HomeMy WebLinkAbout03.08.2022 Public Comment PacketClerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
All Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting.
Enclosed please find all public comment related to the March 08, 2022 Board of
Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia
Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
MEMORANDUM
DATE:
RE:
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting Item 3.01
Contract Amendment with Skyway House, Inc. for Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Services .
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 3.01 at the March 08, 2022 Board of
Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia
Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 3.01 eComments Report
Andrea Smith
Submitted At: 10:54pm 03-04-22
I feel that would be the best for skyway house to provide the substance abuse treatment that way your not
duplicating services
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting Item
4.02 Mental Health Services Act (MHSA) Innovation Proposal: The Resiliency Empowerment Support
Team (REST) at Everhart Village.
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 4.02 at the March 08, 2022 Board
of Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 4.02 eComments Report
Jesica GiannolaSubmitted At: 9:44am 03-08-22This proposal needs the support of our entire county, and I would like to voice mine. The support program for at-risk and
vulnerable people suffering from mental health conditions will be essential in helping lives become
healthier and stable. Without programs like this, so many lives are left without property help and support and we
see people suffering as a result. Please put the full support from the county and partnering services to make
Everhart Village a success. The benefits and services intended by the program are so badly needed in ButteCounty. I would love to see this succeed and be only the starting point for more successful programs and servicesmoving forward. Thank you!
Liz GeorgeSubmitted At: 1:35pm 03-04-22
As a retired mental health professional in Butte County for 30 years, I strongly support this proposal; I believe it
will be of great value to all the citizens of Chico. Thank you for your consideration. -Liz George
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia;
Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Cc:Kennelly, Scott; Nuzum, Danielle
Subject:Public Comment Item 4.02 - FW: Public Comment- Support for Item Number 4.02
Date:Monday, March 7, 2022 8:19:26 AM
Please see public comment pertaining to item 4.02 on tomorrow’s Board of Supervisors Agenda.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
From: Mary Kay Benson <mkbe.sparkles3@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, March 4, 2022 4:06 PM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: Public Comment- Support for Item Number 4.02
Public Comment for Item Number 4.02
I support the REST proposal from Butte County Behavioral Health to refer
clients for CHAT.
In Solidarity,
Mary Kay Benson
Chico
mkbe.sparkles3@gmail.com
510.388.5363
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting Item
4.03 Adoption of an Ordinance Amending Chapter 14, Article XI by adding Section 14-41.6 "Parking
Prohibited on Paved Portions of Cherokee Road".
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 4.03 at the March 08, 2022
Board of Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 4.03 eComments Report
Carolyn Denero
Submitted At: 9:14am 03-08-22
North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve is an amazing natural resource unique to Butte County. Both residentsand out of town visitors flock to the Reserve annually during the wildflower bloom. As many of our outdoor naturalresources are temporarily unavailable for visitation due to wildfires, it is imperative that we find a solution for
managing visitors to accessible recreation during the high visitation season. Parking, for all of the reasons
outlined, has become an issue, but simply putting up No Parking signs is not going to fix the problem. Pleaseconsider the impact the signs will have on even more distributed parking, a more difficult walk along the road, apoor visitor experience (for both locals and out of town visitors). Are there other solutions that could be
considered for longer-term benefit to the visitors to Table Mountain and the surrounding communities who could
benefit from additional visitation?
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting Item
5.01 10:00AM – Timed Item - Resolution Accepting the Butte County Upper Ridge Community
Plan.
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 5.01 at the March 08,
2022 Board of Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia
Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 5.01 eComments Report
SHANNON BURTONSubmitted At: 6:30pm 03-07-22After reviewing the draft, overall, we are quite pleased with the concepts and future plans. Moreso after includingJohn Stonebraker's comments from the February hearing. With that said, there is one area of concern. TheLakeridge Circle development raises some questions regarding commerce in relation to the nature of consumersand residents. We are troubled that too much "real estate" has been allocated to multi-family housing instead ofdispersing it more equitably throughout the community.
