TEXT_SIZE

ColdwellBnr

-Headline News

Sheriff employees will pay more toward retirement

sheriff-contract
The audience spills into the hall outside of the Plumas County Board of Supervisors chambers March 21 as Sheriff Greg Hagwood addresses the board regarding his employees’ contract negotiations. The supervisors held a public hearing to address the topic. Photo by Debra Moore
Debra Moore

  Plumas County supervisors voted to implement a new contract with sheriff’s department employees, but they hope to change the agreement before it takes effect Aug. 5.

  Three years of negotiations between the county and its public safety employees ended May 21 following a two-hour public hearing that filled the boardroom and spilled into the hall.

  At issue: how much the employees would contribute to their own retirement. The new contract calls for the county’s contribution to be reduced from 7 percent to 1 percent for miscellaneous members (dispatchers, office personnel and correctional officers) and from 9 percent to 1 percent for the safety members (deputies), which would require both groups to pay a greater share of their retirement.

 

Quincy Natural Foods offers local grant opportunities

Feather Publishing
6/2/2013
 

  Quincy Natural Foods’ Cooperative Community Fund is now accepting 2013 grant applications.

  Quincy Natural Foods and Twin Pines Cooperative Foundation established the Quincy Natural Foods Cooperative Community Fund in 2005 to provide financial support to local nonprofit organizations.

  

Snake Lake Equestrian Campground: Opening Ceremonies

Feather Publishing
5/29/2013
 

Opening ceremonies for Plumas National Forest’s new equestrian campground facilities will be held Saturday, June 1st, at the Snake Lake Campground on the Mt. Hough Ranger District. Festivities begin at 1:00 p.m.  

Amenities at the campground now include: eight new campsites designed for equestrian users, eight corrals, nine family campsites, picnic tables, and campfire rings.  Activities at the site include fishing, hiking, horseback riding, off-highway vehicle trail riding, and non-motorized boating.

  

Time running out to vote on Measure A

  The last day to vote on Measure A is June 4 and as of May 21, only a quarter of the vote-by-mail ballots had been returned to the Plumas County Registrar of Voters.

  But Elections Coordinator Marcy DeMartile isn’t worried. “Come back on May 28 and these trays will be full,” DeMartile said, pointing to the containers earmarked for ballots.

  

Fund established to honor a former county employee

  After two hours of discussion regarding a new contract for sheriff’s employees May 21, the fight appeared to go out of the Plumas County supervisors and they approved the next several agenda items with little or no debate.

  In addition to green-lighting three music festivals (see related story), they also authorized the probation department to fill a vacant position, approved budget transfers for both the probation and sheriff’s departments, amended a personnel allocation in social services and delineated the roles of social services and the Child Abuse Prevention Council.

  

Page 7 of 372

Facebook Image
Local Events

Contact Us

up_contact

Plumas Flood on DVD

Click to Learn more

Dining Guide
DGCover
 
Plumas County
"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {}