
Neighborhoods and open space on the far western edge of Claremont, including some of the Piedmont Mesa area and part of Claraboya, will be subject to treatment for eradication of the newly-found White-Striped Fruit Fly, found in La Verne a few days ago. This bug is a native of Southeast Asia. The California Department of Food and Agriculture said this in a press release:
The California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) has detected an infestation of the white striped fruit fly in the La Verne area of Los Angeles County.
Seven white striped fruit flies have been detected recently in traps in the area, marking the first time this pest has been detected in the Western Hemisphere. The fly is native to tropical Southeast Asia, where it damages the fruit of many trees, most notably guava and mango. Damage occurs when the female lays eggs inside the fruit. The eggs hatch into maggots that tunnel through the flesh of the fruit, making it unfit for consumption.
Beginning on August 1, CDFA eradication crews will place several thousand traps containing a "male attractant” lure and a small amount of pesticide. The traps will be hung in trees throughout approximately 15 square miles in the La Verne area. These traps, also known as “bait stations,” attract and kill the male flies, effectively eliminating breeding. Within 200 meters of the sites where the seven flies were trapped, crews will also apply ground treatments with an organic-approved product [note: the product is Spinosad*, chemical diagram right; it is highly toxic to bees] to the foliage of trees to ensure that any established breeding populations are eradicated.
Residents of properties that are scheduled for traps or foliage treatments will be notified prior to the application.
Residents with questions about the treatment program may call the department’s Pest Hotline at 1-800-491-1899.
We have noticed a lot of the State Department of Food and Agriculture trucks around town in the past week or so. These are the guys who carry the cardboard "tent" traps and bottle traps to catch bugs in fruit trees. This must be what that has been all about.
Nothing about this in this week's City Manager Update--quite a bit though on the Claremont "Family Campout" and the teen Graffiti Exhibit (do we really need one of these?).
Below is a map showing the present extent of the treatment scheduled to begin today, August 1.
Saturday, August 1, 2009
White-Striped Fruit Fly Eradication in Claremont
Posted by
root2
at
Saturday, August 01, 2009
Labels: Claremont, La Verne, White-Striped Fruit Fly
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
An Insider First: Intelligent Financial Analysis
A reader took exception to last week's breezy comparison here of the Certificate of Deposit Account Registry Service with the Orange County bankruptcy of 1994 and its effect on Claremont:
I noticed the other day that you referred to "Can anyone still spell O-R-A-N-G-E C-O-U-N-T-Y?" as an example of a municipality investment problem/cautionary tale which Claremont and its citizens should be aware of.
I am not involved in the city's management and don't have any relationship with those who do. However, as a financial advisor at Claremont's major brokerage firm, I do want to pass on a little of what I understand about the OC example which may add a little nuance to your understanding of the issue.
While it was indeed a real problem (created mostly by OC County Treasurer Bob Citron [right] but facilitated by conditions at the time such as taxpayers unwilling to accept higher taxes to remedy the problem, and a perhaps flawed strategy of liquidating much of the investment pool's holdings at an inopportune time, etc), a very easy case can be made that Claremont's investments as described on your site are substantially unlike the same kind of risk taking problems that faced OC.Essentially, OC's real problem was excessive leverage... "Two dollars borrowed for every one dollar on deposit." (Source: California State Auditor, 1995" as quoted in a research paper which can be found at this link: http://www.docstoc.com/docs/2676994/When-Government-Fails-The-Orange-County-Bankruptcy ) is what eventually forced OC in bankruptcy.
However, one thing is not generally known by the average person when it comes to referring to OC as a poster child for municipal failure: investors in OC Muni bonds essentially came out OK. [emphasis added; and as we understand it, Claremont came close to breaking even in the OC mess, if you don't count the thousands of hours of staff, attorney, and expert time and energy]
While the word "default" when referring to OC meeting its obligations to muni bond investors is technically correct as OC sometimes delayed payments owed to investors, when one looks beyond that term you might find that in fact at least the Muni Bond investors eventually were paid what they were owed in terms of interest and dividends. As the NY Times put it, quoting a muni bond analyst Zane Mann: "Despite the bankruptcy, the county never defaulted on its bonds…" http://www.nytimes.com/1998/06/03/business/ending-suit-merrill-lynch-to-pay-california-county-400-million.html?pagewanted=2.
In the Claremont case, from the limited info you have on your site, it looks as though they are just dealing with different ways to get CD type returns, and are not overleveraging.
It would take a lot of time to analyze Claremont's entire investment structure and I cannot really speak to that issue in general, but at least concerning the item you posted (a comparison to OC) I think that your warning about Claremont's ability to honor its debts or manage its investments doesn't really fit in this case.
