Arden Carmichael-News

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September 7, 2018 | www.valcomnews.com July 9, 2021 | www.valcomnews.com

Arden-Carmichael News — BRINGING YOU COMMUNITY NEWS FOR 30 YEARS —

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Concerts in the Park return to Carmichael Park Carmichael Recreation and Park District announced the return of summer Concerts in the Park! Concerts will take place at the Daniel Bishop Memorial Pavilion (bandshell) in Carmichael Park. Concerts kickoff on Saturday, July 10 and will take place every Saturday at 6:30 p.m. through August 28. The concerts will feature Carmichael favorites such as Todd Morgan & the Emblems, On Air, Fryed Brothers and more! The series kicks off with the popular Beatles tribute band, Ticket to Ride.

JULY 17: HIPPER THAN HIP Hipper Than Hip is a one-of-kind dance band, grooving to the songs made famous by great horn lines. Earth Wind and Fire, Tower of Power, Chicago, Bruno Mars, Huey Lewis, are just a few of the great bands, famous songs that Hipper Than Hip covers. Their #1 goal with every performance is to deliver an amazing experience for the audience and when everyone is up out of their seats dancing and having a great time, they know they did their job. JULY 10: TICKET TO RIDE Ticket to Ride has been entertaining crowds since 2017. Since then they have grown and now play acoustic or electric depending on the needs of the venue. The band started with Matt Udall on bass guitar. Matt has been in many bands and his love of the Beatles brought him home to form Ticket to Ride. Kevin Arthur is a Carmichael native and formed the Band with Matt in 2017. Kevin plays lead guitar and rhythm. Robert Martino has been in several 60s bands and came to Ticket to Ride from another Beatles tribute in Sacramento. Sherman Applegate is the keyboard player and has real authentic Beatles equipment to carry the band’s sound all the way to the last albums. Sherman sings and plays guitar to round out the band. Bud Ehrk is the band’s other guitar player and also lives in Carmichael. He also plays guitar and harmonica.

JULY 24: KYLE ROWLAND BLUES “Blues harmonica player of the year” and “Blues New Artist of The Year” in 2009 from the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame, Kyle Rowland, has been dominating the stage since the tender age of 10 years old. Beginning his career sitting in and receiving lessons from the hit Sacramento band, Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers, for seven consecutive years, Kyle quickly and naturally developed his own sound. With help from a few of his heroes such as James Cotton, Hubert Sumlin, Matt “Guitar” Murphy, Lazy Lester and many others, Kyle learned specific techniques of stage presence, the music business, and several highly revered harmonica secrets. At 16 years old Kyle formed his own band. Keeping the tradition alive and sticking with the roots, The Kyle Rowland Blues Band dishes out a sauté of boisterous Chicago and swampy Texas blues with a pinch of West Coast swing. Danceable and listenable, this show will have you wanting more with your toes tapping into the next morning.

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JULY 31: MAYA BAND Maya, is a Latin Tribute Band, Presenting the most popular songs from well-known artists that everybody recognizes, including Santana, Selena, Mark Anthony, Gloria Estefan, Celia Cruz, La Sonora Dinamita, Ritchie Valens and popular Latin Old School hits. Maya covers all standard Latin styles including, Cumbia, Salsa, Latin Rock, Cha Cha, and Old School. Valley Community Newspapers, Inc.


AUG. 7: FRYED BROTHERS BAND The Party Ain’t over ‘til the Fryeds go home, goes the song written by legendary local bandleader Harry Fryed. The Fryed Brothers Band performs an energetic brand of American roots music with an irresistible stew of country, blues, swing, boogie-woogie and good old roadhouse rock ’n’ roll.

AUG. 14: TODD MORGAN & THE EMBLEMS Todd Morgan and his band, The Emblems, have been performing and entertaining audiences in various incarnations for over 10 years now. This current version of the group features the backing of Chris Bell on Bass and Andrew Philip on Drums. For the past five years in a row, Todd has been nominated in Sac News & Review’s Sammie Awards for Best Indie Artist, Best Rock Artist and Rest Rockabilly Artist. Todd has also won Best Song of the Year in the Westcoast Songwriters annual multi-statewide songwriting competition. In the past year, Todd Morgan & the Emblems, like so many others, took a bit of a “break” for some mysterious reason. This summer, they are extremely happy to be back, performing their original tunes, and of course, classic rock ‘n’ roll, rhythm and blues, pop and soul from the 1950s and ‘60s

Angela Heinzer

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AUG. 28 CONCERTS IN THE PARK: GREAT WIDE OPEN Great Wide Open pays tribute to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers with the level of attention to detail that is uncommon even among tribute bands. With every performance, GWO delivers that distinctive Tom Petty sound and experience like no other. Sacramento’s Great Wide Open combined five musicians from California and across the nation to form the ultimate Tom Petty tribute band. GWO not only matches up man-forman with Tom’s original Heartbreakers but also with Tom’s “other” band, the Traveling Wilburys!

