Thursday, November 27, 2008

Housing Slips in Redding, CA

David Benda at the Record Searchlight kind of wrote it all....you can see the full article at the following site:

http://www.redding.com/news/2008/nov/26/area-housing-market-slips-prices-drop-14-over-past/

Redding’s housing market sizzled five years ago when it topped a government index as the fastest-appreciating area in the nation. It was the dawn of an unprecedented real estate run-up that exhausted itself in early 2006. Today, Redding is one of the 40 fastest-declining markets in the same government index. Plenty of other California cities share the same fate. Home values in Redding slid 14.07 percent in the third quarter of 2008 compared with the same three months a year ago, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) all-transaction House Price Index. Prices in Redding — which includes Anderson, Shasta Lake and unincorporated Shasta County — in the third quarter declined 6.63 percent from the second quarter of this year. Over a five-year period, values in Redding have increased 31.14 percent. Redding ranked 256 in the index, which surveyed 292 metropolitan areas

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Sarah Palin is still a Winner

Oprah wants her, and so do Letterman and Leno. Fresh from her political defeat, Sarah Palin is juggling offers to write books, appear in films and sit on dozens of interview couches at a rate that would be astonishing for most Hollywood stars, let alone a first-term governor.
Sarah Palin continues to attract huge media interest despite her failed bid to become vice president.

Sarah Palin continues to attract huge media interest despite her failed bid to become vice president.

The failed Republican vice presidential candidate crunched state budget numbers this week in her 17th-floor office as tumbling oil prices hit Alaska's revenues. Meanwhile, her staff fielded television requests seeking the 44-year-old for late-night banter and Sunday morning Washington policy.

Agents, including those from the William Morris Agency, have come knocking. There's even been an offer to host a TV show.

"Tomorrow, Gov. Palin could do an interview with any news media on the planet," said her spokesman, Bill McAllister. "Tomorrow, she could probably sign any one of a dozen book deals. She could start talking to people about a documentary or a movie on her life. That's the level we are at here."

"Barbara Walters called me. George Stephanopoulos called me," McAllister said. "I've had multiple conversations with producers for Oprah, Letterman, Leno and 'The Daily Show.' "

Asked whether Winfrey was pursuing Palin for a sit-down, Michelle McIntyre, a spokeswoman for Winfrey's Chicago-based Harpo Productions Inc., said she was "unable to confirm any future plans" for the show.

Palin may have emerged from the campaign politically wounded, with questions about her preparedness for higher office and reports of an expensive wardrobe, but she's returned to Alaska with an expanded, if unofficial, title: international celebrity.

Sen. John McCain plucked Palin out of relative obscurity in late August and put her on the national Republican ticket. Now, she has to decide how and where to spend her time, which could have implications for her political future and her bank account, with possible land mines of legal and ethical rules.

Palin is considering about 800 requests for appearances from December through 2009, with 75 percent coming from out of state. A year ago, just a sprinkle of requests came from beyond Alaska's borders. They range from invitations to speak at the Chief Executives' Club of Boston, Massachusetts, and to attend a 5-year-old's birthday party, from a prayer breakfast in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to a business conference in Britain.

Michael Steele, the former Maryland lieutenant governor who wants to be the next chairman of the Republican National Committee, is seeking face time.

She has invitations to make appearances in 20 foreign countries, typically with all expenses paid, McAllister said. She has more than 200 requests for media interviews, again from around the globe. Video Watch whether Palin has plans for 2012 »

"She has to pace herself," suggested veteran Hollywood publicist Howard Bragman. "She wants a career made in a Crock-Pot, not a microwave."

In her two months on the national stage, Palin energized the Republican base but turned off moderates and independents, according to some surveys. Flubbed answers in national television interviews raised questions about her competence. She was embarrassed by the disclosure that the RNC spent at least $150,000 for designer clothing, accessories and beauty services for her and her family.

The right book or movie deal could help Palin reintroduce herself to the nation, on terms she could dictate. Video Watch Palin says she's ready to help Obama »

Although books and movie deals could be worth millions of dollars, it's not clear whether Palin would be able to legally earn it. State rules say she cannot accept outside employment for compensation. But there appears to be little in the way of precedent left by former governors to judge if book deals or lucrative speaking appearances amount to "employment."

