Crescent City Council Discusses Transit Center, Stipends, CCPD’s Alcohol Beverage Control Grant Application

Thumbnail image courtesy of Crescent City

Among the items discussed at Monday’s Crescent City Council meeting:

RCTA’s new transit center: City councilors entered into an agreement with the Redwood Coast Transit Authority as it moves forward with plans to build a transit center at Front and K streets.

The agreement comes more than two years after councilors decided that the parking lot near the Del Norte County Library was a suitable home for a transit center. RCTA is building the facility using $2.85 million in grant dollars from the California State Transportation Agency’s Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program. The transit authority’s total grant award was $7.6 million.

“The key reason we have this agreement now is because RCTA needs [it] to move forward with their design and their project steps,” City Attorney Martha Rice told councilors. “We want something in writing that says this is going to be the site, however prior to completing the required environmental analyses they can’t enter into a binding lease agreement. We’re coming to terms on what the basics of the lease agreement will be.”

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Greenough Says Beachfront Park Interpretive Kiosks Should Tell ‘All Of Our History, Not Just One Side’ As Tolowa Cultural Trail Takes Shape

Thumbnail photo: The canoe node will be one of the first interpretive elements to be constructed as part of the Tolowa Cultural Trail feature at Beachfront Park. | Image courtesy of Crescent City

As construction begins on the Tolowa Cultural Trail, Jason Greenough invoked the three industries that “basically made Crescent City” and insisted that “all of our history is important, not just one side.”

The city councilor said he loved the redwood, burden basket and canoe replicas that will be included in the Tolowa Cultural Trail feature. But he pressed his colleagues for consensus on expanding the historical collection of kiosks that will dot Beachfront Park’s perimeter to include information about the lumber, fishing and mining industries.

Crescent City could highlight its historical buildings, bring back the hollow redwood log kids played in before it decomposed and caved in on itself and highlight the importance of the Hmong community in the area, he said.

“If you’re going to walk the entire Tolowa trail and then walk all the way around and look at all the kiosks, that can provide quite a bit of time for people to be outside, to get exercise, to be healthy, to be out there with their families and encourage people to promote a better family life, and education,” Greenough said. “It feels like this checks all those different boxes.”

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CCHD Board Censures Nehmer, Ousts Her As Vice Chair; Nehmer Says Reprimand Is ‘A Smear Campaign’ To Get Her To Resign

Tuesday’s Crescent City Harbor District meeting

Crescent City Harbor Commissioner Annie Nehmer called an effort to censure her and remove her from the vice chair position a smear campaign that wastes more time and taxpayer money.

Before her colleagues voted to officially reprimand her, Nehmer outlined a series of grievances aimed primarily at Chair Gerhard Weber, who she accused of looking the other way as the agency neared insolvency. 

“This really has no ramifications other than trying to make me look bad in public,” she said Tuesday. “It’s a giant smear campaign against me to attempt to get me to step down and resign. It’s not going to happen.”

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At Greenough’s Request, Crescent City Council Observes Moment Of Silence For Charlie Kirk

Kirk | Author: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons License

Thumbnail photo: Screenshot

(Updated at 2:56 p.m. to clarify that Greenough served as Crescent City Mayor in 2021 and 2022.)

Before asking his colleagues to observe a moment of silence for his death, Crescent City Councilor Jason Greenough said he modeled his leadership style on fallen right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk.

“I have struggled with this all week, that in a country where we value our freedoms so much, that someone would be willing to kill another human being for their opinion,” Greenough said Monday. “And I know when I was mayor I pushed that every single person that stepped up to that microphone would have their time to bring their mind and their thoughts and their beliefs to us.”

Stumbling a bit over his words, Greenough, who was Crescent City mayor in 2021 and 2022, recapped the events that led to Kirk’s killing at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10. The city councilor also praised Kirk for his practice of going onto college campuses and engaging youth in “civilized debate” and said his killing was despicable.

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A Quarter of Del Norte County’s Positions Are Vacant, HR Director Says

Updated at 4:37 p.m. to correct the spelling of Samantha Reagen’s name.

After weighing in on a compensation analysis they said fell short of expectations, county supervisors learned that Del Norte’s overall vacancy rate is 25%.

Out of a total of 482 positions countywide, 121 are empty, Human Resources Director Kerri Vue said last week. This represents a significant staffing shortage that is more pronounced in the Social Services and Behavioral Health branches of the Department of Health and Human Services as well as the District Attorney, Probation and Sheriff’s Offices, she said.

