from more than 280 zip codes by early Friday morning.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – The Lake County Registrar of Voters Office is advising new county residents or those who have moved that the deadline to register to vote is approaching.


A general district election is scheduled to be held on Tuesday, Nov. 8.


At this election, voters who reside within the boundaries of the Mendocino-Lake Community College District, Lakeport Unified School District, Upper Lake High School District and Upper Lake Elementary School District will have the opportunity to elect governing board members for each of the school districts.


In addition to the school districts, voters who reside within the boundaries of the Hidden Valley Lake Community Services District will have the opportunity to elect directors for the District.


New residents of Lake County and registered voters who have moved to a new address, changed their mailing address within the county, or changed their name, that you need to reregister in order to be eligible to vote in the upcoming general district election.


Don't delay – the last day to register to vote for the Nov. 8 general district election is Monday, Oct. 24.


The completed voter registration form must either be personally delivered to the Registrar of Voters Office on or before Oct. 24, or postmarked on or before Oct. 24 and received by mail by the Registrar of Voters Office.


Section 2101 of the California Elections Code states, “A person entitled to register to vote shall be a United States citizen, a resident of California, not in prison or on parole for the conviction of a felony, and at least 18 years of age at the time of the next election.”


Residents may register to vote at the Lake County Registrar of Voters Office, Room 209, at the Lake County Courthouse, 255 N. Forbes St., Lakeport or may phone the Registrar's Office at 707-263-2372 for information.


Registration forms also are available at most local post offices, libraries, senior centers, city offices and chamber of commerce offices.


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MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The service of two search warrants by the Lake County Sheriff’s Marijuana Suppression Unit in the Jerusalem Valley area of Middletown last week resulted in 10 felony arrests and the seizure of 296 marijuana plants, 840 pounds of processed marijuana, a semi-automatic assault rifle and nearly $7,000 in US currency for asset forfeiture.


On Oct. 6, detectives secured a search warrant for a large scale outdoor marijuana cultivation operation on Daly Place in Jerusalem Valley after several large marijuana gardens had been observed during an aerial overflight, according to Capt. James Bauman.


On Oct. 11, the Marijuana Suppression Unit executed the warrant with the assistance of the Sheriff’s Narcotics Task Force and the Sheriff’s Special Enforcement Detail, Bauman said.


When detectives entered the property, they immediately detained 47-year-old Odalys Angeles Lopez of Middletown and 55-year-old Alfredo Eugenio Fernandez of Castro Valley. Bauman said both subjects were located near a dwelling on the property and Fernandez was found actively processing marijuana at the time.


Detectives located a locked barn on the property, which appeared to be occupied. Upon forcing entry into the barn, detectives located and detained 23-year-old Osvaldo Gamalier Negronaponte, a transient; 27-year-old Pablo Andres Garcia Hernandez of Lower Lake; 19-year-old Rafael Ortiz Chavez of Middletown; and a 17-year-old juvenile transient from Pomona, Bauman said.


He said the barn contained large quantities of processed marijuana and the four men were actively processing more marijuana when detectives entered the structure.


As a search of the property continued, detectives located two large grow sites and a large outdoor marijuana processing “station.” Bauman said the partially harvested grow sites appeared to have been the source of all the processed marijuana found inside of the barn and at the outdoor processing station.


During the search of the Daly Place property, detectives identified another active marijuana cultivation operation on an adjacent property on Jerusalem Grade Road, Bauman said. Upon further investigation of the second cultivation operation, detectives located a garage that also appeared to be occupied.


After announcing their presence, detectives entered the garage and discovered it contained several more subjects actively manicuring large amounts of processed marijuana, he said.


Those detained were 33-year-old Toribio Raygoza Andrade of Kelseyville, 26-year-old Alfonso Hernandez Guzman of Kelseyville, 25-year-old Juan Manuel Raygoza of Kelseyville and 53-year-old Efren Medina Andrade of Kelseyville.


While checking the property for additional suspects, detectives located another structure near the garage that also contained another large quantity of processed marijuana. Bauman said detectives held the Jerusalem Grade property for several hours while a second search warrant was secured for further investigation.


During a search of the dwelling on Daly Place, detectives located a semi-automatic SKS assault rifle with a high-capacity detachable magazine concealed beneath a bed, Bauman said. In that same bedroom, detectives located a briefcase containing $6,967 in US currency and several documents belonging to Odalys Lopez and Alfredo Fernandez.


