"Beneath old growth forests in the Mad River Valley, in a town that had witnessed the decline of the timber industry, “everyone around me was growing weed and making good money, too,” he said."
"So in 2009, after the cancer death of his wife of 13 years, after his double hip-replacement surgery, after the economic downturn drove him out of the construction business, Winkle, then 53, decided to reinvent himself – as a marijuana grower and drug trafficker called “Papa Winks.”
As the Golden 1 Arena prepares for opening, Sacramento RT is trying to find marketing tactics that appeal to consumers by offering reduced Uber, Lyft and light rail ticket combo-packs.
Tony Bizjak writing for Sac Bee reports: "If you live in the suburbs and plan to attend games at the new Golden 1 Center but worry about a downtown parking crunch, would you give transit a try?"
"In an effort to entice some of those potential riders, Sacramento Regional Transit is laying plans to offer a door-to-door deal for at least some people. The transit agency will offer $5 discounts for arena attendees to take a rideshare service such as Uber or Lyft to select light-rail stations, where they can catch a train to the arena."
"They don’t have to worry about parking or driving at all,” said RT General Manager Henry Li."
A half-a-million-dollar audit will soon be underway for the U.C.'s Office of the President.
Brenna Smith with Daily Californian reports: "Amid concerns of conflicting staffing and spending figures, California lawmakers on Wednesday approved an audit of the University of California’s Office of the President."
"The audit was requested by Assemblymembers Phil Ting, D-San Francisco,and Kevin McCarty, D-Sacramento. It will be conducted by the state’s independent auditor over the course of eight months and is expected to cost $418,000."
"I am a proud Cal grad but my job demands that I ask tough questions,”Ting said in a press release. “The Office of the President’s duties, budget, and staffing remain a mystery."
California's summer fire season continues apace, and now the target is Lake County.
From the Press Democrat's Guy Kovner and Christi Warren: "One day after it started, a wildfire in southern Lake County exploded Sunday, driving flames into Lower Lake, where it destroyed homes and downtown businesses before it moved to the edge of Clearlake, the county’s largest city, and prompted the evacuation of thousands more people."
"An estimated 4,000 people were evacuated during the day as wind-driven flames revived fears of last year’s nightmare, when three large wildfires ravaged this drought-withered region."
"Firefighters, water tankers and helicopters arrayed against the blaze were unable to save commercial buildings along Lower Lake’s Main Street, as the wind-driven flames advanced on a day when temperatures soared into the 90s."