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this Week: Calendar: Sierra Madre: Pasadena – Altadena: Around SGV / The World: Arcadia: Monrovia – Duarte: Education & Youth: Just for Best Friends: Good Food & Drink: The Good Life: Healthy Lifestyles: Arts and More: Left Turn / Right Turn: Opinion / Legals: Columnists: Recent Issues: |
HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND A Time To Remember America’s Heroes SATURDAY, MAY 25, 2013 VOLUME 7 NO. 21 Inside this week: CITY TO OFFER AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID AND CPR/AED COURSES The Community Services Department is happy to announce Red Cross certification course are now available! Certified instructors are holding courses for First Aid and CPR/AED for both professional rescuers and workplace, schools and individuals. All courses are held in the Sierra Madre Room, located at 611 E. Sierra Madre Blvd., Sierra Madre, CA 91024. Participants must be ages 16 or older. Online registration is available at www.cityofsierramadre.com/ onlineregistration. First Aid and CPR/AED for the Workplace, Schools and Individuals Would you know what to do in a cardiac, breathing or first aid emergency? The right answer could help you save a life. With an emphasis on hands-on learning, our First Aid/CPR/AED courses give you the skills to save a life. All course options align with OSHA’s Best Practices for Workplace First Aid Training Programs and are available in classroom and blended learning formats. Certification is issued upon successful completion. • Sessions: June 12-13 and June 26-27 (Must attend both dates in a session) • Time: 6:00pm-9:00pm each date • Cost: $90 First Aid and CPR/AED for the Professional Rescuer As an EMT, firefighter, athletic trainer or lifeguard, it is your duty to respond to cardiac or breathing emergencies until more advanced medical personnel can take over. From assessing needs and making decisions to providing care, this program provides the skills you need through discussion, video and hands- on training based on real-life rescue scenarios. • Session: June 15 • Time: 12:30pm-6:00pm • Cost: $90 For information, please contact the Community Services Department at 626.355.5278. THANKS FOR 26,000 POUNDS OF FOOD SIERRA MADRE Calendar Page A2 Sierra Madre News Page A3 Police Blotter PASADENA/ALTADENA Pg. A4 Police Defend Actions AROUND SGV Pg. A5 LIVE OAK VILLAGE PLANS Nyerges: Surviving Anywhere LOOKING UP - Watch The Planets Dance ARCADIA NEWS Pg. A6 Rusnak Expands MONROVIA/DUARTE Pg. A7 Tip A Cop Raises $$$$ EDUCATION & YOUTH Pg. A8 MWTR T-Shirt Design Winner BEST FRIENDS Pg. A9 The Spinning Spider Pet Of The Week The letter carriers of Sierra Madre Post Office would like to thank the community of Sierra Madre for an outstanding contribution to our Annual Food Drive. 26.000 POUNDS OF FOOD! Last year we collected 17,000. AWESOME Job! We would also like to thank Christdelphian Southern California Boys and Girls Club volunteers (pictured above) and Joe C. Arciniega, Excellent food to the carriers was also provided by Sierra Madre Pizza and Village Pizzeria, Starbucks and The Only Place In Town. Flyers were donated by Mail Box and Postal. All can goods will go to the Foothill Food Bank in Monrovia. Photo and caption provided by Cathy Mabry GOOD FOOD & DRINK Pg. A10 Award Winning Chili Recipes THE GOOD LIFE Pg. A11 Savvy Senior Senior Happenings IT’S GETTING HOT – SAVE WHAT WE’VE GOT! SPORTS Pg. A12 Did you know the largest use of water in Sierra Madre is for irrigation? While there are many ways to save water, one of the best ways to conserve is to lessen the frequency and/or the duration of landscape irrigation. The dry winter Sierra Madre just experienced seriously affected the groundwater levels as well as increased consumption by the City’s water customers. Due to the lack of rainfall, there was no recovery in the water levels in the East Raymond groundwater basin leading the Raymond Basin Watermaster to reduce the City’s groundwater pumping right by almost 47%. As warm weather is upon us, it is imperative that everyone in the community does everything they can to conserve water. Active, thoughtful water conservation by everyone in Sierra Madre now could help the City avoid stringent mandatory measures and/or the import of water from sources outside the City. Due to low water levels in the aquifer