“We also see several smaller, yet important, single vacancies across various departments such as the administrative office, animal control, the assessor and the auditor-controller,” she said. “All these numbers are smaller, [but] each vacancy represents a critical gap in a specific function, potentially impacting efficacy and the ability to meet department objectives.”

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Comp Study Shows Del Norte County’s Overall Base Salaries 10% Below Market Rate; Supervisors Say Analysis Fell Short Of Expectations

Thumbnail photo by Paul Critz

Norma Williams summed up SEIU 1021’s assessment of the Gallagher report in four words: We told you so.

The president of the Del Norte County Employees Association told supervisors Tuesday that the results of Gallagher’s compensation analysis — which showed that the county’s base salary is 10% below the market median though its overall compensation package is 2.1% above the market median — is nothing new.

Following a subsequent presentation from Human Resources Director Kerri Vue, who stated that there were 121 staff vacancies out of a total of 482 positions, Williams called for an across-the-board cost of living adjustment. She also urged them to address substandard salaries by ensuring the positions’ pay is in line with the market rate.

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Working Group Battling Opioid Calls Using Settlement Dollars to Build Treatment Capacity, Increase Naloxone Access

Thumbnail photo courtesy of Jermaine Brubaker

Editor’s note: Rx Safe Del Norte and KFUG Community Radio LLP — Redwood Voice’s parent organization — are currently partnering together on TACOCAT, a teen-based program aimed at spreading awareness about opioid abuse in Del Norte County.

Calling the roughly $4 million in opioid settlement dollars Del Norte County is set to receive a “once-in-a-generation opportunity,” members of a local coalition stated that it plans to use that money to close the gaps that contributed to the crisis.

The opioid litigation work group’s plan calls for increasing treatment capacity in the jail as well as inside and outside of Del Norte County, according to Behavioral Health Deputy Director Shiann Hogan. The plan also aims to use settlement dollars to better equip law enforcement, emergency personnel and other providers to meet the community’s needs.

According to Hogan, the group’s plan focuses on using opioid settlement dollars Del Norte County currently has.

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CCHD Debate Over USDA Loan Continues; Board Rejects Nehmer’s Appointment To Ad Hoc Committee

Nehmer | ccharbor.com

Thumbnail photo by Paul Critz

Crescent City Harbor commissioners rehashed whether one of their colleagues acted outside her scope for the second day in a row at a meeting that culminated in raised voices and a recall threat from the public.

Ultimately, a motion to appoint Annie Nehmer as one of two commissioners on an ad hoc committee related to renegotiating a U.S. Department of Agriculture loan failed Wednesday with three of her colleagues casting no votes. 

Their decision came ahead of a third special meeting that had been scheduled for Thursday but has since been canceled. Nehmer’s censure and removal from her vice chair position was on the agenda.

Continue reading CCHD Debate Over USDA Loan Continues; Board Rejects Nehmer’s Appointment To Ad Hoc Committee

Hooper Pleads Not Guilty to Felony Hit & Run, DUI; Trial Set For October

Hooper |LinkedIn

Thumbnail photo: Randy Hooper’s hit and run and DUI charges stem from a collision that took place near Sand Mine Road and U.S. 101 on April 19. | Photo by Heather Polen.

Assistant County Administrative Officer Randy Hooper pleaded not guilty to felony DUI and hit and run charges on Tuesday.

Hooper was arraigned before Del Norte County Superior Court Judge William Follett, according to Keith Morris, who is prosecuting the case for the California Attorney General’s office. Follett set a jury trial for Oct. 27 through 30, Morris told Redwood Voice Community News on Wednesday.

Hooper entered his not guilty plea via his attorney, George Mavris, according to Morris. About two weeks prior, Mavris unsuccessfully petitioned Judge Karen Olson to reduce Hooper’s charges from felonies to misdemeanors. 

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Though Taken Off The Agenda, Potential Censure of Annie Nehmer Dominates CCHD Special Meeting

Nehmer

Thumbnail photo by Amanda Dockter

Linda Sutter urged Gerard Weber to call the police on Tuesday, refusing to leave the Crescent City Harbor District’s special meeting until she had her three minutes to speak.

Stepping to the rostrum after Weber, the CCHD’s chairman, told the public to stick to items that weren’t on the agenda, Sutter addressed the potential censure of one of his colleagues when he stopped her.

“We should not talk about items that are on the agenda,” he said.

When Sutter protested, pointing out that she is speaking about Harbor District business and accusing Weber of disrupting her right to free speech, Weber called a halt to the meeting. 

Continue reading Though Taken Off The Agenda, Potential Censure of Annie Nehmer Dominates CCHD Special Meeting