Friday, June 15, 2007

Inland Cities Eagar For 210 extention to Open (LA Times June 11, 2007)

Inland cities eager for 210 extension to open

Rialto and San Bernardino expect a commercial boost when the freeway is completed by the end of the year. But some residents are uneasy.
By Rong-Gong Lin II, Times Staff Writer
June 11, 2007

Although the opening of the final leg of the 210 Freeway through Rialto and San Bernardino is still several months away, merchants and city officials are gleeful at the thought of new businesses already being planned along the roadway and for another route to the Los Angeles area.

"It can't happen too soon," said Midge Zupanic, president of the Rialto Chamber of Commerce, which is so happy at the prospect that it will hold its 100th anniversary black-tie gala on an unopened portion of the roadway on June 22.

The $233-million, 8-mile extension is scheduled to open by the end of the year. The Foothill Freeway now extends 67 miles from Sylmar in the San Fernando Valley through Pasadena, Arcadia, Azusa and San Dimas along the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. It ends abruptly in Fontana, not its ultimate destination of San Bernardino. About a three-quarter-mile portion of the extension is open.

The extension will link the 210 Freeway to Interstate 215 and the present California 30, giving many San Bernardino-area residents what they have wanted for decades — relief from the congested San Bernardino Freeway and an alternate route to Los Angeles. The effect on surface streets will be mixed, residents say. North-south streets congested with cars now headed for Interstate 10 should see an improvement, but streets near the new freeway should see the flow increase.

Significant work still needs to be done, including finishing on- and offramps and erecting freeway signs. On one stretch of the freeway Friday, 50-foot-long, 3-foot-diameter steel tubes rested in an eastbound carpool lane, waiting to be formed into an overhead sign. Workers were still digging drainage ditches and were gluing Botts Dots lane markers onto the roadway with a sticky, black ooze.

Not everyone welcomes the extension, however. Some worry that the extension will only add to surface-street congestion and change the nature of their cities.

"You'll get trucks coming and going," said William Avery, 75, of Rialto, "which is highly undesirable and dangerous."

Planning for the Foothill Freeway began in 1948. But the portion proposed for San Bernardino County languished unbuilt for decades because of a lack of funds and priorities that put roads elsewhere. But San Bernardino County voters approved a half-cent-on-the-dollar sales tax in 1989 that provided the money. Nine years later, construction began on a 20-mile leg, from La Verne to Fontana, that opened in 2002.

Work on the last stretch started in 2003. The cost of the entire 28-mile project is estimated to be about $1.2 billion, most of it paid for by the sales tax, said Cheryl Donahue, spokeswoman for San Bernardino Associated Governments.

Despite the lack of an official opening date, many residents are happy it will be soon.

"Beautiful! I'm excited," said San Bernardino florist Edwin Alvarado, who hopes to see an end to the 15- to 20-minute delays he says he now encounters on busy surface streets when making deliveries.

"Any time you have a main artery coming through your city like that, it has to stimulate your economy," said San Bernardino barber Jerome Lewis.

In neighboring Rialto, some civic leaders hope the city can now change its reputation as largely a bedroom community by adding restaurants and commercial establishments. Even a Target store has so far eluded Rialto, though the city is home to the store's regional distribution center.

And they say many residents are happy they won't have to drive as far to get to major businesses and will have a wider selection of good restaurants nearby.

"You can't be a bedroom community and not have the things people want — the upscale amenities and the restaurants we want," Zupanic said. Developers are already sketching plans to develop some of the vacant land surrounding the freeway extension. Zupanic said 50,000 new homes are being considered for a city whose population is 100,000.

Preliminary plans are being made to transform 112 acres near Pepper Avenue into a development with as many as 236 single-family homes, 550 apartments and more than 340,000 square feet of commercial space, said Peter Templeton, one of those working on the idea.

The opportunities for changing the face of Rialto are dramatic, he said. The northern part of the city through which the 210 Freeway extension runs is mostly barren, with rock-crushing operations and sand and gravel pits.

"It was the backside of town for all these cities," Templeton said. "You build a new freeway there, and all of a sudden you build new opportunities and a bright future."

Earline Black, 59, said she savored the idea of strolling down the street from her Rialto home of 30 years, browsing at a Barnes & Noble bookstore or a JCPenney. Now, she says, she often must make shopping trips 22 miles west to Montclair or 14 miles east to Redlands.

But other residents have mixed feelings.

Beverly Clayton, 60, said she would enjoy the new freeway route when she visits family in Pasadena, but worries about increased truck traffic near her home. She is also not happy about the idea of apartments being built close to her neighborhood of single-family homes.

"It's a Catch-22," said Clayton, a retiree. "I love where I am. I love my home. It took me 30 years, and I don't want anything to come in and disturb that, and decrease my property values."

Across the street, Avery agreed with Clayton's concerns. He also hopes, however, that the freeway extension will boost the local economy.

The retired engineer said there wasn't much of a job market in San Bernardino and Rialto. "It'll get better when they build businesses along the 210. They're going to get more sales tax monies, and this whole city will make major changes when that occurs."

Such changes have benefited Fontana, Rialto's neighbor to the west, city officials there say. When that city gained access to the freeway in 2002, Fontana was opened up to San Gabriel Valley homeowners seeking to upsize their homes, said Fontana Mayor Mark Nuaimi.

"We saw quite an influx of folks moving down east on the 210," Nuaimi said. "With increased property values came increased family income and commercial development."

Since 2002, he said, major shopping centers have sprouted near the freeway, attracting auto dealerships, home improvement stores, and, last November, a Costco.

As a result, sales tax revenue for San Bernardino County's second-largest city has doubled in five years, Nuaimi said. Money has been freed up to invest in a new library and 40-acre regional park.

"All of that is tied from the 210 and connecting folks to the west," said Fontana Mayor Mark Nuaimi. "It's really been a major lifeblood for us."

But some warn that the freeway extension will put more pressure on existing roads like California 30 and the San Bernardino Freeway heading east toward Palm Springs, which have not yet been widened to accommodate growing traffic. California 30 will lose that designation and will become part of the 210 when the extension opens.

"Everyone's excited about it until they come to the reality — and I've been saying this for years — of … all the additional traffic," said Ross Jones, the mayor of Highland, just east of San Bernardino. "Locals are going to have to stick to surface streets." The problem, Jones said, is that these freeway improvements should have been completed two decades ago.

"That's part of the transportation problem in California: We under-design and under-plan for the growth and the need," Jones said. "Therefore, all our freeways are crammed because the demand just continues to increase."


ron.lin@latimes.com

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BS Ranch Perspective

Everyone is in a hurry to get home!! They don't have time to stop off the freeway and get anything but maybe a tank of gas!! So, the Commercial that they are waiting for might just be a pipe dream, Most of Highland Ave. Dried up of the businesses that were on there and they are just now starting to come back and that is only because they are dreaming that the new extension of the 210 will bring the business back. But what took the business away from Highland.

I will tell you it was the Completion of the Crosstown Freeway, that is going to be also known as the 210 Freeway or 30, Cross town Freeway, Unless the Crosstown ends at the 215 Freeway. I believe that if the people live beyond Rialto they will drive beyond Rialto, and that will be that!! say good by to them unless the people that they are talking about are the ones that move to Rialto to live. that is different. If that is the case then they are here and they are stuck.

BS Ranch

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Fwd: Police Find Half-Ton Pot Stash in Rialto (SB Sun June 9, 2007)

Police find half-ton pot stash in Rialto
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer
San Bernardino County Sun
Article Launched:06/09/2007 12:00:00 AM PDT

RIALTO - Police found a half-ton of marijuana at a house in the Las Colinas area of the city Friday.

After receiving a call that there might have been narcotics activity at a house in the area, police arrived at 3422 N. Amberwood Ave. at about 5:30 p.m., said Rialto police Sgt. Andrew Karol.

"It looked like a brick wall," Eddie Vargas, who lives down the street, said of the marijuana.

Neighbors gathered to watch police as they lined the marijuana up in the front yard, he said.

When police arrived, 24-year-old Armando Isaac Hernandez showed up with 350 pounds of marijuana in the back seats of his Ford Explorer, Karol said.

Hernandez, who lives in Ontario, said he was just delivering the marijuana to the single- family house.

"He looks just like a runner," Karol said of Hernandez. Karol said he doesn't know who was running the operation or who owns the house.

When police entered, they found marijuana bricks stacked throughout the house, Karol said. The street value of the marijuana is about a half-million dollars, he said.

It was packaged in different sizes and looked ready for sale, Vargas said.

The marijuana was almost all there was inside the house. There wasn't even any furniture, Karol said.

Before Friday, the house blended into the neighborhood, Vargas, 27, said.

"You never noticed that house," he said.

Hernandez was booked at the West Valley Detention Center on suspicion of transportation and sales of marijuana and of maintaining a drug house, Karol said.