Bauman said the assault rifle was seized as a banned weapon in California and the currency was seized as the suspected profits of drug trafficking.


When detectives returned with the second search warrant for the property on Jerusalem Grade Road, they located and seized more than 200 marijuana plants and large quantities of processed marijuana from two indoor cultivation operations and another outdoor grow, Bauman said.


Some medical marijuana recommendations were found posted among the grow sites on both properties. However, Bauman said the recommendations were found to be either insufficient for the amount of marijuana located or were not issued to any of the subjects detained on either property.


A total of 10 felony arrests resulted from the 11-hour warrant execution and eradication operation, Bauman said.


He said Lopez was arrested for cultivation of marijuana, possession of marijuana for sales, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and possession of an assault weapon. Andrade, Hernandez Guzman, Raygoza, Garcia Hernandez, Fernandez, Negronaponte, Chavez, Medina Andrade, and the 17-year old juvenile were all arrested for cultivation of marijuana and possession of marijuana for sales.


All adult arrestees were booked at the Hill Road Correctional Facility and the juvenile was booked at the Lake County Juvenile Hall, Bauman said. Immigration holds were additionally placed on Andrade, Garcia Hernandez, and Chavez.


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LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – On Wednesday Caltrans awarded $66 million to cities, counties and regional agencies for 139 Safe Routes to School projects to improve safety for students in grades K-8 who walk and bicycle to and from school.


Included in those awards were more than $321,000 for Lake County schools.


“By improving safety, more children are encouraged to walk and bicycle to school, ultimately resulting in healthier children and less traffic congestion,” said acting Caltrans Director Malcolm Dougherty.


The funding was provided by the federal Safe Routes to School program. Since its inception in 2005, Caltrans has awarded $156 million for 356 Safe Routes to School projects.


In Lake County two schools in Clearlake – Burns Valley Elementary School and Clearlake Seventh-day Adventist Christian – will receive $321,400 to widen a roadway and install bike lanes and crosswalks on Old Highway 53 between Olympic and Lakeshore drives, and Old Highway 53 and Austin Avenue.


Other notable projects around the North Coast include $849,500 for Fort Bragg Middle School and Redwood Elementary School for the construction of sidewalks and other traffic calming and safety enhancements throughout the city of Fort Bragg, Caltrans reported.


In Humboldt County several elementary and middle schools in Eureka and Fortuna will receive $472,200 to develop a crossing guard program, and four Sonoma County schools will receive $284,400 for sidewalk improvements, bike storage lockers, bulbout and ramp construction and crosswalk upgrades, according to the project list.


Caltrans works closely with a diverse group of state, local, and regional stakeholders representing transportation, health, education, law enforcement, and bicycle/pedestrian advocates.


Go to www.dot.ca.gov/docs/SafeRoutestoSchoolProjectListOctober2011.pdf to view and download the entire list of Safe Routes to School projects that received funding, or see below.


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October 2011 - Caltrans Safe Routes to Schools List

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – A Middletown woman died on Sunday in northern Monterey County when her motorcycle was hit by a driver fleeing law enforcement.


Katherine Hawley, 39, was killed when a sedan driven by 37-year-old Humberto De La Torre of Watsonville collided with her motorcycle, according to Det. Randal Dyck, an investigator with the Monterey County Coroner's Office.


De La Torre also died as a result of the crash, Dyck said.


A report from Officer Sarah Jackson of the California Highway Patrol's Santa Cruz area office explained that a CHP officer observed De La Torre's green sedan traveling southbound at a high rate of speed along a stretch of Highway 1 at approximately 4:18 p.m. Sunday.


Jackson said that when the officer attempted to overtake the speeding vehicle, he observed the sedan make unsafe lane changes and drive erratically, eventually colliding head-on with the guard rail in the center divide near Buena Vista Road.


De La Torre allegedly fled the scene with the officer in pursuit. Jackson's report said that near Salinas Road, the sedan sideswiped a white SUV, which left the SUV's adult passenger with minor injuries.


Jackson said that seconds after that first collision De La Torre's sedan collided with Hawley, who was traveling northbound on Highway 1.