That might be an important thing for you to note to your readers, as any investors who read your site might get overly worried about Claremont's financial strength and ability to pay its Muni bondholders what they are owed when it doesn't seem necessary. As we know when times are challenging some people might overreact which wouldn't really be a healthy response; overreactions tend to exacerbate problems as well. [there are so many ways to go in response to this paragraph. Let's just say that anyone basing his investments on so-called information on our blog deserves what he gets...]
All in all, Munis as an asset class are generally safe. As Moody Municipal Market Advisors recently put it: "The historical default rate for all municipal bonds (i.e., bonds of all rating categories) is 0.1%." That info is also available at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_bond under the heading "default rates." So in fact I think the value of working with an experienced advisor is all the more clear these days when the "do it yourself" and 401k type investors have lost so much due to their skepticism about professional help which could have helped them to reduce their risk back in the second half of 2007. At that time I was cautioning my clients that a recession was coming and to lighten on equities.
Whenever I hear the media ask "how come no one could have seen 08's economic problems and market losses coming?" I think to myself, "maybe its because they did not choose to have someone experienced as their advisor." Hope that helps put things in perspective a little...
Posted by
root2
at
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Labels: Bob Citron, Claremont, Investments, Mailbag, Orange County
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Air Force One Claremont Flyover

To add a little class to our lowbrow blog, we decided to commission a flyover photo-op of Air Force One above Claremont, chased by an F-16. Unlike the event approved by the White House, ours caused no panic.
Thanks to Katie Couric and Jon Stewart for the advice: Photoshop.
See here for 10 good reasons why the flyover of New York was a good idea.
We wanted to get this shot in before the City of Claremont requires an expensive permit for still photography in Claremont:

Doesn't this proposed ordinance language seem a bit over-broad?
Posted by
root2
at
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Labels: Air Force One, Claremont, Flyover, Photoshop
Friday, April 17, 2009
Friday Foto Shop
If the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin can have one First Amendment Friday every couple of years, we figured we could inaugurate an irregular feature--the Friday Foto Shop.
Through technical means available only here, we are able to present a Foto somehow missed by the other media.
We know that President Obama was in Pomona and, well, very, very close to Claremont late last month. And you may recall the fundraiser for Assemblyman Anthony Adams last week in Glendora that was attended by Governor Schwarzenegger. What was somehow missed by everyone (but us) is this apparent and nearly irrefutable fotographic evidence that these two worthies (the Pres. and the Gov.) actually passed each other in their repsective beefy, masculine, heavily-armored and authority-oozing black-vehicle convoys while driving on a Pomona street.
Now there might be some people who maintain this never happened. Who are you going to believe?--them or your lying eyes?
Posted by
root2
at
Friday, April 17, 2009
Labels: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Barack Obama, Claremont, Pomona
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
The Grapes of Wrath Meets Twitter

Yesterday's Daily Bulletin contained an article by Joe Blackstock, resident historian, memorializing the 70th anniversary of the publication of John Steinbeck's, The Grapes of Wrath. For a local hook, Blackstock invoked Route 66, the road by which the Okies traveled to California. He does a nice job illuminating the California part of the road through the prism of the Joads. According to Blackstock, it's not entirely clear that Steinbeck had the Joads following the real "Mother Road" all the way through Claremont though, instead taking them west from Barstow, over the Tehachapis, to the Central Valley.
In this faster-paced, high tech day and age, Steinbeck would've had to adopt all the modern media to get his novel out. Brevity is the soul of wit, and nothing makes for brevity more than the 140-character limitation on Twitter messages (tweets). There are even Twitter novels, and here is the Twitter version of The Grapes of Wrath as Steinbeck would no doubt have written it:
Posted by
root2
at
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Labels: Claremont, Joads, The Grapes of Wrath, Twitter
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Bringin' Home the Bacon
$1.8 million for Claremont
Emergency Operations Center
The 2009 Omnibus Earmark and Appropiation Bill signed last week by President Obama contained a little love for Claremont, courtesy of Congressman David Dreier. In a massive analytical spreadsheet posted by Taxpayers for Common Sense (both of them), we find down on line 7,575 (of 9,309!) an earmark of $1.8 million inserted by Dreier to fund an Emergency Operations Center for Claremont. This earmark represents more than one-third of the dollar value of Dreier's 7 "solo" earmarks, totaling $5,152,500. With other members of Congress, Dreier was involved in 14 earmarks totaling $17,245,000.The spreadsheet may be DOWNLOADED here. Within it there are worksheets showing all earmarks, earmarks by senator, earmarks by house member, earmarks by state and by party. It is worth your time but be warned: it is an Excel spreadsheet and you have to be comfortable navigating and doing searches in Excel. The download takes a few minutes as it is a 3 Megabyte file. (Lotsa earmarks)
There is an explanation of the methodology behind the spreadsheet here.