Palin has sent unmistakable signals that she is open to running for president in 2012, but to advance her political ambitions, she must stay in the public eye in the lower 48 states.

As with any celebrity, there is the risk of overexposure. At the same time, she'll be under pressure to attend to governing her home state, which is thousands of miles from the rest of the nation.

"She has to deal with the perception that she bobbled her debut," said Claremont McKenna College political scientist John Pitney. "She needs to stay home for a while. If she wants a future in national politics, her No. 1 job is doing a good job as governor."

Shasta College Wins Bowl Game

SAN MATEO - The Shasta Knights football team won a thrilling Bulldog Bowl today with a final score of 33-31 over the Monterey Peninsula Lobos.

As time was running out, Shasta's Zack Gibbins intercepted a Hail Mary pass to end the game.

Shasta's Blake Arrowsmith caught an 8-yard TD pass from Will Camy with 33.9 seconds left to put the Knights up 33-31. Brandon Boyd missed the PAT.

Shasta had the ball at 2nd-and-goal from Monterey's 8-yard line with 40.1 seconds left in the game.

Monterey Peninsula came back 31-27 with 1:50 left in the fourth quarter of the bowl game at the College of San Mateo campus. Lobos quarterback Brian Reader scored on a 1-yard QB sneak.

Shasta's Ryan Krueger scored on a 46-yard TD run with 5:45 left to play. Blake Arrowsmith missed the extra-point.

With 13 minutes left in the fourth quarter, Shasta safety Casey Robertson snuffed out a Monterey Peninsula drive by making a diving interception.

With :07 left in the third quarter, Shasta's Brandon Baldwin scored on a 29-yard TD run. Blake Arrowsmith's extra-point was good.

The Knights scored a touchdown with 4:41 left in the third quarter when Arrowsmith caught a 50-yard TD pass from Will Camy. The Knights went for two points and Camy hit Brandon Baldwin in the flat for the 2-point conversion.

The Lobos had gone up 24-6 with 5:23 left in the third quarter after a 31-yard field goal by Monterey's Chris Pinto.

Shasta got on the board after taking the opening drive of the second half in for a score. Ryan Krueger scored on a 2-yard TD run on a toss sweep left. Arrowsmith missed the extra-point attempt.

But the Lobos came back and scored on the kick return. Zachkary Heager scored on the 87-yard kickoff return for with 11:52 left in the third quarter

Monterey Peninsula scored its second touchdown with 29 seconds left in the second quarter. Lobos quarterback Brian Reader threw an 85-yard TD pass to Heager on a great out-and-up play.

Reader pump-faked an out route and Shasta corner Robert Lee bit. Heager then got behind the Knights secondary, got it at the 40 and ran it in.

Halftime statistics for Shasta: Brandon Baldwin has run 11 times for 60 yards. Will Camy is 8-of-10 passing for 50 yards. Blake Arrowsmith has six catches for 28 yards.

For Monterey Peninsula: Ian Hesse has 12 rushes for 66 yards and a score. Quarterback Reader is 10-of-19 for 160 yards and a touchdown pass.

Shasta wasn't able to do much offensively in the first half. Although midway through the second quarter, Shasta's Baldwin reeled off runs of 16 and 25 yards on back-to-back plays, putting the Knights on Monterey's 40-yard line. The Lobos called a timeout with 7:30 left in the second quarter.

Earlier, Monterey running back Hesse ran 31 yards off left tackle for a touchdown with 8 minutes left in the first quarter. Chris Pinto made the PAT kick.

The Knights will return home this evening, probably sometime after 9 p.m.

Buy a Convenience Store in Northern California

Buy a Convenience Store in Northern California.....Just Listed

We now have 11 Convenience Stores with Gas Stations listed in the Northern California area. Cities include Redding, Anderson, Red Bluff, and Chico, CA.

Stores range from a Chevron on leased ground in great location in Redding for $300,000 to a branded and unbranded station that can be sold together in Redding, CA for $3,500,000.

Stores have both good inside sales and good gas volume, and a number of the stores have a liquor license to go along with a beer and wine license.

Brands include Shell, Chevron, 76, Valero, Beacon, in addition to the unbranded stations.

Various locations and sizes.

E-mail for details, financials, and photos to ronlargent@kw.com

This is the time to buy a Convenience-Mini Mart store, for people are buying gas, buying fast food items, and continuing to make the Convenience Store business one of the best profit businesses in the US.