She said the pursuing officer did not observe the collision, as he had slowed his own speed due to the reduction in lanes and safety concerns. At the time of the collision, the officer was approximately 600 feet from De La Torre's vehicle.


The crash led to a highway closure as the vehicles were removed from the scene, the CHP reported.


John Jensen contributed to this report.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Teen drivers received some updates from law enforcement this week regarding a new law that will impact them when they get behind the wheel.


On Wednesday afternoon, officers from the Lakeport Police Department and the California Highway Patrol conducted a public awareness driver education operation at the Clear Lake High School campus to raise teen driver awareness regarding the California Vehicle Code restrictions for new drivers during their first year of driving, according to Lakeport Police Sgt. Kevin Odom.


Odom said California law restricts new teenage drivers from transporting passengers under the age of 20 years for the first 12 months of driving.


Officers contacted more than 20 teenage drivers during the operation and provided educational information related to their driving restriction, he said.


The Lakeport Police Department will be taking enforcement action regarding teen driver restriction violation whenever it's discovered, Odom said.


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Alexis Valdovinos (second from left) of Middletown, Calif., a freshman at Dominican University in San Rafael, has been named to the PacWest Conference Top 10 Honor Roll for cross country runners. Photo courtesy of Alexis Valdovinos.
 

 

 

 


MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – A former Middletown High School standout has earned her place of honor among cross country runners in the Pacific West Conference.


Alexis Valdovinos of Middletown, a freshman chemistry major and a 2011 Stars of Lake County Award student winner, made her first appearance this week in the PacWest Weekly Top 10 Honor Roll.


She was one of five Dominican women’s cross country runners named to PacWest’s weekly honor roll, which was a school record, according to a report from the San Rafael-based university.


Dominican said the five runners received the recognition following their performances in the Bronco Invitational hosted by Santa Clara University last Saturday.


Led by redshirt junior Ally Rosemond, who placed 53rd overall and first among Dominican competitors, the Penguins represented half of the weekly honors list released by the league media office in Phoenix.


Joining Rosemond in the Top 10 were teammates Valdovinos, Keara Teeter, Renee Dominguez and Kendra Woodglass.


Teeter, a senior biological sciences and art major, finished second on the team behind Rosemond, a psychology major, in the Bronco Invite.


For sophomores Dominguez and Woodglass, it also was the first time they have been selected to the PacWest Weekly Top 10 Honor Roll.


The Penguins’ women’s cross country team concludes its season on Oct. 29 at the PacWest Championships at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix.


For more information on Dominican cross country, visit www.dominicanathletics.com.


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At left, businessman Taylor Griffin of Portland, Maine, died in a vehicle crash near Upper Lake, Calif., on Sunday, October 16, 2011. Riding with him was his company's general manager, Carrie Davenport, 43, of South Freeport, Maine, at right. Davenport, who was seriously injured in the crash, called it in on her cell phone the following day. Courtesy photos.





UPPER LAKE, Calif. – The California Highway Patrol on Tuesday released the names of a man killed in a Sunday night collision and the woman riding with him.


Taylor Griffin, 40, of Portland, Maine, died in the crash, according to CHP Officer Korey Reynolds.


Riding with Griffin was 43-year-old Carrie Davenport of South Freeport, Maine, Reynolds said.


The Portland Press Herald reported that Griffin – the head of a luxury food import business, The Rogers Collection – was on the West Coast for a business trip, accompanied by Davenport, his company's director of operations and general manager.


Griffin was driving a rented 2012 Corvette westbound on Highway 20 west of Witter Springs Road when he hit an oak tree, according to a CHP report.


Griffin was ejected from the car and died at the scene, the CHP said.


The crash was discovered Monday morning after Davenport called in the crash on her cell phone, officials reported. She later was airlifted to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital with major injuries.


The CHP investigation found that speed was a factor in the crash.


The Portland Press Herald said Griffin had six speeding convictions in Maine since 2004, and had four license suspensions as a result.


Reynolds said Tuesday he did not have information on Davenport's condition.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews, on Tumblr at www.lakeconews.tumblr.com, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf and on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/LakeCoNews .

 

 

 

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Taylor Griffin, 40, of Portland, Maine, died on Sunday, October 16, 2011, when the 2012 Corvette he was driving went off Highway 20 and hit an oak tree. Griffin's companion, Carrie Davenport, 43, of South Freeport, Maine, suffered major injuries in the crash. She called in the collision the following morning from her cell phone. Photo by Gary McAuley.
 