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BS Ranch Perspective

I just want to hand it to the Rialto Police Department to Rialto PD for keeping on top of everything and working to keep the neighborhoods clean even though they are still short handed from the Vote to Go to the Sheriff for Law Enforcement. It is going to take more time, but they will get the department all caught up on man power. With a Chief like Mark Kling in the Wheelhouse, things are right again.

BS Ranch

Friday, June 08, 2007

State of City: Rialto Approaching Crossroads of Change (San Bernardino County Sun June 8, 2007)


State of city: Rialto approaching crossroads of changeJasonJPesickesick
, Staff Writer
Bernardinoino CouSunArticleicle

RIALTO - This city is at a critical point.

That was the clear theme of Thursday night's state of the city address at the Tom Sawyer Pool Patio.

Residents, developers and city officials all came out for the formal affair.

The centerpiece of the event was a video presentation by MBI, the city's media consultant, and paid for by Young Homes, EDCO Disposal SaresaRegisegis.

The sound of horns and drums accompany a flying Rialto logo to begin the video in dramatic fashion, as if a national news network were announcing a major presidential address.

Then Rialto Mayor Grace Vargas appears on the video, titled "Rialto at the Crossroads."

"The city of Rialto stands at the crossroads to the future," Vargas says in the video.

Much of the presentation focused on the opportunities the city has for rebirth following the completion of the Interstate 210 extension through Rialto later this year, an event Vargas calls "one of the most important historic moments in time for the city of Rialto."

The video's narrator reviews the major projects and plans under way, especially on the north end around the 210.

"Currently, this part of the city is a blank canvas - one which can be painted into a picture of what we want Rialto to be," Vargas says.

The narrator mentions work to updRialto'sto's General Plan, a plan to improve the Foothill corridor, a plan to improve downtown, expansion of Metrolinklink parking lot, new senior housing, new industrial development, a Wal Wal-MSupercenternter and, of course, the redevelopment of the city's airport into Renaissance Rialto.

Renaissance Rialto, which will be located along the 210, is an aggressive project filled with retail and industrial buildings and almost 4,000 housing units.

In the coming years, the video says, Rialto will build 12,000 new homes and welcome more than 50,000 new residents.

The event itself featured gourmet food, jazz music, Mayor Temporepore Winnie Hanson singing the national anthem, jazz music and city staffers like Recreation and Community Services Director LaThornburgburg and Police Lt. Joe Cirilo grooving to the jazz music.

There was also a chocolate fountain.

But the theme of the night was the tremendous opportunity the city has for growth. The city is "on the cusp" Henry Garcia, the city administrator, said.

Even though the presentation was delayed because it was too light out to show the video presentation on schedule, there was a sense of excitement in the air.

"We have done so much in our city," Vargas said.

Contact writer JaPesicksick at (909) 386-3861 or via e-mail at jason.pesick@sbsun.com.

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BS Ranch Perspective

am wondering what crossroads are we approaching and just what is it that the 210 freeway is going to bring us. I guess it is like the movie 'Field of Dreams' "Build it and they will come!"

Then you look to the last line of this optimistic story, and it is the Mayor saying that we have done so much in our city. However, 4000 houses when they are all finished being constructed they will bring a whole bunch of families, but it is going to take a great deal long time to sell these houses since the properties are going to be not in style at the time that they are finished.

It is just a feeling that I have nothing more, just a feeling brings on this prediction, I could be wrong. People by that time might have seen what happened to the people that had land on Fillmore Ave, and their back yards backed up to Cactus Ave, however the water took out their Block Walls, and part of their back yard was gone in the rain storm that we had during the peak of global warming.

Now they are going to turn the airport into homes and lawns and that will be great! I mean just super...The whole airport gone, and they have the promise of one store to move into Renaissances Shopping Center, and that is Target!, I mean TARGET? That is a great store and that is a good store, but Rialto should hold themselves Higher, and maybe Nordstrom's or J.C. Penney's or even a good old Sears Grand, which is a Glorified K-Mart now.

Anyway, I just hope that things come together more for them, other then just that of Target, because if there is more then four thousand homes coming in there should be more then enough shoppers for the new stores that would be willing accommodated the new shoppers that are here.

On that other Road of the Crossroad however, If the City Council continues to run the city by trying to Shut down ,major Departments that are needed Such as the Police Department, where the Battle and fight that they encountered Cost the City, and the City Council Over $4,500, 000.00 to battle the Police union and the publicity against the People that elected them onto the City Council who were trying to keep the Police Department where they should be instead of having the Sheriff's Department in their place. But who cares about $3,000, 000.00 to 5,000,000.00 when it is the people that elected you into the seat that you old and you voted to have the Sheriff Department, and then you had an overwhelming fight from the Council members to put the Sheriff Department in place of the Police Department was overwhelming especially when the ratio was 1 Positive Sheriff Department Citizen to every 25 against the Sheriff Department Vote at every Meeting. Even with that the City council didn't see what they did wrong.

Yes it is true the City is at a Crossroads It is time to THOSE THAT WAISTED ALL THAT CITY FUNDS IN THAT FIGHT!!

BS Ranch

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Inland Empire's 25-Year Growth Targeted (USA-Today June 6, 2007)

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Inland Empire's 25-year growth targeted 
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — This vast county east of LoLosnAngelesthe biggest in the continental USA, could hold the states of Connecticut, Delaware, Vermont and Rhode Island and still have room left over. Most of San Bernardino County remains mountains and empty dedesert.Butn

ever-larger piece, the part known as the "Inland Empire," is freeways, fast-growing cities, traffic congestion and seemingly endless sprawl. For years, this has been the refuge, with Riverside County to the south, for hundreds of thousands of home buyers fleeing soaring LoLosnAngelesrprices.STATESAKE

the suburban dream, for sale on a third of an acre.

"San Bernardino has never seen a project it didn't like," says Brendan Cummings, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental group that has brought several lawsuits in the Inland Empire over global warming. "They rubber-stamp development. It's very much of a frontier mentality."

Test case draws attention

Opponents of sprawl have found an unexpected ally: global warming. They see unfettered sprawl as a big contributor to greenhouse gases that fuel warming, mainly from the fossil-fuel burning homes, businesses and traffic it crcreates.The

tate and conservation groups have made San Bernardino County a test case of that status ququoCalifornia Attorney General Jerry Brown sued the county in April under the state's envircrcreates.Thetateact for failing to account for the impacts of global warming in the county's 25-yearququoCaliforniapproved in MaMarch.The

The Center for Biological Diversity, the Sierra Club and the San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society sued in a separate case.

county has to take some steps to solve it," says Susan DurbMaMarch.TheThe attorney general handling the state's case.

California Durbinear passed the nation's first law ordering an acroscase.California reduction of greenhouse gases by 2020. The attorDurbinneral is looking for more ways other laws can suppocase.CaliforniaaDurbinearn says.

County officials protested that Browacroscase.CaliforniarmingDurbindsays.Countyanning process years in the making and that the state had given localities no rules on how to abide by Durbinwsays.County

o, the county redid its plan to combat global wawarmingDurbindsays.Countyanningys county spokesman David Wert. He says the county will make sure employment centers and housing arWertarlaw.Evenrtation corridors to reduce traffic and do more to promote coBrowlaw.Evensuedt and mass transit.

Wert pointsWert that only 15% of the county is controlled by the transit.Wertrest arWertars and federal and state land. The county has budgeted $325,000 to fight the lawsuit.

The plaintiftransit.Wertcounty to rewrite its growth plan's envirlawsuit.Thepact secttransit.Wertrestethods to measure greenhouse gases and take steps to reduce them.

Durbin and environmelawsuit.They the county addressed global warmingthem.Durbinpecifics.envirlawsuit.Thepactve required developers to build energy-efficient homes, they say. It could have othem.Durbiner subdivisions and more multifamily construction, paidwarmingthem.Durbinpecifics instead of pushing driving alternatives and mandated tree-planting to capture carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas.

National forests in San Bernardino County have had one of the USA's hgas.Nationalire rates in recent years, a condition likely to worseUSA'sglobal warming brings extended droughts and dry tigas.Nationalet the county has done little to restrict resort and sUSA'sthgas.Nationalire in mountain regions or to expand already inadworseUSA'sglobalutes from fires, says Steven Farrell, the timberlands's local chapter's vice chairman.

Marin County's example

secondtimberlandsopments Marin County. Thchairman.Marinifornia enclave took a forceful approach to greenhouse gases in a growth plan likely to be approved this yechairman.Marin set up standards to measure greenhouse gases and set tarThchairman.Marinifornia

Surrounded on three sides by water, Marin also started planning for them.Surrounded sea levels, as polar ice melts, by identifying areas that shouldn't be developed or, if already built migthem.Surroundedls and levees. Marin has long had a progressive, "green" ethem.Surroundedighting global warming came naturally, says community development director Alex Hinds. "We feel fortunate that our population recognizes these concerns," he says.