Business in Redding, CA

Is there any project that's generated so much anticipation while spurring more conspiracy theories than Trader Joe's?

There's enough material here for an Oliver Stone movie.

Of course, Trader Joe's doesn't help by being so reluctant to elaborate every time we report a delay for the Redding store's scheduled opening.

Trader Joe's will open Feb. 1. That was the word in August from the developer who's building the store near the corner of Hilltop Drive and Browning Street.

But a friend told me last week that she was told by a Trader Joe's employee in Chico that the Redding store won't open until at least the summer.

There's a problem with the parking, the TJ worker said.

Parking? The shopping center was OK'd by the Redding Planning Commission in January 2007. The use permit addressed parking.

For the record, this isn't the first time employees at other TJ stores have fanned flames of doubt.

Earlier this year, the buzz was employees were telling folks up here who made the pilgrimage south for their TJ fix that the Redding store was delayed because it was having trouble obtaining its wine and beer license. Never mind that Trader Joe's had already received approval from the Alcoholic Beverage Control Department when this rumor started circulating.

Alas, neither Trader Joe's nor the developer returned my calls last week.

Competition is good

I've lived in Redding for nearly 20 years. Ever since I can remember, the beef has been that there are no decent sports bars in this town.

Now, in the span of two months, two new sports bars have opened here.

In September, Johnny's on California Street downtown was the first out of the gate.

On Wednesday, Bleachers Sports Bar & Grill opened across town on Hilltop Drive, two doors north of Subway. Owner Tyree Bolton started work on converting the former Chuck E Cheese's building into a sports bar more than a year ago.

Bleachers is open daily until midnight and serves lunch and dinner. In addition to some 30 televisions, the bar has video games and pool tables.

Let the games begin.

Zillow alert

The bane of some in the industry, Zillow.com last week released its home value report for the third quarter.

Values in Redding, which encompasses Anderson and Shasta Lake, declined 4.2 percent year-over-year to a Zillow Home Value index of $259,832. That's compared to a nationwide decline of 9.7 percent to a value of $202,966.

Nearly 65 percent of the homes in our area lost value over the past year. That's a veritable real estate boom compared to what's happening in Merced, where values fell 32 percent and 99 percent of all homes have depreciated over the past 12 months.

Coming back to Redding, homes in Shasta Lake have been hit hardest, according to Zillow. Values there dropped 6 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter, and 21 percent compared to a year ago.

Zillow has its detractors, including real estate agents and appraisers, but the site contends its methodology eliminates the bias present in median sale prices. That's because it looks at values for all homes in a region, not just the ones sold.

More Thai food

Racha Noodle is expanding across town.

The popular Thai restaurant in south Redding is opening a second location on Dana Drive.

They will call it 5 Thais Tasty Thai Food and it's in the Metro Anderson Tri Center inside the former The Cool Breeze Yogurt Cafe, which closed earlier this year after more than 15 years in business.

The 5 Thais of Racha Noodle won't give an opening date, only saying the new location is coming soon.

Shasta High School Football

History is for books.

The 2008 Shasta High School football is bent on writing its own chapter and leaving its own legacy.

The second-seeded Wolves reached their first Northern Section title game in 20 years with a 41-19 win over No. 2 Lassen on Friday at Thompson Field.

"We've all heard the history about Shasta not being able to come up big in the big game," said Richard Stevenson, who had a monster game with a fumble-recovery touchdown. "We know the history. We want to write our future."

The Wolves penned another chapter in the 2008 annals with a 35-point second-half outburst that put away the Grizzlies and earned Shasta a trip to The Ridge at 7 p.m. Wednesday to take on top-seeded Paradise in the Division I section title game.

Shasta's offense sputtered in the first half as four starters sat and starting safety Stephen Somers watched in street clothes.

Somers was injured in an after-practice auto accident that led to stitches in his head and 24 minutes on the sidelines for his cohorts.

"It served as a wake-up call," coach Aaron Gingery said of Somers' injuries and the punishments.

The Wolves gave up a 66-yard touchdown burst to Darren Lee midway through the second quarter that put the Grizzlies up 7-6 at intermission.

But the Wolves, with their cadre of starters back, came out of the locker room and made up for lost time.

"These are an experienced bunch of guys," Gingery said. "I didn't need to yell at them. I drew up a couple of plays, but they did most of the talking."