Posted by
root2
at
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Labels: Claremont, COPS, David Dreier, Earmark, Emergency Ops Center
Friday, October 24, 2008
78,000 Pounds of Frozen Chickens Dumped in Claremont
This was on the Daily Bulletin Breaking News website this morning. Only minor injuries to humans. Not sure how long the link will stay alive, but the best part is the headline and the nut graff:
overturns in Claremont,
Sig Alert issued
By Melissa Pinion Whitt on October 24, 2008 6:08 AM
A tractor trailer loaded with 78,000 pounds of frozen chicken overturned on the 210 Freeway this morning, blocking one lane and prompting a Sig Alert.
Don't put those barbeques away yet.
Posted by
root2
at
Friday, October 24, 2008
Labels: 78000 Pounds of Chicken, Claremont
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Tri-City Recovery
Tri-City Mental Health, the cooperative mental health agency funded by the cities of Claremont, La Verne, and Pomona, apparently has recovered nicely from its bankruptcy and recently received a $10 million contract from LA County to service Medi-Cal patients it the three cities.
According to a blurb in the San Bernardino Sun, Tri-City hosted a reception at the Pomona Fairplex Sheraton to celebrate its recovery. The Sun quoted a couple Tri-City boardmembers:
Pomona Councilwoman and Tri-City board chairwoman Paula Lantz praised a recent reorganization of the governing board in which three members have been added as part of a restructuring process intended to help create a future vision for and re-establish the mission and core values of the 48-year-old organization.
La Verne Mayor Jon Blickenstaff, also a board member, said, "When you think about the hundreds and even thousands of people in this Pomona Valley that are served by Tri-City and the enrichment to their lives that we have provided, (it) makes you realize why everyone in this room and so many others have worked so hard to guarantee that this organization continues to serve in the exemplary manner that it has...."
Jesse Duff, who had served as Claremont's interim City Manager right after Glenn Southard left for Indio in 2005, was hired as Tri-City's interim director in August, 2007, and has overseen the agency as it has been regrouping following the bankruptcy. Duff was hired on a permanent basis in late-June.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Labels: Claremont, Glenn Southard, Jesse Duff, Jon Blickenstaff, La Verne, Paula Lantz, Pomona, Tri-City
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
The Earth Moved
[8:30 p.m. Last update of the day. Metrolink says that all track has been inspected, there is no damage, and all trains will run on time on Wednesday, July 30.
See the Foothill Cities Blog here for a picture of the broken glass at Pomona City Hall, and here for some interesting surveillance camera video at a San Dimas bicycle shop.]
[7:05 p.m. Metrolink is showing a 30 to 45 minute delay on the San Bernardino train.]
[Update 6:00 p.m. Sometime in the past hour, KNBC went back to its regular programming. See the Daily Bulletin website for the latest on the earthquake. ]
[Update 4:47 p.m. KNBC still flogging this wall to wall. They are now showing a helicopter view from Newschopper 4 of the building shown in the image above. Richard Nunez was there first.]
[Update 3:35 p.m. See the Goddess of Pomona for some exclusive pictures of damage to buildings in Pomona. Pics taken by Richard E. Nunez. Great work, Richard, and great work, Goddess!
Also, from a reader,
[Update 1:13 p.m. We hear that the Metrolink line is closed for inspection until further notice. Check the Metrolink site (site is being hammered right now) for further information. There have been apparently erroneous reports of roof damage at the terminal at Ontario Airport. Some of the cell phone providers experienced a "mass calling event" and had connection problems immediately after the earthquake. Those seem to have cleared up.]
[12:06 p.m. Tuesday] If you were in Claremont at 11:42 Tuesday morning, you already know about the 5.8 magnitude (preliminary) centered near Carbon Canyon in the Chino Hills.
Early reports do not talk of damage, although it's hard to believe there is not broken glass somewhere.
We will update if there is any serious Claremont news to report. Listen up for a "Code Red" Robo-call from Police Chief Cooper or Mayor Taylor.
KNBC has live coverage as of noon.
Posted by
root2
at
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Labels: Claremont, Earthquake
Friday, April 11, 2008
Trader Joe's Claremont Opens
Hey homies, time to get your Organic Chicken on. And your Unsalted Cashews and Two-Buck Chuck. Exclusive pics of this morning's TJ opening in Claremont. Reports had it that the redoubtable Harry Wu was there--he's the developer of the Old Schoolhouse property and the Doubletree. No Xavier Alvarez sightings, though.
