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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2015 VOLUME 9 NO. 40 SIERRA MADRE POLICE DEPARTMENT or LA COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT, WHAT’S BEST FOR OUR TOWN? Review Committee Seeking Public Input The City of Sierra Madre via the Sheriff’s Contract Proposal Review Committee, is asking the Community for input on whether or not Sierra Madre should retain its’ independent Police Department or contract those services out to the LA County Sheriff’s Department. The meeting will be held on Monday, October 5th at 6:00 pm in the City Council Chambers. The Sheriff’s Contract Proposal Review Committee is one of three committees appointed by the council in an effort to get public input on ways to deal with the city’s current budget issues. The other two committees are the Revenue Committee and the Library Services Proposal Committee. The committee consists of Former Mayor Glenn Lambdin, Chair, Bill Coburn, Vice Chair, Former SMPD Chief Marilyn Diaz, Mayor Pro Tem Gene Goss, and residents Rosemary Burnett and Donald Handly. Lambdin, Diaz, Coburn, Burnett and Handly are members of the Public Safety Committee. A Request for Proposals to provide police services was sent out earlier this year to the LASD, the Pasadena Police Department and the Arcadia Police Department. Arcadia PD and Pasadena PD did not submit responses, however in May, the LA County Sheriff’s Department did. The LASD proposal lists several different levels of service and states that Sierra Madre would become part of the East Patrol which includes Altadena, Crescenta Valley (La Canada Flintridge), Industry (City of Industry, La Habra Heights, La Puente, San Dimas, Temple City, Bradbury, Duarte, Rosemead, South El Monte, Walnut and Diamond Bar. The complete proposal can be viewed online at: http:// www.cityofsierramadre.com/ common/pages/DisplayFile. aspx?itemId=279535 The committee is seeking public input as to the cost effectiveness and other benefits of either keeping the SMPD or contracting it out. After receiving information from the public the committee will reconvene and using the information from Monday’s meeting make a recommendation to the city council. Note: This meeting will NOT be televised., so if you are unable to attend, please submit your questions or concerns via email to: psc@ cityofsierramadre.com S. Henderson/MVNews REMEMBRANCE THEY’RE HERE! Sierra Madre’s 4th annual Scarecrow Festival kicks off October 2nd with scarecrows appearing throughout town through the end of October. Awards will be given in several categories including best representation of a business, church, service organization or government office; best scarecrow story, most humorous, scariest, most clever etc. in child and adult categories. Tour all of the scarecrows on display, and then vote for your favorite. Maps will be available at Creative Arts Group as well as at participating businesses throughout Sierra Madre. Or you can register for a free shuttle tour of the residential scarecrows on October 10th at www.creativeartsgroup.org/scarecrow-festival/ An awards ceremony will take place Friday, October 16th at 7 pm at Creative Arts Group, located at 108 N. Baldwin Ave. Inside this week: MARIE WOOD HARTLEY Marie Wood Hartley, 62-year resident of Sierra Madre, died September 21 of complications of COPD. Marie was born October 24, 1922, the oldest daughter of Capt. Tipton Lee Wood (USN) and Lenore Richardson Wood, at the Mare Island, California Naval Base. As the daughter of a Navy chaplain, she lived in her early years in a variety of locations around the Pacific Rim including Manila and Shanghai. She never forgot the joys of traveling the world as the daughter of a naval officer and, in her later years, found great joy in cruising. Returning to the US, she attended Beverly Hills High School and then the University of California, Berkeley. While there, she met a young seminarian studying at the Divinity School of the Pacific, Richard Hartley. They both worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad during WWII and were married in 1945. Marie and Richard moved to Sierra Madre in 1953. Among her many activities, Marie was actively involved in the Friends of the Sierra Madre Library. Until her death she was a parishioner at Ascension Church, where Richard served as a deacon and vestryman. Richard Hartley died in 1984. Marie is survived by her four sons, Alan of Claremont, CA, Frank of Fort Collins, CO (and grandchildren Brent, Brian, and Megan), William of Monrovia, CA, and Bruce of Huntington Beach, CA (and grand-daughter Emily). Following Marie’s wishes there will be no memorial service. Donations may be made in her name to the American Lung Association. CALENDAR Pg. 2 SIERRA MADRE NEWS Pg. 3 PASADENA/ALTADENA Pg. 6 SAN GABRIEL VALLEY Pg. 7 ARCADIA NEWS Pg. 7 MONROVIA/DUARTE Pg. 8 EDUCATION & YOUTH Pg. 9 BEST FRIENDS Pg. 10 FOOD & DRINK Pg. 11 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Pg. 12 THE GOOD LIFE Pg. 13 BUSINESS NEWS & TRENDS HEALTHY LIFESTYLES Pg. 14 THE WORLD Pg. 15 OPINION Pg. 16 LEGALS Pg. 17 | |||||||||||||||||||||
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