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A map of the morning sky on Saturday, October 22, 2011, at 5:30 a.m., viewed facing southeast. Courtesy of NASA.


 


 


Earth is about to pass through a stream of debris from Halley's comet, source of the annual Orionid meteor shower.


Forecasters expect more than 15 meteors per hour to fly across the sky on the morning of Saturday, Oct. 22, when the shower peaks.


“Although this isn't the biggest meteor shower of the year, it's definitely worth waking up for,” said Bill Cooke of the NASA Meteoroid Environment Office. “The setting is dynamite.”


Orionids are framed by some of the brightest and most beautiful constellations in the night sky.


The meteors emerge from mighty Orion, the shower's glittering namesake.


From there they streak through Taurus the Bull, the twins of Gemini, Leo the Lion and Canis Major – home to Sirius, the most brilliant star of all.


This year, the Moon and Mars are part of the show. They'll form two vertices of a celestial triangle in the eastern sky on Saturday morning while the shower is most active; Regulus is the third vertex.


Blue Regulus and red Mars are both approximately of first magnitude, so they are easy to see alongside the 35-percent crescent Moon. Many Orionids will be diving through the triangle in the hours before dawn.


Cooke's team at the Meteoroid Environment Office will be watching for Orionids that actually hit the Moon.


Cometary debris streams like Halley's are so wide, the whole Earth-Moon system fits inside. So when there is a meteor shower on Earth, there's usually one on the Moon, too.


Unlike Earth, however, the Moon has no atmosphere to intercept meteoroids. Pieces of debris fall all the way to the surface and explode where they hit.


Flashes of light caused by thermal heating of lunar rocks and moondust are so bright, they can sometimes be seen through backyard-class telescopes.


“Since we began our monitoring program in 2005, our group has detected more than 250 lunar meteors,” said Cooke. “Some explode with energies exceeding hundreds of pounds of TNT.”


So far, they've seen 15 Orionids hitting the Moon – “two in 2007, four in 2008 and nine in 2009,” recalled Cooke.


This year they hope to add to the haul. About 25 percent of the Moon's dark terrain will be exposed to Halley's debris stream, giving the team millions of square miles to scan for explosions.


Watching meteoroids hit the Moon is a good way to learn about the structure of comet debris streams and the energy of the particles therein.


It also allows Cooke and colleagues to calculate risk factors for astronauts who, someday, will walk on the lunar surface again.


“Going outside to watch the Orionids might not be a good idea for a moonwalker,” said Cooke.


But it is a good idea for the rest of us.


Set your alarm for a few hours before dawn on Saturday morning and enjoy the show.


Dr. Tony Phillips works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.


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Military grocery stores operate so efficiently that the discounts provided to shoppers are worth double the value of tax dollars being spent to deliver this prized benefit worldwide to U.S. service members and families.


Joseph H. Jeu, director of the Defense Commissary Agency (DeCA), made that point and more in an interview last week amid rising speculation that commissaries could be targeted for cuts under national debt reduction plans being readied by Congress and the Obama administration.


In return for the “$1.3 billion that we get in appropriations support” annually, Jeu said, “we are providing nearly $2.7 billion in savings to patrons.”


That more than “two-for-one return on investment” is “something people don’t think about. It’s really an excellent investment for taxpayers.”


As national debt climbs toward $15 trillion, and politicians confront a crisis decades in the making, talk in Washington is of cutting federal entitlements, like Medicare and Social Security, and slashing future defense budgets.


Commissaries have become part of that conversation, thanks to a long-standing suggestion by the Congressional Budget Office.


CBO says that up to $1.7 billion a year could be saved by ending commissary subsidies, combining base grocery and department stores into a single system and cutting shopper discounts to 5 percent.


The diluted discounts could be eased in part with a new grocery allowance, CBO advises.


Last December the Simpson-Bowles commission on budget reform listed base store consolidation as one of many possible cuts to federal spending.


In August, the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee liked the CBO idea enough to include it in a bill to create another entitlement.


The committee voted to take dollars saved by ending the commissary subsidy and redirect them to the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide health care to veterans and their families who lived on Camp Lejeune, N.C., during an era time when base drinking water was contaminated.