Shasta held Lassen to a three-and-out before ripping off a three-play, 44-yard touchdown drive.

The Grizzlies would score on their next possession — an 11-play, 70-yard drive that chewed up nearly five minutes — to go up 13-12.

It would be the last time Lassen would see the lead.

The Wolves blitzed the Grizzlies for 21 points in roughly the same time as the final Lassen scoring drive.

Shasta used trickery with a Brooks Beaudette to Matt McCartin to Nick Preston double pass for a 44-yard strike to go up 20-13.

The Wolves then got a huge play from Jordan Tucker, who pounced on an 8-iron lob kickoff at the 20-yard line.

Evan Taylor carried the ball twice, scoring on a 4-yard run to lengthen Shasta's lead to 27-13.

After another Lassen three-and-out, the Wolves got the ball on their 33 and marched 67 yards in seven plays, capped by Taylor's untouched, 48-yard off-tackle scamper.

It gave Shasta a 34-13 lead just into the fourth quarter.

Taylor had 276 yards on 22 carries to move within 30 yards of Jim Tomasin's all-time Shasta rushing mark of 3,115.

With Lassen in a hurry-up offense, the Grizzlies were able to march down the field and looked primed to at least make it a game.

Lassen drove from its 28 to the Shasta 12 in six plays and were about to punch it in when quarterback Quinton Perry fumbled the snap.

Linebacker Richard Stevenson pounced on it for his second fumble recovery of the game and iced the Lassen threat.

Stevenson, a junior who said he wanted step up and take the leadership mantle in Somers' absence, also found the end zone for the Wolves' first touchdown.

"Stephen is our leader," Stevenson said. "Someone had to step into that role.

"I wanted to be that person."

In the first quarter, Taylor ran off-tackle from the 5, but fumbled at the 3.

Stevenson, also an offensive lineman, picked up the ball before twisting and turning into the end zone.

"You can just say 55 was at the right place at the right time," Stevenson said. "I knew once I picked up the ball, I was going to carry two or three people across the line if I had to."

The Wolves now must head to Paradise to exorcise the past — both distant and recent.

This season, Paradise handed Shasta one of its two losses — a 27-19 Oct. 31 loss in Paradise.

The Bobcats haven't lost to Shasta this century.

Compound that with Shasta's title berth drought and the Wolves have a chance to vanquish quite a few ghosts Wednesday.

"I've been here seven years," Gingery said. "We all know the history, but these guys are trying to leave their own mark.

"We expect them to rise to the occasion."

Unemployment in Redding, CA

When John Nogle was laid off three months ago from his position at the Shasta County Opportunity Center, he knew it would be difficult to find another job.

In that respect, the Shasta Lake resident hasn't been disappointed.

"I'd tell people looking for a job to take whatever's out there - it's slim pickings," Nogle said one recent weekday morning at the Smart Business Resource Center in downtown Redding. "Even if it's a minimum-wage job, it's better than nothing."

Nogle's hardly alone.

Unemployment in Shasta County in October jumped to a 15-year high as continued declines in the construction sector helped spark the increase. Construction jobs in the county last month totaled 3,700, a 21 percent drop from the 4,700 who were employed in the trade in October 2007, the state reported Friday.

Shasta's jobless rate in October was 10 percent, up from 9.5 percent in September and 7 percent from a year ago. Last month's unemployment rate tied October 1994 and was the highest since October 1993, when it reached 10.7 percent.

In Shasta County, there were 8,900 unemployed in October, up from 8,300 in September, and nearly 3,000 more people without jobs in October 2007. The number of people applying for unemployment benefits in Shasta County last month was 2,469, up from 2,039 a year ago.

California's unemployment rate jumped to 8.2 percent in October, the highest rate in 14 years, just as a state fund that pays unemployment benefits was about to run out of money.

State officials are preparing to ask the federal government to step in with a loan on Dec. 1 so they can continue paying jobless benefits to California's now more than 1.5 million unemployed, nearly a third of whom have lost their jobs in the last year.

Shasta County saw year-over-year job gains in farming, manufacturing, local government, and educational and health services.

For Nogle, who's divorced with three school-aged children, job hunting has been mentally exhausting. But he doesn't have time to dwell on his bad luck.

