UPDATE: Hornbrook residents asked to boil water, shortage continues
Siskiyou Daily News
Residents in Hornbrook dealt with a lack of water for most of last week, as efforts were made to correct the issue.
Elaine Mellon, a board member on the Hornbrook Community Service District said Saturday morning that water was restored to residents on Friday and Saturday, although some still had a limited amount of water.
Water conservation and water boiling efforts will be ongoing for the foreseeable future. Two of the town’s pumps were pumping, and water was operational Saturday morning. Things changed Saturday afternoon when Mellon said the water pressure went back down and the water was again not working or down to a trickle. She said at the time they were working to solve the issue.
City has wish list of state funding for 2021 recorderonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from recorderonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
1,248 Building Permits issued
555 Homes Rebuilt (certificate of occupancy issued)
289 Multi-Family Permit Applications Received
277 Multi-Family Permits Issued
Other Updates
Last Chance to Enroll in the Government Hazard Tree Removal Program: The deadline to enroll in the Government Hazard Tree Removal Program is Thursday, Dec. 31, 2020. This deadline will not be extended. Property owners in the Camp Fire footprint must remove hazardous trees on their property. To sign up for the Government Program, contact the Tree ROE Center. At the contact below:
Call (530) 552-3030
Business Update:
Home Builders Resource Virtual Connection: An opportunity to connect rebuilders with the trades and resources needed to build in the Paradise community is once again taking place, with a virtual change. Companies will become accessible through a 2-minute video shared with community members who attend. A formal launch will be coming soon.
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments: Adam Dondro, 38, of Carmichael, has been reappointed Deputy Secretary for
Waterworks project funding/looks like rain/Kings River water dispute gets hearing
Water bills would help fix subsidence damage: A package of water bills passed Congress this week that could offer hundreds of millions to improve San Joaquin Valley water deliveries. Folded into the same bill that will be offering COVID relief was the government s annual spending bill that included funding approval for key local canals and dams. Significantly it includes $206 million to rebuild 33 miles of the Friant Kern Canal and monies for the repair of the westside s California Aqueduct and Delta Mendota Canal â all facing reduced capacity due to subsidence- the sinking of land caused by vigorous water pumping nearby over the years.