So as not to disappoint those of the opinion that the Insider is all negative, we offer the following observation: After Sprouts, this is another stake in the heart of Wolfe's, already planning a makeover--last we heard it would be in May--to reinvent itself as a deli. Anyway, for now, enjoy the festivity of food.
Posted by
root2
at
Friday, April 11, 2008
Labels: Claremont, Trader Joe's
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Our Post-Literate World
A while ago, around the same time the Claremont Unified School District Board of Education election was going on, we noticed some lawn signs going up for the Claremont Friends of the Library encouraging reading.
The signs seem to have come down around the same time the election ended and also seemed to coincide with signs for the two Claremont 400 candidates, Elizabeth Bingham and Hilary LaConte. Presumably, the sign posters were trying to send a subliminal message that their school board candidates were the real champions of literacy.
Unfortunately, all indications are that none of the candidates who ran for the CUSD board could possibly make a difference in the long-term reading levels of our kids. Quite the contrary, there seems to be a good deal of evidence that greater cultural forces are at work, forces that have been in play for decades.
Writer Caleb Crain had an article in the December 24th issue of The New Yorker titled "Twilight of the Books." The piece examined decline in reading and its potential effects on modern life.
Crain noted that the National Endowment for the Arts conducted a study that found that since 1982 the percentage of people polled who had read a work of creative literature in the previous 12 months had fallen steadily, from 56.9 percent in 1982, to 54 percent in 1992, to 46.7 percent in 2004.
And anyone in the newspaper industry will attest to the problems that papers are having attracting readers.
Educators have spent huge amounts of dollars and resources trying to raise reading scores, but scores don't tell the whole tale. Reading for pleasure is becoming less and less a part of our daily lives, as Crain writes:
More alarming are indications that Americans are losing not just the will to read but even the ability. According to the Department of Education, between 1992 and 2003 the average adult’s skill in reading prose slipped one point on a five-hundred-point scale, and the proportion who were proficient—capable of such tasks as “comparing viewpoints in two editorials”—declined from fifteen per cent to thirteen. The Department of Education found that reading skills have improved moderately among fourth and eighth graders in the past decade and a half, with the largest jump occurring just before the No Child Left Behind Act took effect, but twelfth graders seem to be taking after their elders. Their reading scores fell an average of six points between 1992 and 2005, and the share of proficient twelfth-grade readers dropped from forty per cent to thirty-five per cent. The steepest declines were in “reading for literary experience”—the kind that involves “exploring themes, events, characters, settings, and the language of literary works,” in the words of the department’s test-makers. In 1992, fifty-four per cent of twelfth graders told the Department of Education that they talked about their reading with friends at least once a week. By 2005, only thirty-seven per cent said they did.
Much of the decline in reading may be the result of the rise of television. Crain cites Dutch research that found that between 1955 and 1975, reading declined from five hours per week to 3.6, while television viewing rose from 10 minutes a week to over 10 hours.
Crain also believes that contrary to what we might expect, education matters less to active reading than age:
By 1995, a Dutch college graduate born after 1969 was likely to spend fewer hours reading each week than a little-educated person born before 1950. As far as reading habits were concerned, academic credentials mattered less than whether a person had been raised in the era of television. The N.E.A., in its twenty years of data, has found a similar pattern. Between 1982 and 2002, the percentage of Americans who read literature declined not only in every age group but in every generation—even in those moving from youth into middle age, which is often considered the most fertile time of life for reading. We are reading less as we age, and we are reading less than people who were our age ten or twenty years ago.
Interestingly, according to Crain, the Internet doesn't seem to affect reading ability in the same way as television, and reading scores appear to rise with time spent online. (Whew! A big relief to those of us in the digital world.)
The consequences of these trends seem self-evident. Illiteracy or more accurately post-literacy (the ability to read coupled with the inability to comprehend), may take an inevitable toll on our civic lives. After all, if a person cannot step outside of themselves and reason through an argument, they are more susceptible to demagoguery. Or they may just not participate.
Ironically, the Claremont 400, those self-anointed protectors of our schools and our kids, seem to thrive in the post-literate world. For instance, many of their arguments on the Baseline Rd. affordable housing this past year or on the failed Parks and Pastures Assessment District in 2006 depended on voters not examining the premises of those arguments. The 400 say, "Listen to us," rather trying to make a fair assessment of all the pros and cons of a position.