Nogle's rent is $510 a month and he lives on $800 a month in unemployment benefits. He makes about two trips a week to the Smart Center, which has a database of job openings across the state and also helps job-seekers with resumes, cover letters and interview tips.

"It's been pretty hard. I will go to the Salvation Army to get canned goods and make sure we have food on the table," said Nogle, who made $9 an hour at the county before state budget cuts eliminated his job. "I want welfare to be the last resort."

Nogle's 13-year-old son helps out when he can by doing odd jobs like mowing neighbors' lawns.

"I won't let anything get me down - with kids you can't," Nogle said. "I told my oldest that just because you're down right now, doesn't mean it's the end of the world."

Nogle has applied for a temporary position at Sierra Pacific Industries in Anderson. He might find out Tuesday whether he gets the job.

For Sylvia Partridge, who quit her medical assistant job in Medford, Ore., and moved here to be closer to her family, finding job listings aren't difficult. But it's tough landing an interview when as many as 30 people apply for one job.

"It's very competitive," Partridge said while searching for work at the Smart Center.

Partridge applies for about two jobs a week. She's discovered that hourly wages in Shasta County are below what she made in Medford, Ore.

"I left making $13.41 (an hour) and most of the jobs I've applied for are 10 to 12 dollars an hour," said Partridge, who rents a home in Anderson.

Partridge's husband, who works in retail loss prevention, still lives in Medford. The couple's house is for sale but Partridge's husband won't move until she finds a job.

Meantime, she lives with her two children.

"I haven't applied for unemployment. I'm getting by, so it's OK," Partridge said. "I watch what I spend. There's no eating out; we do what we need to do."

Friday, November 21, 2008

Business in Redding..the Winners

The Greater Redding Chamber of Commerce honored the best in customer service with its annual Hall of Excellence awards.

Two businesses and an individual walked away with top honors Wednesday night at the Holiday Inn.

Redding Veterinary Clinic on Westside Road won first place for service. The business is owned and operated by Dr. Gerald Bond, who has five full-time employees. Bond's dedication to animals is illustrated by the time he donates to the Shasta Wildlife Refuge.

The veterinarian business was established in 1942 by Dr. C.J. Ferreira and his wife, Dorothy.

Penguin Paddlers won first place for retail business. Penguin Paddlers, which sells kayaks and accessories, is owned by Garth Schmeck and is at 3330 Railroad Ave. in Redding.

Schmeck's customers are a dedicated band of paddlers who meet weekly for paddle excursions and travel monthly on outdoor adventures.

Recently, Penguin Paddlers staged the great penguin migration, meeting at the old store and walking 200 yards north to the new location, each customer carrying a piece of equipment.

Individually, handyman Erin Johnson of Erin Johnson Handyman Service won top honors.

Johnson has made a habit of fixing just about anything since his arrival in Redding.

This year, 24 shoppers visited 156 nominees - 96 in the individual category and 61 businesses - over a four-week period.

Fishing in the North State

Without help, almost two-thirds of the state's native salmon, steelhead and trout could be gone within a century.

That includes seven fish swimming in north state waters, according to a report released this week by California Trout, a San Francisco-based fish and watershed advocacy group.

"They are all in serious danger of extinction," said Peter Moyle, a University of California at Davis ecology professor who wrote the 350-page report.

In danger of extinction in the north state are redband trout on the McCloud River; coho and spring chinook salmon on the Klamath River; and winter, spring and late-fall run chinook, as well as the Central Valley steelhead, on the Sacramento River.

They're endangered by the changes people have made to rivers and the land surrounding them, such as dams and logging, Moyle said.

"Every place has its own different reasons," he said, "but it all deals with how we treat the land and the water."

All of the fish facing possible extinction are indicator species that give warning of problems in the health of their streams, said Curtis Knight, Mount Shasta area manager for California Trout.

"These fish are telling us that something is wrong with those systems," Knight said.

In two of the past three years, he said, only about 50 fish of each species have made it back to the Shasta and Scott rivers, which feed into the Klamath River in Siskiyou County.

"These guys are hanging on by a thread," Knight said.

And there is precedent of extinction in the north state, with the bull trout - which was only found on the McCloud River - declared extinct in 1997.

But there are many habitat-restoration projects around the north state that are under way to help the ailing fish, Knight and Moyle said.

