POPULAR LOCAL DISTRICT RANGER CHANGES FORESTS CID MORGAN LEAVES SANTA CLARITA AREA FOR SIMILAR POSITION NEAR ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.Byline: JUDY O'ROURKE Staff Writer SANTA CLARITA Santa Clarita, city (1990 pop. 110,642), Los Angeles co., S Calif., suburb 30 mi (48 km) NW of downtown Los Angeles, on the Santa Clara River; inc. 1987. Situated in the Santa Clara valley and nearby canyons, Santa Clarita includes the former towns of Canyon Country, -- The popular ranger for a section of Angeles National Forest The Angeles National Forest (ANF) was established by executive order on December 20, 1892 as the San Gabriel Timberland Reserve. It covers over 2,600 km² (650,000 acres) and is located in the San Gabriel Mountains of Los Angeles County, just north of the metropolitan area of Los bordering Santa Clarita is unwittingly playing out a cliche, having recently left for a spot where the grass really is greener -- unexpectedly so. The grass at her new post was only greened up by winter storms. District Ranger Cid Morgan left behind 10-hour workdays in a district of more than 350,000 acres for territory about one-third that size near Albuquerque, N.M. The rash of recent fires in the Santa Clarita area were a long-distance adieu. In Santa Clarita, co-workers and community members still talk about her work and her in the present tense pres·ent tense n. The verb tense expressing action in the present time, as in She writes; she is writing. Noun 1. present tense - a verb tense that expresses actions or states at the time of speaking present . ``She is the glue that held the district together,'' said Division Chief Dave Conklin, serving as district fire manager. ``She got out there and got her hands dirty with the firefighters.'' Firsthand experience on an engine crew and her acumen at grasping complexities posed by the landscape earned his praise. For nearly five years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time petite 48-year-old blonde was in charge of a big chunk of forest crisscrossed criss·cross v. criss·crossed, criss·cross·ing, criss·cross·es v.tr. 1. To mark with crossing lines. 2. with utility lines, near two major freeways and skirting residential neighborhoods. She faced many challenges protecting trees the district, often from several fires burning at once. As head of the Santa Clara/Mojave Rivers Ranger District, Morgan oversaw budgeting, nine engines, four battalions, two 20-person hot-shot crews and about four patrols. But she was never just the boss. ``She didn't use it as a stepping stone; she stuck by her employees,'' said Sharon Hoglund, an administrative liaison in the Human Resources The fancy word for "people." The human resources department within an organization, years ago known as the "personnel department," manages the administrative aspects of the employees. Department. A woman who helped form a Fire Safe Council in 2002 after the Copper Fire raged up San Francisquito Canyon -- just missing her burg of Green Valley -- said Morgan helped the group secure Forest Service grants that paid for a huge chipper chipper Drug slang An occasional user of illicit drugs. See Recreational drug use Tobacco A popular term for a person who smokes < 5 cigarettes/day, who may be resistant to nicotine dependence or addiction, and often born to non-smoking parents. , chain saws and a huge brush mower. Lu Bole commended Morgan for attending the group's meetings and said the ranger cared about saving more than trees and homes. ``She came to my husband's funeral. I really consider her a friend,'' said Bole, who recently retired from the Angeles Forest Valleys and Lakes council, which serves Green Valley, Leona Valley, Lake Hughes, Elizabeth Lake and Pine Canyon. Ruthann Levison, chairwoman of the Sand Canyon Fire Safe Council's large-animal evacuation program, credited Morgan's role in saving homes from the hungry Foothill Fire in 2004. ``She would say things like `We live in an area where the natural vegetation is meant to burn.' ... I found her very direct, very matter of fact and terrifically nice,'' Levison said. ``Our fires took their toll on her.'' Devoting so much time to her work took its toll on Morgan's personal life. A 16-year relationship went down in blazes recently. ``I love being a ranger but the job on the Angeles was just too much. Work was all-consuming. ... I was not there for him when he needed it,'' she said about the end of the relationship. ``Maybe somebody else can do a better job of balancing. It cost me a lot.'' Moving into the position as district ranger for the Cibola National Forest The Cibola National Forest stretches from western Oklahoma to western New Mexico. Administered by the USDA's Forest Service, the forest covers 2,540 sq mi (0 km). was a lateral, but welcome, move. Morgan opted for it partly in response to cost-cutting measures in the Angeles. ``If you look at the organizational chart An organizational chart is a chart which represents the structure of an organization in terms of rank. The chart usually shows the managers and sub-workers who make up an organization. , we are lower than bare bones No frills. No luxuries. See bare bones system. ,'' she had said. ``They've not only cut the meat out; they've cut the skeleton out.'' The