Petition formed for Pride month, flag to be recognized in Roseville
A proclamation is on its way to being issued at the next city council meeting, but the question of flying the Rainbow Flag is still up in the air. Author: Zach Fuentes (ABC10) Updated: 12:24 PM PDT May 10, 2021
ROSEVILLE, Calif. A push to get Pride Month recognized in Roseville has garnered support from hundreds and is on its way to being officially proclaimed.
But along with the push for a Pride Month proclamation, is also a call to get the Rainbow Flag flown at the Roseville City Hall and Civic Center.
Roseville approves CDBG funds for nonprofits
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ROSEVILLE The Roseville City Council unanimously approved its Community Development Block Grant nonprofit distributions for fiscal year 2022 at its regular meeting April 13.
Eleven nonprofit organizations received a portion of the grant money that comes annually from the federal government.
“This year, we saw a decrease in our funding from HUD,” explained Jim Gammicchia, the city’s administrative services administrator. “This year, we received 10 applications versus the four we received last year. For 2022, we only can use 15% of the funding from the government for public service allocations. That equates to $89,182 in total, and those go toward all public service distributions, not just the agencies that have applied. We also use it for some other repair projects.”
Roseville city councilman resigns, pleads guilty to drug possession charge By: Brendan Losinski | Roseville - Eastpointe Eastsider | Published April 28, 2021 | Updated May 6, 2021 4:18pm
Frontera
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ROSEVILLE Roseville City Councilman Charles Frontera has resigned from his office as of April 28, one week before he pleaded guilty to a drug possession charge.
Frontera, 33, submitted his intent to resign in the late hours of April 27, following the Roseville City Council meeting that took place via Zoom.
“At 9 p.m. on April 27, 2021, City Clerk Jennifer Zelmanski and I received a written letter of City Council resignation from Charles Frontera,” City Manager Scott Adkins said in an email. “The resignation is to become effective at 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, April 28, 2021.”
Political Trifecta
Back Web Only Apr 15, 2021 By Laurie Lauletta-Boshart Active volunteer. Accomplished professional. Working mother. Krista Bernasconi, Jill Gayaldo and Alyssa Silhi proudly claim each of these monikers. And this year, one more: mayor. For the first time, Placer County’s three largest cities are headed by a woman mayor: Krista Bernasconi in Roseville, Jill Gayaldo for Rocklin and Alyssa Silhi in Lincoln. All three cities have at-large elections where city councilmembers are elected for a four-year term with a mayoral rotational system (prior to the 2020 election, the top vote getter in Roseville City Council elections would serve a two-year term as vice mayor, followed by
by Nancy Derringer Where Nicole Curtis goes, drama follows. You can’t really dig into the clip files on her without turning up lots of stories that have nothing, or little, to do with subway tile or hardwood floor restoration or other aspects of her life as a professional home restorer – the time she had her purse stolen (which led to follow-ups that it was actually a “work bag”), the time she was escorted out of a Roseville City Council meeting, the thing with the photos of her Brush Park rehab, and now, her latest beef with the Detroit Land Bank Authority.