Environmental groups are also focusing on specific developments in Ssays.EnvironmentalRiverside counties that they claim ignore greenhouse-gas impacts. A suit filed in November by the Centesays.Environmentaliversity against Banning, Calif., says the city failedSsays.EnvironmentalRiversidemissions when it approved 1,500 new homes on 1-acre lots on open space it planned to annex.

"It's coincidental that our first wave of litigation has all been down here," says Kassie Siegel, the center's climate program director. "But to some degree it's nSiegelcause we have the nation's worst sprawl."

The lawsuits are a wake-up call, says Cary Lowe, a San Diego lawyer and plSiegel consultant. "Cities and counties are scrambling, absolutely," he nSiegelcauseknow there's a good chance they'll get sued."

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BS Ranch Perspective


It appears to this writer that the population of the Inland Empire will grow larger then that of the lower projected amount of the report in the news paper indicating only a half million people will be expanding the Inland Empire in the next 25 years. However just the feelings that I get and the amount and success that the people and businesses are getting at this point in the Inland Empire with the kinds of shops and businesses that are running here seem to be very successful right now and there are not that many Businesses that are Failing in the Inland Empire!

So the Growth is welcome and it s a wonderful ting that is always have to look back on and laugh!!

BS Ranch

Pet Lovers at Odds Over Spay-and-Neuter Bill (Press Enterprise Sun June 3, 2007)

Pet lovers at odds over spay-and-neuter bill


10:00 PM PDT on Sunday, June 3, 2007
By JIM MILLER
Sacramento Bureau

SACRAMENTO - A bill requiring most California dog and cat owners to sterilize their pets or risk $500 fines faces a key deadline this week, following weeks of debate about the wisdom of a statewide spay-and-neuter policy.

The measure, dubbed the Healthy Pets Act by supporters and the Pet Extermination Act by some opponents, divides animal control officials, veterinarians, breeders and pet owners in Riverside and San Bernardino counties and around the state.

"I've been involved with animal issues for 10 years. And I know people are passionate on all sides of the issue. I knew it was going to be contentious," the bill's author, Assemblyman Lloyd Levine, D-Van Nuys, said. "I didn't know it would be this big, but I knew it would draw a lot of people out who don't normally come out."

Story continues below
Amanda Lucidon / The Press-Enterprise
Richelle Romano plays with her dogs, Lola and Chase, in the yard of her Riverside home. Romano, who shows her Dalmatians, opposes a bill that would require dogs and cats to be fixed by the time they are four months old. She says the bill wouldn't stop backyard breeders.

In recent weeks, both sides have flooded lawmakers' offices with letters, faxes and e-mails. Bloggers and talk-radio hosts have joined the fight.

Proponents contend that the bill would reduce the estimated 1 million strays who end up in pounds and animal shelters each year, many of them the offspring of ba

ckyard breeders or irresponsible owners who let their pets roam.

But critics slam the proposal as an ill-conceived government intrusion. They argue that the measure would punish legitimate breeders and pet owners, while doing little to reduce the number of abandoned animals.

Trying to lessen the opposition and win over skeptical members of his own party, Levine late last week introduced amendments that carve out clearer exemptions for dogs used by law enforcement, the blind, and as animal companions. They also restrict what cities and counties can charge the owners of "intact" animals.

Vote This Week

The bill has cleared two committees already. But it needs to pass the 80-member Assembly by Friday or else it's likely dead for the year. A vote could come as early as today.

Republicans, who opposed the bill in committee, seem ready to do so again on the Assembly floor.

"I appreciate that he's trying to address a problem but I just don't think this is the right way to go," said Assemblyman Bill Emmerson, R-Redlands, who voted against the bill twice in committee. "I just think it adds a lot more fees on legitimate breeders."

Some of Levine's fellow Democrats also seem skeptical. Assemblywoman Wilmer Amina Carter, D-Rialto, who backed the bill in committee last month, would not commit in a recent interview to supporting the measure on the floor.

Introduced in February, the bill would require cat and dog owners to get their animals fixed, or "altered," at four months of age.

The only exception would be for pets with special intact permits. People eligible for the permits include licensed breeders and owners or handlers of service dogs, police dogs, or pets too unhealthy for the surgery.

Animal control departments would enforce the law, with the help of tips from other agencies and residents.

Violators would be fined $500. The bill would take effect in April 2008.

Supporters Active

Proponents estimate that it costs $250 million annually to house stray dogs and cats in California.

Story continues below
Rodrigo Peña / The Press-Enterprise
Dr. Allan Drusys, left, chief veterinarian, and Robert Miller, director of Riverside County's Department of Animal Services, back the bill.

Cities and counties already can adopt spay-and-neuter ordinances. The city of San Bernardino recently approved a similar rule.

A spay-and-neuter ordinance has been on the books in Santa Cruz County since 1995. Officials there estimate that the number of animals in the counties' pounds has fallen by about two-thirds.

But supporters of the Sacramento legislation say there needs to be a state law, not a patchwork of local regulations.

"This bill would give us one additional tool to address those who breed irresponsibly," said Brian Cronin, program manager for San Bernardino County Animal Care and Control.

Animal-control departments in Riverside and San Bernardino counties have endorsed the measure. Government-run and private animal shelters in both counties house about 85,000 animals annually.

"We as organizations have basically exhausted all the post-impound strategies," said Dr. Allan Drusys, Riverside County's chief veterinarian. Many animals cannot be reunited with owners or adopted out, he said, and have to be put down.

Levine's office has received more than 5,000 letters on the bill. Messages of support have arrived from the band INXS, comedians Bill Maher and Kevin Nealon, actor Pierce Brosnan, actress Diane Keaton, and "the Dog Whisperer," Cesar Milan.

Wrong Approach?

But opponents say the state proposal would fail to make a dent in the overpopulation problem.

Responsible breeders would comply with the law, they say. But backyard breeders -- those in California and out-of-state -- would continue to produce thousands of puppies and kittens.

"They're violating the law already. They're not licensing. They're involved in dog fights. I don't think they're all of a sudden going to say, 'We're going to get him spay and neutered,' " said dog owner Luisa Serrano, of Redlands.

Richelle Romano, of Riverside, shows her two Dalmatians and would be eligible for an intact permit.

The bill does not set a permit fee schedule; that would be up to cities and counties. But Romano said she fears that the permits would be too expensive for many legitimate breeders.

Organizations such as the American Kennel Club, which opposes the bill, have predicted that the law would discourage people from participating in dog shows held in California, costing the state millions in lost tourist activity.

"It's unfair to treat us that way and everyone else does whatever they want and gets away with it," Romano said.

Gov. Schwarzenegger has not taken a position on the bill.

Even if the measure fails, spay-and-neuter requirements still could come to the Inland area. Riverside County has held several hearings on a county ordinance and Cronin said he would recommend a San Bernardino County ordinance.

"Really, to have a healthy community, indiscriminate breeding is not acceptable," said Robert Miller, Riverside County's director of animal services.

Reach Jim Miller at 916-445-9973 or jmiller@PE.com


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BS Ranch Perspective
This bill is not seem to fair to to this to the breeders of great dogs, that there is a demand for in the County of San Bernardino and Riverside. They Breed their Dogs here in San Bernardino County, and then the Dogs in some cases are get shipped all over the United States and beyond if there is a demand for them. Some of these people make there money solely from their Dog Breeding business and this Spay Neuter Bill makes it hard for those business men and woman to keep their business going and in some cases running with a good profit, so that they can keep their prices competitive

BS Ranch


Rialto's Historic 1853 Adobe Celibrated (Press Enterprise Sat. June, 2, 2007).

Rialto's historic 1853 adobe celebrated


  Download story podcast

10:00 PM PDT on Saturday, June 2, 2007
By PENNY E. SCHWARTZ
Special to The Press-Enterprise

The Rialto Adobe came back to life Saturday for festivities celebrating its history and that of the adjoining cemetery.

About 100 current and former city residents toured the one-room adobe, built in 1853, and walked through the cemetery, noting graves of family members and prominent residents. Music, food, craft activities and self-guided cemetery tours were organized by the Rialto Historical Society.

The inside of the 18- by 28-foot building has been decorated with period artifacts that include parts of an old covered wagon and a section of wooden pipe believed to have carried irrigation water. An iron bed, wooden chairs, a pot-bellied stove and cooking utensils give the building the look it might have when Englishman Michael White built it and used it as a temporary home while overseeing his Mexican land grant.

Story continues below
Penny E. Schwartz / Special to The Press-Enterprise
Built in 1853, the one-room Rialto Adobe once served as a stagecoach rest stop. It had stood on Walnut Street in Rialto and was donated by the Isadore Strommer family to the city.

The building also served as a stage coach rest stop and an animal exchange depot, where riders left exhausted horses for fresh ones when riding back and forth to Rancho Cucamonga.

During the Prohibition years, the adobe housed a wine-making operation, said Rialto historian John Adams.