Cibola boasts a large wilderness area and is a popular recreation spot, attracting more than 2 million visitors a year. While Morgan endured the excitement of film crews invading the Angeles for shoots, at the Cibola she shares space with a defunct bombing range, in use from the 1940s to the 1970s. ``You don't need the public going in there (with) all these unexploded bombs in there,'' she said, her characteristic dry humor intact. The land is under National Forest stewardship, but the U.S. military and forest service share jurisdiction for the range, which is closed to the public. Periodically, she is likely to contend with a group of mountain bikers seeking to open an area along the eastern edge, so she packed her urban know-how. Morgan bade farewell to working with agencies whose infrastructure feeds the Los Angeles Basin The Los Angeles Basin is the coastal sediment-filled plain located between the peninsular and transverse ranges in southern California in the United States containing the central part of the city of Los Angeles as well as its southern and southeastern suburbs (both in Los Angeles with pipelines and power lines: the county's Department of Water and Power, the California Department of Water Resources History 1850-1875 California recognizes many types of water rights. These rights have developed with the State over time. Prior to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed in 1848, California was part of Mexico. , Southern California Edison Southern California Edison (or SCE Corp), the largest subsidiary of Edison International (NYSE: EIX), is the primary electricity supply company for much of Southern California. It provides 11 million people with electricity. , Exxon Mobil Corp., Pacific Pipeline, AT&T and Caltrans. In their place she will meet with some more down-to-earth folks. The Albuquerque Tricentennial tri·cen·ten·ni·al adj. Tercentenary. n. A tercentenary event or celebration. Adj. 1. tricentennial - of or relating to or completing a period of 300 years tricentenary Committee is lobbying to hang portable lights on the Sandia Crest. It is on edge of the T'ufsh Shur Bien Preservation Trust -- a wilderness area the Forest Service co-manages with the Sandia Pueblo. Sandia Pueblo has a treaty giving it some control of the forest land, and its members, as well as other tribes with treaties covering the area, have some rights the general public does not have. No federally recognized tribes Federally recognized tribes are those Indian tribes recognized by the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs for certain federal government purposes. Description In the United States, the Indian tribe is a fundamental unit, and the constitution grants to the U.S. have jurisdiction in the Angeles National Forest. The Forest Service will look widely for Morgan's successor in the Angeles, but some say the agency needs more than a good manager. ``She wasn't just a manager in here doing a job. She cared what happened. ... She cared about the forest itself and the people,'' Hoglund said. Forest planner Karen Lessard had shunned applying for a job in which Morgan would have been her direct supervisor so the two could remain fun-loving friends without barriers. Morgan had encouraged Lessard to relocate to Los Angeles from Washington, D.C., and Lessard repaid the favor by urging Morgan to apply for the Cibola opening. Lessard said the Angeles has a reputation for challenging its personnel. ``Things that happen here don't happen anywhere else in the national forests, ... with all these people in the huge megalopolis megalopolis (mĕgəlŏp`lĭs) [Gr.,=great city], a group of densely populated metropolitan areas that combine to form an urban complex. at the edge of the forest,'' she said. ``(Morgan) loved rangering. The people who worked for her adored her, and she was an excellent leader. She had incredible people skills.'' Lessard remembered a night out in 2004 -- after a spate of fires -- when the two took refuge in laughter. ``There were so many things happening. It was fun to see her laugh so hard and so long a few months after,'' she said. ``(Morgan) had three fires going at once in a two-week period -- the Crown, Pine and Foothill -- three huge fires. Then in the fall we had all those rains and the oil spill in Pyramid Lake. It was nonstop for months on end.'' Morgan hopes to find spare time to resume her long-lost hobbies: hiking, camping, gardening and rescuing Labrador retrievers like her 9 1/2-year-old old Jett and 11-month-old Sadie. Long before she earned a master's degree in wildlife from New Mexico State University New Mexico State University, at Las Cruces; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered and opened 1889 as a college. It became New Mexico State Univ. of Engineering, Agriculture, and Science in 1958 and adopted its present name in 1960. , she decided on a Forest Service career during her senior year in high school. ``We went on a trip to Yosemite, and I felt like I came home,'' she said. judy.orourke(at)dailynews.com (661) 257-5255 CAPTION(S): photo Photo: District Ranger Cid Morgan, 48, has left the Angeles National Forest for a position near Albuquerque, N.M. She started her new post three weeks ago. |
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