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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Desert Hot Springs Code Enforcement Cases & Foreclosure Stats

Mountain views surround Desert Hot Springs, California
by Anna Miller, Secretary
B-BAR-H Ranch Neighborhood Association

Desert Hot Springs, California is probably one of the best kept secrets in the State. It's a quiet city nestled between Palm Springs and Yucca Valley. It has a beautiful landscape with many new homes for sale. The cost of living in Desert Hot Springs isn't quite as high as its neighboring Desert Cities, and it has all the conveniences with short travel times to many other areas.


B-BAR-H Ranch Arch constructed in the 1920's is in need of repair


Our Community, the B-BAR-H Ranch neighborhood, is located in Riverside County between Desert Hot Springs and Palm Springs. We're about a 10 minute drive to either city. Palm Springs is well-known and developed. Desert Hot Springs is smaller, mostly residential with a few shopping centers and many, small, well-known spa resorts. It's the perfect, quiet area to live and raise a family. Dining out is less expensive than other Desert Cities, and there are restaurants to please all sorts of traditional Thai, Italian, Mexican and American diners. The service is great and the people are friendly.


The B-BAR-H Ranch organized a neighborhood community watch program in 2008. Under the direction of a group of neighbors, the B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association holds meetings and helps organize neighborhood functions to maintain the property value of the new homes located in the B-BAR-H Ranch neighborhood.



View from Pierson Blvd in Desert Hot Springs, California
An important function held throughout the year is a neighborhood clean up day sponsored by Chaka Ferrel, Community Improvement Specialist, Riverside County Code Enforcement Department. The B-BAR-H Ranch works in partnership with Code Enforcement to obtain annual clean up goals. Chaka, and fellow associate, Regina Keyes, Code Enforcement Officer, attended and presented at the B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association meeting held on January 17, 2009.



Courtesy of City-Data.com


As follow up to our in depth discussion with Code Enforcement on January 17th, Chaka responded to our request with details about our area. According to Chaka Ferrel, as of November 2008 statistics, the Desert Hot Springs area has about 253 properties in foreclosure, and 39% of the 253 foreclosed homes have open, active Code Enforcement cases. There are about 98 Code Enforcement cases as summarized below:
  • 20 – Accumulated Rubbish (20.4 %)
  • 7 – Construction without Permit (7 %)
  • 60 – Substandard Structures / Dwellings (61.2 %)
  • 2 – Vehicle Abatement (2.4 %)
  • 9 – Zone Violations (9 %)

Our goal is to continue to work in partnership with Riverside County Code Enforcement to keep the B-BAR-H Neighborhood clear of violations. Our next neighborhood clean up day is being planned for Spring 2009. The date, location and activities will be defined and posted here. We'll also send out an email and notify the neighborhood by printed newsletter. The tasks and activities sponsored by the B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association are accomplished by a team of concerned neighbors. We work together to uphold the quality of our neighborhood.

For more information, to Subscribe to our emails, to submit an article for this blog, or to become a part of the B-BAR-H Ranch Community Association, please send your email address to Webmaster(at)PaintbrushTrail.com.

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Bus Stop Fears Come to a Halt for Worried DHS Mother

from Steve Grasha, B-Bar-H Resident
By Elyse Miller , News Channel 3

Parents will do anything they can to keep their children safe. A Desert Hot Springs mother spent weeks trying to put a stop to a dangerous walk her son makes every day: it's the walk to his bus stop. Desperate to protect her son, she turned to KESQ for help.

Just as the sun is rising and people are rushing to work, Brenda Soto's 10-year-old son Steven waits for the cars to clear to get to the school bus.

"I go to work worried every day if he made it to school ok. Did he cross ok? Did he get hit by a car?" says Soto.

The speed limit along Mountain View Road is 55 mph. Steven has to cross the road twice a day, before and after school. There's no crosswalk, stop sign or traffic light for at least a mile down the road.

"The sun is in the drivers' eyes or sometimes they're on the phone," says Soto. "People aren't looking for a 10-year-old kid at 6:45 in the morning."

Memorial crosses along the road remind Soto of what could and has happened. Last year, Carissa Nwene was hit and killed as she walked to Desert Hot Springs Middle School, which is the same school Steven goes to.

"I don't want it to be a little too late," says Soto.

Soto took Steven's safety into her own hands, making calls and asking for a bus stop on their side of the road or for a crosswalk.

"They told me eventually they'll get to it. What does it take for it to eventually come?"

Desperate for immediate help, she turned to KESQ. We made dozens of phone calls, and, finally, the Palm Springs Unified School District's Transportation Department took a look at the problem.

One week after our first call to the department, a new stop was added to the bus route. Now, Steven doesn't have to cross the road to get to school. Instead, the bus picks him up right in front of his house, driving away his mother's fear.

Soto now hopes the Transportation Department will install a sign to warn drivers that students are in the area.