It was donated to the city by the Isadore Strommer family, its last owners, and moved from its original location on Walnut Street, now the site of the Rialto Unified School District Office, to its current location in Bud Bender Park, formerly Lilac Park, in 1961.

In 1967, the Rialto Adobe was designated a state historical building.

A number of former city residents and graduates of Eisenhower High School attended Saturday's events, organized by Jennifer Selbert, 63, of Laguna Woods.

Selbert and her committee located and identified the graves of former teachers, doctors, police officers and other prominent city residents. An alphabetical listing and map indicated the locations of graves, which were also marked with helium balloons.

Adams led an informal walk through the cemetery, which has about 4,100 graves. He pointed out the resting places of Dave Manuel, who built the cemetery and dug its first grave; Edmund Strommer, whose father made wine in the adobe during Prohibition; Milo Meddock, who bulldozed the city's orange groves in the 1950s to make way for housing tracts; and Margaret Todd, for many years the city's only kindergarten teacher.

At many of the graves, he related an anecdote or remembrance about the deceased.

Linda Bunting Smith, 62, came from Prescott, Ariz., to attend Adobe Day. She grew up in Rialto, where her great-grandmother built Rose Courts, a collection of Sears Roebuck redwood kit houses.

"The city has a wonderful history and it's great to walk around the cemetery with John," she said.

Cardiff resident Connie Blair Coe, 62, was delighted to see that the adobe and cemetery have been so well maintained.

"My grandparents are buried in the cemetery and coming here is like coming home," said Coe, who grew up in Rialto.

"Walking around the cemetery triggers a lot of emotions," said Adams, whose family owns the last orange grove in the city. "Here you can easily find your beloved teachers, store owners and doctors. The whole adult population you remember from your childhood is buried here."


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BS Ranch Perspective:

It does come to mind that there is a great deal of Rialto's History that is around that Building, In Fact the first and only Officer to Die in the While On Duty is buried in the Cemetery as well as the store keeps and School teachers. There is some of the Clerks and Office Personnel that keep the records straight at the Police Department that are at the Cemetery too. Yes there is a lot of Rialto History there. I also say that one of the best Leaders of the Police Department is buried there. Chief Sid A Jones.

BS Ranch

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Others Had Seen Fake Bomb For What it Was, Arrestee Says ( Press Enterprise May 30, 2007)

Others had seen fake bomb for what it was, arrestee says


11:24 PM PDT on Wednesday, May 30, 2007
By SHARON McNARY
The Press-Enterprise

The clock that Fontana resident Brian Babcock rigged up on the dashboard of his 1991 pickup truck to look like a time bomb triggered Monday's five-hour evacuation of Rialto's Home Depot and surrounding homes and stores.

Babcock, 55, a semi-retired construction worker, had taped and wired a $4.50 analog clock and a couple of 9-volt batteries to five orange-taped, foot-long sections of plastic pipe. He stuck "Danger" decals on the bundle.

Most people who saw his unique clock got the joke, said Babcock, who described himself as a funny guy.

"A couple of my friends said, yeah, it looks like it might be a bomb," Babcock said Wednesday. "When I was at the smog place, the guy was looking at it and laughing and said, 'Let's take it into the liquor store next door and show them.' "

Rialto police Sgt. Paul Wing, one of the first officers to arrive at the Foothill Boulevard store parking lot and view the dashboard device, said he and bomb squad officers considered it to be very realistic.

They called for a wide evacuation in case it was real. If it were dynamite, he said, there were enough sticks to inflict damage for a third of a mile around the store.

"He wasn't using his common sense, and when he gets a fine or jail time, he'll be re-evaluating his sense of humor," said San Bernardino County sheriff's Detective Jim Mahan, who works on the bomb squad.

A fake bomb used as a scare tactic can be a form of terrorism and is taken as seriously as a real bomb, he said.

Babcock said he installed the clock in December after he bought the truck. But due to a difficulty passing smog inspections, he had not driven it until Monday, after he got a provisional smog permit. His first outing was to buy circuit breakers at Home Depot.

While shopping, he and others were evacuated from the store. He said he did not hear store security announcements describing his truck.

The parking lot was taped off and it appeared it would be some time before he could get to his truck, which he could not see. So he hitched a ride home with a man who told him the evacuation was caused by a report of a bomb in a vehicle in the parking lot.

"As soon as I heard about that, I flagged a Fontana police officer down on Sierra (Avenue)," and told the officer his vehicle's clock might have caused the scare, Babcock said. Within minutes, he was sitting in handcuffs in the back of a police car being questioned by the bomb squad.

"They asked if there were screws on the numbers of the clock," Babcock said Wednesday, one day after his release from West Valley Detention Center.

Wing said Babcock didn't alert Fontana police until three hours into the incident. By then, homes and several large stores had been evacuated, losing hours worth of business on a busy shopping day, Wing said.

Babcock was booked on suspicion of possessing a look-alike destructive device, a misdemeanor, according to the Rialto Police Department.

His truck remains in the sheriff's impound yard, its windows destroyed from the water cannon that was used to blast the device.

Reach Sharon McNary at 951-368-9458 or smcnary@PE.com

BS Ranch Perspective:

The Gentlemen, Babcock is a real Genius, to figure out how to make a simulated Explosive device that would be so realistic as to make the City Police Department Close the Business that he is parked in and evacuate the premises for almost 1/3 of a mile to attempt to detonate the explosive device only to find out for sure that it is a simulated Explosive device.

Babcock is such a mental giant that he left his vehicle at the Store at which he was shopping at because he was being evacuated due to a Bomb scare in the parking lot! HEY BABCOCK! YOU WERE PLAYING LETS SCARE THE PEOPLE IN THE OTHER STORES  EARLIER, WHY WOULD YOU THINK THAT IT WOULDN'T BE YOUR CAR THAT WAS THE ONE THAT WAS SCARING THE PEOPLE IN THE HOME DEPOT PARKING LOT JUST A HALF HOUR LATER!!

Babcock I hope that you make enough to pay someone to mow your lawn, because I would be afraid if you were operating a Lawn Mower, VERY AFRAID,  I certainly would want any of your fingers toes, or even feet to come flying into my lawn and feeding my lawn with your blood. I hear that blood is good for lawn care, but I don't want to have to clean up the fleshy parts after flying from your machine!!

BABCOCK BRAIN. I guess when we were looking for the next super here villain you would be the next villain to Super Chicken!!

BS Ranch


Cracks in 210 Planning Lead to Shaky Finish (SB Sun, May 28, 2007).

Cracks in 210 planning lead to shaky finishArticle

Somehow, a major interstate that has been on the drawing board for 60 years now won't be really finished when it's finished, according to San Bernardino County's transportation agency.

Come to find out, when the 210 Freeway fully opens later this year, and the extension to Highway 30 in San Bernardino is finally finished (at a still undetermined date), access to and from another major artery running through the region will be severely limited - making the 210 less than the lifesaver for commuters it should have been.

But don't fret. San Bernardino Associated Governments, or Sanbag, reassures the public that the opening of the long-awaited interstate won't be delayed. You can count on that.

It's just that two major connectors between I-210 and Interstate 215, which would have stood to make the lives of motorists that much easier because of uninterrupted travel, won't be ready for yet another 3<MD+,%30,%55,%70>1/<MD-,%0,%55,%70>2 to four years.

A geologist who was working in the area after the contract to build the freeway was awarded back in late 1999 or early 2000 just happened to notice a major problem that could, er, radically shake up freeway construction plans.

Seems two presumably well-known earthquake faults, the San Andreas and San Jacinto, which have been in existence since long before the freeway was a sparkle in some engineer's eyes, might someday pose the danger of a fault rupture to any large piece of concrete in their vicinity.

"If the geologist hadn't seen it," said Sanbag's director of freeway construction, Darren Kettle, "(the freeway) might have been built like that."

So now, the agency has set about redesigning the elevated "flyovers" to compensate.

Thank heaven for accidents of mercy. But we would have thought that that, er, connection would have been made before then.

"The San Andreas Fault and San Jacinto Fault being so close to the freeway and the nature of the soils means those elevated columns would need to be designed to withstand the seismic problem that could be produced by those two faults," Kettle said.

Such major brainstorms can be awesome, when they come with the requisite amount of foresight. But in this case, it's more like shock, and after-shock.

While we're glad that extra precautions are being taken now that the potential danger has been noted, how is it that no one took into account the existence of the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults long before now - at least, in time to mitigate for the 210's final grand opening?

As it is, when the 210 officially opens later this fall, it will not be possible to go directly from the 210 east to the 215 Freeway south, nor will it be possible to go from the northbound 215 to the westbound 210.

Get ready for the delays.

---------------------------------------------------------


BS Ranch Perspective:

You know this whole thing about the bridges cracking is something that PISSES ME OFF!!!!!!