Our democracy is based on reason and in our trust that voters will make the best decisions if they are given enough information. Post-literacy threatens us because it removes critical thinking from the equation. Non-readers are less likely to delve into an argument or to try to independently verify assertions. Good readers, by contrast, tend to question and to seek to educate themselves on issues.
Crain ends his article on this note:
Proficient readers are also more likely to vote. Perhaps readers venture so readily outside because what they experience in solitude gives them confidence. Perhaps reading is a prototype of independence. No matter how much one worships an author, Proust wrote, “all he can do is give us desires.” Reading somehow gives us the boldness to act on them. Such a habit might be quite dangerous for a democracy to lose.
Come, let us reason together in the New Year.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Labels: Claremont, CUSD, Elizabeth Bingham, Friends of the Library, Hilary LaConte
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Robbing from the Rich (and Poor), Paying City Hall
A reader pointed us to yesterday's Claremont Courier's letters to the editor. In particular, the reader wanted us to see a letter sent in response to Dean McHenry's recent Op-Ed piece about the irony of the juxtaposition of Claremont's centennial celebration with Paystubgate and the governmental secrecy (BlackOps?) practiced in closed session and other matters.
The letter writer, one William Rook, thinks Claremont's city government is building a fiefdom, complete with serfs - taxpayers.
Rook takes the city to task for the $17.5 million paid out by Claremont's insurer for the homes burnt down in Palmer Canyon and Padua Hills in the 2003 Grand Prix fire. Rook concludes by saying:
This [city's] government sounds like it is being run by Prince John and the Sheriff of Nottingham. Maybe we as the people should gather in Nottingham Wilderness Park and take to wearing Claremont green, (complete with appropriate lettering claiming our place as 5th best). Then they could send the code enforcement officer to cite us for illegal use of park property.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Labels: Centennial, Claremont, Palmer Canyon, Pay Stubs
Friday, October 12, 2007
Foothill Cities Commentary
The FC Blog is up this morning with some commentary on Paystubgate. (Click on "Den of Falsehood" under the image on Foothill Cities for the text. Their writer Centinel takes some jabs at Claremont's City Attorney and City Hall in general.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Friday, October 12, 2007
Labels: Claremont, Pay Stubs, Sonia Carvalho
Thursday, September 20, 2007
A Brief Sighting of Martin Weinberger
We were poking around the website for the Claremont Courier the other day, looking for some news that was fit to print. While there, we noticed the reference to this video on the bottom of the home page.
We were surprised and pleased to see that it featured a short recent scene with Martin Weinberger reflecting on the changes in Claremont.
It was great to see again the crusty old editor and publisher--now listed as co-owner--of the Courier. While the years are obviously flowing rather relentlessly on, we are reminded that Mr. Weinberger has owned and operated the Courier for over 50 years. We are not looking this up, but our recollection is that he bought the paper towards the beginning of 1955. His mark on the paper and on this community is huge. Councilmembers and college presidents have come and gone, businesses have sprouted, grown, flourished, and died, and still Martin Weinberger has put out two newspapers a week, every week.
We were a little surprised and disappointed that the community didn't make a bigger deal of 50 years of Mr. Weinberger's ownership of the Courier when that milestone passed a couple of years ago. He deserves our continued thanks.
This article from La Verne Magazine done in 2005 is a nice story of Martin Weinberger and his newspaper. It appears that his tragic flaw is being a Yankees fan. Well, he is only human and has human failings.
We suggest you take a look at the Courier video here. Be sure to pay attention at the very last when Mr. Weinberger gets his closeup. If you see the years in his face, it is because that face has seen and those hands have chronicled everything that has happened in this town for over five decades.
We wish him well.
Posted by
root2
at
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Labels: Claremont, Claremont Courier, Martin Weinberger
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Rewriting History
We suppose we are old-fashioned in thinking that City of Claremont news releases ought to be taken seriously. We have been impressed recently the the City news has been larded with spin, half-truths, and double-speak. Even the City Manager's Report, which used to circulate to the councilmembers and give them real information has degenerated into just another happy-face press release since it was made available to the community on the website.
A reader forwarded a note from a prominent Claremonter questioning the City's "Johnson's Pasture" press release of last Friday. The sugar-coated PR bureaucratese read:...This project was only possible because of the devoted efforts of Claremont residents who approved Measure S and the hard work of the business community, community groups, and the Claremont Colleges. [emphasis added]
The problem is, the business community, if by "business community" you mean the Chamber of Commerce, did not support Measure S. Measure S, which provided the authority to issue the bonds that paid the bulk of the cost of Johnson's Pasture, won by a 71% to 29% majority. The Chamber Board did endorse the failed "Parks and Pasture" assessment district, which was rejected by property owners in July 2006 by a 56% to 44% margin.