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Lost your rooftop solar panels? Check the Web

Solar panels were stolen from the roof of Jim & Shayna Powell's home in Palm Desert, California.
(J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times)
from Steve Grasha, B-Bar-H Resident
by Kate Galbraith, International Herald Tribune

DESERT HOT SPRINGS, California: Solar power, with its promise of emissions-free renewable energy, boasts a growing number of fans. Some of them, it turns out, are thieves.

Just ask Glenda Hoffman, whose fury has not abated since 16 solar panels vanished from her roof in this sun-baked town in three separate burglaries in May, sometimes as she slept. She is ready if the criminals turn up again.

"I have a shotgun right next to the bed and a .22 under my pillow," Hoffman said.

Police departments in California - the biggest market for solar power, with more than 33,000 installations - are seeing a rash of such burglaries, though nobody compiles overall statistics.

Investigators do not believe the thieves are acting out of concern for their carbon footprints. Rather, the authorities assume that many panels make their way to unwitting homeowners, sometimes via the Internet.

Last November, someone tried to sell solar panels stolen from a toll road in Newport Beach for $100 each on eBay. Detectives from the local police department entered the bidding and won the panels, which were worth nearly $1,500 each, according to Sergeant Evan Sailor, a Newport Beach police spokesman.

When Nathan Tyrone Mitchell, a resident of Santa Monica, showed up to hand over the panels, the police greeted him with handcuffs.

Mitchell, who was charged with possession of stolen property, has pleaded not guilty. His lawyer, Charles Stoddard, said that his client had bought the panels from someone on Craigslist and then tried to resell them on eBay for a profit. "Our contention is that Mr. Mitchell is just an innocent purchaser who kind of got caught up in this thing," Stoddard said.

In Contra Costa County, detectives accustomed to handling thefts of copper began to notice solar panels disappearing in the past six months, according to Jimmy Lee, a spokesman for the county sheriff's office.

This summer, a police officer on a routine patrol became suspicious when he spotted a man trying to sell solar panels to a home builder who had advertised on Craigslist that he was seeking panels.

The officer confiscated the solar panels and, after detectives found that they matched panels stolen from a school, a California man was charged. Lee says that law enforcement agencies are investigating about a half-dozen other solar panel thefts in his area.

"We were surprised and kind of caught off guard" by the solar panel thefts, said Lee, who recommends that people engrave their driver's license numbers onto their panels for better identification.

For Tom McCalmont, president of Regrid Power, a solar installation business near San Jose, the problem hit home in late June. His own headquarters were struck by thieves, who took more than $30,000 worth of panels from the roof.

The panels were disassembled expertly, he said, leading him to suspect that someone in the solar industry had done it. He urges clients to install video cameras and alarms for their solar arrays, and likens his own revamped security system to Fort Knox.

"This is the crime of the future," McCalmont said.

After suffering a solar panel theft, some victims find unusual ways to protect their property. Hoffman, of Desert Hot Springs, could not sleep for several weeks during the string of thefts from her roof.

One night, she waited beside a nearby building and watched her house in an attempt to catch the thieves, causing a suspicious neighbor to call the police. She vows that if she ever catches the culprits, "they're not going to leave walking" - especially if she feels threatened.

So far, with the losses still modest, homeowners' insurance is processing the claims with little resistance. Hoffman's insurer, State Farm, is paying $95,000 to replace her entire system. She plans to install an alarm, and possibly a video camera.

Not far from Hoffman, in the town of Palm Desert, Jim and Shayna Powell were devastated after thieves took 19 of their solar panels in June, just when they needed air-conditioning the most, causing their electricity bill to shoot from $3 to $300.

"Of all the times of year to steal the panels," Jim Powell said in frustration.

Beyond California, solar power markets are comparatively small, so thefts are still rare - but they are spreading. In the past 18 months, Oregon's highway department has lost a few panels used to power portable traffic message boards.

In Minnesota, the Sauk River Watershed District has lost at least eight small panels, worth $250 each, in the past few years, according to Melissa Roelike, who coordinates the water-quality monitoring program there.

In response, the district has taken steps to protect the panels, including putting them in trees and atop poles. But thieves promptly stole one such panel.

"Obviously, hoisting them 20 feet in the air on a metal pipe does not work," Roelike said.

In Europe, where the solar industry is well established, thievery is entrenched, and measures to ward it off have become standard, including alarm systems and hard-to-unscrew panels.

But in the United States, installers are just coming to grips with the need for alarms, video cameras and indelible engraving of serial numbers. Some people prefer simpler solutions.

Ken Martin Jr. lost 58 panels, which will cost $75,000 to replace, this spring from the roof of a half-empty office building in Santa Rosa, California, that he owns.

He is considering slapping paint on some parts of his remaining panels - bright pink paint.

"At least if someone comes across them and they're painted, they'll know that's my color," he said.


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