I believe that this shabby construction was done on purpose to make it so that the construction company could have the freeway open on time, and get any bonuses that would be due to them for the Freeway opening on time, However they didn't this Hap Hazard Job, Making so that they could say......OOOOPS!!! WE are going to need more money to fix the problem!!! It is either that or!! YOU HAVE YOUR MEN COME IN, the middle of the middle of the RUSH HOUR, CLOSING DOWN LANES TO FIX WHAT YOU DIDN'T DO RIGHT THE FIRST TIME!!!

Of coarse the fix is not as good as the if it was put up right the first place!! Collecting the money for the same job twice, I like this!! great!

BS Ranch

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Mayor's State of the City Address (City of Rialto June 7th, 2007 $25.00 a head RSVP 909-820-2519) The City must be in great shape?

Mayor's State of the City Address

rialto seal The City of Rialto is hosting its Annual Mayor's State of the City Address on Thursday, June 7, 2007, 5:30 PM at the Tom Sawyer Pool Patio 1423 S. Riverside Ave. The Mayor's State of the City Address will be a video production that will highlight some of the major development projects in the City. The cost is: $25.00 per person. Please RSVP to (909) 820-2519.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BS Ranch Perspective:

Let me get this straight, This is a Public Address of the State of the City, and they are Charging a $25.00 fee to be able to sit in on the Mayor's State of the City's Address. I guess this must be common practice because I have not heard of the city holding a State of the City Address Before. Either that or the City is in such a Bad State that they need to charge a Fee to have people sit in on this affair to see just how bad the City of Rialto is.

The Mayor of Rialto is being Pimped out at $25.00 per person to hear just how good the City is, but I hope that no one looks behind the Curtain, if they have to charge a $25.00 Fee to hear the State of the City!! I kind of wonder if this is a performance or if the State is the real thing?

After all we pay to see a Performance, We Get to see Elected Officials For Free Every two weeks on Television, and when it comes to the most Important Speech that the Mayor of Rialto Delivers there is a Door charge of $25.00, that makes it a Performance. Remember this a PERFORMANCE is something that is written that doesn't necessary have to be the truth about the Actual State of The City of Rialto. I would believe the Politician more if there wasn't any door charge, and they didn't try to make money as this Says Quite a Bit About The State of Rialto!!

BS Ranch

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Armored Vehicle Bulks Up Rebuilding Rialto Police Department (Press Enterprise)

Armored vehicle bulks up rebuilding Rialto police department

10:00 PM PDT on Monday, May 28, 2007
By MASSIEL LADRÓN DE GUEVARA
The Press-Enterprise

Rialto officials say they want to send a clear message to the city's Police Department: you are here to stay and we support you.

The Rialto City Council's latest effort to convey the message came in the form of an 8-ton, diesel-powered, bullet-resistant BearCat armored vehicle.

The $215,000 vehicle is the first of two components, said Chief Mark Kling. In July, the department will receive a large communications vehicle that will be deployed with the BearCat, he said.

Story continues below
Greg Vojtko / The Press-Enterprise
Rialto Police officers look over a new BearCat armored vehicle. They will use it to serve high-risk search warrants and for the SWAT team. The City Council sees the purchase as a sign of support.

"Planning and preparation are the two keys to success and we are acquiring the tools necessary in the event a catastrophe occurs," Kling said.

The communications vehicle will be equipped with televisions, fax machines, telephones and other such equipment, Kling said.

The council's agreement to purchase the vehicles speaks volumes of its commitment to the department, Kling said.

"We are getting the type of equipment and support that we need to rebuild our police department into the premier department it was," he said.

The council voted 4-1 in September 2005 to disband the Police Department because of what the members said were chronic problems. The council had planned to contract with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department for Rialto's law enforcement.

In March 2006 the City Council ended its attempt to disband the department because the effort seemed hopelessly stalled and it appeared the issue could be taken out of their hands and put to a citywide vote.

Councilwoman Winnie Hanson said once the decision was made to retain the department, the council's support has been complete.

"The council and Police Department went through a greatly painful situation and we are now moving forward with an enthusiastic push of support," Hanson said. "If we are going to have a police department we don't want them to be understaffed or under-equipped."

Sgt. Jim Kurkoske said the BearCat has done wonders for the morale of the SWAT team, to which the vehicle is assigned.

"Knowing the council approved a $215,000 piece of equipment shows they and the city have confidence in our department and that we will be around," Kurkoske said.

The SWAT team has been using an armored vehicle donated by a bank several years ago, Chief Kling said.

The Colton Police Department purchased an armored vehicle in 2006 with asset-seizure funds for about $200,000. The Palm Springs department purchased a Lenco BearCat armored vehicle for a little more than $200,000 the same year.

Although the Colton Police Department has promised to lend its armored vehicle to neighboring agencies, Kling said it benefits Rialto residents and the department to have its own vehicle.

The vehicle was purchased with developmental impact fees, said Kirby Warner, assistant city administrator.

Reach Massiel Ladrón De Guevara at 909-806-3054 or mdeguevara@PE.com

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BS Ranch Perspective:

I was looking at this machine that the City Council spent some $215,000.00 dollars for and the Title of this story that the City Council is working to Rebuild the Rialto Police Department, after the whole Vote Against the Police Department, and the Contract with the San Bernardino Sheriff Department.  I Look at the Parking lot at the Sidney A. Jones Building and I notice one thing, that back in 1990 the Police Department was out grown the Facilities that they were in. When I had started I was Changing into my Uniform in the Hallway, blocked only by a dress blind so that the woman of the department that were walking by didn't get to see if we were Tight White Underwear or The Boxer Shorts when it came to our underwear, back then the Boxer Brief were not made just yet!

Well, we tried back then to get a deal passed to get a grant passed by the voters to get a new station financed however We were unable to get it passed. So in stead of getting a new station they realized that they could afford a modular, or temporary Office building, and it has been there along side the station since 1990. The Investigations Modular Office Space came in 1991 or 1992. Now, they are moving another modular Building into the parking lot against the modular building known as Rialto Investigations.

When is the City Council really going to wake up and say that they are really going to take care of the Police Department, and take them out of the Almost 20 year Apartment Buildings (known as Modular, Temporary Office Space) and Build them that Police Station that they were planning to build back in 1990, Which by now will have to be re designed since the department will have to allow for a City that will have a Population of close to 200,000 thousand people in it when they get all the land that they are due and the Airport Renaissance is all done, then they will need that new station.

The SWAT Truck, Will Save lives, but they will not handle calls for service with that piece of equipment. If you were to go to each officer and ask them if they wanted a SWAT BearCat Armored Vehicle or a brand new Police Station let me see which one that they will answer!!

Lets Take Care of the Patrol Officers. The Swat Team could have continued to have used that Armored Vehicle that they had already that the hardly used. Please Don't get me wrong, That Bear Cat is nice, but there are only about 12 to 20 Officer's that will be able to drive that truck. The rest of the Officers will only be able to drive Patrol Cars. There are only two or three that are allowed to Drive the Motor Home Command Post Vehicle that they purchased some six years ago. I have seen the Command Post (Motor Home) Used by City Hall more then by the Police department. But that doesn't mean that they don't use it on call outs at night and the like. I am just saying that they are not using their spending sense wisely, they need to do something to get a police station that everyone is housed in, Give the City some pride.

BS Ranch

Cracks in 210 Planning Lead to Shaky Finish (Daily Bulletin 052807)

Cracks in 210 planning lead to shaky finish

Somehow, a major interstate that has been on the drawing board for 60 years now won't be really finished when it's finished, according to San Bernardino County's transportation agency.

Come to find out, when the 210 Freeway fully opens later this year, and the extension to Highway 30 in San Bernardino is finally finished (at a still undetermined date), access to and from another major artery running through the region will be severely limited - making the 210 less than the lifesaver for commuters it should have been.

But don't fret. San Bernardino Associated Governments, or Sanbag, reassures the public that the opening of the long-awaited interstate won't be delayed. You can count on that.

It's just that two major connectors between I-210 and Interstate 215, which would have stood to make the lives of motorists that much easier because of uninterrupted travel, won't be ready for yet another 3 to four years.

A geologist who was working in the area after the contract to build the freeway was awarded back in late 1999 or early 2000 just happened to notice a major problem that could, er, radically shake up freeway construction plans.

Seems two

presumably well-known earthquake faults, the San Andreas and San Jacinto, which have been in existence since long before the freeway was a sparkle in some engineer's eyes, might someday pose the danger of a fault rupture to any large piece of concrete in their vicinity.

"If the geologist hadn't seen it," said Sanbag's director of freeway construction, Darren Kettle, "(the freeway) might have been built like that."

So now, the agency has set about redesigning the elevated "flyovers" to compensate.

Thank heaven for accidents of mercy. But we would have thought that that, er, connection would have been made before then.

"The San Andreas Fault and San Jacinto Fault being so close to the freeway and the nature of the soils means those elevated columns would need to be designed to withstand the seismic problem that could be produced by those two faults," Kettle said.