So you have the Chamber Board endorsing a failed measure, and failing to endorse a successful measure with the overwhelming support of the voters in the community. That sounds like being out of touch to us.
(This is not to slight the many individual business owners who supported and voted for Measure S. We appreciate your commitment and contributions to our community. But take a look at your leadership and hold it accountable.)
All in all, we suppose it's just another day in the Wonderland of the Claremont 400, where words mean just what they choose them to mean, no more and no less.
Posted by
root2
at
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Labels: Chamber of Commerce, Claremont, Claremont 400
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Pay Stubs
Our long-time readers will know that the Insider is nothing if not accommodating. Now we make no claim at having the stratospheric IQ of Claremont City Attorney Sonia Carvalho, and with respect to Google, the owner of Blogger, who took down the images from our Labor Day post, if we're so smart, how come we're not rich.
It took us a little while to get both neurons connected and firing, but we think we finally figured out a way to post the Claremont City Employee Pay Stubs to the satisfaction of both City Attorney Carvalho, and the Google Gods:

Posted by
root2
at
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Labels: Claremont, Google, Pay Stubs, Sonia Carvalho
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Dem Bones
To avoid accusations of being "All Pay Stubs, All the Time", we post an inquiry from a reader. We admit to being at first a bit skeptical, but we are hearing more and more about this from reliable sources:
Shades of Blue Velvet. We assume the story, if it has legs, will be buried by the City of Claremont.
While hiking on Claremont's wilderness trail this morning [Tuesday, September 11, 2007] we came upon a young man on the phone with the police. He seem upset and we asked him if he was ok. He responded by telling us that he was on hold and that he had come upon a human foot in an old army case that was behind the small water tower that sits about a mile or so out from the entrance. Now the group I walk with have been hiking the trail for years and besides the rattlesnake (a baby) the most interesting thing we have witnessed is some beautiful deer a coyote or two and a plethora of colorful birds.
The young man said the officer on the phone didn't know how to get to the trail so he proceeded to give directions. While we were disturbed by the incident, we weren't sure we believed his assessment until he told us her was a veteran of the war. He apparently had seen a lot worse than the foot he stumbled upon in the box.
While we had commitments and had to leave our young good Samaritan foot finder...we are curious as to the end of the story. Our friend said it was a small adult foot and the case contained items that may have belonged to a child.
Posted by
root2
at
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Labels: Bones, Claremont, Wilderness Park
Friday, August 24, 2007
The City Council Writes Us
A FAMILIAR TUNE
Our post from Wednesday was a riff on a theme we here at the Insider have written about several times. It's been our contention, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, that the net effect of that social network known in local circles as the Claremont 400 has been the creation of an inflexible, counter-productive, regressive, intolerant system of local governance.
On the surface, things look swell, but look deeper and you will see a consistent pattern of missteps and misjudgments that in a non-dysfunctional community would result in a change in leadership, a change in direction.
Here, however, given the unique and an entrenched nature of the 400, when Claremont started down the road to a more responsive city council beginning 2001 in reaction to the fatal shooting by Claremont police of 18-year-old motorist Irvin Landrum, the 400 snapped into action, working tirelessly by spreading false rumors about critics of the local scene in an effort to undercut anyone who stood to threaten their control of City Hall.
The result has been that voices of critics like ourselves have been either been silenced or driven underground. The 400 and their main representatives on the Claremont City Council (Ellen Taylor, Linda Elderkin, and Sam Pedroza) refuse to acknowledge this past and current behavior on the part of the people who got them elected.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF PACS
The August 18th edition of the Claremont Courier carried a very good article (not available online) by Tony Krickl that explored the phenomena of local political action committees that really began in 2003 with Residents United for Claremont (RUC), a PAC organized to support the three city council incumbents in that year's municipal election.
RUC was organized by Claremont Human Services Commission Chair Valerie Martinez and received the support of many former councilmembers and commissioners, as well as one future councilmember: Sam Pedroza.
RUC was the precursor to the Preserve Claremont campaign two years later that attacked sitting Councilmember Jackie McHenry and then-candidate Corey Calaycay. The Krickl article noted:
Mr. Calaycay referred to a full-page advertisement in the COURIER in February 2005 featuring a letter written by a man whom Mr. Calaycay had never worked with that offered false information about his career and character. Paid for by Preserve Claremont, a political action committee active during the 2005 election, the ad was one of several that the group received criticism over for being negative and malicious.
Preserve Claremont included spokespersons Valerie Martinez (again), former Claremont Mayor Paul Held and Homer "Butch" Henderson, the former head pastor at the Claremont United Church of Christ and the recent chair of the city's Youth and Family Master Plan Steering Committee.