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AUG. 21: ON AIR On Air, Sacramento’s premier classic rock horn band is putting COVID where it belongs! “Solid rock music, tight harmony, and white-hot horns characterize the On Air sound.” The band performs the best of ‘70s and ‘80s groups like Chicago, Steely Dan, Tower of Power, and the Doobie Brothers along with a mix of Motown and Stax/Volt landmark hits plus contemporary selections.

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The response from helpful successful gardeners was swift in coming when my woe-is-me garden column published. It was very fun reading their suggestions. Being Covid-fearful, I’d gotten a late start on my garden (at least a month behind other gardeners at my complex). May 1 (our garden contract deadline), I put in two rows of bean seeds (green and yellow), three smallish tomato plants, two larger ones. And crossed my fingers. Existing strawberries .. well. I should have watered earlier. A couple days ago I gave my only two small vine-ripened berries to Lydia (my save-theduck neighbor who also gardens). The next day, another friend, Tanya, gave me a large ripening tomato. She told me that, in Russia, there’s a saying: If you give a friend your first harvest, your next harvests will be better. I think that’s lovely! For me, more than half the fun of gardening is giving stuff away and I’m always quick to share -- with other gardeners; people from the neighborhood who stop to chat; other tenants. Two weeks ago I cut back my rosemary (an eight year old plant that is prolific). I gave some away right then. The rest I spread out on a beat up table that mysteriously showed up out there. ‘No chemicals, organic, help yourself ’ I told my garden friends as it was drying. Since all of them grow tomatoes, I’ll give my surplus to a veteran who just moved in with his wife and assorted others.

I used to use Sluggo to get rid of snails .. until I read that to a Mourning Dove, snails are a delicacy. Sluggo is supposed to be safe for pets. I don’t know about wild birds. So now, I pick the snails out by hand and throw them across the fence. Although I use no chemicals of any kind, I’m careful to wash off any that might be used by landscapers hired by the complex. I worry they use RoundUp on weeds and grass that sprout in the garden’s pathways. This, as we now know, is not ideal – for plants or people – as RoundUp’s been linked to assorted cancers. The thing is, too, on breezy days, it drifts. So, since I suspect I’ve lost more than a few plants to RoundUp; the day after the landscapers are in the garden area I hose down the outside of my box, and snip yellowing leaves of plants I think got hit. If I do that when the rest of the plant’s still green, sometimes I can save the plant because the root’s OK. Right now, I’m trying to save my jalapeno pepper. So, short version (which, as we all know is not my strong suit), I’m pretty excited about the successes in my garden despite assorted heat waves!! Four times my chives have brightened up the flavor in my Ramen soup!! I’m just sorry I can’t share any with the other gardeners because they’re not interested. Tanya, being polite, declined, saying only, “I grow what I like.” Lydia shook her head and told me honestsee This ‘n’ That page 6 Valley Community Newspapers, Inc.


Sleep Train Arena site to become home to teaching hospital Sacramento Kings donated 35 acres of land for project By Lance Armstrong VCN Staff Writer

Sleep Train Arena – home of the Sacramento Kings from 1988 through 2016 – will be demolished as part of a project to construct a medical center, featuring a 13-story teaching hospital, at that site. In partnership with the Kings and the city of Sacramento, California Northstate University (CNU) officials on June 16 announced their plan to have the center located on 35 developable acres that were donated to the university by the Kings. The university plans to open their hospital in 2024. In a press release issued last week, Sacramento Kings owner and Chairman Vivek Ranadivé addressed the team’s decision to donate the property. “We have been working diligently with the Natomas community to find the right partner to redevelop the arena site and believe California Northstate University is the perfect fit,” he wrote. “With a medical school campus and teaching hospital, this project will serve as a hub of innovation and an economic driver for the entire region.” CNU President and CEO Dr. Alvin Cheung called the Sleep Train Arena site plan a “giant leap” toward establishing a hospital that will benefit the greater Sacramento region. “In addition to providing extraordinary services and acting as a hub for teaching and healing, the campus will be a place to nurture health and lifelong wellbeing,” he wrote in a press release. “The university looks forward to working with the Kings organization and advancing our mission of science and the art of health care.” In addition to the hospital, plans for this project include a helicopter landing pad atop the hospital, a medical office building, an outpatient clinic, a 150Valley Community Newspapers, Inc.