Such major brainstorms can be awesome, when they come with the requisite amount of foresight. But in this case, it's more like shock, and after-shock.

While we're glad that extra precautions are being taken now that the potential danger has been noted, how is it that no one took into account the existence of the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults long before now - at least, in time to mitigate for the 210's final grand opening?

As it is, when the 210 officially opens later this fall, it will not be possible to go directly from the 210 east to the 215 Freeway south, nor will it be possible to go from the northbound 215 to the westbound 210.

Get ready for the delays
---------------------------------------------------------------------
BS Ranch Perspective:

Let me see, and Engineer that works for any of these planning outfits make a great deal of money, and they cannot figure out that they are in a seismic active area as the Inland Empire? The Inland Empire has only had an Earthquake every year in some cases two, and there has been a major quake, or what was considered to be a major quake within every 7 years.

Reading this article about the "Cracks" in the development, has raised a few questions of my own. Such as, if this has been in the planning stages for the last Sixty (60) Years then some one, did what? Planned it the Sixty years ago, and then they closed the file on it, and dusted it off when they started to decide to start the Construction on it.

Now that they are 89% done with the last portion of the 210 Extension that will complete stretch form Valencia to Redlands, it is now  that they come to the conclusions that they are going to be late finishing the Freeway?  This is so puzzling since they had so many opportunities to see the problems with the construction that they had already done and it is now that they find that it there is going to be delays, Even after the announcements that they were going to open it at the end of June, beginning of August!!

I am not happy, Especially being one that lives on the Detour that sends the Traffic Right in front of my house, until the figure out what they are going to do to finish this job.

SANBAG has stated that there will not be a delay, will you believe them? or the reality of what really happens??

BS Ranch

Monday, May 28, 2007

Memorial Day Events


Memorial Day events

Riverside National Cemetery, 22495 Van Buren Blvd., will celebrate Memorial Day at 10:30 a.m., Monday in the cemetery's amphitheater. National colors will be presented by the West Coast Thunder Color Guard of the Inland Empire Harley-Davidson Owners Group. Featured speaker will be Navy Senior Chief Petty Officer Mike Vanderwood, who recently returned from deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Information and directions: (951) 653-8417.

American Legion Post 155 and Veterans of Foreign War Post 6476 will co-host a ceremony from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Monday at Hermosa Cemetery, 900 N. Meridian Ave., Colton. It will include posting a POW flag on an empty chair to symbolize soldiers missing in action or being held as prisoners of war. VFW Post 6476 will perform a 21-gun salute. Speakers include Veterans Administration representative Charlotte Babar. Information: (909) 422-9922.

Five veterans' organizations - American Legion posts 772, 262 and 497, Veterans of Foreign War Post 6563 and Amvets Post 1240 - will host ceremonies at 11 a.m., Monday at Green Acres Memorial Park and Cemetery, 11715 Cedar Ave., Bloomington. VFW Post 6563 will host a luncheon afterward at the post, 9190 Fontana Ave., Fontana. Information: (909) 823-2600.

Rialto's fifth annual Memorial Day Tribute will take place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday at the Rialto Park Cemetery, 200 S. Willow Ave. Information: Rialto city clerk, (909) 820-2519.

Veterans of Foreign War Post 8737 will host a short ceremony at 3 p.m., Monday to be followed by an open house with refreshments at the post, 2018 Foothill Blvd., San Bernardino. Information: (909) 889-2204.

A short ceremony will be hosted by Veterans of Foreign War Post 1744 at 10 a.m., Monday at Mountain View Cemetery, 570 E. Highland Ave., San Bernardino. An open house from 1 to 4 p.m. will follow at the post headquarters, 1541 W. 24th St., San Bernardino. Information: (909) 887-0511.

American Legion Post 777 will host a ceremony at 11 a.m., Monday in front of its headquarters, 194 E. 40th St., San Bernardino, followed by an open house throughout the afternoon. Information: (909) 882-3110.

-----------------------------------------------

BS Ranch Perspective:

There isn't much to say there, except that you should have a look to see at what is going on and then see what is going on. With the war on terror, it would be the best thing to go out and see to it that you have a speical prayer on the Military Hero's Fighting for our Freedom in the wor on terror. God Bless

BS Ranch


Sunday, May 27, 2007

Officers Salute Redlands Man Who Died in Iraq (Redlands Daily Facts 052607)

Officers salute Redlands man who died in Iraq
C.L. LOPEZ, Staff Writer
Redlands Daily Facts
As the honor guard carried the flag-draped casket bearing the body of Army Spc. William "Tony" Farrar Jr., more than 100 police officers stood in formation, their right hands held to their heads in salute.

Farrar Jr. never got the chance to follow in the footsteps of his father, Rialto's Police Capt. William "Tony" Farrar Sr. The 20-year-old Redlands soldier was killed May 11 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee as he drove through Al Iskandariyah, Iraq. But he came close - he was a member of the military police.

On Friday, Rialto's finest gathered at First Missionary Baptist Church of Redlands to honor the fallen son of their captain.

Sgt. Tim Lane, who has known the family for 17 years, said it was important for the Rialto police officers to be there to support the captain and his family.

"His son is a military policeman and he was a part of our law enforcement family," Lane said. "Everybody who knew Tony is proud of his choice."

Ken, one of Farrar Jr.'s brothers, is a Marine.

'Tony was prepared for everything'

At the church, more than 100 police officers gathered in a room near the packed sanctuary and watched the service on large screens. Images from Farrar Jr.'s life flashed on giant screens during a slide show. The service was a celebration of Farrar Jr.'s faith and patriotism. His uncle Scott Breckley talked about his nephew's life and his decision to serve his country.

"Tony's decision to be a soldier was not a spur-of-the-moment decision," he said. "Tony was prepared for everything and Tony passed every test the Army threw at him except one."

That test came when Farrar Jr. stepped onto a scale and was found to be too light.

"Tony was not going to let a few pounds stand between him and his goal," Breckley said.

Thirteen days later, the would-be soldier drank a gallon of water and made weight.

The young soldier's decision to believe in God was also celebrated.

Christine Rodriguez recalled how Farrar Jr. came to faith in July 2005.

"He boldly said, RI do not believe in God,'" she recalled. After she shared her testimony with him that day and he listened to the sermon at an evening service, she said he chose to believe in God.

'We watched them grow up'

Outside the church, members of the Patriot Guard waited for the casket to be carried out to the hearse. The group, made up of bikers and veterans, attends the funerals of soldiers to honor them and their families. Bill Bogart said he and about 25 bikers rode in from Palm Springs with Farrar Jr.'s mother, Sally Bors, a friend of his. Bogart has ridden on previous Patriot Guard missions, but he said this was the first time it has been for someone he knew.

"She (Bors) is a very special part of our community," he said. "It's amazing to see how one young person (Tony) can touch so many lives."

About 500 people attended the service and most of them were in the funeral procession that wove through the Redlands neighborhoods, not far from where Farrar Jr. lived with his family for a year.

People paused to see a seemingly endless procession of motorcycles, police cars with the red, white and blue lights flashing and fire trucks following the white hearse. One family stood at a street corner waving American flags and others simply bowed their heads in prayer when they saw the white hearse carrying the fallen Redlands soldier. Motorcycle officers stopped traffic at all the intersections and later, along the freeway, for the procession to make its way to Riverside National Cemetery.

There, members of the Patriot Guard held American flags and lined both sides of the walkway and police officers and firefighters saluted the fallen soldier.

Farrar Sr. and his wife, Cathy, sat with their twin daughters, Christina and Samantha, who each held small American flags.

Moments later, Farrar Sr. and Bors each tearfully accepted a folded American flag, Purple Heart and Bronze Star.

At the end of the service, some police officers struggled to find words to talk about the young soldier.

Tim Roy, now with the Riverside Police Department, previously worked with Farrar Sr.

"We have known both kids (Tony and his brother Ken) since they we so small and we watched them grow up," he said. "It shows you how much respect everyone has for them - especially with both boys serving their country."

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Rialto Police Captain's Son Laid to Rest (Daily Bulletin 052607)

Rialto police captain's son laid to rest
By Robert Rogers, Staff Writer
Inland Valley Daily Bulletin
REDLANDS - Reserved and self-effacing, Spc. William "Tony" Farrar Jr. was never comfortable with outpourings of attention.

But this was different. Farrar, 20, was killed in combat in Iraq on May 11.

His body lay in a coffin draped by an American flag in the Worship Hall of First Missionary Baptist Church on Friday.

His spirit was above, 400 mourners were told, and he was smiling. It was possibly a mild, lips-compressed expression familiar from recent pictures.

"Today we honor a hero, a hero to his country, a hero to his faith," said Scott Breckley, Farrar's uncle. Breckley read a few lines from his Bible while standing over Farrar's coffin, then completed the hour-long service.

"This is not the end, this is Tony's beginning."