2007 - ALL ROADS LEAD TO CASM

What happened after that Preserve Claremont debacle? Was there a backlash against PACs? Hardly. In this year's campaign there were two active PACs. The Krickl article noted that the anonymous Claremont Progress group was created by two former Claremont residents, including a Newport Beach attorney who largely funded the groups $2,000 operating budget.
Claremont Progress sent out a pre-election mailer critical of Mayor Peter Yao and candidates Elderkin and Pedroza. The mailer endorsed McHenry and candidate Opanyi Nasiali.
The other group that was active in the 2007 election was Claremonters Against Strip Mining (CASM), which Krickl noted spent more than four times the amount Claremont Progress did - over $8,000 total. CASM was organized to fight the proposed Vulcan Materials Co. gravel and aggregate mining project in Northeast Claremont.
CASM and its president Mike Kunce, were largely a single issue PAC. However, the Preserve Claremont group wasted no time in trying to co-opt CASM in order to get two candidates, Elderkin and Pedroza elected. CASM ended up endorsing those two and also endorsed candidate Mike Maglio, whom the 400 knew could not win.
The strategy was to use Maglio to siphon off votes that might have gone to McHenry and Nasiali. That much was evident from the involvement of Pedroza supporter and Human Services Commissioner Ed Leavell in Maglio's campaign.
According to the Krickl article,
Several local political leaders and observers believe that the group was influenced by behind-the-scenes players who were seeking CASM's endorsement for their favored candidates.... This was done, they say, by feeding CASM's leadership questionable information and rumors about the prospect of mining in the city and certain candidates' stances on the issue.
In the run up to the election, CASM president, Mike Kunce, approached the COURIER with unverifiable information, claiming that the city council had voted in closed session to authorize negotiations with Vulcan Materials Company to allow strip mining....
Mr. Kunce's named former mayor and spokesman for Preserve Claremont, Paul Held, as his source on the information leaked from closed session, as well as "someone very close to the inner workings of city hall." If the statement is true, Mr. Kunce's claim could imply that a Brown Act violation occurred on the part of either council members or city staff for leaking information out of closed session. [Emphasis added.]
No outcry from the public on that last bit, so we can assume it's okay for the Claremont 400, without being anonymous but manipulating behind the scenes, to break the law and to spread false rumors in order to get Elderkin and Pedroza elected.
PEDROZA RESPONDS
Another thing we've observed repeatedly is the habit of the Claremont 400 to constantly erase the past, to refuse to acknowledge any error in judgment. When critics arise with valid points, the 400 will never address the facts of those arguments. They consciously avoid engaging on the issues. Instead, they attack the person speaking out. So, we ask, is it really surprising that things like anonymous blogs would arise?We think that what frustrates the 400 the most about our humble efforts is the fact that they don't have anyone to attack, so they are left with having to deal with the information we provide - something they tend to be inept at responding to intelligently.
A case in point. We received an email from Councilmember Sam Pedroza in response to our posting from Wednesday. Did Pedroza address the concerns we raised? Did he use his skills in debate and argument to refute our points of contention? We'll let Sam speak for himself:
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 10:24:58 -0700 (PDT)
From: "sam" spedroza1@verizon.net
To: claremontbuzz@yahoo.com
Subject: Claremont Insider : Why are We Here?
sam has sent you a link to a blog:
weak response, if you are just providing another view then why hide... just another coward.
Blog: Claremont Insider Post: Why are We Here? Link: http://claremontca.blogspot.com/2007/08/why-are-we-here.html
We suppose cowardice takes many forms. The worst, we feel, is that of the weak, insecure man placed in a position of power and who allows himself to manipulated, who refuses to use his position to speak out against serious things like possible Brown Act violations and the leaking of information from closed session city council meetings in order to influence elections. Cowardice need not be limited to anonymity; often it is masked in respectability.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Friday, August 24, 2007
Labels: CASM, Claremont, Corey Calaycay, Ed Leavell, Jackie McHenry, Linda Elderkin, Mike Kunce, Mike Maglio, Opanyi Nasiali, Paul Held, Sam Pedroza, Valerie Martinez, Vulcan Materials
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
Mental Health Woes
A Daily Bulletin article by Will Bigham reports today that the Tri-City Mental Health Center's debt repayment plan has been approved by a federal bankruptcy judge.
Tri-City is operated by Claremont, La Verne and Pomona and provides mental health services to people in the three cities. Tri-City Mental Health is unique in Los Angeles County. In all other areas, the county itself provides the services Tri-City is responsible for.
