Shannon O’Brien has challenged Mayor Acquanetta Warren and the Fontana City Council to redress issues relating to the veterans memorial that was built within easy visual distance of City Hall five years ago.
O’Brien commended the city for the effort to honor those who have fought for the United States in its wars and military actions around the globe, but noted that there are design flaws and vandalism issues at the memorial that should be addressed earlier rather than later to prevent those who have properly been honored from being overlooked again and ultimately forgotten.
“Our veterans are not being treated well in this city, after their contributions making it possible for us to be free and be able to have all the advantages and privileges that we have,” O’Brien said. “I am glad the City and the people of Fontana built this memorial, but I think we as citizens should take pride in it and go just a little bit further to see that it is not only maintained but tweaked to show the proper respect for what our brave soldiers, sailors, Marines and airmen did for all of us.”
One shortcoming that should be redressed, O’Brien said, was “some people’s names do not have the appropriate years of service. That is important. I also agree with our veterans that the bricks honoring them should not be on the ground but on the wall.”
O’Brien noted, “The sponsors are on the wall, but you notice that the bricks commemorating the veterans are on the ground. That should have been reversed. Students and children in the area tend to ride bikes and skateboards over these bricks and not really pay attention. That is scuffing them and over time, I am afraid we won’t be able to read them. We should move the bricks honoring the veterans up onto the wall. Maybe the bricks could be a different type of material, so they can stand out. Education is important for our youth. This wall is a way for them to learn about the contributions of our community’s veterans to our national causes. If those bricks are up on the wall, it would force everyone who comes by here to look up, take notice and have respect for our veterans.”
O’Brien also said that a large plaque summarizing the spirit of sacrifice could be added to the recognition wall. And she echoed the suggestion of many of the veterans that the names that are enshrined should be distinguished and grouped together by which service they were in, which would make it easier for family members who come to the shrine to find the individual memorialized they are looking for.
The memorial already exists, O’Brien said, and just a bit more effort is needed to make it worthy of those it honors. “There is still something we can do to fix this problem,” she said, and it can be done at relatively little cost, she suggested.
The honorarium was accomplished through a joint effort involving a few prime movers, veterans and their family members, City Hall, some volunteers, veterans’ legions and donors. The cost was roughly $300,000. Nowhere near that amount is required now, O’Brien said, but action, activism and volunteerism are called for.
“If you are a professional and you know about things like this, inbox me and tell me your recommendations and also any contacts we might want to reach out to,” she said. Her email address is shannonobri@gmail.com.
She said, “Something that disturbs me is the veterans were asked to pay for their own bricks They risked their lives, yet they have to write a check, too. I would like to call on the city or the county or whoever wants to take up this cause and make things right by our veterans.”
O’Brien said, “We don’t have to start from scratch. We can build on what we have, but we should make these corrections.”
Recently, she visited the memorial with about a dozen local veterans. She noted that both time and vandalism are taking a toll. “The flags are getting eaten up by the high winds we have here in Fontana,” she said. “We need replacements for those and to do something to maintain the quality of the flags.”
She surveyed broken lights, vandalism and graffiti that marred the memorial.
“This is really upsetting to us,” one of the veterans said.
“Something needs to be done,” said another.
O’Brien suggested the city go to the expense of installing “a Ring System or something similar to what people have on their doorsteps with motion sensors and cameras, to video monitor the site and ward off graffiti and vandalism. Something like that would allow us to see and identify those who are blatantly disrespectful of our veterans so we can catch them and see that they are punished by assigning them at their own expense to repair the damage they have caused.”
She listened to one veteran who said that the city had removed a staff member from the role of overseeing the city’s banner program, which celebrated the contributions of the city’s currently serving servicemen and servicewoman. Since that staff member was removed, the veteran said, the program had languished.
“That shouldn’t be,” O’Brien, who is running against Warren for mayor in this year’s election, said. “The mayor and council should be looking at doing these things the right way.”
O’Brien said she hoped her effort to bring attention to the issues involving veterans in Fontana was not perceived as a political stunt. “This is something that needs to be done,” she said. “I am a citizen here and the granddaughter of a veteran and the niece of a veteran. Our local veterans have been in the struggle to get this fixed and it’s not happening. Now that Memorial Day is coming up, this is a perfect opportunity to do something about it.”
San Bernardino County Has Obscure Program To Isolate Those Suffering From COVID-19
Virtually no one knows about it, but the county has a program intended to cover the costs of residents who want to isolate themselves from their families and others while they are ill with the coronavirus.
The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors this week approved a third amendment, effective July 1, 2022, to a contract with Aviah Hospitality, Inc. which does business as Motel 6, for continued provision of rooms to county residents for isolation capacity as a response to COVID-19 as part of the state’s Project Roomkey. The action updating the contract terms extended the contract one year and increased the contract amount by $990,000, from $1,163,540 to an amount not to exceed $2,153,540, for the total contract period of January 1, 2021 through June 30, 2023.
The board also approved a fourth amendment to a contract with Prime Hospitality, Inc., which does business as Woody’s Classic Grill, for the continued provision of meals to county residents currently in an emergency, non-congregate shelter due to COVID-19 as part of Project Roomkey, updating the contract and increasing the contract amount by $650,000, from $1,297,366 to an amount not to exceed $1,947,366, for the total contract period of July 6, 2020 through June 30, 2023.
Supriya Barrows, the deputy executive officer for the county’s community revitalization division who presented the contact amendments to the supervisors this week, did not offer information with regard to the program, how residents can assess it, or which Motel 6 ill residents can check into.
Woody’s Grill is located at 22400 Barton Road in Grand Terrace. The closest Motel 6 to Woody’s Grill is the Motel 6 at 111 East Redlands Boulevard in San Bernardino, which is owned by Aviah Hospitality. The desk there, however, said no beds are available for COVID isolation patients.
Those ill with COVID-19 in need of isolation might try contacting Barrows at (909) 387-4717.
Mountain Lions Spotted Four Times In Two Months Around The County
There have been at least two spottings and maybe as many as five of mountain lions in San Bernardino County in the last five weeks.
In late March, what was reported to be a mature mountain lion was seen, at what was estimated to be an eighth of a mile distance, in Chino Hills State Park.
This week, there was photographic confirmation of what was at least a single and maybe actually two fully grown mountain lions some seven miles apart in Apple Valley on Sunday April 24 and Tuesday, April 26. The following day, there was another sighting of a mountain lion slightly more than a half mile away from where the second sighting in the town occurred.
Sightings of mountain lions in metropolitan settings are extremely rare. Less uncommon is the migration of the big cats into out-of-the-way sites at the periphery of urbanized places and more rustic districts.
Chino Hills State Park, which embodies an undeveloped swathe of land at the confluence of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, lies at the southwesternmost tip of San Bernardino County in the Chino Hills, and involves Santa Ana Canyon within the foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains. It is not unheard of for mountain lions to come into that area. The cat seen in March was at an elevation slightly above the hikers that spotted it while they were hiking on Bobcat Ridge Trail.
On or around April 15, a Mountain Lion was struck and killed on the 60 Freeway near Diamond Bar, which is contiguous with Chino Hills but lies across the Los Angeles County Line.
On Sunday, April 24, a photo was snapped of a mountain lion in the yard of a home on Chiwi Road in Apple Valley.
More than seven miles away, on early Tuesday morning, April 26, a doorstep Ring camera caught the image of a large adult mountain lion in the front yard of a home near Kiowa and Bear Valley roads in Apple Valley. The evening of the following day, Wednesday April 27, the Apple Valley station of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department received a call at 11:29 p.m. which reported a “full-grown” mountain lion had ventured into the front yard of a residence in the 12000 block of Tamiani Road, which is roughly 0.55 miles from where the previous sighting occurred.
Unknown is whether the mountain lions seen were the same cat, perhaps two or even three. Sleek and agile, the average mountain lion is roughly 8 feet from nose tip to tail end. They weigh, on average, between 125 to 150 pounds.