In a solemn service dabbed by rays of humor and hope, mourners packed the small Redlands church to send off a local soldier whose achieved dream of joining the military was all too brief.

Farrar, the son of a Rialto police captain and a military policeman in his own right, was killed when a roadside bomb detonated near the Humvee he was driving about 30 miles south of Baghdad.

Farrar was assigned to the 127th Military Police Company, 709th Military Police Battalion, 18th Military Police Brigade out of Darmstadt, Germany.

He enlisted in the Army in September 2005 soon after graduating from Palm Springs High School.

Farrar was deployed to Iraq in November the following year.

The packed funeral procession was joined by dozens of uniformed Rialto police officers and firefighters. Farrar's father, Tony Sr., 46, is a 19-year veteran of the Rialto department.

The soldier's younger brother, 18-year-old Ken, also came to the lectern to speak about his big brother.

His voice at times cracking, Ken, who joined the Marines in December and could soon find himself in Iraq, said he knew the severity of the conflict but couldn't fathom that tragedy would strike down his "hero."

"He may have been small," Ken Farrar said of his wiry brother, who was temporarily denied admission to the Army for being underweight. "But I'd just like to be half the man he was."

Christine Rodriguez, a childhood friend of Farrar's, moved to the podium to tell of the day at church camp two years ago when Farrar accepted God in his life.

"He's in heaven right now because he decided to give his heart to God that day," Rodriguez said, crying.

Speakers also humorously spoke about Farrar's near obsession with video games and ravenous appetite, despite his slight build.

Amid the tragedy, the mood was at once solemn, proud and hopeful. During a still-photo montage set to music were quotes from historical leaders including Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Edmund Burke and President Ronald Reagan.

A procession of cars, police and fire vehicles and about 60 motorcycles ridden by Patriot Guard Riders, a nationwide group that escorts military funerals, took Farrar's body to Riverside National Cemetery, where he was buried. Farrar was awarded the Purple Heart and Bronze Star for valor posthumously for his service to the nation.

The services were intimate and personal, with the short list of speakers sharply focused on the fallen young man, his sacrifice and his faith.

"This is beautiful," said Darin Good, a resident who watched the procession from across the street. "This is the way to honor our heroes."

Burying One of The Nation's Finest (SB Sun 052607) Rialto Police Caption's Son Remembered

Burying one of the nation's finest
Rialto police captain's son remembered
Robert Rogers, Staff Writer
San Bernardino County Sun


Photo Gallery: 05/25: Soldier Killed in Iraq

REDLANDS - Reserved and self-effacing, Spc. William "Tony" Farrar Jr. was never comfortable with outpourings of attention.

But this was different. Farrar, 20, was killed in combat in Iraq on May 11.

His body lay in a coffin draped by an American flag in the Worship Hall of First Missionary Baptist Church on Friday.

His spirit was above, 400 mourners were told, and he was smiling. It was possibly a mild, lips-compressed expression familiar from recent pictures.

"Today we honor a hero, a hero to his country, a hero to his faith," said Scott Breckley, Farrar's uncle. Breckley read a few lines from his Bible while standing over Farrar's coffin, then completed the hour-long service.

"This is not the end, this is Tony's beginning."

In a solemn service dabbed by rays of humor and hope, mourners packed the small Redlands church to send off a local soldier whose achieved dream of joining the military was all too brief.

Farrar, the son of a Rialto police captain and a military policeman in his own right, was killed when a roadside bomb detonated near the Humvee he was driving about 30 miles south of Baghdad.

Farrar was assigned to the 127th Military Police Company, 709th Military Police Battalion, 18th Military Police Brigade out of Darmstadt, Germany.

He enlisted in the Army in September 2005 soon after graduating from Palm Springs High School.

Farrar was deployed to Iraq in November the following year.

The packed funeral procession was joined by dozens of uniformed Rialto police officers and firefighters. Farrar's father, Tony Sr., 46, is a 19-year veteran of the Rialto department.

The soldier's younger brother, 18-year-old Ken, also came to the lectern to speak about his big brother.

His voice at times cracking, Ken, who joined the Marines in December and could soon find himself in Iraq, said he knew the severity of the conflict but couldn't fathom that tragedy would strike down his "hero."

"He may have been small," Ken Farrar said of his wiry brother, who was temporarily denied admission to the Army for being underweight. "But I'd just like to be half the man he was."

Christine Rodriguez, a childhood friend of Farrar's, moved to the podium to tell of the day at church camp two years ago when Farrar accepted God into his life.

"He's in heaven right now because he decided to give his heart to God that day," Rodriguez said, crying.

Speakers also humorously spoke about Farrar's near obsession with video games and ravenous appetite, despite his slight build.

Amid the tragedy, the mood was at once solemn, proud and hopeful. A still-photo montage set to music included quotes from historical leaders such as Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Edmund Burke and President Ronald Reagan.

A procession of cars, police and fire vehicles and about 60 motorcycles ridden by Patriot Guard Riders, a nationwide group that escorts military funerals, took Farrar's body to Riverside National Cemetery, where he was buried.

Farrar was awarded the Purple Heart and Bronze Star for valor posthumously for his service to the nation.

The services were intimate and personal, with the short list of speakers sharply focused on the fallen young man, his sacrifice and his faith.

"This is beautiful," said Darin Good, a resident who watched the procession from across the street. "This is the way to honor our heroes."

Contact writer Robert Rogers at (909) 386-3855 or via e-mail at robert.rogers@sbsun.com.

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BS Ranch Perspective:

I Remember when I first was to meet Tony Farrar Jr. and his Brother Kenny. It was way back in 1990, when they were just little tot's. Tony Sr. and I were assigned as Explorer Coordinator's and we both were getting ready to expand the membership of the Explorer Post. We had some applicants, but we had to do some Back Round Investigations and I went to The Farrar's House to Pick Tony Sr. up to get started on the Back Round Investigations.

I met Tony Jr. and Kenny when they were getting their breakfast in order by their Father, and boy they had engergy, they could have kept a go cart going all day on very little effort due to the energy that those little boys had back then. The energy was endless until Tony Sr. Punched a VCR Tape of Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory into the VCR and pressed play it was like their power butten had been neutralized and the power was drained.

Both Tony Jr. and Kenny were stuck to the screen while Gene Wilder started singing and the Umpa Lumpa's were belting out tunes. It was rather cute. They both grew to be fine young men. It was hard to say good by to that little boy, at that funeral that day.

Tony, Cathy, and family I just want to say that you are in my prayers, and my thoughts. I have lost many friends, family, in my life time, and well I have even survived death, it isn't easy doing that either, But god Bless You, and I want to say that you are in my prayers through this hard time right now.

God Bless You,

BS Ranch




Friday, May 25, 2007

Three Names Are Added To Veterans Memorail Wall (Redlands Daily Facts 052507)

Three names are added to Veterans Memorial Wall
COLLEEN MENSCHING, Staff Writer
Redlands Daily Facts
REDLANDS - Thursday night saw the somber addition of three local names to the Veterans Memorial Wall at Jennie Davis Park.

The wall lists all the city's war fatalities since the Spanish-American War. The names of Vernon R. Widner, Hannah Leah McKinney and William "Tony" Farrar, Jr., are newly etched into an ivory-colored tile commemorating their deaths in service in Iraq.

"On Veterans Day I made a promise that we would have these up by Memorial Day," Councilman Mick Gallagher said.

"What this is is a fulfilled commitment," said Sam Irwin, commander of American Legion Post 106.

Widner, 34, with the Army's 101st Airborne Division, was the first Redlands soldier killed in the war in Iraq. In late 2005, he was in a military Humvee targeted by someone driving a civilian vehicle. The Humvee flipped when hit. Wider and a fellow soldier were killed.

Married and the father of two boys, Widner was the son of Emmanuel and Sandra Widner of Redlands.

About year later, Army Pfc. McKinney was on her way home from a party at Fort Taji. She fell from the truck and was crushed under its wheels. The driver was suspected of being under the influence at the time of the accident.

McKinney, 20, had a husband and a son. Todd was just 2 years old at the time of his mother's death.

And two weeks ago today, Farrar, a member of the military police, was killed when an improvised explosive device blew up near his vehicle.

His memorial service was held this afternoon at First Missionary Baptist Church in Redlands.

Irwin said the organizations that maintain the wall, including his post and Post 650, are considering making space for a fourth Redlands name. Navy yeoman Melissa Rose Barnes, 27, died on Sept. 11, 2001, when a plane struck the Pentagon building.

"We've got to find an appropriate place to put her," said Irwin, noting that the country wasn't actually at war when Barnes was killed.

Ennis Dixon, commander of Post 650 and Ron "Gator" Riley, who will succeed her as commander in June, were on hand Thursday and will join Gallagher, Irwin and others Monday at a Memorial Day Ceremony at Hillside Memorial Park. Not all post members will be able to join them.

"We have some ` that are still serving," Dixon said.