Based on the figure Chapter 2: pg. 5 and Figure 3.1, we do not notice any proposal for multi-family housing to bewoven into the community further down Skyway (ie: between the fire station and Paradise Pines RV park or onSteiffer near Cedarwood Elementary).
This raises two comments:
With limited opportunity for commercial development it makes more sense to have an anchor of retail, restaurantand services in a "village layout" rather than a long linear pathway. Consumers are more apt to park in onelocation (reducing carbon footprint and promoting walkability) and utilize 2 or 3 clustered blocks of services andretail over repeated stops for the same experience. Creating a place of convenience, safety, intuitive retail andservices will be important to keeping revenue in Magalia for maintaining and developing its infrastructure. IfMagalia wants to be able to market itself as a destination spot for events it should have an area that is able to besafely blocked off (Lakeridge Circle) so that pedestrians can safely meander the variety of locations. The otherconsideration is that once multi-family houses are built on the view side of the road, Views from the currentcommercial designation will be blocked. This is part of the appeal of outdoor dining.
Possible compromises could be:1. A couple of multi-family developments at the north end of Lakeridge Circle near Lakeridge Crt.2. Work-live options for the view side of the road.The other notion is affordability and social impact. Magalia will need affordable multi-family housing. While theintention is great for affordability, the reality is that because of location to businesses and services as well as anexcellent view, the housing may not be affordable. It is a perfect opportunity for revenue that may not be justifiedin other locations. In regards to social impact, studies have historically proven that if housing is not mixed wellthroughout a community, artificial pockets of poverty and economic prejudice form. The economic and socialfabric of the community needs to be woven evenly in order to promote a healthy and empowered community.Otherwise, economic and social "lack" promote resentment and encourage increased crime. This works directlyagainst the re-development concept of Magalia. A community that supports the most fragile elements of its socialand economic infrastructure is a resilient community. No members left behind.
We would appreciate our comments and concerns being communicated in tomorrow's hearing. Thank you foryour time and consideration.
Steven RodowickSubmitted At: 11:37am 03-07-22I would to support the Upper Ridge Community Plan, particularly with respect the the Recreation element as wellas the Resiliency element.As I noted in my comments to the Planning commission on 1/27, I would like to see emphasis on extending theold Union Pacific right-of-way as a trail beyond Paradise into the unincorporated portion of the County. Perhapsall the way to Stirling City. This right-of-way essentially disappears behind fencing and gates and generalovergrowth. To my knowledge, that right-of-way still exists while some adjacent property owners have assumedcontrol over this land.With potential grant funding and other seed money, this trail would greatly expand the biking and hikingopportunities for the upper ridge, as well as be a destination site for outdoor enthusiasts throughout the region.
Thank you,Steve Rodowick
https://mail.google.commailu/0ui=2&ik=aaa8d40a63&attid=0.0&permmsgid=msgf:1726598018929711418&th=17f61bc01293a&view=att&disp=safe
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting
Item 5.02 11:00AM - Timed Item – American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) Funding.
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 5.02 at the March 08, 2022 Board of
Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia;
Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Cc:Hurtado, Maria
Subject:Public Comment Item 5.02 - FW: Typos corrected public comment BOS 3/8/22 item 5.02
Date:Tuesday, March 8, 2022 11:26:11 AM
Please see public comment on item 5.02.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
-----Original Message-----
From: K Brazil <fewzil@att.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 8, 2022 11:08 AM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: Typos corrected public comment BOS 3/8/22 item 5.02
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
I encourage the Board to take the allocations of the ARPA funds with serious review. In my opinion the funds need
to go directly to all people not just hikers on a trail What about the recovery programs for the elderly the children
and small businesses What about the middle class working community. People need direct help not just agencies.
