Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, OR Wednesday, July 20, 2005 Page 13 County board ... (Continued from page 1) he or she makes,” the board added. Commissioners noted that the sheriff recently was quoted in the “Illinois Val- ley News” and Grants Pass “Daily Courier” that “he would not be replacing Lt. Lee Harmon, who worked 20 hours per week from his office in the I.V. Substation. “He also was quoted as saying he was reducing in- mate capacity at the county jail. In his statements,” the board commented, “Sheriff Daniel said these actions were the result of budget and personnel changes made by the board of county com- missioners.” They take issue with Daniel’s views, saying that the decision to not replace Harmon’s 20 hours per week in I.V. “was an admin- istrative decision made by the sheriff. If he so chose,” said the board, “he could assign any deputy to patrol Illinois Valley during those 20 hours. “The available hours have not disappeared, just the sheriff’s commitment to allocate them to Illinois Val- ley, because the sheriff has made the decision to move the budgeted lieutenant po- sition from Illinois Valley to the county jail. “The board of county commissioners,” said Rid- dle, Ellis and Raffenburg, “was not involved in the sheriff’s decision in any way. The recent reduction in inmate capacity at the jail is also the direct result of deci- sions made by Sheriff Daniel. “This is what hap- pened,” said the board: “In mid-June the sher- iff’s office forwarded two Personnel Action Forms, required by county policy, to the board of commission- ers, requesting permission to fill two vacant detective positions. Those are vacant due to one retirement and one resignation. “The sheriff decided to promote two patrol deputies to the detective positions. He also decided to promote two jail deputies to fill the patrol vacancies. This re- sulted in two vacant posi- tions at the jail.” The board said that the paperwork required to pro- mote two jail deputies to patrol, and to hire two new jail deputies did not reach its office until July 1. The pa- perwork, said the commis- sioners, was approved by them and returned to the Human Resources Division within four days. The sheriff’s office was notified that the promotions and new-hire authorizations were approved, said com- missioners, “before the sheriff issued his press re- lease that blamed the com- missioners for his decision to lower the inmate cap at the jail. “Sheriff Daniel knew months in advance that he would have to fill six open- ings,” the board said. It added that, “It is hard to understand why he did not prioritize the hiring of the new jail deputy positions first, so they could attend the academy and return ready to work, before he promoted jail deputies to patrol and patrol deputies to detective. “Instead, he went ahead with the promotions to de- tective and patrol before even beginning the hiring process to replace the two jail deputy positions. “The detective positions sat vacant for months any- way, so these promotions didn’t appear to be critical,” the commissioners said CJ Council agrees with sewer pump station plan After considerable de- liberation, the Cave Junction City Council voted 5-0 to conditionally approve the final plat for Illinois River Estates in connection with a sewer pump station affect- ing 128 housing lots overall. The council voted dur- ing its meeting Monday night, July 18 in city hall. The request for final plat approval was made by James Armstrong, of The Forks LLC, which is devel- oping the 41-lot Illinois River Estates off Schumacher Street. Also affected, in a co- operative arrangement, are Jerry Sterling’s 25-lot Vine- yard Place, between Schumacher and Daisy Hill Road; and Elton Frank’s 62- lot Pomeroy Place at the end of Schumacher. Under a motion by Councilman Rita Dyer, The Forks LLC will provide the Woman held for stabbing Susan Hayworth, 57, of Grants Pass, was arrested and jailed on a charge of second-degree assault in connection with the stabbing of her husband, said Grants Pass Dept. of Public Safety (GPDPS). Injured with knife wounds to his neck and one arm was her husband, Ar- thur Shivy, 61, said GPDPS. The incident was re- ported at approximately 5:37 a.m. Sunday, July 10. The couple had been drinking and arguing, said GPDPS. city a $140,000 letter of credit to serve as a bond until the pump station is completed and accepted by the city. Also, Schumacher will have to be paved. Arm- strong said that the work will begin this week. Additionally, any legal costs incurred in the event of delay in installing the pump station will be borne by the developer. And the water and sewer infrastructure will have to be approved by the city and state Dept. of Envi- ronmental Quality. Armstrong agreed to all conditions, noting that he has worked hard to be a partner with the city. Sterling and Frank urged the council to approve the final plat, noting that City Recorder Jim Polk will not sign off until all condi- tions are met. They indi- cated that Armstrong de- serves trust. At one point, Dyer in- terjected, “All we need now is for Jim Frick to get up here.” Frick, a real estate broker, has been an outspo- ken supporter for various developments under way in the city, but did not attend Monday’s meeting. Added the mayor after Dyer’s comment, “Shhh -- he’ll show up.” E-waste aim of Wyden bill ‘SNORTIN’ NORTONS’ RALLY - Some 300 members of Norton Owners Clubs from around the world met at Lake Selmac Friday through Sunday, July 15-17 for the 2005 Rogue Rally. Illinois Valley Fire District volunteers served the visitors pancake breakfasts Friday and Saturday as a fund-raiser for the volunteer association. As the cycle aficionados gathered for a ride to Oregon Caves National Monument, all the bikes were started at once in a ‘moment of thunder.’ Observers said that it was ‘awesome’. Besides visitors from many states, there also were attendees from as far away as England and Australia. Bikes at the rally included a 1936 model 16h Norton that the owner rode from Ohio. Valley merchants went out of their way to be helpful, said Alan Goldwater, event coordinator from the Northern California Norton Owners Club. (Text and photos by Dale & Elaine Sandberg) JOINT seizes indoor marijuana garden following incident in rural Grants Pass After arresting a man in rural Grants Pass on numer- ous charges, including pointing a firearm and at- tempted assault on two law- men, officers found an ille- gal indoor marijuana crop. Arrested was Douglas R. Dorr, 56, of 3201 River- banks Road, said Josephine Interagency Narcotics Team (JOINT). His wife, Dianne S. Dorr, 53, was arrested on a charge of manufacturing a controlled substance (MCS), marijuana. Douglas Dorr was charged, said JOINT, with two counts each of first- degree attempted assault, menacing, pointing a firearm, unlawful use of a weapon, and attempted assault on a public safety officer. He also was charged with unlawful possession of a short-barreled shotgun, disorderly conduct, MCS/ marijuana, possession of a controlled substance/ marijuana, and three counts of reckless endangering. JOINT gave the follow- ing account of the incident that began at approximately 10 p.m. Friday, July 15: A neighbor to the Dorrs phoned to report screaming and yelling at the home. A deputy and an OSP trooper verified that there was a dis- turbance, identified them- selves, and ordered Dorr to come to his front porch. Instead, he went back into his home, armed him- self with a sawed-off shot- gun, and threatened the offi- cers with it. After a brief stand-off, he surrendered the loaded weapon. Officers then made a “safety check” of the resi- dence and found a small room “dedicated for grow- ing marijuana.” The couple refused to cooperate, and JOINT was New building planned on Lister A major zoning clear- ance permit for a two-story building on Lister Street was among permits ap- proved by the city of Cave Junction during June. “Sally” Palmer plans to erect a building with more than 3,000 square feet of space, the city council was advised during its meeting in city hall Monday night, July 18. The site is between Josephine County Title Co. and Valley Chiropractic. Also during June, the city issued four fence per- mits. City Recorder Jim Polk noted that two “drug sites” have been cleared of code violations. Their ad- dresses are 495 S. Old Stage Road, and 220 S. Kerby Ave. In another matter dur- ing the meeting, the coun- cil approved use of Jubilee Park for the Men’s Softball City League from mid-July to September, said organ- izer Don Hook. called. Seized were 18 mari- juana plants, each approxi- mately 4 feet tall. The con- verted laundry room had a grow light, timers, ventila- tion, fertilizer and a water- ing system. Officers found a loaded handgun and a small amount of processed marijuana. They also found equipment and documents about psilo- cybin mushrooms. None were found. An amendment written by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and accepted into the Senate energy bill, will give U.S. recyclers a tax credit to help buy equipment that can be used to recycle electronic waste. The Wyden amendment adds electronic waste to the list of qualified recyclable materials covered under the recycling equipment tax credit in the tax title of the energy bill. That provision would allow businesses to claim a credit of as much as 15 percent of the cost of equipment used to process recyclables such as news- print, plastic and aluminum -- and now, electronic waste. “American homes and businesses are only going to discard more and more elec- tronics in the coming years, so the time to build an infra- structure to recycle all this e-waste is now,” said Wy- den. “Helping recyclers get the equipment they need is the first step toward a na- tional e- recycling effort.” Harmful e-waste is a large and growing problem in the United States, with some experts estimating that more than 150 million tons of electronic equipment were disposed of in 2004 alone, Wyden said. The personal and office electronics that are routinely dumped in landfills contain a number of toxins includ- ing lead, mercury and cad- mium. Buying the heavy- duty shredders needed to process e-waste for recy- cling is often cost prohibi- tive for recycling busi- nesses. 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