Indian Valley Record
Wednesday, April 4, 2012 5A
. A cla,00:s gift
Former principal and superintendent Joe Hagwood presented
the community with a gift of a Greenville High School
Yearbook from 1925, which includes the first graduating class
of five seniors.
Surnames of almost every student on the yearbook staff
back in 1925 are familiar ones, especially to the numerous
descendants who still live in Indian Valley, or for those who
come back home for reunions and regular visits. Photos by
Alicia Knadler
DRUGS, from page 1A
Simpson said. "They are
telling me, 'You need to buy
it from mail order.' And I
said, 'No, I'm not going to do
it.' I go to my local pharmacy
instead. It's complicated."
Supervisor Sherrie Thrall
called it a "bigger balancing
act."
"If we don't take advantage
of savings, (we might) end
up having to cut some other
department in order to pro-
vide
the
fffding to pay more
l" medication to support one
business in our county," she
said.
Thrall suggested combin-
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Richard IL Stockton,
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WE LIVE WHERE YOU LIVE
ing the local service with
mail order. "Could we do it
the way you have been doing?
But then contract out with
Script for some of our long-
term prisoners?"
Thrall emphasized that
whatever local pharmacy the
county uses, the contract
should be put out to bid.
"i'm sure we have lots of
businesses in our county that
would like county support in
one form or another," she
said.
Meacher said there is
already a local jrack record
of national pharmaceutical
companies providing poor
service.
"North Fork Medical
Lodge
April 8
Group has to use a national
pharmaceutical because of
corporate rulings for the
Quincy nursing home. And
they say it has been an
absolute nightmare," he said.
"I won't go into the details,
but they have listed a number
of instances where the public
good was not served by hav-
ing to follow the corpor A:e
model," he said. "They ha l,e
tried to adjust ... tried to u:;e
local."
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invites you to Easter Services
~ Have you thought about God lately?
~ Have you ever wondered if He thinks about you?
- If you've never been active in a]ocal church,
have you thought about visiting one?
- Were you attending a church and just stopped going?
God does think about you and
He cares for you very much!
There is no better time than Easter
to get acquainted or reacquainted
with God and His Son Jesus Christ.
400StateFarmBank TM
Good Friday Service
..... ,m
1953 (4463)
, ,,,4
TRASH, from page |A
the county's public works
department to spend up to
$17,500 to develop new con-
tracts and a CPI-style refuse
rate index.
Future solid waste rate
adjustments would be imple-
mented annually, based on
the index.
The new contract, which
would require approval from
the waste disposal com-
panies, is expected to go
before the supervisors in
June.
Digc0unt carpet recycling
County residents will be
able to get rid of their old
carpet for 25 percent less
than the current fee.
Public works engineer
John Kolb said residents can
start drolping off carpet for
the reduced rate at the
Delleker transfer station
"very soon."
He said there would be a
28-foot trailer at the site,
sponsored by Carpet Care
and CalRecycle.
The service is part of a
one-year, nine-county pilot
program in Northern Califor,
nia.
Kolb said the fee would be
based on the carpet weight.
The program does not
include carpet pads.
"We expect the trailer to
arrive any time," Kolb said.
Free paint disposal
Beginning in the fall, resi-
dents will be able to dispose
of old paint at yet-to-be-deter-
mined sites in the county:
"We don't know how many
of our facilities in the county
are going to offer these
recycling services," Kolb
said. "I would think that each
of our franchise contractors
would have a central location
for paint recycling."
Kolb said there would be no
charge to drop off the paint.
He added that California and
Oregon are the only states to
offer the free disposal.
The program, sponsored by
the nonprofit Paint Care, will
accept cans up to five gallons
in size.
InterMountain Disposal
said that about 67 percent of
the hazardous waste it took
in during its last special
event was paint.
"Most of it is latex, oil paint
and stain," IMD owner Ricky
Ross said. "So I'm very
thrilled about this. It is great
news for us."
Ross said the free program
wouldn't be an event. "We
would be able to collect this
(paint) every day that the
transfer site is open."
(
STOR00IDE
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• ,, To send a legal: typesetting@plumasnews.com
,,:::;. To send an advertisement: mail@plumasnews,com
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