unit dormitory, and three parking structures. Sacramento City Council Member Angelique Ashby, whose District 1 includes the arena/future hospital site in North Natomas, spoke about the project’s regional impact. “This is really exciting for Natomas, but it’s about so much more than Sacramento,” she said. “It’s hard to imagine a better location, and it’s really wonderful to have a reuse for the arena site,” she said. “But in my mind, this is a regional amenity that will bring high-quality health care and the opportunity for education in the health care field to everyone in our region.” Ashby noted that although many other proposals had been presented for the site, none of them fit the baseline standard that the council envisioned. “Losing an arena, even if you’re just losing it to two freeway exits down, still has impact,” she said. “So, what we really wanted to do was use that space to its best and highest use. And we actually had a study that showed that its best and highest potential use for that site was a hospital, and, ironically, the second best and highest use was a medical campus. “So, here’s the best of both worlds. We get both.” She additionally mentioned that previous proposals for the site included an auto mall, a large retail complex and housing. Ashby added that the area near the arena will include additional housing. “There will be a housing component there, because there’s 180 acres and the hospital is only 35 (acres),” she said. “But before we would agree to housing, we really wanted an anchor tenant – something that would help us with our economic space.” According to CNU, within the next 10 years, the project will generate a total econom-

ic output of $4 billion, create 24,000 direct and indirect jobs throughout the region, and produce a new business tax revenue of $62.7 million. Ashby projected that the arena will be demolished later this year. “It has to be pretty soon, because in order for them to (use) the land and really start the facility, the arena has to come down,” she said.“That’s because the hossee Hospital page 6

Photos courtesy of CNU and the Sacramento Kings

The lobby of the university’s future teaching hospital is shown in this artist’s rendition.

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Hospital:

continued from page 5

pital wants to be sited on the exact footprint of the arena. “So, it’s the highest point on that piece of land. If they’re going to put the helicopter pad on the top, they really want to have the peak of Natomas be the top part of that hospital. That’s the spot – the same reason it was selected for the arena – which is wonderful. I would expect to see the arena come down later this year.” Gregg Lukenbill last week shared his thoughts on the plans for the site of Sleep Train Arena, which his construction company built as ARCO Arena about three years after he and other Sacramento businessmen moved the Kings from Kansas City, Missouri. “Tearing that arena down and putting a hospital there would be fantastic,” he said. “I just love it. I just think that because it is in the realm of science and education and medical advance-

ments – and that’s what a university that teaches medicine is – (it) is about as good as it gets in living life on this planet. “That suddenly takes on a whole different, upper higher-level, significant dimension from a facility standpoint than an arena would from my perspective. It’s about the quality of life. What contributes to the quality of life more than a university that’s a medical center that’s on the cutting edge of education, while it is teaching people to do medicine on a cutting-edge, scientific way?” The university’s efforts to acquire a site for its hospital began in Elk Grove in 2018, when it announced its plan to build a 1.5-million-squarefoot medical center, featuring a teaching hospital. CNU’s pursuit to have a $750 million to $800 million hospital built in that city’s Stonelake neighborhood, near Interstate 5, drew opposition from neighbors, business owners and environmentalists. The Elk Grove Planning Commission last February re-

jected the project due to that site’s existence within a 200year floodplain. Other concerns raised were the site’s existence in an international flyway, near the Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, its potential impacts on Elk Grove’s Stonelake neighborhood, and how the area would be affected by increased traffic and noise. Following the rejection of their hospital/medical center project in Elk Grove, CNU briefly considered locating their project in Rancho Cordova. CNU plans to retain its pharmacy school at its present site in Elk Grove, and has submitted an application to that city to expand its Elk Grove campus to accommodate a new dentistry school. The university opened its Elk Grove campus in 2014, becoming the state’s ninth accredited medical school. CNU currently occupies 130,000 square feet in Elk Grove, and has more than 1,700 combined students

California Northstate University plans to build a medical center, featuring a 13-story teaching hospital, on the site of Sleep Train Arena, which opened as ARCO Arena in 1988.

and employees in five colleges, including health sciences, medicine, pharmacy and psychology. Elk Grove Mayor Bobbie Singh-Allen, in a press statement, wished CNU well in their pursuit to build a hospital at the Sleep Train Arena site. “We still believe that this is an important project for the Sacramento region, and we wish California Northstate University and the city of Sacramento every success

in establishing the project in (North) Natomas,” she said. Ashby shared her thoughts on all of the cities CNU pursued for their hospital/medical center project. “(Rancho Cordova) is very good at recruiting business there, just as is Elk Grove; but I think the hospital landing in any of those three locations would have benefited all of us,” she said. “But I do feel that the reuse of the arena site is a near perfect match.”

as ‘persnickety’. She used to frown and say, “You don’t continued from page 4 know what’s good” or “All the more for me.” My taste buds matured over time although ly, “My mother not feed me my ADHD tongue still rebthat,” viewing with suspicion els at certain textures. Offered this plant she didn’t know. a food that I don’t know, my I nodded because I get it. knee jerk is “I won’t like it.” I My mother described me like chives but don’t eat soup

every day. My Spanish speaking friend from across the street stopped a minute as she passed by. She accepted my gift of just-picked chives. Yay! (It made me happy.) By the way, did you notice a new brand of Ramen soup Walmart sells has replaced Maruchan? Initially, being the persnickety creature that I am, it upset me. But turns out the chicken flavored vegetarian is really great! (Especially with fresh chives.) Carol says, if you aren’t growing chives or don’t know someone who is, Walmart and maybe Raley’s sell packaged fresh chives in the produce section (plain chives). You can grow plain, garlic or onion chives at home easily. Carol grows both plain and onion. Questions, comments? Contact Carol Bogart at carol@bogartonline.com.

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