Thank you for doing due dillegence. The big forest service does not need more of these funds Kathy
Sent from my iPhone
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia;
Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Cc:Hurtado, Maria
Subject:Public Comment Item 5.02 - FW: Board of Supervisors 3/8/22 item 5:02. Re: List
Date:Tuesday, March 8, 2022 11:56:15 AM
Please see public comment pertaining to item 5.02.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
-----Original Message-----
From: K Brazil <fewzil@att.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 8, 2022 11:52 AM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: Board of Supervisors 3/8/22 item 5:02. Re: List
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
To the Board of Supervisors regarding the LIST of ARPA fund to allocate for the list of ideas/ projects/proposals, if
you approve without speaking to each one. any public listening to the audio in session meeting does not know what
was on the list.
Sent from my iPhone
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia;
Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Subject:Public Comment Item 5.02 - FW: County growth item 5.02 BOS 3/8/22 meeting
Date:Tuesday, March 8, 2022 12:57:00 PM
Please see public comment.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
-----Original Message-----
From: K Brazil <fewzil@att.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 8, 2022 12:14 PM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: County growth item 5.02 BOS 3/8/22 meeting
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
In listening to the live BOS 3/8/22 meeting Supervisor D .L stated the County growth is in Chico. Oroville has
enormous development occurring and Lafco approved County land to be annexed into the City of Oroville at 18th
and Feather Ave so that a city planned development will impact County residents and impact the known FEMA
floodplain that exsists in the County along Ruddy Creek with no newly prepared EIR documents and this city
development will be allowed without addressing the Thermalito Master Drainage known diffiencies that will impact
County properties and also without addressing the impact to County roadways with no newly prepared traffic
studies. So when the BOS discusses County growth please look at the whole picture not just Chico. The County is
impacted by the cities and not always in a beneficial way. Kathy
Sent from my iPhone
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia; Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami; Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Cc:Daneluk, Paula; Nuzum, Danielle
Subject:Public Comment Item 5.01 - FW: March 8, 2022, Board of Supervisors Public Hearing Notice: Planning Commission Resolution PC 22-01
Date:Tuesday, March 8, 2022 8:00:55 AM
Please see public comment pertaining to item 5.01 on today’s Board Meeting Agenda.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
From: 1122 Designs <1122designs.xyz@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, March 7, 2022 6:25 PM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: March 8, 2022, Board of Supervisors Public Hearing Notice: Planning Commission Resolution PC 22-01
Hi,
My name is Shannon Burton. My husband, Tim Ryan, and I have a small business based out of Magalia. After reviewing the draft, overall, we are quite pleased with the concepts and future plans. Moreso, after including John Stonebraker's comments from the February hearing. With that said,
Tim and I have one area of concern. The Lakeridge Circle development raises some questions regarding commerce in relation to the nature of consumers and residents. We are troubled that too much "real estate" has been allocated to multi-family housing instead of dispersing it more
equitably throughout the community.
Based on the figure Chapter
2: pg. 5 and Figure 3.1, we
do not notice any proposal
for multi-family housing to be
woven into the community
further down Skyway (ie:
between the fire station and
Paradise Pines RV park or
on Steiffer near Cedarwood
Elementary). This raises
two comments:
· With limited opportunity for commercial development it makes more sense to have an anchor of retail, restaurant and services in a "village layout" rather than a long linear pathway. Consumers are more apt to park in one location (reducing carbon footprint and promoting walkability)
and utilize 2 or 3 clustered blocks of services and retail over repeated stops for the same experience. Creating a place of convenience, safety, intuitive retail and services will be important to keeping revenue in Magalia for maintaining and developing its infrastructure. If Magalia wants
to be able to market itself as a destination spot for events it should have an area that is able to be safely blocked off (Lakeridge Circle) so that pedestrians can safely meander the variety of locations. The other consideration is that once multi-family houses are built on the view side of
the road, Views from the current commercial designation will be blocked. This is part of the appeal of outdoor dining. Possible compromises could be:
o A couple of multi-family developments at the north end of Lakeridge Circle near Lakeridge Crt.
o Work-live options for the view side of the road.
o
· The other notion
is affordability and
social impact.