In fact, Tri-City is one of only two city-level mental health agencies in California. The only other one is operated by the City of Berkeley. Everywhere else in the state, counties, with the help of state and federal funding, provide access to mental health services.
Tri-City, according to Bigham's article, got into trouble by expanding too fast and ended up having to cut staff and services and to sell most of its facilities after it declared bankruptcy in early 2004. The agency's debt totaled over $20 million, mostly to the state and to Los Angeles County.
Jesse Duff, who in 2005-06 served as Claremont's interim City Manager, is now interim director for Tri-City. The article states that the three communities are trying to work on community outreach to figure out Tri-City's future.
The state of California's California Performance Review (CPR), however, singled out the Berkeley and Tri-City mental health agencies as being redundant and recommended phasing them out and replacing them with county-level services. According to the state's CPR report:
Tri-City Mental Health Center
The Tri-City Mental Health Center developed in a very different manner [from Berkeley's program]. It was established in the early 1960s by three Los Angeles County cities-Pomona, Claremont and La Verne-as a Municipal Joint Powers Authority. When they established Tri-City, the three cities were isolated geographically from the rest of Los Angeles, and the cities were concerned that the county would not provide an adequate level of mental health service to their residents. Today the Tri-City area is integral to, and contiguous with, the rest of greater Los Angeles. Nonetheless, the Tri-City Mental Health Center has continued to operate separately from the County of Los Angeles, submitting its own claims, cost reports and client data to DMH [the state's Department of Mental Health].
Recently, Tri-City Mental Health Center has had financial difficulties, and in February 2004, it filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 9. The case is now in federal court and Tri-City is developing a plan for continued operation. However, Tri-City owes DMH $12 million in federal funds due to over-claiming for Medi-Cal services, and DMH is listed as its largest creditor. Tri-City continues to receive its full share of realignment funds but has reduced the level of services it provides, prompting the County of Los Angeles to express concern that it will become responsible for services formerly rendered by Tri-City without additional funding. In addition, Tri-City has recently cancelled several service contracts with the county.
Comparison
No other state has been identified that faces a comparable situation under which anomalous city programs continue to operate within a county-based mental health system. Further, the politics of each of the two affected counties are unique to those areas.
Posted by
Claremont Buzz
at
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
More on Claremont as the Fifth Best Place to Live
The Insider can read the Money FAQ as well as the next guy. Here is Money's explanation with our comments:
First, "start with places that have populations above 7,500 and under 50,000."
[OK, that may give us the "best places" with populations between these somewhat arbitrary and capricious limits. You now have 2,876 towns]
Next, "screen out retirement-oriented communities, places where income is less than 90% or more than 180% of the state median and towns that are more than 95% white."
[How did Claremont make this cut with Pilgrim Place, the Gardens, the Manor, Sunrise, and the Village? The Insider isn't going to touch the racial bit. Now we have 974 towns.]
Third, "eliminate towns with low education scores, high crime rates, declines or sharp increases in population, projected job losses or lack of access to airports or teaching hospitals."
[OK, now we have a more or less mainline stable population of smart working non-criminals at least 6% of color who either take airplane trips or frequent nearby teaching hospitals...that must be us alright. Well, there are 678 total towns now.]
From these towns, "rank remaining places based on job, income and cost-of-living data; housing affordability; school quality; arts and leisure opportunities; ease of living; health-care access; and racial diversity."
[These all sound good. It would be interesting to compare Claremont's housing affordability with that of others on the list. "Ease of Living"? Sounds like Peter Yao's first campaign with the "good life"--notably absent from his second. And the Insider is beginning to think this "racial diversity" thing is a surrogate for "lots of nearby ethnic restaurants." Now we have 466 towns; must've lost a few in the ranking.]
From here, the researchers "gather more data on job markets, housing prices, schools and ambience. Interview community leaders and residents by phone."
[Here's where the "Kentucky windage" is put in. We wonder what data are available on "ambience". Did you get a phone interview? The Insider regrets to report he is "out of the loop." Now they have 70 towns.]
Next, the protocol demanded that they "visit and do more interviews. Assess the sense of community, vibrancy of town center, natural surroundings, amenities, real estate and congestion."
[More subjectivity. All we can say is that they must not have visited during rush hour on the 10 or 210. And let's have a look at the "sense of community data". They are down to 25 towns now...]
Finally, "give [Potemkin Village] the nod, based on data and qualitative findings."
[More of those pesky subjective slippery squirmy qualitative findings. And now the towns are one...]
Posted by
root2
at
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Labels: 5th Best Place to Live, Claremont, Money Magazine, Peter Yao





