Thursday, 28 November 2024

Community

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The early history of Coyote Valley and Middletown will be the subject of discussion at the next meeting of the Stone House Historical Society Tuesday, Feb. 1.

 

Nina Bouska, longtime member of the society, will share her research about Robert Henry Sterling, who built the Stone House in 1853, and the men who owned the Rancho Guenoc, where Stone House was built as the manager’s headquarters, and the Rancho Collayomi, where Middletown was founded in 1870.

 

Stone House was determined to be the oldest existing building in Lake County by the California Centennial Commission in 1950.

 

All interested persons are invited to attend the meeting, at 10 a.m. in the Activities Room at the Hidden Valley Lake Association offices. Non-residents can simply give their names at the Hartmann Road gate, listing the Stone House meeting as their destination.

 

For further information, call Georgeann Tintorri, 707-987-7370, or Bonney Jorgensen, 707-987-8764.

UPPER LAKE, Calif. – The second installment of the Redwood Empire Civil War Roundtable will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 1.

 

The meeting will begin at 6:15 p.m. at the historic Tallman Hotel in Upper Lake.

 

The topics for the coming meeting will be “The Formation of the Confederate States of America” and “Attempts at Compromise” followed by a roundtable discussion.

 

The roundtable was created to coincide with the 150th anniversary of the Civil War and intends to follow the events of the war chronologically month by month. The first meeting was Jan. 3 and had 26 in attendance.

 

Presenters will be Zane Jensen and Phil Smoley, founders of the group.

 

“Starting in the March roundtable, we will have additional presenters coming online,” Smoley said. “We are attracting the area's leading historians to the group and it is evolving into a very dynamic, mature group of history buffs. We all don't agree on what happened, but it's been great to hear various diverse opinions, even those that are outside the current mainstream.”

 

While the group includes some serious historians, it's not limited to them.

 

“We want to keep the discussions at a level that most everyone can enjoy and learn from,” Smoley said. “High school and college students with an interest in history would enjoy the presentations, and it would help them in class.”

 

There is no charge, but there will be a donation can to help offset some of the costs related to the venue.

 

The neighboring Blue Wing Saloon (next to the Tallman Hotel), is offering 10-percent dinner discounts for roundtable attendees the night of the event.

 

For more information, contact Zane Jensen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or Phil Smoley at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

The average age of the American farmer is 55, and rising. Unless we want to be as dependent on other countries for our food as we are for our oil, we must replace these aging farmers.

 

The California State Grange, seeking to preserve American agriculture and protect California farmers, is asking the Legislature to review current labor law and preserve the practice of agricultural internships and volunteers.

 

In the past, families trained family members to take over the family farm, providing them with the practical knowledge to make the book-learned skills work. Today, that culture is changing.

 

Fewer young people are remaining on the farm, be it economics or simply social preference. On-the-job training (OJT) gained from a childhood on the farm is being lost. As the old song asks, “How you gonna keep ‘em down on the farm after they’ve seen Paris?”

 

One answer to this question is to train a new crop of farmers though an OJT program called an internship.

 

Young people interested in farming do not have family members who can provide the experience needed, and have found volunteering or interning on small, family farms an ideal way to try out their interest while learning important skills.

 

Farmers who take on volunteers and interns contribute in many ways to the intern’s education. With the profit margin so close on most farming operations, these farmers could not take on “hired” hands, so in return for the training, they benefit from the interns work, a true win-win arrangement.

 

Back in 1946, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Anderson v. Mt. Clements Pottery Co. that work performed by interns are properly included as working time under the Fair Labor Standards Act.

 

Now, 60 years later, the State of California has begun a campaign of enforcement aimed at forcing farmers hosting volunteer interns to comply in all particulars, such as paying minimum wage and paying payroll taxes. And the state gets a hefty fine from farmers they find out of compliance, farmers who are struggling just to survive.