Magalia will need
affordable multi-
family housing.
While the intention
is great for
affordability, the
reality is that
because of
location to
businesses and
services as well as
an excellent view,
the housing may
not be affordable.
It is a perfect
opportunity for
revenue that may
not be justified in
other locations. In
regards to social
impact, studies
have historically
proven that if
housing is not
mixed well
throughout a
community,
artificial pockets of
poverty and
economic
prejudice form.
The economic and
social fabric of the
community needs
to be woven
evenly in order to
promote a healthy
and empowered
community.
Otherwise,
economic and
social "lack"
promote
resentment and
encourage
increased crime.
This works directly
against the re-
development
concept of
Magalia. A
community that
supports the most
fragile elements of
its social and
economic
infrastructure is a
resilient community.
No members left
behind.
We would appreciate our comments and concerns being communicated in tomorrow's hearing.
Thank you for your time and consideration.
Best,
Shannon Burton | Tim Ryan
Sent from Mail for Windows
Clerk of the Board Andy Pickett Chief Administrative Officer and Clerk of the Board
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200 T: 530.552.3300
Oroville, California 95965 F: 530.538.7120
Members of the Board
Bill Connelly | Debra Lucero | Tami Ritter | Tod Kimmelshue | Doug Teeter
buttecounty.net/administration
DATE:
RE:
MEMORANDUM
March 08, 2022
Public Comment Submitted for March 08, 2022 Butte County Board of Supervisors
Meeting Item 5.03 B COVID-19 Update by the Public Health Director.
Enclosed please find all public comment related to Item 5.03 B at the March 08, 2022 Board
of Supervisors Meeting.
Shyanne Valencia Administrative Assistant to Clerk of the Board
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 5.03 B eComments Report
Diana DreissSubmitted At: 11:59am 03-06-22A “vaccine” with reports of wayyyy over a million adverse events and deaths is NOT safe, effective, or free aspromoted by Butte County Board of Supervisors and Butte County Public Health as anyone can clearly see.
The center for Disease Control and Prevention released new data showing a total of 1,134,984 reports of adverseevents following COVID-19 vaccines between December 14, 2020 and February 18, 2022 - up 31,031 comparedwith February 4, 2022, to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VARES). VARES is the primarygovernment-funded system for reporting adverse vaccine reactions in the U.S.
It is a voluntary reporting system for reporting adverse reactions to the U.S. and has been estimated to accountfor only 1% of vaccine injuries.
Every Friday, VARES publishes vaccine injury reports received as of a specified date. Reports submitted toVARES require further investigation before a causal relationship can be confirmed.
The data included a total of 24,402 reports of deaths - up 787 compared with February 4, 2022. And 196,203reports of serious injuries - up 8,068 compared with February 4, 2022 with tragic stories that never end.
NOTE: *Children have a 99.97% chance of recovering from COVID; however, if they DON’T get the shot theyhave a 100% chance of NOT being vaccine injured!
U.S. VARES data for 5- to 11- year olds show:8,564 adverse events188 rated as serious4 reports of death16 reports of myocarditis and pericarditis (heart inflammation)39 reports of blood clotting disorders
U.S. VARES data for 12- to 17- year olds show:29,416 adverse events1,693 rated as serious39 reported deaths69 reports of anaphylaxis (life threatening)643 reports of myocarditis and pericarditis159 reports of blood clotting disorders
As of February 18, 5,139 pregnant women reported adverse events related to COVID vaccines, including 1,644reports of miscarriage or premature birth.
We know Covid-19 vaccines do NOT prevent infection or viral transmission and natural immunity is robust and farsuperior. In addition to VARES website we have the Yellow Card, Eudra System, whistleblowers, DMED data,insurance documentation (deaths & injuries), & others.
Coronavirus vaccines would have been withdrawn from the market due to the UNACCEPTABLY high mortalityrate. Usually a vaccine is withdrawn from the market after 50 deaths or less (25). VARES is supposed to act asan EARLY WARNING SYSTEM and no one is being given legal INFORMED CONSENT which is a violation ofour laws, the Nuremberg Code, as well as many others.
