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Ron Largent

Shasta College Football Win is a Big Opener

09-14-09
Ron Largent

The following was in the Record Searchlight earlier today and kind of tells it all on Shasta Football....

A baseball-like formula at quarterback and better second-half defensive effort allowed the Knights to claim its home opener for 2009.

Led by freshman quarterback Matt Summers-Johnson and then sophomore Cole Johnston, the Shasta College football team overcame an early double-digit deficit to beat Mendocino 31-26 at Memorial Stadium on Saturday.

Summers-Johnson started the game and helped the Knights rally to a 24-20 lead in the third quarter, throwing for two touchdowns and rushing for one.

Johnston, the sophomore from Foothill High School, then came in and capably ran the Knights version of the Wildcat offense for a quarter and half. He threw a touchdown pass and led the Shasta offense on a 10-minute fourth-quarter stroll to run down the clock and preserve Shasta’s lead.

“It was awesome to get the home opener,” Johnston said afterwards. “We want to come out and give the home fans a good show and at least come out it with a win.”

For a young team, the victory over Mendocino provides a big moral boost. Shasta (1-1) lost at Laney 34-19 to start the season. The Knights went 9-2 last year, breaking a string of fruitless seasons. A victory over the Eagles after falling behind early gave an indication that the Knights aren’t about to return to those losing ways.

“It was a big win for us,” Knights linebacker Zach Gibbins said. “It gives us a lot of confidence. We’ve been working hard, so it was nice to see all the effort rewarded tonight.”

Ironically in the first half, it was the supposedly still green Shasta offense that bailed out a more experienced Knights defense as the Eagles (1-1) built early leads of 14-3 and then 20-10 late in the second quarter.

Shasta came in expecting to face a passing team after Mendocino won a 55-46 shootout over Hartnell last week.

But the Eagles came out running the ball behind bruising Sterling Jackson, a 215-pound sophomore from Stone Mountain, Ga. Mendocino marched 69 yards on its opening series, including a fake punt leading to an 11-yard pass completion on fourth-and-9, before Jackson punched the ball in from three yards out for a quick 7-0 Mendocino lead.

Shasta drove the back on its first possession, but Abdu Reda missed on a 32-yard field goal attempt. The Knights turned to Kelly Crowley out of University Prep on the next field goal try and the freshman nailed a 36-yarder less than minute into a second quarter to put Shasta on the board.

The Knights early-season troubles have mustly dealt with secondary breakdowns and it bit them again. Kyle Yanusevich completed a 58-yard pass to Montel Nix-Fleming all the way down to the Shasta 5-yard line. Yanusevich, who briefly came on in relief of Eagles starter Jake Strickler, then hit 6-foot-3 receiver Tommy Jones on a 5-yard fade route for a touchdown and a 14-3 Mendocino lead.

Shasta went three-and-out on three straight incompletions by Summers-Johnson, looking as green as their uniforms in that brief series. But the Knights defense started to get a hang for what the Eagles offense was doing and delivered and three-and-out series of its own.

The Knights then rebounded by featuring sophomore tight end Saxon Schultz prominently in the pass game. Schultz caught four passes for 31 yards on the next drive, including a 6-yard TD catch from Summers-Johnson with 4:40 left in the first half.

However, Mendocino marched right back down and Matt McHenry plunged in from two yards out with 50 seconds left, putting the Eagles up 20-10.

However, the Knights made a key drive against the clock.

Summers-Johnson hit Emerald Guillet on a 34-yard pass play as the Knights went 69 yards downfield. On a third-and-10, Summers-Johnson hit Schultz for a 14-yard gain down to the Mendocino 10. Johnston caught the next pass for nine yards before, with four seconds left in the half, Summers-Johnson snuck in from a yard out.

Summers-Johnson then let the Knights to another score on the opening second-half drive, getting a fortuitous bounce along the way. On a second-and-9 from the Eagles 10, Summers-Johnson tried to throw to Brian Brown to the right side, but an Eagles defensive end tipped it at the line. The ball went all the way over to the left side where Mark Brooks came sliding in running a slant pattern to snare a 10-yard touchdown pass with 13:02 left in the third quarter.

Armed with the lead for the first time, the Knights started unveiling its multiple threats on offense.

Summers-Johnson went 17-of-27 for 168 yards before giving way to Johnston in the third quarter. Schultz had eight catches for 64 yards and Brooks had six catches for 61 yards.

But it was the Knights offensive line and the running game that took over for the rest of the game.