Those include the massive restoration of the Klamath River that would take place after the removal of four hydroelectric dams that block salmon from spawning habitat. Earlier this month, leaders from California and Oregon, the federal government and the dams' owner, Portland-based Pacific Power, announced an agreement in principle to remove the dams by 2020.

Along with restoration work, the California Trout report called for the state to hire more game wardens to enforce laws that protect watersheds and overhaul management of the state's hatcheries.

State scientists who study the north state fish deferred comment on the report to a spokeswoman in Sacramento - Jordan Traverson - who in turn released a typed statement from state Department of Fish and Game Director Donald Koch.

It read:

"We look forward to reading the 100-plus-page report 'SOS: California's Native Fish Crisis,' released by California Trout today. We thank California Trout for their dedication to California's native fish species. We appreciate their support and look forward to engaging them and other stakeholders in finding solutions to further our efforts to conserve the state's valuable fish and wildlife resources."

Life In America...What Happened on This Date?

Today is Friday, Nov. 21, the 326th day of 2008. There are 40 days left in the year.

On this day in:

1908

J.A. Johnson and father B. Johnson visited Redding on a trip from Olinda. The Johnsons owned a large tract of land near Olinda, which they were selling in small parcels for colonization purposes.

1958

Redding police received vandalism reports from three owners of airships parked at Benton Airpark. Nothing had been stolen, but a radio antenna on one was cut and door locks were sprung on all the planes.

1983

A battle cry had sounded against the north state's marijuana growers. One of the area's most notorious growers was "Dangerous Dan," who supposedly stood 6-foot-11 and weighed between 240 and 290 pounds. When authorities closed in on his camp, he got away, again.

1998

Country singer Merle Haggard played host and mentor to Palo Cedro Cub Scout Pack 85, Den 1, whose members wanted to spend the day fishing. Haggard gave the boys permission to fish on his Palo Cedro property, but they got more than fish. Haggard first gave the boys some lessons on the finer points of angling, then sent them out with personal fishing guide Mike Martin.

Fishing in Northern California

Fishing In The North State

Posted November 21, 2008 at 22:51 PM

ronlargent

Without help, almost two-thirds of the state's native salmon, steelhead and trout could be gone within a century.

That includes seven fish swimming in north state waters, according to a report released this week by California Trout, a San Francisco-based fish and watershed advocacy group.

"They are all in serious danger of extinction," said Peter Moyle, a University of California at Davis ecology professor who wrote the 350-page report.

In danger of extinction in the north state are redband trout on the McCloud River; coho and spring chinook salmon on the Klamath River; and winter, spring and late-fall run chinook, as well as the Central Valley steelhead, on the Sacramento River.

They're endangered by the changes people have made to rivers and the land surrounding them, such as dams and logging, Moyle said.

"Every place has its own different reasons," he said, "but it all deals with how we treat the land and the water."

All of the fish facing possible extinction are indicator species that give warning of problems in the health of their streams, said Curtis Knight, Mount Shasta area manager for California Trout.

"These fish are telling us that something is wrong with those systems," Knight said.

In two of the past three years, he said, only about 50 fish of each species have made it back to the Shasta and Scott rivers, which feed into the Klamath River in Siskiyou County.

"These guys are hanging on by a thread," Knight said.

And there is precedent of extinction in the north state, with the bull trout - which was only found on the McCloud River - declared extinct in 1997.

But there are many habitat-restoration projects around the north state that are under way to help the ailing fish, Knight and Moyle said.

Those include the massive restoration of the Klamath River that would take place after the removal of four hydroelectric dams that block salmon from spawning habitat. Earlier this month, leaders from California and Oregon, the federal government and the dams' owner, Portland-based Pacific Power, announced an agreement in principle to remove the dams by 2020.

Along with restoration work, the California Trout report called for the state to hire more game wardens to enforce laws that protect watersheds and overhaul management of the state's hatcheries.

State scientists who study the north state fish deferred comment on the report to a spokeswoman in Sacramento - Jordan Traverson - who in turn released a typed statement from state Department of Fish and Game Director Donald Koch.

It read:

"We look forward to reading the 100-plus-page report 'SOS: California's Native Fish Crisis,' released by California Trout today. We thank California Trout for their dedication to California's native fish species. We appreciate their support and look forward to engaging them and other stakeholders in finding solutions to further our efforts to conserve the state's valuable fish and wildlife resources."