At the same time, Butte County Board of Supervisors (and others) appear to be breaking many state and federallaws by by continuing to fake a medical emergency for funding.
18 U.S. Code 104018 U.S Code 1038CA Health and Safety Code 101080Penal Code 148.3Title 18 U.S.C. Section 142
Board of Supervisors Meeting - Item 5.03 B eComments Report
Diana Dreiss Continued
Submitted At: 11:59am 03-06-22
Government Code 8630
42 U.S. Code 1986
Title U.S.C. Code Section 241
HSC Div., 105, Part 1, Chapter 3, Section 120175.5
Emergency Services Act 8558b
Disaster Fraud
We the People DO NOT approve of unlawful actions by the Butte County Board of Supervisors.
Money is NOT a reason to put Butte County residents and their children in harms way.
The pandemic was a hoax created by a fake PCR test (which can not diagnose), fake news and unscientific
science. NONE of the tests are approved or validated (EUA). This level of malfeasance (wrongdoing or
misconduct especially by public officials) has never happened in our history.
Masks, lockdowns, and vaccines all proven failures and must stop! The harm especially perpetrated on our youth
is unconscionable.
Masks cause carbon dioxide poisoning, significant and possibly permanent damage to a child’s brain, lowers I.Q,
retards speech and language development, cripples social skills, and has lead to depression, self harm, and
substance abuse.
Medical literature and modern-day heroes are exposing all the fraud, lies, and we will hold those who participated
accountable.
You appear to be aiding, abetting, and violating your oath of office you have sworn to uphold. I implore this board
to do the right thing and STOP promoting unethical human experimentation.
.ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
From:Paulsen, Shaina
To:Alpert, Bruce; Bennett, Robin; Clerk of the Board; Connelly, Bill; Cook, Holly; Cook, Robin; Hironimus, Patrizia;
Kimmelshue, Tod; Lucero, Debra; Paulsen, Shaina; Pickett, Andy; Reaster, Kayla; Ring, Brian; Ritter, Tami;
Sweeney, Kathleen; Teeter, Doug; Valencia, Shyanne
Cc:York, Danette; Nuzum, Danielle
Subject:Public Comment Item 5.03B - FW: AGENDA ITEM #5.03B
Date:Tuesday, March 8, 2022 10:42:49 AM
Attachments:BOS SMARTEST Report 3_9_22.pdf
Please see public comment for item 5.03B.
Shaina Paulsen
Associate Clerk of The Board
Butte County Administration
25 County Center Drive, Suite 200, Oroville, CA 95965
T: 530.552.3304 | F: 530.538.7120
From: Julie Threet <ladythreet@gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 8, 2022 10:31 AM
To: Clerk of the Board <clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: AGENDA ITEM #5.03B
For distribution to the Supervisors. I will cover a few of these today! Also send to the Staff or
anyone you think would be interested!
Julie
Butte County Board of Supervisors Meeting – March 8, 2022
Agenda Item #5.03B & #5.04
Note: I pray for the day when we get work-able information from our
Public Health organizations. The dis-information they propagate is hurting
so many people. Damaging livelihoods, permanently scaring relationships
with family members, forever breaking the doctor/patient relationship, and
asking teachers to spend valuable time on mask. Shameful. All because of
power and $....
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Our Founding Fathers, who wisely formed a Constitutional
Republic rather than a monarchy or democracy, understood
America would not survive if unscrupulous leaders became able
to usurp the government for their own personal or pol itical
priorities.
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Newsom “SMARTER” Plan
S = Shots
M = Masks
A = Awareness
R = Readiness
T = Testing
E = Education
R = Rx
A 2nd Opinion of the “SMARTER” Plan
Freedom to choose with informed consent.
