A woman had to be assisted out of the American River on Sunday after she became surrounded by the rising river.
According to Assistant Chief Scott Cockrum of the Sac Metro Fire Dept., the woman walked out to a small island in the river and when the river level rose, she decided she could not get back to the shore safely.
In honor of Earth Day, a huge clean-up effort took place on the American River.
The clean-up event was organized by the American River Parkway Foundation, which said every year more and more people are volunteering to clean up the environment.
Help preserve the American River Parkway via text donation.
The program is being implemented in conjunction with the running of the Parkway Half Marathon on April 28 in Sacramento. So in lieu of running 13.1 miles to raise money for the American River Parkway Foundation, all it takes is a little thumb action to text a donation.
Sacfit (Sacramento Friends in Training) is spearheading the text donation campaign. To make a donation, type in “Parkway”, a space, “donation amount” then send to 27138.
May is Bike Month in the Sacramento region, an invitation to try bicycling one day.
The annual effort to get people out of their cars and try pedaling is scheduled during May, in part, because it is one of the best months to bicycle in Sacramento — after the winter rains and before the summer heat.
April is also a pretty good month to bicylce. To that end, rest stops will be in place this month to promote biking in May.
Bicyclists are urged to look for “Energizer Stations” along key commuting routes in the Sacramento area. Most of the stations will be set up along the American River Bike Trail.
Hundreds of volunteers will be taking out the trash in the American River Canyon on Saturday.
The Earth Week cleanup brings volunteers together with several organizations in a major annual spring effort to remove litter and spruce up the canyon near Auburn.
Eric Peach, a Protect American River Canyons (PARC) board member, said Thursday that volunteers will fan out along both the middle and north forks of the American River from the confluence near the city to not only collect discarded garbage.
“Work will also include minor trail maintenance, removal of invasive non-native plant species and graffiti removal,” Peach said.
The Auburn-based PARC will be working with the California State Parks Foundation, which is holding its 15th annual Earth Day restoration and cleanup around the state. Among the projects are cleanups at both the Auburn State Recreation Area in Placer County and at the Folsom Powerhouse State Historic Park in Folsom.
A lawn Santa, a blow dart, a wig, a flat-screen TV and a rocking horse are some of the dubious trophies volunteers have hauled out of Sacramento-area creeks during annual cleanups.
The Sacramento Area Creeks Council spotlights each year’s quirkiest finds to call attention to human activities that are harmful to dozens of urban creeks and their tributaries. The perils to creeks include roadside litter, illegal dumping, invasive plants and development- related storm runoff.
The 22nd annual Creek Week will get under way today with a Splash Off from 11 a.m. to noon at the William Pond Recreation Area on the American River. The big event will take place April 14, when about 2,000 volunteers will fan out across the county to remove trash from waterways.
One person has been taken to the hospital and another is in police custody after they entered a Sacramento water treatment plant and became trapped.
Assistant Chief Niko King of the Sacramento Fire Department said firefighters were called to the Fairbairn Water Treatment Plant on the American River at 8:08 p.m., after a passerby on the levee reported hearing someone yelling near the plant’s pumphouse. Firefigters initially thought someone was in the river and were preparing for a water rescue. They discovered, however, that the cries were coming from inside the five- or six-story concrete building, which sits in the river and is accessed from the levee via a footbridge.
Inside, firefighters found a man and woman, who appeared to be in their late 20s or early 30s. King said he did not know how the two, who were not authorized to be on the property, entered the site. They told firefighters that they had walked down several stories when the woman accidentally fell into a pool of water. The man jumped in to try to help her climb out
Sacramento City firefighters have contained a fire along the American River bike trail.
The two-alarm fire burned along mile marker 1 and the trail was closed as a precaution. The incident may have started at or near a homeless encampment, according to crews at the scene.
A detour will be in place for a one-mile section of the American River Parkway Bike Trail beginning at 9 a.m. Thursday to allow for trail repairs.
The detour, between the mile markers 2.5 and 3.5, will take trail users up on the adjacent levee, according to a Sacramento Regional Parks news release. Officials said work is necessary to repair damage to areas of the trail undermined by beavers.
The trail will be open through the repair site during the weekend. The closure and detour will resume Monday and continue during the week until repairs are completed.