Rancho-Santa-Fe-News,-December-20,-2019

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DEC. 20, 2019

State fellowships open to college grads, seniors REGION – State Sen. Patricia Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) is encouraging college seniors and graduates to consider applying for the 2020-2021 California Senate Fellows program. Former fellows include current members of Congress and the California Legislature, judges, and local elected officials. “If you have a desire to improve California and work very hard at work worth doing, then the Senate Fellows program may be for you,” Bates said. The deadline for submitting an application is Feb. 3, 2020. There are also similar opportunities to be an Assembly, Executive or Judicial Fellow. Visit csus. edu/center/center-california-studies/capital-fellows. html for more information. Anyone at least 20 years of age and a graduate of a four-year college or university by Sept. 1, 2020, is eligible to apply. There is no preferred major and individuals with advanced degrees or those in mid-career are encouraged to apply. There will be 18 fellows selected in May 2020 after an initial screening of applications and a subsequent panel interview of finalists. The program gives people an opportunity to become full-time Senate staff at the California State Capitol in Sacramento for 11 months beginning in October 2020.

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T he R ancho S anta F e News

Finding real joy in a fake Christmas tree small talk jean gillette

I

think stories from their grandmother may have given my children a false sense of the joys of a live Christmas tree. I don’t think my children even remember the years we went out and bought a live tree. They never wanted to help decorate it, and certainly didn’t want to help undecorate it. Yet, when I succumbed to an artificial tree, when they were about 8, they began to sulk and have not yet forgiven me. It was something I thought I would never do. It was one of the best things

I have ever done. One year in October, I examined the assembled, decorated artificial trees closely several times, checked the price tag, held my breath and bought one. Somehow it had always seemed too expensive. Then December would roll around, and I would set out to find a tree. It meant chasing the children around several different tree lots, while I tried to picture various bound-up Christmas trees upright in my living room. I always came home scratched and sticky with sap and exhausted from wrestling with 25 different trees. It’s rather like that joke about how everyone looks just before the bar closes. After three lots and 42 trees, they all start looking lovely and $50 sounds cheap. I would schlep it home and somehow get it into the

stand. It always had a flat side. Then I would drag in bricks, to make certain it was adequately stable. In a couple of days, the oncefirm boughs dropped low and before Christmas Day even arrived, it would begin to shed like a mange-stricken dog in August. When Jan. 6 finally arrived, I was the last man standing to eject and recycle this parched creature amid a storm of needles. In July, I was still finding the last of the needles hidden behind the drapes. Even with all this negative motivation, I hung on tightly to my fake-tree receipt, fearing I might lose my nerve. I was one of those people, who, in my youth had sneered at people with artificial trees. Didn’t they have any holiday spirit? Didn’t they love the smell of fresh pine? Now I was that

person. It’s amazing how little importance the smell of fresh pine holds after you have cleaned weekly with pine-scented Lysol and had to unclog a lump of pine needles from your vacuum hose. The reaction of friends was fascinating, as I confessed my purchase. There was scathing disapproval from a few. It was clear that the family hunt for the perfect tree was quite a different experience for them than for me, and they have my envy and blessing. Others applauded my long-term thrift, saving a tree and my effort to simplify the Advent season. The final bonus came when I decorated it. Did you know that you can bend those fake branches any way you want? It was heaven to not be at the mercy of nature’s decision on branch distribution and

Downed Wire_Coast News + Inland Edition_RUN: 11_15_19__TRIM: 8.525” x 10”

strength. I threw away my receipt. I realize now that the Christmas tree was my father’s annual creative outlet. He did it all, from purchase to take down and his now-illegal lead tinsel hung so straight it truly looked like ice. But somehow I ended up with an artificial tree with lights already attached and covered enthusiastically with goofy, kid-proof ornaments. Yet it glows brightly, reflecting joy and warming the winter nights — and then it will slide neatly back into its box. That sounds like a merry Christmas to me. Jean Gillette is a freelance writer who has had the audacity to graduate to an even smaller fake tree, with a big smile on her face. Contact her at jean@ coastnewsgroup.com.

BE SAFE NEVER GO NEAR A DOWNED POWER LINE

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tion, Delaney said that the net assets for the authority have declined approximately $1.6 million from $8.36 million to around $6.73 million, and that there were no accounting errors found in the audit. “It’s a very clean representation to all of our customers that took out the debt, because of course, the customers are the district,” Kind said. “We’re representing the public here … we have the money, the money we’ve invested in very conservative instruments. And that’s part of the report, if any member of the public want to read them, they would see that we take a conservative approach to how we invest their money. “And everything is as expected … there’s nothing that’s occurred in these two districts and this jointowned facility that would indicate we are not very careful with the customer’s money and we’re paying back our debt on time.” Afterward, Administration Services Manager Seth Gates discussed the upgrades to the irrigation district’s IT department and the new training measures that would be implemented to improve cybersecurity. The next meeting of the Water Facilities Financing Authority will occur on Dec. 10, 2020.

Report downed power lines immediately to 1-800-411-SDGE. If a power line has fallen to the ground:

If a vehicle is involved and you are in it:

• Always assume power lines are live. • Stay far away and never touch a

• Sit calmly until help arrives. • Warn others not to touch the vehicle

• Never touch any person or equipment

• If the vehicle is on fire and you must

power line.

that comes in contact with a power line.

and direct them to call 911.

leave it, open the door or window and jump clear without touching the vehicle and the ground at the same time.

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