 

The California State Grange is asking the California Department of Labor Standards Enforcement to ceaxe investigation and prosecution of farmers hosting interns and volunteers, unless pursuant to a complaint.

 

Further, the Grange is petitioning the state Legislature to begin hearings to review California Labor Law aimed at accommodating the practice of volunteering and interning on small farms. In addition, hey are seeking specific exclusion from existing law for farms grossing under $100,000 annually who wish to host volunteers and interns.

 

“These interns work voluntarily on farms to learn a valuable trade. They are not asking for compensation, why should the State?” said Bob McFarland, president of the California State Grange.

 

Peggy Price-Hartz of the Elk Grove, California Grange, asked, “If our farmers must pay wages to their interns, shouldn’t the County, State and Federal Pages and interns also be wage earners?”

 

The Grange questioned how will we answer the question “Who will grow your food?” if we cannot find a way to replace aging farmers with knowledgeable, productive replacements.

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Ivan Pine of Kelseyville, Calif., celebrated his 100th birthday with family on Wednesday, January 12, 2011. Courtesy photo.

 

 

 

 

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – This month brought a milestone birthday for one Kelseyville resident.

 

Ivan Pine celebrated his 100th birthday on Jan. 12.

 

He marked the special event with his many family members, who wished him a lot of love and many more birthdays to come.

 

Pine was born in 1911, and married Mildred Meacham in 1930, raising two children – son Marlin Pine and daughter Janet Lee Welch – who gave him and his wife several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

 

He worked for the United States Forest Service in Mendocino County at Lake Pillsbury from 1959 to 1974.

 

Pine retired in 1974 and today lives in Kelseyville.

 

 

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From 1959 to 1974 Ivan Pine

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – Mother-Wise is looking for dedicated volunteers who can spend some “one-on-one” time with Lake County mothers.

 

An upcoming training seminar in the city of Clearlake will introduce the Mother-Wise program and prepare volunteers for home visits by exploring the subjects of perinatal mood disorders, home visiting, values and active listening.

 

The training is spread over three days, with the first two sessions in the evening on Thursday, Feb. 3, and Friday, Feb. 4, from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

 

The third session will be on Saturday, Feb. 5, from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., with lunch included.

 

Registration is required, as is attendance at all three sessions.

 

Mother-Wise helps mothers when they need it most. Perinatal mood disorders can affect any mother during or after any pregnancy. The program accepts volunteers and new moms on a continual basis.

 

For more information about Mother-Wise, please call Jaclyn Ley at 707-349-1210.

REDDING, Calif. – Federal natural resource management agencies in the North State will host a job fair in Redding Saturday, Jan. 29, and Sunday, Jan. 30.

 

The fair will be held at the Mt. Shasta Mall, 900 Dana Drive, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

 

Representatives from the Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service will be on hand to answer questions, help with job applications and provide assistance with the federal hiring process.

 

Positions being filled include permanent, temporary and student.

 

Featured professions include wildland firefighting, recreation, forestry, biology, earth sciences, cultural sciences and administrative programs.

 

Job seekers are encouraged to bring application materials, including resumes and reference materials, to the fair to start the application process.

 

Most federal applications are submitted electronically for consideration. Work stations with computers and agency staff will be provided to help job seekers start navigating the process.

 

Applicants are encouraged to bring materials digitally to help streamline the application process.

 

“This is an excellent opportunity for people interested in starting a career with the federal government, or even those looking for a summer job, to talk to current employees about what a career in natural resource management has to offer and get their application in,” said Joe Sean Kennedy, a wildland firefighter with the Mendocino National Forest who is serving as this year’s event coordinator. “We will have some of the gear and equipment on site, too, as well as activities for children attending the fair.”

 

The Mendocino National Forest, based in Willows, has been tasked with leading the job fair this year, in cooperation with the National Forests in Northern California, the Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service.

 

For more information, please contact the Shasta-Trinity National Forest at 530-226-2500, the Mendocino National Forest at 530-934-3316 or visit www.fs.usda.gov/mendocino.

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