SHOTS: Governor Newsom actually got something right with this one… IT IS A SHOT… there’s a
bullet in the gun… you pull back the syringe and plunge it straight into your little kid’s arm... SO THE
GOVERNOR’S PLAN CONTINUES TO PUSH A “WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION” ON OUR
CHILDREN IN ORDER TO GO TO PUBLIC SCHOOL WHICH IS BASICALLY LIKE HOLDING
TRADITIONAL SCHOOL EXPERIENCE HOSTAGE. There continue to be more and more reports
about adverse effects as more parents are forced to take a chance on this shot. I want to make sure
all parents are aware and take a pause before having their healthy little kid shot:
• Children under 18 are 51x more likely to die from the shot than from COVID if
umvaccinated.
• For Omicron, it would take 58,000 child vaccinations to prevent one-child
hospitalization . Avg stay is 1-2 days.
• Pfizer withdrew its U.S. “EUA” application for children < 5 because two doses did
not produce expected immunity in 2 - to 5-year-olds.
https://m.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/the-alarming-trends-in-covid-jab-side-
effects_4319841.html?
MASKS: POPE TELLS ITALIAN ARMY TO REMOVE THERE MASKS FOR HUGE GROUP
PHOTO.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10568679/Pope-tells-Italian-Army-
officers-remove-Covid-masks.html?adobe_mc=TS%3D1646760109
AWARENESS: ANOTHER REASON TO MOVE TO FLORIDA!! The Florida
Department of Health is going to be the first state [department] to officially
recommend against the COVID-19 vaccines for healthy children”.
https://m.theepochtimes.com/mkt_app/florida-to-become-first-state-to-recommend-
against-covid-19-vaccines-for-healthy-children_4321865.html
READINESS: The Governor warns us to be ready and this is why he keeps his
hands on the emergency power reigns. We all know this is a seasonal flu
and Danette has its endemic. So please take the influenza policy and just call
it an overall seasonal PIC policy which is how the hospitals code DEATHS
“pneumonia, influenza, covid”. They are inter-related.
TESTING: On the new BCPH Dashboard there is Butte County Jail icon.
THERE’S NOTHING ABOUT VACCINATION. Are the arrested or incarcerated required to be
vaccinated?
Are they required to wear masks?
Nothing on vaccination %.
Testing inmates: 4518 total. 3921 negative. 498 recovered. 1 sick.
Testing staff: 151 tested positive 148 recovered.
Where’s all their vaccination status. Who's mandated?
If our children can’t go to school without vaccination, an inmate or arrested person can’t go
to jail. It has to be mandatory. I can’t go to visit a friend in the hospital because I can’t have
the booster. Any I recovered from a mild case of the omicron flu. Not good.
EDUCATION: BE AWARE OF THE SIDE EFFECTS BEFORE YOU SHOOT YOUR OWN
CHILD. Public health has become a dictator over public education in Butte County.
And it’s creating a growing divide that isn’t healthy. IT’S TIME TO TURN THIS UPSIDE
DOWN… Education needs to be on top driving the CA School Vaccine Mandate.
https://www.powerhomeschool.org/articles/parent-guide-to-start-home-school/
RX: The first approved use of Ivermectin for humans was in 1998 to treat River Blindness. THANK
GOD WE DIDN’T YANK IT FROM THEM AND ACUSE THEM OF TAKING HORSE DE -
WORMER.
New data indicates that mass treatment with ivermectin—a drug that was a workhorse of
tropical medicine long before it emerged as a controversial COVID -19 treatment—has
eliminated river blindness transmission in two states in Nigeria, the first Nigerian states to
achieve this distinction in a country that has the world's highest burden of the disease .
River blindness, also known as onchocerciasis, is caused by tiny parasitic worms transmitted
by infective bites from blackflies that breed in rapidly flowing rivers. In humans, the worm's
embryonic larvae routinely produce eye lesions that eventually can lead to blindness. River
blindness is found widely in Africa, and there are isolated pockets of disease in Brazil,
Venezuela and Yemen.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2 021-11-ivermectin-river-nigeria-west-nile.html