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Page: of 20

the communities of Nevada City, Grass Ve ley, Red
Seay oe Fad pg
Hill, Willow Valley, Newtown, Indian Flat, Bridgeport,
Flat, Grizzly Hill, Gold Flat, Soggsville,
North
“THIS IS A HECK of a time io inspect the pavement, ” claimedCounty Public Works Director Jack Meade Saturday during a road
tour of the eastern end of the county. Looking on at the washed
out section of subdivision of road are (left to right) Joe Day, Jr.,
Dale’ Miller, Wes Moore and Ross McBurney.
Road Tour Of Eastern End Of
County Turns Up Sorry Sights
By Don Hoagland
If you think you have trouble
getting out of your driveway or
driving around the chuck holes
in the roads of your neighborhood
subdivision, you should see what
they have at the eastern end of
the county.
This is just what a group of
about 20 officials and interested
residents didSaturday on the
second of two county road inspection and information tours
sponsored by the County Department of Public Works.
County Employees
Will Start Punching
A Time Clock
The Nevada County Board of
Supervisors, with time on their
minds, voted yesterday to hold
a meeting every week.
Atthe same time, the board
directed Auditor-Controller
John T. Trauner to make a cost
study installing time clocks in
county offices and of switching
from compensatory timeto
straight overtime pay for overtime work,
The board decided to meet ©
every Tuesday. The new schedule will start in 30 days on a
regular basis and the meetings
will be adjourned from Tuesday
(continued on page 19)
At Donner Lake, which a ‘few
years ago had little development, the group saw a hodge
podge of houses and commercial
development stuck on the lake
shore and climbing up the surrounding mountains,
(continued on page 14) :
NID Asks Both Cities To
Make Prompt Decision On
Water Treatment Plant
Nevada City and Grass Valley
city officials were given a “fish
or cut bait” proposition by the
Board Of Directors Vote
To Use Project Bonds
For New Treatment Plant
The Nevada Irrigation District
directors last Thursday approved
the spending of unsold YubaBear River project revenue bonds
Bond Voted
New Contract
The Grass Valley Elementary
School Board Monday gave
Superintendent Vernon Bond a
resounding v ote of confidence
by giving him a four year contract.
The board by unanimous vote
approved the new contract and
a salary of approximately
$14,080 which is up $1,880
from thelast contract.
Bond came to the district on
a one year contract and was then
given a two year contract. The
new contract approved Monday
does away with the last year of
the two year agreement.
The trustees alsoadopted a
preliminary 1966-67 budget of
$654,799. This is an increase
of $77,799 over last year.
According to Bond, the major
increase in the budget can be
attributed to the district taking
over responsibility for the seventh and eighth grade students
and an increase of $17,000 in
teacher salaries. Bond noted
that much of this salary increase
will be reimbursable to the district for programs under the
Title Isection of the federal
Education Act.
(continued on page 19)
THE HONEYETTES will be one of the showboat acts to be staged
during the River Queen show to be staged in the Nevada City Elks
Club Saturday night to raise funds for the theater. Other pictures
are-on page 7.
to finance construction of facilities to treat and transport
domestic water.
The board had earlier expressed the desire to put the
question of the spending of approximately $7 million in unsold Yuba -Bear bonds before. the
voters since the original $65
million authorization given by
the voters)in 1961 was only to
finance the project construction.
But the directors were told by
the State Health Board in Berkeley April 1 that while the NID
directors might feel some moral
obligation to put the question of
the bond use before the people,
the state had an obligation to
see that safe water was supplied with the district.
With this
took'the . "
would be no time to put the
matter before the voters,
In addition to approving use of
project bond funds, the board
also approved using approximately $50,000 in Davis-Grunsky funds to pay for the feasibility report being prepared on a
master water treatment system
for the Twin Cities area,
The district received a DavisGrunsky grant of more than $3
million including a $600,000
reimbursement tothe district
for original engineering paid out
of district funds. This $600, 000
is not tied to eecreation, or
operation of or maintenance of
project facilities so itcan be put
to any district use.
At the same time, the district
moved ahead to comply with
state orders to chlorinate untreated district systems now serving domestic water, Of 14
domestic systems ordered treated by the state, district manager Edwin Koster said work on
five of thes¢ is planned or now
underway. These include the
Cedar Ridge line, the Grandview Terrace and Union Hill
System, the Loma Sum Gold
and the line to the county hospital,
These serve the greatest areas
of population, Koster said, and
the district is trying to treat
these first. The other systems
required treated by state order
are more remote and Koster said
these will be handled as rapidly
as funds become available,
The district is looking hopefully toward getting out of adding individual chlorination to
several of these systems by incorporating them into the proposed master treatment facility.
tion that there:
Nevada Irrigation District last.
Friday in regard to their participation in the district's proposed master water treatment
system for the area.
The mayors of both cities and
meanbefs of the city councils
attended the session last Friday
in the NID office to obtain information on the proposed project. The session calledby
NID manager Edwin Koster was
the first at which all three
agencies wererepresented at
the same meeting.
Koster told the city officials
thatthe district washaving a
feasibility report of the proposed plant and transmission
facilities prepared by the San
Francisco engineering firm of
Leeds, Hill and Jewett and it
was the hope of the district that
the report would be ready by
July 1 and construction of the
plant-and-could start by December of next year,
Koster said to meet this time
schedule the district would have
tostart making design plans and
before this could be done it
would have to know if the cities
wished to participate in having
treated water sold and delivered
to them trough the new system.
As K~ put it, if the cities
parte in on the system, it
would be designed to include
them. If they did not-want to
participate, the system would
be designed to exclude the
cities, but the district had to
know now.
Actually the cities have little
choice since the district is the
only supplier of water to the
area. Although both cities hold
minor water rights, neither could
develop sufficient water to supply the growing city population.
While officials from both
cities indicated interest in the
project, council representatives
(continued on page 19)
TOM REYNOLDS, oldest member of the William Bull MeekWilliam Morris Stewart Chapter
of EClampus Vitus, joined
about 300 other red-shirted revelers Saturday at a plaque dedication in Nevada City. More
Clamper pictures are on page 4,.