that Sierra Madre draws all of its water from, the City Council will hold a Public Hearing on May 28, 2013 at 6:30 pm. At this time, the Council will discuss increased mandatory water conservation measures. Currently, the following measures are already in place: • Washing sidewalks, walkways, patios, driveways, or parking areas with a water hose is prohibited. • Water may not be used to clean, fill or maintain levels in decorative fountains unless such water is part of a recycling system. • Restaurants, cafes, delis, or other public place where food is sold, served or offered for sale, may not serve drinking water unless expressly requested by the customer. • Water leaks must be fixed immediately. • Watering lawns, landscaping, or other turf area is prohibited between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and must be done in a manner that does not waste any water. There are a number of ways to save water, for more water conservation tips, visit http://wateruseitwisely.com. SMLL CHAMPIONS SECTION B REMEMBERING OUR HEROES.............Pg. B1 HEALTHY LIVING Pg. B2 The Harry L. Embree VFW Post 3208 Invites the Public To MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONIES at Sierra Madre Pioneer Cemetery Monday May 27, 2012 11 a.m. Guest Speaker: Veteran Charles Carter Congresswoman Chu State Senator Carol Liu VFW 2.jpg Renee Quenell - How We Flow Lori Koop - TRU FEELINGS ARTS / ENTERTAINMENT BUSINESS Pg. B3 HOMES Pg. B4 Graywater Systems A Way To Save Water SIERRA MADRE MUSEUMS SHOWCASE NATIVE PLANTS IN NEW GARDEN LEFT/RIGHT Pg. B5 By Christine Bachwansky In a joint project the Sierra Madre Garden Club, The Sierra Madre Historical Preservation Society, garden designer Orchid Black of Native Sanctuary, Sierra Madre resident Bruce Goss, concrete artisan and stone mason, the City’s Public Works department, along with many volunteers from the community spent the weekend installing a new native plant garden at Lizzie’s Trail Inn Museum and Richardson House Museum grounds. In front of Lizzie’s, the garden features local native plants that are found on the Mt. Wilson Trail. Richardson House is landscaped in California natives like Douglas Iris. Along the stream bed are sedges and other creek-side plants. An improved access path was added from the sidewalk to the Richardson House porch. The City donated several large boulders to the project, which Bruce Goss and his crew staged around the grounds. Bruce and crew members Steve D’Auria, Wen Hampson, Mario Razo, and Enrique Mendoza repeated history from 20 years ago when they did the original stone and masonry work on the museum grounds. Their new efforts give the site good bones to showcase the plants. The Garden Club and the Historical Society volunteers did the lion’s share of the digging and planting, aided by many community volunteers, like City Councilman John Carpaccio, and some who came from Long Beach, Victorville, Granada Hills, Chatsworth and Santa Clarita. There were even those who, in passing, wanted to help and signed up on the spot! The tremendous effort of these people made the garden possible. The various plants will soon have an identifying number that corresponds to its name on a “take away” sheet listing the plant name so visitors will be able to identify trail plants and native plants that do well in our area. Native plants require much less water than non-natives and attract butterflies and birds by providing the sort of food they are genetically pre-disposed to eat. Designer Orchid Black reminds us that “it takes three years to mature a native garden. One year to sleep, one year to creep, and one year to leap.” The museums are located at 165 E. Mira Monte Ave. at the foot of the Mt. Wilson Trail and are open Saturdays from 10:00 A.M to Noon and the gardens are always available to be viewed. OPINION Pg. B6 LEGAL NOTICES Pgs. B7-9 @mtnviewsnews www.facebook.com/ mountainviewsnews Councilman John Carpaccio, Garden Designer Orchid Black, Garden Club President Glenn Putnam, Historical Society Vice-President Leslie Ziff, and Library intern Courtney Woodford planting the bed in front of Richardson House. Read The Paper Online At: www.mtnviewsnews.com | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Mountain Views News 80 W. Sierra Madre Blvd. #327 Sierra Madre, Ca. 91024 Office: 626.355.2737 Fax: 626.604.4548 www.mtnviewsnews.com |