Whether it was sweeps for Manny Barragan (14 carries, 88 yards), fullback dives by Marcus Sannadan or runs up the middle by Trevor Rook and Xavier Robinson, the Knights marched 80 yards downfield before taking to the air when Johnston found Brown in the end zone for a 14-yard touchdown pass on a third-and-13 with 13:09 left to play.

Johnston finished 2-of-4 for 30 yards.

“It’s just fun knowing you can help out the team in so many ways,” Johnston said.

Mendocino drove the ball downfield, but Strickler overthrew an open receiver and Knights safety Austin Cantrell picked it off and returned it 11 yards.

“We didn’t make any halftime adjustments,” Knights linebacker Chace Taylor said. “The coaches just told us to keep playing our assignments.”

That was when the Knights offense went on a 10-minute stroll in the fourth quarter, going 79 yards on 17 plays. Johnston ran for eight yards to convert a key fourth-and-7 play to keep the drive alive at one point. The Knights ended up going for it on fourth-and-goal from the 2, but Sannadan was stuffed for a 1-yard loss.

Shasta High product Brooks Beaudette then came in at quarterback and led the Eagles 97 yards the other way. But his 42-yard touchdown pass to Trent Scatena ended up being the final play of the game.

“It was a good win and a good game for us,” Taylor said. “Mendocino is a good team and I didn’t think we had it until all the way near the end.”

Shasta Voices Luncheon..from Ron Largent

09-11-09
Ron Largent

A L E R T !

Get your tickets to the Public Pension Forum Luncheon Now! This is an

opportunity to actually do something about unsustainable public pensions.

We must start somewhere…

$ PUBLIC PENSION FORUM $

A Working Lunch (food included)

Date: Thursday, September 24, 2009

Time: 11:30 am – 1:30 pm

Location: Holiday Inn, Redding

1900 Hilltop Drive

Featured Panelists:

Gene Bell (Negotiator for Shasta County)

Marcia Fritz (California Foundation for Fiscal Responsibility)

Ed Bond (Consultant/Private Sector Pension Expert)

Steve Allen (Northern California Union Negotiator, UPEC)

Larry Lees (CAO for Shasta County)

Kurt Starman (City Manager, City of Redding)

(Note: Rob Feckner, President, CalPERS Administration was invited but has not responded)

The purpose of the forum is to foster a better understanding of public pension systems, and provide an opportunity for open discussion.

Ticket Information

$25 each or $250 to reserve an “up front” table (seats 8 people) Tickets must be purchased in advance. To secure your tickets, contact: Mary Machado Phone: (530) 222-5251 Email: mary@shastavoices.com

Please note: There will be no tickets sold at the door. Seating is limited.

Redding Council Deals with Economic Shortfall

09-02-09
Ron Largent

This was in www.redding.com earlier today...and kind of says it all...

Redding will suspend the lowered utility late fees approved earlier this year so the city may avoid laying off up to seven police officers in its latest round of general fund budget cutting.

This evening's 3-2 vote to take back the late fee discount came as the council voted to lop nearly $3.8 million, or 5.5 percent, from the city's general fund.

Vice Mayor Patrick Jones and Councilwoman Missy McArthur voted against giving up the utility late fee discount to spare police officer jobs.

The council voted unanimously on the rest of the cuts, which include up to 21 layoffs and closing Fire Station 3 on Westside Road near Buenaventura Boulevard and Highway 273.

City Manager Kurt Starman told the council, however, that the city and the firefighters union are discussing using six firefighters from Station 3 as "floaters" rather than laying them off. These "floaters" would fill in for firefighters who would otherwise work overtime. Fire Station 3 would still close if the city kept those six firefighters on its payroll, Starman said.

Other cuts approved this evening include suspending the city's $279,000 contribution to Turtle Bay Exploration Park starting in mid-2010.

Turtle Bay officials have said they support the city's decision to suspend its funding. But the organization wants to work with the city to come up with other funding sources for the park outside the general fund, 60 percent of which is devoted to police and fire.

Those funding sources could include redevelopment dollars, federal Community Development Block Grants that could help subsidize some events or allow schools to visit the museum at a lowered cost, Starman said.

The city's utilities could also team up with Turtle Bay on education campaigns, he said.

Steve Gaston, who chairs the Turtle Bay board, said the park needs to show municipal support when it applies for private grants.

Council members were subdued as they rapidly voted on this latest round of budget cuts, the fourth exceeding $1 million in the past 12 months.