The bill, S 277, still faces procedural challenges before it can be debated and put to a vote by the full Senate.


Commissary advocates fear the committee’s vote alone has made commissaries a reasonable target of savings to achieve higher priorities, like new debt reduction goals.


Defense officials meanwhile are studying ways to achieve $400 billion in budget savings over 10 years as ordered by President Obama earlier this year.


Under a separate deal reached between Obama and Republican congressional leaders this summer, this one as a condition for raising the debt ceiling, a new “super committee” of lawmakers must find at least $1.5 trillion more in debt-cutting initiatives over the decade or automatic cuts of $1.2 trillion, by design, will hit both defense budgets and entitlements hard.


“I don’t want to speculate on what could happen but I have heard the same rumors as you have,” said DeCA Director Jeu.


Commissary patrons are concerned, he said.


Jeu’s senior enlisted advisor, Army Command Sgt. Maj. John M. Gaines Jr., travels often and “gets feedback from a lot of junior members who say ‘Sergeant Major, commissaries are critical to us. We cannot make ends meet without them.’”


Rather than comment on any particular threat to stores or savings, real or perceived, Jeu chooses to explain the value commissaries create for both shoppers and taxpayers, “even in a fiscally constrained environment.”


First, he said, DeCA has a tradition of efficiency that other agencies would do well to emulate. When adjusted for inflation, the $1.3 billion annual appropriation is 40 percent below what DeCA got in 1992, when it was formed through consolidation of service-run grocery store. That’s savings of about $700 million a year to deliver the benefit, Jeu said.


Commissaries shoppers meanwhile save, on average, 31.7 percent over commercial store patrons. The savings likely are less, he conceded, if price comparisons are made only for Walmart or other major discounters.


Even then, Jeu said, “I’m confident our prices [are] much better … It could be 15 percent. It could be 20 percent. Who knows? But it will be much greater savings [overall] than in comparison to Walmart”


But commissaries deliver more than savings. They bring a sense of community, Jeu said.


That was seen anew following some recent natural disasters including the earthquake and tsunami in Japan last March. Shelves in grocery stores outside Misawa Air Base soon were bare of goods.


But commissary shelves were full, Jeu said, with “plenty of bottled water, batteries and all those things. The [deputy wing] commander there sent me an email. He said the commissary had been a ‘bedrock’ of the community. That’s how members view their commissary.”


Likewise this summer, first in response a threatened government shutdown and later, for east coast commissaries, as Hurricane Irene approached their towns, shoppers who feared base stores would be closed for a time rang up record sales ahead of events.


“Military members and retirees truly value the benefit,” said Jeu. Manufacturers and vendors enrich it even more each year with “ancillary support” such as charitable contributions, scholarships, and special events and promotions. DeCA estimated those were worth $244 million in 2010.


Before becoming DeCA director last January, Jeu spent about the first third of his 32 years in government working with Army and Marine Corps commissaries.


He remembers base stores 30 years ago being more like warehouses. They carried about half the number of products being stocked today. None had their own bakery or deli or fresh seafood section.


“Thirty years ago our savings were probably running about 25 percent,” Jeu said.


He credits the larger savings today to a more professional staff. DeCA employees are better trained, armed with better data and have skills to manage categories of items far more efficiently.


“It really is more than a grocery store,” Jeu said. Commissaries “are an integral part of the military’s compensation system. That’s something people are forgetting.”


To comment, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., write to Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120-1111 or visit: www.militaryupdate.com.


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HIDDEN VALLEY LAKE, Calif. – A south county intersection that has seen a high number of vehicle crashes over the last several years will have a three-way stop installed next week.


Caltrans said Tuesday that the Highway 29 and Hartmann Road intersection near Hidden Valley Lake is scheduled to become a three-way stop on Monday, Oct. 24.


On that day the final striping and stop signs will be installed, and California Highway Patrol officers will be on hand helping to slow traffic, Caltrans said.


The three-way stop signs are intended to reduce the number of collisions which have recently increased at this intersection, according to Caltrans. The most recent fatal crash occurred there on June 23.


Message signs have been placed to warn motorists of the upcoming change, and they will remain

in place for at least a week afterwards to remind motorists of the change, Caltrans said.


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