Mountain lions are most likely to appear in areas inhabited by humans, if indeed they do show, in the spring. In the winter, they are in their element in wildlands because winter conditions give them an even greater advantage over their natural prey than in other seasons. They come into areas inhabited by humans in spring because the animals they normally eat become scarce in their natural habitat during that season. At such times, they will victimize domesticated animals that are available and vulnerable. Appearances in summer come about, usually, because water sources where they live – mountainous areas and rugged deserts – have dried up.
Mountain lions do not have a strong sense of smell and rely upon keen eyesight, in particular their acute night vision, and their extraordinary hearing to hunt. This makes them most active at night and in the early morning. Known as ambush hunters, mountain lions are adept at concealing themselves in dense vegetation or available crevices such as those between boulders in nature or in hiding places of opportunity in areas built up by man. After patient and silent stalking, they will engage in a lightning fast surprise attack in which their sharp claws and powerful jaws play a prominent role.
Jury Confers $4.5 Million On Family Of Highland Man Slain By Deputies In 2018
A federal jury yesterday made a determination that San Bernardino County must pay $4.5 million to the family of Juan Ramos, formerly of Highland, who was fatally shot by Sheriff’s Sergeant Gary Wheeler on July 22, 2018.
That afternoon, a Sunday, the temperature in Highland in mid-afternoon had reached or exceeded 96 degrees Fahrenheit.
According to the sheriff’s department, at 3:52 pm, the sheriff’s dispatch center received a call for service regarding a report of a reckless driver speeding through neighborhood streets in the vicinity of Olive Street and 13th Street in Highland. Deputies responded and located a white Ford Crown Victoria being driven by a male subject, later identified as Juan Ramon Ramos, 32. In a release after the shooting, the department maintained Ramos was “driving without regard for the public’s safety, endangering himself and other motorists by running red lights and nearly hitting other vehicles. A deputy attempted a traffic stop on the suspect vehicle at a gas station [and] the suspect drove away when asked to exit the vehicle. The deputy witnessed Ramos hold up a box cutter prior to fleeing the gas station. Ramos refused to yield and led deputies on a pursuit after he narrowly missed colliding with other motorists. Eventually the pursuit ended back near Olive Street/13th Street.”
According to the department’s version of events put out in the immediate aftermath of the incident, “Deputies attempted to de-escalate the situation” but “Ramos did not comply with commands and refused to exit the vehicle. After a brief standoff, Ramos exited the vehicle armed with the box cutter and ran from deputies.”
Ramos had returned to a residence in the the 26700 block of 13th Street owned by his aunt and uncle.
According to the department’s narrative, “Ramos continued to ignore deputies’ commands and did not comply with their orders to peacefully surrender. Deputies deployed less than lethal bean bags, striking the suspect. Deputies also deployed a Taser, striking the suspect; the less than lethal and de-escalation techniques proved ineffective in getting the suspect to comply. Ramos jumped a fence approaching a group of people with the box cutter in his hand.”
At that point, Sergeant Wheeler discharged his service sidearm, hitting Ramos in the back.
“Fearing for the safety of the citizens, a deputy involved shooting occurred,” according to the department.
Ramos was transported to St. Bernardine’s Medical Center where he was pronounced deceased at 5:24 p.m.
The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office, which routinely clears law enforcement officers of wrongdoing with regard to shootings of civilians that take place within its jurisdiction, reviewed the circumstances of Ramos’s death. The district attorney’s office generated a report of that review, released in 2020, in which it was concluded that Wheeler’s action was a justifiable and legal use of deadly force.
Ramos’s family was represented by attorney Dale Galipo.
Galipo was able to call upon multiple witnesses – members of Ramos’s family including his cousins – who testified that Ramos was not attempting to attack anyone, was not showing hostile intent and was not close enough to use the box cutter on anyone when Wheeler felled him with the fatal shots. At trail there was testimony to the effect that Ramos’s cousins told deputies that he was not dangerous or violent and represented no threat to them.
The department maintains that the shooting was entirely justified.
Under the verdict, Ramos’s family will receive $4.5 million for his wrongful death.
The office of San Bernardino County Counsel had no comment on the verdict.