The memorial service at Hillside begins at 11 a.m. and is open to the public. Post 650 will host a reception for al attendees that afternoon. The post is at 1132 N. Church St. For more information call Post 650 at 792-6783.

E-mail staff Writer Colleen Mensching at cmensching@redlandsdailyfacts.com

Monday, May 21, 2007

Bomb Kills Member of 127th Military Police (Stars & Strips051707)

Bomb kills member of 127th Military Police


By Matt Millham, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Thursday, May 17, 2007


Pfc. William A. Farrar Jr., a member of the 127th Military Police Company based in Darmstadt, Germany, was killed by a makeshift bomb Friday in Iskandariyah, Iraq. He was 20 years old.

Farrar, the son of San Bernadino County police Capt. Tony Farrar, was the eldest of three sons. He joined the military in September 2005 after graduating from high school and deployed to Iraq in November 2006, according to the San Bernadino County Sun newspaper. It was his first tour in Iraq.

Farrar was riding in a vehicle when he was killed, according to a Defense Department news release. An article in the San Bernadino Sun identified the vehicle as a Humvee.

"We were all real proud of him and his decision to join the armed forces and serve the country," Sgt. Tim Lane, a Rialto, Calif., police department spokesman, told The Associated Press. "We've lost a part of our law enforcement family."

"It's what he wanted to do," Farrar's father told the Sun. "There are jobs people do because they choose to do it ... somebody's got to want to do it. As a parent you just give them the support they need; what else is there to do?"

Farrar's brother Kenny is a Marine, and his other brother, Nic, is a college student, according to the Sun.

Soldier Was Known For Gentle Ways (San Bernardino Sun 051607) / Redlands Man Dies in Iraq (Redlands Daily Facts)

Soldier was known for gentle ways
Police captain's son grew up liking military
Robert Rogers, Staff Writer

Photo Gallery: Local soldier killed in Iraq

He was the gentle one, the son whose slight frame and calm demeanor belied his ambition to be a soldier.

He was deployed to Iraq in November. He wrote jaunty e-mails to his family regularly, the prose livened with a joy that seemed incongruous with his full-time job patrolling a deadly war zone. His heart was swept away by a woman he met in Germany.

"He even liked the military food," said his father, Tony Farrar, a Rialto police captain and, on this day, a broken-hearted man straining to keep his upper lip stiff.

But what 20-year-old Army Pfc. William A. "Tony" Farrar Jr. liked to write about recently was coming home.

In an e-mail last week, Tony Jr. wrote to his father about taking some R&R in August and attending a family gathering in Wisconsin.

But on Friday, Tony Jr. was killed when a roadside bomb detonated near the Humvee he was driving through the desert of Al Iskandariyah, about 30 miles south of Baghdad. The blast from the IED, or improvised explosive device, penetrated the Humvee's armor but spared

other soldiers riding with Farrar.

Sitting in the living room of their Redlands home on a gray Tuesday morning, Tony Jr.'s father and stepmother talked with calm solemnity about fateful decisions, duty to country and the sense of invulnerability shattered when military personnel knocked on their door and delivered the news no parent wants to hear.

A modest-sized American flag swayed above their porch, suddenly woven with more meaning than ever before, Farrar said.

"We've never experienced anything like this," said Farrar, a 19-year veteran of the Rialto Police Department. "At first, it all seemed kind of untrue. It's really sunk in now."

Tony Jr. joined the military in September 2005 after graduating from Palm Springs High School. Deployed to Iraq in November, it was his first tour.

The police captain has another son, Kenny, 18, who joined the Marines in December and could be deployed to the war zone.

Farrar, 46, recalled Tony Jr. as a child, growing up the oldest in a family steeped in law enforcement and military pride.

"Him and his brother wanted to be soldiers since they were little," he said. "They loved Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for a while, then it was toy weapons, plastic swords and guns. But as he got older, I think he looked at it as a stepping stone, an opportunity" for either a military career or one in law enforcement.

Farrar paused, a bit of moisture leaking from his eyes.

"It was just the first step for him," Farrar said.

Cathy Farrar, Tony Jr.'s stepmother for almost all his life, described how the first time he tried to enlist he was rejected for being too light for his height.

"He was about eight pounds off," Cathy remembered, smiling beneath saddened eyes. "He was very slightly built, and very soft and gentle, especially with his (younger) sisters."

Farrar didn't push his eldest son into military service, but was proud of his decision. Farrar knows it's sometimes inevitable for the parents of a fallen soldier to second-guess the past.

"It's what he wanted to do," Farrar said. "There are jobs people do because they choose to do it ... somebody's got to want to do it. As a parent you just give them the support they need, what else is there to do?"

Tony Jr.'s body was flown to Delaware on Tuesday, Farrar said. From there, he will be flown to Ontario. Funeral arrangements were pending, but will probably be next week.

The Farrars sat in their hardwood-floored living room, where they were last week when military personnel walked up the driveway on a mild evening and told them their son was dead.

To Cathy, the last few days have shredded the veil of safety she enjoyed over the years. Family members have been deployed and returned. Thousands of times her husband has returned unscathed after nights of patrolling Rialto's streets.

But Tony Jr. will never walk through the door again.

"You never really realize this could take place until Army personnel are standing at your front door," Farrar said.

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Redlands man dies in Iraq

C.L. LOPEZ , Staff Writer

Article Launched: 05/15/2007 04:12:43 PM PDT

REDLANDS - Rialto police Capt. William "Tony" Farrar Sr. didn't think there was anything significant when he saw two men in Army uniforms on Friday night, but when they approached the door of his Redlands home, he realized something was wrong.

"Once they got to my door in full dress uniform, it was pretty apparent the message was not going to be something I was going to like," he said.

It wasn't.

His 20-year-old son William "Tony" Farrar Jr. was killed in Iraq May 11 when an improvised explosive device was detonated near his vehicle in Al Iskandariyah. He was assigned to the 127th Military Police Company, 709th Military Police Battalion, 18th Military Police Brigade out of Darmstadt, Germany. The Palm Springs High School graduate had been in the Army since September 2005 and had been in Iraq since November 2006. He lived in Redlands for a year after high school graduation.

"The military was a good choice for him to find out what he wanted to do," said his stepmother Cathy Farrar.

He had talked of following in his father's footsteps with a career in law enforcement. In his last e-mail to his father from Iraq early last week his father said he Farrar Jr. was not sure whether he would return to Redlands or

Germany, where he was stationed, when he went on leave in August.

He was in good spirits, he said.

"He was kind of quiet and was the more soft spoken of the three boys," Farrar Sr. said.

His brother Kenny is a Marine and his brother Nic attends Crafton Hills College where he is studying to be a paramedic. He also has 10-year-old twin sisters, Christina and Samantha. Cathy looks back fondly on the time he spent with the girls. Although he was older, he would still play games with them and draw cartoons for them.

The family has received support from the community since they learned of Farrar Jr.'s death.

Farrar Sr. said the family has received flowers, cards and meals. He has heard from colleagues he has not spoken to in two decades and from people he has never met.

The Rialto Police Department, where Farrar Sr. is second in command, has been shocked by the news, said Chief Mark Kling.

"We are shaken by this tragic news of the loss of the captain's son," Kling said. "He is a remarkable man."

Kling said the department plans to support the family in whatever way they can. Funeral services are pending and Kling expects a large Rialto Police Department presence at the funeral. The department is in the planning stages, but will likely call on other cities' police departments to help them so they can attend the funeral.

Farrar Sr. also credited the Army casualty assistance officer for his support in helping the family through the difficult time by helping with funeral arrangements.

The family is awaiting news that his body has returned to the United States. When his body is shipped to Ontario International Airport, the family will be waiting for him.

"It is going to be really tough, but these are the next steps to get through this," Farrar Sr. said.

His funeral service will be at First Missionary Baptist Church of Redlands, where he was a member. Graveside services will be at Riverside National Cemetery.

Farrar Jr. is the third Redlands soldier to be killed in Iraq. Army Specialist Vernon R. Widner, who was the first, died on Nov. 17, 2005, from injuries when his Humvee was rammed and flipped over. In September 2006, Hannah Leah McKinny was killed Sept. 4, 2006, when she was crossing the road and struck by another soldier who was driving a Humvee.

E-mail Staff Writer C.L. Lopez at clopez@redlandsdailyfacts.com

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BS Ranch Persective:

Tony, Cathy, Kenny, Nick, Samantha, & Christina,

My thoughts and Prayers are with you during this difficult time, I am so sorry for your loss. I can remember Tony Jr. and him Loving Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory when he was only four years old. I am just sorry that I didn't get to see them grow up, throught the years. I know that we started off as friends when Tony started @ Rialto, and we were Exploerer Advisors, I don't know what happend to cause our friendship to fade like it did. I was always sorry that it did. God bless you, I will continue to keep you in my prayers thorough this difficult time.

God Bless,

Buck & Family