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Page: of 28

NORTHERN MINES & CALIFORNIA REPORTS .
BEES ERO Et eee ret oP et
Mean Dogs
Are Legal,
Owners Liable
What can be done about a
“biting dog” in Nevada County?
Supervisor Gene Ricker asked
this question of Nevada County
District Attorney Harold Berliner
Monday, and the answer was to
sue the owner in civil action.
“It iscertainly a terrible situation,” Berliner commented, “but
it is no crime in California to
harbor a biting dog. “
"It is extraordinary to me, " the
district attorney continued, “that
people who have a dog like that
would keep it.”
Ricker said the dog he referred
to has terrorized the neighborhood's children, and when a
neighbor opens a window the dog
jumps with bared teeth at the
property's community fence.
Supervisors asked the district
attorney to prepare an amendment tothe county 's dog licensing
ordinance which would allow for
the destruction of such a dog as a
public nuisance.
"Point System”’ Disinterred, But Loehr Doesn’t Dig It
Construction
Bids To Open
= The California Division of
Highways this week advertised for
bids for resurfacing bridges at 17
locations on Interstate 80 between
Cisco and Floriston in Placer and
Nevada counties.
Bids willbe opened July 1 with
$220,000 available for the project, according to officials at the
Marysville district office.
The surfacing material will be
a mixture of modified epoxy resin
and sand. Recent tests show that
this type surfacing is highly resistant tothe spalling or chipping
of concrete decks, caused by salt,
usedto meltice, and the freezethaw temperature change of the
upper mountain areas.
A Rambling Discussion of County Road
Standards and Specifications Ensued
Nevada County supervisors got
into a discussion of roads at Monday's meeting which drifted from
the possibility of using county
funds on private. road improvements to the current road standards.
The discussion was kicked off
when District Attomey Harold
Berliner gave an opinion that the
Streets and Highways Code forbids the county from spending
on private or public roads that
are not in the county road system.
His answer was to a question of
Supervisor Don Blake.
The district attorney then continued, saying that there were
precedents, however, in other
counties where funds had been expended on public roads and that
the attorney general's opinion is
that when this happens the portion of the road worked on is automatically taken into the county
road system.
This did not seem to solve the
problem which prompted Supervisor Blake's question, and the
discussion veered to the problem
of what to do with private and
public roads in the county.
Supervisor Neil Hennessy noted
thatit would be a terrific’ expense
to bring such roads intothe county
system. They are narrow, but
witha little help from the county
many of them can do the job (of
carrying the required traffic).
Blake agreed, and said it was
time to take a look at the whole
county road system.
He saidhe favored a point sys~tem which would call for county
improvement of roads. But the
standards now required by the
county are too high, he said, in
some areas. In those instances,
they should be lowered.
Loehr said that possibly this
wasn ‘tthe time to get into a discussion of road standards that
might lead to action on the road
system. In the future he sees the,
probability of a Public Works Department witha paid engineer on
the staff, an engineer who could
program county rvad improvements.
Supervisor Gene Ricker noted
that county taxpayers live on
many of these public (but not
county) roads, “and as long as a
person is a taxpayer, he should
have some road work done.”
Loehr warned that if the county
were to accept these private and
public roads into the system it
would not be necessary to bring
each road upto current standards.
In this way, each road could be
upgraded through the classifications when possible.
Supervisor Blake noted that the
problem is county-wide, saying
about each of the districts, "We're
all in the same boat. “
Supervisor Ricker agreed, but
said, “Something has to be done
about them (the old existing
roads), "
Supervisor Blake again urged a
point system which would enable
subdivision at a lower road standard than at present insome
areas. He said the present standards are “not being realistic”.
Blake said his point system would
call for lower standards where the
lot size was an acre or more.
Supervisor Hennessy agreed,
saying that road standards should
be based on the density of population, but noting that he would
suggest low er standards for developments in which the lot size
was five acres or more.
He said the standards now are
arbitrary and are geared to high
density population.
Supervisor Loehr warmed, however, that the county would be
called upon to improve these
roads as soon as the original
parcels were split into smaller
units, thereby bringing higher
population density.
Supervisor Hennessy countered
this with a suggestion that the
lowering of standards be tied to
deed restrictions against the division of parcels below a minimum size, according tothe lower
road standards. He said these res~
trictions could be for a specified
number of years---perhaps 20 or
25.
Supervisor Loehr said he would
not agree to this, believing that
a property owner had a right to
sell offa portion of his holding if
and when he desired.
The chairman said the county
was trying to get orderly development, and questioned whether a
lowering of the standards would
fit into orderly development.
Supervisor Blake said, “I don ‘t
think high standards are necessary
to orderly development. "
Supervisor Loehr warmed again,
“You can't let the barrier down. “
The discussion ended witha
brief notation that the county had
received areport from Supervisor
Hennessy on the operation of a
road point system in Shasta
County.
The last time this subject came
before the board, Planning Director Bill Roberts reported that he
had received a letter from his
counterpart in Shasta County
which said that the point system
there was tied into that county's
zoning ordinance.
Nevada County's zoning ordinance is little more than a collec~tion of spot zoning,
Supervisor Hennessy noted that
he hadn't seen the Shasta County
letter, and he intended to see it.
’
POGT ‘F Ounf’* *1083nN AqUNOD epeAeN* ** AS
DEATHS
WILSON ---in Miners Hospital
May29, 1964, Irma May Wilson
of Nevada City. She was the
mother of Margaret McKittrick,
Los Angeles; sister of Cora Strang,
Nevada City, Arthur R. Theile,
Bakersfield, and Dr. AlvinA.
Theile, Peoria, Ill. She was a
native of Wisconsin aged 75 years.
She movedto California about 28
years ago and had been making
home in Nevada City for the past
six months. The body was shipped
by Hooper-Weaver Mortuary to
Fullerton for services and burial.
++ ++ +
PAGE---in an auto accident on
Highway 20 May 30, 1964, Haggard L. Page of Wells, Nevada.
He was a native of Tennessee aged
64 years. He was the husband of
Dexie; father of Mrs. Ann Halvarson, Grass Valley, Mrs. Mary
Katherine Bradham, Fort Worth,
Tex., Mrs. Wanda Griffith, Long
Beach, and Mrs. Peggy Brown,
Wells, Nevada. He was a lifelong
Democrat and active in party affairs. He and his wife owned the
Shell Crest Motel in W ells. Funeral services and burial were in
Wells.
++ +t +
MANCHEST ER---in the University Hospital of San Francisco
May 28, 1964, Mrs. Genevieve
Manchester of Jones Bar Road,
Grass Valley; mother of Arthur,
Jr., Camp Pendleton, Tim and
Dennis, Grass Valley; and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Fiora,
Grass Valley. She had been a
resident of this area for about 12
years and had been active in farm
bureau work in the Jones Bar area.
Funeral services and burial were
in San Leandro.
5 FTHE MINERS...As the third sch
struction of the Nevada Union High School on Ridge Rd.,
Nevada Union High School students have these mining
relics to lend authenticity to their athletic teams’ nickmF
ool year ends since conRuess.
name. The miningcar, large hydraulic nozzle, and hydraulic
motivated pelton wheel are all part of the landscaping plan
for the high school developed by landscape architect Joe