Category Archives: Bike Trail

Boy Scouts will sell campground in Sacramento

Camp Pollock, the historic Sacramento campground where generations of Northern California boys have practiced their Scouting skills, is soon to be on the sales block, officials have confirmed.

One potential buyer? SafeGround, the nonprofit group that is seeking to establish a place in Sacramento where homeless people can live in small cottages with basic services.

“The executive board has made a decision to sell the camp,” said Paul Helman, president of the Golden Empire Council of the Boy Scouts of America.

He said the council, which oversees the activities of 20,000 Scouts from Vacaville to Redding, has outgrown the Sacramento property, which stretches over 10 acres off Northgate Boulevard along the American River. Members, he said, are concerned about encroaching development and traffic.

More at Sacbee.com >>>

Dead body found at Discovery Park

A dead body was found at Discovery Park early Tuesday morning.

Police said a cyclist was riding through the park when they noticed burning leaves.  The cyclist called the fire department who came out and extinguished the fire.  After putting out the flames, firefighters discovered the burned body of what they believed to be a female.

More at News10.net >>>

American River Parkway crimes decline, despite cuts in ranger staffing

Despite budget cuts and reductions in the number of park rangers, crime along the American River Parkway dropped dramatically last year, new figures from Sacramento County indicate.

Car break-ins, violent crime and misdemeanors all dropped in 2011 compared to the previous year, according to a ranger report released this week.

The only segment that saw an appreciable increase in activity was in the number of citations issued for illegal camping, an outgrowth of efforts by officials to stem the influx of homeless camping along the lower end of the parkway near Discovery Park.

Some attribute the decrease to the overall drop in the crime rate, a phenomenon that has been seen in jurisdictions nationwide.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Sheriff’s detectives arrest suspect in Monday’s fatal shooting in Rancho Cordova park

Sacramento County sheriff’s detectives have arrested a 47-year-old man they suspect in Monday’s shooting death of a Rancho Cordova parks district supervisor, according to authorities.

The suspect, whose name has not been released, was arrested this morning on suspicion of murder and is being questioned by homicide detectives, said sheriff’s spokesman Deputy Jason Ramos.

Ramos said he will release the suspect’s name after he is booked into the Sacramento County Main Jail. However, Ramos did confirm that the suspect is a former employee of the parks district.

The man is suspected of fatally shooting 59-year-old Steve Ebert, superintendent of the Cordova Recreation & Parks District, as he arrived for work at the district offices in Hagan Community Park early Monday.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Parks superintendent fatally shot while driving in Haggin Community Park; no arrests

Police are investigating the shooting death of a parks superintendent whose body was found in his bullet-riddled car in a Northern California park that runs along the American River Parkway.

Sacramento County Sheriff’s Deputy Jason Ramos said a park employee came upon 59-year-old Steve Ebert’s car around 6 a.m. Monday in Hagan Community Park in Rancho Cordova, an eastern suburb of Sacramento.

Ebert was the superintendent of Cordova Recreation and Park District who oversaw maintenance of 38 parks.

Hagan Community Park abuts the 23-mile American River Parkway, a well-known jogging, hiking and bike trail that attracts some 5 million visitors each year.

More at WashingtonPost.com >>>

Bike trail between Rainbow Bridge and Folsom Dam to be improved

A rough section of a bike trail between the Rainbow Bridge and the state parks headquarters below Folsom Dam will be smoothed over once the weather improves.

Repair of the bumpy bike path was supposed to begin this week, but a rainy forecast has temporarily stalled the project. On the bumpiest section, crews will have to pull up about 20-30 feet of pavement, remove some tree roots and re-pave.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Legal fight looms over valley elderberry longhorn beetle

A group of Sacramento-area property owners and land managers has threatened to sue the federal government if it does not remove a native beetle from the endangered species list.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed removing the valley elderberry longhorn beetle from the endangered species list in 2006. But the process dragged and the beetle is still protected.

The Pacific Legal Foundation, a Sacramento nonprofit law firm, claims the delay may have cost its clients millions of dollars. Those clients include landowners, levee maintenance districts and farm organizations required to protect beetle habitat.

There are signs that the beetle population has improved, and its habitat is relatively abundant. The valley elderberry bush, the beetle’s specific host plant, is hardy and commonplace. But because the beetle remains protected, construction projects are often required to relocate or replant the bushes at great expense.

More at SacBee.com >>>

Some homeless say they won’t leave illegal camp site

A showdown appears to be brewing as Sacramento police officers evict 150 homeless people from an illegal campground along the American River.

While most of the homeless appear to be complying with orders to pack up their tents and move somewhere else, some say they will stand their ground and face arrest because they have no place else to go.

The confrontation started about 8 a.m. Wednesday when around 40 police officers arrived at the site near the intersection of North 10th Street and the American River. The campers were warned earlier this month that eviction was imminent.

“They asked me what I’m going to do,” said “Brother” Eli, a camp elder. “I said ‘I don’t have anywhere to go.’

“Recent efforts by city officials have added nearly 60 additional shelter beds for homeless men and women, but more than that number are camping at the American River site.

More at SacBee.com >>>