Nearly a dozen speakers had excoriated the council for cutting public safety.

"If Redding is not a safe place to live, it really won't matter how many Sundial Bridges, river walks and Stillwater bridges we have," said Connie Spooner. "A 10 percent cut to the city manager's office will not have same ramifications to the community as a 10 percent cut to public safety."

Council member Dick Dickerson proposed that the city suspend the lowered REU late fees until city general fund revenues return to 2006 levels.

The $700,000 savings from reversing the late fee discount could preserve the crime statistician, four community service officers, two investigators and school resource officer on the chopping block, Dickerson said.

The council in June had lowered utility late fees in an effort to cut the number of REU customers disconnected for nonpayment.

A council majority in June was willing to follow a committee's recommendation to lower late fees from $36 to $25, or by 30 percent, at an estimated cost of $619,000 to the general fund. Staff had urged the council not to lower the fees.

Mayor Rick Bosetti and council member Mary Stegall supported Dickerson's idea.

Jones and McArthur -- the only council members who had supported ending the city's controversial abatement policy against REU customers who have been disconnected for nonpayment -- opposed it, also with no discussion.

First Time Homebuyers Tax Credit to End...Act Now!

08-31-09
Ron Largent

This was in www.cnnmoney.com and I wanted to get it known to all that are looking for a home…time is of the essence.

There’s barely three months left before the $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers ends — and it can take that long to close on your new home.

By Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer
Last Updated: August 27, 2009: 3:38 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Use any metaphor you want: the ticking clock, sands running through the hourglass or pages falling away from the calendar. The fact is, time is running out to claim the $8,000 first-time homebuyers tax credit.

Passed earlier this year as part of the economic stimulus package, the credit is good for up to $8,000, or 10% of the purchase price, and applies to people who have not owned a home in the previous three years. (There are some income restrictions.) The best part: Unlike a similar program from 2008, the credit does not have to be repaid.

The bad part: It ends on Dec. 1.

Because it usually takes around 90 days to close on a house after a contract is signed, buyers have very little time left to act. As of Thurs., Aug. 27, there were only 96 days left before the credit ends.

“Buyers have to get a home under contract very, very soon,” said Tom Kunz, CEO of Century 21. “They probably should get out looking.”

Sense of urgency

What they will find may surprise them: Many of the prime properties have already been snapped up. Home sales have been on the upswing, and inventories are so depleted in hot markets that first-time buyers are struggling to find homes in their price range. (Check prices in your city.)

In Whittier, Calif., for example, there are few repossessed homes for sale. Those are easy to buy because there isn’t a lot of red tape and the bank wants to get rid of them as quickly as possible. Instead, most of the properties are short sales, where the sellers have to convince their lender to let them sell the house for less than they owe.

“That’s why there’s such a sense of urgency now,” said Irma Tapper, a Century 21 real estate agent in Whittier. “The banks have to approve short sales, and they’re taking three to six months to do that.”

That means a first timer putting a bid on a short-sale might not get an answer form the bank until well after the Dec. 1 deadline for the tax credit. So when an actual repossession listing hits the markets, it creates a feeding frenzy.

Chuck Whitehead, who runs the Coldwell Banker agency in Temecula, Calif., said one recent listing hit the market on a Friday and by Monday there were 57 bids.

The National Association of Realtors attributes much of this activity to the first-time buyer tax credit. It estimates that 1.8 million buyers will file for the credit, and 350,000 of them wouldn’t have been able to buy without it.

“It makes a big difference because most of these clients are in a lower price range,” said Michelle Edmunds, an agent with Coldwell Banker in Temecula, Calf., who has closed sales for six first-time buyers. “The houses they buy need work and normally they wouldn’t want to move in because of the [less than perfect] conditions the homes are in.”

That is true for Wesley Forsythe. This June, the 30-year-old computer consultant and his girlfriend bought a row house in the Fishtown section of Philadelphia. Since he paid just $80,000 for the three-bedroom, two-bath place, the credit acted like a 10% discount.

“It allowed us to expand our price range and plan additional renovations,” he said. “My mortgage is several hundred dollars less than what my new rent would have been.”

Forsythe applied for the credit immediately after closing, filing an amended 2008 tax return. The IRS cut him a check in less than seven weeks. He’s spending it now on new hardwood floors, repainting most of the interior and renovating a bathroom. He’s stretching the cash by doing much of the work himself.

So, time is running out…act now.