LOCAL NEWS - The McClatchy Company

Ripon High holds off
Riverbank to clinch
playoff berth SPORTS | Page C1
A VALENTINE’S DAY
DINNER FOR TWO
TASTE | PAGE D1
The Modesto Bee
modbee.com
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2015
MID snubs water rate hike
County
to target
runoff
pollution
IDEA POSED AT WORKSHOP ON DISPARITY
IN CHARGES, COSTS FOR UTILITY SERVICES
By Garth Stapley
gstapley@modbee.com
TOUGH STANDARDS
AIM TO MEET STATE
STORMWATER RULES
By Ken Carlson
kcarlson@modbee.com
Stanislaus County will adopt and
enforce stronger regulations for reducing pollutants in stormwater in
unincorporated areas.
The county needs to comply with a
state permit issued in February 2013.
And that will mean tougher standards for new construction, penalties for violators and broader
responsibility for the county to act as
stormwater police.
Public Works Director Matt Machado said the state is making the
county responsible for knowing
whether private businesses are contributing to stormwater pollution,
for monitoring discharges in the Tuolumne and San Joaquin rivers, and
for watching runoff from county
property and parks.
An updated stormwater ordinance will include fines if someone is
POLLUTION | Back page, A8
Harvest of
grapes for
wine fell
last year
BUT NO SHORTAGE
AFTER RECORD 2013
By John Holland
jholland@modbee.com
California’s wine grape harvest
dropped 8 percent last year from
the record 2013 crop, the state reported Tuesday, but Modesto-area
wineries still had plenty of raw material.
The 2014 crop came in at 3.91 million tons, compared with 4.25 million a year earlier, the California Department of Food and Agriculture
announced. Even with the decline,
it was the third-largest harvest on
record and a sign that wine drinkers
continue to have plenty of choices.
“The quality was great and the
consumer is in a good position to
enjoy it,” said Erica Moyer of Riverbank, a broker and partner with
Turrentine Brokerage, a Marin
County firm that buys and sells
grapes and wine.
The news was not all good: Tonnage declined in the premium Lodi
region, and per-ton prices slipped
for growers in Stanislaus County
GRAPES | Back page, A8
Just to start the conversation,
Modesto Irrigation District staff on
Tuesday asked board members:
What if we triple water prices in the
next couple of years?
Not so fast, said most members of
cent in 2016 and 50 percent in 2017
– representing a jump from the current $9.30 an acre-foot to $29.25 – is
too much, most board members
agreed.
“I think we can do this a little softer, take a little more time,” said Larry Byrd, board chairman.
Tuesday’s workshop was promoted as a time for the board to consider whether electricity and water
prices cover the district’s true cost
the MID board, a majority of whom
are farmers.
Some agreed that a gradual increase in farmers’ water rates, in
light of their multimillion-dollar
subsidy borne by electricity customers, probably is a good idea. But
hikes of 40 percent this year, 50 per-
A prosecutor on Tuesday
told a jury how authorities
believe Francisco “Frank”
Jose Drumond, a former
police officer and MJC
instructor, molested four
teen girls. The defense,
however, said the stories
from the girls have continued to change. Page B1
FLOORING
TRENDS
2015
of providing those core services,
and if not, what to do about it.
It’s clear that farmers have underpaid since MID began delivering
water in 1923. Even if the board approves a 40 percent rate hike in a
few weeks – and some board members have hinted that’s too steep –
MID will collect $14 million less
from farmers than the district’s
$18.8 million cost to deliver the waMID | Back page, A8
TICKETS DROPPING BUT CRASHES RISING, REPORT REVEALS
Council updated
on traffic, crime
Above, emergency crews
respond to a
crash at Sixth
and K streets
in Modesto on
Friday. At
right, a Modesto K-9
officer
searches for a
burglary
suspect on
12th Street in
June.
By Kevin Valine
kvaline@modbee.com
Motorists who drove too fast or
ran red lights in Modesto were
less likely to get a ticket last year
compared with 2013. But the drop
in citations was accompanied by
an increase in traffic incidents.
The number of citations
dropped 16.2 percent, from 15,753
in 2013 to 13,199 in 2014, while the
number of traffic incidents increased 9.4 percent, from 3,077 in
Andy Alfaro
aalfaro@modbee.com
2013 to 3,365 in 2014.
Police Chief Galen Carroll presented this information Monday
to the City Council’s Safety and
Communities Committee as part
of a report on traffic statistics for
2013 and 2014. Carroll said this is
the first time in a while that the
Police Department has provided
the committee with this data, and
it plans to start providing it on a
quarterly basis.
TRAFFIC | Back page, A8
Stewart ending his 16-year run on ‘Daily Show’
By Scott Collins
and Meredith Blake
Los Angeles Times
Jon Stewart will step down as
host of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” this year, ending a 16-year
run that changed the way Americans view the news.
Stewart, 52, made the announcement to his studio audience as he
recorded Tuesday night’s show in
New York. Under his watch, “The
Daily Show” navigated new frontiers in comedy and journalism. He
tweaked newsmakers and news
organizations with equal relish,
along the way helping influence the
media elites he frequently pilloried.
“In my heart, I know it’s time for
someone else to have the opportunity,” Stewart said. “I don’t have any
specific plans. ... I’ve got a lot of
things in my head. I’m going to
have dinner on a school night with
my family.
“This show doesn’t deserve any
even slightly restless host, and neither do you.”
Under Stewart, the show’s stature grew so much that even mainstream news outlets borrowed
from it. MSNBC found a hit with
Rachel Maddow, a host whose
TODAY’S SCOOP
LOCAL NEWS
$1
NATION
Brian Williams, the embattled NBC news anchor
whose credibility plummeted after he acknowledged
exaggerating his role in a
helicopter incident in Iraq,
was suspended for six
months without pay, the
network said Tuesday
night. Page A5
OPINIONS
The fall of anchor Brian
Williams is a sorry window
onto the news business. In
the digitally disrupted,
corporate-owned industry,
journalistic standards have
become muddled and
anchors are not just journalists, but multimedia
stars. Page A7
LOCAL NEWS
Members of the Golden
Valley Chorus will be
crisscrossing Stanislaus
and Merced counties
Friday and Saturday to
sing “Let Me Call You
Sweetheart” or “Heart of
My Heart” on behalf of
Valentine’s Day romantics.
Page B1
99¢
WORK & MONEY
The United States ranked
19th in the world for
retirement security, according to an annual
ranking of 150 countries
by Natixis Global Asset
Management. It’s held that
spot for three years. Switzerland topped the list for
the second year. Page A6
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smirking delivery and arched eyebrow instantly recalled Stewart. On
CNN, the usually sober Anderson
Cooper delivered the “Ridiculist,” a
snarky editorial segment that
would have been hard to imagine
on a news show in the pre-Stewart
days.
“He’s been a really significant
part of the civic conversation, at
STEWART | Back page, A8
Foggy,
then sun
66 | 44
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Complete forecast Page B6
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The Modesto Bee, © 2015
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